Truth Commission Special Report
Decision - 59549

Type: AMNESTY DECISIONS
Names: MAPHUTHI JOSEPH CHIDI
Matter: AM0708/96
Decision: REFUSED
URL: https://sabctrc.saha.org.za/hearing.php?id=59549&t=&tab=hearings
Original File: https://sabctrc.saha.org.za/originals/decisions/2001/ac21270.htm
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DECISION

The Applicant is applying for   amnesty in respect of the murder of Gideon Moeng on 7 May 1986 at Tembisa.

The Applicant testified that he was a member of the UDF   and served on the Street Committee.  During the relevant time it was the policy   of the UDF to make townships ungovernable in order to bring the then government   to a fall.  In the process persons serving on Municipal Councils were seen as   collaborators with the government and forced to resign.  If they failed to dissociate   themselves from the system of Municipal Government, they could be killed.

The Deceased, Gideon Moeng, was a councillor serving on   the Tembisa Municipal Council.  About two weeks before his death, at a community   meeting, the position of the Deceased was discussed and it was decided that   he should be eliminated.  The Applicant testified that he understood that to   mean that the Deceased should be banned from the community and be forced to   leave the township.  This decision was taken because the municipal council at   the time resolved to enforce rent payments while the UDF, as part of the strategy   to bring the government to a fall, advocated a rent boycott.

On 7 May 1996 a group of youths gathered near the Applicant's   house and decided to kill the deceased.  The Applicant in a statement signed   on the morning of his amnesty hearing stated:

      "I was amongst the people who chased   the deceased, Mr Moeng, from his house and poured petrol on him and set him   alight although I could not get a chance to assault and burn him personally   due to many people in front of me.  However, I had the common purpose of killing   the deceased because he was a councillor."

In his evidence before the Committee, as already indicated,   he stated that he understood the decision of the community to mean that the   deceased should be chased out of the community.  He didn't participate in the   chasing of the deceased.  He, however, did follow the group who assembled near   his house and would have participated in the assault and burning of the deceased   if he had the opportunity.  The question therefore arises whether the Applicant   indeed had the common purpose to murder.  As stated in State vs Mgedezi and   others 1989 (1) SA687 (AD) in the absence of proof of a prior agreement to kill   the victim, a person who did not contribute casually to the killing or wounding   of the victim can only be liable if certain prerequisites are satisfied.

1.    He must have been present at the scene where the violence   was committed.

2.    He must have been aware of the assault.

3.    He must have intended to make common cause with those   actually perpetrating the assault.

4.    He must have manifested his sharing of a common purpose   with the perpetrators by himself performing some act of association with the   conduct of the killers.

5.    He must have had the requisite mens rea.  He must   have intended the deceased to be killed or he must have foreseen the possibility   of him being killed and performed his own act of association with recklessness   as to whether or not death was to ensue.

According to his evidence, the Applicant didn't understand   the resolution taken at the community meeting to mean that the deceased should   be killed.  He did not participate in "a prior agreement to kill".    He was, however, present at the scene of the killing and at least at this very   late stage intended to make common cause with the killers.  He had the requisite   mens rea, he intended the deceased to be killed.  The question to be answered   is whether he manifested his sharing of this common purpose by himself performing   some act of association with the killers.

It must be born in mind that the Committee is not conducting   a trial.  If there is an onus on the Applicant, the onus would vastly differ   from the onus to prove beyond reasonable doubt as required in a criminal trial.    The requirement that the Committee should be satisfied is also different from   the onus in a civil matter of proof on a balance of probabilities.  It is not   even stated in the act that the Applicant should satisfy the Committee.  The   act is silent on who (if anyone) is to satisfy the Committee and what standard   of satisfaction is required.

See Johannesburg Local Road Transportation   Board and Others vs David Mortan Transport (Pty) Ltd. 1976 (1) SA 887 at 903   H.

      "In civil proceedings that expression"   (onus of proof) "has a recognized connotation, and the onus is fixed by   the pleadings and the latter govern the evidence which is led.  These considerations   do not apply in proceedings before a local board or commission, which are not   bound by rules of judicial procedure."

See also Die Afrikaanse Pers Bpk   vs Neser 1948 (2) SA 295 C at 297.

      "Satisfy does  not mean prove.    I take "satisfy" to mean therefore that the court must feel that there   is a fair probability that ..."

The question remains whether the fact that the Applicant   joined the group, knowing that they are on their way to kill the Deceased and   that he testified that he would  have participated in the killing, if he had   the chance, is a manifestation of his sharing of the common purpose to kill,   for the purposes of deciding whether the Applicant falls within the ambit of   Section 20(2) of Act 34 of 1995 as a person who would qualify for amnesty provided   that the other requirements of the Act are met.

This could only be the case if the Committee concludes that   on the facts elicited above the Applicant had committed an offence or delict.    Did the Applicant's "participation" go any further than that of a   person following a crowd to see whether they would carry out the threat they've   made and which the Applicant by co-incident overheard?  The Committee is not   satisfied that on the facts put before it that it can be said that the Applicant   is guilty of murder or that he committed any offence.

At the criminal trial the evidence vastly differed from   the evidence now presented.  The evidence then was that the Applicant was the   person who actually pulled the Deceased out of his house.  It should further   be stated that before the hearing started the Applicant's legal representative   handed up an affidavit attested to by the Applicant that morning in which it   was stated that he was part of the process leading to the killing and not merely   an interested bystander.

This was withdrawn during his oral evidence stating that   it was a misunderstanding between him and his representative.  The Committee   is not satisfied that a full disclosure has been made of all relevant facts   pertaining to the Applicant's participation and role in the murder.

In the result amnesty is REFUSED   in respect of:

1.    The murder of Gideon Moeng on 7 May 1986 at Tembisa   by pouring petrol on him and setting his body on fire while still alive.

2.    Any other offence or delict directly linked to the   offence mentioned and flowing from the evidence given by the Applicant before   the Committee.

The Committee, as envisaged in   Section 22(2) of Act 34 of 1995, is of opinion that Mrs Moeng, the widow of   the deceased and their three children are victims in relation to the above offence   and refers the matter to the Committee on Reparation and Rehabilitation for   its consideration in terms of Section 26 of the Act.

DATED AT CAPE TOWN THIS    DAY OF                  2001.

ACTING JUDGE N J MOTATA

ACTING JUDGE C DE JAGER

MR W C MALAN

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