<?xml version="1.0" encoding="windows-1252"?>
<hearing xmlns="http://trc.saha.org.za/hearing/xml" schemaLocation="https://sabctrc.saha.org.za/export/hearingxml.xsd">
	<systype>amntrans</systype>
	<type>AMNESTY HEARINGS</type>
	<startdate>1997-09-08</startdate>
	<location>NEW BRIGHTON, PORT ELIZABETH</location>
	<day>1</day>
	<names>G J NIEUWOUDT</names>
	<case>3920/96</case>
						<url>https://sabctrc.saha.org.za/hearing.php?id=54824&amp;t=&amp;tab=hearings</url>
	<originalhtml>https://sabctrc.saha.org.za/originals/amntrans/pe/nieuwoud.htm</originalhtml>
		<lines count="1259">
		<line number="1">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>This is a sitting of the Amnesty Committee, whose members are;  myself as Chairman and on my right, Adv Denzel Potgieter and on my left, Adv Sandi.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	This morning we&#039;ll be commencing to hear the application of Mr G J Nieuwoudt.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="3">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Mpshe, are we ready to begin?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="4">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairman.  Yes, Mr Chairman and members of the Committee, we are ready to commence.  May I request via the Chair&#039;s permission for the lawyers to put themselves on record, thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="5">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Who is appearing for the applicant, Mr Van der Merwe?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="6">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Mr Commissioner and my name is Francois van der Merwe.  I&#039;m appearing for the applicant.  I&#039;m an attorney in Port Elizabeth, stationed at the firm Van der Merwe &amp; Bester.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="7">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Mr Chairman. I&#039;m Mpumela Nyoka, a local attorney.  I&#039;m appearing for the victim, Mr Mkhuseli Jack.  I&#039;m practising on my own.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="8">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="9">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Advocate for the Amnesty Committee.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="10">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.  Mr Van der Merwe, over to you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="11">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairman.  The Committee is in possession of my client&#039;s application for amnesty at this stage.  As far as his personal background is concerned, I will start leading him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="12">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I do not think it is necessary for us to spend too much time on that.  I will just ask Mr Nieuwoudt and for the purposes of the Commission, I would also request my client&#039;s request is that he may proceed to give his evidence in Afrikaans, if it so pleases? </text>
		</line>
		<line number="13">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Van der Merwe, I will have your client to take the oath.  Mr Nieuwoudt, would you stand, please.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="14">
			<speaker>GIDEON JOHANNES NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>(Duly sworn, states).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="15">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.  Please be seated.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="16">
			<speaker>EXAMINATION BY MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>As it pleases the Committee, Mr Nieuwoudt, you are informed about the application that was submitted and the personal background report that constitutes the first few pages. Is it correct and the truth?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="17">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, it is.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="18">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>If we can then go to page 21 of the application.  I will ask Mr Nieuwoudt to proceed to read the four pages and it will also be his evidence in this particular case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="19">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>&quot;Your Honour, at the time of</text>
		</line>
		<line number="20" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>this incident I was a lieutenant in the South African Police at the security branch in Port Elizabeth.  I was the unit commander of the information component, having to deal with Black issues and my direct commander was Maj Herman du Plessis and Col Harold Snyman.  He was the regional commander of the security branch in the Eastern Cape.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="21">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		I cannot remember who Mr Mkhuseli Jack is, in terms of the regulations or stipulations that was constituted in terms of the Act of Public Security 1953 and proclaimed in the Government Gazette, reference number R121 of 21 July 1985, who arrested him on 3 August 1985.  I also cannot remember who gave me the instruction to detain Mkhuseli Jack.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="22">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		The detention of Mkhuseli Jack was to my opinion necessary and the extension of his detention at that stage was also important and necessary for the maintenance of public order, the security of the public and to end the state of emergency.  I personally had him detained at the St Albans Prison at Port Elizabeth.  If you can just look to Annexure 15.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="23">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Commissioners, at this stage I think we will leave the addendums at this stage and my suggestion is that Mr Nieuwoudt just finish his evidence.  We can refer to the addendums at a later stage, should it be necessary.  Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="24">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="25">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="26">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>&quot;I obtained the information during the</text>
		</line>
		<line number="27" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>investigation as member of the security branch and also base on information form certain sources that could be trusted and also our physical sources.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="28">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		According to this Mr Jack was president of the Port Elizabeth Youth Congress.  It&#039;s PEYCO and also the co-ordinator of the consumer boycott that was executed in Port Elizabeth at that stage.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="29">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		PEYCO is a youth organisation that&#039;s affiliated to the UDF, the United Democratic Front.  PEYCO was also directly responsible for the mobilisation and politicisation of the youth and implementing of the alternative structures in the Black townships.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="30">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		The so-called street and area committees as been mentioned already, was an institution of the ANC.  There was a so-called M Plan of the ANC and it was part of the strategy or the aim to in fact overthrow the whole State constitution through violence.  Mkhuseli Jack played an active role to mobilise the Black youth, the so-called Amabuthu and politicise them by means of intimidation of the community to consumer boycotts and stay-away actions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="31">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		Now these consumer boycotts and the stay-away actions was also enforced by threats and then also by applying the necklace method by means of the so-called people&#039;s courts.  He was also responsible for the creation of underground structures, the revolutionary zones by the Amabuthu and also by means of trained MK cadres who had initiated the people&#039;s war.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="32">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Paragraph five -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="33" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;On 12 August 1985, he was taken to my office on my request.  That was on the 7th floor of Louis Le Grange Police Station and there I also refer to my transfer warrant.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="34">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		During this interview I was alone.  I interviewed him with regard to his liability and also being active with the intimidation during the consumer boycott and also the contact he had with MK members.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="35">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		Then also the constitution of the constituting revolutionary bases in Soweto;  that is the Black township in Port Elizabeth.  It&#039;s not Soweto in Johannesburg.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="36">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		The manning of these revolutionary bases by the Amabuthu referred to the so-called Soviet base.  The Soviet base was used by Amabuthu as their headquarters in Soweto and it was also used to keep military trained MK members there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="37">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		His involvement in the unrest and violence in Port Elizabeth and the Black townships and also addressing a meeting at the Soviet base and also the presence of MK members, were aspects that were taken up with him during this interview.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="38">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		After I confronted him with these facts and questions, he was very hard-headed and at that stage I took a black plastic sjambok and then also gave him several lashes over his body and legs.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="39">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		He then settled down and I could see that he had a lot of pain.  I stopped with the questioning there and he was taken back to St Albans Prison, where he got medical attention and Dr Wendy Orr treated him there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="40">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		Because he refused to give any information or affidavits at that stage, it was necessary for me to use methods to try and influence him to provide me with information to enable me to control the situation as mentioned.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="41">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		I was of the opinion that it would be in national interest and especially in the interest of stability and peace in the Eastern Cape;  that would be to end this consumer boycott as speedily as possible.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="42">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		At a later stage, Jack was prepared to negotiate with us to in fact make an end to this consumer boycott, if we would release him and all the leader elements.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="43">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		This was done and the consumer boycott was ended.  As far as my knowledge goes, Mr Jack has already made a civil claim against the State and it was settled.  It was case number 28886 in the local Supreme Court and Mr Jack was then released on 6 November 1985.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="44">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Then I continue to page 26, 10(a), point number 1.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="45" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;The aim of the security branch as part of the power base of the National Party Government, was maintenance of internal security by means of combating terrorism and the protection of the constitutional order.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="46">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		At that stage it was a National Party Government and structures against communistic expansionism as identified in the so-called liberation organisations, namely ANC/SACP alliance, PAC and then also the armed wings, Umkhonto weSizwe, APLA who wanted to subvert the Government by means of violence and take it over.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="47">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		These aims were the political objectives of the security branch and to achieve this, it can be described as follows:</text>
		</line>
		<line number="48">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		The protection and maintenance of the National Party Government and the legal institutions established by it.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="49">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Paragraph 1.2.2 -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="50" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;The protection of integrity of the former Government to ensure that the community would not lose its confidence in the governing party, the National Party at that stage, as a result of the acts of terror and propaganda by the communistic orientated organisations, Black Power organisations. South Africa and its Western capitalistic community to protect it against a violent take-over by communistic orientated so-called liberation movements whose aim was to make the country ungovernable.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="51">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		By means of the aims mentioned, to ensure the maintenance of a normal Western democratic situation as I knew it, to ensure that.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="52">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		In this matter it was necessary to use a measure of violence to force Mr Jack to give me the information that would enable me ...&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="53">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>I beg your pardon -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="54" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... to control the unrest situation and boycotts, intimidation and also stay-away actions and then also to restore law and order in the Black townships.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="55">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		It was necessary to restore law and order in order to ensure the maintenance of the constitutional order.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="56">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Then (b) -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="57" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;This attack was necessary to restore the political aim and that is to restore law and order in the constitutional order.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="58">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Then 11(a):  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="59" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Yes, this act was executed on behalf of the security branch to obtain information in national interest so that law and order could be restored in the Black townships.  The emergency regulations of that stage also gave a large measure of protection and even in some cases it gave indemnity against prosecution and civil claims.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="60">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that will conclude his evidence in chief.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="61">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR VAN DER MERWE</text>
		</line>
		<line number="62">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Nyoka, are there questions you wish to put to this witness?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="63">
			<speaker>CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Your Honour.  Good morning, Mr Nieuwoudt.  	You said that you were the unit commander of the information component of Black affairs.  What exactly was the role of this information unit within the security branch establishment?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="64">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, the role of that was to obtain information.   The activities of the so-called organisations;  to monitor that and also to report on that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="65">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>What was its modus operandi or a way of operating in achieving its goals of obtaining such information?  How did you operate?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="66">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>By means of non-physical sources as well as physical sources and agents and also contact persons within the organisation; to place people in these organisations and then to obtain the information.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="67">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Did this modus operandi include assaults on detainees to obtain such information or attempt to obtain such information?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="68">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, Your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="69">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Are you sure about that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="70">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="71">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>So when were assaults made?  When were they made?  Under what circumstances?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="72">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>When the person is in detention.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="73">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>For what reason is a person being assaulted if information is not required from him or her?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="74">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>If he doesn&#039;t want to talk and when there is a situation where he is then prosecuted according to the justice system.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="75">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>So you do agree that assaults were made if someone does not talk for purposes of getting information from that person, not so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="76">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is true.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="77">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>How many unit members were there in your information unit and who were they?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="78">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I had a team, approximately more then ten White people and each then had Black colleagues who worked with them.  So I would suggest approximately 20 people at that stage, if not more.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="79">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Did they have specific roles, individual or as a team, when they performed a task.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="80">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>The function that they had to do, was to extend the information network and to gather information.  That was the role.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="81">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>So when you acted,  did you do so alone or with these team members of 20 or 10, when you acted Mr Nieuwoudt?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="82">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, Your Honour.  If I understand the question correctly, it was only with regard to public meetings held on Sundays and where someone was sent to attend the meeting.  Then we also had a team outside, especially in Centenary Hall.  We then had a team where the meeting was monitored, but when you had to speak to your contact people, your informants, it was usually alone.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="83">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>It was usually what?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="84">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="85">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>What did you say, it was usually alone.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="86">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That was usually when you had to consult your agents or people giving you information that you did on your own.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="87">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Besides your circumstance where you had to consult your agents, did you at all act alone besides consulting your agent?  I&#039;m talking about you now.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="88">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I did.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="89">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Under what circumstances.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="90">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Under the circumstances where I was questioning a person and on several occasions I acted alone.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="91">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>What I don&#039;t understand, why would you leave your team members and act alone in such circumstances?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="92">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>It seems as if the legal council doesn&#039;t understand what I referred to.  Everyone has its own task and function and then I would give the instruction monitor at a meeting.  Then the whole team doesn&#039;t go there.  It&#039;s only certain people then who are then nominated to attend that meeting,  whatever the case may be.  When there was an instruction that a certain person must be questioned, the whole team doesn&#039;t do it. That&#039;s the explanation that I can give.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="93">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Was there a similar information unit with reference to White affairs?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="94">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.  I can just give explanation what the structure is.  Perhaps it would then be easier to understand.  You have your administrative personnel within each section.  You have then Black affairs where it is concentrated on Black affairs where people Black organisations are involved.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="95">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Then you also have affairs where the Indian community as well as the White community as well as the Coloured community would be involved in a particular organisation.  Those personnel had their own commander and their own personnel.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="96">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Then you had a technical section.  They had their own personnel.  Then the administrative staff and all these subsections also had their own administrative personnel.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="97">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>You said that your direct commander was Maj Herman du Plessis and Col H Snyman was regional commander.  	What I want to know, did you as a commander of your unit, report regularly the task that you undertook to either of these gentlemen?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="98">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>The procedure was as follows.  I would report it after my members gave me reports on information from the agents or informers.  I then went through these reports.  I would then sent it through to my direct commander.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="99">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	At that stage it was Col Du Plessis and he then again sent it to Col Snyman.  That was the procedure and Snyman then had to send it to headquarters, head office after he evaluated it and considered it to be important enough.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="100">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>The other way around.  Did you receive instructions from them, from the higher chain of command, filtering down to you and then to your commanders?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="101">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, Your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="102">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>With that you would say that Mr Du Plessis or Mr Snyman knew in general most of the things that you did within the scope of your duties, not so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="103">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>In certain instances, yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="104">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>What other instances would they not know?  Just give an example.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="105">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I believe, for example, if I was aware of a meeting that was held, they did not give me an instruction to monitor the meeting, but I would use my own initiative to do that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="106">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Were there occasions where you acted together with either of the two gentlemen;  Mr Du Plessis or Mr Snyman?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="107">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, a variety of opportunities where I acted with them.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="108">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>You said you could not remember who had arrested Mr Jack on the 3rd of August 1985.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="109">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, Your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="110">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Mr Jack said, instructed me that he was never arrested on the 3rd of August, but during the 2nd of August 1985.  What do you say about that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="111">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t know.  I got him on the 3rd.  I could just refer you to annexure 15.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="112">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t have that, I didn&#039;t have a warrant.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="113">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>If you have a look at Addendum 15, that is the day that I got the instruction to detain him, to have him detained in St Albans Prison.  I can describe the procedure.  You&#039;d take him to Algoa Park, because there is a special task unit and that unit then handled the emergency regulations situations.  There you complete the necessary forms.  The person is then processed and then the members of the uniform branch then takes him to prison.  He was then left there.  That is the procedure.  With his fingerprints and if you just turn the page and then that member of the special team to then work with the processes of the regulations.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="114">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Excuse me, M&#039;Lord, I think the original exhibit contained fingerprints on the back which wasn&#039;t photostatted.  So it will - it doesn&#039;t appear to be on here.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="115">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Okay.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="116">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Is it not correct that Mr Jack was one of the big fish.  He was heavily sought by the police and for a relatively long time during that period, not so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="117">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Could you please repeat the question.  I couldn&#039;t hear it properly.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="118">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>I am saying that Mr Jack was one of the big fish that was being sought by the security police.  He was heavily sought by the police to arrest him and for a long time.  Is that correct, Mr Nieuwoudt, he was being sought for a long time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="119">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.  That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="120">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>You mean to say that you have forgotten who achieved the honours of arresting such a highly sought man?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="121">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Could you please repeat the question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="122">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>I am saying,  do you mean to say that you have forgotten the person who achieved the high honours of arresting the big fish that you were looking for a very long time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="123">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, there were many people arrested at that stage.  He wasn&#039;t the only big fish, in other words he wasn&#039;t the only activist.  There were many others whom according to me were greater activists than him at that stage.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="124">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	So I really cannot remember.  There were many people detained under the emergency regulations and it&#039;s impossible for me to remember who arrested him and where he was arrested.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="125">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Maybe then I should say on a light note that this was a big pool with big fish - on a light note.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="126">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="127">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Do the names Capt Van Zyl and Capt Sakkie du Plessis, accompanied by the policemen, not ring a bell as the people who arrested Mr Jack, according to my instructions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="128">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That might be possible, but I can&#039;t remember who arrested him.  That might be the case.  I won&#039;t deny that.  I really cannot remember.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="129">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>You also said you could not remember who had instructed you to detain him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="130">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="131">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>When was the order to detain him made or received by you before he was arrested on the 2nd of August or 3rd of August?  Do you remember?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="132">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That must have been during the morning.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="133">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>The morning of what?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="134">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is of the 3rd.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="135">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Would it not have come from either of your directors, Mr Du Plessis or Mr Snyman, to detain him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="136">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that could be quite possible.  That could be possible that I got the instruction from Du Plessis, but I can&#039;t really remember that he told me to detain him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="137">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Okay.  You said that his detention was necessary, amongst other things, for the maintenance of public order, the security of the public and the termination of the state of emergency and that he was the leader of PEYCO and co-ordinator of the consumer boycott.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="138">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Exactly what did you expect to achieve by his detention?  What did you expect to achieve by his detention?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="139">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>The emergency regulations was at that stage instituted by the Government of the day and we had to stabilise the situation within the townships.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="140">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	That was the aim and that was the opinion of that time and then to work towards the ending of the state of emergency.  There was unrest, there was anarchy in the Black townships.  These instructions came from the State Security Council.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="141">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Did you hope to get any information from him during his detention?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="142">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I did.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="143">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>What information was that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="144">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>In the first instance, the intimidation and campaign that was launched by Mr Jack and his collaborators and then also his contact with MK members who already infiltrated into South Africa, to get them and then also the violent actions, the necklace murders that was executed, held and who was responsible for that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="145">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Before he was detained, you must have been anxious to cause him to be arrested, to be arrested and detained.  Not so, and to interrogated him?  Were you eager to do so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="146">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>All the leaders who were involved had to be detained.  That was an instruction from the State Security Council of the Government that the unrest situation must be stabilised and he was part of that scenario.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="147">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Were you not eager to have him arrested and to interrogate him?  Please answer the question, Mr Nieuwoudt.  Were you or were you not?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="148">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, all the people whom we arrested, we interrogated and it is so that we had to remove the leaders from the community.  They were responsible for the murders.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="149">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>I see you don&#039;t want to answer my question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="150">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	You said that on the 12th of August 1985, Mr Jack was brought to your office at your request.  Why did you wait for about 10 days from the time of his arrest on the 3rd of August, to only talk to him on the 12th of August?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="151">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Why did you not talk to him on the very day he was arrested or the day after, since he was a troublemaker?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="152">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>There were many other people that I also had to interrogate.  That was the opportunity that I could actually see him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="153">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Apparently he was not much of a troublemaker if he had to wait for 10 days.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="154">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I didn&#039;t hear the question.  Apparently what?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="155">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Apparently he was not that of a troublemaker - that much of a troublemaker?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="156">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>No, it may be that there were others who were bigger troublemakers.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="157">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Okay, bigger troublemakers.  (Laughter).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="158">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>That is so, yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="159">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, thank you very much.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="160">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Did you inform any of your commanders that you had - that you&#039;re going to interrogate Mr Jack that day?  Did you inform them?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="161">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, I did not.  I really can&#039;t remember that I would have informed them.  I acted on my own initiative to actually have him for that day.  He had to be interrogated.  That was the initial instruction.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="162">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>It was of interest to them what Mr Jack was going to tell you, not so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="163">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="164">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>What did you hope to achieve by the question you posed to him about intimidation during the consumer boycott and his link with MK members, because you had evidence to that effect, what did you hope to achieve by those questions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="165">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>At that stage I was busy with the investigation of a case of high treason against these detainees and that is why they were detained again in 1986.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="166">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>But you had reliable evidence regarding his involvement in those issues that you questioned him about, not so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="167">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="168">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Why did you then continue the interrogation in stead of charging him in terms of the Tenure Security Act for MK activities involvement and even in terms of intimidation or even murder?	Why did you just not charge him?  Why did you interrogate him?  I see, you&#039;re smiling.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="169">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.  That he has to be asked to the Attorney-General D&#039;Oliviera, because he refused to prosecute at that stage.  There were statements taken, the case was prepared, the prosecution does not depend on me.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="170">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Mr Nieuwoudt, you had - you have 25 years experience as a policeman.  The first five years as an ordinary policeman.  The last 20 years as a security policeman.  Surely you know that if someone&#039;s committing an offence, you charge a person.  So you&#039;re charging him and then it&#039;s up to the Attorney-General to prosecute.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="171">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	There&#039;s a difference between charging and a prosecution, not so?  Not so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="172">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, our security cases are first referred to the Attorney-General and then he has to judge.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="173">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;ll leave it at that.  Was it the very first time that you interrogated Mr Jack in his activist life before?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="174">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I have previously interrogated him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="175">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Alone or with other people.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="176">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>There could have been other people present.  I cannot remember precisely.  It&#039;s 20 years ago.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="177">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I remember with his detention in 1980 with the school boycotts where he was transferred to Modder Bee and there he was detained under section 10 where you couldn&#039;t have interrogated him. </text>
		</line>
		<line number="178">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	That&#039;s what I can remember off the cuff now and there must have been other instances as well where I could have interrogated him and where I also interviewed him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="179">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>In those other occasions, did you ever assault him or had to assault him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="180">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="181">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Why was it the case this time.  Was he not rebellious or stubborn in the other occasions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="182">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No. In this particular instance he was and the reason why I assaulted him in this instance, was because the state of emergency regulations gave me wide protection in this regard.  That was why at this stage, I assaulted him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="183">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Mr Jack will say that in the other occasions he has always been rebellious and stubborn to policemen.  So he must have been assaulted at other occasions.  He has always been rebellious.  Any comment?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="184">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>No, is the question not there, the question is not whether Mr Jack was rebellious on other occasions ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="185">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="186">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Is Mr Jack going to say that as a result of being rebellious on other occasions, he was also assaulted?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="187">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="188">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Is that the question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="189">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>No, Your Honour, I&#039;m saying that he has always been consistent in his rebelliousness.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="190">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="191">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>So he must have been assaulted before.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="192">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>No, but I mean, is Jack going to say that he was assaulted on those occasions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="193">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes, he was.  He&#039;s going to say so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="194">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s the question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="195">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Mr Jack will say that he was assaulted on other occasions and that involved you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="196">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="197">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>This particular interrogation;  how was it organised?  When he came in; were you sitting down and preparing to charge or what?  What exactly was the scenario in the room?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="198">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>He stood and my objective was to determine his involvement in a bona fide way, regarding the intimidation, his responsibilities there, linking him with MK as well as his direct or indirect activities within the organising of these people who then were involved with the execution of violence, necklace murders and so forth.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="199">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>As that was your office,  can we assume that the sjambok was yours or you were aware of its presence.  The sjambok that you used on Mr Jack, was it yours?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="200">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.  In 1985, that was during the state of emergency and we were issued with sjamboks;  that&#039;s the police so that we could suppress the unrest.  That one was in my possession.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="201">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>So it was in your possession.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="202">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that&#039;s correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="203">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>How long was it in your possession.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="204">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I can&#039;t remember.  It was after three months, the sjamboks were then taken in again.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="205">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Was it ever used before, the sjambok?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="206">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>You say before, before the 12th of August?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="207">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Mr Chairman.  Was it ever used during his stay in your office before the 12th of August?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="208">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.  When I used it was during an action at a school where the students got together. It was then used to disperse the crowds.  If I can remember it was at Sondele High School.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="209">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Before using the sjambok, did you know that you&#039;ll have to use it at any stage that day against Mr Jack?  Did you know that at the back of your mind I will have to use this sjambok when Mr Jack comes, did you know that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="210">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="211">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Why did you use it instead of wrestling with him about the concerns - concerning of - concerns around him, because you stopped the assault immediately after he was rebellious.  You didn&#039;t achieve anything, not so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="212">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is so.  Why I used it at that stage,  there are two reasons.  It was on the one way to diminish his resistance and also it would have been very bad for him, because I was treating him like a child.  I was giving him a hiding.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="213">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  In your background which was handed in as an exhibit, you said you used a sjambok?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="214">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is true and that was the aim.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="215">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Did you not think that being alone with him, he would have fought back against you when you had no other people with you in the office?  Did you not think at all that he would fight back?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="216">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, not at this stage.  I would not have expected it from him.  It could have been possible.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="217">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Did you report this assault to your two seniors,  Mr Du Plessis and Mr Snyman?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="218">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="219">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Why not?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="220">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>It wasn&#039;t necessary for me to report that to them.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="221">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Under general, did you understand the emergency regulations as a licence, not only to detain activists indefinitely, but to assault them as you did that against Mr Jack? Was that your understanding?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="222">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is how I understood it.  Can I just refer you to a publication.  That would be Annexure 18.  That was with the state of emergency.  That&#039;s on page 7.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="223">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>If you&#039;re referring to Annexure 18, it would appear that there&#039;s page 132 to 134.  I don&#039;t see a page 7 there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="224">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is Annexure 18.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="225">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, page 133 of the bundle starts on page 7.  That&#039;s the page he his referring to.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="226">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m sorry.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="227">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>That very first page.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="228">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>So you&#039;re referring in fact to page 133 of the papers.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="229">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Unfortunately, I don&#039;t have the bundle in front of me.  My apology.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="230">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m sorry, yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="231">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Paragraph two.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="232" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;The second distinctive future ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="233">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, do carry on.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="234">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes</text>
		</line>
		<line number="235" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... of the emergency regulation,</text>
		</line>
		<line number="236">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		was the attempt to exclude legal process and legal supervision from the exercise of the emergency powers, particularly the exercise of these powers by the police. </text>
		</line>
		<line number="237">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		In both states of emergency the State President saw fit to promulgate three provisions seeking to maintain law and order without law.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="238">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		The first regulation contains an ulster(?) clause, which sought to exclude Supreme Court supervision of the emergency powers.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="239">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Then he refers to the regulation -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="240" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot; In this way the security force would escape accountability to legal standards in an exercise of their powers.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="241">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>That is what I am referring to, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="242">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Are you saying that implied assault on detainees?  Are you saying that what you read implied that you as security policemen could assault detainees?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="243">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, those are the wide powers that were stated.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="244">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>I put it to you that you misunderstood what was written there then.  Okay.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="245">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Let&#039;s go to - I&#039;m going to finish with you - you said that you thought it was in the national interest and that of stability and peace in the Eastern Cape;  that the consumer boycotts came to an end.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="246">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	As you know the consumer boycott effected the White business community, not so?  As you&#039;ve said, not so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="247">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is true.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="248">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Did the White business community invite you to be involved in stopping this consumer boycotts?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="249">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="250">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Why did you not leave it to them to sort the matter out with the consumer boycott committee?  Why did you get involved?  It was an economic issue.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="251">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>From our side we took the initiative where at a stage we consulted with Mr Jack and other leaders in an effort to end the consumer boycott and it was in my commander&#039;s office;  I was present when we had the negotiations.  We continued with it to end the consumer boycott.  They had agreed with one request, that all leaders should be released and then secondly that they should have to go back and they would have to have a meeting at the Nkeke stadium, where they would have to inform the wide masses and on that basis they would then be able to then end the boycott.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="252">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	We released them.  They went back on the Sunday.  It was late in the year and they then also then ended the boycott.  So we did achieve our goal.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="253">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>My instruction is that you were never involved directly in the negotiations to end the consumers boycott of any kind;  that you were hostile towards any negotiations with detainees.  What do you say about that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="254">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, I was present.  Rev Soka was there and many of the religious leaders were involved, Mr Fazi was involved, Edgar Ngoi was present as well as Mr Jack.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="255">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>You said that he instituted a civil the same claim against the State.  Did that relate to the assault that you perpetrated against him, the civil claim, to your knowledge?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="256">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I think that it had to do with the Wendy Orr issue.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="257">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>My client never said, he will say that he was never treated by Wendy Orr, but by a male doctor after he was assaulted by you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="258">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, I refer to 1985.  That was the first instance where Wendy Orr is involved and that is what I refer to.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="259">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Finally, I would just put to you what the version of my client is. He would say that you never assaulted him on the day that you said you did;  that is on the 12th of August 1985, but that you and one security policeman, called Mr Bezuidenhout, fetched him from a police station one day after his arrest. That is on the 3rd of August 1985 and took him to Louis Le Grange Square to Warrant-Officer Coetzee&#039;s office, who was alone at the time.  There you and Warrant-Officer Coetzee prepared the so-called helicopter torture treatment and administered it to him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="260">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Further, that you, Mr Bezuidenhout and one policeman, Mr Strydom, assaulted him with a sjambok in turn, whilst Mr Coetzee was asking questions.  Any comment?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="261">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, I deny it. I don&#039;t have knowledge of that incident.  On the 12th I then assaulted him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="262">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>But you kept on coming in - coming into the office and going out until you settled down to write.  You hit him a second time in anger when Mr Jack answered one of the questions on Mr Coetzee about Mrs Molly Blackburne to the effect that Mrs Blackburne understood the hardships of Black. When he was asked about Mrs Blackburne, that you stopped writing and in anger took a hosepipe or a sjambok and assaulted Mr Jack, saying that all Mrs Blackburne wanted was a violent overthrow of the State and one-man-one-vote.  Do you remember that incident?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="263">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, I can&#039;t remember it and that is not the incident that I referred to.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="264">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Mr Jack will further say that after this assault you took him to Algoa Park Police Station and on the way you said he must be warned not to lay any complaint of assault, otherwise ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="265">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Excuse me, Sir, Commissioner, I have problem, difficulty in following the questioning, the noise level.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="266">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>I will repose after this.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="267">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Put your question again.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="268">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>All right.  That after the assault, Mr Nieuwoudt, you took him to Algoa Park Police Station.  On the way ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="269">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, what police station?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="270">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>To Algoa Park, Algoa Park.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="271">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Algoa Park?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="272">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Algoa Park Police Station and on the way you warned him that if he laid any complaint he will end up like Galela or Dolozi and Hashe and that the assault was actually a warm-up.  What do you say about that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="273">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, that is nonsense, because then I would have involved myself with the disappearance of Hashe and Dolozi, whatever the case may be, but I really think that it is really impossible that I made such a statement to him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="274">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>And further, that on the day that you said you had assaulted him, in fact, you did not assault him.  You had called him in to question him why he laid a complaint of an assault and my client said you were very, very angry.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="275">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	You said you were going to deal with him on the spot and kill him on the spot.  He had to deny that.  When he denied, in relief, you took him to Warrant-Officer Coetzee&#039;s office.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="276">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Again he restated his denial and Mr Coetzee said he must not worry about, that is dead.  He must not take that incident seriously;  that you were just angry on that day that you assaulted him. What do you say about that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="277">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, I deny that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="278">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>He would say that it was not the only time that you had assaulted him;  that on the 22nd of January 1984, you assaulted him in New Brighton Police Station with your commander, Mr Herman du Plessis?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="279">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, that specific day I can remember quite well.  There was a meeting.  He was in the vehicle of the late Mrs Helen Josephs.  They were stopped, because they didn&#039;t have a permit to go into the Black township and Mr Du Plessis and myself were, by coincidence, that we were there at New Brighton, just before the starting of the meeting that would have taken place in this particular hall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="280">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	They were then taken in by members of the uniform branch.  They were in the vehicle.  We had an interview with them there.  We took their names and we told them that they could continue.  That is all that I can remember of that particular incident at New Brighton.  That&#039;s all that I can remember.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="281">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>My instructions are that you are making a mistake about the events.  This event I&#039;m talking about is when you asked him why he was interfering with one of the informers, Mr Mlongwane and you assaulted him, because he had confronted Mr Mlongwane about testifying against fellow comrades and you assaulted and Mr Pitse was assaulting him at the same time, because Mr Jack had disrupted a meeting of Chief Lucas Mangope, of Chief Lucas Mangope&#039;s wife.  That was why the two of you were assaulting Mr Jack.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="282">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Is that the event that took place on the 22nd January?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="283">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes, 22nd of January of 1984.  Not the other incident of Helen Josephs.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="284">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>What happened on that particular day that I can remember, I was personally present.  That was at New Brighton Police Station.  It was in New Brighton at the church where Mrs Mangope would have addressed a meeting and there was a choir that would have performed at the so-called speech that she would have given. 	Mr Jack was in front of the entrance of this church and when the choir moved on, he had an interview with them and the choir turned around and left and there was a case of intimidation laid against him.  	I didn&#039;t investigate it and I didn&#039;t have anything to do with him on that particular day.  Nothing of that I can remember.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="285">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>We deny that.  We are further instructed that detainees were never assaulted by one individual policeman.  There had to be more than one.  Any comment, especially as you were a lieutenant at that stage.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="286">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>On the 12th I assaulted Mr Jack.  I was alone.  I was not present at any other assault where any other people would have assaulted him.  I didn&#039;t assault him at any other instance.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="287">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>In conclusion.  Our impression is that whilst it is appreciated that you came forward, the reason why you are saying you assaulted him alone, is because you don&#039;t want other people who have not applied to be involved, their names to be involved.  That is why.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="288">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	You never assaulted him when you were alone.  You assaulted him together with other people, but you don&#039;t want to conceal - you want to conceal their names or their involvement.  	Any comment about that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="289">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.  The law expects of me, requires of me to make a full disclosure and that is why I included this and this is why I referred to it and I do not have any knowledge of other instances.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="290">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Finally, the final question.  In 1985 on the 27th of February, Mr Jack&#039;s home was petrol bombed.  Mr Patrick Hlongwane, one of the people who petrol bombed it, who said that you instructed him amongst others in general, to do the petrol bombing, including that of Mr Jack.  Do you have any knowledge about that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="291">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="292">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Can you just - sorry, can you give us the name of the person again?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="293">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Mr Patrick Hlongwane, Hlongwane, H-L-O-N-G-W-A-N-E.  He&#039;s sitting right in front, your Worship.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="294">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.  Thank you very much.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="295">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.  Any comment, Mr Nieuwoudt?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="296">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Can I just ask which house or residence Mr Nyoka refers to?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="297">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>In Zwede,  Mr Nieuwoudt, Zunga Street.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="298">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>According to my knowledge, Mr Jack lived in Klemia Street, New Brighton at that stage, with his uncle.  So I have no knowledge of the fact that his house in Zunga Street, Zwede, was petrol bombed. 	Regarding Mr Hlongwane,  that is nonsense.  I deny it, because Hlongwane was a witness in a particular case in 1983 and how could I then use him to attack other people.  It is untested and he is a second Matiwane.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="299">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Did you not receive a report to the fact that his home was petrol-bombed after it was petrol-bombed at Raneswa.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="300">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I do not have any knowledge of that incident.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="301">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>But you are the head of the information unit,  how could you not have known or got that information?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="302">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>In September, 1984, the unrest started in Port Elizabeth, and it had started with attacks and anarchy in the townships.  There were no petrol bombs, according to my knowledge, in January 1984.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="303">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>No further questions, Your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="304">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR NYOKA</text>
		</line>
		<line number="305">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Mpshe, are there any questions you wish to put?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="306">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>EXAMINATION BY MR MPSHE</text>
		</line>
		<line number="307" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Yes, Mr Chairman, thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="308">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Nieuwoudt, let&#039;s start with the answers that you gave to my learned friend.  Just to make it quite clear.  You were asked a question and you then said that the assault was done by you.  When a person didn&#039;t want to talk and then also if a person is charged according to the criminal law ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="309">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Could you just repeat the question for me.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="310">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Under which circumstances do you use assault on a prisoner?  Could you just give me the answer, just repeat your answer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="311">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is to obtain information from him and then possibly to get his co-operation and then also possibly to give testimony, evidence in a case when he should be charged according to the law and then to get the necessary information.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="312">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>In other words, to use a person as a witness in the court of a law, he is then first assaulted.  Is that what you mean?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="313">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>That might be part of the softening process.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="314">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is breaking down the resistance of the person.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="315">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I notice the point, but this is not what I was trying to establish, on the weakness.  What I was trying to establish as to whether if a person is a potential State witness, is it necessary for him to be assaulted first?  Did you understand my question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="316">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, but that is a general statement, but it isn&#039;t used in every case.  You should see this within a different context.  This was - has to do with the stabilisation of the unrest.  That&#039;s the difference.  It wouldn&#039;t have happened in normal circumstances.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="317">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>My learned friend asked you earlier.  You said that you can&#039;t remember who gave the instruction to detain Mr Jack for the further period.  Can you remember?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="318">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="319">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Your answer to that was that it was possible that Mr Du Plessis gave the instruction.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="320">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="321">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Why isn&#039;t this contained in your application that possibly Mr Du Plessis gave the instruction?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="322">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Because I really cannot independently remember this;  who gave me the instruction to detain him.  That is why I say that it is - it could be possible that it might have been him.  I didn&#039;t say it was him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="323">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>I understand, but it just sounds strange to me that you were a unit commander, specifically for Black affairs, but you can&#039;t remember what happened in these Black affairs?  I find it strange.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="324">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>But I can remember, but I can&#039;t specifically remember who gave me the instruction to do it.  There were many people who I detained.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="325">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Were you given instruction by a variety of people, of seniors?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="326">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that&#039;s so, and also where I personally arrested people.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="327">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>You also testified during cross-examination that the instruction was given by means of the State Security Council.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="328">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="329">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>I will read to you.  This was the submission given by the former State President at the Truth Commission on the 21st of August, last year.  I will just take this out, Your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="330">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, is that De Klerk?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="331">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>The date is 21 August 1996.  This was in Cape Town.  I am going to read what he said.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="332">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="333">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>I will read slowly.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="334" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;In dealing with the unconventional strategies from the side of the Government, I want to make it clear from the outside that within in my knowledge and experience, they never included the authorisation of assassination, murder, torture, rape, assault or the like.  I have never been part of any decision taken by Cabinet that the State Security Council or any committee authorising, authorising the instructing the commission of such gross violation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="335">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		Nor did I individually directly or indirectly, suggest, order or authorise any such action.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="336">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Mr De Klerk said specifically that the State Security Council never ever made it an instruction that human rights could be violated in such a way.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="337">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I can only react in giving commentary on the following and I will refer you to a case incident in 1993.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="338">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>I was then falsely blamed, accused that I would have attacked the APLA base in Umtata;  that I gave an instruction to Matiwana, who has now since deceased, and he was also detained, because he gave a false statement.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="339">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	The instruction of this attack was sanctioned by De Klerk personally and it was executed by the Army.  So I cannot see how he can deny it.  He was in command.  He was the State President of the country and he sanctioned it.  Up to this date he has not apologised to me for that.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="340">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	If I can just refer you to Annexure 1.  I don&#039;t know how it is numbered in your bundle.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="341">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Page 31.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="342">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Here we have a document of the State Security Council of 10 April 1986 and I believe that he was part of it, I don&#039;t know.  I proceed to the second page, paragraph six.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="343" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;From the way in which the</text>
		</line>
		<line number="344">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>revolutionaries and their collaborators are </text>
		</line>
		<line number="345">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>using the South African democratic </text>
		</line>
		<line number="346">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>institutions and their customs, it is quite </text>
		</line>
		<line number="347">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>clear that the security situation would not</text>
		</line>
		<line number="348">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text> be stabilised without the enforcement and</text>
		</line>
		<line number="349">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>strengthening of the South African security </text>
		</line>
		<line number="350">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>legislation.  The State cannot afford the </text>
		</line>
		<line number="351">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>state of emergency and then also </text>
		</line>
		<line number="352">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>legislation that gives broader powers to the </text>
		</line>
		<line number="353">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>security community.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="354">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Then I proceed to paragraph seven.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="355" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Each department has a strategic communication sub-component that would be of assistance in this regard.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="356">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Then they have objectives in the same document.  The objective, if you page on, those are Annexure A of the same document.  It&#039;s part of the document.  The second page thereof.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="357" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;The aim.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="358">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Right at the top -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="359" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Restoration, restoring law and order.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="360">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Then we page to the next one and then one of the objectives would be, do you have it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="361">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>It is page 36 you&#039;re looking at, are you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="362">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Actually it is page 34 and page 35.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="363">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Page 34 and page 35, yes, thank you.  Now when you were referring to this document which you said is a document of the State Security Council, on page two you read from paragraph seven.  What was the other paragraph you read from on page two?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="364">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I read paragraph seven right at the bottom of the page.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="365" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Each department had a strategic communication component, that is STRATCOM, who can be of assistance in this regard.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="366">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Then they also compiled an Aim Plan.  Then I refer you to the second annexure, paragraph three and that is:</text>
		</line>
		<line number="367" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;The objective</text>
		</line>
		<line number="368">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		To neutralise leaders of the enemy or to eliminate and then also to break down the influence that they have.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="369">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Then you look at (b).  That is your specific task, that would be -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="370" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;To identify the leaders and to determine the areas of influence.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="371">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Then number two, the second column (b) -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="372" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Neutralise or eliminate the leaders of the enemy.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="373">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Then I would like to refer you to an annexure;  that is number two.  I think that would be page 37 in your bundle.  The previous one was 36.  Do you see there Strategic Communication, that&#039;s STRATCOM.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="374">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	This is a document of the police compiled in 1989.  De Klerk was then in power.  All STRATCOM actions had to be re-registered and also submitted to him for approval.  That is why this document was compiled in 1989.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="375">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Then I refer to page 1 of this particular document -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="376" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;STRATCOM as instrument of the State.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="377">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Then they give a variety of objectives of importance with regard to the question of Mr Mpshe.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="378">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	On page three -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="379" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Covert actions also known as STRATCOM, PULWA, active issues of psychological warfare and these include actions which could be executed where that could not be determined and it is also then to achieve a national security policy,  the objectives thereof.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="380">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Then I go to page 14 right at the bottom, those were the guidelines.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="381">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Page 49.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="382">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes</text>
		</line>
		<line number="383" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;STRATCOM is an instrument of the State that has to be used to protect national interest.  It is therefore a political instrument that must be controlled by means of efficient political control and all STRATCOM operations where the SAP would be involved, must be approved by the Minister of Law and Order.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="384">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Then on page 18.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="385">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Page 53.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="386">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Paragraph 50</text>
		</line>
		<line number="387" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;It was decided that STRATCOM would be used as an additional instrument to combat the revolutionary attack.  Different departments, also the police, have been given the task to execute STRATCOM.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="388">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>This was done by the State President.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="389">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Then the next page, page 19 -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="390" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;STRATCOM actions are not unfamiliar to the security branch.  Security branch sections are for many years already busy with it on an ad hoc basis.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="391">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		The SAP are sometimes accused of being involved by implication by the media.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="392">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>If you look at for example assassinations, sabotage et cetera.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="393">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Nieuwoudt?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="394">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="395">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>What is the relevance of this document that you now shared to us, especially the extract from the State Security Council.  What is the relevance of that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="396">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>The relevance is to point out to you that there was pressure from our side to stabilise the unrest situation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="397">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>According to your version, you assaulted Mr Jack on the 12th of August 1985?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="398">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, and this document is 1986.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="399">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>So what is the relevance of this document?  What does this have to do with the assault on Mr Jack?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="400">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>The relevance of this is that it was continuous - we have pressure from the unrest in 1985.  When we started, that there was pressure on the security branches to stabilise the unrest. That is the reason.  I do not have the documents that refer to 1984 and so forth.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="401">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>But these documents in front of us;  where does it give an indication that these references in the document of the State Security Council that certain leaders have to be eliminated. Where does this have anything to do before the 10th of August?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="402">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, those documents I don&#039;t have what was decided beforehand, but that we did have pressure from above.  That&#039;s the reason for that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="403">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>But in this document there&#039;s no indication that it had to do with the situation before 1986.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="404">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s 1985.  No, the process continues.  The State Security Council was already established in 1978.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="405">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, Mr Mpshe.  Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="406">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Mr Nieuwoudt, what I think is important at this stage, is a State Security Council document that gave you authorisation to interrogate and assault people the time that you assaulted Mr Jack. Do we have such a document?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="407">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>The only document is the emergency regulations, almost 18 that gave me the wide powers.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="408">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>What he is trying to say is that the emergency regulations either indemnified or gave them to understand that no matter what they did, they would not be prosecuted.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="409">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="410">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>The emergency regulations did not say that they must now proceed to go around, intimidating and assaulting and terrorising people.	It merely said that if they did it, they will not be prosecuted.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="411">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is how I understood it.  Thank you very much.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="412">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Nieuwoudt, but it is implied in your application today that that was not correct, not so? Your interpretation that you attached to these emergency regulations ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="413">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is how I understood it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="414">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>You are now applying for amnesty and you then also, by implication, where you then say that if you have assaulted someone like Mr Jack, it was not really legitimate.  So you then agree that this - these regulations never really gave you the permission to assault people.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="415">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="416">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Mr Nieuwoudt, on what basis could you conclude that reading the regulations the mandate to you, you could go around doing anything as a security policeman, including assaulting detainees. Would you say that was a reasonable interpretation of those regulations?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="417">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>According to me, yes, because it gave me broader powers against prosecution;  should it happen that they would charge me, that I would then have protection against prosecution and civil claims.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="418">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Maybe we can follow that later on.  Mr Mpshe needs to continue with his questions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="419">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m nearly finished, Mr Chairperson, thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="420">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Mr Nieuwoudt you testified that during questioning the detainee stood?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="421">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is true.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="422">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>For how long did Mr Jack stand when you were busy with him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="423">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>If I have to guess, it was approximately 20 minutes, 20 minutes to half-an-hour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="424">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>And you expected that he had to stand for 20 minutes and at the same time be of assistance to you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="425">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="426">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Was it reasonable?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="427">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s not reasonable, but that&#039;s the way in which we break down resistance.  So, yes, it&#039;s not reasonable.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="428">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>As I understand your operations;  if you act against a prisoner or an activist, then it is based on an instruction or command from a senior person?  Is that so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="429">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="430">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>The assault on Mr Jack,  was there an instruction given to you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="431">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, not a direct instruction to assault him, but that the information had to be obtained to rectify the situation.  There was pressure placed on us.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="432">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>In other words, the instruction was indirect&gt;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="433">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="434">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>To use assault?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="435">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="436">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Who gave that instruction?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="437">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That was when the emergency regulations were instituted.  We were called together and there were priority given to the leader elements.  It could have been Du Plessis.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="438">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>So you&#039;re going back to these broad powers?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="439">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that&#039;s how I see it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="440">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Why didn&#039;t you report to your seniors after this incident with Mr Jack?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="441">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m not talking about that.  That&#039;s not what I referred to?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="442">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Why not?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="443">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>It wasn&#039;t necessary for me to explain to him which method I used to get information.  It was irrelevant.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="444">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>I doubt whether you understand my question.  Reporting after the assault on Mr Jack, are you referring to that?  Are you referring to that incident?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="445">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="446">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Did you report that to your senior people?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="447">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, I didn&#039;t with regard to the assault.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="448">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Who is this &quot;him&quot;?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="449">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>That is my commander.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="450">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Who is that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="451">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is Du Plessis.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="452">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>So it was Du Plessis who gave the instruction?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="453">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Not to assault, but to interrogate.  That was our instruction;  to interrogate the leader elements.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="454">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>But you said that you were not quite sure whether Du Plessis said that you had to detain the detainee for a further period, but now Du Plessis is coming back;  that you&#039;re quite sure that it was he who gave the instruction.  That sounds strange.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="455">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, perhaps I&#039;m not understanding you correctly.  What I want to say is that we were informed initially when the emergency regulations were instituted.  	Du Plessis got us all together, explained it to us and the leader elements were then placed in priority.  Everybody gave his input and the instruction was given that these people had to be interrogated, because we had to try to stabilise the unrest situation, and on that basis, we did that, but when Mr Jack was arrested;  who arrested him, I don&#039;t know.  I can&#039;t remember.  Who gave the instruction to detain him, I can&#039;t remember.  That&#039;s all I want to say to you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="456">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>And you didn&#039;t report to Mr Du Plessis with regard to this assault?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="457">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, not with regard to the assault.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="458">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Why wasn&#039;t it necessary for you to report to him, saying that I was interrogating this person and unfortunately I used a sjambok?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="459">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>It wasn&#039;t necessary for me to explain that to him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="460">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Why not?  Because the man could have been injured; he received medical treatment; he was injured.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="461">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>At that stage I just didn&#039;t think of reporting it to him.  It wasn&#039;t necessary.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="462">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>What happened to this man;  was it just one of those things that you could have done?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="463">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="464">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Let&#039;s go back to your application, page 21, paragraph two.  A question has been asked of you;  You have answered it.  I refer you to Annexure 15 on page 129.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="465">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I have it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="466">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>According to your testimony you said that you didn&#039;t know who arrested him.  You also didn&#039;t give the instruction that he should be detained for a further period, but the warrant was signed by you to request him - I will read it, the first paragraph of annexure 15 on page 129.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="467" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;You are hereby notified that Mkhuseli Jack, a Black man, according to regulation 3 of the Act of 1953, is arrested and he must then be brought to you from St Albans.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="468">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Now the word &quot;arrested&quot;, for me it implies that he has been arrested and who arrested him?  Isn&#039;t that so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="469">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, this is a warrant that has been compiled by the Department of Justice, which makes provision, according to the emergency regulations. 	Now, the terminology used there, the question in the emergency regulation, is you must then form this opinion when you detain this person, that he falls within the context of that particular regulation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="470">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	That is how you must understand it.  That is how I understand it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="471">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I understand it also, but the word is &quot;arrested&quot;.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="472">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s a question of semantics.  There are different words used.  Those were the words used by Kobie Coetzee, or whoever, the Parliament.  I was just part of executing the function of detaining the person, because then there is a warrant issued to detain him. This is just a preliminary warrant.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="473">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>You signed this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="474">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="475">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>In other words, what is included in this particular annexure, you agree with that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="476">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="477">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>And then page 24 of the application, paragraph 6</text>
		</line>
		<line number="478" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;After I confronted him with the facts and questions, he was rebellious and stubborn.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="479">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>And my question is precisely what did he do?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="480">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>He became angry and he said, &quot;Nieuwoudt you prove it&quot;.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="481">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>He became angry?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="482">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="483">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>It was then necessary to assault him, because he became angry and he was arrogant? So he made you angry and you then hit him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="484">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, it was not that he made me angry.  He was angry.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="485">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s so easy.  You talk to the man, he gets angry, you take a sjambok and you hit him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="486">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I didn&#039;t do this, because I was angry.  He was angry and he said, &quot;Nieuwoudt, you prove it&quot;.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="487">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>&quot;Nieuwoudt, you prove it&quot;.  Was it an insult to you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="488">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="489">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>If a man gets angry, is it an insult to you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="490">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="491">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Now, was there any cause for you to assault him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="492">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>He didn&#039;t want to talk and because of the information that he didn&#039;t want to give to me so that there could be an end to the boycott.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="493">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m going to proceed, same page, same paragraph.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="494" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;I then took a black plastic sjambok and I gave him several lashes over his legs and his body.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="495">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>How many lashes?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="496">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>If I can guess, it might have been six to eight.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="497">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Eight lashes?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="498">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I think it would have been six to eight, somewhere there. I didn&#039;t count.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="499">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Did he have his clothes on?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="500">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, he was.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="501">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>So you would have had to give him very severe lashes?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="502">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s a black plastic sjambok.  It&#039;s not a very heavy one, it&#039;s black, it&#039;s the colour black.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="503">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Was it the first time that you used this sjambok?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="504">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I used it previously during a situation where we had dispersed people at a school.  I think I said it was at Insokelele.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="505">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>The second time was on Mr Jack?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="506">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="507">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m going to mention names to you.  If you remember these names, we will then ask other questions. Do you remember the names of Tango Lemani.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="508">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I remember.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="509">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Was Tango Lemani assaulted by you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="510">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="511">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Do you remember Kgogsile, Cicil Orlyn?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="512">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Orlyn, Mr Mpshe?  How do you spell that name?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="513">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>K-G-O-G-S-I-L-E -  Cicil and the surname is Orlyn - O-R-L-Y-N.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="514">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="515">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>You said that you remember this name.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="516">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Is that the Rev Orlyn?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="517">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>It is just written that you assaulted him at Humansdorp.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="518">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="519">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Do you remember Ernest Malgas?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="520">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="521">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Was he also assaulted by you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="522">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="523">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Am I fast, Mr Chairman, Member of the Committee?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="524">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Pardon.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="525">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>I was checking whether am I fast?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="526">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="527">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="528">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="529">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Do you remember the name Stembele Slovobona?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="530">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No. No, I can&#039;t remember him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="531">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Do you remember Sipho Michael Gopela?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="532">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, the Rev Sipho Gopela?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="533">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Did you assault him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="534">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, I did not assault him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="535">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Do you remember Ernest Mzwanana?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="536">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="537">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Are you sure?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="538">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="539">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Did you say Ernest Mzwarmama or Mzawanana?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="540">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Ernest Mzwanana?  M-Z-W-A-N-A-N-A.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="541">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Nieuwoudt, I want you to help.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="542">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I will as far as I can.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="543">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>The Committee does not have the medical report of Mr Jack.  Now according to paragraph 6, you testified that</text>
		</line>
		<line number="544" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;I stopped the interrogation.  He was taken back to St Albans Prison where he received medical treatment and the Doctor was Dr Wendy Orr.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="545">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>What was the extent of his injuries?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="546">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I remember he had a lot of pain and there were also then lashes.  I looked at it.  Those were the lashes of the sjambok.  There weren&#039;t any open wounds.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="547">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Did he bleed?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="548">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, they weren&#039;t open, but they were swollen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="549">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>And it was very painful?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="550">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="551">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>And on page 25 you testify that you decided to use other methods.  Which methods did you apply?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="552">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I refer to the assault as the method and</text>
		</line>
		<line number="553">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>because his resistance was broken down.  I then had an interview with him to get the information and then also to get to the end of the consumer boycott.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="554">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Was that after the assault?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="555">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, after the assault.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="556">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Why didn&#039;t you use this method before the assault?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="557">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, it was, but because he was rebellious and stubborn, I went over to this action.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="558">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Page 27 ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="559">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Just before you continue, Mr Mpshe.   Mr Nieuwoudt, on page 24, paragraph 6, there you say that you gave him several lashes over his body and legs.  He then stopped, became quiet.  &quot;I thought that he had a lot of pain&quot; and then you stopped the interrogation. Did you interrogate him after this assault?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="560">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, that was at another instance when we negotiated to end the consumer boycott.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="561">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="562">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>How long did this assault take?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="563">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t think it was very long.  I think it might have been three, four, five minutes.  I only gave a few lashes.  It wasn&#039;t that long.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="564">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>I refer you to page 27, paragraph 1.3</text>
		</line>
		<line number="565" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;By means of the above-mentioned objectives, the maintenance of a normal Western democracy as I know it, had to be ensured.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="566">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>What do you refer to here as a &quot;normal Western democracy&quot; at that stage?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="567">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That was apartheid that was in existence at that time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="568">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Was that democracy?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="569">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, democracy as we know it now.  No, it was not that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="570">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Democracy, but there is only one democracy, isn&#039;t it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="571">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That might be the case, but it was also a democracy.  It was the democratic right of the National Party at that stage.  That was the Government and the NP had to be maintained.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="572">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>What he is really trying to say is that it was a democracy in so far as White people are concerned.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="573">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairman.  Point is taken, Mr Chairman, thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="574">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Page 28, paragraph 11.A.  I&#039;m not going to read the question, but only the answer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="575">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="576">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Yes</text>
		</line>
		<line number="577" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;This action was done on behalf of the security branch to obtain information of national interest so that law and order in Black townships could be restored.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="578">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Then you refer to the emergency regulations.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="579">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="580">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>I am going to leave it there, because you have already answered this question and that is that the regulations didn&#039;t state that assaults could be correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="581">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m going to leave it there.  No further questions, Mr Chairman, thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="582">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR MPSHE</text>
		</line>
		<line number="583">
			<speaker>EXAMINATION BY ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>You say in your application form,  during the time in question you were a member of the National Party as well as the security police.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="584">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="585">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>When did you become a member of the National Party?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="586">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That was in 1975.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="587">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Are you still a member of the National Party today?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="588">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="589">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Can you explain something here?  As a member of the National Party, were you expected and required to do the things you have spoken like, for example assaulting someone like Mr Jack in detention?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="590">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Was it required and expected of you to do that as a member of the National Party?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="591">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>It wasn&#039;t stated explicitly, but to ensure the maintenance of the National Party and to protect it.  That is how I understood it, to ensure the National Party&#039;s existence.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="592">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Is that - was that the understanding of all members of the security police who were members of the National Party;  that if you&#039;re a member of the National Party, you&#039;ve got to assault people in detention, amongst the other things you have to do?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="593">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I cannot answer on behalf of other people, but I believe that you had to ensure, your objective was to maintain law and order and to ensure that the National Party is not overthrown and then you have to apply certain methods to ensure that so that you can in fact achieve your objectives.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="594">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>We&#039;ll have to leave that one and proceed to talk about other issues, but one last question concerning your being a member of the National Party as well as a member of the security police at the same time. Where does one draw the line here?  Where do you draw the line here in the process of performing your duties as a policeman?  Are you always regarding yourself as a National Party?  Which one comes first.  Are you first a member of the National Party and then a policeman or a policeman first and then a member of the National Party?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="595">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>You are supposed to serve the Government of the day and that is your objective that is stated in the first instance, to protect the Government of the day. You were the first line of the so-called anarchy or the violence.  You are involved in combating that.  So you have to ensure that the Government of the day is not subverted.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="596">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Maybe one last question from me at this stage.	Why was Mr Jack not released when the Attorney-General said there was no evidence to convict this person?  You had made a report to the Attorney-General that Mr Jack was involved in certain criminal activities and that he should be charged in a court of law, but the Attorney-General refused to prosecute. Why was he not released?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="597">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>He was released.  The Attorney-General took his time to come to a particular decision and when he then gave his decision, the emergency regulations were repealed.  	That was in 1986 in this particular situation.  In 1985 the regulations were repealed, they were released, after we had negotiated with him.  I can just refer you to my appendix and perhaps you will then understand that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="598">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	If you can just give me a moment.  I would just like to point it to you. It&#039;s Appendix 4.  It&#039;s Sheshaba, April 1986.  It is on page 7 of my Appendix.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="599">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>That would be page 70, Mr Chairman and members of the Committee.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="600">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Then we go to page 11.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="601">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Page 74, in the middle of the page under the heading &quot;Unity in Action&quot;.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="602" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;The boycott in Port Elizabeth was finally suspended in early December at a rally, attended by 50 000 people, but only after the boycott leaders&#039; release from detention in November, had conducted in negotiations.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="603">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is, because of that with the negotiation with Mr Jack, the leaders, because he was chairperson of the consumer boycott, the meeting was arranged, he was released and the boycott was suspended.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="604">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>I will not pursue that one.  Just to show that I understand your subjective thinking correctly during the given time.  	Let us say we have the law here.  The law, &quot;die reg&quot;; on the other hand you have the police.  Who is superior?  Who is above the other?  Is it the law above the police or the police above the law?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="605">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Is it now in these circumstances or then?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="606">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>During the time we&#039;re talking about here today?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="607">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I believe that the objective at that stage, specifically during the state of emergency at that time, we actually acted above the law.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="608">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>You were above the law as the police?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="609">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="610">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Thank you very much for that.  No further questions from me.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="611">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY ADV SANDI</text>
		</line>
		<line number="612">
			<speaker>EXAMINATION BY ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Nieuwoudt, one issue before your legal adviser cross-examines you.  Was your objective during the assaults on Mr Jack to restore law and order.  You said if law and order was restored, then at the same time it also protects the constitutional order.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="613">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that&#039;s correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="614">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>So what you did your ordinary function as a policeman and that is to maintain law and order?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="615">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="616">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>It doesn&#039;t matter whether you were a policeman that was also a member of the National Party or a policeman who was a member of the Conservative Party or any other party.  That was your duty as police officer.  That&#039;s what the law states.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="617">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is to serve the Government of the day.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="618">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>And to maintain law and order.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="619">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="620">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="621">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, this may be the opportune time for an adjournment.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="622">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Pardon.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="623">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>This may be the opportune time for a break.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="624">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>The Committee will now adjourn and resume at two o&#039;clock.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="625">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>COMMITTEE ADJOURNS</text>
		</line>
		<line number="626">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>ON RESUMPTION</text>
		</line>
		<line number="627">
			<speaker>GIDEON JOHANNES NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>(Still under oath).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="628">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Van der Merwe, any re-examination?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="629">
			<speaker>RE-EXAMINATION BY MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Commissioner.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="630">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Nieuwoudt, at the stage that you decided to apply for amnesty in this instance, you already testified that there was a civil claim that was settled?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="631">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="632">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>There was also no criminal case made by Mr Jack.  There is also no charge of assault against you at this stage pending?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="633">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="634">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Despite the fact that this incident took place 12 years ago?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="635">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="636">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>You heard the counsel for Mr Jack said that he will allege that you assaulted him on more than one occasion.  Is that so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="637">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, it is.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="638">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>What is your opinion in this regard; did you assault him on more than one occasion?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="639">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, I did not. If I had assaulted him, I would have mentioned it in my application, because the Truth and Reconciliation Act requires me to make a full disclosure.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="640">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Can we quickly go back to the members of the South African Police under the old Government system.  Were people assigned to the security branch?  How did it happen that they got to the security branch?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="641">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>You were recruited for the security branch.  You could never apply for the security branch.  They then took you, they recruited you, they looked at your background and then they screened and selected you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="642">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>During the time that you were at the security branch in the 20 years, are you aware of any of your other officers, juniors, other members who were not members of the National Party?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="643">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Not that I have any knowledge of.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="644">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>In your experience, what would have happened if a person was stationed at the security branch, if he criticised the Government of the day, that is the National Party?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="645">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>He would have been transferred from the security branch to another division and I think that would have meant the end of his career.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="646">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>What do you imply?  What do you mean  end of his career?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="647">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>He would never have been promoted again.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="648">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>A lot has been said about security legislation and the emergency regulations.  Can I ask you;  do the regulations and the Act give you any permission to assault a person?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="649">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, not per se.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="650">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Did it ever happen during your time that you were at the security branch that irregularities came to the fore later on where senior officers were then cognisant expo facto and where these things were then covered up in the interest of the security branch and the National Party?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="651">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="652">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>I think without linking with other things, you were also aware of situations that are also going to serve in front of this Commission; an instance would be Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="653">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is true.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="654">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>At the stage when you were in the security police in 1985 and this incident took place, the State President at that stage was P W Botha.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="655">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, it is.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="656">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>With the new Government in South Africa there are efforts to establish a human rights culture.  Do you think that during that time, in the 80s, that there was really a human rights culture in South Africa?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="657">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="658">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>On the question of Adv Van Rooyen (sic) you answered that it was the duty of the South African Police to maintain law and order during that era.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="659">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	If I would ask what would have happened if you were placed before the choice to contravene laws of the Government in order to protect the interest of the National Party, would you have chosen to abide the law or would you have chosen to support the National Party?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="660">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I&#039;m sorry for disturbing or interrupting.  May I just be given an opportunity to address the Commotion on what is going on down here, please, Mr Chairman?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="661">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Mr Mpshe.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="662">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>I am appealing to people who are giving out the headphones, please stop doing that.  They are causing commotion, please.  Stop handing them out right now.  Thank you, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="663">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Proceed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="664">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Commissioner.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="665">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	What I was trying to get to is if you had a choice between breaking the law with, say, for instance, with the breaking an entering to obtain or evidence or assaulting someone to get information out of a person or not doing that and therefore not succeeding in protecting the National Party Government at that stage. What option would you have taken at that stage?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="666">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>To benefit the National Party, to protect the Government or the party.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="667">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Would you then say that at that stage, as long as it served the interest of the National Party and the Government of the day, it would have been excusable to break the law.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="668">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is how I understood it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="669">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Am I also correct in saying that you never had a direct instruction from anyone to assault Mr Jack?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="670">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="671">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Excuse me, Mr Commissioner. I seem to be jumping around between English and Afrikaans.  I&#039;m getting confused, but I&#039;ll stick to English.  I think my client can supply his answers in Afrikaans.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="672">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I think you are facilitating the work of the Committee.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="673">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="674">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="675">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Mr Nieuwoudt, in your application I will quote you on page 27.  You said that the reason that you applied violence to the person of Mr Jack, was, and I quote</text>
		</line>
		<line number="676" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;To force Mr Jack to give me information that would have enabled me to control the actions of the day;  that is then the boycotts and everything and then to stabilise the Black community.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="677">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is true.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="678">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Was the driving force behind this feeling that you had to get the necessary information from Mr Jack and to stop the consumer boycott.  Where did this pressure come from?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="679">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That was because of the pressure of the Government of the day at that stage and also the State Security Council at these different structures they pressurised the security branches on grassroots level, the foot soldiers to stabilise the anarchy and unrest of the time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="680">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>In all the time during your service in the security police, there must have been various reports of assaults and deaths in detention.  Is that true?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="681">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is true.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="682">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>In all that time, did the National Party Government at any stage, clamp down on the powers of the security police and the security forces or did they broaden the powers of the security police and the security forces?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="683">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Usually they ensured that we would have broader powers.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="684">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>And then just to finalise this matter.  At the stage that you assaulted Mr Jack, straight after the assault no further questioning took place.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="685">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="686">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Was that because at that stage he would not co-operate?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="687">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="688">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>But what I&#039;m saying is, was he in a position - maybe you didn&#039;t understand - was he in a position to answer you at that stage or didn&#039;t he want to co-operate, directly after the assault?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="689">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>No, he didn&#039;t want to co-operate after the assault.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="690">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>When you detained political activists;  once a person would co-operate or would not co-operate, was there any further reason for detaining such a person?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="691">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, there was.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="692">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>What would that be?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="693">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>To remove him from the community, to detain him so that he could not continue with his political activities and in such a way then to control the anarchy and the unrest.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="694">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>At a later stage it became apparent to you that Mr Jack was willing to co-operate in order to obtain his own freedom and those of his comrades.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="695">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="696">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>At that stage the deal was struck with him which allowed you to free the people and end the consumer boycott.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="697">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="698">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Would you then say that the assault in this event did contribute directly to the eventual solution of the consumer boycott in solving the problem and ending the consumer boycott?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="699">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="700">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Is that what you envisaged?  Did you think that is what would happen when you assaulted him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="701">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is what the objective and the aim was that I had at that stage.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="702">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>May I just confer one moment with my client.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="703">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="704">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Commissioner, I have no further questions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="705">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR VAN DER MERWE</text>
		</line>
		<line number="706">
			<speaker>FURTHER CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Mr Nieuwoudt, when we adjourned this morning you had left us in the dark as to why exactly when you were giving a report to Mr Du Plessis, you did not mention the fact that you had assaulted Mr Jack.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="707">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Would one be correct to think or to speculate that perhaps the reason why you did not tell Mr Du Plessis that you had assaulted Mr Jack, it was because he would have approved anyway?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="708">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, if there would have been a case then we would have tried to cover it up whatever the case may be to ensure that we would not get to court. So it was not necessary for me to report that to him.  There was never a pending case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="709">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>If you had told him that you had assaulted Mr Jack, that is not something he would have disagreed with?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="710">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>He would have agreed with it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="711">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Did you hear counsel for Mr Jack and Mr Nyoka this morning when he mentioned something about the helicopter-method of torture?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="712">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I have heard when he read that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="713">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Do you know anything about what is known as the helicopter-method of torture?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="714">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I have heard it on different instances.  During testimony in court cases where I testified and other people, but I don&#039;t know the methods.  It was then explained how they applied it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="715">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>How did they explain this particular method of torture?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="716">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Their hands are then hand-cuffed and then something like a stick or a rod is put through the arms and then it&#039;s placed over two tables.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="717">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>At the time you were investigating a number of matters or criminal matters in which you believed Mr Jack was involved, who are the other detainees that you interviewed?	Did you interrogate any other leaders who were his colleagues at the time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="718">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I did.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="719">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Who were those?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="720">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>I interrogated Edgar Ngoy.  There was Tolla Makapela, Mzoli Giwas.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="721">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.  Thank you, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="722">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR MPSHE</text>
		</line>
		<line number="723">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, you may stand down, Mr Nieuwoudt.  Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="724">
			<speaker>MR NIEUWOUDT</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="725">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>WITNESS EXCUSED</text>
		</line>
		<line number="726">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Are you calling any other witness?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="727">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Mr Commissioner, we will not be calling any other witness, thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="728">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>And you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="729">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Your Worship, we will be calling Mr Jack to give his testimony.  I wish to apologise for not having made copies of his statement, but we&#039;ll avail it later on, but his statement is not very long.  We have afforded the other side with a copy.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="730">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, you don&#039;t have enough copies for us?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="731">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>No, unfortunately. I&#039;m very sorry for that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="732">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>You&#039;ll make that available to us?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="733">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="734">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Okay.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="735">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>MR NYOKA CALLS</text>
		</line>
		<line number="736">
			<speaker>MKHUSELI JACK</speaker>
			<text>(Duly sworn, states).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="737">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="738">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>What are your full names.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="739">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>My full names is Mkhuseli Jack.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="740">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, you may proceed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="741">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m going to read from an affidavit which was the basis for the civil claims which the applicant have referred to in his evidence and I presume he has read it carefully and they&#039;re settled on the basis of the information that is in this document.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="742">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Among other things it does, referring to the assault in question, they refer to my arrest at a friend&#039;s house on the 2nd of August, which was a Friday.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="743" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;At approximately 11:30 am and the people who arrested me there, I know their names very well. Capt Van Zyl was drafted into the Eastern Cape in the early 1980s to come and assist to deal with the troublesome activists.  He was from Koevoet in Namibia - according to his own admission to myself - and a Capt Sakkie du Plessis and a team of security policemen which included Black policemen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="744">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		I was taken to the Campsteen Road Police Station, commonly known as Barry&#039;s Corner.  I was locked alone in a cell and only later taken out to an office where my name and other particulars were taken down by two black security policemen, known to me as Jean and Serg Tonkata. That is the younger brother.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="745">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Sorry -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="746" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;This Tonkata is the younger brother of Serg Tonkata.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="747">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		The following morning I was picked up on the 3rd of April by two security policemen.  One of them was Deon Nieuwoudt, who was a warrant-officer at the time and a policeman called Bezuidenhout, who I know very well and I can locate him, even now if I have to go and look for him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="748">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		I know Deon Nieuwoudt since 1979.  He picked me up whilst I was writing exams.  The Black policemen he was with, was Mkodoka and Metselo.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="749">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Mkodoka died recently in a bomb blast - a few years ago.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="750" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;On that occasion, Deon Nieuwoudt gave me four choices which I could take in my life.  That was either to work for him, quit the country, go to Robben Island or face death.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="751">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		That was very clear and he explained to me each of those choices what they meant.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="752">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		The other one was that the emphasis of his advice for me was that if I were to stay out of politics, I would never see him again, but if I intend to be in politics, I must accept my life will be hell.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="753">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		He sticked to that right through from that time until 1986, the last time he tortured me.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="754">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		They took me to Louis Le Grange Square.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="755">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>That is Deon Nieuwoudt and Bezuidenhout -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="756" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;When we arrived there, he took me to an office where there was Warrant-Officer Coetzee, who I know very well also.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="757">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		It was a Saturday.  He was with his small boy, which is one of the things which make me feel sad about that day on every time when I think about it;  that he has brought his boy;  I could imagine. I have a boy today.  It must have gone to the shop to do something for him, but the boy had to wait in a room next door, whilst he was busy preparing me as he said; `ons het jou gekry en vandag ons sal al die politiek uit jou kop slaan.  Jy wil mos nie hoor nie.&#039; (Today we got you and today we will hit all the politics out of your head, because you will not listen.)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="758">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		He took out a towel and tied it nicely around each of my wrists and placed the hand-cuffs over the towelling.  He screwed the hand-cuffs tight.  I was told to sit on the floor and place my hand-cuffed arms over my legs.  A stick was then inserted below my knees and above my forearms, locking me into a permanent crouch.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="759">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		Nieuwoudt entered the room.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="760">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text> That is the document he was showing here, as having arrested me on the 3rd.  It is the document on that day, he wrote, sitting there and taking the particulars and he knew exactly who arrested me, because that&#039;s the question he was asking to me as he was sitting on a table there.  Who arrested you, which he knew anyway, which  I repeated.  He wanted to make sure whether I knew those people or not.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="761">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>I find it absolutely strange today that he doesn&#039;t know who arrested me.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="762" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Nieuwoudt entered the room.  Assistant Coetzee pushed the stick through.  Both men then lifted me up by means of the stick and suspended me between two tables.  This form of torture is what is known as a helicopter and not only me alone who was subjected to this.  About 60 other applicants who were the basis of the civil claim he talks about, were subjected to that.  On 80 per cent of them, he was involved. Apart from being ...&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="763">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m not going to go into the discomfort, because everybody knows what this thing is about -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="764" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Coetzee sat at one of the tables with documents which I assumed were papers relating to my file.  He was putting questions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="765">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		At some stage, Serg Diaan, who is also dead now, Lieut Strydom, Warrant-Officer Nieuwoudt and Basil came into the office again, as they were doing this up and down, whilst Warrant-Officer Coetzee was putting the questions to me.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="766">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		Bezuidenhout and Nieuwoudt took me off the two tables and removed the stick between my legs and replaced it with what looked like a thick broom stick.  They questioned me about the speech I made in Cape Town where I addressed a University and I referred to the Port Elizabeth security policemen as worse than the Gestapo.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="767">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		This thing was put the question to me;  did I say that. I denied that, I said I never said that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="768">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		Coetzee at that time asked me what business it was of Molly Blackburne to value herself with Blacks and my organisation in particular.  When I replied that Mrs Blackburne understands the hardships that Blacks suffered, Nieuwoudt stopped writing and took up the sjambok, hitting me several times, shouting `you lie&#039;. </text>
		</line>
		<line number="769">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		All Mrs Blackburne wants is a violent overthrow of the state and one man one vote.  I was thereafter taken to Algoa Park Police Station by Nieuwoudt ...&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="770">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>And I find it strange that he doesn&#039;t remember this, because he was bragging about how he has assaulted all the other people, the likes of Alexgala and Pume Odolo and all that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="771">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Nieuwoudt in his life, has never, as far as I&#039;m concerned, he&#039;s not a talkative person who likes to talk nonsense.  He will never commit himself and make statements about things he is not involved in.  His record, as far as I know him, has never involved that kind of thing.  He will never say that I have done that as he said.  He will ask what happened to Hashe, what I&#039;ve been to that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="772">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I knew and all my friends, we know, that Nieuwoudt knows what he talks about.  We know him to be a man that was dedicated and know his job very well and he has demonstrated that in this house today;  that he knows his job.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="773" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>On the way there he warned me not to lay any complaints of assault against the police.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="774">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text> This is the important point -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="775" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;He said that if I did, that I would disappear like Godoloze, Hashe and Galela or that my body would be found, burned to death like Goniwe and others.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="776">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		These communist leaders has disappeared or had been killed in strange circumstances.  That was frightening to me.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="777">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>The date of the 12th he refers to, is perfectly correct.  	It is correct in that he did call me in that day.  What he did, was to tell me - to ask me, didn&#039;t you tell me when we drove to Algoa Park Police Station that I cannot lay charges against police and that is what - and on that day, let me tell you, I was jelly - like you wouldn&#039;t have - my whole body was still as hard and sore as it was when he took me to - when I was taken to St Albans by riot police, not by him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="778" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;I was taken by the riot police to St Alpines prison.  He left me at Algoa Park and I was taken from Algoa Park to St Albans.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="779">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		I think what caused all this problem was the fact that there was a Col Paulsen ...&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="780">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>I hope I got it right -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="781" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot; ... who came to visit me in court and I was the only detainee at the time who had the privilege of getting this high profile visit from this colonel. This colonel was supposed to come and find out about my situation after my then employer, Daz Chalmas, have asked the then PFP member of Parliament, Malcomess, to enquire as to how is my situation in jail.	I told the colonel that I was assaulted and I do want to lay charges against Deon Nieuwoudt, but I wouldn&#039;t do it whilst I was there in prison. He said I must sign something to that effect.  That&#039;s what made Deon Nieuwoudt extremely happy when I told him that&#039;s what actually transpired in the meeting between me and this Col Paulsen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="782">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		He was a proud man.  He took me to Coetzee&#039;s office and told Coetzee that I had not laid a charge against them.  Coetzee spoke to me and said that they were just angry on the day I was assaulted;  that I should not take the incident seriously.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="783">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		Coetzee said it was right in not laying a charge against them, but wanted to know how it had become known that I had been assaulted.  I told him that I had been with detainees who have since been released and that these ex-detainees might have spread the word, because I could never say that I have made plans to make together information outside the prison, because that would have invited some extra punishment.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="784">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>So that is that side of things.  I find it extremely strange that Deon Nieuwoudt had, he says he had a team of 10 people who were working with him.  Now he had 10 and about 10 Whites and 10 others, Blacks and all that.  I presume, informers are included into that, I don&#039;t know.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="785">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	But I want to bring him back to 1979 when he, Nieuwoudt, Roelofse and Tongkata and Mselo terrorised me on that evening at Sanlam Building.  I presume as far as he know, I was never in Sanlam building.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="786">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	What they did there, they tortured me with - when they did this thing first to me, this thing of this putting a electrocuting - electrocutes, putting them on my fingers.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="787" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Nieuwoudt used the others.  I don&#039;t know for what reason.  Roelofse would turn off the light and go outside, but Nieuwoudt would do it with the light on when he was there himself.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="788">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	What the significance is of doing it and standing outside when it&#039;s being done on me, I don&#039;t know.  It&#039;s still a mystery to me, but it looks to me like it&#039;s always been Roelofse&#039;s idea that maybe he plays the smart guy that was not involved in assaulting people.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="789">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Whilst jumping and jumping and trying to show the gaps in what he&#039;s been trying to talk about, looking at the 1922 incident - sorry, 1984, on the 22nd of January.  He doesn&#039;t know where this took place now, but he was there in charge on that day when he claims that I intimidated people, which I deny.  There&#039;s nothing like that.  I never intimidated anybody.  He laid charges, alleged that I intimidated people and it was proven in his own courts that that was a lie and that was nonsense.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="790">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	The important thing about this day that we are raising on this matter, is the fact that they took me - he took me into his car from Ahoza.  I think it&#039;s Ivan Peter there in next to the Limbo Church to New Brighton Police Station.  There a Major or Col Du Plessis is today, whatever his title is, I know him very well the person I&#039;m talking about;  he put me down.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="791">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	What he likes to do is this, his Honour.  I&#039;ll show you.  He would take his victim ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="792">
			<speaker>MR JACK DEMONSTRATES</speaker>
			<text>(Indistinct)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="793">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>... and he slapped me, he hit me with a stick and wanting to know what do I want from his informer, Patrick Hlongwane.  Why did I harass him and this is to do with the case he referred to earlier on.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="794">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	That is why ended - that incident was raised again by Molly Blackburne via Moorcroft, the then PFP MP in Parliament and the then Minister of Justice, whatever justice or injustice, said that the reason was that I had an intimidatory behaviour which is on record.  They have done that.  He said it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="795" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Later on, after they had to prove that they made a case against him, after about six months for this so-called intimidation, which they lost anyway.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="796">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>The interesting element of this is this one -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="797" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;During the trial, the State Prosecutor in the case, Mr H F Goosen, who Nieuwoudt boasted to me that he was his close friend.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="798">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Ad this, for interest, just, this very prosecutor visited me in Jeffreys Bay when I was locked up there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="799">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	He was just there, because I used to meet him when I was working in North End, every day, because we were passing each other and we used to talk and always I ask him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="800">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="801">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I&#039;m going to bring maybe the second last thing.  This one is in January 1987.  I was locked up at Bethelsdorp Police Station and I was taken by two Black policemen from there.  You get discharged.  You get taken to another place.  	They took me from there.  This is going to be very interesting also.  How Deon Nieuwoudt can deny this, I really don&#039;t understand.  How does he hope to get amnesty, because I was taken to a - to a place which was known as Willowdene. 	I&#039;m not sure about this which place I was taken.  I assumed, because all the other people who were assaulted at Willowdene with the method that I&#039;m going to explain.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="802" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Before we got there, the police stopped the car, the van and they put a bag over my face and of course I was wearing shorts, just a T-shirt.  It might have been written release this or release that or viva that or viva whatever. 	When I got there, I got tortured.  I got tortured.  I don&#039;t know whether Nieuwoudt tortured me there or not.  On that one I cannot say he did, but the interesting thing is that he took me from that place and drove with me from there to Grahamstown, to Fort Brown, that side of Grahamstown. I think it&#039;s near the Fish River.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="803">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		There is an old fort there.  When we got there, Nieuwoudt insisted to the young policeman who was there, who was a sergeant in charge of that police station, that they must put me in the fort.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="804">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		There is a fort there which is a - is never used, I presume, since the Anglo Boer War.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="805">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>What was the name of the fort?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="806">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Fort Brown.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="807">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>B-R-A-N-D?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="808">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>F-O-R-T Brown.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="809">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes. What is the second word?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="810">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I want to explain, Sir, this Fort Brown.  It&#039;s a police station ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="811">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>No, you better take the mike with you, because the evidence has to be recorded.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="812">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Okay.  The police station is standing like - about say 15 metre, 15 metres from the place that was originally the fort.  Then you come into the fort, which is dark.  There&#039;s never been any light in there.  There is a door.  When you open the door as you come in, then the sunlight would come in.  The time was roundabout four and five.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="813">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Mr Nieuwoudt accompanied me to this new residence of mine. (Laughter).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="814">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	There was a sort of a trap door, much like this.  It could have been two by two, whatever.  Then you pick that up and you put a step-ladder down and then they put it down and then you walk - you move down there and then they take it out.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="815" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>He said let him stay there until he, but in Afrikaans, he said;  hy moet daar vrot. (He must rot there).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="816">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>I finished that. </text>
		</line>
		<line number="817" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;I went down there. I stayed there. By the mercy of God I was lucky.  I had two slabs of chocolate which were big.  I don&#039;t know how I managed to keep them with me.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="818">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		I stayed with that there.  To keep my chocolate there I had a competition with the mice that were staying there, trying to get to my chocolate, but after five days or four or five days, I was taken to a doctor, because this fellow, although he said to me he had his wife who was pregnant at the time, this White policeman, came and stood there with his wife and said to me at night;  ek voel niks vir jou nie. (I feel nothing for you.)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="819">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		I never saw him.  He never took me on the day he was supposed to take me to the doctor.  I stayed there.  Ultimately I was take to a doctor in Grahamstown.  I cannot remember the name of this young doctor, but that man, in front of this policeman, shouted at him and said;  `what happened to this man,  I want him back here again&#039;, and he gave prescription.	That policeman turned around and said that, oh no, never bring me back again there.  He was so angry with me I had to say in front him, yes doctor I&#039;m fine. The doctor said;  `this person is not fine, can&#039;t you see&#039;, as a result of the torture that was happening there.  I was taken from that place on his instructions.  Locked.  After that they took me out of that place and they put me in a cell in Fort Brown.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="820">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	You can go there now.  There is a ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="821">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I just want you to be a little more - just take control over yourself.  You&#039;ve told us how you were taken to a doctor in Grahamstown.  From Grahamstown, where were you taken to?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="822">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I was taken back to that cell.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="823">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Fort Brown?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="824">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes, but not in the fort, now into a small cell, where in this cell I was tied with my feet, which was one of the rare thing that a detainee stayed with hand-cuffs for about five weeks I stayed there, until some policeman took me there to Alicedale.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="825">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I want to repeat that I would laugh.  I have no intentions myself to his Honour to hope and say that I would like to see Nieuwoudt rotting in prison.  I have no - my - but I believe that this platform of amnesty should be used with the dignity it deserve and it mustn&#039;t be turned into a mockery with the aim of insulting the families.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="826">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	My family and myself and the families of many other people who would not be having an opportunity to come and speak in front of this thing.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="827">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	What I have seen now, although I know many families harbour no grudge against anybody, but I think if the humiliation that was done to us, is going to be brushed aside just like that, it could create a little bit of a problem.  I think, I want to support the institution of the land, which I so dearly sacrificed a lot, but not as much as many of my friends, whom Mr Nieuwoudt hasn&#039;t given an opportunity to be able and stand in front of you and decide to oppose or not to oppose this amnesty. </text>
		</line>
		<line number="828">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I am in a very fortunate position whereby I can make that choice, but many people would have loved to do that.  He has denied himself the opportunity that they do that.  Thank you.  (Applause).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="829">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Are there any questions you wish to put to your client?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="830">
			<speaker>EXAMINATION BY MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Was Mr Nieuwoudt ever alone during such interrogations or assaults?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="831">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>As far as I can remember, in my whole life of getting in and out of Sanlam Building, and in and out of Louis le Grange, never ever have I seen Nieuwoudt or him alone, except on the day he spoke about - I spoke about, when he called me in and said to me have you laid charges against me.  And if I have told him, there is no doubt in my mind, he would have had a lot of supporters to assisting him in dealing with me on that matter.  There was no need to deal with me and he didn&#039;t need to have another person.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="832">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>That is all, your Worship.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="833">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR NYOKA</text>
		</line>
		<line number="834">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Van der Merwe?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="835">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR VAN DER MERWE</text>
		</line>
		<line number="836">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Thank you, Mr Commissioner.  Mr Jack, you and your </text>
		</line>
		<line number="837">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>attorney have given me some notes this morning, which is your affidavit and the other note is a summary of a consultation between yourself and your legal representative, which I thank you for.  Are those two documents correct?  The contents, is it correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="838">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>The contents are correct, yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="839">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>You have read it all, you are happy and that it is correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="840">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I have read them all, I wrote it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="841">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>By the way, you are not planning a future in politics, because it seems to me ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="842">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>You what?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="843">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>You are planning a future in politics?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="844">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Do I plan ...?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="845">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>No, it is just a light-hearted moment.  Do you plan a future in politics?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="846">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>No, that&#039;s none of your business anyway.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="847">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>You are doing quite well.  (Laughter).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="848">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>He is asking you a friendly question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="849">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="850">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Well, I think you should give him a friendly reply.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="851">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Let us come back to the serious business.  In this document which says biographical profile, which is the consultation notes, on the first page.  You allege that you were terrorised by Nieuwoudt, Roelofse, Tungata and Celo. Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="852">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Come again?  Oh, yes, ja. That&#039;s correct, that statement, terrorised by them.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="853">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Yes. By that you mean that Mr Nieuwoudt was on your neck all the time 24 hours a day?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="854">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Ja.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="855">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>And by that statement you mean Mr Nieuwoudt was on your neck 24 hours a day and really making it difficult for you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="856">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>He has made it difficult for me.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="857">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Right. Now the allegation or your evidence that you gave here, you have changed that word terrorised to torture, which seems to be quite a significant change.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="858">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>It is not a significant change. I used them inter-changing maybe.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="859">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Yes. Let me ask you, Mr Jack, you were educated up to what standard at school?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="860">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I was what?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="861">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>What standard is your level of school education?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="862">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Can you bring this thing closer to you? Okay,  you can speak.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="863">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Let me rephrase the question. I know that you are a well-educated man. Would you care to inform us what your qualifications are?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="864">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>I have got tertiary education.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="865">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Yes, give it to us, please.  Tell us where you were educated. I know you were educated outside South Africa, so please tell us.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="866">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I was educated in (indistinct) School, I was educated in England.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="867">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>What qualifications did you obtain in England?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="868">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I obtained a BA (Hons) in Economics and Development Studies.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="869">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Good. So I can take it as granted that you understand and you master the English language?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="870">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>It is not my language.  (Laughter). I would never master it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="871">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>That was not the question, Mr Jack.  The question is you understand and master the language because you obtained a Master&#039;s degree in that language.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="872">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>What I am saying, that language remains not my language. I would say that as far as Xhosa is concerned.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="873">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>No, I think you had better just answer directly, please. We are wasting a lot of time unnecessarily.  You are trying to suggest - that you are very well-educated with the English language.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="874">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="875">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="876">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I am.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="877">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Well, let&#039;s answer it that way.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="878">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="879">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Good. Then you will also have to agree with me that tortured and terrorised is definitely not the same word?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="880">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I agree with that, ja.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="881">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>I cannot hear your answer, your hand is in the way?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="882">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I agree with that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="883">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Good.  Would you care to explain why this is referred to as terrorised and whether, why there was no mention made of torture?  Was this something that you devised while you gave evidence here?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="884">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I didn&#039;t devise that. The fact is of Nieuwoudt&#039;s action have always consisted of the two words or the definitions of both.  They would terrorise you, they would torture you, and he has done that both, and if you want me to tell you about it, I will tell you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="885">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Yes, you have had your chance.  Now what I am trying to ascertain from you, by implication made that clear, that there is a quite clear distinction between terrorise and torture. Do you agree with that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="886">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I think he has already said that he agrees with it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="887">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.  Would you care to explain to me why you didn&#039;t, why there is no mention in this document of torturing?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="888">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>In which document?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="889">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>The document that you have in front of you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="890">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="891">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I think Mr Van der Merwe you must be content with the answer that he is using these two words interchangeably. He is not drawing a distinction in his mind.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="892">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Ja.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="893">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Commissioner.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="894">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Ja, I am not writing a dictionary.  (Laughter).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="895">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="896">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Oh, yes, of course, I do.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="897">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>And if he had to use threats to try and deter you from being politically active, would you agree that he was doing his job?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="898">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I agree with that personally.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="899">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>You also mentioned that Mr Nieuwoudt was not a talkative person. Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="900">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="901">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Now would you expect a person of his stature, keeping in mind that he is not talkative, to boast to someone who is an activist, to boast about people who has disappeared?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="902">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Oh, yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="903">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Or people that he has assaulted?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="904">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I have told you that he has done that. He has done that, and I say to you, Nieuwoudt was not a man that will go and talk about and just make empty claims. That&#039;s the point I am making about that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="905">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Ja, I think the point I am trying to make is that it is highly unlikely that he will make admissions to a person who would eventually one day be able to give evidence against him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="906">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>He never believed that will ever happen, Sir. He never believed that, he probably never believed that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="907">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>He never believed?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="908">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>He never believed that he will be facing these people here and sitting here. (Laughter).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="909">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>The question is not whether he would be facing the people here, the question is whether he would have to face you in, as you referred to it, as their legal system?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="910">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>No, he knew that, he was so confident, he was so confident as I told you, he read - what he was referring to the honourable gentleman there, when he quoted in that document of the state of emergency, that is what Nieuwoudt read and worshipped, and he applied it to the letter.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="911">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Yes, but despite all the odds, Mr Jack,  various successful prosecutions did take place against members of the South African Police as well as civil claims. You were one of the people who benefited by a civil claim.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="912">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Let me tell you this ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="913">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Is it true or is it not true?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="914">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Let me tell you this, if you want me to answer that.  Are you aware that Mr Nieuwoudt&#039;s main objection to the likes of the Molly Blackburnes, because they brought the idea to us that we could go and lay charges or complain to police, if assaulted.  But before that, they knew we would never dare to do that. How many cases do you know, except this one, where political detainees have ever laid charges or civil claims against security police; how many cases?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="915">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Would you care to answer my question, please?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="916">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>What is your question? I am trying to answer your question. I am explaining to you that Nieuwoudt feared no claims from detainees, because it won&#039;t work.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="917">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>That was not my question. I will reiterate and repeat the question.  The question was simply, various successful prosecutions were instituted against members of the police and various civil claims were either heard or settled by the then government of the National Party for assaults that took place in detention or things which were untoward at that stage.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="918">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>But I dispute the statement part of that statement, that&#039;s - and I think we will continue disputing that.  I am asking you which other cases were ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="919">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>No, I think we are not be working with statistics here.  You are making a general statement that there have been cases of people who have claimed successfully against the State.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="920">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="921">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>And are you aware that there have been people who have made successful claims against the State?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="922">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I know only of this specific one, and this is before Mr Nieuwoudt boasted to me.  After that I can believe that what he says it will be correct, after that Nieuwoudt will be more careful, but before that, he never knew that was possible.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="923">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Well, that&#039;s your answer.  (Laughter).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="924">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, your Worship. You alleged that you were arrested on the 2nd of August?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="925">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Ja.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="926">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>And not on the 3rd of August. Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="927">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="928">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Where were you detained on the night of the 2nd of August?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="929">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>On the evening of the 2nd of August I spent the night at the Algoa police station.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="930">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>And when were you transferred to St Albans?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="931">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>No, from there I was taken to Louis le Grange to be tortured by Deon Nieuwoudt and others and from there I was taken back to Algoa police station by Deon Nieuwoudt and from there I was taken in the normal procedure by the riot squad to St Albans Prison.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="932">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>What was the rank of Mr Nieuwoudt at that stage?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="933">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Of who?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="934">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>The rank of Mr Nieuwoudt at that stage?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="935">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I can&#039;t be sure of that, I presume he was a warrant-officer and I think that&#039;s what I thought he was.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="936">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Ja, you gave evidence to say that he was a warrant-officer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="937">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Ja.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="938">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>And that is in actual fact wrong.  But you won&#039;t dispute that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="939">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Well, I mean, it wasn&#039;t my business to know his ranks, whatever it was.  I mean ... (Laughter).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="940">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>In other words, what I am getting to is that of all the incidents that occurred here, there are some possibility of making mistakes with regard to the facts. Is that right?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="941">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>No, I mean - look, when you talk of the - whether he was a warrant-officer or whatever, I could be saying he is a warrant-officer even this day, I don&#039;t think it is a mistake, I mean ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="942">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Is there anything material that turns on this kind of questioning?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="943">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Commissioner, I think I will get to it eventually, but I will leave it at that. I will step on to something else.  You also alleged that the incident with the car and Fort Brown, if I can just get some clarity on that.  You were tortured by unknown assailants, due to the fact that you had a bag over your head. Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="944">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes, it is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="945">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>So you cannot confirm or deny that Deon Nieuwoudt was involved there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="946">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Ja, I have stated that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="947">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Good.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="948">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>On the torture.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="949">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s right. When you were driven to Fort Brown, you say that you were driven in the back of your motor vehicle. Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="950">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s correct, in a car, a proper car. Was it a Skyline? It was something like that, a yellow Skyline. I am not sure, ja.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="951">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>And you also said that Nieuwoudt was the driver?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="952">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="953">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Is it correct then that what happened is that you were transferred from Bethelsdorp police station via the ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="954">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>The torture camp.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="955">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>... the torture camp as you call it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="956">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="957">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>To Fort Brown for further detention.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="958">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="959">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Is it - do you know what the reason was for your transfer to Fort Brown?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="960">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I know, it was because I was in 19 - at the end of 1985, &#039;86, former Pres Samora Machel died in an air crash and the comrades decided to embark on a hunger strike.  You know, it was spontaneous, it happened, because there was no planned thing with anybody else, which I supported.  And after that, I went to Livingstone Hospital where I was sick, and I was taken by security policemen there back to Sanlam, to Louis le Grange, where Roelofse, who showed his anger to me about the fact that I have participated on that strike there, okay. And then from there I was taken back to Bethelsdorp and from Bethelsdorp, of course, that is what I was tortured for.  At this torture camp.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="961">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>May I just confer with my client?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="962">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Can I just ask, when you talk about the torture camp, is this some place other than the police station?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="963">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>It is a - there was a place called Willowdene.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="964">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Willowdale?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="965">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Willowdene.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="966">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Willowdene?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="967">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes. This was supposed to be an old school. I have never been there to see it.  Every time we went to this place we would have this, and the most of the people who made the application in the case of Wendy Orr, have been to that place, and actually everybody was detained during the 1986 state of emergency, was tortured there, with the same method, all of them, and that is what they were using it for.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="968">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Yes, do carry on.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="969">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Commissioner. Who took you to - is it Willowdene?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="970">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I told you it is two policemen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="971">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Unknown to you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="972">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Black policemen. Ja, I can&#039;t remember them now.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="973">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Okay. So the first time you noticed Mr Nieuwoudt was after the torture had taken place already?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="974">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes. Ja.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="975">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Ja, my instructions are that you were removed from Bethelsdorp police station, because at that stage you were a problem to the police, and that you were intimidating people and acting in an activist matter and disrupting their procedures, but you wouldn&#039;t - would you dispute that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="976">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>No, no, I don&#039;t have to dispute that. I think, I mean, I won&#039;t dispute that. The point that I was making about that, is that I am explaining what happened and I am saying that Nieuwoudt didn&#039;t say those things in his application.  And I think he is applying for amnesty. I am not applying for amnesty.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="977">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Let&#039;s get back to the committee that you served on or the membership of the bodies.  Is it true that you were the co-ordinator of the consumer boycott during the &#039;85 time period?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="978">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I was, ja.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="979">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>So you would agree that for the security establishment you were a very important role-player in the struggle?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="980">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Of course, yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="981">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>You would also agree with me that the - you would expect the security establishment to target you if they had any hope of bringing the consumer boycott to an end?  Surely you should be ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="982">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I do not quarrel with their methods. We are here just to tell what they have done, that&#039;s all.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="983">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Oh, I see.  And then subsequent to your negotiations after your detention or during your detention, when you managed to convince the security police that they should release the detained leaders, the consumer boycott was called off. Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="984">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Let&#039;s come to that. Thank you for bringing this all back here, because I wanted to tell you something about this. You know, your client purports that he was involved in negotiations of any kind. Let me tell you this. Your client don&#039;t believe in prisoners talking with the police and that was his philosophy and he adhered to that; never ever has he discussed with me or any of my comrade community leaders ever anything to do with our actions. The only time he talks with us, it was - the only time he was involved, it was when he wants to torture and terrorise people. Never has he been involved in a meeting that discussed anything to do with the suspension of the boycott.  And I will tell you a little bit more about that, which you don&#039;t know. Mr Deon Nieuwoudt, he was so upset with Barend, with Du Plessis engaging and continuing those talks with us, because those talks we initiated them for the sole purpose of lifting the morale of our troops in the prison. It was always a good thing for us to yearning after of course the Wendy Orr thing, to go and engage the police to assess the mood, how far were they in terms of going to release us. And those talks were initiated by us and always for that purpose. And Nieuwoudt hated those talks. He hated them. He never wanted them.  As a result on the second state of emergency that was declared, Sir, Nieuwoudt worked carefully to get Roelofse get, who was not involved in the 1985, because of Du Plessis who made a mistake, of engaging in talks with us, when actually their job was just to lock us up, according to what he said, and Roelofse. And this I was told by Roelofse and Nieuwoudt was present, he knows that. They said the talking is over, and we will rot in prison until the situation is stabilised. He must not come here and pretend as if he was a negotiator of any kind. He hated the word negotiations.  (Applause).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="985">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	He hated the word negotiations, Sir. Don&#039;t please come up with that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="986">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>You, however, let&#039;s leave Mr Nieuwoudt for the time being.  Subsequent to your detention and assault in custody, you did enter into negotiations with the security police. Is that correct?  And subsequent to that people were released and the boycott was called off.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="987">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Listen, the boycott, the release of the political prisoners had no impact. There is no way that we could have negotiated our release with the police.  Forget about that. What has happened is that ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="988">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Mr Jack, will you please answer the question. It is a simple question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="989">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>What is simple in your question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="990">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>There was an assault on you by Mr Nieuwoudt.  After that you were still detained. You entered into negotiations with other members of the security police, according to your version, and you as well as the other ring-leaders of the consumer boycott were released and the boycott was stopped. Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="991">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>No, the point I am trying is not correct. Because what I am trying to say to you, the negotiations that were held between us and the police, were, had nothing to do with the torture, and which you are trying to bundle together.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="992">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s not my question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="993">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Ja, but that&#039;s the implication you are creating.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="994">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>No, I don&#039;t think he is implicating - he said after the torture had all been over, at some stage there was negotiation, which negotiations resulted in the release of the leaders.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="995">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>You see, what I do not agree with, is to tie this, the release and the boycott are two different things.  The police have been keeping us for a long time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="996">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Right, say that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="997">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Ja.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="998">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Now tell us about that. You say the release of the leaders and the ending of the boycott are not connected issues?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="999">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>They are not connected issues. It is just that the impression they - what he tries to, they try now to make a case about, having negotiated and us going to stop the boycott, is false.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1000">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>I am merely talking about the sequence of events.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1001">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>What sequence?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1002">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>There was an assault on you.  There was negotiations after the assault. Is that correct?  While you were still in detention.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1003">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Whilst - yes, of course, ja.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1004">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Right.  After the negotiations you as well as some of the other activists were set free by the security police?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1005">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1006">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1007">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes, they were set free as a result of ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1008">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Then you went back to your people, at grassroots level and the boycott was called off. Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1009">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Listen, the calling of the boycott was based on completely different circumstances. What I am very uncomfortable with, what you are saying is to try to link the release of the political prisoners and ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1010">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>I think we will leave that for argument. I am not trying to link that. I will argue that later.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1011">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>No, you are linking it. Okay, but anyway.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1012">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Just a minute, just a minute.  But, Mr Jack, the question is the assault or the torture, is that linked at all to the negotiations, the lifting of the consumer boycott or not?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1013">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Not at all.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1014">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>I beg your pardon, Mr Commissioner, that was not the question either.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1015">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>It doesn&#039;t matter, that&#039;s my question. (Laughter).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1016">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.  When you were arrested at first, Mr Jack, would I describe you correctly as saying you were very active and that you were prepared to stand your ground against the security police. Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1017">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I stood it all the way, Sir.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1018">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>You were not a man who would budge for the security police because you had certain beliefs which you were prepared to go all the way for?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1019">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I never gave, I stood my ground and I stayed too.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1020">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>So under normal circumstances would you say the security police would have a change to negotiate anything with you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1021">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Depending on what&#039;s the matter subject.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1022">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>In other words, it depends on what the quid pro quo would be, what you would receive in turn?  Whether you would be able, be prepared to negotiate?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1023">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Look, I have always been open to negotiations, genuine negotiations on any matter, and I have, for that, let me just tell you.  Nieuwoudt will remind, can also bear this. I don&#039;t know whether you are aware that I was the first person to lead a delegation of extra-parliamentary comrades to meet with National Party people, in this country, and that you don&#039;t.  So I have always been open for negotiations. The idea of sitting down with the riot police, who were shooting our people, I was the first person to organise, but I never give in on the principles that we elevate in.  It was that or nothing.  But I have always been ready to negotiate with anybody. And I have said it from the first day.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1024">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Your question about negotiations, I think - I get the impression you are trying to be specific about it.  Was it that you really want him to admit, because he says he has always been in favour of negotiations, what is it that you want him to say?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1025">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>I think what I will do is, I will leave it there at this stage, Mr Commissioner.  (Laughter). The problem we have, and I find it fairly hard to concentrate when everybody is laughing and making a mockery of this scene here.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1026">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Yes, please ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1027">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>It is obvious that Mr Jack will not be agreeing ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1028">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Just hold it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1029">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>I beg your pardon.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1030">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Ja, ladies and gentlemen, I would like you to show respect to the people that are replying.  Their minds here are on important issues about whether amnesty must be granted or not. Please behave like responsible people, responsible elders and responsible leaders of your community.  Try and avoid interrupting here by applauding   and shouting.  We will appreciate it if you do that.  Our job is difficult enough as it is, and please, don&#039;t try and make it any more difficult than it is. I thank you for that. Try and give counsel a full chance to put forward the case on behalf of his client.  You may proceed now.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1031">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Commissioner, and I also thank the people. I think at this stage I will leave it there until a later stage and maybe come back to that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1032">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	In all, Mr Jack, if I can sum up, you allege that you were assaulted by Mr Nieuwoudt on how many occasions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1033">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>In all? Okay, let me just try to - I will tell you these things, okay. I was, I told you I was arrested in 1979 and during that occasion I was taken to Sanlam Building, where in the evening I was assaulted by Mr Nieuwoudt and the other people I mentioned.  In 1980 there was a student boycott which Mr Nieuwoudt has referred to. During that year, Mr Nieuwoudt himself at least caught me, I am not saying I was arrested by other people, at least three times, that year.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1034">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>The term is assault.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1035">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>No, no, listen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1036">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Not arrest, assault.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1037">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>I am coming to that.  And during that time I remember of no occasion where Nieuwoudt will not, either directly or indirectly, get involved in assaulting me, whenever I was arrested. It might not have been, it would never have been as harsh as it became as the years were going up, it became more harder, more stronger and so on, but from the beginning it wasn&#039;t that - I must confess that. It wasn&#039;t that heavy. Because anyway, in those days we believed that Nieuwoudt could do, they could do whatever they like with us, until the dreaded, hated Black Sash ladies came to influence us, that our human rights were being trembled.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1038">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>When was the next, after 1980, when was the next time that he assaulted you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1039">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>In 1980 actually, most of 1980 I spent in detention in and out. The other one was in 1981, and during the anti-Republic celebrations, I was taken from my home and taken to Sanlam and assaulted in the presence by Mr Nieuwoudt of a certain Momberg and other people and Du Plessis, of course.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1040">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1041">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Is that all?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1042">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>No, it is not all.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1043">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>But you had the opportunity to tell this Committee now how many assaults there were and they are growing by the minute. Would you please tell us how many times you were assaulted?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1044">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Counsel ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1045">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>No, please. You have mentioned 1979, you have mentioned 1980, 1981, I want you to continue.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1046">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Okay. In 1982 I wasn&#039;t, I hadn&#039;t had a brush with them - was it 1982?  Ja, well, I was arrested in the Ciskei and then in 1983, ja, that&#039;s the year I wasn&#039;t detained myself. In 1984, in January 1984, is the time when Nieuwoudt assaulted me during that time, and again, with of course, not only assault as I said, the physical and psychological torture he used to embark upon, for example, the case he opened against me of attempted armed robbery and attempted murder. Those cases were instituted by him through his spy, Patrick Hlongwane, and that is what he, after assaulting me there, he followed with those two cases on me.  And with the others that I have already told about.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1047">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1048">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Did you sustain any injuries in all this time during these assaults, apart from the assault described by Mr Nieuwoudt?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1049">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>During this one, at the New Brighton police station, yes, I did.  I went to a doctor and even photos of me which appeared in newspapers, showed me being swollen with the bruises that I got from that assault. And that is what I said to you, the Minister responded in Parliament. Then so-called Minister then, I don&#039;t know who he was, could have been Louis le Grange or Vlok, I can&#039;t remember, but one of them answered a question tabled in Parliament to that effect, that yes, I was taken for so-called intimidatory behaviour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1050">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>These cases that were opened against you in 1994 ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1051">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>1984.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1052">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>I beg your pardon, 1984. Who was the investigating officer in those cases, do you know?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1053">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Let me tell you, they were the murder and robbery, it was the murder and robbery squad, because it was involving murder, Sir.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1054">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m sorry, that was ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1055">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>It was Fanie Els. Fanie Els I think, what I suspect is still a warrant-officer or whatever, but the important thing, let me tell you about what Fanie Els said to me, and Patrick Hlongwane, if you want to listen to him, he will confirm this.  I was at that - was it still Sanlam? Yes, I think it was still Sanlam, and there was this wound in Hlongwane, who was supposed to have assaulted by me and this is the Hlongwane that on the 22nd of January 1984, Mr Nieuwoudt assaulted me for whatever, in the bus, an incident, I had seen him in the bus and he said - Mr Fanie Els said to me, I will tell you in Afrikaans what he said to me. He said &quot;jou politiek is kak&quot; (your politics is shit), but even &quot;so, dit is gemors hierdie storie&quot; (this entire story however remains nonsense).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1056">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>May I then ask you ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1057">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>No, but I am trying to show you that Nieuwoudt used his informer to go and lay a charge against me, that I attempted to murder him. I have stayed in prison for that, amongst criminals and I was a criminal.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1058">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>During the assaults you allege in 1980, it is also true that while you were giving evidence in chief, you never mentioned once that you were assaulted, was it right?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1059">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>What&#039;s that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1060">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>When you were giving evidence in chief now, you didn&#039;t mention that you were assaulted during 1980.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1061">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Of course, that&#039;s possible that I didn&#039;t mention that, of course.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1062">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t think - I think all those questions would not have been asked in detail, because he was reading a large part of his evidence in chief, was merely a reading out by him from a prepared statement, from his affidavit.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1063">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, Commissioner.  This however, this notes that you and your attorney compiled, also speak about 1980 detained more than five times, before being sent to Modder Bee Prison.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1064">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1065">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Now remember this is drawn up in response to Mr Nieuwoudt&#039;s application for amnesty, and in there you do not make mention of any assault by Mr Nieuwoudt either during 1980.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1066">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Ja, look, those notes are my notes for my consultant.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1067">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, surely if he assaulted you, it would have been written in the notes, because that is of utmost importance.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1068">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>No, but look, let me tell you advocate ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1069">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Attorney.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1070">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Attorney, whatever.  I am really in a difficult situation now, whereby I was hoping that I will sit down and listen.  My intention was never to come here and nail down Deon, Mr Nieuwoudt, okay?  And I think you are misunderstanding. Your questions now seem to be achieving what I think you are not intending to achieve.  I expected Mr Nieuwoudt to explain in detail, and I don&#039;t blame him for omitting, and I know that if you want to find faults with me, the first fault you will find is the fact that he doesn&#039;t even know when I was arrested in 1985, okay.  And I find it very funny that he has such a good recollection and actually I believe he got documents in his possession, which are not even available at Louis le Grange at this point in time.  They have been shredded and I thought he will use those documents he has, which he has shown he does have them, to come clean on this matter, especially with mentioning his co-partners in torture. But he failed to do that.  And I have no apologies for not having - my intentions even now, is not to pin him down, but what I want him to do, I hope he will do to this amnesty application, is to tell just things as they were. I mean nobody is standing here and saying that no, we want to punish you for that little bit, admit this little bit. That is not what I am for here. I don&#039;t take care about that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1071">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Mr Jack, in a nut-shell, just very briefly in other words, what is your attitude to the application for amnesty by Mr Nieuwoudt, having heard what he has said?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1072">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>No, I mean, as I have said, Mr Commissioner, my - when I came here, I was flowing with the spirit of knowing that I am going to achieve the greatest thing in my life of standing here, knowing that Mr Nieuwoudt has really come clean and told what he has done, as he has tried as much as he could with some other more serious issues, like the National Party and all that.  On the smaller things like torturing, the rest of the other people that are here, here in this hall and outside there are thousands and thousands of people who we were leading at the time. And those people are looking at least in times like this, upon us for some direction. And I believe an opportunity was great here for Mr Nieuwoudt to say that he remembers that and that. I am shocked that his lawyer is attempting to disprove this matters instead of assisting him to say that he may have forgotten this, but go on and all that. And personally, from my personal point of view, and I speak solely for myself now, because I believe that the question of forgiveness or whatever is a personal matter, is not a general matter, I have no qualms, I understood clearly Mr Nieuwoudt when he set the rules of the game to me, that it was war, and I was ready to take the consequences from his side. And I am proud today that out of the product of the sacrifices of the people that has stood so definitely opposed to today, is coming to you, the institutions, and the structures those people have put up. I have no objection in him enjoying the fruits and benefits of that freedom that many people have died for. That is my point.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1073">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Okay. Is that all?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1074">
			<speaker>ADV MR SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1075">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Any further questions, Mr Van der Merwe?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1076">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>I would just like to place on record, I am not trying to disprove anything.  But I also have instructions from my client, and his instructions is he will apply for whatever he did, he cannot apply for what he didn&#039;t do, and we have a factual difference at this stage. You allege he assaulted you more than once.  He says he assaulted you once.  That is the facts we are working with. All I was trying to ascertain, is why does your consultation notes with your legal representative not refer to an assault in 1979?   Why does it not refer to an assault in 1980, why does it not refer to an assault in 1981.  Which I think ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1077">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I think that we have covered that ground now.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1078">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I will then close off by saying - these are my instructions and ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1079">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR VAN DER MERWE</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1080">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I understand your instructions, your job is to carry out your instructions and I can understand the purpose of the questions as well.  I would like you to tell me, Mr Jack, a little more about this trumped-up charge. You spoke so quickly that I wasn&#039;t able to take it down. In 1984 there was a trumped-up charge against  you.  What was that charge about?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1081">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>The charge was about attempted armed robbery and murder.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1082">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Of?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1083">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Of a Mr Patrick Hlongwana.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1084">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>What is the surname of this person?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1085">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Blongwana. B-L-O-N-G-W-A-N-A, as he was known then.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1086">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1087">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, so this was a charge of attempted armed robbery?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1088">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1089">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>And attempted murder, was it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1090">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1091">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes. Any other charge?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1092">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>There was again another one, in succession too of attempted murder, armed murder, which was supposed to have taken place at Njoli Square, later, but three months after the first one. So in that year I had three cases going on at the same time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1093">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Attempted murder of who?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1094">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Of the same individual.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1095">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Again the same person?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1096">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Sir.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1097">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Patrick?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1098">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Sir.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1099">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>What was the third case about?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1100">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>The third one was relating to the so-called intimidation of the choir.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1101">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>And please tell me what happened to these cases?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1102">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>All three of them I was acquitted.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1103">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>They were separate trials?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1104">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Yes, separate trials.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1105">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>In different courts?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1106">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>In different courts.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1107">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1108">
			<speaker>MR JACK</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Sir.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1109">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Any re-examination?  I&#039;m sorry, Mr Mpshe, are there questions you want to put to him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1110">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>No questions, Mr Chairman, thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1111">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO QUESTIONS BY MR MPSHE</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1112">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Any re-examination?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1113">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>None, your Worship.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1114">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO RE-EXAMINATION BY MR NYOKA</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1115">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>That is our case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1116">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Will you make a copy of that statement available to us before the close of day today?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1117">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Mr Chairperson.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1118">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>You have a copy, Mr Mpshe?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1119">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>I will make a copy for the Committee, Mr Chairperson.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1120">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, thank you very much.  Yes, Mr Jack, you may stand down. Are you calling any other witnesses?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1121">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>None, that is our case, your Worship.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1122">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Jack, thank you very much for having taken the trouble to come here and to give evidence before us.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1123">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>WITNESS EXCUSED</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1124">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Van der Merwe, do you propose to address us?  Would you like to address us to highlight the relevant portions of the Act which have a bearing on your client&#039;s application?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1125">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>MR VAN DER MERWE ADDRESSES COMMITTEE ON MERITS OF APPLICATION</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1126">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Commissioner and Committee, I shortly - I don&#039;t intend to address the Commission at length.  As far as the evidence of Mr Nieuwoudt is concerned, I am of the opinion, and I submit to the Committee, that his actions do qualify as per the qualifications which is laid down by the Act. I don&#039;t know if there is any specific incident in which the Committee would like to hear me. It is quite clear that this assault had taken place in circumstances where he was trying to achieve a political goal, which would be the restoring of law and order and also bringing to an end the consumer boycott which was being practised in this area at that stage. </text>
		</line>
		<line number="1127">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Is that in fact a political goal, political objective?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1128">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I think it is a political goal, because if you look at the surrounding circumstances this was part of - that will come clear from the rest of Mr Nieuwoudt&#039;s application which wasn&#039;t read out, that the consumer boycott was part of the bigger struggle and part of the bigger onslaught, if you can call it that, to use the rhetoric which was used by the organisations such as the ANC, PAC and UDF at that stage, to try and create the system in the townships which would make them ungovernable and which they then could substitute the unlawful government, as they would call it at that stage, with legitimate structures from the people in the townships.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1129">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Wasn&#039;t he doing his normal duties as a police officer?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1130">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>I beg your pardon?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1131">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Was he not executing his normal duties as a police officer to restore law and order, as he had said in his testimony and in doing so, securing the State institutions? Isn&#039;t that the normal duties of a policeman?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1132">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I think we must not at this stage confuse the normal duties of a policeman and the normal duties of the security policeman, because somehow I don&#039;t think they were the same.  But I think what - to restore law and order for a normal policeman during the 1980s would have been something different than restoring law and order for a security policeman.  Because as we have already heard Mr Nieuwoudt say that he regarded the security police as above the law.  When there was conflict between the interests of the National Party Government and law and order, the National Party Government&#039;s interests would take precedence.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1133">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	As such it was of utmost importance for the National Party to retain their power base and their support amongst the White community, to clamp down on the consumer boycott, which was really hurting the White people in the area and not really doing anything in the non-White people.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1134">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Now assuming that to be the case, I won&#039;t debate that any further, but assuming that to be the case, by assaulting Mr Jack, is there any proximity between assaulting Mr Jack and bringing an end to the consumer boycott?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1135">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Very definitely. I think it is without a doubt, there is a proximity, Mr Jack was the chairman of the consumer boycott committee and if they, as the security police had to have any chance of getting the consumer boycott under control or convincing anyone to cease it or to work on it to normalise the situation, it would obviously be to work through Mr Jack.  And if Mr Jack at that stage, were unco-operative and as through his own evidence, were a person who didn&#039;t fear the security police or wouldn&#039;t stand back for them, then I think it is just normal that intimidation and an assault would be used in the subjective view of Mr Nieuwoudt, that through that he would be able to coerce and I say convince in inverted commas, &quot;convince&quot; him to stop this consumer boycott, and which consumer boycott was inter-linked with the current state of anarchy and unrest in the townships.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1136">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Just for my information. When was the consumer boycott eventually called off?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1137">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>In December of that year. I think it was in Exhibit - if you just give me a while. It was on page 74 of the exhibits.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1138">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>What was the date?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1139">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>It says here, this is an excerpt I think it is Sishaba, I just want to make sure. Ja, Sishaba of April 1986, and the section reads</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1140" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;The boycott in Port Elizabeth was finally suspended in early December at a rally, and it was only after the boycott leaders were released from detention in November.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1141">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1142">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Yes, but Mr Van der Merwe, if you were listening to your client, the applicant this morning, when he detailed the circumstances in which he ended up assaulting Mr Jack, I think he comes very close to saying Mr Jack was a bit cheeky to him, and he had to give him a bit of a hiding.  Can you explain or what is political about that; assaulting someone who is rebellious and stubborn in the course of interrogation here?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1143">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>It is actually very simple. I think what at that stage happened, is that we must understand that Mr Nieuwoudt was under severe pressure from the security establishment. All of them were under pressure to apply the measures, any measure which was necessary to stop the consume boycott and unrest.  And if you had to work with someone who you knew could be the link to be able to achieve those results, and this person would appear unco-operative and be cheeky for that matter, it is obvious that a person in those circumstances might get cross, but this is not a personal thing.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1144">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	This isn&#039;t something personal for his own personal gain.  This was, he was being frustrated at the fact that the person who would be able to provide the solution to the problem, was unco-operative, and in that way he described him as cheeky, but that is, I think - the Committee witnessed Mr Jack&#039;s attitude today, and I think he said he was cheeky at that stage with the security police. But that was the reason why Mr Nieuwoudt acted. </text>
		</line>
		<line number="1145">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Nieuwoudt had to act at that stage to be able to, let&#039;s call it through intimidation, to soften up Mr Jack in order to be able to achieve his end goal, which would be to break through to him, to be able to stop the consumer boycott.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1146">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Can I ask you to comment on the implications of his evidence this morning, when he said if you are a member of the National Party and being in the security police, you would not get any promotion if you were opposing actions like this, and I would like you to comment with particular reference to section 2(3)(i) where the Act specifically excludes personal gain.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1147">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Ja, well, what he basically said is it was common cause in police circles that if you did not support the government of the day, that you would not be promoted, you would be sidelined. You wouldn&#039;t lose your job, you wouldn&#039;t stand a chance of financial loss or anything, but obviously the people who will be promoted are the people who are sympathetic to the cause, who is sympathetic to the government of the day, and who does everything they can to promote the government of the day.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1148">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I do not think that the contrary would be true, to say that any person who collaborated with the National Party, or not collaborated, was in the service of the police, and therefore supported the government, stood to make any financial gain out of his actions. It was merely a fact that he was doing his job and doing what he believed in.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1149">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>In that kind of situation, as I understood his evidence, a member of the security police would have a choice between doing what he is expected to do or not to do it, and face a very bleak future in the force.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1150">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I think the bleak future that you talk about, my learned friend talks about, my learned colleague talks about, arises in the circumstances which are different. I understood the evidence of Mr Nieuwoudt to mean that if a member of the security police did anything which went against the interest of the National Party, he will then be sidelined and demoted or removed from the security branch and given some other job.  That is how I understood it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1151">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I also understood it to mean that if anybody did his job properly, as a member of the security police, whatever he did was not for any reward or gain, because he was normally performing his normal duties, under some terrible laws that were in existence at the time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1152">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I must confirm it, because Mr Nieuwoudt during that stage was a warrant-officer, a lieutenant, and at that stage he was in the South African Police for more than 15 years already.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1153">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1154">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>So it was not that he was promoted before his time or anything like that and I agree with Judge Mall as far as his summary is concerned.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1155">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Now tell me, I understood your client to say that it was indeed government policy to use all measures to bring the situation under control, all measures meant legal and extra-legal, and that where there was torture and where there was assault, quite clearly that was illegal, but nevertheless in their eyes, justified.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1156">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1157">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Is that the position?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1158">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1159">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Now what section of the Act do you think that your client&#039;s conduct falls under?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1160">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>I have left my Act, I haven&#039;t got it at the moment with me.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1161">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Oh.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1162">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>I would say it would definitely be section 20(2)(b).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1163">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1164">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>What are you saying, it was implied authority?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1165">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>What I would say is the implied authority, I would also equate to a lack of control.  These things were happening and nothing was done about it. Instead, the powers of the security forces were increased, despite everything that happened. In my mind I would say that turning a blind eye, I would construe as implied authority at this stage.	And then I think that as far as subsection (2)(f) is concerned, it could also become relevant.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1166">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, is there anything else you wish to add?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1167">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>No, I have ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1168">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Or let me just ask you. Let me just ask you, just linking up with my colleague Sandi&#039;s question.  What are we to make of the testimony of Mr Jack concerning how the assault was sparked off?  Mr Jack says that at a stage when he referred to Mrs Blackburne, your client lost his cool and then assaulted him, because your client apparently didn&#039;t like the reference to Mrs Blackburne. Which of course is totally opposite to the version that your client is putting before us. What are we to make of that?  If that is in fact how this assault was sparked off, does that not put paid to the argument that the assault was linked to the political objective of stopping the consumer boycott and breaking down the resistance of Mr Jack?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1169">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>It would definitely.  It would (indistinct) to the argument. I would, however, submit in the circumstances, that there is no reason - we obviously have conflicting versions here. There is no reason why the honourable Committee should not accept Mr Nieuwoudt&#039;s testimony. In the circumstances I think his version should be accepted and accordingly he should be able to qualify for amnesty as applied.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1170">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>The Act also requires the applicant to make full disclosure. I would like to hear you on that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1171">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>Yes, it is quite evident that, if I can address the Committee as far as that is concerned, and that is why I was at pains with Mr Jack. It just does not make sense for Mr Nieuwoudt to come and sit here today, in front of this Committee and apply for one assault, when he quite easily could have applied for two assaults or three assaults.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1172">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	As far as the other allegations is concerned, which Mr Jack made about the court cases which was made against him.  We have no knowledge of this and I cannot react to that.  But it would be, I would agree, that if the Committee had to find that full disclosure wasn&#039;t made, that certainly my client would not be entitled to amnesty, but I would say in these circumstances the odds must weigh very heavily in his favour. There is no reason why he would come to the Committee with only one assault and not mention anything about the others. Especially in the circumstances where there was no pending criminal trial, a civil claim has been settled. There was actually nothing that coerced Mr Nieuwoudt to bring this application. I think if I did ask Mr Jack the question, he probably would have confirmed that this application took him by surprise.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1173">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	If I may just add. Obviously Mr Nieuwoudt has also filed various other applications, which this Committee and other Committees will deal with in the forthcoming weeks, which is far more serious, and I think it is highly unlikely that he would jeopardise his chances, given the circumstances, to something as simple as this matter, compared to the matters to follow.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1174">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1175">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>MR NYOKA ADDRESSES COMMITTEE ON MERITS OF CASE</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1176">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Thank you, Mr Chairman.  The Promotion of Truth and Reconciliation Act states two grounds upon which amnesty may be granted to an applicant. Namely, firstly that the act or incident applied for has to be politically orientated or motivated one.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1177">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Secondly, underline and secondly, that the applicant must have made a full disclosure of the facts with regard to the act or incident applied for.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1178">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Both sections must be shown or proved to satisfy the requirements of the Act or to ensure that amnesty is granted.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="1179">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	We respectfully submit that the first requirement of  political orientatedness was not proved by the applicant, in that he said himself that he assaulted Mr Jack because he was rebellious or stubborn. Therefore he may have done this in anger, due to his rebelliousness or stubbornness.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1180">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Furthermore, the assault itself was not long, it was just for three minutes, and appear to be at random. It stopped at random, without any further discussions and without achieving any goal.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1181">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	We submit therefore, that this assault was purely a criminal one, not a political one. You cannot assault a person in the national interests for such a flimsy reason, and say it is in the national interest or in the interest of peace and security.  That will make a mockery of those phraseologies, even though they were used ad nauseam or nauseatingly in the previous regime.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1182">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	In so far as the assault related to the consumer boycott, one wonders how it can be construed as such, instead of being an economically motivated one, to protect the interests of the White business community rather than the broader national interest.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1183">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I wish to refer to page 19 of Mr Nieuwoudt&#039;s application, where it is stated why they sought to stop the consumer boycott. It was not for political reasons but for economic ones.  Paragraph 17.2 says:</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1184" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;White business was affected to such an extent by the consumer boycott, that it resulted in an unusually high liquidation and closure of businesses. Available statistics indicate a number of businesses liquidated and closed during the period 1983 to 1987.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1185">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>And they are listed -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1186" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;In 1983 there were 49 businesses closed; in 1984 103 businesses, 1985 222, 1986 299 and 1987 81.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1187">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>And then there is a big full stop. There is no mention about political orientatedness, only economic ones.  That is why we asked whether he was sent by big business to stop this consumer boycott.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1188">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	With regard to the second requirement of full disclosure of the fact.  We respectfully submit again that applicant has failed to satisfy this requirement.	In that, for instance, the direct commander.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1189">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	One of the further commander, the regional commander, were never informed of this assault. Why not?  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="1190">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Secondly, the fellow unit members of about 20, were never informed or even invited to be part of the interrogation, because important things could have emerged.  Why not?  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="1191">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	He said he only assaulted Mr Jack once on the 12th of August 1985. Yet, he had done so, according to the uncontroverted evidence of Mr Jack before.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1192">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	It is strange for Mr Jack to deny that he was assaulted on the 12th of August, if that happened, only to find out that he had been assaulted before. Why would he deny this specific incident and admit others?  It does not make any sense.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1193">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>What is the answer to the question that counsel makes, what advantage has Mr Nieuwoudt got to deny these assaults?  He is applying for amnesty.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1194">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>I am coming to that, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1195">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1196">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>I am coming logically to that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1197">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	If at all he only interrogated and assaulted Mr Jack on the 12th of August, why did he wait for about 10 days before he interrogated him?  My instructions from Mr Jack were not to oppose Mr Nieuwoudt&#039;s application, on the following two grounds.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1198">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	The first one, that Mr Jack, unlike other victims of apartheid atrocities, did not lose any life or limb, as a result of the assaults by the applicant.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1199">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Secondly, that we greatly appreciated his application as initial and honest gesture towards reconciliation, in particular towards one of the institutions of our young democracy being the TRC.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1200">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	However, it seems as if the applicant is mocking the process by embarking on sterile half truths. He seems to have decided - and this is the answer, Mr Chairman - he will be man enough to go it alone in his decision to seek amnesty. In so doing, conceal the role of his colleagues by changing the facts to suit that isolated event where he had not assaulted Mr Jack, but interrogated him.  Perhaps trying to avoid any criminal prosecution against them.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1201">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	We wish to say that none of the security laws and states of emergencies of the previous regime, gave the security police or anyone exclusively or implicitly the right or perhaps the duty to assault detainees. However, draconian those laws there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1202">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Security officers, like Mr Nieuwoudt, who did so, knew fully well, as he has confessed, that it was not outside the law to do so, but they were acting above the law. It was not in advancement of the interests of the National Party, but because it was enjoyable to do so.  As Lord Acton stated:</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1203" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1204">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>The immense security legislation corrupted the security police of the previous regime.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="1205">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Consequently, whilst the application is defective or non-compliance of the legal requirements of the Act, we are still not opposing it, and we leave the decision to grant or refuse the amnesty in the able hands of the Commission.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1206">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Thank you.  (Applause).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1207">
			<speaker>ADV POTGIETER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Nyoka, to the extent that there are differences, factual differences between the versions of Mr Jack and Mr Nieuwoudt on the number of assaults for one - I am just referring to the two, to my mind, material issues - and the circumstances of the assault for which this application is being made, what is your submission on those factual disputes?  What finding has this Committee got to make? Is there an onus; which way should be decide where there is a dispute.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1208">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Firstly, the evidence of Mr Jack in repudiation of that of Mr Nieuwoudt, has not been controverted by my learned friend.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1209">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Well, now it is Mr Jack who controverts Nieuwoudt and Nieuwoudt contradicts.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1210">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1211">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s how it works here, isn&#039;t it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1212">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1213">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>In other words there is no independent evidence in support of either one or the other.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1214">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>On the basic principle of our law that he who alleges must prove. It is Mr Nieuwoudt who seeks amnesty, he must try to squash the evidence of Mr Jack.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1215">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>There is no doubt about that.  The onus in that sense of the word, one talks about onus in that sense.  Every applicant has to satisfy this Committee that he is entitled to amnesty, in the broad sense. But I think that the question that is put to you here by my colleague, is how must the Committee approach this situation where on an issue such as this, you have two mutually exclusive or contradictory positions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1216">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>May I suggest humbly that the Commission should look at the totality of the evidence, and try to fit the question of the assaults within the framework of the circumstances and bearing in mind that my client&#039;s attitude is not as such to oppose the application.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1217">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I understand your client&#039;s attitude.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1218">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1219">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Your client says that he understands that during those turbulent political days, if the police did what they did, he is not surprised, they were doing their duty at the time, I think, Mr Jack said something along those lines.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1220">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1221">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>On the question of non-disclosure or failure to make a full disclosure, what would Mr Nieuwoudt have to gain by not disclosing the names of others, personally, what has he to gain? He is trying to best to try and avoid being lumbered with the allegation or the suggestion that he has done something terrible to Mr Jack.  He is facing a number of other similar challenges of a more serious nature. In the light of all that, what has he to gain?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1222">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>My impression, Mr Chairman, is that even in the other applications, those that are implicated are core applicants.  No one is mentioned outside of the applicants. That poses a question as to why that is the case. It seems as if a person has decided that I am going to apply for amnesty, I am just going to mention myself, not any other person. Except, that he is a co-applicant.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1223">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Even in those applications I stand to correction, in the serious cases, although I doubt that a violation of a human right, even if it is a minor assault, is not serious. Even those cases, people that are mentioned, are core applicants. No one is mentioned outside the applicants. That is very, very strange. </text>
		</line>
		<line number="1224">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	In that regard, he stands to gain, with the co-applicant, who is being mentioned, who coincidentally is also an applicant.  In this case Mr Nieuwoudt is alone. I am sure if there was another applicant, they will have referred to each other&#039;s statements. That is my point.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1225">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>In this particular case, it is common cause that the injuries sustained by Mr Jack was as a result of him being sjambokked.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1226">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1227">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>That sjambok was in the hands of Mr Nieuwoudt when those injuries were inflicted and Mr Jack admits that that is how he got hurt.  That is the injury or that is the assault in respect of which amnesty is sought.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1228">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Is there any matter relating to that issue where you say that there has been no full disclosure?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1229">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes, your Worship.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1230">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>What is that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1231">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>Yes, because we are saying that event was, did not occur on the 12th of August, it occurred on the 3rd of August when there were other gentlemen who Mr Jack mentioned, like Mr Coetzee, Mr Strydom and Mr Bezuidenhout who are not conveniently not mentioned. That is why he was saying so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1232">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, but I mean Mr Jack doesn&#039;t say that those other people were the ones who had the sjambok with which he was assaulted.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1233">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>I did mention it when I put the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1234">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>The sjambok was in the hands of Mr Nieuwoudt, wasn&#039;t it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1235">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>They took turns in assaulting Mr Jack. I did put that to Mr Nieuwoudt.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1236">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1237">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>With Mr Jack&#039;s statement, that they took turns, ja, in hitting Mr Jack.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1238">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>No, unfortunately we don&#039;t have that statement.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1239">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>I am sorry for that, Mr Chairman, but it is in his statement.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1240">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I see.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1241">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>And in fact, even the helicopter treatment is an assault on its own, it doesn&#039;t have to be a sjambok.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1242">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>No, I understand that, but that occurred on another occasion.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1243">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>On the same occasion, on the 3rd of August, not on the 12th as alleged.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1244">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, do carry on.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1245">
			<speaker>MR NYOKA</speaker>
			<text>That is all.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1246">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Mpshe?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1247">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>MR MPSHE ADDRESSES COMMITTEE ON MERITS OF CASE</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1248">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Thank you, Mr Chairman. Mr Chairman, I am not going to belabour the points that have been canvassed, but just to say something on the two requirements, very briefly.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1249">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I will start with the question of full disclosure. Mr Chairman, before I do that, I want to put it on record that as a member of the TRC, representing the TRC, I am not here saying what I am going to say in order to oppose the amnesty application, but the purpose of my duty is just to place before the Committee what I think is necessary for the Committee to know.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1250">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I will first start with the full disclosure part, Mr Chairman. Mr Chairman, I have been listening very carefully that the evidence of Mr Nieuwoudt, the applicant, has been gainsaid by Mr Jack and vice versa. That may be the case, Mr Chairman, but the point I am trying to make here is that full disclosure has not been satisfied and I want to believe that what I am talking about as to full disclosure, is very much relevant in casu, because we are talking of assaults, plus minus four assaults on the very same person, Mr Jack. This evidence has not been contradicted whatsoever by the applicant. In fact, the applicant&#039;s lawyer at a certain stage, whilst making the submission, said we do not dispute the evidence of Mr Jack, which then means that Mr Jack&#039;s evidence stands, which then means that the assaults did take place.  Which then means that the application as put forward before the Committee today, selectively choosing the 12th and leaving out the rest.  Then there has not been full disclosure.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1251">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	On the question of political objective. Mr Nieuwoudt, the applicant during cross-examination, stated that the emergency regulations gave them &quot;wyer magte&quot; (wider powers) to do what they did or what he did.  But under questioning by the learned Committee member, Adv Potgieter, the answer was so specific and so direct, when he was asked about the assault, as it being included in the regulations. The answer was very clear, no, the emergency regulations did not provide for the assault.  This was an admission that the assault was not authorised.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1252">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Granted, he may have acted in order to stop the activities of activists then or particularly of Mr Jack. That I do not want to dispute. He was carrying out his normal duties as a police officer. But, in as far as the assault is concerned, that cannot be condoned, because it was outside his ambit of jurisdiction and that assault then becomes unauthorised, and if it becomes unauthorised, it is not politically motivated.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1253">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	That is all, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1254">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I am going to give you another chance, Mr Van der Merwe. Is there anything you wish to reply to?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1255">
			<speaker>MR VAN DER MERWE</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t think I can take it any further. I have taken it as far as I can, thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1256">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>The Committee will make its decision known in due course.  Thank you very much.  Do we adjourn now, Mr Mpshe. Do we adjourn now?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1257">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Mr Chairman, that completes the work for the day and the Committee will not be sitting tomorrow, but will be sitting on Wednesday, the same venue.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1258">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Very well.  This Committee now adjourns and will resume at 09:30 on Wednesday morning.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1259">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>COMMITTEE ADJOURNS</text>
		</line>
	</lines>
</hearing>