<?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 HEARING</type>
	<startdate>1998-04-14</startdate>
	<location>EAST LONDON</location>
	<day>8</day>
	<names>VUYASILE BRIAN MADASI</names>
							<url>https://sabctrc.saha.org.za/hearing.php?id=54721&amp;t=&amp;tab=hearings</url>
	<originalhtml>https://sabctrc.saha.org.za/originals/amntrans/el/eln6.htm</originalhtml>
		<lines count="508">
		<line number="1">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>ON RESUMPTION</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Chairman.  Mr Chairman, today being the 14th of April 1998 we proceed with the amnesty applications of</text>
		</line>
		<line number="3" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Kupani Diamoneng, amnesty application 3828/96</text>
		</line>
		<line number="4">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		Vuyasile Brian Madasi, amnesty application 6077/97</text>
		</line>
		<line number="5">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>There was a third applicant:</text>
		</line>
		<line number="6" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Themingkosi Diesel Sijone, amnesty application 5933/97</text>
		</line>
		<line number="7">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>I understand from his attorney, Mr Mbandazayo that he has withdrawn his application and I also understand that Mr Ntintili had also applied for the Yellowwoods Hotel matter under amnesty application 6539.  That application forming part of the bundle in the King William&#039;s Town attack.  I understand from Mr Mbandazayo his attorney, that Mr Ntintili is not present today, he&#039;s ill and has a doctor&#039;s certificate to that effect.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="8">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	May I indicate to the Committee that Mr Madasi is represented by Mr Mbandazayo and the indication is that he will lead the evidence or lead the application.  Mr Mthembu is acting for Mr Diamoneng. </text>
		</line>
		<line number="9">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I, Advocate P C Prior is the evidence leader and I will representing the interests of Mrs Jerling: J-E-R-L-I-N-G, who is the victim.  Her son was killed in this attack.  Thank you Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="10">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>The Committee is unchanged with myself, Judge Wilson as Chairman and the Members are Mrs Gcabashe, Mr Lax and Mr Sandi.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="11">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Prior, can you give us any explanation as to why we starting this hearing after one rather than at 9H30 as arranged?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="12">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, there was some difficulty this morning with Mr Mbandazayo&#039;s client, Mr Madasi.  He was brought substantially late in the morning.  The prison authorities had brought another applicant, Mr Siyoni in his place.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="13">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I don&#039;t know what led to that confusion, however he was brought, I think, towards 11 in the morning and then Mr Mbandazayo indicated that Mr Madasi had not yet signed his affidavit which had been recently taken, on the Sunday and the affidavit had to be transcribed and attested to by him.  So unfortunately Mr Chairman, those are the reasons I can advance for the later start in this matter.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="14">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Why was this only done on Sunday?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="15">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Chairman.  Mr Chairman, we are not in control in the bringing of prisoners to East London.  We have been communicating with the prison authorities and for instance Mr Madasi is coming from Cape Town and they have been brought very late.  For instance, there is another applicant Mr Chairman who was also brought yesterday evening.  I have not even consulted with him and he&#039;s also going to - I still have to go and consult with him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="16">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	We have those problems Mr Chairman, that these applicants were not brought to East London prison timeously for us to be able to consult with them.  The other one I&#039;m referring to is from Umtata.  I even went to Umtata Mr Chairman, and I was told he has been transferred to East London, came back and when I arrived in East London they told me: &quot;That&#039;s not true, he&#039;s still in Umtata&quot;.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="17">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	He only arrived yesterday evening.  So we have those problems regarding those who are in custody Mr Chairman.  Those who are not East London are transferred late to East London prison to enable us to consult with them.  Thank you Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="18">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I was told, and I can&#039;t vouch for it in any way of course, that Mr Madasi had been here since the 6th.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="19">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I understand from the prison authorities, the leader of the Correctional Services, that he was here on the 6th in East London.   I don&#039;t know at which facility he was held but the officer in charge of the detachment is present Mr Chairman, if you need any clarification from him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="20">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I trust that if there has been a lack of communication and attorneys have not been informed, arrangements will made that they informed as soon as possible.  On the other hand I equally well assume that attorneys will enquire of the prison authorities and make sure that they do get informed as soon as possible.  I think be can now continue with this hearing.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="21">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="22">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Are you calling the first applicant?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="23">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I just wanted to confirm that I was appearing for Mr Madasi, Mr Siyoni who has since withdrawn his application, Mr Ntintili who has been booked off by the doctor.   If you remember he testified last week but he did not complete the hearing last week because he was ill, he fell ill last week.  I&#039;ve been told that he will be available after the 15th to give evidence.  Thank you Mr Chairman.  The applicant may be sworn in.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="24">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Which one?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="25">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Mr Madasi Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="26">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>And you confirm that Mr Siyoni has withdrawn his application?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="27">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I confirm that Mr Siyoni has withdrawn his application for amnesty in this matter, thank you Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="28">
			<speaker>VUYASILE BRIAN MADASI</speaker>
			<text>(sworn states)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="29">
			<speaker>EXAMINATION BY MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="30">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Madasi, do you confirm that the affidavit which before the Committee was made by you and you adhere to the contents thereof?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="31">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="32">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I&#039;ll go to specific paragraphs of the affidavit and I would request the applicant to explain certain things to the Committee.  Mr Chairman, I would request the Committee to turn to paragraph 6 of the affidavit.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="33" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Comrade Xomiso told me to go to Fort Beaufort and advised me that I would be met by Comrade Zuko at King William&#039;s Town, who will provide accommodation for me.  He advised me that the target had already been identified and it is Yellowwoods Hotel in Fort Beaufort.  He told me that comrade Diesel will give me further	 information regarding the target as he is from the area.  As far as I know no other person knew about the target except myself, comrade Xomiso and Diesel.  Comrade Xomiso told me that the place must be attacked on Friday or Saturday night&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="34">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Now Mr Madasi, are you in a position to explain to the Committee whether Xomiso told you the reason why the Yellowwoods Hotel has to be attacked and why was it going to be attacked on Friday or Saturday night?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="35">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>In answering your question Sir, he said that they Yellowwood Hotel was frequently visited by security members, security force members.  He said that they would go there every Friday and Saturday.  He then stipulated that we must go and attack the place on Friday or Saturday.  I am not sure if I&#039;ve answered you clearly.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="36">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, you&#039;ve answered me.  Now, at paragraph 7</text>
		</line>
		<line number="37" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;As ...[indistinct] arrived in Fort Beaufort, I was accommodated at Mxelo administrative area in Alice.  I was later joined by comrade Nxeba and comrade Mlungisi.  Comrade Nxeba was to be driver of the unit and comrade Mlungisi was to be my deputy&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="38">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, correction:</text>
		</line>
		<line number="39" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;my deputy&quot;   &quot;Comrade was to be our link with comrade Xomiso and will provide us whichever we want&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="40">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Now you talk about comrade Nxeba and comrade Mlungisi, can you tell us who are these people or are there any other names which they are known by?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="41">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>First of all, we used code names.  I only know those comrades according to those code names.  I Nxeba is Nxeba and Mlungisi is Mlungisi and that is it.  It is only today that I discover that he is Xobane, otherwise we know each other through our code names.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="42">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Well, you have discovered what his name is.  Who is this that is Xobane?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="43">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>It is the African Mlungisi that I&#039;ll be appearing with.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="44">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Comrade, Chairperson, is Kupani Diamoneng, applicant AM3828/96, that&#039;s Mlungisi.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="45">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>And who is this comrade Zuko you&#039;re going to meet at King William&#039;s Town?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="46">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Sky, I know him as Sky.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="47">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, and Nxeba, who is he?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="48">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I just Nxeba as Nxeba.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="49">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Do you know these comrades by any other code names, that is Nxeba and Mlungisi?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="50">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I just know Mlungisi as Mlungisi.  I don&#039;t know Nxeba very well, I just know him as Nxeba as well.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="51">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Now if I could just ask in that case, do you now what Siyoni&#039;s code name was?  Was it just Diesel or did he have some other name that you knew?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="52">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I knew him as Diesel.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="53">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Did you know that as his code name?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="54">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, because when I met him he was referred to as Diesel.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="55">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Then Ntintili, did you know his code name or what did you call him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="56">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I just knew him as comrade Ntintili.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="57">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Chairman.   Now, can you explain to the Committee paragraph 7, the last sentence</text>
		</line>
		<line number="58" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Comrade Diesel was to be our link with comrade Xomiso and would provide us whichever we want&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="59">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>What does that mean?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="60">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>We were trying to protect the lines of communication because he was meant to be our conductor.  I reported to Diesel if we needed anything within the unit.  Diesel coordinated everything.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="61">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Paragraph 9 Mr Chairman</text>
		</line>
		<line number="62" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;After I had completed the reconnaissance of the place, comrade Ntintili came with the arms.  The arms are as described in paragraph 9&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="63">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Can you tell the Committee who requested the arms that they be brought?  Did you request the arms that they be brought or Mr Ntintili just came with the arms?	</text>
		</line>
		<line number="64">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I got there and stayed there with comrade Sky.  It is from Sky that we got the arms and accommodation.  However, as the commander of the unit I received the arms from comrade Ntintili.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="65">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Paragraph 10 Mr Chairman ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="66">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m sorry, I seem to be a bit confused about this arms story, about whether it&#039;s Sky or Ntintili who arranged the arms.  I understand it to be Ntintili even from the affidavit, where does Sky come in?  I understand the accommodation part, the arms part?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="67">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Your question is not clear.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="68">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>You see I have made a note here, your initial response was something along the lines that you got there and stayed with Sky so I understand your accommodation was provided by Sky, that&#039;s correct.  But you also said: &quot;From Sky we got arms and accommodation&quot;, now it&#039;s the arms part I don&#039;t quite understand.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="69">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>My answer to this question, where the accommodation is concerned and the arms, as Sky was from that area he is the one who knew who to contact in - it is Ntintili who brought the arms to me directly.  I hope I have answered you well.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="70">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Chairman.  Paragraph 10 Mr Chairman</text>
		</line>
		<line number="71" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;When I was about to decide on the wake of the attack at Yellowwoods, I was informed that comrade Ntintili has been arrested and we retreat from that area.  We were accommodated at Mdantsane at comrade Law&#039;s place who was a relative of comrade Nxeba&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="72">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Can you explain to the Committee what happened and how did you retreat to Mdantsane?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="73">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>After the comrade came with the arms, comrade Nxeba and Mlungisi went to the phone.  When they got there they heard that comrade Ntintili was arrested and we then had to withdraw.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="74">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	It was clear that Nxeba knew people around the Eastern Cape.  I think he was going to meet one of his relatives.  We then had to use that day that he was meant to meet his relative, they were meant to meet at Alice.  We then moved to Alice, we then met with comrade Law, Nxeba&#039;s relative.  That is how we ended up in Mdantsane.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="75">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Can you tell the Committee what was comrade Law doing in Alice?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="76">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>First of all, comrade Law was a student at Fort Hare.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="77">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Paragraph 11</text>
		</line>
		<line number="78" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;As we were determined to hit the target we decided that on a Friday we must meet at Fort Hare at comrade Law&#039;s room as he was a student there.  We met at comrade Law&#039;s room, it was myself, Mlungisi, Nxeba, Diesel and Sky&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="79">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Can you tell the Committee how did you arrange that you meet at Law&#039;s room at Fort Hare?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="80">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>As a unit commander I organised that the comrades meet.  We then found out as we met that comrade Law had at room at Fort Hare.  After having spoken to Nxeba we decided to meet there.  Mlungisi, Nxeba and myself stayed in Mdantsane.  Comrade Diesel and comrade Sky are from around here.  We made a way that we meet.  We met at Fort Hare.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="81">
			<speaker>INTERPRETER</speaker>
			<text>The applicant is listening to channel 2 and he keeps waiting for the interpretation.  If he could list to channel 3 please.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="82">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="83">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Then when you met at Fort Hare, what did you decide to do?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="84">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>We discussed certain matters and we decided to carry out the operation.  Comrade Mlungisi and comrade Nxeba and Sky had to go get a car, I was then left behind with comrade Diesel.  We were left behind with the arms just outside Fort Hare.  They noted where we were sitting so that when they came back with the kombi they could pick us up, it was a Nissan.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="85">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	We got into the kombi and on the way there to the hotel the police came after, chasing us.  We then abandoned the vehicle.  We collected our stuff from the kombi but some of our stuff was left behind.  We went back to Fort Hare, we left our arms there.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="86">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	The next morning the three of us went to Mdantsane, the other two comrades went back to their own area.  That is how it happened.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="87">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I will proceed to paragraph 14</text>
		</line>
		<line number="88" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Because our mission aborted we decided that we must take a car in Mdantsane and use it on the attack.  On the following Friday we took a red Langley&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="89">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Langley Mr Chairman, not Landley, it&#039;s a &quot;g&quot;.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="90" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;red Langley from a certain person in one of the Mdantsane units and we drove to Fort Hare where we took arms and proceeded to Fort Beaufort but when we arrived the hotel was closed and we came back and dropped the arms at Nxlelo location in Alice.  We were a unit of three this time, it was myself armed with  R5, Mlungisi armed with R4 and Nxeba with Uzzi.  We decided that we will carry the attack on the following day on Saturday.  We dumped the Langley near Alice&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="91">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Can you tell the Committee how did you get the Langley?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="92">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>After we got to Mdantsane the next morning we took the Langley.  I can&#039;t remember which unit in Mdantsane.  An elderly man was driving it.  We talked to him, he didn&#039;t give us any trouble.  We tried to communicate the conditions to him, we took his car.  After that we went to Fort Hare for our arms, it was Mlungisi, Nxeba and I.  We got to the hotel after that, the hotel was closed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="93">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	We went back to Nxlelo, dropped the car.  The next morning, the Saturday we went to Alice where we were going to get a car to go back to the target place.  We got this car from a couple, we  dropped them off between Fort Beaufort and Alice, they didn&#039;t give us any trouble either.  We took our arms and we went to the hotel, it was open.  I hope I&#039;ve answered you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="94">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Can you proceed and tell the Committee what happened.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="95">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>We went inside the hotel.  We drove in, parked the car and after that I ordered comrade Nxeba to go to the back door so that as we were going to shoot by the bar there might be people who would want to escape from the back door and he then would deal with those people.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="96">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mlungisi had an R4, a pistol to use as a withdrawal sign.  The comrades prepared well.  After about three minutes the comrade used the pistol as a withdrawal sign and we left.  We didn&#039;t have problems on our way back.  We left the car just before King William&#039;s Town because we had a problem with a punctured tyre.   We then went to a place that Nxeba would know better, dropped off the arms.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="97">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	The next morning we took different transport, we went to Mdantsane, we took our clothing and went back to the Transkei individually.  I gave feedback to comrade Leklapa and Mjala.  I hope that I&#039;ve answered you well.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="98">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>You&#039;ve told the Committee that you were told about the target by comrade Xomiso and now can you tell the Committee what was your position regarding the attack at the Yellowwoods yourself?  What was your attitude regarding the attack at Yellowwoods, putting aside the order that was given by comrade Xomiso as you indicated?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="99">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>As an APLA combatant I always asked myself why I was not sent to an operation area.  It was good and noble to fight for our country, I was eager to join the struggle.  I was given an order and mine was to obey and make sure that the order is carried out.  I was proud of what I was doing, I was a soldier and a politician.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="100">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Everybody knows that the white man was the oppressor in this country.  A lot of Africans lost their lives through the white man.  I hope you do not perceive this as being racist, I am racist, the PAC is not racist.  However the oppressors in this country were white.  I was proud to take part in the struggle to fight oppression.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="101">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Oppression doesn&#039;t just come naturally, it is people who choose to oppress.  I was proud to receive orders and I was proud to carry them out.  I endeavoured to make sure that orders are carried out.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="102">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>That is all Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="103">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR MBANDAZAYO</text>
		</line>
		<line number="104">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Mthembu?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="105">
			<speaker>CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR MTHEMBU</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Chair, just one question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="106">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Madasi, in paragraph 10 you say you were accommodated at Mdantsane at comrade Law&#039;s place, was Mlungisi or Diamoneng together with you at Mdantsane or not?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="107">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>There were just three of us there, myself, Mlungisi and Nxeba.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="108">
			<speaker>MR MTHEMBU</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Chair, I have no further questions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="109">
			<speaker>CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="110">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Madasi, you said you were the commander of this particular operation, when did you arrive in the area to engage or to ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="111">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I can&#039;t really be sure, it&#039;s been a while.  It was 1993 though but I wouldn&#039;t know which month or day it was.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="112">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Well we know that when Mr Jerling was killed in the bar at the Yellowwoods Hotel, that was on the, I think the 20th of March 1993, you had come to the area a little while before that had you not?  Can you maybe tell us or tell the Committee, was it a month before the operation or was it a week before, what is your recollection?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="113">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m not sure.  I don&#039;t want to say a month or guess, it wasn&#039;t too long a time but it was at the beginning of 1993.  I can&#039;t remember the date.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="114">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Did you or were you together with the group that took a taxi, I think it was a kombi type vehicle, it was a Mazda Marathon?  I&#039;m referring to page 31 and particularly page 33: Mr Tandisili Vena&#039;s vehicle from the Fort Beaufort taxi rank, do you remember that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="115">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>It was a taxi rank in Alice I think because we were in Alice not Fort Beaufort.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="116">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Do you remember that Mazda Marathon, it&#039;s a kombi type vehicle?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="117">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I do remember it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="118">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m referring to page 31 of the papers, of the bundle.  Mr Vena made a statement reporting the theft or robbery of the vehicle and he says that was on a Friday the 12th of March 1992, that obviously is incorrect, it was &#039;93.  It appears to be a week before the actual attack on the hotel, would that coincide with your recollection?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="119">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t follow you, I&#039;m a bit confused.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="120">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Look Mr Madasi please, don&#039;t get confused, the question is very simple.  A week before on the 12th of March 1993, were you involved in the theft of a Mazda Marathon?  You actually said it was the Alice taxi rank and not the Fort Beaufort taxi rank.  Were you involved in the removal of that vehicle from the owner, that&#039;s the question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="121">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I said that comrade Nxeba, comrade Mlungisi, Sky, they were the ones who went and got the car, Diesel and I were waiting for them.  I&#039;ve already said this.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="122">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Did you at some stage enter into that vehicle?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="123">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Sorry the questions was, did you enter into that vehicle?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="124">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="125">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Just for the interpreter&#039;s sake, nothing to do with Ntintili.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="126">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Did you at any stage on that evening when the vehicle was removed from the owner&#039;s possession, did you enter or board that vehicle?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="127">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>This is the car that we were meant to use to the operation.  The comrades brought the car and I got into the car.  I did get into the car.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="128">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Where was the owner of the vehicle at that stage, when you entered the vehicle?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="129">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I was not there when the car was taken from the owner, it is the other comrades who brought the car to us, to Diesel and I.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="130">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Did you instruct your comrades to go and fetch that vehicle or to fetch a vehicle to be used in the operation on that evening?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="131">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I did so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="132">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Were your instructions that the vehicle had to be removed from the owner by force?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="133">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>It was a war, a battle.  We expected contribution from the other Africans as they were also oppressed, they know they were oppressed.  You talk to the person, you tell them the reasons why you need their car.  I know that they never injured the man.  It showed that they did well to contribute into the struggle.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="134">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Did you instruct them to use force to obtain the vehicle, yes or no?  That would suffice.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="135">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I instructed them to go and get the car, I did not stipulate whether they should take it by force or talk to the people.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="136">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>What was your instruction as the commander of the unit that was going to attack Yellowwood Hotel?  Did you say: &quot;If the owner of the vehicle resist, you must use force&quot;, or did you not tell them that?  Or did you tell them: &quot;First try and persuade him to relinquish the vehicle of his own&quot;?  What did you say to them?  Or did you say absolutely nothing to them, was it left to their discretion?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="137">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Sir, years have elapsed since the incident and I&#039;m in jail, that affects me psychologically.  I told the comrades to get a car that we&#039;d use in the operation, I did not stipulate and say: &quot;Take it by force or talk to the people&quot;.  I just said to them that we need a car to carry out the operation, that&#039;s the order I gave.  I hope I&#039;ve answered you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="138">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Now, how long before that incident with the Mazda Marathon motor vehicle of Mr Vena, had you gone to the hotel to reconnoitre the area?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="139">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>You&#039;ve asked two questions, please ask me one question at a time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="140">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>How long before the incident that you&#039;ve now just answered about the motor vehicle - we know that happened on the 12th of March, how long before that did you go and look at the hotel where you were going to launch an attack on - as you say, security policemen who attended there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="141">
			<speaker>INTERPRETER</speaker>
			<text>Could the speaker please repeat the question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="142">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>How long before the 12th of March, the date which we know from the statement of Mr Vena, you took the Mazda Marathon, that was the kombi type vehicle, how long before that date, was it a week, two weeks, a month, that you went to look at the hotel where you were going to launch an attack?  Do you understand the question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="143">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Are you saying that - are you asking whether it was a week before we went there or what?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="144">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m asking you, can you give us an estimation of how long before the vehicle incident, that&#039;s the theft of the first vehicle, that you had gone to the Yellowwoods Hotel?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="145">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Mr Prior, a lot of time has elapsed, I can&#039;t give you dates and months.  I&#039;m going to have problems with giving you specific times, I would not be telling the truth if I said so.  I&#039;m not sure how much time had elapsed, I can&#039;t speculate.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="146">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, you&#039;ve answered the question.  When you went to the hotel, was that during the day?  That was now to go and reconnoitre, to see where your target is or what the target is, was that during the daytime?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="147">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>It was during the day.  I went with comrade Nxeba and then he went for the second time inside the hotel but it was during the day when we both went there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="148">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>And your mission was sanctioned by the Director of Operations, is that right, that was Leklapa Mpashlele?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="149">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>We were given direct orders by comrade Xomiso, he then informed us that he got the orders from comrade Mpashlela.  He said that these orders came from the Director of Operations.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="150">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>When did that take place, can you maybe cast your mind back and give us an idea when those instructions were received?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="151">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>At the beginning of 1993.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="152">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>And where you, were you in Umtata, Butterworth, where were you?  What part of the country were you when you got these orders?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="153">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>In Umtata.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="154">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>And comrade Xomiso, where is he today?  Is he still alive?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="155">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Apparently he passed away.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="156">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Do you know when he passed away?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="157">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>In 1997, I&#039;m not sure of the particular dates.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="158">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Were you part of any regiment or detachment - we heard during this session that there was a thing known as the Lembede Regiment and the Xude Regiment, were you part of any detachment or regiment of APLA?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="159">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="160">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Were you just a squad that was sent into an area to do an operation and once you&#039;d done that operation you had to get out as quickly as possible?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="161">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>It was a special operation done by special units.  I was a commander of that specific unit at that time, I was elected as a commander.  I don&#039;t know whether you are clear.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="162">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Was that your first operation that you led that you were the commander of?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="163">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="164">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>And before that, before March 1993, had you been involved in any other operation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="165">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="166">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>So would you agree that you had very, very, - well, you had no experience in leading operations at all?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="167">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t agree with you Sir for specific reasons.  We have military classes, political classes.  Before a comrade is sent to an operation you first were educated accordingly.  You go and put into practise something that you have learnt already.  I had theoretical experience.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="168">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Yes, thank you.  And Mr Kupani Diamoneng, had he been involved in any other operation to you knowledge, before the Yellowwoods matter?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="169">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t know because it was the first time I worked with him in that particular operation, I don&#039;t know of any prior operations.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="170">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Would it be correct to say that, or to understand from you that all the people involved in this operation on Yellowwoods Hotel never discussed their past experiences or past operations with each other?  I that correct?  Or did you discuss with each other operations that you&#039;d been on or the training that you&#039;d received, anything like that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="171">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>First of all, we were a guerilla army, it&#039;s not important to discuss or tell my comrade about operations I was involved in and visa versa.  What would be important then would be the operation at hand.  We never discussed anybody&#039;s experiences, it would create problems.  We just had to focus on what we had to do.  We would end up looking down at each other perhaps if we looked at each other&#039;s experience.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="172">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  So from that you didn&#039;t know - let me rephrase it, you were expecting, well the target you were informed about was the hotel where you were informed military personnel were in attendance or frequented, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="173">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Pleas repeat the question Sir.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="174">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Your target was the hotel where you say military personnel - that was your information, that used to attend - in other words, members of the security forces attended that hotel and that was your target?  The personnel, the military personnel or security forces that attending there or frequented that place, those people were your target, is that right?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="175">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>The people that chose the target are members of the high command of APLA.  We were voluntary soldiers, we had to make sure that we carry out the operation, that was on our shoulders.  We would go to a target place that had already been selected by the APLA High Command.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="176">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I must ask you this question because this really springs to mind, if we look at the Heidelberg matter - I know those facts aren&#039;t strictly relevant here, but in that matter your evidence was or the evidence was that the targets were left to the commanders on the ground to decide.  Do you remember that evidence been given during the Heidelberg matter?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="177">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I think Mr Prior is not correct when he put it that way, I was in the Heidelberg Tavern.  No, he will be misleading the applicant if he puts that it was left.  If my memory serves me well Mr Chairman, Luyanda Gqomfa made it that he was the only one who knew about the target from when he left from Umtata.  The others were told during the attack, so it was selected even before they left Umtata.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="178">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I simply want to draw - if there is a distinction, I want to draw that distinction.  My recollection - and Mr Chairman, you can correct me.  In the Heidelberg matter APLA said that the policy at that stage, they would leave the identification of the targets up to the local commanders.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="179">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I simply want to ask this witness if he remembers that being said and if he does remember why does there seem to be a difference between yellowwoods hotel and the policy adopted later?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="180">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I still have a problem with that.  If the Committee has a problem, I don&#039;t have a problem, I can fetch the affidavit of Luyanda Gqomfa.  That is not true what is being said by Mr Prior.  He still in the affidavit of Luyanda Gqomfa, that was not the position.  If he is talking about APLA then I would understand maybe the submissions of APLA but if he&#039;s talking about the Heidelberg incident during the amnesty hearing, it was clear that he was given an order in Umtata.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="181">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Alright, I&#039;ll leave that Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="182">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Thank you, I won&#039;t pursue it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="183">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Now on this reconnaissance that you went on, what did you do at the hotel?  What did you do, did you go into the hotel, did you walk around it, what did you do?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="184">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>The question of reconnaissance, as I knew that Nxeba knew the Eastern Cape well, we went to the hotel with Nxeba during the day, Nxeba and I.  We went to look at the distance especially and entrances, how many entrances there were into the hotel, the different roots and their disadvantages, these are the things that we looked at.  We did not go inside the hotel.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="185">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>On the basis of that reconnaissance you decided that the target could be attacked, is that right?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="186">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>We concluded that we should go again and enter the hotel to find out how it is inside.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="187">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>When did you do that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="188">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>The second reconnaissance.  I&#039;m not sure but Nxeba is the one who went inside the hotel, he went on his own.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="189">
			<speaker>ADV PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Where were you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="190">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>We were staying in Mdantsane, I was in Mdantsane.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="191">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Did he report back to you, Nxeba, about the second reconnaissance?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="192">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, he did.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="193">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Tell me Mr Madasi, do you accept that apart from your information that members of the security forces attended that hotel, was it also your information that civilian people unconnected to the security forces also attended the hotel or patronised the hotel? ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="194">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Sorry Mr Prior, he hasn&#039;t said his information was that.  He said his order was that and that&#039;s why he understood the order to have been given.  So please, let&#039;s just be careful here otherwise we put words in his mouth.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="195">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="196">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Was it your instruction or your order - sorry, maybe you give an instruction in that way, what did you understand from your orders as to who were the patrons of that hotel, who were the people that frequented that hotel?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="197">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t understand your question well, if you can clarify.  What are you trying to ask me?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="198">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Well I&#039;m trying to ask you if you are able to tell us, did you believe that there were only security forces at that hotel or did you also understand that private people or citizens unarmed, unconnected with the security forces, could also possibly be at that hotel?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="199">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>That place was outside the town so to speak, members of the security frequented the place that is why it was the target, that was the order.  As the commander of the unit you just had to plan how to go about attacking the place.  We went there with the knowledge that that was the place where security members went frequently.  I hope I&#039;ve answered you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="200">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>So it wouldn&#039;t have made ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="201">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Sorry Paddy, I&#039;m still not very clear on this.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="202">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Were you able to verify that this place was frequented by military people?  We you able to verify that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="203">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>It is a report that we received from comrade Nxeba, that as he went inside the hotel he discovered that the men that were inside there were carrying guns, most of them were carrying guns.  He did not specify and say what kind of guns but he said that most people that were there had weapons.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="204">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Then the second leg to the same aspect is, did he say anything about ordinary civilians who may or may not be in the hotel?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="205">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>He did say that there were people there, he did not say whether they were civilians or not.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="206">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>And the last aspect on the same issue is then people who worked there.  I know Mr Prior didn&#039;t talk about them specifically, what was your information on those people?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="207">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>We did not receive any information on those, we were just focusing on people that frequented the hotel.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="208">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="209">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>But surely you must have also, as the commander of that unit, that operation, you must have also appreciated surely that also would have been civilian people unconnected to the security forces that might also be there, did you appreciate that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="210">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>It was a battle against the oppressors, they oppressed us socially, through the military and economically.  The question about civilians is difficult because according to APLA there was no distinction between civilians and the others because an oppressor was an oppressor according to APLA.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="211">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>And he was an oppressor if he had a white skin, is that right?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="212">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Sobukwe puts it this way: &quot;Don&#039;t hate white people simply because they are white&quot;.  It is like you would beat me up with a sjambock, I can&#039;t say I hate the sjambock, I would rather say I hate you.  So that you stop using the sjambock I have to hit you or hit on you rather than the sjambock.  I hope you understand.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="213">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>When you went to the hotel on that occasion when you fired shots, what steps did you take to make sure that you were hitting the right target, in other words that the people there were in fact members of the security forces.  What steps did you take if any?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="214">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>First of all, we were there to kill and destroy ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="215">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Who were there to kill?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="216">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>We are there to kill and destroy the people that we would find there at that particular time.  You could not differentiate amongst the people that were there because you would also get injured.  We went to attack the people who were there at the time.  We did not assess the damage.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="217">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>And what steps if any or precautions did you take to avoid injuring the staff, that is the non-white - if I can put it that way, members, the black members of staff at that hotel who were present on that evening?  Did you consider their safety at all?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="218">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>As I&#039;ve already said, I did not know the people that worked there or what race they were.  We were not there to protect some and attack others.  The APLA battle was not specifically against white or black, it was against the oppressor.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="219">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Did you class the servants working in the kitchen there as oppressors?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="220">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>As I&#039;ve already said people - I had no information on the people that worked there, whether they were black or white.  We went to attack black or white.  We were going to attack the black people if they were there as well.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="221">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>So you were really focused on the target, not on whether there were black or white people in the premises, is this what you&#039;re saying?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="222">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="223">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I want to put to you ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="224">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Also - if I&#039;m hearing you correctly, in essence you are saying: &quot;We had our orders, our orders were to attack that place&quot; and you are saying in essence it didn&#039;t matter who was there, you went there to attack that place, just to carry out your orders?  Is that right?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="225">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>That was selected because security members frequented the place.  Even the person who went to do the reconnaissance came back with the same report.  He did not identify the people that were there as civilians.   We just knew that security members frequented the place.  I would not know whether there were civilians there but I was given an order in a specific manner.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="226">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>And you went there to carry out that order, that&#039;s what I asked you in the first place.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="227">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Correct, however to confirm the information that I received, the comrades that went inside to find out who was there came back with the same report that most of the people inside the hotel had weapons.  Therefore to me and to the unit there was no difference amongst the people.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="228">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>If you had found that that place in fact had a whole lot of old grannies there that were not armed or anything, would you have carried on with the mission?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="229">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>The order did not say anything about old people.  We did not choose the target place.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="230">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s what I&#039;m asking you, I&#039;m trying to understand what would you have done if you had found that the place was full of old grannies?  Would you have reported back to your commanders and said: &quot;Hang on we think you&#039;re making a mistake, this is not a security force place&quot; or would you have simply carried out your orders?  Did you have the space to question your orders, that&#039;s what we&#039;re trying to understand, so please don&#039;t get all - try and understand what I&#039;m asking you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="231">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>First of all Sir, the Secretary for Defence in 1993 for AZANIA&#039;s people for liberation declared 1993 as:  &quot;The Year of the Great Storm&quot;.  If there were old people there or there were grannies there they would give specific reasons why the place must be attacked.  We left our parents to fight for this country, we chose to, we volunteered to be members of APLA.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="232">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I need for you to have that clear in your mind.  We were not chased away from home, we left our homes voluntarily.  As members of APLA you do find that you are where you always wanted to be, to fight against the oppressor.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="233">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>You haven&#039;t answered my question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="234">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>You seem to be avoiding the question.  As I understood the question it was: &quot;You were sent to this place because you were told it was frequented by the security police&quot;.  If however you had found that there were no security policemen there but merely a lot of old women, would you have felt you could question your orders and say: &quot;You must have got the wrong place&quot;?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="235">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Where would we be getting that?  Would we discover ourselves that the place is full of grannies or would it be an order from above that we must ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="236">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>You would discover yourselves when you went to check on it, Nxeba could come back and report to you that he didn&#039;t see a single security person there he just saw old grannies.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="237">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, can I just for clarity assist here in explaining to him what is wanted by the Committee, just in his mother tongue as maybe he&#039;s having problems with that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="238">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	The question is, for a moment forget that there were security men there as your order said.  Say you go there and you get there and there are grannies, old people only, now the question is, would you continue and attack the place?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="239">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, we would Sir.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="240">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>...[end of tape]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="241">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>...[inaudible] answered my question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="242">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Mr Madasi, just a follow-up to your answer here, is that to say that in those circumstances you wouldn&#039;t have felt any obligation to go back to those who had given you this information and orders, to go back to these people and say that: &quot;The information you gave us about this place is wrong, it&#039;s incorrect&quot;, you would not even have done that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="243">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Advocate Sandi, your question is clear.  I wouldn&#039;t be able to do that, I had to carry out the order, not because I was forced to do so or because I could not ask any question but as I said, after I received the training I kept on asking myself: &quot;when am I going to be sent into the battle&quot;?  I was proud, I was glad that I was sent into battle because it was my contribution to liberate this country, to liberate the oppressed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="244">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I wasn&#039;t going to go back and ask our commanders about the order or the nature of the order.  Even if there were grannies there we were going to attack, I wasn&#039;t going to go back and ask questions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="245">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Are you saying you were proud and glad to have been told to go and kill people and you wouldn&#039;t go to anything that might stop you doing that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="246">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Judge Wilson, it was a war between the oppressor and the oppressed.  As we were fighting, anybody who was oppressed wanted to fight against the oppression to overcome the oppression because even the oppressors, they used their own tactics, their weapons to fight, to oppress us.  Yes, I am proud.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="247">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I left home, my parents loved me and I left them behind, volunteered, yes I was proud to fight, to be in the battle.  I don&#039;t regret having taken part in APLA.  APLA consists of soldiers, different units inside South Africa.  I feel that the struggle the Africans took part in was a good thing, it was noble.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="248">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	It would take the day to list the number of things that Boers did against the oppressed, the cruel things that they did.  It was not sinful what we did.  APLA fought for the oppressed.  I hope I&#039;ve answered you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="249">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Mr Madasi, - and I&#039;m referring the Committee to page 47 and 49 of the bundle, there were two statements from employees at the hotel on that evening.  Page 47, that&#039;s the statement of Bingklela and I refer to paragraph 5 there of Mr Chairman and the statement of Kameni at page 49 paragraph 2.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="250">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Now I just want to draw your attention to the fact that the staff were told by a gunman who appeared in the kitchen area to keep, that they must keep quiet and that this person then moved past them deeper into the hotel.  My question is, it would seem from that - and I&#039;m putting it to you, that the staff were told to keep quiet, they were left alone, they weren&#039;t threatened by your unit.  That is what appears from their statements that they made when this hotel was attacked.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="251">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Now I&#039;m putting to you that this seems to fly in the face of your evidence a short while ago, that it made no difference whether there were black people or white people there, you were simply there to attack the target.  Would you care to clarify that or answer that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="252">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>First of all you must also ask yourself a question that, how can you pass a person and then move onto others, what if this person hit you from behind because you don&#039;t know this person?  In the matter that you say that the gun - the people say that the gunmen passed them, I&#039;m not going to say anything about that because I don&#039;t know.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="253">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	If they say that he did not heed the blacks, I don&#039;t know why would he leave them behind.  I don&#039;t want to say anything about that because I don&#039;t know about it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="254">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>So obviously that wasn&#039;t you, it must have been one of your other comrades, Mr Diamoneng or Mr ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="255">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Excuse me, this I&#039;m not going to confirm this.  I&#039;m not denying it but I&#039;m not going to confirm it because first of all it&#039;s the first time I hear about this, that there were people who say that there was a gunman who passed them.  I don&#039;t know about it so I&#039;m not going to confirm it.  I don&#039;t know whether it happened or not.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="256">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Well I&#039;m putting to you that it happened.  These two witnesses have made statements, those statements were given to your attorney on Wednesday of last and I assume that you had been informed of that.  And I&#039;m simply putting to you a portion of the paragraph where you they say: whilst they were in the kitchen area a gunmen came in, told them - when they started screaming, to keep quiet, they were unmolested and the gunmen then went past them into a different place of the hotel where the shooting then occurred.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="257">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	 Are you saying that that didn&#039;t happen or are you unable to comment on whether that happened or not, possibly because you weren&#039;t in that portion of the hotel?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="258">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>When I gave in my report about this operation I did not include this because I don&#039;t know anything about it.  If the comrade Nxeba perhaps was there and knew that that had happened he should have reported it and we would have included it in the report.  There was no such report and I don&#039;t know anything about it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="259">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Did your co-applicant, that is Mr Diamoneng, was he also in the hotel or was he outside the hotel when the shooting occurred?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="260">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>He was outside next to the window.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="261">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>So was it yourself and Nxeba who entered the hotel?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="262">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I think you are mixing the whole story up.  It is Nxebe who went round the other way ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="263">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Just tell us ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="264">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Please give me a moment Sir.  It is Nxeba, I and comrade Mlungisi - I opened the door by the bar and I shot whilst I was standing by the door.  It was Mlungisi and I who was inside, Nxeba was standing at the back.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="265">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Did you shoot the person who was sitting at the bar?   And I want to refer you to page 28 and 29 of the bundle which shows the deceased, Mr Jerling slumped over the bar, was it you that shot at that gentleman?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="266">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I can&#039;t say whether it was me or Mlungisi because we both shot, we were shooting towards the place where there were people.   I can&#039;t say whether I&#039;m the one who shot him or it was Mlungisi because we were both shooting towards the same place.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="267">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Did you ever go into the kitchen area of the hotel before shooting in the bar?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="268">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I have no idea which side the kitchen is.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="269">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>So you never saw any black employees of the hotel before you shot in the bar, is that what you&#039;re saying?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="270">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I did not see any black people there.  We got off the car and we started shooting, it was all fast.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="271">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>And was that in the front - did you enter the bar from the front entrance?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="272">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Sorry Mr Prior, ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="273">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>There was a front door with windows at the side.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="274">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m listening to both Xhosa and English.  There seems to have been a misunderstanding between the witness and the interpreter.  I think he said at some point: &quot;I did not see any people there&quot; and the interpretation was: &quot;I did not see any black people there&quot;.  Maybe you can clarify that with him, what exactly did he say?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="275">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I think the question was, did he see any black employees of the hotel and he answered that he didn&#039;t.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="276">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="277">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I did not see any workers, I did not identify anyone as a worker or whether they were there to drink.  There was no-one outside the premises, we just focused at the bar.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="278">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Did you see any people at all there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="279">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>When exactly?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="280">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Did you see any human being there, whether black or white?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="281">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>He said that he and Mlungisi both shot to where there were people.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="282">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, we did not identify any colour, we just saw people.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="283">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, because again abantu can mean strictly black people, umululagenu munt(?), we say that sometimes or abantu could be as you say human beings, that&#039;s the only distinction Mr Sandi is trying to draw because we understand the Xhosa meaning of umuntu(?).  That is the only bit of clarification that I can appreciate him asking and I was wondering as well, thanks.  If you can just help us on that one, mauti abantu ...[indistinct].  Do you mean ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="284">
			<speaker>INTERPRETER</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s fine Advocate Gcabashe, you don&#039;t have to wait for the interpretation, just carry on speaking.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="285">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>The reason why I said that there were people is because there was a noise.  There were people playing darts.  The people that were there were white, I did not see any black workers.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="286">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>In paragraph 14 of your affidavit you said</text>
		</line>
		<line number="287" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;I entered the door of the pub, Nxeba went to the rear door of the hotel and Mlungisi was at the window&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="288">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Is that so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="289">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Paragraph?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="290">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>14 of your affidavit.  I want to know from you, did Mlungisi, that is your co-applicant, did he shoot from outside the premises, shooting into the premises through the window?  Is that what you&#039;re saying there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="291">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="292">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>And when Nxeba went to the rear of the hotel, did you know whether he shot at all or you unaware or can&#039;t you say that, whether he shot?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="293">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t think that he shot because according to the report that he gave - I&#039;m not sure whether his gun jammed or not, I don&#039;t know, however he did not shoot because we put him there so that if there are people escaping from the back then he would attack.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="294">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>You see why I ask you that, are you saying he never made a report that the gun jammed?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="295">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t know because you said that his gun jammed in an operation area in a danger zone, that&#039;s a bit confusing, it&#039;s the first time I hear of that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="296">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Did he tell you that or didn&#039;t he tell you that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="297">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Sorry Mr Prior, maybe we can just help the witness here.  We don&#039;t know exactly whose gun jammed at this point in time ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="298">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m coming to that Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="299">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>So let&#039;s not put it to him on the basis that someone&#039;s gun jammed, did anyone report that their gun jammed during the operation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="300">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Let&#039;s clarify that first and then we&#039;ll take it to the next step.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="301">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m putting it to him specifically whether Nxeba&#039;s told him because we know the other one stood at the window.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="302">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>...[inaudible]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="303">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Nxeba.  Thank you Mr Chairman.  Maybe I&#039;ll just cut to the chase, page 43, the statement of Mr Clyde Conway Shorts who was the assistant manager ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="304">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Just before you do Mr Prior, let him just answer the question we put to him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="305">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="306">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Did anyone&#039;s gun jam as far as you are aware? As the commander of the operation, did anyone report to you that their gun jammed during the operation, yes or not?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="307">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>There was never a report that the gun jammed in the danger zone, however after the operation, after we&#039;d left then it was discovered that a gun had jammed but not during the operation, ...[indistinct] withdrawal.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="308">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Whose gun jammed?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="309">
			<speaker>INTERPRETER</speaker>
			<text>Could the speaker please repeat the</text>
		</line>
		<line number="310">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>answer?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="311">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>The report concerning the jamming of the gun was not such that the gun jammed during the operation, the comrade reported afterwards, after we&#039;d already dropped off the car, that his gun has jammed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="312">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Who was it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="313">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Comrade Nxeba.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="314">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>He was the one that went to the rear of the hotel?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="315">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="316">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>When you started shooting in the bar area, did they lights go off in the hotel?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="317">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I wouldn&#039;t know, I didn&#039;t notice anything about lights.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="318">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;ve had sight - I haven&#039;t put up the documents, but I&#039;ve had sight of the electrical report that the mains were struck, the cable was struck that ran in the bar and that&#039;s when the lights went out plunging the hotel in darkness.  So you say you have no recollection of the lights going out?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="319">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>No, I did not notice such.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="320">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I just want to put to you what Mr Short said in a statement that he made on the early morning after the attack at page 43, 44 Mr Chairman.  In paragraph 2 at the top of the page he said he saw this gunman and he thought that this person had an AK47 automatic rifle.  At the top of the page, page 44 he said</text>
		</line>
		<line number="321" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot; As he appeared from out of the kitchen I saw that he cocked the weapon.  He pointed the weapon at me and pulled the trigger.  I then hear the weapon make a clicking sound but no shot was discharged.  I then put my hands in the air and asked him if he wanted money.  He kept trying to cock the gun and kept saying: stand still.  At this stage I heard gun shots ring out and the premises were plunged in darkness.  I heard a number of shots ring out from the bar area&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="322">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>What is your question Sir?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="323">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>From the account of Mr Shorts who had confronted, and I would presume to have been Nxeba in the rear portion of the premises away from the bar, that Nxeba tried to shoot him but the gun jammed at that stage.  Was that not reported to you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="324">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>That was not reported to me.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="325">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>What I&#039;m also putting to you is that the person that entered through the rear portion of the hotel told the black employees to keep quiet or to keep still, in other words that he didn&#039;t seem to be interested in them.  Are you able to comment</text>
		</line>
		<line number="326">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>That does not really make sense because Nxeba did not go inside and just leave the black people.  I did not get such a report as a unit commander because Nxeba was meant to have divulged such information.  Whether it happened or not I would not know, I did not get such a report.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="327">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Where&#039;s Nxeba today, have you seen him since the operation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="328">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t know.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="329">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>And after your operation you disbanded, you never saw him again?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="330">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>The last time we saw each other was when we went to Cape Town, that was the last time I saw him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="331">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, you went to Cape Town on several occasions, was that during your operations or was that when you went as part of the amnesty process, which?  Was Nxeba part of your Cape Town ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="332">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>During the time of the operation Sir.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="333">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Was Nxeba part of your unit in Cape Town?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="334">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="335">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>And just to get some clarity because I want to check up on this, was he involved in Heidelberg, the Heidelberg Tavern attack?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="336">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="337">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I want to refer you to what Mr Kenneth Mashalaba at page 35 of the papers ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="338">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Sorry Mr Chairman, I would like Mr Prior just to wrap up that question because he said he&#039;s going to check, whether he can ask the applicant what was the name he used in Cape Town, that is Nxeba, because I understand he was not using the same name.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="339">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I think Mr Mbandazayo puts it well, maybe he can answer that question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="340">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	What name did Nxeba use in Cape Town?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="341">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Maxebu.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="342">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Mr Kenneth Mashalaba at page 35 of the bundle said he, on the 20th of March 1993, was in Alice when his vehicle was taken from him and I think that was a Nissan motor vehicle.  It was a Nissan Sentra but it doesn&#039;t appear so from the statement Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="343">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Do you remember that vehicle, the Nissan Sentra in Alice?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="344">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, this is the one we used to go and attack.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="345">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Mr Mashalaba said that someone pushed him into the passenger seat and that he had struck this person with his fist, is that correct?  Did this person put up a resistance?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="346">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Does Mr Mashalaba say who he was with in the car?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="347">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>There was a female on the back seat, do you remember that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="348">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I wanted you to clarify that point.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="349">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Now that I&#039;ve clarified it, do you remember it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="350">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="351">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>And do you remember that he put up resistance, he tried to strike the person or did strike the person, pushing him over?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="352">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>The lady that was there was in shock, she was in shock because of what was happening.  Mashalaba was in shock and it&#039;s the lady that count him down, nobody was beaten, nobody was attacked.  We did not want to fight.  They just showed that they wanted to run away because they were in shock.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="353">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, you haven&#039;t heard the question properly, the question was that Mashalaba fought with one of the people who wanted to push him into the passenger seat of the car.  That is what Mashalaba says in his statement, so you didn&#039;t understand the question properly.  The question is not that you assaulted anybody or any of your members ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="354">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Excuse me a moment Sir, we did not fight with anyone.  We ended up getting the car and we travelled with them, delivered them between Alice and Fort Beaufort.  We didn&#039;t fight with anybody.  Not a single unit member fought with ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="355">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>If you would just stop and listen for a second, just try and listen.  Try not to think about the trick behind my question, just try and listen carefully then this will go a lot more quickly.  There&#039;s not trick.  I&#039;m trying to explain to you that you misunderstood the first question and you&#039;ll already trying to tell me that I&#039;m wrong now.  Just listen carefully please.  Gashly, we&#039;ll get there, slowly, slowly we&#039;ll get there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="356">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Now, what Mr Prior asked you was what Mashalaba  says in his statement.  He doesn&#039;t say you fought with him, he says he fought with one of you.  Do you understand?  I&#039;ll read you the section.  He says that he was at his friend&#039;s house and when he was leaving:</text>
		</line>
		<line number="357" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Whilst she was standing next to the car and I was about to start my car a guy came and pushed me to the passenger seat and I beat him with my fist and he immediately drew a pistol and said I must be quiet&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="358">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>That is what he says happened.  Now, what do you say about that, that&#039;s what Mr Prior was asking you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="359">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>It is not so.  The reason why I say that is because I have a good memory of what happened and how it happened.  We approached these people, we had the guns.  He had not even entered the car.  We got to him before he got into the car, he was told to move aside.  I was talking to him.  As I was talking to him, that he must go onto the other side so that Nxeba can start the car and drive off.  Mlungisi was talking to the lady.  She is the one who was not too much in shock ...[end of tape]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="360">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	...[inaudible] to give in and not to run away.  She is the one who said they must listen to us, which they did.  There was no struggle.  I am the one who talked to him and I didn&#039;t hit him.  That&#039;s probably a statement that he gave to the police or the TRC, I don&#039;t know.  I don&#039;t know what led him to say this.  We could have shot him but we didn&#039;t, that showed that we talked and communicated with them.  If he had fought one of us we would have beaten him up.  Why didn&#039;t anyone shoot at him if they drawn a gun?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="361">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Well the answer is quite simple.  He says that once you had pointed the gun at him and told him to be quiet he was quiet, he didn&#039;t do anything after that.  So that is why there was no other fight about it.  But anyway, you&#039;ve given us your answer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="362">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.  There&#039;s just one final aspect on this matter.  The last paragraph he says</text>
		</line>
		<line number="363" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;I asked them whether they took my car or not and they said I must not be worried, they are APLA, African People&#039;s Liberation Army soldiers, they are going to kill whites and my car is going to be safe&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="364">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Did you say that, did any of your group say that or did you say that to Mr Mashalaba, that you were going to kill whites, you were using his vehicle for that purpose?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="365">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, it is so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="366">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I want to refer you to page 37 of the bundle, it was Reverend Albert Maboyz Dingane.  He can&#039;t remember the precise date, he says it was a Friday evening during March &#039;93, this was the red metal bronze Nissan Langley CAU registration, do you remember that vehicle?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="367">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I do remember it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="368">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Was that vehicle taken on the same night of the attack or was it on a different night?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="369">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>It was a different night.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="370">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Before the shooting or after the shooting?  Before the shooting of the 20th of March?  Was Reverend Dingane&#039;s vehicle taken before that event or was it after that event?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="371">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I think before.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="372">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>He also says in paragraph 3 that firearms were pointed at him when the vehicle was taken from him and he was also threatened with death, you threatened to kill him and that he should simply report the vehicle was stolen and not robbed.  Would you like to just comment on that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="373">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>There is no such thing that we were going to kill him because we would talk to the owners of the car just like we talked to Mr Mashalaba, we never said that we were going to kill anyone.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="374">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I want to refer the Committee to page 108 of the bundle.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="375">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I refer to remarks that you made during a pointing out.  It would seem from this document that house number 906 the house of one, Mr Zixhasha was pointed out by you.  And I just put this for your comment - this was also - I think the house was in Dimbaza, where you said - and I&#039;m going to translate it from the Afrikaans:</text>
		</line>
		<line number="376" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Jerry, Lester, Vuya, ...[indistinct], Thembelani and myself, we stayed at this house.  It was here that we made petrol bombs and hand grenades with nails fixed to them which were used in the golf club, referring to King William&#039;s Town&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="377">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Do you remember saying that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="378">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>All that you have said - I was tortured by the Boers, I don&#039;t want to run away from that fact.  I had to admit to anything that APLA was responsible for because I was a member of APLA.  There is no such.  If this is so, it is false, it is false.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="379">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>You were never involved in the King William&#039;s Town golf club attack?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="380">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>No, I was never involved.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="381">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Were you base in Butterworth at any stage before the Fort Beaufort attack?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="382">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I can&#039;t remember, however I do remember that I met comrade Xomiso in Umtata, it&#039;s been a while.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="383">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>And Jimmy Jones, is that name familiar to you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="384">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t know Jimmy Jones.  Perhaps if I saw him I would remember him or recall him but the name Jimmy Jones I don&#039;t know.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="385">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>You never trained in Butterworth at all?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="386">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Not at all.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="387">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Mr Madasi, you said you were proud and glad to be part of the fight of the war and in an answer, I think to the Chairman, you gladly carried out your instructions to kill people irrespective of who they were when you were simply following an order, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="388">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>What do you mean: &quot;I was just following an order&quot;?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="389">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t particularly want to get into that analogy between the elderly women or grannies in a hotel if you&#039;d got there but you were glad to be part of the struggle as you put it, you were glad to kill people on instructions from your commanders, is that correct?  You weren&#039;t questioning your orders, you simply carried out your orders without question.  There was no room for you as the commander of that unit to turn away or to turn back if you saw for example, that they weren&#039;t security policemen, they were people other than the expected target?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="390">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>We have 15 points of attention under APLA and they stipulate that you should always strictly obey orders and be punctual.  When you&#039;re given an order, that order is not given to someone who does not know what they are about.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="391">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	The orders were given to APLA members who voluntarily joined the APLA, not forced.  I was proud to receive the order because I was going to the battlefield.  What was left of me was to plan how to go about the order and to make sure that it is successful.  	The order was not given to someone who was not prepared or somebody who was not in anticipation of such.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="392">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>You make - if I can just come back to the attack on the hotel.  Mr Jerling was 18 years of age, he was unarmed, he was enjoying a drink at the bar with three or four of his friends who were also unarmed.  How did his death, how did killing him, in your mind, further your political objective?  Did it in fact assist in any way?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="393">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Could you please repeat the question because I do want to answer it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="394">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  I&#039;m putting to you the facts, Mr Jerling was not a member of the security forces and that will be the evidence that I will lead in a short while, not were the other people at the bar that evening, there were four or five other people present who were not members of the security forces.  So, I want to put to you - maybe I can just rephrase the question, your instructions or your intelligence or your information was hopelessly incorrect.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="395">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, you left out one important factor as well Mr Prior, that they weren&#039;t armed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="396">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Yes, they were unarmed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="397">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>As Sobukwe said, ...[no English translation]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="398" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;We regard them as the shareholders in the South African oppressors campaign right?  There are whites of course, who are intellectually converted to our cause right, but because of their position materially they can not fully identify themselves with the struggle of the African people.  They want safeguards and checkpoints all along the way with the result that the struggle of the people is blunted, stultified and crushed.  So I think&quot; ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="399">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, can I just stop you?  We didn&#039;t hear the interpretation that preceded you starting to read the quote from Robert Sobukwe, so unfortunately it&#039;s difficult to know what the context around the quote is.  You began this quote by saying some contextual words but we don&#039;t know what that was unfortunately.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="400">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Alright.  The question was do we regard all whites as oppressors, that was the questions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="401">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, that wasn&#039;t the question actually but ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="402">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>What was the question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="403">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>The question was that Mr Jerling was completely unarmed, his friends were unarmed, they were not in any way connected to the security forces.  The question was, can you comment on the fact that your intelligence was so badly out of line with the facts? That was the question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="404">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, if I may?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="405">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Your intelligence in relation to the information that he got, not his own natural intelligence.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="406">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>The word in intelligence has a special meaning in the military, it implies the gathering of information.  Sorry, I&#039;m not for one moment insulting the man.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="407">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I was going to say that - just before you intervened, that the question was not related.  The applicant was quoting and I&#039;m sure he was trying to put into context the question which was being asked, by quoting from what Sobukwe had said and I think the Committee should allow him to answer in his way.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="408">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Please go ahead.  We don&#039;t have a problem with that, we&#039;re just trying to make sure we all understand that we&#039;re on the same question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="409">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Maybe I can just repeat the question as we seem to be arguing about nothing.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="410">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	The question was - I broke up the question and I want to ask it in two parts.  The first part is, your information, your instruction was to attack Yellowwood Hotel because military personnel went there.  I&#039;m putting to you that the evidence is the facts are in this case, Mr Jerling was 18 years of age, he was unarmed and having a drink with some other people, some friends who were also unarmed.  He was not a member of the security forces, the police or the army and nor were the other people at the hotel on that evening.  The question being, that on the facts it would seem that your intelligence, your information gathering and your instructions were hopelessly out of line, out of synchronisation, out of touch with the facts.  Are you able to comment?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="411">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>First of all, I don&#039;t know the gentleman that you&#039;re referring to, it is the first time I hear of him right now.  The order was such that the place was frequented by members of the security forces.  This hotel was located out of town and people who would go and have a good time out of town.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="412">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	What you&#039;re saying about Mr Jerling and not being armed or his friends not being armed, I did not know that at the time.  Even if I did know that the people in there were not armed, however if there were other reasons for the attack I would continue and attack.  It is the first time I hear that there were these men there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="413">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Excuse Mr Prior, give me a moment to finish.  I know that nobody has a right to take another person&#039;s life no matter who you are, where you&#039;re from, who created you, you have no right to take another person&#039;s life.  However, what I was about I am proud of.  This is what led us to the transformation in South Africa.  The loss of life is painful and I would like to reconcile with the families and the victims.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="414">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Whether the people were armed or not armed or his friends were armed or not armed, that was not part of the information or the intelligence that we received.  I would have made a decision with the person who gave me the orders, however we attacked under the reasons that the place was frequented by security members.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="415">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>A week before that you broke off the attack, you didn&#039;t continue the attack because you found that the hotel was closed.  If the order was to attack those premises, why did you not continue with the attack?  There were certainly rooms at the hotel, people stayed at the hotel?  Why did you carry on with that attack?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="416">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>The way the reconnaissance was done we could not afford to go and inspect bedrooms.  We were drawn by the number of the people inside the bar.  We found that a lot of people would sit in the bar, at the bar and I was given orders that this place should be attacked on Friday or Saturday.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="417">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	We got there and it was closed the first time but that did not stop us from completing our work, we went the next day.  We were even chased the first time but we continued the next day.  I hope I have answered you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="418">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I put it to you that there were five people in the bar at the time that you started shooting, can you confirm that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="419">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I did not count the number of people.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="420">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>And you shot Mr Jerling as he was seated at the bar, as is depicted on the photograph.  You shot him through the head and he slumped froward.  He died as a result of a gunshot would to the head.  Did you aim?  Did you take aim when you shot him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="421">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I did not aim that I&#039;m going to shoot so and so and where.  I knew that there was a comrade shooting through the window.  I know that my weapon was on repeat as I  was shooting, I was just shooting.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="422">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>He hasn&#039;t in fact said Mr Prior, that he shot the deceased?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="423">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Well I&#039;m putting it to him because on the basis of his affidavit he said he entered the bar and shot and if necessary there will be evidence that the shots came from a particular direction that killed Mr Jerling, it was from inside the bar and not from outside.  Mr Jerling wasn&#039;t sitting opposite the window through which shots were fired.  He was shot by someone who was in the bar.  On his own admission he was in the bar firing shots, so it&#039;s on that that I&#039;m putting to him that he was the person that shot Mr Jerling.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="424">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>But he has already responded to that.  He has said in his evidence that two of them shot, he doesn&#039;t know whether he personally shot that particular victim.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="425">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m suggesting that he is the one because of the evidence, of what I know about the matter.  But yes, I hear what he says, he says he doesn&#039;t know.  He just shot indiscriminately.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="426">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Well Mr Madasi, Mr Prior is putting it to you that because of where you were standing you must have shot this particular person, maybe you want to comment on that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="427">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Ma&#039;am.  The word perhaps can mean a lot of things, it&#039;s ambivalent.  It could be me or my comrade.  I don&#039;t know which bullet hit him, whether it was from me or from my comrade.  If he wants to put it that way I can&#039;t dispute it.  I don&#039;t know how else to explain myself.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="428">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>The political training - and this is my last aspect, the political training that you received before this attack, were you ever informed that APLA had to do something to keep the support of the masses, in other words the people on the ground because of the deaths on the trains, the deaths at vigils, as we&#039;ve heard in earlier applications or other applications for amnesty.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="429">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Was that communicated to you, that APLA had to strike and strike hard, particularly in the white areas and at white people?  In other words to keep up the support of the masses, the black masses, if I can put it that way?  It was put by some of your leaders at the open of the submissions, that these were called legitimate reprisals.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="430">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>The battle that APLA was fighting was a battle that APLA saw as being legitimate because it was fighting oppressors.  APLA stood for the people, it was the people&#039;s army.  Everything that APLA did it did it to protect the African masses and the masses of AZANIA.  Everything that APLA did was encouraged by the people, Viva APLA people carried on.  The AZANIAN masses supported us in whatever we did.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="431">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>And did that exclude the white people, the white population?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="432">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>How so, because APLA was not racist.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="433">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>But you don&#039;t answer my question.  You said APLA was to protect the masses of AZANIA, did that - I&#039;m asking you specifically, did that - and I want a specific answer, did that exclude the white population of this country of AZANIA or were they included in the group that was to be protected?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="434">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Your question is clear.  Whether we excluded the white people or not, there were white people who sympathised with us.  These people were not labelled on their foreheads that they were supporting us.  Everybody that was white was regarded as an enemy, the oppressor.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="435">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I want to refer to page 87 of the general submissions made by APLA during October of last year and I refer to the paragraph that follows the sub-heading</text>
		</line>
		<line number="436" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Member of Delegation&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="437">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>I unfortunately don&#039;t know who was speaking at that stage, I think it was Brigadier Mofokeng but I&#039;m not too sure because on the previous page he certainly was giving evidence.  I want to quote and I want you to listen carefully.  The delegate said:   </text>
		</line>
		<line number="438" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;I want to add comrade Chairman, that during this time when our people were being killed in the townships, members of APLA, those commanders who were inside the country were very angry, to the extent that they thought that maybe our people will say that they are not protecting them properly or successfully.  That is one of the things which made them to take this decision of mounting these operations.  These operations being the attacks soft civilian targets, white targets&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="439">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>and I continue with the quote:</text>
		</line>
		<line number="440" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;They feel that they feel guilty, referring to the commanders, that if the war is being taken to the black townships they must also take the war to the white areas.  That was one of the reasons&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="441">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Now my question is, was that sentiment conveyed to you as part of your political training, as part of being a member of APLA before you embarked on the Yellowwood Hotel attack?  That is what I want to know, was that part of your information that you received or was it not?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="442">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>In my understanding right - I&#039;m going to repeat this.  Comrade Sabelo Pama declared 1993 as: &quot;They Year of Great Storms&quot;.  Every member of APLA was prepared to participate in the great storm.  We wanted to show the white man that it was wrong to oppress Africans.  The question of whether we were told of white people - I forget exactly what you said, we were not told whatever it is that you&#039;re asking.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="443">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Mr Madasi, if you&#039;d rather he repeated that last little bit, he can do that so that you can answer him fully.  It&#039;s not a problem for him to repeat that last aspect.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="444">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>..[no English translation]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="445">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>The question was, was that information, that quotation, the information that is contained therein, that the war must be taken to the white areas because of the anger of the local commanders at being perceived as not doing enough to protect the black people in the townships, was that part of your political training before you embarked on this specific operation to attack Yellowwood Hotel?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="446">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I understand you.  First of all, APLA is a military wing of PAC, APLA stems from PAC.  Decisions made by the PAC which consists of the oppressed people of AZANIA, the decisions that PAC takes affects the decisions that APLA had to take.  PAC has it&#039;s own ...[end of tape]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="447">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>...[inaudible] from the high command.  We were prepared for those orders and we were prepared to fight because we also were of the view that what the white people, the oppressors were doing was wrong.  We had to show the white man that he cannot continue to express because it is not acceptable to the people of AZANIA. </text>
		</line>
		<line number="448">
			<speaker>INTERPRETER</speaker>
			<text>Could the speaker please repeat the last sentence.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="449">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>No, you&#039;re answered the question, thank you.  I want to ask you finally - and this was despite the fact that there was widespread ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="450">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>What was the interpreter asking for repetition?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="451">
			<speaker>INTERPRETER</speaker>
			<text>The applicant would like to explain the part that the interpreter said she did not hear, when Mr Prior said it was alright, the question had been answered.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="452">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>He wanted me to repeat the last portion.  I think he&#039;s answered my question, I was happy with the reply unless the Committee wants that last portion.  He gave a long answer and I was happy with that answer.  I have no further questions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="453">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	May I ask the Committee an opportunity, just ask Mrs Jerling who is present or the family whether she has any questions of the applicant?  She indicates none, thank you Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="454">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR PRIOR</text>
		</line>
		<line number="455">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>And just to finish off that point to satisfy you Mr Madasi.  As a Committee certainly the answer was sufficient so there&#039;s nothing that we have missed.  Having said that this ...[indistinct] your future, there&#039;s nothing that ...[indistinct] by the interpreter having missed that little bit, if you are happy with that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="456">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>I have nothing more to say but there is something that I would like to say before the TRC if the Chairperson would give me a moment please.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="457">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I was asking you attorney who appears for you if he wanted to ask you any questions he can do.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="458">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, there&#039;s no re-examination except Mr Chairman I think the applicant would like to be given an opportunity to say something to the Committee.  I have no re-examination.  If he can just be given that opportunity?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="459">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO RE-EXAMINATION BY MR MBANDAZAYO</text>
		</line>
		<line number="460">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Go ahead.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="461">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Thank you very much.  Just to use this moment given to me by the TRC, I am thankful.  First of all, I want to reiterate as a member of APLA and as a member of PAC and a person who is in prison because of what we were fighting for, for the people of AZANIA, it is painful that we still continue to feel this pain.  I know that the decision is taken wherever.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="462">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Secondly, the Africans that are in jail have a lot of problems, I think that the TRC should show and reveal that what is going on is not right.  We heard here of delays of people or prisoners being taken from one prison to another.  The people that we have to deal with under correctional services are hard to deal with ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="463">
			<speaker>INTERPRETER</speaker>
			<text>Could the speaker slow down please.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="464">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>The problem that we experience under the Department of Correctional Services is unspeakable, it is painful.  Even if people will say we are gangsters and hooligans please, you must know that we are soldiers.  We are not mercenaries, we are soldiers for the people.  We stood for the people.  How is it that up to this day not a single APLA combatant has received results for amnesty whether it is passed or failed.  It is extremely frustrating.  I understand the position of victims.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="465">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	The PAC organisation should have their own programme between themselves and the victims, that is up to the PAC.  As members of PAC, it&#039;s not that we are not prepared to reconcile but the relationship between the so-called perpetrators and the victims, that is up to the PAC.  Please, the PAC must do something.  Tell us whether we are staying in jail or we are getting out of jail.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="466">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	We do not have a political status in prison, you must not be under that impression.  We are treated as common criminals in prisons.  I don&#039;t want to delve in that because we are going to identify the word criminal differently.  We are under a lot of pain.  We should help each other in facing this problem, in solving it.  If you have a reason why you are keeping APLA members in jail, perhaps you&#039;ve got a reason, perhaps you can divulge or let us know what the reasons behind are.  It&#039;s been a long time, I hope the TRC has heard me.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="467">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="468">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>There are various reason why there are delays in hearings and decisions but one the major ones is the lack of response from the PAC.  And you may have heard today when we were trying with the help of attorneys, to arrange that senior PAC officials appear and give evidence confirming what the soldiers of the APLA did and we are having great difficulty in getting the assistance of those people to come and tell us.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="469">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	And if you can persuade your leaders to come forward and assist, it will make matters very much easier.  I think your attorney is fully aware of the problems we are having getting such information, such confirmation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="470">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, may I also just respond from my side regarding the prison services.  Obviously I cannot comment on what happens outside these walls, what happens in prison but certainly I must place on record that the South African Prison Services have gone out of their way to accommodate the very many applicants who were in jail all over the country, to get them to East London, to get them here timeously, to get them here under very difficult circumstances to enable them to consult with the attorneys.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="471">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I find Mr Madasi&#039;s statements disturbing in the following sense, that if there was any improper conduct I will certainly take it up with the prison authorities.  I understand that he was brought to East London on the 6th of the 7th of April so I don&#039;t know, when he refers to being moved around, whether he&#039;s referring to himself or somebody else, but certainly that was my information.  And he has been in East London since at least the 6th of April, today being the 14th.  So if the suggestion is that the prison services are moving them around to make consultation difficult, then I will most certainly take it up at the highest level.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="472">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, just before - I want just to add to what has been said by Mr Prior.  In fact Mr Prior, I don&#039;t he is referring to them being moved for the hearings of the TRC.   I&#039;m sure he&#039;s just mentioning general conditions under which they are staying in prison, when or where they are kept or anywhere, not necessarily regarding the process of what is happening here in East London.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="473">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Chairman, I think also - let me apologise, I was supposed to come today about whether Mr Leklapa will be available.  Mr Chairman, over the weekend, as I indicated, I communicated with him and he told me that he has no problem with that though he does not know whether personally he has to come but he is still going to contact the members of the high command as he representing them.   </text>
		</line>
		<line number="474">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	He gave me an undertaking that even if it is not himself, it&#039;s his deputy and other members, they will definitely come before the Committee.  As such we have agreed that we will meet in Aliwal North during the hearings in Aliwal North.  So I will give a definite answer in Aliwal North Mr Chairman.  Thank you Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="475">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Good, because as you know it&#039;s very important to us that we have this information before us.  It would speed up the processes enormously as I think you are fully aware.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="476">
			<speaker>MR MBANDAZAYO</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I am fully aware of that, thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="477">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, may I ask whether we are going to be sitting a little later.  We have lot a lot of time today but obviously I&#039;m in the Committee&#039;s hands.  We have the victims that are from Fort Beaufort but I understand that they are prepared to go back and then drive back tomorrow morning and I&#039;m confident that is start at say 9 o&#039;clock, I think we&#039;d finish the evidence at least.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="478">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Are you suggesting we should not continue now?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="479">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m in your hands Mr Chairman.  I understand from Mr Mthembu that in any event he would ask for an indulgence.  Obviously there is a lot of information that has come out that he&#039;d like to canvass with Mr Diamoneng before he leads his evidence.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="480">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Well who would be the next witness?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="481">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>It would be him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="482">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Him, he would be the next witness?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="483">
			<speaker>MR PRIOR</speaker>
			<text>Yes, he would be the next witness.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="484">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>As I understand the position and it may have altered or may be slightly different down here, there are problems returning persons to the prisons at a late hour - is there no problem there?  But we have had other people who - although they haven&#039;t been working, they&#039;ve been here all day and it&#039;s getting a little tiring for them I think.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="485">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	And I appreciate - you would want to consult wouldn&#039;t you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="486">
			<speaker>MR MTHEMBU</speaker>
			<text>That is correct Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="487">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>So if we adjourn now you can consult now and we can start at 9.  If we don&#039;t adjourn now you will come along at 9 o&#039;clock tomorrow and ask for time to consult.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="488">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Right.  I think we will grant your application Mr Prior but there is just one point that we want to clarify here.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="489">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Chair.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="490">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Madasi, just one very small point.  You gave feedback to Mr Leklapa and comrade Mzala, who is comrade Mzala?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="491">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>It was one of the names that we used, however his proper name was comrade Mandla, if that was his proper name.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="492">
			<speaker>MS GCABASHE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, we&#039;ve heard of him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="493">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Chairperson.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="494">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Just one small question, you said you received your training in the Transkei under Mzala, where did that happen?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="495">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>In Umtata.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="496">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>And do you remember the year?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="497">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>1992.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="498">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="499">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Right, we will now ...[intervention]</text>
		</line>
		<line number="500">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, just one little last thing that I&#039;ve picked up in my notes.   You said that when you took the Langley you spoke to the owner and you said you tried to communicate the conditions to him, those were the precise words you used, what did you mean by that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="501">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>Explain again Sir, please.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="502">
			<speaker>MR LAX</speaker>
			<text>I made a note of your evidence, when you took the Langley at Mdantsane, you said: &quot;We talked to him, the owner, we tried to communicate the conditions to him&quot;.  I didn&#039;t quite know what you meant by that.  Those were the precise words you used and I wrote them down, what exactly did you mean by that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="503">
			<speaker>MR MADASI</speaker>
			<text>We gave him an explanation, that we are members of APLA and we wanted to go and kill white people, if he would hand over the car please.  We would give the car back to him in good condition.  However if it happens that, as we&#039;re going to leave him, he&#039;s going to go and report to the police he was going to lose his car because the police would come after us and his car would get damaged in the process and therefore to make matters easy he must cooperate.  I don&#039;t know whether he did that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="504">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="505">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	We will now adjourn and we hope that we can commence at 9 o&#039;clock tomorrow morning, that is if the people can all be here on time before then because I am quite sure that the attorney would have overnight thought of a few more questions they want to ask.  So if they could be here by half past eight?  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="506">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	May I remind you please to leave your earphones on your chairs.  There is really no point in taking out of this room because they don&#039;t work outside.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="507">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>WITNESS EXCUSED</text>
		</line>
		<line number="508">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>COMMITTEE ADJOURNS</text>
		</line>
	</lines>
</hearing>