<?xml version="1.0" encoding="windows-1252"?>
<hearing xmlns="http://trc.saha.org.za/hearing/xml" schemaLocation="https://sabctrc.saha.org.za/export/hearingxml.xsd">
	<systype>amntrans</systype>
	<type>AMNESTY HEARINGS</type>
	<startdate>1999-05-02</startdate>
	<location>JOHANNESBURG</location>
	<day>12</day>
								<url>https://sabctrc.saha.org.za/hearing.php?id=53371&amp;t=&amp;tab=hearings</url>
	<originalhtml>https://sabctrc.saha.org.za/originals/amntrans/1999/99050321_jhb_990520jh.htm</originalhtml>
		<lines count="1340">
		<line number="1">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>For the record, it is Thursday the 20th of May 1999, we are continuing with the amnesty applications of Coetzee &amp; Others in respect of the Simelane matter.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Lamey, you hadn&#039;t completed your evidence-in-chief?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="3">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Yes Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="4">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Veyi I remind you that you are still under oath.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="5">
			<speaker>NIMROD VEYI</speaker>
			<text>(s.u.o)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="6">
			<speaker>EXAMINATION BY MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>(cont)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="7">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Sorry Mr Chairman, my client just points out to me that he wants to change his headphones.   Thank you Mr Chairman.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="8">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Veyi, I just want to come back on one aspect, can you hear me, during the times that you were present during interrogation sessions at the farm in Northum, can you comment about, can you give any comment about the question whether the lady Simelane, about whether she was allowed to sleep and if so, how did it happen?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="9">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>As I have already said, she would sleep maybe for 30 minutes or an hour and then she would be woken up and questioned again.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="10">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Okay, now you say in your supplemented application in paragraph 9(a)(i) that you apply for amnesty for your involvement, participation and the kidnapping of this person and the assaults on her during interrogation, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="11">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="12">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>So you also apply for amnesty for every other offence or delict which may be inferred from the facts of your participation and involvement, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="13">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="14">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Further you state that in so far as you have been informed by the late Sergeant Mothiba, this lady was shot and her body buried at Rustenburg, you also apply for amnesty for your omission to report this or for the possible offence of being an accessory after the fact, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="15">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="16">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>In this regard, when Sergeant Mothiba told you this that she was shot and killed and buried at Rustenburg, can you comment as to why you did not report this to any authority?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="17">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>After I met with Mkhize at the four way stop ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="18">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Is that now Coetzee, Mkhize?  Who is Mkhize?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="19">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>It is Coetzee.  At the four way stop I saw Nokuthula in the car boot, I didn&#039;t tell anybody, but I kept that to myself.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="20">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Right, perhaps can I just get back, when you saw her in the car boot, she was still alive, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="21">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, she was still alive.  She was swollen, her face was swollen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="22">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>I am asking when Sergeant Mothiba told you that she was shot and killed and buried at Rustenburg, you didn&#039;t report that, or you didn&#039;t report this to any authorities?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="23">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct, I didn&#039;t report it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="24">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Can you explain perhaps why you did not do that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="25">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I didn&#039;t report it because the situation at those times, it did not allow me to report it.  If I would have reported this,  I would be regarded, I don&#039;t know how to put this, I would be regarded as a sell-out, as somebody that cannot keep the government secrets.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="26">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>And if you were being regarded as a sell-out, what in your mind, could something happen to you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="27">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I would be charged for revealing that sensitive information.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="28">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE </speaker>
			<text>Explain that, you would be charged for revealing that information, just explain that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="29">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Everything that we did at those times, those things were secrets.  If you joined the Police, you take an oath, especially at the Security Branch, that everything that would be said there, you won&#039;t reveal it to anybody.  Everything that took place, you won&#039;t tell anybody.  If it happened that they found out that you are selling out the information, you would be charged.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="30">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now the secrecy aspect, what was the reason behind the secrecy aspect and the way the Security Police worked at that stage?  The secrecy, you say that you worked under secret conditions during those times, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="31">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="32">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>In your mind, what was the reason behind all this secrecy among the Security Police members and their activities?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="33">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I can put it this way, because at those times it was during the struggle, if the information, if I would give out the information, it might be possible that the enemy would get that kind of information.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="34">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Would the enemy then use that information to their advantage against the Security Police and the government at that stage?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="35">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="36">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>So in other words it was, the reason behind the secrecy if I may make an assumption from what you are saying, it was in order to protect the workings and activities of the Security Branch who actually had to combat the ANC and MK during the struggle and also to protect the government at large, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="37">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="38">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now further on on this paragraph 9(a)(iii) you say, you refer also to the places is that correct, the Carlton Centre, Northum and so forth?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="39">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="40">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>You explained that she was seriously assaulted as to the nature of her injuries and she suffered injuries on her body, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="41">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="42">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>And further on, if we get to the political objective, Mr Chairman, can I proceed just to lead the witness on this and to read it out to him and ask his confirmation on this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="43">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="44">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.  The witness is saying he cannot hear me.  Can you hear the Interpreter?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="45">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, I can&#039;t.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="46">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Which channel?  3?  Can you hear me now, can you hear the interpretation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="47">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="48">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>You say under the paragraph, it is Exhibit S, page 8, yes, thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="49">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Paragraph 1.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="50">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Paragraph 1, you say one of the main tasks of the Security Police was to combat the armed struggle led by Umkhonto weSizwe, MK, being the military wing of the ANC, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="51">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="52">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>And you were part of that Security Police, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="53">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="54">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>You say further that this armed struggle posed a serious threat to the existence of the previous government, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="55">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="56" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>MR LAMEY:	&quot;As a member of the Security Police at that stage, I</text>
		</line>
		<line number="57">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>			regarded it as my duty to follow orders in combating the activities of the ANC and in particular the armed struggle?&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="58">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="59">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>You say further that</text>
		</line>
		<line number="60" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... this particular lady was a member of MK who was intercepted as a result of the undercover work done by Norman Scotch Mkhonza and she was detained for the purposes of interrogation in order to obtain information from her.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="61">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="62">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>You say that the information which was mainly sought as far as you know, was the presence of other MK members or terrorists in the RSA, particularly in Johannesburg, Soweto area?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="63">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="64">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Further on, particulars on planned attacks or infiltration of MK insurgents from Swaziland, armed caches and the like information, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="65">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="66">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Further on in paragraph 3, page 9 you say the impression that you gained during the interrogation that she was not co-operative and refused to divulge information?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="67">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="68">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>She was assaulted in order to force her to divulge information which the Security Branch was interested in which you believed that she had?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="69">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="70">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>From your political own motivation, paragraph 10(b) you say your participation is motivated by the fact that you were at that stage a member of the Security Branch at Soweto and that you strongly believed that the armed struggle of the ANC in collaboration with the South African Communist Party, posed a serious revolutionary threat to the previous government and population, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="71">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="72">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>You also followed orders from your superiors, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="73">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="74">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>You also say that you kept quiet after you heard from the late Sergeant Mothiba that this lady was shot and killed by Coetzee and Pretorius as the disclosure or report would have placed your own life in danger?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="75">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="76">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>You worked as a Security Policemen under highly secret conditions?  You have already actually said that, I am just reading this to you out.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="77">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="78">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Such a report would have been regarded as a serious breach of the secrecy, as a result you would have been regarded as a similar threat to the Security Police and be viewed in the same category as the enemy, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="79">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="80">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>You referred previously also as a sell-out, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="81">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="82">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>You received no any other remuneration as a result of your participation here, except that you received your normal salary?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="83">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="84">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, that is the evidence in chief.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="85">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR LAMEY</text>
		</line>
		<line number="86">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Lamey.  Mr Visser, any questions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="87">
			<speaker>CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Chairman.  Mr Veyi, I understand that you are still a member of the South African Police Service, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="88">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="89">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>What is your rank at the moment?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="90">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I am a Sergeant.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="91">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you attend Police College and pass out from the Police College?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="92">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I attended.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="93">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I want to read something to you Mr Veyi, Chairperson, I will refer to Exhibit T, specifically to the newspaper reports, in my order it is the first ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="94">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t know what is wrong with our system.  There seems to be something wrong with the system, we receive constantly other noises on the system.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="95">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I know sometimes if people touch this when it is on, then of course it produces a disturbance, but I don&#039;t know ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="96">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>(Microphone not on)  Yes Chairperson, I am referring to the newspaper reports and unfortunately we did not paginate it, we should do that, Chairperson it is the one with the heading &quot;Burden of Guilt lifted off Mr X&quot;, it is about the sixth page I think, from the front yes.  It is dated February, 15, 1995, I just want to read something to the witness.  Mr Veyi, would you please listen to what I read to you and I will ask you some questions about that.  Under the heading &quot;Time for Truth&quot; it states, this newspaper report states &quot;he knew&quot; and that he refers to Mr X and we have heard that Mr X was you, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="97">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="98">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>&quot;He knew it was time to reveal the truth, the evil deeds of his Intelligence Unit and especially those of his white Commanders had remained hidden for long enough.  Mr X thinks it is time they were brought out into the open, his conscience demanded that he do something about it.&quot;  I skip a sentence and then the next paragraph &quot;besides his getting on years and after almost two decades of serving in the Police Force, he remains a lowly Constable.  His white bosses have climbed the ranks to Colonel and General.&quot;  Now is that information which you gave the reporter?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="99">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>The information I gave was about the shooting of Nokuthula because after it appeared in the Sowetan ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="100">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>... can help you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="101">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>The article that appeared in the Sowetan was this photo.  The heading said &quot;Missing in Action&quot;.  This is what made me to go to the Sowetan and tell them about my story.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="102">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>My question to you is this, did you in fact give the information to the reporter, which I have just read to you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="103">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="104">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE </speaker>
			<text>Can I just get clarity on that Mr Veyi, you are saying that you told the reporter that these evil deeds had to be divulged essentially and that your bosses had moved, climbed the ranks from Colonel to General, while you are still a lowly Constable, that is what Mr Visser read to you in essence, you say you gave that information to the Sowetan?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="105">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I apologise, I didn&#039;t understand the question, I didn&#039;t say anything about the ranks, but what happened is after I saw this heading in the Sowetan, &quot;Missing in Action&quot; and this photo that I have already showed you, I then went to the Sowetan and then I told Sharon Chetty that I know about this story.  She then made a follow up and she wanted to know what happened and then I told her from Carlton Centre, I told her what happened.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="106">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE </speaker>
			<text>Mr Visser&#039;s question is specific, he actually read that passage to you in full and that is what he wants a comment on, not generally what you said to whom, he actually asked you a specific question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="107">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I didn&#039;t say that, I don&#039;t know anything about that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="108">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Are you saying that which I read to you is something which the reporter came up with and it is not based on anything you told her?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="109">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Maybe she just wrote that, but what I told her is about the missing of Nokuthula.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="110">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, and that was after you saw her photograph in the Sowetan, is that right?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="111">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, it was after I saw the photo and then read the story.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="112">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And you indicated, you showed the Committee members the photo that you were referring to, isn&#039;t that right?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="113">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="114">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Is this the one that I am holding in my hand at the moment?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="115">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="116">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Are you sure of that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="117">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I am sure.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="118">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>It is not true and I will tell you why not, because the article that I read to you from, is dated February, the 15th 1995 and the one that you showed the Committee is dated two years later, in May on the 22nd of May 1997.  What you say, can&#039;t be true.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="119">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>The photo appeared in the Sowetan and the story you are referring to, I don&#039;t know anything about that.  I saw this photo and the heading of that story was &quot;Missing in Action&quot;.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="120">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>But would you agree with me that the reader of the portion which I read to you, might come to the conclusion that you resented your white co-Policemen?  Would you agree with that?  There is a resentment towards white Policemen that emanates from what I read to you, do you agree with that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="121">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>It is the first time that I hear that I resented them, I don&#039;t agree with that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="122">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>You don&#039;t agree with that, all right, now you told this Committee that Mkhonza came back from Swaziland and you said &quot;we had a meeting&quot;.  Do you remember saying that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="123">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I said there was a meeting.  I know about the meeting but I don&#039;t remember whether I was present at that meeting.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="124">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Try to listen to the questions and answer them instead of trying to find out where we are going.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="125">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t think that is a reasonable conclusion to make by my learned friend.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="126">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Chairperson, can he just answer the questions.  Where was this meeting held?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="127">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I have already said that I don&#039;t remember about the meeting, but I knew that we were supposed to go to the Carlton Centre.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="128">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Veyi, let&#039;s start again, you said &quot;when Mr Mkhonza came back from Swaziland, we had a meeting&quot;, did you say that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="129">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I said there was a meeting but I don&#039;t remember whether I was present in that meeting, but I knew that there was, people were going to go to Carlton Centre.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="130">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Are you saying you attended a meeting where it was said that people would go to Carlton Centre, is that what you are saying?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="131">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I am saying because this happened at that time, I don&#039;t remember whether I was present in the meeting or not but I knew about what was going to happen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="132">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>How did you know what was going to happen?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="133">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>First of all in the Unit, we were working like this, even if you were not present at the meeting, if there was going to be a meeting, we as members of the Unit, especially black members, if Lazarus attended the meeting, he would then report back to me about the discussion.  Even if I attended the meeting, I would tell him.  That is how we were working.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="134">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Well, all right, we heard that there was a meeting and within an hour or two after that, the arrest was apparently carried out.  Do you know anything about that space of time between the meeting and the arrest?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="135">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I have already said that I knew that a lady from Swaziland was going to be arrested in Carlton Centre.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="136">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I just want to put it to you that I am going to argue that you were present at the meeting which Coetzee and Pretorius and Mong and Williams and Ross testified about and that this was the meeting where you heard what the plan was in regard to the arrest of this lady.  Do you want to make any comment on that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="137">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I have already said that I can&#039;t say I was there or not, but I knew about it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="138">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>You see Mr Veyi, I want to put a few things to you and I want to suggest to you that what has happened here with what was put on your behalf to the witnesses which I have just mentioned, creates the impression that you opposed what they said basically just in principle, and let me tell you what I am talking about.  You see on your behalf it was put by Mr Lamey to those applicants which I have just referred to that you did not attend the meeting where Coetzee informed those present, that the intention was to kidnap Simelane in order to recruit her as an informer.  That was put, now ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="139">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, if I remember correctly it was put specifically about a meeting about a &quot;kop draai aksie&quot;, that he did not attend such a meeting where there was a specific discussion about the purpose of kidnapping for a &quot;kop draai aksie.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="140">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairperson, I put it exactly correctly as I wrote it down, and I don&#039;t withdraw that question.  I will repeat it then.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="141">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>In whose cross-examination was that put Mr Visser?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="142">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>That was put to both Coetzee as well as Pretorius as well as to Mong that when Mong gave evidence Chairperson, I am not quite sure but I think in Mong&#039;s cross-examination it was conceded that he might have been there.   To Coetzee and Pretorius it was specifically denied that he was present at any such meeting.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="143">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, if I may come in here, in Exhibit T there is specific reference, I don&#039;t have it now in front of me Exhibit T, by Coetzee and also repeated by the other members about the meeting of the &quot;kop draai aksie&quot; and it was about the way in which they put it in a &quot;kop draai aksie&quot;, in a meeting where that was specifically spelt out to the members present, but it was put to the witness, as far as I recall that he was not present at a meeting where specifically a &quot;kop draai aksie&quot;, or  - my learned friend put it in the way of recruitment, that is just perhaps another way of saying it, but that was the gist of I think if I remember correctly, what was put.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="144">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Just remind me Mr Lamey, is there a reference in the statements of Coetzee &amp; Others to the effect that, or to the allegation that your client was present at a meeting where a &quot;kop draai&quot; was discussed, I don&#039;t want to search for that here, I am trying to look at Coetzee&#039;s ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="145">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, page 5 of Exhibit T Chairperson, from paragraph 10 onwards.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="146">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>(Microphone not on), paragraph 10 was about a &quot;kop draai&quot;.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="147">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Well, that was the evidence Chairperson, there was only one meeting at which all of this was discussed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="148">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>According to my colleague, drew my attention to paragraph 15 on page 7 of Exhibit T, the last sentence, it says</text>
		</line>
		<line number="149" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... that a kidnapping would take place.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="150">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	And then paragraph 12, yes, this is Muller all right, then paragraph 13 says -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="151" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... Muller decided on the second option &#039;ontvoering en kopdraai&#039; ...&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="152">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	so that seems to be what Exhibit T says.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="153">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>That is what those witnesses stated Chairperson and what was put to them was that Mr Veyi will say that he was not present at that meeting.  That is what I am putting to him now.  The record will speak for itself.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="154">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, may I just come in here, in Exhibit W it could be that this was, I can&#039;t remember exactly to which witness it was put, but in paragraph 5 of Exhibit W Ross states that, paragraph 5 onwards, page 3 of Exhibit W Ross states that he was told beforehand that it was decided by Brigadier Muller to give approval for this turning action and that certain members were informed as such.  Yes, he just  makes mention of certain members ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="155">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>No, no, he mentions them, he lists them Chairperson.  My learned friend can&#039;t just say that he just makes mention of certain members.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="156">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Sorry then, I was looking actually for that whether he was mentioning it specifically, but it could be that it was then specifically put to this witness, but I remember putting it in the context of a meeting where there was mention specifically made of a decision of kidnapping for purposes of the &quot;kop draai aksie&quot;.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="157">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>That is what I was referring to.  I don&#039;t understand the objection Chairperson.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="158">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Perhaps we are speaking then on cross purposes here, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="159">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, the objection seems to be that Mr Lamey is of the view that what he had put to your witnesses, to your clients was that Mr Veyi was not present at a meeting where the &quot;kop draai&quot; of this intended arrestee or abductee was discussed, so it is in that context that he had put that Mr Veyi wasn&#039;t there.  From there I understand, from that submission I understand that he is disputing that he had put on behalf of Mr Veyi that he was not present at a meeting in the sense that you have referred to in your cross-examination, a meeting where there was discussion about arresting and so on.  This witness&#039; position seems to be that he could have been there, I can&#039;t remember but he could have been there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="160">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Chairperson, I don&#039;t want to make this more involved than what it is, because really it is quite simple.  The applicants whom you have heard up to now, have given you evidence about a meeting that was held where it was discussed that this person had come into the Republic, that she was going to meet Mkhonza, that she was an MK agent, that she was going to be grabbed and the purpose would be that she would be recruited to become an informer.  Mr Lamey quite explicitly put that Mr Veyi wasn&#039;t present at that meeting and the only point that I am making now, is only when Mr Mong gave evidence did Mr Veyi concede that he might have been present at that meeting.  That is as simple as that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="161">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, but except that on what Mr Lamey says, there seems to have been a lack of common ground as to what was discussed at this particular meeting.  Mr Lamey says that what he had put to your clients was focused on the question of whether a &quot;kop draai&quot; was discussed beforehand or not.  He says his client wasn&#039;t present at a meeting where that was discussed.  His client seems to say that he knew about the arrest, he could possibly have been present at a meeting where that was discussed, he can&#039;t remember and he can&#039;t dispute it, so it seems to be that that is where you part company, you and Mr Lamey.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="162">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I will put the question on this basis if I may then Chairperson, I put to you Mr Veyi, that on your behalf if was put that you did not attend any meeting at which the kidnapping of Simelane was discussed.  I put to you that the evidence of Mr Mong, it was conceded on your behalf that you might have been present, but you had forgotten about it.  In fact it was in your own evidence yesterday, you said that you might have been present, but you might had forgotten about that, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="163">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>What I am saying is, it might be possible that I was there or not, but I knew that people would go to Carlton Centre.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="164">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I am sorry, I didn&#039;t have my, I am sorry, could you just repeat for my benefit the answer, please.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="165">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>What I am saying is, it is possible that I was present or not, but I knew that people would go to Carlton Centre and arrest a lady from Swaziland.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="166">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>All right.  Let&#039;s go on to the next thing.  Do you agree that it was put on your behalf that your Unit, the Intelligence Unit, in 1983 had safe houses available which they used?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="167">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="168">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did I understand you correctly when you gave evidence yesterday to say that they came later than 1982?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="169">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="170">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I see.  Let&#039;s go on to the next point.  You, it was put on your behalf, consistently, that you never knew that Simelane was being recruited while she was in your detention, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="171">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>There is a question that I didn&#039;t answer, I thought that we were still continuing about the safe houses.  Yesterday I said there were safe houses before 1983, at the time when Simelane was kidnapped, there were safe houses and I quoted about Peter Lengene.  After Peter Lengene was kidnapped in Botswana, he was taken to Klipspruit.  We then sometimes would be in Rustenburg.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="172">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I am sorry, you know Mr Veyi, if you want to discuss that, we can do so, I have already stepped off that point, but let&#039;s discuss that.  Were you involved in the kidnapping of Mr Lengene?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="173">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, I was not involved.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="174">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, so how do you know anything about it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="175">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>But I was working in that Unit.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="176">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>How do you know where he was kept and where he was questioned?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="177">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I was working with that Unit even though I didn&#039;t go when they went to kidnap him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="178">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>So are you saying that you told the Committee something which you heard from someone else, is that what you are saying?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="179">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="180">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>... while he was being assaulted?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="181">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct, he was assaulted and that didn&#039;t take a long time like in Nokuthula&#039;s case.  It only took a short period and then after that he agreed to cooperate with us until he became a full member of the South African Police Force.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="182">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And exactly where was he assaulted where you were present?  In which place were you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="183">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>In Klipspruit, as I have already said we had three safe houses and then we abandoned the two, we used one.  It is where we were interrogating people in Klipspruit West.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="184">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="185">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I would like to tell this Committee that the way that the Internal Intelligence of the SA Police was working, you wouldn&#039;t understand how it was working.  The story that you are reading to me, sometimes what you are reading, might not be what happened.  I think that the people who are mentioned, you are saying that they kidnapped Peter, I would like to ask whether you have referred to David Djane and George Putukezi.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="186">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Are you saying that Mr Lengene is not telling the truth in his affidavit, in his application for amnesty, is that what you are saying?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="187">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I would like to know whether George and David Djane are written in that list of names that kidnapped him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="188">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Can you just answer my question please, are you saying that Mr Lengene is not telling the truth in what I have just put to you, he says?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="189">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Before answering that question, I would like to ask about David Djane and George, whether their names are in that list?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="190">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>No, their names are not.  Yes Mr Visser, I don&#039;t know where it is going to take us.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="191">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I am not going to waste time, I am merely recording that the witness is either unable or unwilling to answer the question.  May I refer you to page 400 Chairperson, paragraph 36, just to - I wasn&#039;t even going to cross-examine him on this, but he brought it on.  The last, second last sentence, he says - actually he refers to him being taken to Benoni after having been taken to Johannesburg and Protea Police station and Benoni, I don&#039;t want to go into detail, but he says he was then guarded by three people who were changing days, they were Sergeant Mothiba, Lazarus Selamolela and Manuel Oliphant.  I just want to point out that this witness&#039; name doesn&#039;t feature anywhere.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="192">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, may I just come in here, I think in all fairness, the witness should be asked - I don&#039;t want to be prescriptive to Mr Visser, but I think the question should be asked first whether he had an opportunity to read the statement in total of Mr Lengene, in order to enable him to reply to the question whether he - the general question -whether what Mr Lengene is telling, is not the truth.  It is a very general question and there is a whole lot of detailed facts, as Mr Visser has put it,  in very detailed information.  I mean it is such a general question and perhaps the witness should be asked whether he had an opportunity to read this, in order to comment where he agrees and where he does not agree, as it pleases you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="193">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I think Mr Visser has indicated he has stepped off this.  It is up to you if you want to deal with it in re-examination.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="194">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="195">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Let&#039;s come back to the question where we were, I put it to you that it was put on your behalf to the previous witnesses that you never knew that Simelane was being recruited &quot;kop gedraai&quot;, if you want to use the word, as an informer of the Police.  Do you agree with that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="196">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>What I am saying is that I knew that people were going to go to Carlton Centre and arrest Nokuthula.  What I was expecting to happen after her arrest, I expected her to be detained.  The fact about &quot;kop draai&quot; and all that, I didn&#039;t know about that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="197">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>You never knew about that until the last time you saw her, is that what you are saying?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="198">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>This happened when we were in Northum, that is where she was recruited.  We were also present, but when initially she was going to be kidnapped in Carlton Centre, the idea was to arrest her.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="199">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I am not talking about the Carlton Centre, I am talking about the farm, it was put on your behalf that you never realised that she was being recruited.  Do you agree with that, on the farm?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="200">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>When we were with her at the farm, when she was interviewed, we would tell her about the advantages when she would agree being a Police, that was the way we were using to recruit her, that happened at the farm.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="201">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I just want to put it to you your evidence is crystal clear that you knew very well that she was being recruited, even though there was an attempt made to hide that fact from the black members, you knew very well and that is very clear from your own evidence, because you told this Committee yesterday she was told &quot;we will do this and that for you&quot;, those were your words and you said &quot;I got the impression that we were trying to recruit her, but she would not cooperate&quot; and statements such as that, but let&#039;s step off that.  The fourth issue which I want to raise with you is it was specifically denied on your behalf that any toiletries were provided for Simelane from the beginning on the farm.  Do you agree with that statement?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="202">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t remember seeing toiletries.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="203">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yesterday you conceded that it may have happened.  Do you agree with that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="204">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t remember yesterday toiletries being referred to.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="205">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>All right.  You, it was denied on your behalf that Coetzee is truthful when he says that his modus operandi when he turns a person to an informer, was to use the method of assaulting, that person.  That was for some reason or other, denied by you, do you remember that?  It was put on your behalf?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="206">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Coetzee would assault a person if he was trying to recruit that person, that was the way he used.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="207">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, well that is exactly the point, because that was his evidence, and that was denied through Mr Lamey when Mr Coetzee was cross-examined?  Do you have any explanation for all of this?  All right, you see, I am going to argue that you placed these matters in dispute because you have a resentment against the white Officers that gave evidence here, and it was for the mere sake of denying whatever they were asserting, that is what I am going to argue, if you want to make any comment on that, please do.  If you don&#039;t, then perhaps we can go onto the next one.  You said something strange yesterday ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="208">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>It is the first time that I hear that I resented them.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="209">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>All right, you said something strange yesterday, you were asked about what you knew about Simelane and you said and I wrote it down &quot;she could possibly be an MK member&quot;, did I hear you correctly or is that not what you intended to say?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="210">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Can you please repeat your question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="211">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>You said &quot;she could possibly be an MK member&quot;, that is what you heard about Simelane, perhaps if one of the members would check my note, but I wrote it down exactly like that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="212">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE </speaker>
			<text>What were they discussing?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="213">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>The evidence, it was right in the beginning, Mkhonza came back from Swaziland and he told them about somebody that was coming in and then he said &quot;she could possibly be an MK member&quot; and because we haven&#039;t got a record, I want to be quite careful with my notes, they are notoriously bad.  I am sorry for asking you to check for me, but that is what I wrote down.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="214">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>In his evidence in chief?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="215">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>His evidence in chief, it was right at the beginning.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="216">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, he said that he understood that this lady would be arrested, trapped and arrested because she might be a member of MK.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="217">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Words to that effect yes, she might be, yes.  That is the only point I want to raise with the witness now.  Mr Veyi, could there have been any doubt in your mind at the time, that she was in fact an MK member?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="218">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Because Scotch, Mr Mkhonza, in Swaziland, his contacts were MK members, so I took it for granted that this person who was coming this side, was also a member of MK.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="219">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Just press your button, can you just keep your hands away from that then please, thank you.  In other words you did not intend to convey to the Committee yesterday that you were uncertain about the fact that she was an MK member?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="220">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>At the time when she was coming to this country, I was not certain, but the way Mr Mkhonza was operating, I knew that he was operating with MK members, so I just assumed that she was also a member of MK.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="221">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>You know Mr Veyi, let me just tell you what you say in your own application, Exhibit S page 3, paragraph 3, you say</text>
		</line>
		<line number="222" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... Scotch reported to his handler, Warrant Officer Coetzee, that there was an MK woman on her way from Swaziland to Johannesburg ...&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="223">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	is that right or is that wrong?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="224">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>As I have said, Scotch was dealing with MK in Swaziland, so it was possible that this one was also a member of MK, that was what I was trying to say.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="225">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Look at page 8, paragraph 2</text>
		</line>
		<line number="226" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... this particular lady was a member of MK ...&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="227">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Why suddenly the doubt in your mind?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="228">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE </speaker>
			<text>Page what was the last reference?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="229">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I am sorry, page 8, paragraph 2 the first sentence.  In any event, perhaps if we can try to cut this short, are you conceding today she was an MK member or are you saying you are still doubtful?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="230">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I would like to look at my statement first that I made.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="231">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Are you saying you cannot say today in your own mind as you sit there, whether Simelane was an MK member or not, is that what you are saying, without looking at your statement?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="232">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>At the time when I was making the statement, I knew that she was a member of MK, but when she was arrested, I didn&#039;t know.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="233">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE </speaker>
			<text>And today, the question is today, what do you think today?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="234">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>She was a member of MK.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="235">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>On what information do you base that?  Why do you say that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="236">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>When we were in Northum, when she was tortured, interviewed and all these things, it is where we got the information that she was trained and she was an MK member.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="237">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Is that what she told you under torture?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="238">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="239">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Have you confirmed that independently?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="240">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>According to the reports that Coetzee found and the contacts in Swaziland, confirmed that she was a member.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="241">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>So Coetzee confirmed this you say, independently from what she was saying under torture?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="242">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="243">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Visser?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="244">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Chairman.  You went to visit Simelane&#039;s parents not too long ago, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="245">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="246">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you find out whether they did anything in the struggle?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="247">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I was not interested of what they did in the struggle, I was concerned only about the child that was missing, the child that I knew about.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="248">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>You say that Simelane was kept at the Norwood flats for approximately a week, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="249">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="250">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Are you quite sure of that, you are absolutely certain that it was a week, not one or two days?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="251">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I can say it is a week because after she was taken to Norwood, I went there and I stayed something like three days guarding her and then I went back.  I didn&#039;t know when she had arrived.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="252">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I am sorry, I am not sure that you understood my question.  My question to you is, how long was Simelane kept at the flats at Norwood?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="253">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I think it was about a week.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="254">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>When you made your statement, Exhibit S, did you - I am sorry - when was Exhibit S dated?  I don&#039;t have a date on mine, the 7th of May 1999?  When you made your statement on the 7th of May 1999, which was just the other day, did you say at page 4, in paragraph 5, with reference to the words</text>
		</line>
		<line number="255" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;...the day after her arrest, I was also posted to go to the farm to guard her&quot;?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="256">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	You made a footnote and in the footnote you say - </text>
		</line>
		<line number="257" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... the preceding two sentences appear in my initial statement which I made.  After I had made the statement I remembered the lady was not taken immediately the day after her arrest, to the farm at Northum.  She was first detained at Norwood Police quarters in Johannesburg for approximately a week where I also had to guard her with other members.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="258">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	What this means in brief is in your original amnesty application you said she was taken to Northum the day after her arrest, do you agree with that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="259">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I agree with that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="260">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And this year, in May 1999, you changed that to a week, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="261">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>There is nothing that I changed, I only added to what my initial statement was.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="262">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Well, all right.  Did you read Mr Selamolela&#039;s application at the time when you made your, when you completed your application, the first one?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="263">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t remember reading it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="264">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you read it after you completed your original application form?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="265">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, I don&#039;t remember.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="266">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Well, I want to suggest to you - well, did you speak to Mr Selamolela about the time that this lady was kept at Norwood?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="267">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>What I did when I was with Mr Lamey, he told me that Selamolela was also present, after taking my statement he would take Mr Selamolela&#039;s statement.  Selamolela then came and I greeted him and we haven&#039;t been seeing each other for more than five years.  We didn&#039;t discuss about Simelane&#039;s case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="268">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you listen while Mr Selamolela was telling Mr Lamey what he remembered about this incident?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="269">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I was present, I was there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="270">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, and you heard him say that Simelane was kept at Norwood for approximately a week, page 567 Chairperson, Bundle 3.  Bundle 3, 567.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="271">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Mr Lamey only wanted to know whether I know the story of Simelane and Selamolela, whether I was present in this case and I then agreed that I was present during the Nokuthula incident.  Then I don&#039;t remember anything else.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="272">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>You are avoiding the question, did you hear Mr Selamolela tell Mr Lamey that this lady was kept at Norwood for approximately a week, it is a simple question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="273">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, I didn&#039;t hear him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="274">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Well, I suggest to you that that is exactly where you heard about the week and that is the reason why you changed your original statement from the - more or less the correct situation of one day, it was in fact two days, but one day after her arrest, to a week after her arrest.  That is the reason why you changed it.  I put it to you, what do you say to that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="275">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>What I am saying is, I didn&#039;t change, I just added to what I have forgotten after I consulted with Mr Lamey.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="276">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you tell this Committee yesterday that you visited Simelane twice during the time that she was at Norwood, did I hear you correctly?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="277">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="278">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And on each occasion for how long did you spend time in her presence?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="279">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>When she was in Northum ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="280">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I am talking about Norwood, at the flats, I am not talking about the farm.  I am not talking about the farm, at the flats in Norwood, in Custodum Flats, at the office.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="281">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>In Norwood I went there twice if I still remember well.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="282">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, all right, the next question is, on each occasion, how long time did you spend with her?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="283">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I would sleep there, spend the night there or spend two days there and then you would go back.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="284">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>All right, so while she was at the flats in Norwood, you spent two nights there with her, guarding her I take it and you say that you also spent two days with her, is that what you are saying?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="285">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Please repeat your question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="286">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Perhaps you must tell us, how long on each occasion did you spend with Simelane while she was at the flats at Norwood.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="287">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I went there twice, I would go this day.  In a week I would go twice.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="288">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE </speaker>
			<text>Now come back to the first time you went to see Simelane at Norwood, how long did you spend with her that first time, then you went away.  Then tell us about the second time, how long did you spend with her that second time, that is the gist of the question.  Break it down for us, thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="289">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I can say that when I first saw her, I stayed for two days and then I went again after two days, for another two days.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="290">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE </speaker>
			<text>And on these two days each time, you would spend one night or two nights at the flats, just break it down for us again.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="291">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>If I would go to Norwood, I would arrive maybe today, let&#039;s say on Monday and I would spend the night, Monday night and I would spend Tuesday night and then I would go back, and maybe a day would pass, after a day I would then go back, spend two days and then I would go back again.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="292">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>During the time that you spent with Simelane at the flats at Norwood, were you alone with her or was there another black Policeman with you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="293">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I was not alone, in most cases I was with Selamolela.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="294">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Well, we only know of two cases, was Selamolela with you on both those occasions that you have told us about?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="295">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t remember whether the first day I went, I went with Selamolela the first day or the second day, I don&#039;t remember, I can&#039;t remember that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="296">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>All right, are you saying you were not with him there on both occasions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="297">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I would not dispute the fact that I went with him the first time or the first day or second day, but I was there with him sometime.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="298">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Are you saying you were not with him on both occasions, please it is a simple question?  Is there a problem with the microphones again?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="299">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>The first, firstly I used to work with Selamolela and with Sefuti sometimes, I don&#039;t know whether the first time I went with Selamolela or Sefuti and I don&#039;t know the second occasion whether I went with either of them, which one of them I went with.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="300">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>All right.  Let&#039;s come to the assaults of Ms Simelane.  Why do you say at Norwood, I am just talking about Norwood at the flats, why do you say was she assaulted?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="301">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>She was assaulted because we wanted her to reveal about her activities and the contacts in South Africa and her mission in South Africa and the targets that were attacked during her presence in South Africa and the countries where she was trained and the people that she was trained with.  That was the information that was needed from her.  The reason that made her to be assaulted was because she was not willing to talk.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="302">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Right.  Coetzee and Pretorius said and Mong stated that they assaulted her by slapping her with the open hands, hitting her with the fists at Norwood in her back and in her ribs apparently, do you agree with that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="303">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Coetzee and Mong and Pretorius are not telling the truth, are not relating properly as to what happened.  Some of the things did happen, but some of the things that they are saying are not true.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="304">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>What is not true about them saying that they slapped her and hit her with a fist on the body?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="305">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>First of all, if an MK member was caught or captured, an MK member used to be regarded as a most dangerous person, more than a criminal.  The treatment would not be assaulted with open hand, the others would kick him, the others would strangle him or her, the others would even walk over his body or try to trample her body, something like that.  The treatment was not soft at all.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="306">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Okay, let&#039;s take that in turn.  Did either Coetzee, Pretorius or Mong kick Simelane?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="307">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>They were kicking her, they were doing anything that you do to a person if she is captured, she was pulled roughly and hit against the wall and she would scream, that is why when she was in Norwood, she was later taken to Northum.  It is because people were suspecting that something was going on at the penthouse.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="308">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Veyi, did Mr Coetzee kick Simelane?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="309">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>The way he was kicking her, he even told her or he would tell her that he himself was more dangerous than ANC, and if she was not willing to talk, he would kill her.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="310">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I am sorry.  Did Mr Coetzee kick Simelane?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="311">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, he was kicking her and doing everything and smacking her face and he would do anything.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="312">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.  Mr Veyi, do you have a problem with the Translator?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="313">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, I don&#039;t have a problem at all.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="314">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did Mr Pretorius kick Simelane, at Norwood at the flats?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="315">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>The two of them were doing that and even though we were there ourselves, we wouldn&#039;t stand up and fold our arms, we would try and do something, though we knew very well deep down from our hearts, that what was happening was not acceptable.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="316">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t know what that means really.  The question was whether Pretorius kicked Simelane, that was the question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="317">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>They were having turns, if Pretorius was hitting her and the others would be standing there and push her to the other side and the other person would take a turn also.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="318">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Veyi, I think we must sort out the problem that we have, I asked you whether Pretorius kicked Simelane and you talk about others standing around and pushing and - don&#039;t you understand ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="319">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE </speaker>
			<text>I was going to say it is a language issue.  It is expression because what they were doing, he also is agreeing with you as I understand Zulu, Xhosa, they were in fact doing exactly that, but they were actually exchanging, he is adding to what you are saying, so he is agreeing and adds, he agrees and adds.  Maybe you need to agree one way or the other that he is either going to be more specific and not expansive in language or something, but that is what I think the problem is Mr Visser.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="320">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Here I was thinking that he has a disagreeable way of agreeing with me.  All right, Mr Veyi, I just want to put to you that - let me ask you this, did Mr Mong kick Simelane at Norwood at the flats?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="321">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I cannot say, as I was saying the other members were also participating whenever she was beaten up.  Maybe if she happened to run towards your direction, you would try and push her and say go away and the room was so small.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="322">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Can you perhaps try and take it step by step?  I suppose Mr Visser would come to the slapping and the pushing, but at first can we only deal with kicking?  Who did the kicking?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="323">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t know how to explain this.  I think Mr Visser does not understand the way that the Police were working.   If the suspect is captured by five Policemen and the suspect is there in front of the Police, there would be no time to check or monitor who is doing what.  All the people who are there in front of the suspect, if perhaps I smack her across the face, the other one is kicking and the other one is punching her, such things used to happen.  That was happening, that is what was happening there, I can not say that so and so did this and that, but it is something that would happen there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="324">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Would you just all attack this lady?  You would smack, you would kick, you would push, you would strangle, you would step on her body, all those things that you described to us that would happen to people in your care at that time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="325">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="326">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>So it wasn&#039;t a nice thing where you</text>
		</line>
		<line number="327">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>would not all kick for five minutes and then you would slap for five minutes and then you would strangle for five minutes?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="328">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, that was not the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="329">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Was that what happened there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="330">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="331">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes Mr Visser?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="332">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Are you saying that for the time that you were in the presence of Simelane, four or five people assaulted her continuously together, is that what you are saying?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="333">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is what I am trying to explain.  This is exactly why I say the way she was assaulted, she didn&#039;t look the same, her appearance changed.  Her physical condition had changed completely.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="334">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I just want to put it to you that it is most unlikely that that could have happened.   I put it to you that what you are telling this Committee about strangulations, about trampling on her body, was never put to Coetzee or Pretorius or Mong in regard to Norwood, nor was it ever put to them that any of them ever kicked Simelane and that means only one thing and that is that you never told Mr Lamey that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="335">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>I think it was conceded by the clients of Mr Visser that they each participated in one way or the other in the assault by hitting with fists, slapping and also possibly kicking, they also conceded in their own evidence.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="336">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>That is just not so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="337">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>I have a note in which Mr Coetzee conceded that it is possible that he might well have kicked the deceased, Simelane, it happened I think on the morning, the second morning whilst he was being asked questions by members of the panel.  I have a note specifically to that effect.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="338">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, well I think the record will eventually bear out what was the position.  Mr Visser, you had put your recollection to him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="339">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Chairperson, then obviously I can&#039;t take it any further.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="340">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="341">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>The record will speak for itself.  I also want to put it to you that you never, it was never put to Pretorius that he would push  Simelane against another person who would slap her, that made her fall to the ground.  That is evidence which we only heard for the first time when you gave evidence.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="342">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>It is, you are supposed to hear that for the first time from me, because I mentioned it for the first time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="343">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, but you were supposed to make a full disclosure in your application, you know, Mr Veyi.  All right.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="344">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Even if you are in court, if you give evidence in court, you do make your statement, but when you are in the dock or if you are in the podium there, you start revealing, you get into details and the things, some of the things that you mention in court, are the things that you did not write down.  That is what I am saying that even if I did not write some other things in my statement, right now I am having an opportunity to spell it out in details.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="345">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Fair enough.   Fair enough, this is after all your application, I accept that.  Let&#039;s talk about your participation in the assaults.  Did you slap Simelane, listen carefully, did you slap Simelane with the open hand at Norwood?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="346">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I said as you are working together, all of us, I was not supposed to stand there and fold my arms if the other people are busy, because if I would do that, I was going to be perceived the other way.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="347">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>About not just saying &quot;yes I slapped her&quot;, if that is your evidence, or no, I didn&#039;t slap her.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="348">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>I think Mr Chairman ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="349">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Is it a language problem again?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="350">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Visser, it might very well just be a cultural issue here.   Let&#039;s try, Mr Lamey?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="351">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t want to be at all - interrupt my learned friend&#039;s cross-examination, but I get the impression that he answers it by implication, what he is saying, it is a way of expression.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="352">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Well, that seems to be the position Mr Lamey.  Counsel is trying to find out exactly what you did, if you can tell us, if you can remember exactly what you did to Ms Simelane, exactly what you did, if you can help us.  The first question was did you slap her with an open hand, can you remember whether you slapped her?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="353">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I did.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="354">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>You slapped her.  Mr Visser, what is the next...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="355">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I must come for lessons from you Mr Chairman.  Did you slap her in her face?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="356">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="357">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Was it a hard slap?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="358">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="359">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you slap her more than once?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="360">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct, I was participating, I was smacking her as she was being assaulted.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="361">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, all right.  Did you slap her many times, let me ask you that, did you slap her in the face many times?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="362">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I did, but when we realised that she was</text>
		</line>
		<line number="363">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>changing, her physical condition was changing, we withdrew, we did not participate.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="364">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>That is my next question, because of inter alia your slapping of her, did her face swell up and did she change her appearance?  Is that what happened?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="365">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>As she was still in Norwood, she was better there, the condition deteriorated when she was in Northum.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="366">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you hit Simelane with your fist?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="367">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I cannot remember, I can only remember me slapping her.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="368">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you kick Simelane at Norwood at the flats?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="369">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I did kick her, but I was not kicking her because I wanted to kick her.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="370">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Where did you kick her on her body?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="371">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Just on her body.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="372">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Where on her body?  On her head, on her foot, on her stomach, where?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="373">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t know how to explain that, according to us the body is from the waist up to the shoulders.  We don&#039;t regard the head as the body and even the foot, we refer to them as feet.  I was kicking her on her body.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="374">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>That means then from the waist to below the head, that is where you were kicking her, is that what you are saying?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="375">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.  It is not because I am the one who was kicking her, but because people were kicking her, I was not alone in kicking her, this was happening in Coetzee&#039;s presence only.  During their absence, that is Coetzee and the others, nothing would happen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="376">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Now you said yesterday, you kept on referring to &quot;we assaulted her&quot;, now what I want to ask you is this, did you participate in assaults on Ms Simelane on both the occasions when you say you spent time in her presence, on both those occasions at Norwood, I am just talking about Norwood?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="377">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>When she was assaulted at Norwood during my presence, I would participate during those two times.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="378">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>So, at least on one occasions Mr Selamolela was present while she was being assaulted by you at Norwood?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="379">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>As I have already said all the members including the black members, they would do what the others were doing, they were participating though we knew very well that what was happening was not acceptable, but we were forced by the situation prevailing at the time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="380">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you see Mr Selamolela assault Simelane?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="381">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I am going to repeat this, I explained this, if a person is a captive and the people who are present there, they are hitting him or her, you don&#039;t watch what the others are doing, as she was there, everyone was taking part in assaulting her.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="382">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I take that to be a &quot;yes&quot; to my question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="383">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>I take that not necessarily as a &quot;yes&quot;.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="384">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>He is saying everyone was taking part, he didn&#039;t say everyone was kicking, it was about an assault.  Could you then perhaps tell us whether Mr Selamolela, whether he in fact kicked or slapped or pushed her, what did he do?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="385">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>He was also assisting in assaulting her, but I cannot remember exactly what he did, because assaulting refers to various things or methods.  If you are kicking or punching or slapping a person, that is assault.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="386">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Do you know what he says, in Bundle 3 page 567, let me tell you, he says, he refers to the Norwood flats as the married quarters and he says &quot;whilst in my presence at the married quarters, nobody assaulted her.&quot;  What do you think of that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="387">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I am saying she was assaulted.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="388">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And in fact you say he also helped assaulting her?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="389">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is what I am saying.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="390">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>All right, I am going to go over to the farm now Chairperson, might this be a convenient time to take the adjournment?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="391">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, we will adjourn for 15 minutes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="392">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>COMMITTEE ADJOURNS</text>
		</line>
		<line number="393">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>ON RESUMPTION</text>
		</line>
		<line number="394">
			<speaker>NIMROD VEYI</speaker>
			<text>(s.u.o)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="395">
			<speaker>CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>(cont)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="396">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Thank you Mr Chairman.  Mr Veyi, can we come to what transpired on the farm in Northum and may I say that all the questions that I am going to ask you now, will only relate to what happened on the farm, do you understand that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="397">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I do understand.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="398">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>To cut a long story short, were the assaults on Simelane on the farm the same as those at Norwood perpetrated by the same people that you testified to this morning?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="399">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="400">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Except that on the farm, if I may remind you, there was evidence that a sack was also used to draw over Simelane&#039;s head to prevent her from breathing, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="401">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct and when she was being put into the dam.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="402">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>All right, let&#039;s talk about the dam.  What do you make of this, or what do you want us to understand about the putting into the dam of Simelane, what are you saying to us?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="403">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>As she was being put into the dam, she would be assaulted and later be put into the dam, I think that was part of the torture.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="404">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>That is not the impression that one gets when one looks at Bundle 3, page 567 of the evidence of Mr Selamolela, page 567.  In paragraph 7 he says in the third sentence, &quot;at night this same lady was taken to the zinc dam where Radebe threw her in, but hold her so that she could not drown.&quot;  If I may stop there, do you agree with that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="405">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.  When she was put into the dam, she would be put in there and be taken out, that was the procedure.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="406">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Right.  And it was only done by Radebe?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="407">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that was Radebe.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="408">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE </speaker>
			<text>No the question was only done by Radebe?  Only?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="409">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, it was himself and the others, Coetzee were present and that was an instruction from Coetzee.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="410">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Well that was never put to Coetzee, I put it to you that he instructed Simelane to be put in the dam.  That is a question for argument.  I just want to continue reading to you - no, let me just make absolutely certain, you now say that putting her in the dam was part of her torture, is that what you are saying?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="411">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="412">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And that was in order to obtain information from her?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="413">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="414">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>The next sentence of Mr Selamolela says this</text>
		</line>
		<line number="415" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... she was thrown into the dam after interrogation bouts ...&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="416">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	and that seems to suggest that it was not part of her interrogation, but it came after that.  Do you agree with my interpretation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="417">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Perhaps that was not his perception, but I maintain that it was part of interrogation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="418">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>You disagree with him, all right.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="419">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>You in fact say you think it was part of the torture?  That is what you said?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="420">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="421">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>As he refers to interrogation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="422">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I am saying it was torture.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="423">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Okay.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="424">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>But you also say it was part of the interrogation, to elicit information, Mr Veyi, you just said so just now.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="425">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I said she would be interrogated and be tortured at the same time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="426">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And putting her into the dam was part of her interrogation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="427">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Maybe I made a mistake there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="428">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>What is the mistake you made?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="429">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I am saying torture and interrogation were all happening all at once and by her being put into the dam, it was part of torture while she was being interrogated.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="430">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, that is what I understood you to say.  When - first of all, I am not certain how long you visited the farm, can you remember today on how many occasions did you go to the farm, two or three or four or six, can you perhaps remember?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="431">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I think I would go there twice a week, twice or thrice a week, up to four weeks.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="432">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Okay.  So you would have gone then roughly eight times to the farm?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="433">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that could be the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="434">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And on those occasions, how long would you stay on the farm?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="435">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>If I go there let&#039;s say the distance between Johannesburg and Northum, it is about plus minus 300 kilometres, if I plan to go there, I know that I will be there for two days and after two days, I would come back again.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="436">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, but would it be two days and two nights or just two days and one night or what was your shift?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="437">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I am going to calculate it like this, say for instance if I am there on a Friday, I would spend a night there, Friday and Saturday night and Sunday evening or during the day, I would go back to my place.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="438">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>So you would spend two nights there on each occasion?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="439">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="440">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you always go to the farm in the company of another black Policeman?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="441">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, we were changing shifts.  When I arrived there with someone else, we would find the others there and we would release them, they would go back and we would stay over.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="442">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t think you understood, would you always go to the farm in the company of another black Policeman?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="443">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="444">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And who would that have been?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="445">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>A person who used to be in my company was Selamolela or Sefuti.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="446">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>All right.  I am sorry to ask you this but it is important, did you go there half the time with Selamolela and half the time with Sefuti or did you go to the farm with Sefuti more often than with Selamolela or the other way around?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="447">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I cannot be certain about that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="448">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Were you used on the farm sometimes as an Interpreter?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="449">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="450">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And I want to ask you just to explain again about this question of sleep.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="451">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>What language was Simelane actually speaking?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="452">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>She was speaking in Zulu.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="453">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I understood your evidence yesterday and stop me if I am wrong, that Coetzee would arrive during the day and he would start interrogating Simelane until late at night, ten o&#039;clock at night?  Is that what you said?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="454">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="455">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And I understood you to say that if she became tired or sleepy, he would let her go to sleep?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="456">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>When she was getting sleepy, she would look tired, he would let her relax for something like an hour or 30 minutes and then he would later start questioning her thereafter.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="457">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>That is what I understood you to say, all right.  So in other words, your evidence is when she got tired, she was allowed to sleep for a while, if I may sum it up.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="458">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>As I am saying her sleeping time was limited, she wouldn&#039;t sleep normally, her sleeping time was limited, she wouldn&#039;t sleep perhaps from eight o&#039;clock and wake up the following day, that was not the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="459">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I understand.  Now was it only Coetzee when he was there, that would interrogate her?  Let&#039;s try to role a few questions into one,  when the white Officers came there, did they interrogate her together, whoever was there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="460">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="461">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>They didn&#039;t take turns among themselves to interrogate her through the night for example?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="462">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>If it would be Pretorius and Coetzee, Pretorius would ask questions  and then he would hand over to Coetzee to say something, that is what was happening.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="463">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>While they were both interrogating her?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="464">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>This is what they were doing there, this is what they would go there for.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="465">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Now, in regard to the assaults on the farm, if I may refer to Exhibit S page 5, perhaps in fairness to you, I should read to you what you said so that you can remember, paragraph 6 at page 4, the sentence starting with the following</text>
		</line>
		<line number="466" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... Nokuthula was interrogated by Coetzee, Pretorius, Mong ...&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="467">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	and over the page -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="468" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... she was kept at the place for more than a month, she was both hand- and footcuffed, her sleep was kept to a minimum, she was kicked and slapped.  A bag was pulled over her head ...&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="469">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	and then the footnote says this -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="470" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... at times during her interrogation, I also participated by slapping the lady.  If I remember correctly almost every one at a certain stage participated in one way or the other in the interrogation or assault.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="471">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Would that still be correct, is that still your evidence?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="472">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="473">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Would Selamolela have assaulted her on the farm as far as you can remember?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="474">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>At some stage it says if I remember correctly, it might happen that Selamolela did take part, that is why I have mentioned there that if I remembered very well, because we wouldn&#039;t go there, we wouldn&#039;t be there at the same time, we were changing shifts.  I would be present and he would be absent or things would happen vice versa.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="475">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I am not quite sure, is it your recollection that Selamolela also assaulted Simelane on the farm, yes or no?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="476">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="477">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>There weren&#039;t any luxuries on this farm if I understand it correctly, do you agree?  There was a toilet?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="478">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>It was a back room at the main house.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="479">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you hear the evidence that this room was quite a distance away from the main house?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="480">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I heard that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="481">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Do you agree with that evidence?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="482">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, I disagree with him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="483">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Mong said you couldn&#039;t see the one building when you were standing at the other because of the bush?  Did you hear him say that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="484">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>This incident took place some time ago and Mong was still new there, it might happen that he cannot remember or perhaps he was not there, the distance from the main house to that back room, is from this wall that I am facing to the other wall that is behind me, you could see the main house.  Mong, if my memory serves me well, mentioned something like 100 meters.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="485">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, did you tell your Attorney that Mr Mong is mistaken in that evidence?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="486">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I did not tell him because he did not ask me.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="487">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I see.  Do you agree or disagree that there was a washbasin, a blue washbasin in which water was poured for Simelane to wash with?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="488">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I just heard that for the first time, there was no washing basin there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="489">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>All right.  Did you wash on the farm?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="490">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="491">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>You stayed there for two nights and two days and you didn&#039;t wash, is that what you are saying?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="492">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="493">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Why didn&#039;t you wash on the farm?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="494">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>There were no facilities, there was no water, there was no time to wash.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="495">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>But there was a dam, I thought there was a dam with water in it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="496">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>The water was dirty and we wouldn&#039;t wash ourselves in dirty water or filthy water.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="497">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I see.  What was the purpose do you think, why Simelane was hand- and footcuffed?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="498">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>In those time&#039;s language, Simelane was referred to as a terrorist and a terrorist was a person who was regarded as a dangerous person, that is why she was cuffed because it was possible for her to escape any time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="499">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, of course.  And the whole point about foot or ankle cuffs is that one walks with difficulty when your feet are cuffed, isn&#039;t that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="500">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="501">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you sometimes help her when she had to go to the bush, to the toilet, help her to walk?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="502">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>She, as I have already explained that her physical condition had completely changed, she could barely walk, we were assisting her.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="503">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Are you saying that she was unable to walk properly because she was injured, is that what you are saying?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="504">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="505">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Where was she injured?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="506">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>She would be kicked on her body, I think that was a result, her condition was a result of her assault of her being assaulted.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="507">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I am asking you the question Mr Veyi, can you tell us of any particular injury that caused her to walk with difficulty?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="508">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>He seems to suggest that it was the condition, it was a result of the assaults Mr Visser.  Does it help to take it any further than that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="509">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>As it pleases you Mr Chairman.  So this physical condition that you talk about, would that have been the result of the assault by all the people that you mentioned, on her?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="510">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="511">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Veyi, I want to refer you again to the newspaper reports, this time Mr Chairman, let me count the pages again, we really must paginate these now ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="512">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>If you could just continue, I think the last page is the typed page 15.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="513">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I am referring to the newspaper clippings that were attached to Exhibit T, is that what you are also referring to?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="514">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>(Microphone not on)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="515">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Mine consists of 60, don&#039;t ask me how that happened.  There may have been a page duplicated, but I am suggesting that we should mark them 15(a), etc.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="516">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>16, 17, carry on.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="517">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="518">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Visser, do we have the same sequence of articles?  Won&#039;t you just refer to them as ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="519">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Chairperson, yes, I will do so.  The first one, page 16 will be &quot;Families plead with TRC&quot;, 17 will be &quot;MK Agent&#039;s Death&quot;, 18 will be &quot;Mother&#039;s Agony&quot;, 19 will be &quot;Hope for Daughter Lingers&quot;, 20 will be &quot;NCIS Suspense to Officials&quot;, 21 &quot;MK Heroes Are Forgotten&quot;, 22 &quot;SAP Informers Spied on ANC&quot;, 23 &quot;Burden of Guilt Lifted&quot;, 24 &quot;Cops Trapped and Killed MK Cadre&quot;, 25 &quot;Police Strike Hard at ANC&quot;, 26 is a follow up page on that, I think Chairperson, it just says &quot;motivated and protection&quot;, 27 &quot;18 Trained Terrorists Apprehended&quot;, 28 will be - oh no, that is it, that is it Chairperson.  Thank you I am sorry about that, we should have done that before, it kept on slipping our minds.  Mr Chairman, I just want to refer now to page 24 of Exhibit T, there is a heading in the middle of the page &quot;she was very beautiful&quot; and just to place you in the picture here, Mr Veyi, I want to start reading directly under the heading &quot;Constable X, that is you who prefers not to be named at this stage, said the black members of the Unit, guarded Simelane while the white members tortured her.&quot;  Do you understand what I have just read to you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="520">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="521">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you tell the reporter that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="522">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="523">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Why didn&#039;t you tell her the truth that all of you assaulted her?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="524">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I am saying that today that all of us, we took part in assaulting her.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="525">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>But why didn&#039;t you tell the reporter that, this is a dishonest statement as it stands here, isn&#039;t it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="526">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I said when you are making a statement, you make a statement, but when the time to testify comes, that is where you get into the details of everything.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="527">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And then the next paragraph appears to be a quotation of your own words which you told the reporter, it says</text>
		</line>
		<line number="528" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... she was very beautiful, but by the time they (the white Officers) were finished with her, she could not be recognised ...&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="529">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	he said, did you tell the reporter that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="530">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="531">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>But why did you lie to her?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="532">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I want you to explain where did I lie, how did I lie?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="533">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Because you did not tell her that all of you assaulted her.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="534">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>As I am here in front of this Committee,  that is the reason that made me to be here, is to come here and tell exactly what happened.  This is what I am telling today.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="535">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I just want to put to you what I put to you right in the beginning, it is because you resented your white Officers and you wanted to get back at them, and that is why you told the reporter that, isn&#039;t that so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="536">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Please explain how did I resent them.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="537">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Because you implicated them in this assault which you describe here, without telling her that you were also involved in it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="538">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I am telling about my role, I am saying that I also played a role in that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="539">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I am not talking about now, I am talking about then, what you told her, and this is something that went into the world Mr Veyi, this is a newspaper that is circulated.  It is circulated in the country.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="540">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I think as I am here before this Committee, saying what I am saying now, it can be published, because I know that there are media people around, they can also publish this and tell the people that this is the truth.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="541">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes Mr Veyi, I think you are far cleverer than you pretend, you understand exactly what I am asking you, let&#039;s step off that.  When the white Officers were away, Coetzee, Pretorius and Mong, from the farm, did Coetzee order you to interrogate Simelane?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="542">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, during their absence nothing was going on, except for her paging the album, photo album because she would be given the album and she would be given instructions to identify the people in the photo album and they would tell her that they will be coming back the following day to get the identity of the people who were in the photo album.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="543">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>But you say Coetzee never ordered you to interrogate Simelane to get information from her?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="544">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I said she studied during his absence, we would stay there with her and she would page the album and she would tell us that she doesn&#039;t know anything and when they come, they would tell her that she was lying and they would assault her.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="545">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Veyi, I cannot believe that it is a language problem, that you can&#039;t understand a simple question or that you are quite incapable of giving a simple answer.  Did Coetzee order you to extract information from Simelane while he was away from the farm?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="546">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>What he would tell us during his absence was that he would tell us to talk to her and tell her about the disadvantages and advantages of being a Policeman and let her page the photo album and try to identify the people.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="547">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Forget about what Coetzee told you to do, did you ever interrogate Simelane when the whites were not there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="548">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="549">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you ever assault her while they were away?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="550">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="551">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Now when - you told this Committee that after some time, you decided that what you were doing was wrong and you felt sorry for her, is that right?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="552">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="553">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>When did this happen, in the first week, second week, third week or fourth week or the fifth week while you were on the farm?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="554">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I cannot remember clearly but during the first days, when she came, she started, she was assaulted first at Norwood and she came there after a week or two and her condition had changed.  That is when we got this feeling.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="555">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Somewhere in the middle perhaps, while she was being kept there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="556">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>There were only white Officers who were assaulting her, and we just told ourselves that we are going to back off, we were not prepared to take part in assaulting her.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="557">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>You, please stop me if I am wrong, but didn&#039;t you say in your evidence that it took place in the latter part of her detention at the farm, in the fourth week, thereabouts?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="558">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Maybe I made a mistake, I cannot say I did not say that, or I cannot say I said so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="559">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>That is not the point, the point that I want to ask you is this, after you came to the conclusion that what you were doing, was wrong and you felt sorry for her, and the white Officers left, did you take off her shackles, her cuffs from her arms and from her legs to allow her to move freely because you felt sorry for her?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="560">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>We would take the cuffs off.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="561">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Both the arms and the legs?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="562">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="563">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you ever tell anybody that you did that?  Did you tell your Attorney that you did that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="564">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I did not tell him because he did not ask me.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="565">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>You see, what surprises one with respect to you Mr Veyi, is at page 5 of Exhibit S, you dealt with this whole question of the cuffs and there you never made the qualification.  You were addressing yourself to that and you never made the qualification to say that when the white people were not there, the cuffs were removed.  At page 5 the top of the page, you simply say this</text>
		</line>
		<line number="566" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... she was kept at this place for more than a month, she was both hand- and footcuffed.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="567">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	That is it.  Now I am putting it to you that if it were true that you decided and in fact did remove her cuffs, then it was the easiest thing in the world just to say so.  Don&#039;t you agree?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="568">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I can see that I did not write that, but I am saying it now.  I don&#039;t know where the difference is.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="569">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>You don&#039;t see it, all right.  Were the white people still interrogating Simelane at the last week, during the last week when you were there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="570">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="571">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Now at that stage, according to your evidence, she had now been interrogated for a month, a week in Norwood and three weeks on the farm, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="572">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="573">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And in all this time, she refused to cooperate?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="574">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="575">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>But what could possibly have been the point of continuing to interrogate a person who clearly doesn&#039;t want to cooperate and doing it for a month?  What is the purpose of that, I mean it is rather stupid, isn&#039;t it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="576">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Mr Visser or Mr Venter is going to see this thing with his own eye because he doesn&#039;t understand the way the Police were operating, this was possible that this process could go on for more than a month because they would be hoping that this person might end up co-operating.  That is the motivation behind that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="577">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Give us an example of another person that was interrogated for more than a month, who refused to participate right from the word go?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="578">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>As I am saying Nokuthula&#039;s case was different from the other cases because Joe who was from Angola, who was trained in Angola as an MK member, took two weeks and he co-operated.  Peter Lengene who was from Botswana, he didn&#039;t take much, it was only less than a month and then he co-operated.  During his first week of interrogation, he agreed immediately.  The interrogation discontinued.  With Nokuthula&#039;s case, she was totally refusing, it was something that was unusual to exceed two to three weeks, trying to turn a person without success.  That is the reason why it took more than a month in her case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="579">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>What you have just told us about Peter Lengene, is something that somebody else told you, is that right?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="580">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I did not hear it from somebody else, I know him, I was in the Unit.  When he was kidnapped, I was not present, but as part of my duty was to recruit the people, informers, giving them training, Peter Lengene was one of those people.  I did not hear it from anyone else, I was working in that particular Unit.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="581">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Veyi, we have gone through this before, you were not present, you had nothing to do with the kidnapping and turning of Mr Peter Lengene, I put it to you before?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="582">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I was not present during the kidnapping, but during the process of orientating him, telling him about the advantages and disadvantages of being a Policeman, not disadvantages, this is when he was staying at a safe house that was in Klipspruit and sometimes he would be at Mr Coetzee&#039;s in-laws in Rustenburg, he was staying there in a garage.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="583">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you participate in the attacks on the power stations of either Bryanston or Fairlands or both?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="584">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I was present at Fairlands and Bryanston.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="585">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>What was that about, why did you do that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="586">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>It was part of my duties as a member of the Security Police.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="587">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Selamolela says that it was done to preserve the credibility of SAP agents in Swaziland, page 571 of Bundle 3 Chairperson, paragraph 2.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="588">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I agree with you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="589">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>You don&#039;t have to agree with me, do you agree with him that that was the purpose?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="590">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="591">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>It was a false flag operation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="592">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="593">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Do you know about the fact that a certain MK Mpho, was arrested while Simelane was held on the farm?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="594">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I think  Mpho&#039;s case is different to Simelane&#039;s case.  Mpho&#039;s case is different from Nokuthula&#039;s case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="595">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Why don&#039;t you just answer the question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="596">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Will you please repeat your question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="597">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Please listen to the question then.  Do you know about the fact that Mpho was arrested while Simelane was on the farm?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="598">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>He was not arrested because of Nokuthula.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="599">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE </speaker>
			<text>The question was do you know of his arrest at the time that Nokuthula Simelane was at the farm, at that time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="600">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That was not the time of his arrest when Nokuthula was on the farm.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="601">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you hear that Coetzee and Pretorius and Mong gave that evidence?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="602">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes I heard so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="603">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you tell your Attorney that you disagree with them?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="604">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>He did not ask me about that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="605">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I didn&#039;t ask you whether he asked you, I asked you whether you told him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="606">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I did not tell him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="607">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Do you know about the arrest of some 17 other ANC members later?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="608">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I was surprised to hear about the 17 people who were arrested.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="609">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Do you find it impossible to answer a question?  Did you hear of 17 people who were arrested later?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="610">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Later here at the proceedings or when exactly, can we just get clarity on that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="611">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>They were arrested not at the proceedings Chairperson, my learned friend couldn&#039;t possibly think that I am saying that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="612">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>No, at the moment when he heard it.  At the moment when he heard that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="613">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, will you try to specify Mr Visser.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="614">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Do you know or did you hear that some 17 ANC or MK members were arrested towards the end of 1983 and in 1984?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="615">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>The people who were arrested were arrested in the beginning of 1984 if my memory serves me well, it was from 1984 upwards.  They were not 18.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="616">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>All right.  You see that is the point I tried to make right at the beginning, anything that is put to you on behalf of the white Officers in principle, you will oppose, but let&#039;s go on.  Can you deny that those arrests were made possible from what was either directly or indirectly, learned from Simelane?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="617">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I dispute that.  The people who were arrested were not arrested because of Nokuthula, they were arrested by SWT66, that is Nompumelelo.  They were arrested because of SWT66.  There was Cheche among them,  Justice Ngedi.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="618">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, all right.  Did you concede yesterday, did I hear you correctly to say that Simelane wrote down stuff on paper?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="619">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I said I did not remember her writing down, but she was paging the photo album.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="620">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did you ever see her write anything on paper?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="621">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, I do not remember that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="622">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Can you deny that she wrote things down on paper when she was requested to do so by Coetzee?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="623">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I cannot dispute that, perhaps she did during my absence, but I do not remember seeing her doing that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="624">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Do you recall Pretorius giving evidence that when they left, Coetzee told the black members who stayed behind with her to see to it that she writes down things on paper?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="625">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I remember hearing that from him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="626">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Do you agree that that was correct?  Is that evidence correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="627">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I am saying during my presence, I do not remember that.  Perhaps if he is referring to black members, he is also referring to the other people excluding myself.  I was not the only black member there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="628">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, we all know that.  You stated in Exhibit S page 7, paragraph 9(b) right at the bottom of the page, you say</text>
		</line>
		<line number="629" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... she was seriously assaulted and as a result suffered injuries on her body ...&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="630">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Now, we know what you are talking about when you refer to body, but later on and I am not quite sure where it was, but later on you stated that she was swollen, swollen over her whole body, did I hear you correctly, swollen all over I think you said?  That was yesterday afternoon.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="631">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I said her face was swollen, her body and she couldn&#039;t walk.  I think the reason for that was because she was being kicked, but her face was swollen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="632">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And I think you also added her wrists I think Mr Chairperson, you pointed that out to me when I didn&#039;t hear the answer.  I just wanted to make sure of that.  What would have happened to you Mr Veyi, in 1983 if the ANC had suspected that you were a sell-out?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="633">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>If it happened that the ANC learned that I was a sell-out, the MK and the SAP Intelligence were working almost the same, but what was going to happen, the ANC would try to recruit me and let me go back to them and work there, work for them there and work here in South Africa.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="634">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And are you naive enough to believe what you have just said?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="635">
			<speaker>INTERPRETER</speaker>
			<text>Will the speaker please repeat the question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="636">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Let me rephrase the question.  Were sell-outs not a legitimate target of MK?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="637">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Could we just get clarity, sell-outs as sell-outs from the Security Force&#039;s side, namely people that turned against the Security Force or sell-outs that turned against MK?  From what area are we talking about?  I think that is where the ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="638">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Or was your client a Security Policeman?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="639">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="640">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Your client was a Security Policeman all along?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="641">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I believe so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="642">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Do you mean in that sense Mr Visser, what would happen to a Security Policeman?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="643">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>No, I mean sell-out in the sense that the ANC means it in their target selection.  They talk about sell-outs, government stooges, meaning people whom they suspected of working with the system, with the government.  Obviously Policemen fell under that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="644">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>They were the system, the Police were the system, people who worked with the system.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="645">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>They were the system, yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="646">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>People who worked with the system, as I understood it, were members of the community who were assisting the system.  So what is the ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="647">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Well, I understood this witness to be an undercover agent.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="648">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>No, not him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="649">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="650">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Oh well, all right, well then I can understand my learned friend&#039;s objection, all right, fair enough, I am sorry, then I withdraw that.  I am sorry, then I withdraw that.  Let me ask you this, if the ANC came to know that the Police had arrested Simelane and kept her on a farm for five weeks in seclusion, what do you think would their reaction have been if she were to be released thereafter?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="651">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>First of all Nokuthula Simelane was an MK member.  Coetzee wouldn&#039;t take that risk of taking Nokuthula back to Swaziland knowing very well that he had kept her for that time.  The ANC would know obviously that that person was sent, was on a mission.  That was not possible.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="652">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Why wouldn&#039;t Coetzee take her back to Swaziland after five weeks, what would happen to Simelane do you think?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="653">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>He wouldn&#039;t do that, first of all I do not remember since I started working for the Security Branch, I do not remember an MK member after being turned to work for the Police, and be taken back again.  What used to happen was if the person works for the Police and if Coetzee does not want that person to work with him in the Unit, he would be taken, he or she would be taken to Pretoria, not for that person to be taken back again.  That never happened, more especially with an MK member.  If she did go back, she would go back there and there would be people who would be monitoring her movements in Swaziland, if she had co-operated with the system this side and she goes back to Swaziland, Coetzee would get a report that this person has changed her mind.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="654">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Bluntly Mr Veyi, I really don&#039;t know what your answer has to do with my question, but wouldn&#039;t she be killed in all probability by the ANC, if they suspected that she had become an informer?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="655">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Because she was trained, it would be impossible for Coetzee to take her back.  There was never a case like that before, a case whereby an MK member is taken back after being turned to work for the system and then be taken back again to Swaziland.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="656">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE </speaker>
			<text>Mr Veyi, Mr Visser is asking you to speculate because you were part of the Security Branch.  He is asking you to speculate on what you think might have happened to Nokuthula if indeed she had been put back, speculate, he wants your opinion?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="657">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>As a person who was working for the ANC, Nokuthula that is, I think the ANC would tell her that they were having suspicions about her and they would tell her to go back to South Africa as if she was there to give a report, and then she would be a person, she would pretend as if she was working for the Police, therefore she would be working for the ANC and for the Security Police at the same time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="658">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Do you mean they would turn her into a double agent?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="659">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="660">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>And use her in turn against the Security Police?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="661">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="662">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes Mr Visser.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="663">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And is that what you think would probably have happened?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="664">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="665">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Can you deny that Simelane was in fact recruited as an informer?  Can you deny that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="666">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>What I didn&#039;t understand, if Nokuthula was recruited Selamolela and myself were working  with those people, we knew about her and if she was recruited, we would know that she was recruited and she was working.  Coetzee would tell us, that is why I was surprised when I heard him saying that she was already working.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="667">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I understand that you are drawing inferences from what you know, but I ask you this, can you deny that in fact without you knowing it, Simelane had become an informer, can you deny that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="668">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I dispute that on the basis that during the last weeks of her being kept on the farm, she was still swollen and her condition was not changed and if she was really recruited and sent back to Swaziland with swollen face like that, what story would she give to the people in Swaziland.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="669">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, well of course, there is a conflict of the evidence you see, because the applicants whom I represent, disagree with you.  They say that the assaults took place during the first week and thereafter only occasionally, you have a different story about that.  Can you deny that she was registered as an informer in Soweto?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="670">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I heard Superintendent Coetzee saying that.  What my Attorney asked me or the family Attorney asked was the number, her number, but Coetzee could not tell her number.  That is impossible for a person who is recruited, and I know Mr Coetzee is very, very brilliant, he will never ever forget that number.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="671">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Can you deny it or can&#039;t you deny it, are you speculating that it didn&#039;t happen because he cannot remember the number?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="672">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I dispute that, because he could not tell the Committee about her number.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="673">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Is that the only reason why you deny it?  I am sorry, that is an unfair question, I withdraw that.  You - I want to come to the meeting at the Fochville/Potchefstroom roads.  Was Selamolela present?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="674">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I was with him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="675">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>I am not sure whether it was, whether the road the four way cross-roads was identified as the Fochville/Potchefstroom road.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="676">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>(Microphone not on)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="677">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Oh, was Fochville mentioned?  I know Carltonville was mentioned.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="678">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>(Microphone not on), page 5, paragraph 7 of Exhibit S.  Nothing turns on it, I just want to identify where I am going to now, nothing turns on Fochville or any of the other names.  The day where you met Coetzee on his own with his blue XR6, Ford motor car on the road at the crossing, where you saw according to you, Simelane in the boot of the car, that is the incident I am referring to, do you understand?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="679">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="680">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.  Was Selamolela present?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="681">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I was with Selamolela if my memory serves me well.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="682">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, you said it all over, you said it in your statements, etc, etc, you said it in your evidence.  So he also saw Simelane in the boot of the car?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="683">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="684">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And if he is talking the truth, he will come and confirm that as far as you are concerned?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="685">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="686">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And when you saw Simelane in the car, the boot was closed and Coetzee told you to go back to Soweto?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="687">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Coetzee opened the boot, when I saw him there, I want to explain this so that you know what happened, what led to those circumstances.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="688">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I am sorry, you lost me completely.  Would you please explain that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="689">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>We were now at the office, there were guards that were at Northum.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="690">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Veyi, I am sorry ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="691">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>We were to go back to Northum to guard her, but before going to Northum, we would stop at the office and get instructions because we would go to the office and get instructions, because Mr Coetzee was not in the office, he was on the farm at the time, because when we saw him before that day, he had told us to go to the farm, but when we arrived at the office, the plan had changed.  He said we should meet with him at Potchefstroom at the Security Branch office where Colonel Loots or Colonel Steyn was, who was involved with the Western Transvaal Security Branch.  We drove to Potchefstroom to meet him in those offices.  On our way on this Fochville crossing Carltonville, we saw an XR6 car approaching and then he flashed the lights, it was during the day, he stopped and we realised that that was him, Mr Coetzee that is.  We went to his car and he got out of his car and he told us not to go to Northum because the guards were withdrawn.  He instructed us to go back and then he said here is the lady, he opened the boot and then he told us that he was taking her back home.  After that he closed the boot and then we went back.  When I looked at her, she was cuffed on foot and her hands were at the back and they were also tied and then he closed the boot and then we went back to the office.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="692">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t know how that is an answer to my question but you said something interesting, he opened the boot to show you the lady and he told you he was taking her home?  That is what you have just said.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="693">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="694">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>What did you understand by that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="695">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>There was nothing else that I could think about because I was listening to what he was saying, he said he was taking her home.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="696">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>What did that mean to you, was he going to release her?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="697">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I thought so because he was taking her home, it means he was releasing her.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="698">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Now let&#039;s come back to my question, according to you, after you and Selamolela saw Simelane in the boot, Coetzee closed the boot and he told you to go back to Soweto?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="699">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="700">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>That is the question I asked.  My question to you is on your evidence, why do you think did Coetzee let you come down to Potchefstroom to do what he did?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="701">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>This meeting here on the way, we were on our way to Potchefstroom but when we met her on the way, stopping us, we did not know why did he leave Potchefstroom because when we moved from the office, we were going to Potchefstroom but we met with him on the way to Potchefstroom.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="702">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>But he said nothing to you, he told you nothing, he gave you no orders, he just showed you Simelane in the boot and he told you to go back to Soweto?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="703">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="704">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Do you have any idea why he would have done that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="705">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t know.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="706">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Well, neither do I.  I want to put it to you that this meeting where Simelane would have been shown to you, is a figment of your imagination.  It never happened, there was no reason for it and you can&#039;t even give any kind of explanation of why it should have happened.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="707">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>It happened.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="708">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>And lastly, your version is not supported by Mr Selamolela.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="709">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Veyi, did you have radio&#039;s at that time in the motor cars, the Police vehicles?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="710">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>The way we were operating, we were working like underground Policemen and our identity was not to be revealed because we were working with sensitive information and the informers were not supposed to know anything.  Therefore we did not have radio communication.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="711">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="712">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I see it is close to one o&#039;clock, can I go on a little while longer.  I want to refer you again to Exhibit S, page 6, paragraph 8 where you said that a few days later, that is now a few days after you saw her in the boot of the car, you spoke to Sergeant Mothiba who told you that Coetzee and Pretorius had shot, killed and buried Simelane at Rustenburg, is that still your evidence?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="713">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Before talking to Sergeant Mothiba, I asked Mr Pretorius as to what happened to Nokuthula, and he said to me I must stop asking a lot of questions.  I kept quiet.  After a few days, after a day or two, as we were chatting in the office with Sergeant Mothiba, Mothiba told me and said to me Mchana, I am scared of these white men.  I asked him why and then he said that they are very cruel.  Then he said they shot her, killed her and buried her in Rustenburg.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="714">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  And if you have resentment for white Officers, that is a very nice story to tell, particularly because Mr Mothiba is dead and he can&#039;t come and tell what he says about this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="715">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>It is the same, Mr Coetzee and Sergeant Mong&#039;s evidence, in their evidence they did not mention myself and Selamolela who are still alive, they were talking about SRA to Fred Langa who is no more and Sergeant Mothiba and I want to know, I am talking about Sergeant Mothiba who is no more and they mentioned Sergeant Mothiba who is no more, where is the difference now?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="716">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Why would you think if Coetzee and Pretorius wanted to kill Simelane, why would you think would they tell Mothiba about it?  One wouldn&#039;t expect that, would one?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="717">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Will you please repeat your question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="718">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>One wouldn&#039;t expect the murderers to spread the story around, would one, that they killed someone?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="719">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>The way he was telling me this, Sergeant Mothiba, it looked like he witnessed this incident.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="720">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Oh, I see, so he was actually part of the killing of Simelane, as a witness or as an accomplice or whatever?  Is that what you are saying?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="721">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I think so because when he told me, it was not a hearsay, it is something that he was present when it was being done.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="722">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Why would he have told you about this do you think?  Is there any reason why you could think why he should come and tell you about that if he was involved?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="723">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Perhaps he was not feeling good about it, so he decided to tell someone about it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="724">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Now when you spoke to the newspaper reporters about this alleged killing of Simelane, did you tell them that Mothiba told me this or did you state it as a fact that she was killed by Coetzee and Pretorius?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="725">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I told them that Mothiba told me that Pretorius and Coetzee killed her.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="726">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Well that takes care of that question Chairperson, it has just landed on the floor, all my papers.  I see it is one o&#039;clock, so the clock has come to my assistance.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="727">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, we will take the lunch adjournment, and we will reconvene in 30 minutes&#039; time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="728">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>(Microphone not on)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="729">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>We will meet you, yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="730">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>COMMITTEE ADJOURNS</text>
		</line>
		<line number="731">
			<speaker>NIMROD VEYI</speaker>
			<text>(s.u.o)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="732">
			<speaker>CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>(cont)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="733">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Thank you Mr Chairman.  Mr Chairman, as promised, I did draft a new list of Exhibit to bring it up to date, I think it has been handed to you, it should have been handed to you.  It now goes to AA2 and I am going to hand up an Exhibit straight away within a moment or so, which will be Exhibit BB.  Thank you Mr Chair.  Mr Veyi, I better get my headset on, just before we adjourned, I asked you whether you had told the reporters that you heard from Mr Mothiba that Simelane was killed by Coetzee and Pretorius, do you remember that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="734">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I do remember that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="735">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>What was your answer, I don&#039;t remember your answer?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="736">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I said I told the reporters that Coetzee and Pretorius killed Simelane and I was told by Sergeant Mothiba.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="737">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Page 17 of Exhibit T, Chairperson, in the right hand column, the third paragraph I just want to read that</text>
		</line>
		<line number="738" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... the Policeman, that is you, told the Sowetan that Simelane had been held captive by his Unit and tortured so badly her body was unrecognisable.  He also claimed that Coetzee and Pretorius were responsible for Simelane&#039;s death.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="739">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Would that have been what you told the  reporter Sharon Chetty?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="740">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, may I just give the article to him?  Is it on page 17?  Which column?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="741">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>My question is, is that a correct reflection of what you told the reporter?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="742">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>The heading about &quot;MK agent/cop seeks amnesty&quot;, I would like you to go back to the one with the heading &quot;Cops trapped and killed MK&quot;, that is what I said.  I think this is a story that followed up from what I said.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="743">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Which is this page?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="744">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>It is pointed out, there are some loose leaflet pages that have also been distributed about articles in the Sowetan, there is a number 3, I don&#039;t know they are marked Exhibits, I know that they were distributed to the legal representatives.  I think that is repeated in the Exhibit T, although the copy that we have before us on Exhibit T is not a good copy, the loose leaf copy in front of the witness is a better copy.  I think he refers to what is on page 24.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="745">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>What on page 24 are you referring to?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="746">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>(Microphone not on)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="747">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>He was told by Sergeant - yes thank you Chairperson, thank you Mr Veyi, I missed that, I am indebted to you.  The other reference which I could find was at page, yes, that is page 17 and then at page 18, just a short sentence in the right hand column, first, second, third paragraph, &quot;he claimed that she was killed after held for about two months&quot;, but you have also pointed out the other one where reference is made to the Sergeant, yes.  Thank you.  Now, in Exhibit S, at page 4, you listed the names of those people that you could remember, who came to the farm at Northum, is that correct?  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="748">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="749">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>All right, then at page 6 in paragraph 8, the second last sentence, you stated</text>
		</line>
		<line number="750" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;...  I just wish to mention that I had forgotten to mention that Constable Patrick Kobe was also used as a guard.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="751">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	We are talking about the farm, is that evidence correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="752">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, I made a mistake here.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="753">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="754">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>After we discussed, the first heading of City Press, I made a mistake.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="755">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, and Mr Kobe was informed about what you said and he made a statement, Chairperson that was a statement that was handed to me by the Evidence Leader, it professes to be a statement under oath, but mine is not attested to, oh, I see, it is a retyped version of, yes, in fact, it is an affidavit, it is in fact an affidavit, and Chairperson, as I want to refer to one sentence of that, perhaps it should go in as Exhibit BB?  BB1 and BB2?   I remember it was placed on your table yesterday.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="756">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, we have a hand-written statement by a Mr Kobe, yes and then somebody had retyped it for us, a typed version  where he is referred to as Robe?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="757">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Perhaps if you want to mark the manuscript BB1 and the typed version BB2.  Thank you Chairperson.  Now you say you made a mistake, all right.  He says and I am referring to the last paragraph of BB2, the third last sentence, he says</text>
		</line>
		<line number="758" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... I also said, it should read he also said, that is you, also said he once heard from the late Mothiba that Warrant Officer Coetzee and his team once arrested a lady ...&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="759">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I am not so sure whether this should be, perhaps I should refer to the hand-written portion Chairperson, it doesn&#039;t make sense, yes, it should be he.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="760">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE </speaker>
			<text>Second last line.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="761" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>MR VAN DEN BERG:  	&quot;I also said I once heard from the late...&quot;,</text>
		</line>
		<line number="762">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>				so it is &quot;I&quot;.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="763">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Thank you, I will read it again -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="764" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... I also said I once heard from the late Mothiba that Warrant Officer Coetzee and his team once arrested a lady whom he never mentioned the name to me and said the lady disappeared and was killed by his team.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="765">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	It must clearly refer to the witness or Mothiba?  I also said I once heard ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="766">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE </speaker>
			<text>He heard from Mothiba Mr Visser.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="767">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>He, being Kobe?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="768">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE </speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="769">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Chairperson, yes, then it doesn&#039;t make sense at all, because it starts off by saying &quot;he told me that he knew about the lady, he explained to me that the lady was being arrested  by our Branch.  I also said I once heard ...&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="770">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>In the context it would appear a conversation between him and Veyi.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="771">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Arrested the lady, well, then there is no point to be made out of this and I leave it Chairperson.  I just want to put it to you or let me rather ask you, Exhibits AA1 and AA2 do I understand correctly that that is a statement you made to the South African Police, Mr Veyi?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="772">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>May we just have an opportunity just to get that portion.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="773">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Don&#039;t you recognise the statement?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="774">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>It has just been placed before the witness, I was trying to find it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="775">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I thought he handed it in.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="776">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Yes, he did hand it in but when the question was asked, I took it out from my pile here and just placed it before him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="777">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Is Mr Veyi looking at Exhibit AA1?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="778">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="779">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>All right Mr Visser?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="780">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Veyi, is that the statement that you made to the Police?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="781">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I haven&#039;t read the whole statement but this is my signature.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="782">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Did the police give you indemnity against prosecution, Mr Veyi? - the Attorney-General.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="783">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I don&#039;t know whether the Attorney-Attorney can as a matter of law, give indemnity to any witness.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="784">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Well, what is the purpose of Section 24?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="785">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s for the court, as I understand, to give indemnity.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="786">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="787">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>You asked about the Attorney-General.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="788">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Perhaps I should choose my words better then.  Were you promised indemnity by anyone, Mr Veyi?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="789">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I can&#039;t remember.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="790">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>I see.  You can&#039;t remember whether you were promised indemnity in case you gave satisfactory evidence against someone else in a case, in this particular case of Simelane?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="791">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, I don&#039;t remember, I can&#039;t remember.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="792">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairman, I have no further questions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="793">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR VISSER</text>
		</line>
		<line number="794">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>It looks like that kind of indemnity doesn&#039;t bear very much weight nowadays, Mr Visser.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="795">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>...(indistinct)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="796">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Advocate Gcabashe?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="797">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Is it Gobe or Kobe?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="798">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Kobe.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="799">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>K-O, Kobe, thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="800">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Mr van den Berg?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="801">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairperson, I have a logistical difficulty at the moment.  There is a person who might be a potential witness, but he has time constraints and he needs to leave fairly soon.  Could I have a short adjournment, no more than five minutes, just to make those logistical arrangements?  I apologise for the inconvenience.  I know that we&#039;re running well behind schedule and at the rate we&#039;re going, it looks like we will battle to finish by the close of business tomorrow.  So I apologise for that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="802">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="803">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairperson, I&#039;m indebted.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="804">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, we&#039;ll stand down for a few moments.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="805">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>COMMITTEE ADJOURNS</text>
		</line>
		<line number="806">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>ON RESUMPTION</text>
		</line>
		<line number="807">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Veyi, you&#039;re still under oath.  Mr van den Berg?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="808">
			<speaker>NIMROD VEYI</speaker>
			<text>(s.u.o.)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="809">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR VAN DEN BERG</text>
		</line>
		<line number="810">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Chairperson, I&#039;m indebted for the short adjournment.  I have been able to make other arrangements in respect of this particular witness.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="811">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Veyi, can we just start with your relationship with the other members of the unit that you were part of.  If we can just take them one by one.  Sergeant Mothiba, what was your relationship with him?  How long had you worked with him?  That&#039;s the kind of information I&#039;m looking for.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="812">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Sergeant Mothiba, I knew him very well.  I started working with him when I joined the Police Force in 1978.  He was stationed in Meadowlands.  I met him in Meadowlands in 1978, and then in 1981 I joined the Security Branch in Protea when I again met him.  We then worked in the same unit until he died.  I can&#039;t remember when he died, but it was the mid-&#039;80s.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="813">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>And this work that you did as a member of the Security Branch, this was fairly dangerous work, you were involved with the tracking down of information relating to MK cadres and to other members of the liberation movement.  Would you agree with that assessment?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="814">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="815">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>And it would be necessary that the people that you worked with were people that you trusted?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="816">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="817">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>If we can move on.  Sergeant Langa, RS269 I believe his code was, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="818">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="819">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>When did you first meet him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="820">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I can&#039;t remember well when he joined but when he joined the Police Force, I met him then for the first time. It was the early &#039;80&#039;s.  I think it was &#039;81 or &#039;82, I&#039;m not sure, but it was the early 1980&#039;s.  We were the people who were training him when he started at the police, until he died.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="821">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>And what was his role in your unit?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="822">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Langa was an undercover police.  He was playing the same role as Mr Mkhonza&#039;s role.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="823">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Was he a person who reported to the same office as you did or was he a person who - ja, let me ask you that way, was he a person who reported to the same office as you did?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="824">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="825">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>And he would report for duty regularly at Protea?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="826">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, those who were working undercover were not doing the same job as ours, they were not reporting at the office.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="827">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>So where and when did he report?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="828">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>He would phone and then he would tell where he was and Mkhize would send Lazarus or myself to pick him up.  We&#039;d meet in a certain place and then he would interview him..</text>
		</line>
		<line number="829">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>So your unit was the way in which both Langa and Mkhonza reported to the police, their reporting would be through your unit, is that correct?  Do I understand you correctly?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="830">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>They were the police, but they were working undercover.  They were reporting to Coetzee.  Each and every report was reported to Coetzee.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="831">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Now what was the position in respect of Peter Lengene, when did you first meet him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="832">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I met Peter Lengene, if I still remember well, in 1982.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="833">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>And from the evidence we&#039;d heard earlier today, this was after he had been abducted in Botswana and he had agreed to work for the South African Police, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="834">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="835">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>What was your relationship like with him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="836">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I ...(indistinct) were working together with Peter Lengene after he was turned to be a police official.  He worked the same way as us, together with Lazarus.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="837">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>There&#039;s a policeman referred to in these papers, by the name of Sefuti.  I understand he was a member of your unit, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="838">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="839">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>What was his role in the unit?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="840">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Sefuti was from the Police College.  We were doing the same job, the normal police duties.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="841">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>And then I presume the same goes for Radebe?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="842">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="843">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>How did the RS programme work?  What I&#039;m really interested in is who reported to who?  To whom did informers report, to whom did the undercover policemen report?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="844">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>RS programmes was operating this way;  in Protea there was an office, a recruiting office where everybody who was joining the Police Force would be at that office.  We would go to that office and then observe these people and if we could see that a particular person can be able to work with us, we would take that particular person to our office.  And in our office that person would tell us whether he wants to be a police, and then after that, because there were a lot of them, there was a group of people, we would recruit that particular person and then Coetzee would tell him that there&#039;s  a short way that he would use to help him to be a police, he won&#039;t take six weeks to be a police.  We would then take his papers, his particulars and fill in the papers.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="845">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	He would then give out a story at home to the people who saw him, that he&#039;s a police.  He would say that he doesn&#039;t want to be a police anymore, he stopped being a police, he found a job somewhere else.  And then after that he would be trained and we would tell him and explain all the ways of infiltration and then he would be sent to that particular organisation to infiltrate.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="846">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Is this - are we talking her about people like Mkhonza and Langa, is that who you referred to now?  Are they examples of what you referred to?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="847">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, all those who were RS were police.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="848">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Now the informer network, to whom did the informers report?  For example, SWT66?  And I don&#039;t want you to mention her name.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="849">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>All of them they were reporting to Coetzee.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="850">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Did they report directly to an officer like Coetzee, or were there instances where they might report to somebody like Langa or Mkhonza?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="851">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>They were reporting directly to Coetzee.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="852">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Was there ever a situation where an informer would report to an uncover policeman? - just by way of general.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="853">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, that didn&#039;t happen.  I don&#039;t remember something like that happening.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="854">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Would there have been a reason why that didn&#039;t happen, or are you saying it simply didn&#039;t happen?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="855">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t remember it happening.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="856">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>When you last saw Nokuthula Simelane, your version is that she was in the boot of Coetzee&#039;s car.  You remember giving that evidence?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="857">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="858">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Can you describe her condition at that time, what was she wearing and what did she look like?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="859">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>As I&#039;ve already said, the last time I saw her at the farm when I was going back, she was swollen. The condition had not changed.  Her face was swollen and she was wearing a brown overall, a police overall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="860">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Do you know a policeman by the name of Garibe?  Does the name mean anything to you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="861">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Radebe we&#039;re talking about here?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="862">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Not Radebe, Garibe; G-A-R-I-B-E.  Does that name mean anything to you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="863">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I do remember Garibe.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="864">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Was he involved in this incident at all?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="865">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>There were different units in Protea.  We were in the Intelligence Unit and Garibe, if I remember well, was in the group that was under Captain Grobbelaar.  When there was an information that there&#039;s a terrorist somewhere, that particular group would go there and arrest the terrorist.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="866">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>So if I understand you correctly, this person was not involved in this incident at all?  He was no involved in either guarding or the interrogation of Nokuthula Simelane?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="867">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, I don&#039;t remember him there, he was not there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="868">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>I want to show you a photograph.  This is the photograph that was given to me, or put in my possession by Mr Wagener and Mr Visser, the photograph of what is described here as MK Mpho.  Do you recognise this person at all?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="869">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I&#039;m afraid, Mr Chairperson, there aren&#039;t copies of it, but I&#039;ll hand it up once he&#039;s had a look at it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="870">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	You will see that there is a person crouching, wearing dungarees.   Do you recognise that person at all?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="871">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I can&#039;t see this person clearly.  I don&#039;t know him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="872">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, I wasn&#039;t listening to the interpretation, what was the answer?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="873">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t know him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="874">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, are there two people on the photo?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="875">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairperson, the photo contains three individuals, two white persons who from the look of the photograph, appear to be policemen and then a person with his hands cuffed behind his back, kneeling.  And then the designation on the back of the photograph is &quot;MK Mpho&quot;, with the date &quot;1983&quot;.  Can I hand the photograph back to the Panel, Mr Chairperson?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="876">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, it was handed to us at some stage and it drifted back to Mr Wagener.  I&#039;m not sure if that was handed in as an exhibit, not really.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="877">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>My recollection is that it wasn&#039;t handed in as an exhibit and I don&#039;t think that anything particularly turns on it.  It&#039;s certainly different from the Mpho who was the handler of Nokuthula Simelane, the person known as Gilbert Twala.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="878">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>The Swaziland one, okay.  Yes, no, we&#039;ve got enough documents.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="879">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>We make no point that it&#039;s the same person as my learned friend&#039;s witness, not at all.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="880">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairperson.  I&#039;m indebted to Mr Wagener for the loan of his photograph, or his client&#039;s photograph.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="881">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	The group of 18 ANC members who were arrested, reference is made to it in pages 25, 26 and 27 of Exhibit T, and from what I understand from the evidence of Messrs Coetzee and Pretorius, included the arrest of Cheche.  What is your  recollection as to when that occurred?  Was it at the same time as the arrest or the detention of Simelane, was it before, was it after?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="882">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I think it was the following year when Cheche was arrested.  If I still remember well it&#039;s either 1984 or 1985, but it was after Nokuthula&#039;s arrest.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="883">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Now I put it to both Coetzee, and I think I put it to Pretorius as well, that Cheche is a person known as Justice Ngedi and that he was arrested on the 25th of May 1984.  Can you confirm or deny that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="884">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That might be so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="885">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>In your opinion, what led to the arrest of Ngedi and the 18 other, or the 17 other people?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="886">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="887">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	According to the information I got, he had to recruit a person here in South Africa and take that person to Swaziland.  So he told Coetzee, he gave this report to Coetzee and then he took Selamolela and said that he was the one who was supposed to be introduced to Cheche because Cheche was the one who was supposed to come to South Africa.  Selamolela then went, they went to the border post in Oshoek.  That is where Cheche was arrested.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="888">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	They were together with Nompumelelo, and the three of them with Lazarus were arrested there.  I still remember that when Coetzee came back, it was during the night.  He came with Cheche because when he went to Swaziland, Nompumelelo phoned and said that they were on the way, together with Cheche and then Coetzee drove to the border post where he was arrested, where Cheche was arrested.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="889">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>When you say &quot;they&quot; were on their way to the border post, you refer to Cheche and to - was it RS269, to Langa?  Do I understand you correctly, that he was one of those people?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="890">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>SWT66 and Selamolela and Cheche.  There were three of them.  SWT66 phoned, confirming that they found Cheche and they were on the way out.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="891">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, I misunderstood you.  Thank you for correcting me.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="892">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, just for some clarity.  All you are really - not all, but one of the things you are saying is that SWT66 was instrumental in Cheche&#039;s arrest?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="893">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="894">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="895">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Did you have any dealings with SWT66?  Did she pass information on to you?  Did you handle her at all?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="896">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>As I&#039;ve already said, SWT66 I knew her.  According to the information she was from Swaziland, staying in Manzini.  Most of the MK cadres that were in Swaziland would go and hide weapons in her home.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="897">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I remember one time when Coetzee sent us together with Selamolela to Swaziland, that SWT66 said that there were weapons.  Her boyfriend was a cadre.  We went there and then she gave us those weapons.  We brought them back to the office, explosives and AKs.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="898">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t want to revisit the aspects of the interrogation which you testified to at some length during your cross-examination by Mr Visser, and I think that we have sufficient evidence insofar as that is concerned.  I just want to ask you about the participation of Strongman, the Mozambican.  Was he also involved in both the interrogations and the assaults?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="899">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Strongman was working, was doing the same job as I was.  He took part in interrogations, because sometimes when an informer was to be fetched or an RS, Coetzee would send him to go and pick up that particular person, together with Malung(?).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="900">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, I want to return to the aspect of SWT66.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="901">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Could we just have clearance here.  Did Strongman participate in this interrogation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="902">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct, he took part, he participated.  As I&#039;ve already said, the black members also took part.  The fact that he was guarding the farm is not true.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="903">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>But what language did he speak, what did he ask her?  Do you remember anything about what his role was in the interrogation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="904">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>For example, if she was assaulted he would take part as any other person who was there, and he was speaking English and Zulu.  He knew Zulu, a little bit of Zulu.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="905">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, carry on, Mr van den Berg.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="906">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, I want to return to the, one or two further aspects surrounding SWT66.  Do you know if she was ever withdrawn from Swaziland?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="907">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I can&#039;t remember that.  When I was still working at the Security Branch - I left there in 1986 and I was ...(indistinct) to the CIDs in Cape Town, when I left she was still working.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="908">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>And do you know if she had any contact with the person who has been referred to in these proceedings as Mpho, the handler of Nokuthula Simelane?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="909">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, I can&#039;t remember.  If I still remember well, I can connect Mpho and Cheche&#039;s case.  I can connect her with Mpho and Cheche&#039;s case.  After Cheche was arrested he came to South Africa and then when he arrived here in South Africa, he was together with the Investigation Team of Protea.  They were taking him to John Vorster.  On the way to John Vorster -they took him to John Vorster and then they brought him back.  On the way, under the chair the police had placed weapons and then on the way he took one firearm and he pointed them and they jumped out of the car, they ran away, and then he drove the car and he abandoned the car in Diepkloof.  That&#039;s when he managed to escape the first time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="910">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	After his escape, Mkhize sent Nompumelelo back to Swaziland to report because according to my understanding they were working under the command of Gabuza Sephiwe Nyanda.  He was sent to tell him that this person had not escaped, he was working together with the police.  And then if I still remember well he got a lift from Swaziland back to South Africa.  On the way she arrived back here and then she was together with an informer.  After some time he was then arrested again.  Then she went back to Swaziland and Nompumelelo reported again.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="911">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>If I understand - I could extract from what you&#039;ve told us, the aspects which I believe are relevant, it would seem that this SWT66 was well placed and that she had access even to a person like Gabuza, who is, that was the MK name for Sephiwe Nyanda.  Did I understand that correctly?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="912">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.  As I&#039;ve already said, most of the MK cadres that were in Swaziland, they trusted her.  Everything that she said they were listening to it, because when Cheche escaped Gabuza took Nompumelelo&#039;s story as the truth.  He then sent her again so that she could be ...(indistinct) the second time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="913">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	To add on that, on the case of the 18 cadres who were arrested, after Cheche was arrested I remember we were going to Dube to SWT66&#039;s uncle.  We were with her and we told her to call, to phone Swaziland because there were people who were supposed to pick her up, and we told her to tell them that everything was okay, she arrived and she is fine.  Then Cheche would phone and the people would come to South Africa and then they would be arrested.  There was nothing else you could do because we were there with him and then he was phoning.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="914">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>This discussion that you had with Sergeant Mothiba, during which he apparently said that he was afraid of these white men and that they were very cruel.  Can you just give us a bit more information about that?  You said to us in-chief and in cross-examination, that this took place some few days after you last saw Nokuthula Simelane.  Can you remember where the discussion took place, were at the offices, were you out on an assignment?  Can you give us that sort of information?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="915">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>If we would be in the office we would just chat generally about the work and I think it was about a week when we had come back from Northum.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="916">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Usually what used to happen is Coetzee and them would then give us the feedback about what happened, but in this case we did not get any feedback, they kept quiet.  It is when I then decided to ask Pretorius where this girl was, what happened to her.  He then told me not to ask a lot of questions.  Two days after that, after asking that question we were, I was together with Sergeant Mothiba and then he said to me: &quot;Mchana, I&#039;m very scared of these white policemen&quot;.  I ask him why, he said: &quot;They are very cruel&quot;, and I asked why, he said: &quot;They shot her and they killed her, they buried her in Rustenburg&quot;.  That was the end of the story.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="917">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Where did this discussion take place, in the office?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="918">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>We were on the premises, Protea premises.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="919">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Was anybody else present when this discussion took place?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="920">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>At the Security Branch you would not just talk anything, sensitive things, you would tell a person that you trusted, that you knew that he would keep the secret, because if that kind of information can be revealed, if it could be found out that you knew something that you were not supposed to know, that would place you in a dangerous situation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="921">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>I accept that it wouldn&#039;t have been discussed with other members of the police, would it have been discussed with other members of the unit, were there other members of your unit present when Mothiba, when you had this discussion with Mothiba or was it just the two of you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="922">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>It was just the two of us.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="923">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Did you repeat the story that Mothiba had told you, to any of your other colleagues?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="924">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, I didn&#039;t repeat it to other colleagues, I first started talking about this, I think it was in 1995.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="925">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>That was when you saw the newspaper story.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="926">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="927">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairperson, the original or the newspaper clipping which gave rise to this whole thing is not before you, so I&#039;d like to hand it up to through this witness.  I have made copies available to my learned friends, I think that only the Panel are not in possession of this.  It&#039;s a series of three photostat copies.  If I could hand a copy to the witness and then hand up copies to yourselves and I&#039;ll get him to identify it and to sort it out.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="928">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Veyi, if you have a look - can we mark that, Mr Chairperson?  There is some duplication between this and what is contained in the other bundles, but if perhaps we could mark it CC 1, 2 and 3.  There should be a single copy of each page, 3 pages.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="929">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Which one will be 1, 2 and 3?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="930">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>The first page ...(indistinct) - sorry, my microphone, I apologise, is a copy from the Sowetan and headed</text>
		</line>
		<line number="931" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Missing in Action&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="932">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>... with a poor photograph on the left-hand side.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="933">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Is that with the 2 written on it, and &quot;perpetrator&quot;?  Switch on, switch on your mike.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="934">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>With the 2 at the top, yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="935">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Is that the first one?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="936">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s the first one.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="937">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Is it a single page?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="938">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s a single page and then later from the same edition of the Sowetan, a page headed</text>
		</line>
		<line number="939" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Mom&#039;s question: Where is my child?&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="940">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Alright, so that&#039;s the second article?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="941">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s the second article.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="942">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Now let&#039;s start marking them.  The first one will be CC1, the one that you&#039;ve just identified.  And the second article in that same edition of the Sowetan, dated January 27, 1995, will be CC2.  Which is the next article, Mr van den Berg?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="943">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>The next article is, there&#039;s already a copy of this before you in Exhibit T, but that&#039;s the Sowetan of the 6th of February, Monday the 6th of February, headed</text>
		</line>
		<line number="944" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Cops trapped and killed MK cadre&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="945">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, so you want that ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="946">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>As CC3.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="947">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Marked Exhibit CC3.  Yes?  What is the next one?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="948">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Those are the three that I handed up.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="949">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Oh, then this is just simply duplicates, extra copies.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="950">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Well, if I could retrieve those from you at the end of the hearing.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="951">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, very well.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="952">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairperson.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="953">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I think we&#039;re no on board.  Mr van den Berg?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="954">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Mr Veyi, can I refer you to CC1?  Do you recognise that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="955">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="956">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Is it correct that this is the article which caused you to go to the Sowetan to speak to the reporter, Sharon Chetty?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="957">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="958">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>And this is an article dated 27th of January 1995?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="959">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="960">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>And then what you told the Sowetan is recorded in CC3, the article dated the 6th of February 1995, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="961">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="962">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>And that&#039;s the article on which you&#039;ve been cross-examined by Mr Visser earlier on today?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="963">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="964">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Now at a stage you were referred to Exhibit T and page 17 thereof, do you have that exhibit in front of you?  Do you have it in front of you, Mr Veyi?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="965">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="966">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Would you agree with me that that photograph is the same photograph which appears on CC1?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="967">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="968">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>And the newspaper seems to have used the same photograph continually throughout its reporting of this matter?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="969">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="970">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>Obviously this is an article of a much later date, the 22nd of May 1997?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="971">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="972">
			<speaker>MR VAN DEN BERG</speaker>
			<text>No further questions, Mr Chairperson.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="973">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR VAN DEN BERG</text>
		</line>
		<line number="974">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you very much, Mr van den Berg.  Ms Thabethe?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="975">
			<speaker>MS THABETHE</speaker>
			<text>No questions, Mr Chair.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="976">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO QUESTIONS BY MS THABETHE</text>
		</line>
		<line number="977">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m going back to the very beginning of the evidence-in-chief.  You were talking about knowing that somebody was going to come to the Carlton Centre and meet Mr Mkhonza.  Did you know it was a woman?  That&#039;s the note I have here.  It wasn&#039;t clear to me.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="978">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I knew that there was a person who was going to come there.  I didn&#039;t know what kind of a person.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="979">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Then my next note is about your role in the interrogation of Nokuthula.  You said she was questioned about whether she was trained etc., etc., what answers did she give you?  Just give us examples of the answers she gave you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="980">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I think that she did say that she was trained.  I don&#039;t know where Coetzee got it, but we heard that this lady was trained.  That is when we made a follow-up, asking her where she was trained and who were other people that she knew.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="981">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Now assist me, I just want you to tell us about what you heard, what you heard from Nokuthula herself, not what you might have heard from Coetzee or Pretorius, just what you yourself heard during that interrogation.  Did you hear her say that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="982">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t remember hearing her saying that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="983">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>You then talked about going up to the farm, you were picked up at the police station.  Who did you find on the farm the first time you went there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="984">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I can&#039;t - I don&#039;t remember clearly who we found there in the farm, but there were people that were there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="985">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>White officers, black officers or just civilians?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="986">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>There were police.  I think there were both black and white police.  I can&#039;t remember clearly.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="987">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>We have heard evidence about Mr Mothiba&#039;s involvement in recruiting Nokuthula, do you know anything at all about that, that he was this father figure and he would be explaining certain things to her?  Do you know anything at all about that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="988">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, I don&#039;t know anything about that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="989">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Ah, you know when you were being cross-examined by Mr Visser I think it was, you were asked about Nokuthula&#039;s stay at the Norwood flats, and essentially what you were being asked about was that you said she had been there for a week before she was taken to the farm, alright?  And then you were asked if you were sure and you said &quot;yes&quot;, and my note may be incorrect, but what I&#039;ve got here is</text>
		</line>
		<line number="990" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Yes, because after she was taken to Norwood, I stayed three days at Norwood guarding her.  I didn&#039;t know when she had arrived.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="991">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Now the &quot;I didn&#039;t know when she had arrived&quot;, lost me a bit.  Just help me through that one, - unless I recorded it incorrectly.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="992">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I said I didn&#039;t know when she arrived there because that was my first time to go there after she was taken in Carlton Centre.  I don&#039;t know whether she was taken from Carlton Centre to Norwood, but I first guarded her in Norwood.  That is what I meant.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="993">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>So you are simply explaining that you don&#039;t know if she went directly from Carlton Centre to Norwood?  You went there three days after Saturday, is that correct? - three days after Saturday.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="994">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="995">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Then you were asked about where you washed when you were at the farm, and you said you wouldn&#039;t wash in that dirty water in the tank, in the dam, remember that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="996">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, we didn&#039;t wash.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="997">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Nokuthula, how did she wash?  I mean you were there when she went to wash, what happened?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="998">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t remember seeing her washing herself.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="999">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Nothing was made available for her to wash herself?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1000">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t remember anything like that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1001">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>And on the occasions that she was thrown into the dam, she was thrown in fully clothed in that brown attire that she was wearing?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1002">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Every time that she was there she was wearing that brown overall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1003">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>I understand that.  So when Radebe threw her into the dam she was still in that brown overall?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1004">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1005">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>And she would keep it on wet as it is, she wouldn&#039;t get a change of clothing or anything like that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1006">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>It would dry, she would not change it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1007">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Is Radebe still alive?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1008">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I think he is in the Fraud Unit here in Johannesburg.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1009">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Do you have any idea why he hasn&#039;t applied for amnesty in this matter?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1010">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t know.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1011">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Ah, my last question.  SWT66, did she know Nokuthula, or did Nokuthula indicate that she knew SWT66, or both ways?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1012">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, they didn&#039;t know each other according to my knowledge.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1013">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.  Thank you, Chair.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1014">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Veyi, where did the white officers wash?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1015">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I can&#039;t remember, I don&#039;t know where they will wash.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1016">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Now what kind of water was it in this tank?  You say it was dirty water, but what was it, what was in the water?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1017">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t know whether it was water that was used to, that was drunk by the cows because that was a farm.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1018">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Was it just an open dam, the top was open?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1019">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>It was a sink and then water inside.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1020">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>And it was standing high on the ground, it wasn&#039;t sunk into the ground, it was on top?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1021">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>It was high.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1022">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>If you stand on the ground outside, can you look into the dam or is it too high for you to look in?  Must you get on or what?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1023">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, you were able to see inside.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1024">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>But on what level would it be, would it be, would you have to stand on your toes for example or would you stand normally and be able to look over the top?  What did you have to do to be able to look inside?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1025">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>If you just standing up normally you were able to see.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1026">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Over the top?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1027">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1028">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Now when Ms Simelane was taken to that dam, did she still have the foot-cuffs on?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1029">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>She was always foot-cuffed, there was no time when she was not cuffed.  So yes, she was foot-cuffed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1030">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>We don&#039;t have an idea as to how tall she was, now if she had to stand up straight outside the dam, would she be able to look inside?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1031">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, she was able to see.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1032">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>If you had to go and wash in the dam, what would you have to do to be able to wash in the dam?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1033">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>You wouldn&#039;t be able to wash there because the water was dirty, there was fungus there.   So you wouldn&#039;t be able to wash there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1034">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Would you - assume the water was clean in the dam and you wanted to wash in the dam, what would you have to do?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1035">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>You were to jump inside the dam, to the dam.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1036">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>So you&#039;ll have to - you must get over the side and into the water inside the dam?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1037">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1038">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>And you&#039;d have to stand up there or whatever?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1039">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1040">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Now you say that when Radebe put Ms Simelane into the dam he had to help her not to drown, did I understand that correctly or what?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1041">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>What I&#039;m saying is, this dam was used when she was tortured.  He would put her in and then take her out of the dam.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1042">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Would he hold onto her, put her in the water and hold onto her or what would he do?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1043">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1044">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Now if he left her, if he didn&#039;t hold onto her what would have happened to her?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1045">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Maybe she would drown because she was hopeless.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1046">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Helpless or hopeless?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1047">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>She was cuffed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1048">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Oh.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1049">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that&#039;s fine.  Did you see the white policemen giving Ms Simelane painkillers?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1050">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t remember seeing that when I was present.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1051">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Did you see anybody giving her medicine, medication?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1052">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I didn&#039;t see anybody doing that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1053">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Did she complain about pains or any discomfort or anything in that nature?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1054">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, when she was with us she would complain.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1055">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>About what?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1056">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>About pain and the fact that she wanted to  go home.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1057">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>And I assume you had nothing to give her, no medication to give her?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1058">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, we had nothing to give her.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1059">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Did you see any - inside this room, did you see any toiletries?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1060">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, there were not, I didn&#039;t see them.  They&#039;re not there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1061">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Did you ever see Ms Simelane using any toiletries?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1062">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t remember seeing her.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1063">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>No I think Mr Visser asked you about this and I wasn&#039;t sure what you were explaining.  Was there a place where one could put toiletries or anything like that into a cupboard or whatever?  Was there anything like that in the room?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1064">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, there was nothing like that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1065">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1066">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>When she complained about pain and having nothing to take for the pain, didn&#039;t you think you should buy some disprins or aspros or whatever and take it with you next time you got to the farm?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1067">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, that did not occur to us.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1068">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Well you were - she complained and you said you were worried because she wasn&#039;t treated well, why didn&#039;t you do something about it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1069">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>We did not think about it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1070">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>You said in answer to a question, that she was always foot-cuffed, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1071">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1072">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Didn&#039;t you tell us that when the whites left you took off her cuffs?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1073">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, we used to do that when they were not present.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1074">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, so she wasn&#039;t - you answered here</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1075" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;She was always foot-cuffed.  At no time was she not cuffed.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1076">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>So that wasn&#039;t correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1077">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>When the whites were present she would be cuffed but when the whites were not there we would remove the cuffs.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1078">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>So at times the whites weren&#039;t there, not one of them, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1079">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, sometimes they would go and leave the black officers behind.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1080">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>For how long would they leave?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1081">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>They would be away, sometimes they would leave in the morning and come back late.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1082">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, and sometimes did they stay away for a few nights?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1083">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I do not remember them staying away for the night, but they used to leave the farm and come back again.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1084">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>When these explosions at Bryanston, or is it Roodepoort, took place, Sandton, were they away or were they on the farm?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1085">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>The Bryanston incident had long passed.  It&#039;s a different incident from this one.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1086">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Because I don&#039;t know whether I&#039;m wrong, perhaps somebody could correct me, but I believe the bombing was round about the 9th and the 10th of September.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1087">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>It had nothing to do with this incident.  Those are two different incidents.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1088">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Weren&#039;t those incidents while she was still on the farm?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1089">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, they did not take place when she was still on the farm.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1090">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Right.  So for the whole four or five weeks while she was on the farm, did they whites return every day and were they present at night? - for the full period.  Did they sleep there very night?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1091">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I can say so, but the person who did not sleep there every day was Sergeant Mong, but Coetzee and Pretorius, even if they leave during the day or in the morning, they used to come late, even it&#039;s about eleven, the time is about eleven, but they used to spend all the nights there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1092">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>For the full four/five weeks, or at least when you were there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1093">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, during my presence I used to see them spending nights there. I don&#039;t know during my absence, but when I was there they would be there also.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1094">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>So did Simelane ever sleep without foot-cuffs or handcuffs?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1095">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>She was always cuffed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1096">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>And you people ...(intervention)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1097">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>If the handcuffs were removed, the foot-cuffs would remain.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1098">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  So when did you take of the cuffs when they weren&#039;t there, only during daytime?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1099">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, we would remove them when they were not there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1100">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>And weren&#039;t you afraid they would come back and find that she&#039;s not cuffed?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1101">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>We knew that we would hear the car when they were coming and then we would put back the cuffs.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1102">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>And at a stage you were told to tell her of the advantages that could come her way if she would join the police, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1103">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1104">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Who did that, who told her about that?  Who was her spokesman?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1105">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Sometimes it would be myself, sometimes I would interpret or Sergeant Mothiba and Lazarus would do the job.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1106">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>What language did Sergeant Mothiba speak?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1107">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>He was a Sotho-speaking person.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1108">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>So he couldn&#039;t speak directly to her in Zulu?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1109">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>He was able to speak Zulu.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1110">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Now why did you have to interpret for him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1111">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>We would only interpret from Afrikaans into Zulu.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1112">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>No, but when he spoke to her and he told her about the advantages, why should you interpret between the two of them?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1113">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>There would be an interpreter if Pretorius or Coetzee were there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1114">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>And if they weren&#039;t there, there wasn&#039;t an interpreter?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1115">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>There would be no interpreter.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1116">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Now didn&#039;t Mr Mothiba speak to her about the advantages in the police and she should rather co-operate and so on, then she would be treated better when  the police weren&#039;t there, the white people?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1117">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>We would talk to her, all of us, telling her as to what to do and what were the advantages.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1118">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  And Sergeant Mothiba was the father figure, wasn&#039;t he?  You addressed him as, what was it, Malume?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1119">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, he was older than us, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1120">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>And was he a fatherly figure? - the old man.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1121">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct, we used to respect him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1122">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>And how did he treat Ms Simelane?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1123">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>We were - he was treating her the same as we were treating her.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1124">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>So if the whites weren&#039;t there he was treating her nicely?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1125">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1126">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Did you any soap there to wash with or any toiletries?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1127">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, we did not have that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1128">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Did anybody have toiletries there, soap and...?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1129">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>We did not wash ourselves, we would only go and wash ourselves at home.  The same used to apply with him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1130">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>So do you say Ms Simelane never washed during the whole period of four/five weeks?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1131">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I can say that is so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1132">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>And you told us that she even soiled herself.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1133">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1134">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>And there was no washing thereafter?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1135">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, there was no time to wash.  He would perhaps during their absence, if we were there she would try and clean herself.  We used to do anything secretly.  We used to, we tried to organise some water but we did not want the people to see us doing that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1136">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, okay you tried to organise the water, did you manage to organise water?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1137">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That was done secretly when the whites were not there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1138">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>So secretly you organised water and she was able to wash herself, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1139">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1140">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Now can you give me one single reason why you denied all the time that she washed herself?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1141">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>What made me to say that is because it&#039;s something that was no allowed, we were doing it out of our own and we were doing it secretly.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1142">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, and did you secretly give her medicine?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1143">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1144">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Why not?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1145">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I do not have a reason for that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1146">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>Because according to you she was in need of medicine.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1147">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1148">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Just one other thing, what did she have to eat?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1149">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>There were takeaways that we would buy whenever we go outside.  Sometimes we would buy food for her at the shop in Northum.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1150">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>What kind of food did you buy?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1151">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Fish and chips and some bread.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1152">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>And did she eat that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1153">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, she did.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1154">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Mr Lamey, re-examination?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1155">
			<speaker>RE-EXAMINATION BY MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1156">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Just on the last question, the question was asked of you; &quot;Did she get food to eat?&quot;, what do you understand by food in this regard?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1157">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m talking about something that you eat.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1158">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Alright.  You say that you, when the whites were not there you used to buy food for her at Northum, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1159">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1160">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Mr Coetzee testified, perhaps also Pretorius, I can&#039;t remember, they made mention of &quot;rat-packs&quot; that was given to her.  Do you know anything about that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1161">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  She used to rat-packs but if you eat that for a long time, it&#039;s not very nice.  It&#039;s not nice at all.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1162">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>I just want to clarify this, when the question was asked about the food you did not mention the rat-pack.  Do you draw a distinction about a rat-pack and the food that is referred to?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1163">
			<speaker>INTERPRETER</speaker>
			<text>Excuse me, Chairperson, the mistake was coming from the side of interpreter.  I interpreted them as takeaways.  He did mention the rat-pack.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1164">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>...(inaudible)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1165">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>I hear the English and the interpreter apparently says now that she&#039;s made a mistake, she interpreted it as takeaways, but he in fact said rat-packs.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1166">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that&#039;s what I wanted to hear from you, whether you heard the explanation that the interpreter gave.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1167">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1168">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Alright.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1169">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Okay, so what you mean is, to sum it up, she was given rat-packs as food, but at the times when the white policemen were not there and you also used to buy additional food at ...(intervention)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1170">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s not what he said, Chairperson.  When did he ever say it was only at times when the white people were not there?  He didn&#039;t say that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1171">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, just ask him, Mr Lamey.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1172">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Perhaps I made a wrong assumption, I thought that is what he said.  I merely wanted to sum it up.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1173">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>...(indistinct)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1174">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>At what times did you buy the food at Northum, the so-called takeaways?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1175">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>We would buy them when the whites were not there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1176">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Alright.  And at the times - did she get food in any form when the whites were there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1177">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>She would eat those rat-packs.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1178">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Okay.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1179">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m sorry to intervene.  What is a rat-pack?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1180">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>It is a package of food in the box, soldiers&#039; food in a box where you get a tin, tinned stuff, baked beans with biscuits in.  The tin in the box with baked beans and biscuits and something called post toasties.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1181">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Is it a sort of a thing that you can, a provision that you can carry around with you and if you&#039;re on the move you can use it to eat, to feed yourself, like a soldier?  I think you said &quot;like a soldier&quot;.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1182">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, it was used by police and soldiers who were on border, who were performing border duties.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1183">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Alright.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1184">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Can I just ask you this, Mr Veyi ...(intervention)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1185">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>So it was bully beef and post toasties and beans and biscuits and tinned mielies, that kind of thing?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1186">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1187">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Mr Veyi, from my own experience in the army, a rat-pack was not a thing that the Force members were very fond of, what was the situation in your case?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1188">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I said it&#039;s not a very nice package, more especially if you eat for a very long time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1189">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now at the times when you went away to buy takeaways, food at Northum, was it for your, did you also buy food for yourself and for Simelane, or did you give some of your food to Simelane, or did you only buy food for Simelane or what was the situation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1190">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>We used to buy food for ourselves and we would buy something for her and eat, all of us.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1191">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Okay.  You testified that at times during interrogation she was also thrown into the dam, is that correct? - or put into the dam by Radebe.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1192">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1193">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Were the white police officers present during those stages?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1194">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That was done per their instructions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1195">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now you also testified that she soiled herself during interrogation sessions, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1196">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1197">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now the stages when she was thrown into the dam, was the throwing into the dam connected with the fact that she soiled herself or wet herself, or was it not connected with that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1198">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Sometimes he would put ... into the dam without being soiled and that would take place as a result of being thrown into the dam.  That used to be the case sometimes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1199">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Do you say that as a result of the throwing into the dam she would soil, also soil herself?  I don&#039;t really understand what you are saying there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1200">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1201">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>If she soiled herself during interrogation -well did it happen during interrogation that she soiled herself, but not at the stage when she was put into the dam?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1202">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that used to happen also.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1203">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>And when that happened was she put into the dam? - when she soiled herself.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1204">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1205">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>So what you&#039;re saying is she was put into the dam at stages when it had nothing to do with the soiling of herself?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1206">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1207">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>But then she would sometimes perhaps soil her in the dam?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1208">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1209">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now you were asked questions by Mr Visser, and it was put to you that you resented the white policemen and he referred particularly to your white superiors in the police at that stage.  What prompted you, what led you to make this statement or speak to the reporter of the Sowetan?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1210">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I would like to rectify something first.  This newspaper article that was shown to me, that was quoted, the one that he quoted, that I resented my superiors, I don&#039;t know where that comes from because it&#039;s not what I said in the report.  I think he showed me the different newspaper.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1211">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Ja, initially Mr Visser showed you page 17 of Exhibit T.  That is a report dated the 22nd of May 1997, was that report made as a result, well was that the report which was made, which you made to the Sowetan, which was published in the Sowetan, dated the 22nd of May 1997?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1212">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, I know nothing about that report, the one that he had.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1213">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now I just want to bring you back.  What caused you to report, to speak to the reporter of the Sowetan and to report what you know about the missing lady?  What caused you to do that, why did you do it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1214">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>After reading the article, the newspaper article something came to my mind.  I remember that I know what happened and my conscience was bothering me and that made me to go to the newspaper.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1215">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now the article that you have read, we have articles before us, could you point out the article which placed a burden on your conscience and which led you to speak to the reporter?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1216">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>It is the one that is referred to as CC1.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1217">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s called</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1218" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Missing in action&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1219">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>... with the photograph of Simelane, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1220">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1221">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now before you were asked by Mr Visser about what you have purportedly stated to this reporter, Sharon Chetty, in the report published on Monday, February the 6th, which is marked Exhibit CC3, did you have an opportunity to look at that carefully before the questions were asked?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1222">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Will you please repeat your question, it&#039;s not clear to me.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1223">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>When Mr Visser asked you questions he quoted from the report published in the Sowetan, Monday, February 1996 and he put it to you that you have said that to the reporter, prior to this question coming up during cross-examination, did you have prior to that a careful look at the contents of that report in the newspaper?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1224">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, I did not get that opportunity.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1225">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now I want to get back to this aspect which Mr Visser has pointed out.  The report states here</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1226" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Constable X, who prefers not to be named at this stage ...&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1227">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Let us just stop there.  Is it correct that you preferred not to be named at that stage?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1228">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1229">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now further reports said</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1230" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Constable X, who prefers ... said the black members of the unit guarded Simelane, while the white members tortured her.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1231">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Is that the totality of what you told her?  In other words, that the black members merely guarded her - will you refer now, the report doesn&#039;t specify Norwood or Northum, it&#039;s general.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1232" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... said the black members of the unit guarded Simelane, while the white members tortured her.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1233">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Is that the totality of the involvement of the members of the unit, that you conveyed to her there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1234">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1235">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Okay.  So what you her at that time when she says that the black members of the unit guarded Simelane, while the white members tortured her, you say that is, you told her that, but that is not correct.  Do I understand you correctly?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1236">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1237">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>What is the correct version?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1238">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Something that I did not mention here is this.  Even us black officials we did play a role when she was being guarded.  That is what I told the Committee here.  That is what I did not mention initially.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1239">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>So you didn&#039;t explain the participation of the black members in the assault to the reporter, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1240">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I did not mention anything about the role that we played.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1241">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now at that stage why did you not mention it to her?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1242">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I do not have a reason.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1243">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Do you say you have not reason?  But there must have been a reason in your mind.  Can you just explain what your thinking was at that stage?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1244">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>There was no reason.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1245">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>What was your rank at the stage of the abduction of Nokuthula Simelane?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1246">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I was a Constable.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1247">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>And at the stage when you, in 1995, when you made this report to the reporter of the Sowetan, what was your rank then?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1248">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I was still a Constable.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1249">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Were you still a Constable?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1250">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1251">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>When did you become a Sergeant?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1252">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>In September 1995.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1253">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now if you say you had no reason why you said that to her, do I take it that it was not a result of resentment to the white members that you said that?  You know that when you referred only to the white members involved in the torture and not the black members.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1254">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, that is not correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1255">
			<speaker>ADV GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m sorry, Mr Lamey, I missed the question.  I heard the answer but I actually missed the question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1256">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Let me just repeat that.  You said, at the time when you made the statement to the Sowetan, that while the white members tortured her, and you said only the black members guarded her and you did not make mention of the involvement in the assaults and so on of the black members, you said that you can&#039;t think of a reason why you told her that.  But my question is, did you specifically mention the involvement of the white members, relating to the torture, because of resentment against the white members?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1257">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, that is not true.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1258">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now you were also asked about your involvement in the Lengene incident, who was abducted.  Did I understand your evidence correctly that you, the kidnapping part you were not involved in?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1259">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is what I said.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1260">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>At what stage, where was Lengene or where was he at the time when you - let me ask you this first, what was your involvement during his, after he was abducted?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1261">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I only interfered when we were recruiting him, as we wanted him to be a member of the Police Force.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1262">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Was it during the stage when the recruitment exercise was applied?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1263">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1264">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now where was he at that stage? - that is now Lengene.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1265">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>He was in Rustenburg with Superintendent Coetzee&#039;s in-laws.  Sometimes he would be in Klipspruit West.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1266">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Were you also at Rustenburg?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1267">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I used to go there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1268">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Were you at Klipspruit?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1269">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I would visit Klipspruit.  There was a safe-house there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1270">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>This place in Rustenburg, what place was that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1271">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>That was Mr Superintendent wife&#039;s home.  Mr Superintendent - Mr Coetzee&#039;s wife&#039;s home.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1272">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Was that - did you regard that as, what you call a safe-house?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1273">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>No, that was not a safe-house, it was just a place because sometimes Coetzee, if he was leaving, if he wanted to go to his in-laws and work from there he would take people with him because he was working all the time.  He was always working.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1274">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now the place at Klipspruit, what was that? - when he was recruited or interrogated there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1275">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>It was a safe-house where we used to - it was a safe-house where the informers, informants used to be interviewed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1276">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>What is a safe-house?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1277">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>If you work with an informant, he or she must not be seen by people.  There should be a house that is secluded or a house that would be used secretly so that their identities could not be revealed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1278">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I just want to point out that in the statement of Lengene, for what it may be worth, there is reference made to Rustenburg, and then in paragraph 34 thereof, page 339, there&#039;s also reference made that he was taken to a certain house, driven to a certain house in Klipspruit West.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1279">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Well will my learned friend just tell you whether he thinks it was before or after he had been recruited, Chairperson.  Let&#039;s get the correct facts on record.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1280">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Well perhaps Mr Veyi could comment on that.  When he was taken to Klipspruit, how far was the development in this interrogation and recruitment process?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1281">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>It was still in process when he was taken to Klipspruit.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1282">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>By that time was he already recruited?  In other words, already turned or not yet?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1283">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>We were still busy with the process.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1284">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Are you saying that it did not happen yet?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1285">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, it was not yet over, we were still busy with it.  We were not trusting him yet.  Sometimes he would be on leg-irons.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1286">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now in paragraph 36, Lengene stated that he was, after that, after being at Klipspruit ...(intervention)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1287">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>This last answer</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1288" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;We were still not trusting him&quot;.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1289">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>So did you already recruit him, but you wanted to keep an eye on him, you were not trusting him, or why did you add &quot;we were not trusting him yet&quot;?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1290">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>We were still busy with the process of recruiting him.  You won&#039;t just trust a person completely during that process.  That is why I said so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1291">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Perhaps I should ask you this, at that stage at Klipspruit was there positive signs about his recruitment, from his side?  In other words, that is was different from the situation at Rustenburg.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1292">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>There were positive signs that he will change and he eventually changed and we could trust him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1293">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Okay.  When did he eventually change and when was the situation that you could trust him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1294">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>After he had changed he used to be in the company of one person and if you happen to be with him, you even monitor his behaviour and you would even detect from what he says, whether he can escape or not and then you would go back to Coetzee and give a report.  At some stage he would be sent, he would be given a mandate alone and then he would come back alone.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1295">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Ja, but what I want to ask specifically, that situation at the stage, when it reached the stage that he could be trusted, was that still while he was at Klipspruit or was he then somewhere else?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1296">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>He was in Klipspruit.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1297">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>So when he was taken to Klipspruit he hadn&#039;t reached that stage, but during the time at Klipspruit the recruitment of him improved, is that what you&#039;re saying?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1298">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1299">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Then in paragraph 36 he has stated that he was also taken to Benoni, do you know of that?  Do you know anything about that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1300">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I do not remember anything about Benoni.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1301">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>I want to take you back to the situation at Norwood.  Perhaps I should just ask you in general, and I&#039;m referring now to the situation at Norwood as well as at Northum.  Let me rather leave that, I&#039;ll bring you back to Norwood.  When you were - you testified that the first time that you got to Norwood was - in examination by the Commissioner Gcabashe, three days after the Saturday, in other words the third day after the Saturday that she was abducted you got to Norwood first, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1302">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1303">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>So that would be the Tuesday?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1304">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I think that is so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1305">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Okay.  How long - did you stay there at Norwood, when you were there, continuously, in other words, the whole day or did you also come and go from there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1306">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I would spend a night there and I would go and spend two nights there and leave perhaps on the third day and we would change shifts.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1307">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>How many nights in total did you spend at Norwood?  Can you remember?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1308">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m not certain about that, but I can say that maybe I spent four nights there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1309">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>When you spent nights there, did you only spend nights there or were you there also during daytime?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1310">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>If you arrive there during the day you wait and you spend the night there and you wake up there the following day.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1311">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Were you there - during the time that you were there, were you there 24 hours out of 24 hours of the day?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1312">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1313">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now, and the white policemen?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1314">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, they would be there for the whole day and go away and come back late in the evening because they were staying there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1315">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Who also stayed at those quarters, if you talk about them or &quot;they&quot;?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1316">
			<speaker>MR VEYI</speaker>
			<text>If I remember very well in those quarters, Block A and Block B, Coetzee was staying at another block and Pretorius was at the other block and even Pretorius was there.  I think even Ross was staying there, if my memory serves me well.  It was a place that was occupied by police.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1317">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Now the - during the interrogation sessions and the assaults during those interrogation sessions, did that happen at day, during day time or night time or both?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1318">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I have been sitting here very patiently, listening to my learned fried starting a whole new case in re-examination, because that&#039;s what it boils down to.  My learned friend is entitled, if this were a court of law, to deal with matters of clarification arising out of that which was asked of his witness by either the judge or other people.  We know this is not a court of law and we know that we&#039;re here to try and establish the truth, but at some stage or other there&#039;s got to be some semblance of discipline, Chairperson.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1319">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I already find myself in a situation here where I&#039;m now going to have to start asking you to recall my witnesses, to deal with matters which have not been raised, which we hadn&#039;t been aware of, which were never put to your witnesses.  And Chairman, I don&#039;t want to restrict my learned friend unnecessarily, but there is a limit.  My learned can&#039;t just now start leading evidence-in-chief afresh while he&#039;s in re-examination.  And I would submit to you, Chairperson, he&#039;s exceeding the bound of what is reasonably permissible by way of re-examination.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1320">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Lamey?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1321">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m not exactly clear.  My learned friend&#039;s objection in very general terms.  I don&#039;t know whether he&#039;s objecting to my questioning about the Norwood aspect only or whether he refers to the other aspects as well.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1322">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s a general objection and it&#039;s just getting to the point now where it&#039;s becoming absurd.  &quot;Who lived in the flats?&quot;, etc., etc.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1323">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s common cause, Mr Visser.  In fact Coetzee and your people already told us who lived there, so it&#039;s really just, it&#039;s common cause.  So I don&#039;t know where ...(intervention)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1324">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Can I just take ...(intervention)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1325">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Now the Norwood flats issue was part of what you cross-examined on and I assume that Mr Lamey is dealing with that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1326">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>Well my learned friend has said it&#039;s in general.  What he&#039;s in fact saying to the Committee is, I am exceeding the bounds of re-examination in total, from the outset.  Now if I need to take the time, I can take the Committee back step by step on each and every aspect which I started on re-examination.  I started with the dam - well I mentioned the dam incident.  That was clearly arising from questioning from the Committee.  I also went further with the newspaper report.  I went -I mean it is clear, I know that I, on this particular aspect about Norwood, it goes a bit slow at this stage, but I really want to get at an aspect which is important but also to clarify aspects regarding my position.  And I must get to that and I must be very clear about this.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1327">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s what I assumed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1328">
			<speaker>ADV DE JAGER</speaker>
			<text>But is it really of importance whether they stayed in Block A or Block B at Norwood?  Could that assist us in coming to a finding in this thing?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1329">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>That was perhaps a side issue that came unnecessarily in, Mr Chairman, but what I&#039;m really aiming at is to get clarity on what really transpired at Norwood, as far as this witness is concerned, the involvement of other members etc., and it also ...(intervention)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1330">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I understand, I know exactly what you&#039;re saying and that&#039;s what I thought you were getting at.  Unfortunately your client did refer to things which are already on the record, Block A and Block B.  We know exactly where the people lived.  So go ahead, please just ...(intervention)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1331">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, ...(intervention)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1332">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>I see it&#039;s 4 o&#039;clock.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1333">
			<speaker>MR VISSER</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s 4 o&#039;clock.  Can we be excused, unfortunately I&#039;ve had to made certain arrangements and we had to assume that we could leave at 4 o&#039;clock.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1334">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I assume you still have some way to go, Mr Lamey.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1335">
			<speaker>MR LAMEY</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;ll have to unfortunately clarify certain aspects.  It&#039;s for various reasons important.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1336">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, yes.  No, you must deal with the matter as you&#039;re instructed to.  Now we&#039;re going to adjourn at this stage, but we have another matter on the role and that&#039;s the Mbali matter, where an interested party and the applicant, one of the applicants had to travel over some distance and had to go to some expense in order to attend.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1337">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	This particular matter that we&#039;re hearing now is taking much, much longer than we had anticipated.  We had worked on the assumption that we would be able to deal with the Mbali matter.  We intend to do that in fact.  We have one of the applicants who came up from Cape Town, we&#039;ve got an interested party who came from Umtata.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="1338">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	We would like to deal with that matter tomorrow, as soon as it&#039;s convenient to do so.  We have been informed that it is something that we in all likelihood would be able to dispose of in the course of the day tomorrow, and we would like to accommodate those parties in regard to that particular matter.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="1339">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	We will adjourn at this stage and we&#039;ll reconvene at 09H30 tomorrow morning.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1340">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>COMMITTEE ADJOURNS</text>
		</line>
	</lines>
</hearing>