<?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>1997-09-10</startdate>
	<location>NEW BRIGHTON, PORT ELIZABETH</location>
	<day>1</day>
	<names>H SNYMAN</names>
	<case>3918/96</case>
						<url>https://sabctrc.saha.org.za/hearing.php?id=54837&amp;t=&amp;tab=hearings</url>
	<originalhtml>https://sabctrc.saha.org.za/originals/amntrans/pe/snyman.htm</originalhtml>
		<lines count="2551">
		<line number="1">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairman.  Mr Chairman, we are ready.  I would request the Chair to cause the legal representatives who are herein present to put their names on record.  All people are represented;  that is the victim and the next-of-kin to victims are all here as well as the applicants, Mr Chairman and members of the Committee.  Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Will counsel announce themselves and place themselves on record?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="3">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>May it please the Commission, Mr Chairman?  J A Booyens.  I appear on behalf of the applicants - Snyman, Siebert, Niewoudt and Marx.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="4">
			<speaker>MR DU PLESSIS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I appear on behalf of Mr J J O Beneke.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="5">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, M Burmeister, on behalf of Dr</text>
		</line>
		<line number="6">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Laing.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="7">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>May it please you, Mr Chairman?  I, G Bizos together with my learned friend, Mr Patrick Mpshwulana, instructed by the Legal Resources Centre, represented by Mr Clive Plaskid from our Grahamstown&#039;s office and Ms Kamen Shepele from the Johannesburg office, appear on behalf of Mrs Biko, the wife of the deceased and Mr Peter Jones, in respect of whom there is also an application for amnesty.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="8">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, members of the Committee, G M Mpshe for the Amnesty Committee.  Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="9">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.  Mr Booyens?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="10">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS ADDRESSES COMMITTEE AND GIVES SUMMARY OF APPLICATION</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairman.  Mr Chairman, we intend leading the evidence of Mr Snyman first.  I think it may be desirable in the circumstances just to very briefly set out what the nature of the evidence would be, without at all suggesting that that is comprehensive.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="11">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	The evidence will be that the late Mr Biko, whom I will hereinafter refer to him as the deceased, had been arrested in a road block on the 18th of August 1977.  He was thereafter taken to security police headquarters in Port Elizabeth, where he was kept in detention at Walmer Police Station.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="12">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	A team consisting of the four persons that I appear for, was </text>
		</line>
		<line number="13">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>put together with the purpose of questioning the persons arrested.  That would be Mr Jones and Mr Biko as well as some others;  in connection with certain pamphlets that had been spread in the Port Elizabeth area as well as certain activities - other activities.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="14">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	On the 6th of September 1977 the questioning of Mr Biko commenced in the morning at security police headquarters.  The evidence will be that Mr Biko was brought in from Walmer Police Station and once brought into the same office as his would-be interrogators, he was told that he should remain standing when he sat down.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="15">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	After approximately half an hour and during some rather fruitless efforts of getting information out of Mr Biko, he again sat down uninvited;  whereupon the applicant, Mr </text>
		</line>
		<line number="16">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Siebert, grabbed him on the front of his clothing and forcefully pulled him up from the position in which he was seated.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="17">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Thereafter, Mr Biko, the evidence will be, apparently lost his temper.  He pushed, had thrown a chair in the direction of Mr Siebert and aimed a blow at him.  A scuffle ensued which was initially between Siebert, but at the same time the applicant - that I do not represent - also joined in from an adjoining office and;  in what one could perhaps describe as a shoulder-type rugby tackle, bumped into Mr Biko. </text>
		</line>
		<line number="18">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	A full scuffle ensued in which Siebert, the applicant, </text>
		</line>
		<line number="19">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Niewoudt and the applicant I do not represent, were involved.  During the course of the scuffle there were blows being exchanged, although nobody is really certain whether any of these blows landed and eventually during the course of the scuffle, the parties grabbed hold of each other and moved towards what would for convenience sake be described as the northern wall of the office in which they were.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="20">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	In the process of the scuffle, Mr Biko lost his balance and the four people;  that would now be Siebert, Niewoudt, the deceased, as well as the applicant I do not represent.  Initially Mr Biko&#039;s head hit the wall and all four parties fell down.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="21">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	It was noted that Mr Biko appeared to be, one could use the word stunned, confused, in any event his condition was such, we are not suggesting that these are accurate medical descriptions; that he did not get up immediately.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="22">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	He was thereupon handcuffed where he was lying on the floor and after a while he was pulled up at the instructions of Snyman and cuffed to a door - some bars of a door that was in the office, with his hands spread out to his sides, with handcuffs as well as with foot-cuffs being threaded through the bars of the door.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="23">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	It was noted that he still seemed to be confused and Snyman went to report the matter to Goosen, the then commander of the security branch.  Goosen came in, spoke to Mr Biko.  It was </text>
		</line>
		<line number="24">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>apparent that he was probably not compos mentes and Goosen gave instructions that the members Snyman and Siebert should continue with their work, whereas Niewoudt and Mark would watch Mr Biko and as soon as he recover, the questioning would continue.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="25">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	The deceased was left in this standing position for the best part of the day and his condition did not improve.  During the evening when the night staff took over, his cuffs holding him against the bars were unlocked, but the leg-iron was kept on and he was offered some mats to sleep on.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="26">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	The next morning;  that would be the 7th, it was noted that Mr Biko still hadn&#039;t recovered whereupon the district surgeon was contacted, who examined Mr Biko and reported to Col Goosen that he could find nothing wrong with him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="27">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	However, his condition still appeared to be a state of confusion.  He was kept at the security police offices throughout the day and observed, but no further efforts to question him were made, due to the fact that his state remained more or less the same.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="28">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Throughout the day of the 8th he was seen again by the doctors and then on the evening of the 8th he was removed to a prison with the intention that he would be examined there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="29">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	He was kept at the prison until the Sunday - Sunday the 11th of September and after some medical examination and it being reported that nothing apparently could be found wrong with him, he </text>
		</line>
		<line number="30">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>was during the course of the morning removed from the prison and lodged in a cell at New Brighton Police Station again.	I correct that, Mr Chairman, it is Walmer Police Station.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="31">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	During the late afternoon, Goosen gave instructions that due to the fact that the deceased apparently was not recovering, he should be sent to Pretoria Central Prison, that he can be observed in the prison hospital there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="32">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	A Land Rover station-wagon was made ready after all efforts to obtain a military flight to fly him to Pretoria proved fruitless, according to Goosen, and he was driven to Pretoria where the parties arrived on the morning - early hours of the 12th of September. He was lodged in Pretoria Central Prison, where he died on the same day.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="33">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Subsequent to that, once the news of his death became known, Goosen gathered all the policemen on the next Saturday and statements were prepared.  These statements were false in many aspects.  The most important being, that it is was in fact alleged that Mr Biko was questioned by the security policemen involved on the 6th for the whole day and an incident which apparently caused his injury only occurred on the 7th.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="34">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	That is - would appear already from what I&#039;ve said earlier on, was false.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="35">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Subsequent to that, in a further investigation, the policemen stuck to the story and also at a later inquest hearing this false evidence was perpetuated.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="36">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	That, in a nutshell, Mr Chairman, is what the evidence on behalf of these four applicants would cover and I would ask leave to call Mr Snyman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="37">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS ADDRESSES COMMITTEE ON APPLICATION</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, our learned friend made a preliminary statement and we would ask for leave to very briefly state in broad terms the basis of our opposition so that the issues before you may be clarified in order to weigh up the evidence as you hear it, having regard to what we are going to submit.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="38">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	We are going to oppose these applications on behalf of the family on two main grounds.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="39">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Firstly, that in the detailed statements made for the benefit of the Committee, where the new versions appears, which has been summarised by our learned friend;  there is no full disclosure of the facts and that the new versions, even though substantially similar to that given at the inquest in 1977, has merely been modified in order to try and explain away some of the concrete evidence which did not fit with the false version that was put up under oath during the course of the inquest in 1977.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="40">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Secondly, that there is recitation of what was their political </text>
		</line>
		<line number="41">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>objective, is not the sort of objective that is envisaged in the Act and to summarise our position briefly, that torturing helpless detainees held under Section 6 of the Terrorism Act for the purposes of extracting information from them;  either false or true to the point that they finish up dead is not a political objective that any civilised society can tolerate.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="42">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	There will be refinements to these main submissions, but those in the main are the grounds upon which we oppose this application.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="43">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Mpshe, is there anything you wish to say at this stage?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="44">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Nothing to add, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="45">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Erasmus, I should have asked you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="46">
			<speaker>MR ERASMUS ADDRESSES COMMITTEE ON APPLICATION</speaker>
			<text>Meneer die Voorsitter, baie dankie.  Ek gaan nie onnodig u tyd mors nie ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="47">
			<speaker>INTERPRETER</speaker>
			<text>The speaker is not activating his microphone.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="48">
			<speaker>MR ERASMUS</speaker>
			<text>I will not waste your time unnecessarily.  My client will give testimony that will in the main be the same as the clients of Adv Booyens.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="49">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	My client claims that he was not part of the investigative team;  that in fact he was a mere observer who stood in the door of the interrogation room and that he saw that the deceased, Mr Biko, </text>
		</line>
		<line number="50">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>bumped or threw a certain chair at Capt Siebert.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="51">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	He also saw that Mr Biko aimed a punch at Capt Siebert and that in an effort to bring Mr Biko under control and to inhibit any further threatening attack or assault, that he took Mr Biko into a secure hold.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="52">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	That in fact a shuffle did occur during which all of the applicants present took part and that beyond that the testimony would be the same as that sketched to you by Adv Booyens.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="53">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	My client, through the course of the afternoon of the 6th of September 1977, guarded the deceased and noted that he appeared disorientated, or possibly confused. </text>
		</line>
		<line number="54">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	He was replaced by the night guard, a further set of police officers and during the afternoon of the 7th of September 1977, resumed guarding Mr Biko.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="55">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	He was not involved in any of the transport arrangements or other arrangements with regard to Mr Biko&#039;s transfer to Pretoria and his involvement ended on the 7th of September 1977.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="56">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="57">
			<speaker>MR ERASMUS</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="58">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Booyens.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="59">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairman.  Mr Chairman, just before I proceed to call Mr Snyman, I would like to hand in a medical certificate in respect of Mr - the applicant Mr Marx.  We</text>
		</line>
		<line number="60">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>have discussed the matter with my learned colleague, Mr Mpshe, and from the medical certificate it would appear that Mr Marx is 75 years old;  that he&#039;s suffering from high blood pressure and emphysema and loss of concentration and accordingly, we discussed it with my learned friend with the purpose that Marx is not out of disrespect to the Commission not here, but due to his condition of health we will only have him here on those occasions when in our view his presence would be strictly speaking necessary.  I ask leave to hand that in, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="61">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>MEDICAL CERTIFICATE HANDED IN</text>
		</line>
		<line number="62">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="63">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I will have to proceed in Afrikaans henceforth.  I call Mr Snyman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="64">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Snyman, your full names for the record please. INTERPRETER:  The speaker is not using the microphone, but his full names are Harold Snyman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="65">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Do you have any objections against the making of the oath?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="66">
			<speaker>HAROLD SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(Duly sworn, states).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="67">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>You may resume, you may take your seat.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="68">
			<speaker>EXAMINATION BY MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Snyman, your date of birth is the 23rd of April 1928 and you were born in Uitenhage.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="69">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="70">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="71">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Is it in addition correct that currently you are 69 years of age?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="72">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="73">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You are a pensioner at this stage?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="74">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="75">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did you during your career support any political organisation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="76">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="77">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What would that have been?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="78">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The National Party.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="79">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Were you an official or anything of that nature or merely a member of the National Party?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="80">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I was only a member.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="81">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>On your retirement, what was your position?  Not in the party, but what was your work?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="82">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>At that time I went home and at a later stage I went to work for Sanlam for a number of years.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="83">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, we cannot hear the witness.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="84">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Please check whether the mike works adequately so that your client can be heard.  Unfortunately there seems to be some difficulty.  Will you talk into the mike, please?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="85">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Yes, let&#039;s hear?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="86">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>At the time of your retirement from the police, what was your position, what was your rank in the police upon retirement?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="87">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I was a colonel.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="88">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>And also regional commander of the security branch in the Eastern Cape, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="89">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="90">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>I will lead you on the following aspect.  In paragraph 8(b) of your application, you explain or indicate your history in the South African Police.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="91">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="92">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Maybe you can read that for us for record purposes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="93">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>&quot;Attested on the 25th of the 2nd 1947.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="94" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>In 1947 I was a constable at the Bakenstreet Police Station in Port Elizabeth.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="95">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1947, district commissioner, Port Elizabeth North.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="96">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1949, Alexander Bay.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="97">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1950, Louis Le Grange Square.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="98">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1951, district commissioner, Port Elizabeth North.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="99">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1953, Louis Le Grange Square.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="100">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1953, New Brighton.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="101">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1955, Baken Street Police Station, Port Elizabeth</text>
		</line>
		<line number="102">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1955 I achieved the rank of sergeant.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="103">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1955 I continued at Louis Le Grange Square.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="104">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1960, district commissioner, Grahamstown.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="105">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1961, regional commissioner, or the office of the regional commissioner in the Eastern Cape near Port Elizabeth.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="106">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1964, warrant officer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="107">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1965 I was transferred to Pretoria to security branch head office.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="108">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1967 I was returned to the security branch Port Elizabeth.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="109">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1968 I achieved the rank of lieutenant.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="110">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1971 I was promoted to captain.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="111">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1976 to manager.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="112">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1981 to lieutenant-colonel.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="113">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		1985 colonel.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="114">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		I attended courses in 1947 with regard to first-aid and in 1967 with regard to the identification of explosives and explosive devices.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="115">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>That is fine then.  In your application you then continue to provide a brief personal overview or sketch of which you have already partly explained to us.  Could you tell us the circumstances of your childhood.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="116">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I grew up in a conservative Afrikaans home.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="117">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Maybe you should read the first paragraph of this brief personal overview and we could expand on that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="118">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>&quot;I, Harold Snyman, is 68 years of</text>
		</line>
		<line number="119" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>age and was born at Uitenhage in the Eastern Cape.  I grew up in Uitenhage where, in a strict, conservative and Afrikaans home.  We were all members of the Dutch Reformed Church.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="120">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		Initially I went to a farm school, but I completed my secondary schooling education at the secondary school Humansdorp.  I joined the South African Police immediately after the completion of my schooling.  During my formative years, I became unconsciously a member or took part in the aparthied era and was convinced at the end of my schooling that apartheid was necessary for the continuing survival of the Afrikaans speaking White person on the Southern extreme of Africa.&quot;  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="121">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>During 1948 when the National Party became the Government, you were already a police officer.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="122">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="123">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did you at all times support the apartheid policy of the National Party Government?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="124">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="125">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>The apartheid policy of the National Party which should be common knowledge, was based on the separation of races and the principle that Whites will govern the country?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="126">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="127">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Against this background and the circumstances of your childhood, could you find any error in this principle?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="128">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, we supported this heartily.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="129">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>With regard to the police during those times,  what had the general attitude of the police been during your early years in the police?  What would your own attitude and the attitude of your colleagues have been towards the Government of the day?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="130">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Our attitude as colleagues had been that the South African Government as constituted at that time had to be supported and kept in Government.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="131">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>During the 1950s there were - there might have been prior incidents, but while you were in service of the police, you became aware of the so-called Quo-Quo incidents.  Are you</text>
		</line>
		<line number="132">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>aware of this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="133">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I am aware of this.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="134">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Are these incidents in what is now known as the Eastern Cape Province?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="135">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="136">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Were you also aware of the fact that the ANC and the PAC were banned in 1961?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="137">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="138">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You also have knowledge of the 1961 Sharpeville incident?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="139">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="140">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You were also aware of the founding of Umkhonto weSizwe in 1960.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="141">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="142">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Were you throughout, or rather what had been the attitude in the police and in the environment in which you found yourself with regard to these incidents and occurrences in relation to the South African Government?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="143">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was very clear that we as police officers had to make every possible effort to maintain the state, or rather the Government in control, in power and that we had to act against all forces that came against them.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="144">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Would you say that it might have been the</text>
		</line>
		<line number="145">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>philosophy or the context within which you lived at that time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="146">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, you Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="147">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You have already mentioned that during 1965 you were transferred to the security branch in Pretoria.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="148">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="149">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>The commanding officer of the security branch or at that time, who would that have been?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="150">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was Brig H A van der Berg, the later Genl van der Berg who was then the head of security.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="151">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>That is the person who was known as &quot;Tall Hendrik&quot; or &quot;Lang Hendrik&quot; and who later became the chief of BOSS;  the Bureau of State Security.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="152">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="153">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did you ever meet Genl van der Berg as your commanding officer?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="154">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="155">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did he on occasion, and I&#039;m thinking of you as security police in general, did he give you talks or lectures?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="156">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="157">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What kind of a person was Genl van der Berg, in your eyes?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="158">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He was a person who as we saw it, emphasised to us that we must make every possible effort and at all cost must keep the then Government in government.  He could be qualified as a very strong man.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="159">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Apart from maintaining the Government in power, what was his attitudes towards the liberation organisations and with regard to organisations such as the South African Communist Party?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="160">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was that we as members of the Force must throw all of our efforts into the struggle against these people.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="161">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>In what section of the security branch did you work at the security branch head office?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="162">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I was on the administrative staff at security branch head office.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="163">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Could you tell the Commission what your tasks would have included?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="164">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>All of the administrative correspondence would have been handled by us in that section.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="165">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What would this have included?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="166">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It would roughly have included everything with regard to staff in the security branch head office.  It did not include political reports;  those were dealt with by other sections.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="167">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, my learned friend has indicated to me that he&#039;s got difficulty in hearing the witness, but unfortunately I think we have got a problem with the acoustics here.  I don&#039;t know</text>
		</line>
		<line number="168">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>whether there&#039;s a possible solution. I don&#039;t know. Is Afrikaans op een?  Did the security reports that came in go through your hands in your administrative capacity?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="169">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="170">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What did the security overviews and reports deal with?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="171">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It contained all of the events of security relevance throughout the country.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="172">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>While serving in that capacity, you dealt with reports from the perspective of the police and you would have had an overview of the security situation in the country as a whole?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="173">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="174">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Subsequently, during 1967 you were returned to the security branch Port Elizabeth.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="175">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="176">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>In what capacity?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="177">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I was in command of the administrative staff at security branch Port Elizabeth.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="178">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What would your task and functions have included?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="179">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>All incoming and all mail that came in and was sent away as well as the reports received from other offices of the security branch as well as the monthly security overview of the</text>
		</line>
		<line number="180">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>situation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="181">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Could you read these reports?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="182">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="183">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>And you therefore would have had a global picture of the presumed security situation at that time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="184">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="185">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did you in - did you remain in the administrative section until 1971?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="186">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="187">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>During 1969 the later colonel, then Maj Goosen took command of the security branch in Port Elizabeth?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="188">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="189">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>During 1971 you were promoted to the rank of captain.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="190">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="191">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Could you perhaps explain to the Commission which desk, as it was referred to, you then found yourself at and how the division of these so-called desks was arranged?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="192">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I was transferred to the unit that dealt with so-called Coloured and Asian matters.  There was also a unit that dealt with Black matters.  There was an administrative section, a technical section and also a unit that dealt with White affairs.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="193">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>That is fine.  If we can then return to the second paragraph of your statement on page two of your application under &quot;Kort persoonlike oorsig&quot; - &quot;Brief personal overview&quot;.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="194">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Could you read the following paragraphs into the record.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="195" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>MR SNYMAN:&quot;However, at all times during my service in the South African Police, I acted in a bona fide manner to carry out my vocation as a member of the South African Police.  It was in service of the Government of the day, loyal and dutifully intending to maintain the constitutional circumstances of the time and law and order.  My personal convictions were further supported by the fact that my church approved of and supported the policy and actions of the National Party Government.  At all times in my capacity as a member of the South African Police, I did not at any time acted or failed to act in a way for personal gain.  My involvement in this particular incident was also not because of personal ill-feeling against the victim of the act.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="196">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>If we can briefly return to the policy of the Dutch Reformed Church at that time.  Did the Dutch Reformed Church proclaim, and I think it&#039;s a matter of public record that there was synodical decisions to this in this regard that apartheid was publicly justified.  At least the White Dutch Reformed Church did proclaim this.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="197">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="198">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Page 3.  You are applying for an act which has to do with the assault on and death of Mr Steve Biko.  The assault or the date of the assault mentioned is the 6th of September, but if we were to be more correct, it would be 6th to 12th September 1977?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="199">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="200">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>In a broad sense this occurred in Port Elizabeth?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="201">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="202">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>With regard to the deceased, you said that you worked on the Coloured desk.  Were you aware of the deceased?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="203">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I obtained information and knowledge through the monthly security reports, which also indicated the activities of this person.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="204">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>In your personal opinion, what was the prominence of the deceased?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="205">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He was a prominent figure in the Black power movement and almost everyone looked to him as the leader of the</text>
		</line>
		<line number="206">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Black Power movement at that time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="207">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>I know that this is 20 years ago, but if at that time you had to rank him in importance, with exclusion of those leaders then in prison, for instance on Robben Island, how high would you have ranked him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="208">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would have ranked him as one of these most important activists.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="209">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>In the country or just in the Eastern Cape?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="210">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>In the country as a whole.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="211">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Never before you had dealt personally with Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="212">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="213">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>If we can briefly deal with the situation in the Eastern Cape at that time and the organisation represented by Mr Biko, in your knowledge, to what political grouping or organisation or whatever you want to call it, did Mr Biko find a home in?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="214">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He was the head of the Black people&#039;s Convention.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="215">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>I think the correct word is president.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="216">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="217">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>To the best of your knowledge as a security police officer, what was the Black people&#039;s Convention?  Without trying to give too technical an explanation, what would the nature and purposes of the Black People&#039;s Convention have been?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="218">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was a Black Power organisation which had the intention of ridding the country of the then order.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="219">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Would you mean by that the National Party Government?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="220">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="221">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Today it is a matter of public record that the so-called Soweto riots, as they were referred to at that time on the 16th of June 1976, broke out in Soweto.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="222">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="223">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did this unrest also spread to the Eastern Cape?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="224">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, it did.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="225">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>At what stage or at what time did the unrest in the Eastern Cape break out?  When did the real problems start in the Eastern Cape?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="226">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was during August of 1976.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="227">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Briefly, what would have been the nature of this unrest?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="228">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, there was anarchy in the Black communities.  Schools were burned down, businesses were burned down, the houses of prominent persons in the Black communities were burned down, beer halls were plundered and burned down and there was generally anarchy reigning.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="229">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>When the unrest broke out in 1976, you were on a</text>
		</line>
		<line number="230">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>course in Pretoria.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="231">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="232">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Was this course shortened by a week to return you to the Eastern Cape to bring the situation under control?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="233">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="234">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Is it also correct that there had been school boycotts?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="235">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="236">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Upon your return to Port Elizabeth, the situation would have been explosive. Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="237">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="238">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What was the reaction and the instructions, the commands which you received from the police head quarters with regard to the manner in which you should handle the security situation in the Eastern Cape?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="239">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>We received very strict instructions that as the police we had to bring the situation under control as speedily as possible and that we should take drastic measures in our efforts to end the unrest.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="240">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Your commanding officer, Goosen, what would his attitude and his instructions have been in this regard?  I&#039;m speaking in general, at this stage.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="241">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, the commanding officer emphasised</text>
		</line>
		<line number="242">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>that we had to do everything possible to bring an end to the unrest and to prevent the possibility that the then National Party Government could in this way be taken out of action.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="243">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>In what manner would you have acted in order to maintain the status quo?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="244">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>At that time investigative teams were formed.  A large number of arrests were also made during that time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="245">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>There were also in terms of security legislation detentions without trial?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="246">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="247">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>During which people were questioned?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="248">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="249">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Had there also been interference with the mail of persons?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="250">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Indeed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="251">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did you and your colleagues at that time pour all your efforts into the struggle against the onslaught;  as it was considered at that time;  against the Government of the day?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="252">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="253">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Already at that time, what would have been the perception with regard to the kind of situation?  What was the view of security police with regard to the situation encompassing the security forces and particularly the police on the one hand and the</text>
		</line>
		<line number="254">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>liberation movements on the other?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="255">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it was necessary for us as part of the security forces to suppress these efforts at rebellion.  That was also said by our commanding officers from head office and also members of the then Government.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="256">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>During 1976, 1977, if my memory does not fail me, John Vorster would have been the Prime Minister and Jimmy Kruger would have been the Minister of Police or Justice.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="257">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>(The interpreter could not hear clearly).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="258">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I would not want you to attempt to quote the statements of the politicians, but broadly speaking;  what would have been proclaimed by the National Party politicians and the then Prime Minister with regard to the security situation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="259">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>There would have been calls throughout that we had to fight fire with fire;  that we had to bring the situation under control.  These calls were from the side of the politicians.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="260">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>During the arrest of Mr Biko there would already prior to the arrest have been a certain document which had been spread, marked, August 18th, Commemoration Day.  I&#039;m showing you a copy thereof - Mr Chairman, that is in fact annexures to Niewoudt&#039;s application.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="261">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Which is?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="262">
			<speaker>MR BOOYSENS</speaker>
			<text>It is rather - at what stage - it&#039;s marked number 7 in the index to Niewoudt&#039;s application and it is pamphlet - or indicated as pamphlet, August 18th - Commemoration Day.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="263">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="264">
			<speaker>MR BOOYSENS</speaker>
			<text>That is the very pamphlet I&#039;m referring witness to.  I&#039;ll just for the sake of clarity hand in the copy.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="265">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>DOCUMENT HANDED IN</text>
		</line>
		<line number="266">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="267">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s page 135, is it?  Is it page 135?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="268">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s correct, Mr Chairman.  Amongst others at that time, there had been a certain Mr Titi, T-I-T-I, in detention.  During the interrogation of Mr Titi, it appeared that, according to his statements, the deceased might have played a role in the drafting of this document?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="269">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="270">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Could you for purpose of ease identify a copy of the document?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="271">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>This is the document.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="272">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Let as mark it as A and hand in it.  Or rather, let&#039;s mark it as B.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="273">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Are you handing in the original?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="274">
			<speaker>MR BOOYSENS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, we have got an original copy.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="275">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="276">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>In other words, not one that was made by us, but by somebody else.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="277">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>But this is not page 135?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="278">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, it is the same.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="279">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Is it the same document?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="280">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s the same document.  It&#039;s just for identification purposes that I&#039;m asking leave to hand this in.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="281">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>EXHIBIT B HANDED IN</text>
		</line>
		<line number="282">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>With regard to the interrogation, Mr Jones and Mr Biko were arrested at the same time, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="283">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="284">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>I believe you have already mentioned, but for completeness sake, the then Col Goosen, called together an investigative team, consisting of yourself and the other four applicants;  Siebert, Niewoudt and Marx?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="285">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="286">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You were the senior officer in this investigative team?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="287">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="288">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What would your instructions have been?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="289">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Our instructions were that we should obtain information from the detainee in order to obtain a statement from him with regard to the pamphlet in order to institute proceedings</text>
		</line>
		<line number="290">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>against him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="291">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	We also received information that he did not obey his restraining order, but had travelled to Cape Town in the process of this breach of the restraining orders.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="292">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>How did you co-ordinate the interrogation?  What did you start with?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="293">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Peter Jones were interrogated first by members of the investigative team in order to obtain information while we investigated the second person.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="294">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>That is the deceased?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="295">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="296">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did you obtain certain information from Mr Jones?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="297">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="298">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You have also referred already to information from Mr Titi?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="299">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="300">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did you on the 6th of September give instructions that the deceased would have to be collected from Walmer Police Station?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="301">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="302">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>To whom did you give this instruction?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="303">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>To Cpt Siebert and Warrant-Officer or Detective-Sergeant Niewoudt.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="304">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did they collect and during the course of that morning bring him to the Sanlam building to security branch offices.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="305">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="306">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Can you recall at what time he arrived?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="307">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would imagine that it would have been around nine o&#039;clock in the morning, if I recall correctly.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="308">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>There were offices which had been outfitted as interrogation rooms;  is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="309">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="310">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>To the best of your knowledge, upon arrival at the Sanlam building he was brought to these offices?  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="311">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="312">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Were all four members of the investigative team present?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="313">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="314">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>When he was brought in, what would his state of well-being have been?  He was normal.  He was not at that point hurt in any way?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="315">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="316">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Was he hand-cuffed?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="317">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, he was.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="318">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Only hand-cuffed or also foot chains?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="319">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="320">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Both of these.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="321">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>He then came into the room.  Were these shackles removed?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="322">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I gave instructions that the shackles and handcuffs were to be removed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="323">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What happened subsequent to the removal of the shackles and handcuffs?  Did Mr Biko remain standing, did he sit down, or what happened?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="324">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Capt Siebert first began asking to ask questions to Mr Biko, with regard to his travels to Cape Town and the breach of his restraining order and also the handing out of the pamphlet.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="325">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	It had been very clear or it then became very clear that Mr Biko was not going to co-operate.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="326">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Could you expand why do you say that there had been no co-operation?  Did he resist the questioning?  Or what exactly did he do?  Did he refuse to answer?  What exactly was the situation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="327">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>His actions were rebellious and aggressive.  He refused to answer questions put to him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="328">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>At that stage was he confronted in any way with the information already available to you with regard to the pamphlet?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="329">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.  Capt Siebert confronted him and</text>
		</line>
		<line number="330">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>interrogated him with regard to the pamphlet.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="331">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>That is then with regard to the suggestion that he was - or that he took part in both authoring and distributing the pamphlet?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="332">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="333">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What was the response of the deceased to this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="334">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He did not react in any way to questions put to him.  At that time he also attempted to sit down on a chair in the interrogation room at which time Capt Siebert instructed him to remain standing, since he was busy with the interrogation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="335">
			<speaker>MR BOOYSENS</speaker>
			<text>Eventually an incident occurred.  Let us call it a fight.  What brought this about?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="336">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It had to do with the chair.  He sat down on the chair again.  Capt Siebert then said to him ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="337">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did he shout at him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="338">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, he shouted at him to stand up.  He did not respond to this instruction.  Siebert then took him by the clothes and pulled him upright very quickly.  In this process the deceased attempted to punch at Siebert.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="339">
			<speaker>MR BOOYSENS</speaker>
			<text>Did he in fact hit him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="340">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, he missed him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="341">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Could you tell us what you observed immediately subsequent to this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="342">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>When he pushed the chair very quickly in the direction of Capt Siebert, Mr Beneke entered through the door.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="343">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You are leaving the context here.  You are referring to the pushing of a chair.  Did the deceased push a chair in the direction of Siebert?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="344">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="345">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did he attempt to punch at Siebert before or after pushing the chair or at exactly the same time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="346">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>If I recall correctly, it was when he was pulled up from the chair.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="347">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You are referring to Mr Beneke.  That would have been the other applicant in this application.  He then came into the picture.  What happened?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="348">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Mr Beneke shouldered Mr Biko and pushed him so that he fell towards the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="349">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You are saying that he shouldered him?  What would you mean by that;  that he bumped him with his shoulder?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="350">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is right.  He ran in and with his shoulder, he shouldered him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="351">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You are indicating where?  Where did he hit him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="352">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Roughly below the ribs.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="353">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What would the effect have been of this shoulder shouldering?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="354">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="355">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The deceased fell backwards towards the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="356">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>If you say fall;  do you mean he fell on the ground or did he simply shuffle backwards?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="357">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He stumbled or staggered backwards.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="358">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Can you recall whether he came into contact with the wall?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="359">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That might have been possible.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="360">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Apart from staggering backwards, did this have any other effect?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="361">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>We noted that he appeared disorientated.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="362">
			<speaker>MR BOOYSENS</speaker>
			<text>Could you wait a moment.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="363">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS OBJECTS</speaker>
			<text>I would appreciate it if my learned friend did not try to lead the witness on so vital a matter.  An answer has already been given.  I would appreciate it if no leading questions are asked to try and shift the witness from what he has said, unwittingly as it may be. I accept my learned friend&#039;s bona fides, but I appeal that he should be very careful that he does not try - that he does not repeat questions in a manner which may indicate to the witness that the answer is not as self-serving as he might have thought.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="364">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>I agree with that objection by my learned friend, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="365">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="366">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You say that Mr Biko staggered backwards. Could you tell us what happened immediately after he was shouldered.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="367">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, at that time Warrant-Officer Marx and Detective-Officer Niewoudt joined in to bring assistance in order to shackle and handcuff him again.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="368">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>The deceased;  how did the deceased respond?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="369">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>During this entire time he was resistant.  He fought against the people.  There was a general melee happening at that time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="370">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>In an effort to shackle him again, you are saying that there was a fight, a melee.  What kind of fight was this?  What did he attempt to do?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="371">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>People were punching at each other.  It was not possible to see who hit whom or whether all of the punches hit the mark.  In the process everyone fell on top of each other at the northern end of the office towards the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="372">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>How did this occur that they fell on top of each other like that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="373">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was because of this very intense shuffle in the efforts to bring him under control to shackle him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="374">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>That is fine.  Can you describe to us;  your are referring to the wall on the north and the falling on each other.  Could you describe that incident in your own words as far as you</text>
		</line>
		<line number="375">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>can recall the exact facts of the incident?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="376">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The fight between the members and Mr Biko at that time became a very violent struggle.  Mr Biko was on the one end and in the process of the shuffle he fell and the others fell on top of him.  He was then pushed towards the wall and  ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="377">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS OBJECTS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, my learned friend is entitled to lead the witness as he pleases within the - within the directions that the Committee may give.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="378">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	The very least that I would draw attention to is, is that on this vital part of the witness&#039;s story, he&#039;s reading it out from a prepared document.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="379">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I merely wish to place on record that if he intends to argue that any weight should be placed on this witness&#039;s evidence, in his own interest he should not be seen to be reading the story out.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="380">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, in so far as my learned friend&#039;s objection is concerned, I think he will accept my word;  the only document in front of the witness is in fact his amnesty application.  That&#039;s the document that he&#039;s got.  So it&#039;s not another prepared document.  I trust my learned friend and I know each other well enough that he will accept my assurance in this regard, but he is welcome to have a look at it.  That&#039;s the only document in front of him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="381">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, all right.  Just formulate your questions as</text>
		</line>
		<line number="382">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>fairly as you can.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="383">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Yes. Immediately before Mr Bizos referred to the document;  the document in front of you;  is that your amnesty application?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="384">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="385">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Could you - or rather let us return; you were referring to the wall and where the people fell.  Could you explain from there onwards what occurred?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="386">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>An effort was then made to shackle Mr Biko again.  He was lying with his head partly against the wall and at that time it appeared as if he was completely confused.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="387">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Could you attempt to give us a clearer picture?  You say that he was lying with his head partly against the wall;  could you describe his position for us?  Could you attempt to?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="388">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>His body was on the wall and his head was sort of lying against the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="389">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What would his state have been?  In what state would he have been?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="390">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would almost explain it like someone who had been knocked out in a boxing match.  You could see that he was dazed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="391">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You&#039;ve referred to shackling.  Was he in fact shackled?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="392">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="393">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>After a time his hands were cuffed in front of him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="394">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What then happened after he was handcuffed with his hands in front of him?  Was he still lying on the floor or had he been pulled up or what was the case?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="395">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He was still lying on the ground.  Subsequently the members picked him up.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="396">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>While being shackled, did he lie or sit or what?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="397">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He was half sitting, half lying on the ground.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="398">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>His hand were then shackled in front or behind his back?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="399">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>In front of his - of him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="400">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What then happened?  You say the members assisted him in rising;  what then occurred?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="401">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.  The members at a later point picked him up, undid the handcuffs and shackled his hands to the grille.  They also shackled his feet.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="402">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You have indicated, when referring to the shackling of his hands to the metal grille that he was sort of spread-eagled, he was - his hands were spread sideways, his arms were drawn away from his body.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="403">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	One could then conclude that there was a shackle to every wrist which would then each have been shackled to the metal grille;  how was the foot shackles attached?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="404">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Each of his feet were separately shackled to the metal grille by means of a chain that was attached to the metal gate or grille and this chain was woven through the bars of the metal grille or door.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="405">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>This investigation started roughly at nine o&#039;clock in the morning as you have said to us already.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="406">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="407">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>At - or rather, what would the length of the interrogation have been up to the incident as now described by yourself?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="408">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would believe that it was a matter of minutes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="409">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>So at about what time would we have had the situation that the shuffle or the fight was over and Mr Biko was shackled or chained to the gate as you have described.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="410">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It might well have been half-past-nine, roughly half-an-hour after the interrogation started.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="411">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What, if anything, did you notice at that time with regard to Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="412">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I noticed, Your Honour, that he was speaking in a slurred manner.  His speaking was affected.  He spoke very unclearly.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="413">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What, if anything, did you notice in addition to this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="414">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I noted that he had an injury on his lip and also to his body.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="415">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>The injury to his lip;  could you describe this more closely?  What, in fact, did you see?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="416">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>We noticed that he had bleeding on his lip and I thought that this was a consequence of the shuffle during which the attempt was made to bring him under control.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="417">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>He spoke in a slurred manner;  did you note anything beyond that which you have already mentioned?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="418">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was clear to me that at that time we could not continue with the interrogation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="419">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>For what reason?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="420">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He showed no response.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="421">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What was your next action?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="422">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I brought the matter to the attention of the commanding officer, Col Goosen.  I informed him of what had occurred and that it appeared to me that we could not continue with the interrogation, but that he first would have to come and look at the detainee.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="423">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did Goosen then accompany you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="424">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="425">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>At that time Biko was still chained to the metal grille or gate?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="426">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="427">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="428">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What happened next?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="429">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Col Goosen attempted to speak to Mr Biko and probably also determined that the interrogation could not continue.  He then told me that the interrogation had to provisionally be brought to an end.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="430">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Were you present when Goosen spoke to him?  What was the response evoked from him by Goosen?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="431">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No response.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="432">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Goosen then instructed you to bring the interrogation to an end?  The deceased at that time was still chained to the metal grille as described by you;  was he then unchained or was he left there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="433">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He was left chained there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="434">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>On whose instructions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="435">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>On the instructions of Col Goosen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="436">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>When Goosen instructed you to end the interrogation, did you give any instructions to the other members present,  the members of your investigative team?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="437">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>My instruction was that they had to take careful note whether his situation changed, his state changed so that we could continue with the interrogation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="438">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>To whom did you give this instruction?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="439">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="440">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>To Niewoudt and Marx and Beneke.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="441">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>The interpreter believes that the person also said &quot;and Beneke&quot;, but could not hear clearly.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="442">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	What was your next action?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="443">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>After having given this instruction to the other members, I received instructions from Col Goosen that I had to go to Baken Street Police Station to make a note of the injury to the detainee.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="444">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Let&#039;s return to your instructions.  You say that they had to come and tell you if there was any improvement on the part of Mr Biko?  Did they at any stage report to you that the interrogation could be continued?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="445">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="446">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>That was on the 6th, the 7th or the 8th?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="447">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>On the 7th I was informed by the members again who then told me that there had been no change in his well-being.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="448">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Also on the 6th they did not give any information to you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="449">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="450">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Can you recall whether during the course of the 6th, subsequent to having given these instructions to the members, whether you saw the detainee again or the deceased again?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="451">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>At a later stage I went to him with Col Goosen again, but in the meantime I withdrew under the instructions of Col Goosen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="452">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>For clarity&#039;s sake you say that you again went to him with Goosen;  was that on the occasion when you and Goosen went to speak to him or was there a subsequent occasion?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="453">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, it was that first occasion.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="454">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>So you did not again see him on the 6th?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="455">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="456">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did you give any instructions that he had to be unchained from the metal gate or was he left in that position.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="457">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He was left in that position.  Col Goosen also said that he would then take over the entire matter from then onwards.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="458">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did you see the deceased on the 7th?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="459">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I was informed of his situation.  It was reported to me that there had been no change.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="460">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Were you in an office on the same floor as that in which the interrogation room was where the detainee was kept?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="461">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, we were on the fifth floor.  The detainee was interrogated on the sixth floor.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="462">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did you make any arrangements for medical treatment of the deceased or do you bear any knowledge of efforts to bring medical attention to the deceased?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="463">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I reported to Col Goosen what had occurred with a view that he would take the necessary steps to provide for a medical investigation or medical treatment.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="464">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Do you have any personal knowledge whether the deceased had been visited by a doctor?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="465">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I had heard that he was visited by a doctor on the 7th.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="466">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>So you had heard that a doctor visited him on the 7th and would that have been the district surgeon?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="467">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It would have been the district surgeon.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="468">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did you have anything to do with the deceased subsequently?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="469">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, not after that day.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="470">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You do know that on the evening of the 8th, or did you hear that he was removed to the prison on the evening of the 8th?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="471">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="472">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>It is also known, possibly for the sake of completeness, did you visit him at the prison at any stage?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="473">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, Your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="474">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You have mentioned that there was an entry made by yourself in the occurrence book?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="475">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, Your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="476">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Although this is a photocopy, but it&#039;s in the witnesses&#039; handwriting.  The original is obviously nowhere to be found.  This is documents that we obtained with the courtesy of my friend, Mr Mpshe.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="477">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I&#039;m showing you a copy of a document.  Do you recognise the handwriting there on?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="478">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="479">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Gee net vir my die getikte afskrif.  Your Honour, with your permission, we have an illegible copy and I will ask the witness to read this into the record, but I do want to give typed copies of that which will now be read to you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="480">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Mpshe, does it form part of the record at present?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="481">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>It is not in the bundle, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="482">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>It is not in the bundle?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="483">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>It is not.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="484">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Very well.  What is this document headed or what is it called?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="485">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s a - Mr Chairman, it&#039;s a photostat of an occurrence book, occurrence book entry at the Bakenstraat Police Station.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="486">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="487">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What you have got in front of you at this stage, is</text>
		</line>
		<line number="488">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>a typed copy of what will be read out now, due to the fact that it&#039;s not very legible.  I hope I can guarantee the accuracy of what you are reading Mr Chairman, but if you see the handwriting, that guarantee certainly is not hundred per cent.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="489">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Very well.  This will be EXHIBIT C.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="490">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>EXHIBIT C HANDED IN</text>
		</line>
		<line number="491">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>The document in front of you, please look at the photocopy of the occurrence book.  Is that in your handwriting?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="492">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, Your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="493">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Would that have been an entry number 633?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="494">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="495">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>The time is 10:44?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="496">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="497">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Or 10:45, when was this entry made?  When was this entry made?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="498">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>On the 8th, Your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="499">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Could you perhaps indicate, to the best of your knowledge, you have a typed copy of the copy of the original entry.  Have you compared these and in your view, is this an accurate transcription of the original handwritten document?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="500">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="501">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Could you perhaps read out what is written there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="502">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>&quot;Injury article 6(a) detainee.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="503" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Maj Snyman reports that on 7/9/79 at about 07:00 he and Siebert and Beneke at the security offices in Sanlam offices  interrogated Steven Bantu Biko.  The detainee was extremely arrogant, went berserk, took one of the chairs in the office and threw it at Snyman.  With his fists he then stormed at the other members and the other members overwhelmed him.  After a violent struggle, he fell with his head against the wall and with his body on the floor and in this process he received injuries on the lip and body.  Warrant-Officer Beneke received an elbow injury and nonetheless did not go off duty.  The district surgeon was informed and visited the detainee.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="504">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>And then my signature appears.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="505">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Is that in fact your signature that appears on the copy of the handwritten entry?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="506">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="507">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>The entry is in your handwriting, but there are corrections in a another handwriting.  The word &quot;injury&quot; and the word &quot;service&quot; was changed.  Whose handwriting would that have been?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="508">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I do not know.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="509">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Would you confirm that this was your entry?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="510">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="511">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Could I ask leave to hand in the photocopy of the occurrence book then as I presume C - C1?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="512">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>EXHIBIT C1 HANDED IN</text>
		</line>
		<line number="513">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Snyman, this entry was made on the 8th?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="514">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="515">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Why was this only entered on the 8th?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="516">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was a late entry, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="517">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>With a view to prevent later uncertainty with regard to occurrence books and their role;  at a police station an occurrence book is kept?  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="518">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="519">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>At the security branch office, would there at the branch have been an occurrence book where entries could be made?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="520">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Is that at the security branch?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="521">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>At the security branch.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="522">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="523">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>When you had to make entries, would that have been made at a normal police station?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="524">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, the entries would have been made in the occurrences book at the complaints desk of a normal police station.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="525">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You say that this was a late entry and you have already said that this was under the instructions of Goosen.  This entry is inaccurate?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="526">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="527">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>It is a blatant inaccuracy in that it indicates that Maj Snyman indicates that on the 7th of September 1979 at about 07:00 in the morning a certain incident occurred.  What is your comment on this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="528">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour, these were not the true facts of the matter.  This incident in fact occurred on the 6th of September.  I questioned the instruction which I received from the commanding officer, Col Goosen, who instructed me to report the matter on the 8th and to indicate it under the date of the 7th of September.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="529">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>When did Goosen give you this instruction to make this entry?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="530">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The instruction was given when I arrived in his office after I reported that the detainee had been injured.  It was not, however, on the same day.  It was on the following day, on the 8th.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="531">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Maybe you could just repeat your answer.  On</text>
		</line>
		<line number="532">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>what date did Goosen instruct you to make the entry.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="533">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was on the 8th.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="534">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Fine then.  The fact that the date had to be indicated as the 7th, rather than the 6th which would have been the correct date, who gave this instruction?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="535">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>This was an instruction of Col Goosen.  I believed that the fact why it came from him was that the doctor had apparently only on the 7th or had been called in only on the 7th to examine the detainee.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="536">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>The entry, although cryptic in nature, attempt to sketch a picture of what had occurred.  Could you comment on the correctness, apart from the date which is apparently incorrect and also it would appear to me that time, namely of 07:00 in the morning, seven o&#039;clock in the morning, would there be other untruths or inaccuracies?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="537">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Most certainly, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="538">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What would these be?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="539">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>In the first place, it did not occur as it was entered.  It did not occur on the 7th.  It occurred on the 6th.  Also, it did not occur at seven in the morning, but at a later time between nine and half past nine in the morning.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="540">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Would there be any further inaccuracies?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="541">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The fact that he fell with his head against the wall</text>
		</line>
		<line number="542">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>is in fact correct.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="543">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>I had in fact asked you whether there were any further intentional untruths in the entry?  I&#039;m not asking you what is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="544">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>With regard to the chairs having been picked up and thrown, that is also incorrect.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="545">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>So that the chair had been thrown at you or at whom?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="546">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The chair was thrown at Siebert.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="547">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Is there anything incorrect in addition to this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="548">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Within the context of the entry, the claim that the district surgeon was called to examine the detainee, would be incorrect, because it would appear as if he had been called in on the same day as the injury occurred.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="549">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.  That was not in fact contextually the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="550">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Is there anything that you would want to indicate in addition to this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="551">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="552">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did you at a later stage - were you informed at a later stage that Mr Biko in fact died in Pretoria after having been transferred there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="553">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="554">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>That would have been roughly on the 13th when you heard of this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="555">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="556">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What would have occurred subsequent to this?  I want you to tell us more about statement made by members of the branch, drafted by members of the branch, including yourself.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="557">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The instruction from Col Goosen to all the members of the security branch who had been involved with Biko;  the Saturday after his death, he called all of these members into his office.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="558">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Yes?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="559">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>During this meeting Col Goosen explained that the death of Biko was a great embarrassment to the security branch and the South African Government or could be a great embarrassment.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="560">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	It was clear that this event would have a negative impact on the image of South Africa abroad and that perhaps this could lose foreign investments for the country.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="561">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Are you reading from your statement?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="562">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct. Col Goosen explained that it was in the interest of the Government of the day that the matter had to be managed in such a way that the interests of the security branch and the South African Government could be protected.	During this meeting there were instructions for everyone involved that the true facts with regard to this incident had to be adapted or simply not mentioned.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="563">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	At that time it was my personal opinion that in this process it was in the interest of the security branch and the South African Government and in fact necessary for the continued survival of the then Government system to act in this manner.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="564">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>All of you then made statements.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="565">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="566">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Were these statements true or false?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="567">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="568">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>No, I&#039;m asking you whether they&#039;re true or false.  It can&#039;t simply be correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="569">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The statements were false.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="570">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>We attempted to obtain a copy of your statement of that time, but we failed in this attempt.  Broadly, however, what would have been the lies contained in the statement?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="571">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, these would include the fact that the detainee had been injured on the 7th rather than on the 6th.  Further more, that a doctor only examined him on the 8th;  that he received medical attention a day after having been injured.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="572">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m sorry, I&#039;m not understanding what you are saying.  Would there have been a lie with regard to when the doctor saw him or would the lie have been that he was in fact injured on the 7th or what exactly?  I&#039;m not following what you are saying with regard to the doctor.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="573">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The lie would have been that he had been injured on the 7th, since he had already been injured on the 6th.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="574">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>To the best of what you can recall, what additional lies would have been contained in that statement?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="575">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>We were told by Col Goosen what to say in our statements.  The statements were not based on the true facts as we are now making clear in this application.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="576">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Were all of you together when you prepared your statement?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="577">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, we were all together.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="578">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did Goosen take the statements down or let you write them out yourselves.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="579">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, he took the statements down from us.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="580">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Were all of the statements cooked or were they all changed from the actual facts?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="581">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="582">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Would these changes have been made under the direction of Goosen or under whose direction?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="583">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, it was under the direction of Goosen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="584">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Subsequently you also testified or made these into sworn statements as if they were in fact the truth and this was done</text>
		</line>
		<line number="585">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>with the full knowledge that they were in fact not true?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="586">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="587">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Genl Kleinhouse was then the chief detective in South Africa.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="588">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="589">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did he subsequently visit you and make warning statements in terms of the Judges Rules in terms of the death of Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="590">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="591">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>At that time, would the lie or lies contained in what we will for clarity sake or for the sake of ease, refer to as the Goosen statement;  would these lies have been continued?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="592">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="593">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You did not come out with the truth to Kleinhouse or Kleinhans, with regard to the true events of the 6th?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="594">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="595">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>We know that there had subsequently been a formal inquest at which my learned friend, Mr Bizos, was in fact present and that you gave testimony at that inquest?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="596">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="597">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>With regard to which statement or statements did you base your testimony at the post-mortem inquest?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="598">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>These were based on the fake statement.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="599">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="600">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Would this have been the Goosen statement?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="601">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="602">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>On that occasion also then you gave false testimony?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="603">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="604">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>So, you in fact lied to the inquest court?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="605">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="606">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>To the best of your knowledge, the other members present, would also have taken part in this deception?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="607">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="608">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Snyman, why did you lie?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="609">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Please, just let&#039;s have some quiet, please!  Do carry on.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="610">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it was very clear that we were guided by Col Goosen with regard to the manner in which we should draft our statements and that is from whom the idea came.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="611">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did you protest in any way against telling these lies?  Did you protest towards Goosen?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="612">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>When I had to make the entry into the occurrence book, I found it strange that he told me to enter the incorrect date, namely the 7th rather than the 6th.  I then became concerned, but I had no intention to protest, since I knew I would get into - would be resisted by him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="613">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did Goosen exactly tell you what to write into the occurrence book entry or what was the situation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="614">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, he only told me that I had to enter that the incident occurred on the 7th.  For the rest I wrote down what I had observed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="615">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>With regard to the incident;  the incident of the Goosen statement, the date change and other untruths contained in that statement, you were wholly knowledgeable of the fact that this was an untrue statement.  It was a deception.  Could you give us some indication of the character of Col Goosen?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="616">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Col Goosen was a very determined person.  Once he had made up his mind, he stayed with that and he also insisted that everyone would have to join into his decision or join with his decision.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="617">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You have given quite considerable, considerably complete detail with regard to the events of the assault on Mr Biko, the statements and so forth.  Would you confirm in addition, the essential correctness of that contained in your statement with regard to the incident, with regard to Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="618">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="619">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>With regard to the interrogation of Mr Biko, the efforts to conceal the true facts with regard to his death, the fact that the man was kept chained in a standing position against the</text>
		</line>
		<line number="620">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>barred metal gate, the fact that medical assistance was only obtained at a later stage on his behalf;  what would your feelings be today, as you are sitting here with regard to your actions at that time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="621">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I feel very badly about these actions, that we acted in this manner against this person.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="622">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Was it ever the intention to kill Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="623">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, it had never been the intention.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="624">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>It is know and I have summarise for you what you had done to in fact violate his human rights;  with regard to your description of the shuffle or fight;  were there any further assaults?  Was he beaten or was there any other such actions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="625">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="626">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>What would the political purpose have been?  In your personal view, what political purpose did you attempt to achieve while interrogating Mr Biko, while violating his human rights and while deceiving the court subsequently?  	Why did you do this?  What would the political purpose, if any, have been?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="627">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The political purpose had been in the first place, not to bring the security branch or the Government of the day into a position of embarrassment.  It was intended to protect the Government and the security branch.  That is why the facts were concealed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="628">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>With regard to the violation of Biko, his interrogation, what political purpose were you attempting to achieve through those actions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="629">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Certainly, since he was striving to subvert the status quo it was our intention to obtain information from him in order to develop a case against him and to have him prosecuted in a court of law.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="630">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>His intentions, to the best of your knowledge, was to subvert the status quo?  If you had done nothing with regard to him, if for instance you simply left him alone;  what would you imagine might have happened amongst others?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="631">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The country would have been brought into further anarchy.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="632">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Referring to page 7 of your application, you there deal with the political objectives which you attempted to achieve, at 10(a).  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="633">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="634">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Perhaps for the sake of comprehensiveness, you should read this out.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="635" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>MR SNYMAN: &quot;1.  The purpose of a security branch as part of the power base of the National Party Government, was the maintenance of internal security by means of countering</text>
		</line>
		<line number="636" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>terrorism and protecting the then State</text>
		</line>
		<line number="637">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>order, namely the National Party </text>
		</line>
		<line number="638">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Government and State structures against </text>
		</line>
		<line number="639">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Communist expansionism as identified in </text>
		</line>
		<line number="640">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>the so-called liberation organisations;  that</text>
		</line>
		<line number="641">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text> is the ANC/SACP alliance and the PAC as </text>
		</line>
		<line number="642">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>well as Black Power or Black </text>
		</line>
		<line number="643">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Consciousness Organisations, namely the </text>
		</line>
		<line number="644">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>BPC and SASO, as well as their armed</text>
		</line>
		<line number="645">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text> wings, Umkhonto weSizwe, APLA and </text>
		</line>
		<line number="646">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>TBCM which had tempted with violence to </text>
		</line>
		<line number="647">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>overthrow the Government of the day and</text>
		</line>
		<line number="648">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text> to take over Government.&quot;  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="649">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m sure everyone knows who the ANC/SACP alliance and the PAC is.  The BPC would be the Black People&#039;s Convention, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="650">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="651">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>SASO would be the South African Students&#039; Organisation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="652">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="653">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m sure everyone knows what APLA is.  BCM would be the Black Consciousness Movement?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="654">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="655">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Maybe this might be a convenient stage to take a short adjournment?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="656">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Certainly, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="657">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Booyens, we&#039;ll resume in 15 minutes from now.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="658">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>COMMITTEE ADJOURNS</text>
		</line>
		<line number="659">
			<speaker>HAROLD SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(Still under oath).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="660">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Booyens, you may proceed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="661">
			<speaker>EXAMINATION BY MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>(cont)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="662">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Thank you, Mr Chairman.  Mr Snyman, you - if I recall correctly, were at the end of page 7 of your application.  Could you continue at the top of page 8?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="663">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Paragraph 1.1</text>
		</line>
		<line number="664" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>The achievement of these purposes or goals would have consisted of paragraph 1.1.1.  The protection and maintenance of the National Party Government and the legal institutions which had been instituted by that Government.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="665">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Paragraph 1.1.2 -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="666" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;The protection of the integrity of the previous Government in order to ensure that the community does not lose trust in the governing party, the National Party, as a consequence of acts of terror and propaganda by communistically- inclined organisations.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="667">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Paragraph 1.1.3 -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="668" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;South Africa, and to protect South Africa and its Western capitalistic community against a violent take-over by communistically inclined so-called liberation movements whose intentions were to make the country ungovernable.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="669">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Paragraph 1.2 -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="670" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;By means of these above-mentioned purposes the continued existence or survival of a normal Western democracy as I know it, would be maintained and ensured.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="671">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Paragraph 2.2.1 -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="672" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;The detention, interrogations and accompanying confrontations were necessary in order to counter the total onslaught against the Government of the day.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="673">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Paragraph 2.2 -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="674" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Information had to be obtained at all costs in order to counter the revolutionary struggle by means of the arrest of persons, the detention of persons and the criminal prosecution of persons.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="675">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Paragraph 2.3 -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="676" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Obtaining new information was necessary in order to take pro-active measures with which to effectively contain the efforts of the liberation organisations.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="677">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Paragraph 2.4 -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="678" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Steven Bantu Biko was personally involved in, and in addition obtained valuable information which would have enabled the security branch to neutralise effectively the Black Consciousness Movement and the Black People&#039;s Convention, to contain them and in this way to stabilise the situation of unrest.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="679">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Excuse me.  There would seem to be a typing error.  It has to be BCM and not BMC in this particular paragraph.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="680" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>MR SNYMAN:  That is correct.	With regard to paragraph 2.5 -&quot;False statements were made to prevent that the Government, the National Party and the security branch would be embarrassed;  should the true facts be made known.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="681">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Thank you very much.  You have indicated your political purposes and intentions as per your amnesty application.  Is this correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="682">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="683">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You would maintain that these still are in fact the reasons for your actions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="684">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="685">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>On page 9 of the application, with regard to the motivation why you would consider this action to be linked to a political purpose.  Could you read your answer to this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="686">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>&quot;For reference purposes, see paragraph</text>
		</line>
		<line number="687" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>9(a)(iv) above and then Steven Bantu Biko.  The assault occurred during interrogation.  Mr Biko, during his detention at the central prison in Pretoria, died in consequence of injuries received during the interrogation of 6 September 1977.  The confrontation was a direct result of our efforts to obtain information from Mr Biko who had been a prominent anti-government activist.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="688">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Briefly then through the remaining questions;  you claim not to have in any way financially or otherwise gained from this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="689">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="690">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>The interrogation occurred under the instructions of Col Goosen, who was your commanding officer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="691">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="692">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>You bear no knowledge of any actions, criminally or civilly?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="693">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="694">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>A few remaining aspects which I want to deal with briefly. You have already said to the Commission that you supported the apartheid Government, the National Party of that day.  Currently, since 1994, there is a different Government in this country.  What is your attitude, your feeling with the wisdom of subsequent experience;  what is your attitude towards your support of the apartheid Government and its actions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="695">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, the transformation and the transfer to a democratic Government I feared, and my fear was that should this change occur, utter anarchy would reign.  The opposite did however occur and thus far all of these events have been peaceful.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="696">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>We&#039;ve already touched on the fact that you had violated the human rights of the deceased.  Today, 20 years after the event;  what would your personal feelings be?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="697">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it is my conviction in the depth of my heart that our actions were wrong.  I can say in honesty that I feel remorse over these events.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="698">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Would there be anything else that you want to bring to the attention of the Commission at this stage?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="699">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I want to ask that I be forgiven for my part.  That is all, it would appear to be all.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="700">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Thank you Mr Chairman, that&#039;s the evidence I intend leading.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="701">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR BOOYENS</text>
		</line>
		<line number="702">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Erasmus, are there questions you wish to put to the applicant?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="703">
			<speaker>MR ERASMUS</speaker>
			<text>There are a few questions I would like to ask, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="704">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Mr Snyman, I want to refer to Exhibit C.  Exhibit C would be the translated version of the entry into the occurrences book.  Do you have that in front of you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="705">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is the case, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="706">
			<speaker>MR ERASMUS</speaker>
			<text>The first sentence thereof reads as follows</text>
		</line>
		<line number="707" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Maj Snyman reports that on the 7th September 1977 at about 7 o&#039;clock he, Capt Siebert and Warrant-Officer Beneke questioned detainee Biko at the security branch offices in the Sanlam building.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="708">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>I want to state it to you that Warrant-Officer Beneke was not part of the interrogation.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="709">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="710">
			<speaker>MR ERASMUS</speaker>
			<text>I have no further questions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="711">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR ERASMUS</text>
		</line>
		<line number="712">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Bizos, any questions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="713">
			<speaker>CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairman.  Please turn to page 2 of your application.  The last two paragraphs where you say that you acted in good faith as a member of the South African Police.  Is perjury a police action which is performed in good faith?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="714">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(No audible reply).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="715">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What is the answer?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="716">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(No audible reply).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="717">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you want me to repeat the question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="718">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Please do.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="719">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you want me to repeat the question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="720">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Please do.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="721">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Bizos, please repeat it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="722">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You say that throughout your long career in the police you always acted in good faith.  Is perjury a police action carried out in good faith?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="723">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="724">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Is defeating the ends of justice as you and your colleagues did during a number of weeks in November 1977, in good faith?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="725">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It occurred as a consequence of the situation and also as I have said in order to maintain the Government of the day.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="726">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Your and your colleagues&#039; perjury for the purposes of defeating the ends of justice, a bona fide police action?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="727">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>At that stage I would say, yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="728">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you know what good faith means?  (Laughter).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="729">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="730">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What does good faith mean?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="731">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That I believe in it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="732">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>That if you believe that you can commit perjury and that you can defeat the ends of justice, you are acting in good faith?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="733">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="734">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you still believe that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="735">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="736">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What made you change your mind?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="737">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>With the change to a democracy as I have mentioned ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="738">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Democracy dawned in our country on the 28th of April 1994?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="739">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="740">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why did you wait until practically the twelfth hour in order to make an application for amnesty?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="741">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Because, at that time we believed that what we did was done in the interest of the State and the National Party.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="742">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t think you understood the question.  If you changed your mind when democracy came, why did you wait from the end of April 1994 until the date on which you made your application for amnesty?  Have you any explanation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="743">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Perjury was committed under pressure.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="744">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What pressure was put on you and by whom?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="745">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>As I have already mentioned in the applications we drafted due to the death of Mr Biko, that lies were told.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="746">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You also gave evidence in the Goniwe inquest.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="747">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="748">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You denied that you had anything to do with it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="749">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, at this point I want to say that that is part of an application for amnesty which I have handed in.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="750">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m testing whether you had any good reason for waiting for so long after the dawn of democracy which you say made you a different man.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="751">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Please repeat your question, I do not understand it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="752">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I think ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="753">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>If I may just help ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="754">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Please do.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="755">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>It has been put to you that as a result of the change in this country when it became a democracy in 1994, you&#039;ve changed your views that you held previously.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="756">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Now the question really boils down to this;  if that change came about in you in 1994;  why did you wait until now to make this application?  Why didn&#039;t you apply earlier?  I think that is the purpose of the question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="757">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>We were offered the opportunity to apply for amnesty which opportunity we took.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="758">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, the copies of his applications is not complete, because it does not give the date.  May I ask for assistance to place the date of the application on record, please?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="759">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Mpshe, can you throw any light on the date of this application?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="760">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I do not know the exact date, but the application reached the office in 1997, in early 1997.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="761">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Early what?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="762">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Early 1997, Mr Bizos.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="763">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Okay.  Why did you wait for almost three years to give expression to your reformation?  (Laughter).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="764">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The current Government offered us the opportunity to apply for amnesty which opportunity we did take?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="765">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Answer the question please;  why did it take you almost three years to profess your reformation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="766">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I think to be fair to the witness, Mr Bizos, the act under which he&#039;s applying was only promulgated in December 1995.  So maybe it wasn&#039;t ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="767">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I&#039;m not for one moment suggesting that he had no right to wait.  I am merely testing whether or not he&#039;s telling the truth that democracy made him a different man.	May I suggest the reason to you that this application was made as a result of the person sitting to your right, one Niewoudt, who had other reasons for applying for amnesty, that you fell along with it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="768">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, those are not the facts.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="769">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Can you give us any other explanation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="770">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>At an earlier stage amnesty applications were completed by us members of the security branch and these were sent to Pretoria.  However, we received no response to these applications.  I cannot recall the date of that application.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="771">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Was there another meeting like the one that you had on the Saturday morning after Mr Biko&#039;s death to decide what you were going to say?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="772">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="773">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>On page 2 of your application, you claim to have done this in the interest of the National Party Government.  Could you name anyone in the National Party who advised publicly or even privately that a detainee was not entitled to sit on a chair?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="774">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="775">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You also say that you acted faithfully in accordance of the principles of your church.  Can you quote anybody in your church that advocated that a detainee was not entitled to sit on a chair?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="776">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="777">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Can you quote anyone in the National Party who suggested to you that a detainee was to be kept naked in his cell and whilst he was being interrogated?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="778">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, your Honour, this was an instruction which we received through our commanding officer from our head office.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="779">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Can you please tell me whether anyone in the National Party told you, or suggested to you that detainees were to be kept naked in their cell and naked whilst they were being interrogated by a team of security policemen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="780">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="781">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did anyone in your church suggest that you might do that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="782">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="783">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You give the impression in your application that you are a God-fearing man who was brought up in a good family who had respect for religion.  Am I summarising the position correctly?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="784">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="785">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Is committing perjury part and parcel of that upbringing?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="786">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="787">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Or the committing the crime of defeating the ends of justice?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="788">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="789">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>If you take the trouble to count the number of lies that you told to magistrate Prins in the Old Synagogue in Pretoria ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="790">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I realise this, your Honour, but as I&#039;ve said earlier, this was done under pressure from my commanding officer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="791">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>My learned colleague sitting on my right who is appearing with me, counted over 80 specific falsehoods of fact which you deposed to.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="792">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, we did make a false statement ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="793">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>That even if we were to omit some of the less important ones, there are almost 40 material false statements.  Are you prepared to accept the number as more or less correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="794">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would not be able to recall that entirely, your Honour, but I will accept that if that is your claim.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="795">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now, you took the oath here to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, like you did when your made your affidavit and when you took the oath before the magistrate.  Can you please give the Committee some idea as to how it can decide when the oath is binding on your conscience and when it is not?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="796">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, the oath is binding on my conscience.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="797">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Just as it was at the Old Synagogue.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="798">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>As I have already said, it was a false statement, under pressure.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="799">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What pressure was placed on you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="800">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The commanding officer instructed us as to how we should draft these statements.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="801">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And did you blindly follow his advice?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="802">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, we followed it blindly.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="803">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Who was the Commissioner of Police?  Why didn&#039;t you go to him and say that the colonel is expecting met to commit perjury, I&#039;m not prepared to do it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="804">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, we did not take that course of action.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="805">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The Deputy Commissioner at the time was either Brig or Gen Johan Coetzee.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="806">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="807">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="808">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I didn&#039;t hear you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="809">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="810">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>He comes from these parts of the world like you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="811">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="812">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>He was, or appeared to be as if he was orchestrating the happenings at the hearing of the inquest,  is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="813">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, that is not correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="814">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>He and Genl Zietsman were there every day.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="815">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, they were present.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="816">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why didn&#039;t you go up either to Genl Zietsman, or Brig or Genl Coetzee, whatever his rank may have been at the time, and say I&#039;m not prepared to commit perjury, nor am I prepared to attend to defeat the ends of justice?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="817">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, as this pressure was exerted on us by Col Goosen, we would simply not have dared to do so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="818">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What prevented you from going to one or other of these two very senior officers and say your colonel in Port Elizabeth is expecting that we should commit perjury and defeat the ends of justice;  help me please to be in good faith and faithful to the truth of my - as my church demands?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="819">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That would probably have been the correct cause of action, but we did not take it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="820">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="821">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why didn&#039;t you do it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="822">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;ve already said to you that I acted under pressure and that these statements were made under pressure and that we had to keep to these statements.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="823">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m going to suggest to you that you did not do it, because you were not pulled along, but rather a &quot;voorbok&quot; as the senior officer of this whole scheme to defeat the ends of justice.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="824">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I do not concur, that was not the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="825">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Were the proceedings in court transmitted by  a secret transmitter, so that one witness could hear what the other witness was saying in court?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="826">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I do not bear knowledge thereof, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="827">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Try and think.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="828">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That was 20 years ago, I cannot remember.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="829">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you say that it may have happened, but you don&#039;t remember.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="830">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m not sure, I cannot respond to that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="831">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But surely, so dramatic - a dramatic fraud on the court;  if it happened, would not have been something you would have forgotten?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="832">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I bear no knowledge thereof, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="833">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Was there an answer?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="834">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I bear no knowledge thereof, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="835">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="836">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I still didn&#039;t hear it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="837">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I bear no knowledge of any such a matter, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="838">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I listened to your evidence carefully and I believe that there are certain ambiguities which I want to clear up.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="839">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Did you or did you not assault the late Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="840">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I did not assault him, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="841">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you associate yourself in any way with any assault that may have been committed on him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="842">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>As I&#039;ve said in my testimony, there was no assault on him other than to bring him under control.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="843">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But that was justified, that was not an assault, if your evidence was correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="844">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="845">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You never witnessed any assault if I understood your evidence?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="846">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="847">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And you did not associate yourself in any way with any unlawful act that may be described as an assault in relation to your dealings with the late Mr Biko?  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="848">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is the case, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="849" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>MR BIZOS:  Then I do not understand, Sir, how you came to say under oath on page 9 of your application, the following</text>
		</line>
		<line number="850">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		&quot;Your motivation why you would associate such an act....</text>
		</line>
		<line number="851">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>And it continues -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="852" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;... to associate this with a political purpose - for reference see paragraph 9(a)iv) above ...&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="853">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>And then it reads: </text>
		</line>
		<line number="854" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Steven Bantu Biko.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="855">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>		The assault occurred during interrogation and Mr Biko died during the course of his detention at the Central Prison, Pretoria, as a result of injuries sustained during the interrogation on the 6th of September 1977.  The confrontation was the direct result of our efforts to obtain information from Mr Biko who had been a prominent anti-government activist.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="856">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Did you sign that under oath?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="857">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="858">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Is it true or false?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="859">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is not false, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="860">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="861">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Is it true?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="862">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The assault to which I refer, is the scuffle, the shuffle  during which the members of the interrogating team were involved ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="863">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The - jammer, gaan maar voort.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="864">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>... when Mr Biko began to throw the chair and threw a punch at one of the members.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="865">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The assault occurred during interrogation.  If there had been no assault, why then have you taken the oath and made the claim that there had in fact been an assault?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="866">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS OBJECTS</speaker>
			<text>M&#039;Lord, I must at this stage, I think in all fairness to the witness - one cannot read this entirely out of context, because there&#039;s a pertinent reference to paragraph 9(a)(iv) above.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="867">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	That paragraph 9(a)(iv) sets out the whole story as to what happened during the interrogation and so it is not entirely fair to suggest that the witness is in fact speaking of another so-called &quot;aanranding&quot;, because there is a reference to 9(a)(iv) above.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="868">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I think that the word &quot;aanranding&quot; means assault.  Is the burden of the question that there was in fact an assault, judging from what had been read out on this page, page 9?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="869">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, your Lordship.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="870">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I think that&#039;s admitted by this witness;  that there was in fact an assault and he gives an explanation as to how the assault occurred.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="871">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I think that Mr Bizos now says that this is a contradiction with what your client has said that there was in fact no assault on the man;  that legitimate force was used to restrain the man, but there was no assault on him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="872">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>I think that that is the distinction Mr Bizos is trying to draw. Mr Bizos, do carry on.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="873">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>May I continue?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="874">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="875">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairman.  You see, you in your own words, say that there was an assault during the interrogation.  Please tell us what form the assault took?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="876">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>In the course of the scuffle with Mr Biko, there were punches thrown by the members who attempted to restrain him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="877">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>On your version the security policemen did nothing wrong.  They acted in self-defence, all four of them against - an attack on Mr Biko?  That is what your story is.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="878">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="879">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And that you did nothing wrong?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="880">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>We had to bring - to restrain him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="881">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now, he died as a result of violence to his person.  You didn&#039;t apply any violence to his person at any time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="882">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="883">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Nor did any of your colleagues in your presence?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="884">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, we have said that during the scuffle, he bumped his head against the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="885">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>That was not violence which was wrongful;  that was in self-defence, because this man had gone berserk on your story?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="886">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, and that is the course of events as we have described it.  There had been a scuffle, he did bump his head against the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="887">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>If your story is true;  that was his own fault and not the fault of anyone else?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="888">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Please repeat the latter part of your question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="889">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m sorry, I didn&#039;t hear you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="890">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Would you just repeat?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="891">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  If what happened, is true;  his death was not your fault or the fault of your colleagues, but his own fault.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="892">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, in order to restrain him, we had to follow that course of action and in the process thereof he fell with his head against the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="893">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Please answer the question.  Do you remember what it was?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="894">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="895">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Please repeat the question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="896">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>If your story is true, you and your colleagues did nothing wrong.  The late Mr Biko caused his own death and you are - you and your colleagues are blameless of it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="897">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, as I&#039;ve told you, as it occurred during the scuffle ... (intervention)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="898">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Answer the questions, please.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="899">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>As it occurred during the scuffle he bumped his head against the wall and that is how he was injured.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="900">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Please answer the question that I have asked of you.	Do you want me to repeat it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="901">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(No audible reply).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="902">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I will either repeat it or you can give us an answer and I will continue with the Chairman&#039;s permission to ask the question until I have an answer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="903">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The events occurred as I have told it to you, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="904">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Sorry, I didn&#039;t hear you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="905">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The events were as I have earlier related them. During the scuffle Mr Biko was injured during the scuffle.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="906">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Please answer the question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="907">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Ek is moeg. (I am tired).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="908">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Bizos, maybe we can help here as members of</text>
		</line>
		<line number="909">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>the Committee.  The question that is being put to you, Mr Snyman, is that your version, the evidence you&#039;ve given here this morning is that there was a scuffle, there was some kind of a struggle between Mr Biko and members of the security police and in the course of that scuffle, Mr Biko got injured on the head.	Now if that is your version, you as members of the security police cannot be blamed for what happened to him. I think that is the question Mr Bizos is trying to put to you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="910">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="911">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Chair, it is the case that during the course of this confrontation, during the course of the scuffle, he was injured.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="912">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I am going to suggest to you, Sir, that you do not answer the question, because you cannot answer it honestly.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="913">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>As I have said, there had been no assault.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="914">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now let us go into that interrogation room of yours in Sanlam Building.  Was Mr Biko brought to that room naked?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="915">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="916">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What was he wearing?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="917">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He wore clothes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="918">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did he have his clothes on?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="919">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="920">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Who supervised his detention at the police station?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="921">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That would have been the station commander and</text>
		</line>
		<line number="922">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>his staff.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="923">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did they take instructions from the security police that as to how Mr Biko as a detainee should be treated?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="924">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="925">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Were there any instructions given to the police officers as to whether he should be kept clothed or naked?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="926">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.  There had been an instruction due to a suicide in a cell.  The instruction was that these detainees had to be detained naked.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="927">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why was he not given a very brief pair of underpants to wear?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="928">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I do not know to what you are referring; at what point is this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="929">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>At the police station of which your security police had control.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="930">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I had nothing to do with this.  The instruction came from our headquarters that they had to be detained naked and that is in fact what was done at that time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="931">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you question why, for a person&#039;s dignity that you should at least have a pair of underpants.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="932">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That was not my instruction, I had nothing to do with this instruction, that was a head office instruction.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="933">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you ever question the humanity of that</text>
		</line>
		<line number="934">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>instruction?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="935">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I realise that this was inhumane, but as I have mentioned this was a head office instruction against which I could not protest.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="936">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And were you prepared to behave in an inhuman manner, because an order came from someone else?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="937">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="938">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, why didn&#039;t you as the person in charge of the late Mr Biko&#039;s detention not accord him the dignity of a pair of underpants?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="939">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was not possible for me, since this had been an instruction from our head office.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="940">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Were your orders as to how Mr Biko was to be treated the same as your orders as to how this Mr Peter Jones ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="941">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, these instructions were the same.  As far as I can recall, he was also detained naked.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="942">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And generally, as to whether he was allowed to sleep or not or what food he should or should not get, the number of blankets and mats that he was entitled to, was the same?  Correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="943">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I had no control over that which occurred in the cells.  That was a police station.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="944">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Whether he should be taken out to the exercise yard or not?  Was it the same for Mr Jones and Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="945">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I do not know what instructions Col Goosen gave in this regard, I gave no instructions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="946">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Or whether one or other or both of them would be allowed the luxury of having a shower or not?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="947">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I had no control over that, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="948">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Was there any suggestion from anyone that detainees should not be allowed to sleep properly?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="949">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, the instruction to us as an investigative team had been that during the course of interrogation the detainee was not to be allowed sleep, so that we could break down his resistance. This was a pertinent instruction which we were given.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="950">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>... was not extended to the deprivation of sleep in the cell before interrogation started, should be applied in order that the detainee should be disorientated and more easily made pliable to your wishes during your interrogation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="951">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="952">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you know whether that was done ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="953">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I do not know, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="954">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>... to Mr Peter Jones?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="955">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I do not know, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="956">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Peter Jones is still alive and on this platform and he has given us instructions as to what happened to him.  Was there</text>
		</line>
		<line number="957">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>any reason for those in charge of Mr Biko before the interrogation commenced to treat Mr Biko any differently than what Mr Jones was treated?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="958">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I believe that the treatment would have been the same in both cases.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="959">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Thank you for that answer.  Now, you have mentioned two names of the persons that influenced your conduct and gave your orders.  The one is Genl van der Berg and the other is Col Goosen.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="960">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Instructions came from Col Goosen, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="961">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And influence from Genl Van der Berg?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="962">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="963">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>There is nothing about Genl Van der Berg in your application.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="964">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS OBJECTS</speaker>
			<text>With respect, Mr Chairman, the context in which the evidence about Genl Van der Berg was given, was that Van der Berg was in charge of the security police at the time when he was stationed in Pretoria and that was many years before the Biko incident.  In fact, if one goes back to that would have been in 1965, that was 12 years earlier.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="965">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t - if my learned friend understood it that it was suggested that Van der Berg had a direct, a direct influence in fact, then I apologise.  It was certainly not our intention to convey that, but I </text>
		</line>
		<line number="966">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>with respect do not think that was conveyed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="967">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I understood the evidence perfectly, Mr Chairman.  I want to persist in my question for - in order to make another point and not the one suggested by my learned friend.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="968">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	My reason for doing so will be come apparent in a question or two later, if I may proceed, please?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="969">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Genl Van der Berg&#039;s name is not mentioned in your application for amnesty?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="970">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="971">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Between the making of your application for amnesty and today, is that Genl Van der Berg has died in the meantime?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="972">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Col Goosen is also dead?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="973">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="974">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Might we infer a tendency on your part to put the blame on the dead;  on Mr Biko, or Mr Van der Berg, or Col Goosen?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="975">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, these persons, when I started my career in the security office, were in fact people who were alive and who exerted an influence on us through the years of their service.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="976">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now, let us come to the reason for the changing of your story.  Was the injury above Mr Biko&#039;s eye clearly visible to you shortly after it was inflicted?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="977">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, I did not notice it, otherwise I</text>
		</line>
		<line number="978">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>would have mentioned it in the entry into the occurrence book.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="979">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You persisted in your affidavit and in your evidence in Pretoria that you did not see that injury?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="980">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="981">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you recall that there was a parade of prison and police officers and police witnesses and prison officials in Port Elizabeth and in Pretoria who all said that they saw this injury.  The only persons who denied that that injury was not clearly visible, was you and your colleagues in the security police.  Do you recall that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="982">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I did not notice this mark.  I did, however, subsequently gain the information from statements received that Mr Biko had fallen from a bed and also at the Walmer Police Station, it might have occurred there. I did not notice it and that is why it is not mentioned in any of my statements.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="983">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Where did you get the story that he fell out of a bed?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="984">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I had heard that this was noted down in statements.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="985">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Whose statements were they?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="986">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I do not know the names of the persons, but I believe it was the warden and someone at the police station.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="987">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The one difference between your story now and the story that you told in Pretoria, is that in Pretoria you described how - you described how, when, after Biko fell, he fought against the</text>
		</line>
		<line number="988">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>four security policemen that he had had a scuffle with and that it took a considerable period of time to bring him under control.  Have I summarised your evidence correctly?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="989">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, that statement made at the judicial inquest was false as I have said at the beginning.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="990">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I asked you whether I have correctly summarised your evidence?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="991">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(No audible reply).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="992">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Have I correctly summarised your evidence?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="993">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I do not know, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="994">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, we&#039;ll refer to the passages in order to satisfy you and the Committee that it is a correct summary, but let us proceed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="995">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Do you recall that it was the opinion of Prof Procter, of Prof Loubser - the Chief State Pathologist and Dr Jonathan Gluckman that your story could not possibly be true, because the contracoup injury on Mr Biko&#039;s would have lead to immediate unconsciousness as if it were a knock-out blow delivered by a heavy-weight boxer.	Do you recall that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="996">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I cannot answer at this stage, but I can say that as we have stated, the way in which the head bumped against the wall, did in fact knock him out for a while, but he was not entirely unconscious.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="997">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>In Pretoria, your evidence and your colleagues&#039;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="998">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>evidence were shown to be false, because you said that Biko fell;  that is where he must have got his injury above his left eye, but despite that, he continued to fight with strength and determination that not even four security policemen could bring him under control.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="999">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Now, the convenient stage that you and your colleagues have changed the story to, was that he appeared to be confused, a sort of halfway stage to unconsciousness in order to make your story fit at least in part the medical evidence given by such eminent medical people.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1000">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Isn&#039;t that the reason that you now changed your story, because you knew that unless you admitted at least in part, that portion, the medical evidence would again show that your evidence was false.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1001">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Have you got anything to say about what I&#039;m putting to you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1002">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, what I have said in my application now, are the true facts.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1003">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What I am asking you is that;  were you not when making up this alternative story aware that you had to say something that fitted the medical evidence, at least in part?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1004">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, that is not the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1005">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>My learned friend, Mr Mpshuwulana, that&#039;s sitting next to me, has drawn my attention that in his affidavit Mr Beneke who&#039;s also sitting at that table as far as I know - I am told that he is, he says in his affidavit</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1006" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;I noticed that there was a bruise over his left eye and that his lip had some blood on it and was slightly swollen.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1007">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Any reason why you could not see what Mr Beneke has reported as having seen?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1008">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, on my observation, I did not notice it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1009">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you recall whether in your evidence in Pretoria you said that you saw that Mr Biko hit his head against the wall?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1010">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is possible, your Honour, but I cannot after all of these years, recall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1011">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, let me assure you that you did not say it, nor did you say it in your statement and my senior colleague, Mr Kentrich, put to you the contents of the affidavits of the other people who were in the interrogation room;  that none of them actually said that Mr Biko knocked his head against the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1012">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	If those be the facts;  can you explain why you did not say, either in your statement or in your evidence that Mr Biko had knocked his head against the wall?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1013">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I did say that that statement made for the judicial inquest, that that had not been founded on the actual truth.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1014">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>People lie in order to serve their purposes.  How would your purposes be served by not mentioning to Mr Biko knocking his head against the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1015">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, as we made our statements subsequent to the incident and under pressure, similarly we gave testimony in Pretoria ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1016">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I think you must try and come to terms with my question, Sir.  Let me illustrate it, Sir.  Meaning, you gave a reason to my learned friend representing you why you lied about the date when the injuries were sustained. You said because a doctor was not called on the 6th as he should have been, but because of the 7th.  As reprehensible as it may be, we can understand why you want to tell that lie.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1017">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Please explain to us what purpose would it have served to withhold that you had seen Mr Biko knocking his head against the wall? </text>
		</line>
		<line number="1018">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(No audible reply).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1019">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Any answer to the question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1020">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, in my current statement I did explain that the incident occurred on the 6th and at that time we were told that it happened on the 7th.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1021">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But surely this false version was orchestrated in order to make it as non-culpable as possible?  Not so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1022">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="1023">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is possible.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1024">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Is there no answer to my question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1025">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I said that that might have been the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1026">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>If that be so, what purpose would have been served by you withholding that you had seen Mr Biko striking his head against the wall?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1027">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I did not keep this information silent.  In the entry in the occurrences book, it&#039;s clearly mentioned that he in fact bumped his head against the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1028">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Please repeat your answer.  Neither of us heard you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1029">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(Indistinct - microphone not switched on).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1030">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, no, I am aware of that.  What I am asking you is whether or not the keeping away that fact from your statement and from your evidence, would have helped you to put together an exculpatory version?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1031">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is how we drafted our statements at that time and that is the testimony that we gave.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1032">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Please tell me who was the conductor, so to speak, in this orchestrated act of perjury?  Who was the smart guy there who could make up stories best?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1033">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, there wasn&#039;t any smart guy who fabricated it.  These facts as we have them in our statements now, are the actual facts ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1034">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m sorry, I again have not heard your answer.  Please repeat it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1035">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The facts are as we have now stated them in our statements.  There has been no change of the facts in these statements ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1036">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m going to appeal to you, Sir, to raise your voice.  I understand your Afrikaans.  I find it very difficult through this system to hear you and I would appeal to you to raise your voice.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1037">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	You asked many questions in your life.  Please raise your voice as if you were asking the questions.  What is the answer?  (Laughter/Applause).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1038">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS OBJECTS</speaker>
			<text>M&#039;Lord, I think the part that Mr Bizos and the witness are completely at cross-purposes here with both question and answer, quite frankly.  Maybe, Mr Chairman, you could ask my learned friend to repeat his question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1039">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1040">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>So that we do not have a dialogue of the death, will you please raise your voice whenever you answer so that I can hear it in Afrikaans, please.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1041">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Who was the person who put the story together, because when you have a lot of people who are going to lie, you need a co-ordinator of the lie. I&#039;d like to know who that person was?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1042">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS OBJECTS</speaker>
			<text>At which stage, M&#039;Lord, with respect?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1043">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="1044">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>On the Saturday, on the Saturday morning.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1045">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>The Goosen statements in other words?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1046">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes. Who was appointed to now work out a version?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1047">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Are you referring to the current statement or what statement?  To which statement are you referring?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1048">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I think, Mr Bizos, just be a little more patient.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1049">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I beg your pardon.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1050">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I know you are - you are being questioned about the original statement that you all made shortly after the death of Mr Biko.  The question is;  who was it that co-ordinated what was ultimately put in your statement?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1051">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, as I have mentioned earlier, this was done under the guidance of Col Goosen, our commanding officer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1052">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	In fact, he told us how to draft the statements.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1053">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>He was not present.  Col Goosen was not present when it happened.  Please tell us how - who said what?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1054">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	First of all, who said what did happen and who suggested how the truth would be insulted by making the different version?  Who - to make an elaborate story such as this, it must have taken a long time, a lot of debate and it must have had a leader.	Let&#039;s start off with who was the person that led the pack?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1055">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>As I have already testified, your Honour, Col Goosen, the commanding officer, called us all together on that particular Saturday morning and then the statements were drafted according to a version, which in fact he gave to us.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1056">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Who gave him the basic facts?  The true facts to enable him to &quot;verdraai&quot; - I can&#039;t think of the English word at the moment.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1057">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would not know.  In fact he did this and we had to draft our statements as he gave us instructions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1058">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And did he tell you not to mention in your statement that you saw Mr Biko&#039;s head hitting the wall?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1059">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is possible that the statements were drafted in that way.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1060">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>In the context in which you were working there;  of what benefit would that have been to you or to your colleagues?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1061">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>That might have been somebody else to answer.  Mr Goosen might have an answer for that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1062">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I beg your pardon?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1063">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Goosen might have an answer for that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1064">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Well, if it was Mr Goosen, did you tell him that it&#039;s too late for you to tell me that, because I went and put at least part of the truth in Exhibit C1 in the &quot;voorvalle-boek&quot;?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1065">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, he gave me the instruction to make the entry in the occurrence book, but I used my own words and my own initiative to make the entry and that is why I wrote in there that</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1066">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>he bumped his head.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1067">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>That might be a convenient stage to take the adjournment, Mr Bizos?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1068">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>As it pleases, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1069">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  We&#039;ll adjourn now and resume at 14:00</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1070">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>COMMITTEE ADJOURNS</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1071">
			<speaker>HAROLD SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(Still under oath).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1072">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Bizos?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1073">
			<speaker>CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>(cont)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1074">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Thank you. This false version that was worked out,  will you please tell us the name of everyone present?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1075">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, everybody who was involved, was present.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1076">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Please give us the names?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1077">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was myself, Daan Siebert, Niewoudt, Beneke, ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1078">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Is that all?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1079">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I think so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1080">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No-one else?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1081">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>There were others, but I can&#039;t remember all the names.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1082">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Please try.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1083">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I suppose it was the people who also looked after him during the night, I can&#039;t remember their names.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1084">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Oh, yes.  Well, were they there or were they not?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1085">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I think they were there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1086">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now, this story that you made up required you personally to be particularly inventive in the story.  Do you agree?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1087">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, that&#039;s correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1088">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You had to make up an interrogation and the answers given by the late Mr Biko and his reaction that was supposed to have lasted the whole day?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1089">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, that is not correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1090">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, didn&#039;t you have to account what happened during the 6th, once you had decided to lie that the injury and incapacity of Mr Biko, started on the 7th?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1091">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, that was because of the false statements that we compiled.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1092">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The question is that you showed yourself to be particularly inventive, because you were capable of making up a story of an interrogation, responses by Mr Biko and reactions by Mr Biko throughout the 6th;  something that never happened.  You made it up.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1093">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>When you are saying &quot;you&quot;, are you referring to him personally?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1094">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Him personally, because I&#039;m going to put to you that it was you who described what happened during the interrogation and what documents Mr Biko was confronted with and how he was - he reacted to them and how he confessed to be a terrorist and how he agreed on this, that and the other;  something that never happened. I&#039;m putting to you that that is evidence of you being particularly inventive.  Do you agree?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1095">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, it never happened, your Honour, the interrogation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1096">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>We know that, because you now tell us that it never happened.  The question is that you are a particularly inventive person, because you were able to fill the whole day&#039;s happenings that never happened and stand up in the witness-box and brazenly lie about what happened throughout that day, without it having happened. Is the answer to my question, yes?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1097">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1098">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now, do you agree that you and your associates made up false affidavits, supposedly having been made by other people with which you confronted Biko during the 6th?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1099">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Do your recall that, that that was your evidence?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1100">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It could possibly be.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1101">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No, no, no, you did it.  We&#039;re not - the Committee is not interested in possibilities.  Do you recall doing it?  Do you</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1102">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>recall saying that you confronted Biko with signed affidavits that showed that he took part in terroristic activities?  Do you recall that or not?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1103">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That was in any case a false statement.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1104">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>We know it was false. I am asking you to place on record that you admit that this is what you did?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1105">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1106">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now, how did you manage to get false affidavits signed, which were in fact signed after Mr Biko&#039;s death?  Do you remember that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1107">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(No audible reply).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1108">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you remember standing in the witness-box and saying that you confronted Mr Biko with affidavits which were produced and which were in fact dated and sworn to after Mr Biko&#039;s death and you said that these are the documents with which you confronted Mr Biko? Do you recall that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1109">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s possible.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1110">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No, we&#039;re not interested in possibilities.  Did you or did you not say that or do we have to take a little time and refer you specifically to passages in the record and read it out to you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1111">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I cannot remember, it&#039;s 20 years ago, I can&#039;t remember what was said.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1112">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now, let me put it to you;  that you produced</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1113">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>affidavits and you said these are the very affidavits that I put before Biko and he got such a shock and that he went ashen grey and he knew that that it was over for him, because we had obtained affidavits and that he knew that his political life was at an end and that these affidavits would prove that the world was being misled when it suggested that he was a peace-loving man, you had hard evidence that he had taken part in acts of terror. Do you recall that? </text>
		</line>
		<line number="1114">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is false, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1115">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I know that it was false.  Don&#039;t you remember, Mr Kenridge assured - accusing you of trying to try, to try Mr Biko after his death when you couldn&#039;t try him during his life time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1116">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(No audible reply).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1117">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Don&#039;t you recall that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1118">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(No audible reply).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1119">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You couldn&#039;t have forgotten that, Mr Snyman?  Could you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1120">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, it is so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1121">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now, for a person that showed such inventiveness as to produce false affidavits, could you please explain to us what methods you used in order to obtain false affidavits from would-be witnesses in Mr Biko&#039;s trial after his death?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1122">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>How did you manage to get those affidavits which you produced?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1123">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was from documents that were available.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1124">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>How were documents signed about what Mr Biko had done, which could be produced on the 6th when they had been signed on the 14th?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1125">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Please tell me how you managed to get false affidavits about Mr Biko&#039;s activities after his death and foolishly pretended that they were taken before his death?	How did you manage that?  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="1126">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>This was a story that was fabricated, because of the meeting on Saturday morning.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1127">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I can understand you making up lies.  I want to know how you managed to get existing persons to sign affidavits about Mr Biko&#039;s activities, after his death?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1128">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>We were in the possession of certain statements, but I can no longer recall which ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1129">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The affidavits which were signed after his death?  And you wrongly believed when you produced them that they were taken before his death.  I want to know how you managed to get false affidavits from people?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1130">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It must have been false, I don&#039;t know.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1131">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, Mr Jones gives an answer as to how you managed to get false statements from people.  You smash them up, like you did Mr Biko.  You torture them like you did Mr Jones, so that they will sign anything that you put in front of them.  Do you consider that as part of your duty as a policeman?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1132">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="1133">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I deny that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1134">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What are you denying?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1135">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I did not beat Jones up.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1136">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, did you take the trouble to read Prof Loubser&#039;s report?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1137">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1138">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Were you never interested to count the number of abrasions that there were on Mr Biko&#039;s body?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1139">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I never saw it, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1140">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  I don&#039;t know whether a copy of the post-mortem report, a very full document by Prof Loubser, also signed by Prof Simpson and also signed by Prof - by Dr Gluckman, is available to the Committee, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1141">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>It is.  It&#039;s in my bag with one of his files.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1142">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I must apologise for the, for the poor paper.  I copied from a copy that was copied from another copy.  My apologies.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1143">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Are you handing this in, Mr Bizos?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1144">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>If it pleases you, Mr Chairman, yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1145">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>All right.  EXHIBIT E</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1146">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>MR MPSHE:  It will be D, Mr Chairperson.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1147">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>EXHIBIT D?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1148">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Exhibit D.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1149">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="1150">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>EXHIBIT D HANDED IN</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1151">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now, I don&#039;t want to go through these technical terms with you, because our time is limited, but please accept from me that these - the two prominent professors and a pathologist of international repute all agreed on the condition of Mr Biko&#039;s body.  There were numerous abrasions which were noted, photographed, described and aged.  Do you know anything about that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1152">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1153">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And the conclusion is that there were numerous abrasions of different ages which could be determined by these experienced doctors that they were of various ages, varying from 48 hours before his - I beg your pardon - varying from four to 12 days, if I remember correctly on the - in the report.  Four to eight days was it?  Yes, four to eight days, but I think that in the record there was some difference of opinion in relation to the precise number of dates. But let&#039;s take four to eight days before his death.  Now, we know that he died during the night of the 11th to 12th.  Can you please tell us, going back four days, will give us the 7th or 8th, but at any rate, during the period from the 6th to the 8th is within that period, four to eight days? Can you explain to us how the abrasions that were described in this report, occurred?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1154">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS OBJECTS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I didn&#039;t have the benefit of my learned of appearing at the Biko inquest.  I did, however,</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1155">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>have the benefit of reading Prof Loubser&#039;s evidence and the report and I think in all fairness to the witness, the - my learned friend should also make it clear that those abrasions with the exception of one against the temple and one on the mouth and some marks on the wrists and the ankles;  those injuries were indeed described as minor injuries and superficial injuries by Prof Loubser.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="1156">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	With the exception of the ones that I mentioned.  It is not a suggestion - they were certainly not suggestive the other injuries of anybody being, to use my learned friend&#039;s words, being bashed up.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1157">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Smashed-up.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1158">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Smashed-up.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1159">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Do you accept that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1160">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I accept that they were described as minor injuries, Mr Chairman, in relation to the cause of death.  What I am asking about is how did those numerous injuries come about?  What caused them?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1161">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	The issue we are not dealing with, is whether they could have caused death, which was the primary concern of Prof Loubser.  We are concerned with how a person who is entitled to have his person not violated;  how so many minor injuries were suffered by Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1162">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, this could have occurred during the fight or the scuffle during which we attempted to restrain him.  Alternatively, it could have been brought about by the handcuffs</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1163">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>during the time when he was chained against the steel door.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1164">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>That was after he had been seriously injured?  If any of these injuries can be explained on the basis that they were caused by the handcuffs;  that must have been after he had been injured and was either unconscious as the doctor say or he had been unconscious as the doctor say or he was confused as you say?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1165">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1166">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1167">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now if you would bear with me?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1168">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>It has been described in simple terms as a scuffle.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1169">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>A scuffle, yes, a scuffle.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1170">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Described as a scuffle.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1171">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1172">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>It may very well have been an event in which the man was pushed around, beaten, bumped against and so on.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1173">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1174">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>But if there were minor injuries;  those could be as a result of falling and whatever.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1175">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	What I would like to know from you, is what is the purpose, obviously medical, legal questions put to this witness are not going to elicit any sensible reply?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1176">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No.  I&#039;m happy with his answer, Mr Chairman, that he does not know how any of the injuries which were recorded were</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1177">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>inflicted and we will argue the ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1178">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, unless you are drawing a distinction between the injuries that were sustained before he became unconscious and those that must have been incurred by him after he was unconscious.  If you&#039;re seeking to draw that distinction, then I can understand the purpose of your question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1179">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I have enough for my - for our purposes in relation to that and I will leave it there, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1180">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1181">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>May I just have one moment?  I just want a document found.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1182">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Was there a hosepipe in the room in which you intended to interrogate Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1183">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is possible, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1184">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Was there such a hosepipe or wasn&#039;t it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1185">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I did not see it, but it is possible.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1186">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you never such a hosepipe there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1187">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1188">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Is that the room that you usually interrogated people in?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1189">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>At that time, your Honour, yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1190">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Was that the room in which Mr Jones was interrogated?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1191">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He was also interrogated in that room, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1192">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you ever take any part in the interrogation of Mr Jones?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1193">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1194">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you know whether a hosepipe was used on him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1195">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, I do not know, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1196">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>If anyone said that he hit Mr Biko with a hosepipe and he was hit with a hosepipe on a number of occasions during the course of the interrogation ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1197">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Are you talking about Mr Jones or Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1198">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No, he says Mr Biko, Mr Chairman.  Page 41 of the papers before you.  Would that be wrong?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1199">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is possible that it might have occurred, your Honour, but I did not pertinently notice it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1200">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Please raise your head so that we can all see you saying that somebody may have been beaten in that room with a hosepipe, but that you did not see it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1201">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour, I did not see it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1202">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why?  Is the room so large or were there screens behind which beatings with a hosepipe were done?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1203">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is possible that it might have been there and that it might have been used in the scuffle to restrain him, but I did not</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1204">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>notice.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1205">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But you were there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1206">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is correct.  I had been there, but I did not see it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1207">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The presence of an instrument of torture such as a hosepipe in an interrogation room;  how can the person in charge of the interrogation, miss it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1208">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I did not see it, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1209">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>How could you have missed it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1210">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I simply did not see it, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1211">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You&#039;ve told us that.  Try and explain how you could have missed it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1212">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I did not see it.  How am I to explain that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1213">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you agree that hitting the human flesh with a hosepipe or a sjambok usually leaves marks which are described as tramlines?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1214">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is the case, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1215">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m just trying to find the passage which I remember having been used in the document, but I want to put it specifically.  I&#039;m relying on memory.  If I may just have a moment whilst the passage is identified, Mr Chairman?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1216">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	You say that if it was used, it must have been used during the course of the scuffle?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1217">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would deduce that, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1218">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Isn&#039;t it a strange way to try and restrain a person when there are four able-bodied policemen and one detainee?  Isn&#039;t hitting him with a hosepipe a strange way of trying to get him under control?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1219">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It would have been irregular.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1220">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>It could only be a punishment and not an attempt to restrain him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1221">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is possible, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1222">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You know, anything is possible.  The Committee is interested in you telling them all the facts.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1223">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I&#039;m going to ask you;  if indeed there is evidence by way of admission or by way of medical evidence that a hosepipe was used on Mr Biko, will you agree that this was not for any purpose that you have spoken of up to now, but for the purpose of punishing him or to use an even worse word, to torture him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1224">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1225">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, what would it have been used for?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1226">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Had it been used, it would probably have been to torture him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1227">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And was that within the policy of the National Party or the security police in 1977?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1228">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Irregularities did occur;  that I would admit.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1229">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No, I&#039;m asking you whether torture was advised either</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1230">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>by the security police or the National Party Government in 1977?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1231">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, yes, the country was in a state of chaos, factually in a state of war.  Probably methods were use that were not authorised.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1232">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Listen to the question please.  Was it the policy of either the National Party or the security police to use torture in 1977?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1233">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, your Honour.  (Laughter/Applause).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1234">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Can you name one politician who publicly said that torture was an instrument within the policy of the National Party?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1235">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS OBJECTS</speaker>
			<text>M&#039;Lord, with respect, the question - the answer was given in reply to a double-barrelled question;  the security police and the National Party.  He didn&#039;t qualify his answer and so perhaps before we get to politicians admitting something like that, as unlikely as it may be, perhaps my learned friend could just rectify that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1236">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Bizos?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1237">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I intend asking the question again and separating them.  I have not preferences, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1238">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1239">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Can you name any National Party politician who said that torture was a means to be used as a matter of policy?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1240">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1241">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Can you tell us any person in the security police who said that torture was to be used as a mode of achieving any objective?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1242">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, instructions had been given to break down the resistance of people.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1243">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No, but I told you how.  You don&#039;t let them sleep, but did anybody say that one of the ways in which you must break them is you must take hosepipes and beat them up? Did anybody say that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1244">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1245">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Not even Col Goosen?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1246">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(No audible reply).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1247">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1248">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1249">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>So this, if it did happen, was on your own initiative or the initiative of the people who were interrogating Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1250">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That might be the case, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1251">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>That includes you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1252">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1253">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why do you want to dissociate yourself from the piece of hosepipe that was apparently in the room in which you have habitually interrogated people and which was there when Mr Biko was to be ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1254">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, it&#039;s not an objection.  I am informed</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1255">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>by my attorney that there might have been a translation error and &quot;torture&quot; has been translated as &quot;ondervra&quot; - &quot;questioned&quot; into the Afrikaans.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="1256">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	So that of course would - that&#039;s what I&#039;m told by my attorney.  In other words, he is listening to the microphones to the Afrikaans translation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1257">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1258">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But you understand my questions in the English.  You know what torture means.  (Laughter).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1259">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Please.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1260">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You know what torture means?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1261">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I know the meaning of the word.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1262">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And you understood it when I used it a couple of times? Must we start again from the beginning?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1263">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I did hear your words.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1264">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.  As I promised, Mr Chairman, I refer to the document, Exhibit B, on page 3, paragraph 2.2.6.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1265">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>I will read it out. Photos numbers 5 and 6, diapositive numbers 2 and 9 -</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1266" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;On the posterior aspect of the left buttock, there is a 5 centimetre and 6 millimetre broad old scar of tramline appearance.  On incision shows no vital reaction.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1267">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Now, either on your old version or in your new version, can you please explain to us in view of what you have told us up to now,  how there is a scar of tramline appearance, 5 centimetres long and 6 millimetres broad?  Can you explain that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1268">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1269">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, it means that someone had given, to use an expression, a hiding with an instrument likely to have been a sjambok or a hosepipe, not so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1270">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is possible.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1271">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>When could it have happened, on your new version?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1272">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would not be able to tell you, but had it occurred, it had probably occurred during that time.  I don&#039;t know of rhR.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1273">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>From the moment, your evidence, from the moment that Mr Biko was brought into that fateful room to the moment that you tied him up on the grille with handcuffs and leg-irons, you were present throughout in that room?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1274">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1275">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But how could that have happened without you seeing it?  Did you close your eyes, your ears in such a small space?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1276">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I did not notice it, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1277">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Could you give us some idea of the size of this room?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1278">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is not a very large room.  I can no longer recall the size of the room.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1279">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Try and give us in relation to any visible space here, how big or small it was?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1280">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was a limited space, it also included a steel cabinet, a desk, a table and chairs as well as the investigative team.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1281">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You are not suggesting that Mr Biko was beaten with a hosepipe behind a chair, or a steel cabinet deliberately for you not to see? Please tell us how big or small this room was?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1282">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I do not know what size the room was.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1283">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Give us some indication here so that we can have - you know, we can see to the end of this very large hall without any difficulty despite the number of people here.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1284">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Please tell us how you could have missed it, if you can?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1285">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Is it not possible, Mr Bizos, it does not benefit him not to disclose if he had taken part or seen this particular injury being inflicted.  It doesn&#039;t benefit him from not disclosing it at this stage.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1286">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>This may be, Mr Chairman, but applicants very often in an attempt to avoid responsibility, whether moral or otherwise or for reasons best known to themselves, do not want to make a full disclosure.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1287">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	What we are going to submit is that when there is evidence, particularly by an admission made by one of the applicants, that this happened, and we have had a story from this witness that hardly anything happened to him. We are going to suggest that there is a deliberate withholding of the truth.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1288">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Is there no other explanation, because if one of his colleagues inflicted that injury, how does it benefit him from not disclosing it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1289">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Can&#039;t it be explained on the basis that if all this happened in the rough and tumble, he may not remember this particular blow being struck.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1290">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, he doesn&#039;t say that, Mr Chairman?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1291">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>But is it not a possibility?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1292">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, I would submit that the Committee at the end of it all will find not on remote possibilities, but on the hard facts.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1293">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>But I think that we must just make some progress.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1294">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And also, one would have expected that when he - when that his colleagues speaks of a hosepipe, that he himself might have mentioned something about it in his evidence.	But leave it as it may, I will leave it there and leave it to argument, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1295">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Now why did you use the handcuffs to spread out the arms of Mr Biko?  Am I indicating correctly, the way I am indicating with my arms, slightly above shoulder level and stretched out completely?  Is this how you tied his arms to the grille?  Is that how you did it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1296">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, his arms were not above his head, they were more on a level with his body.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1297">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Will you please put your arms up the way that you put Mr Biko&#039;s arms.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1298">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Like this.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1299">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No, both arms, please, the way that you did it to Mr Biko.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1300">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(Witness demonstrates).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1301">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  You show that below, below - and why did you do that?  Why did you put his arms out wide?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1302">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The intention was to reduce his resistance.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1303">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But you told us that he had been confused and hardly in a position to speak and you had the benefit of the handcuffs in order to put an end to his resistance. Why would you have to put his arms out in a comparatively uncomfortable position?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1304">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, this was done after he had been lying on the ground for a while and as it appeared that he was improving, we shackled him again and put on the foot-shackles.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1305">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why did you put his arms up in a manner which would have given an injured man some additional discomfort to that of his injuries?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1306">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>At that stage we did not bear knowledge of the manner of his or the nature of his injuries.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1307">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What made you - what did you think had caused his slurred speech and his inability to behave in the normal aggressive way that he had behaved before?  Did you not think that it was an injury?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1308">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It might well have been the knock against the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1309">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No, listen to the question please.  Why is it necessary to break the resistance of an injured man?  If you&#039;ve got a pair of handcuffs and that one handcuff on the grille would have been sufficient with his arm in a comfortable position, why is it necessary to put his arms out in an uncomfortable position?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1310">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was in order to break him down.  We did this when it appeared as if he had improved and that is why we did it again.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1311">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You also used leg-irons.  How long is the chain between each of the leg-irons?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1312">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s a fair length.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1313">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Could you give us some indication of its length?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1314">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would say as long as indicated.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1315">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Approximately 35 centimetres, more or less?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1316">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It would be longer than 35 centimetres.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1317">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Half a metre?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1318">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Let&#039;s say half a metre, maybe.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1319">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Half a metre.  And what - it doesn&#039;t matter, really - but</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1320">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>why was it necessary to use both hands to be hand-cuffed on the grille and the leg-irons with the chain passed through one of the bars, was it?  So that he didn&#039;t have free movement of his legs?  Have I got the picture correctly?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1321">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>We were not aware of whether he would be able to come up with his tricks again and that is why we chained him down like that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1322">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why was the chain put on the other side of the one bar, other than to restrict even the movement that leg-irons allow?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1323">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is possible that we acted in an inhumane manner.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1324">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, that&#039;s one of the franker answers that you&#039;ve given the Committee.  Can we summarise that the putting up of his arms, that the manner in which you did and using the leg-irons in the manner in which you did, was a form of torture?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1325">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.  That might have been the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1326">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>For how long did you keep this injured man, which we know had a serious head injury, for how long did you keep him in this position with his arms and legs?  For how long?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1327">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, after I reported to Col Goosen and after he had seen the person himself, he remained in that position.  Subsequent to that, I withdrew, so I would not know when he was unchained.  There were people who guarded him through the night.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1328">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Was he given an opportunity - what time did you go away?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1329">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I reported to Col Goosen after the incident.  I then accompanied him to the interrogation room.  After he had assured himself of the exact circumstances of Biko, he instructed me to withdraw.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1330">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I thought that you waited there in order to get a report whether his position improved so that you could continue the interrogation.  Isn&#039;t that what you told us?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1331">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, but that is what I said to the people who were supposed to guard him;  that should there be an improvement, they should call us.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1332">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>So you waited there, hoping that that would happen?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1333">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1334">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What time did you go away?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1335">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It would have been through the course of the morning.  I cannot recall exactly at what time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1336">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>How many hours was he left in this position?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1337">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would not be able to tell you, because I had to withdraw at a later stage.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1338">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What time did you leave?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1339">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is possible that it might have been after 10 or at half past 10.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1340">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But you must have waited for the better part of the day for him to recover so that you can continue with your interrogation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1341">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Col Goosen instructed me that I had to provisionally withdraw;  that he would handle the situation himself, subsequent to that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1342">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you give any instructions as the person who originally put this person in a position which you considered as torture;  did you give any instructions as to when it should stop?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1343">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.  I withdrew and Col Goosen said that he would handle the matter after that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1344">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>When did you see him again?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1345">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Through the course of the afternoon I returned and at that time the situation had not changed.  The next morning I also made enquiries and I was told that the situation had not changed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1346">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And during the afternoon, was he still in the same position?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1347">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I cannot recall, but it is possible.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1348">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Were you not concerned as to how long a person was shackled against a grille, unable to rest his legs by movement or his arms by movement or to sit down, particularly as he appeared to you to be injured?  Did you not care?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1349">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, it was not a matter of a lack of care.  I would agree that it was inhumane, but we were acting under instructions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1350">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now, did you know that a person with a head injury, evidenced by slurred speech, by uncoordinated movements, requires medical attention as soon as possible?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1351">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I am aware of that, your Honour, but as I have said, I reported the matter to my commanding officer and subsequently had nothing to do with it since he had told me that he would handle the situation from thereon.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1352">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Would it not be your responsibility as the chief interrogator of Mr Biko to look into his condition and find out whether he required any medical attention?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1353">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is exactly why I brought the matter to the attention of Col Goosen.  We said to him that the person does appear to have been injured.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1354">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What do you do when a person that receives even a minor injury on the rugby field or some other sport;  what do they do with him almost immediately?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1355">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The correct procedure would be to call in a medical officer as soon as possible.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1356">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, and to have an X-ray to see whether there was any brain damage in order to try and give him medical attention as soon as possible to try and reverse the effects of the brain damage.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1357">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would agree with you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1358">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you now?  And you knew that one of the sure signs</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1359">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>of disorientation and slurred speech is of brain injury?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1360">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That might have been the case.  I am, however, not a medical person.  I would not bear knowledge of this.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1361">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, rugby coaches are not doctors either, but they know what to do with a person that has had a head injury and has got slurred speech and is confused.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1362">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I believe that I did my duty when I made this known to my commanding officer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1363">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What arrangement was made whilst Mr Biko was shackled against this grille about his toilet requirements?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1364">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That would have received attention from the person guarding him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1365">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Wasn&#039;t it your general responsibility in order to see to it once you chose this cruel and inhuman manner of practically suspending him from a grille, to make some sort of suggestion as to how his toilet requirements may be addressed?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1366">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I did mention it to my commanding officer ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1367">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What did you say?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1368">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>... and I told him of the injury of the scuffle;  that we wanted to restrain the person, that we wanted to exert pressure on the person.  I brought this information to him, I informed him that he probably hit his head against the wall and he then informed me or told me that he would handle the matter from there onwards. I then left the matter in his hands.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1369">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>When did you find out that Mr Biko had become incontinent as a result of his injury?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1370">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m not following?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1371">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>When did you find out for the first time that Mr Biko could no longer control his functions;  that he could not keep his urine back, had not control over it?  When did you find that out?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1372">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I bear no knowledge thereof.  That was determined by Col Goosen and the medical doctor who attended to him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1373">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you know that early in the morning of the 7th?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1374">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I was informed by the people who guarded him who said to me that his situation had not changed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1375">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Didn&#039;t you see him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1376">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is possible that I&#039;d walked in there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1377">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why do you say, speak of possibilities?  Don&#039;t you remember that you must have gone in in order to see how the person that you had manacled against the grille was faring the next morning;  whether he was still in the same position or whether he had been given an opportunity to sleep or anything like that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1378">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>My responsibilities ceased after Col Goosen instructed me to withdraw.  He had said to me that he would handle the matter from there onwards.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1379">
			<speaker>JUDGE WILSON</speaker>
			<text>May I just ask you a question; when you went there the following morning, did you still see him in the same position he was when you left on the previous day?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1380">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I am not able to recall whether I entered the room or simply asked a question of the people who were guarding him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1381">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you not learn the next morning that he had wet his pants, his blankets and that he was completely disorientated?  Didn&#039;t your learn that the next morning?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1382">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I did not receive this information.  I was only told that he had been seen by the doctor.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1383">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m sorry, there was a break in the sound.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1384">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I bear no knowledge thereof.  I had been told that the district surgeon did see him on the 7th.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1385">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you see Mr Beneke coming suddenly into the room and rugby-tackling Mr Biko with a shoulder and finishing against the wall?  Did you see that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1386">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1387">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now, you will recall that I spoke to you about Mr Niewoudt admitting that he hit Mr Biko with a hosepipe.  I want to read to you, in Afrikaans, because of it&#039;s importance, a passage from Mr Siebert&#039;s application in paragraph, the second last paragraph on page 13(f).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1388">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="1389">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Page 6.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1390">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Page 6 of the typed page 6, but the - of Mr Siebert&#039;s application, but 13(f) of the paginated papers.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1391">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	You have it before you.  Please read it out.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1392" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Tydens hierdie gestoeiery ...&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1393">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Please read that out aloud.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1394">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>&quot;During this wrestling and fighting</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1395" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>I became aware of Det-Sgt Niewoudt on several occasions beating Biko on the back with a piece of cut-off hosepipe.  Subsequently the three of us grabbed Biko and moved with him in the direction of the corner of the room and ran against the wall into the wall with him.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1396">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1397">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>As I have read it there, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1398">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I know that you&#039;ve read it.  I&#039;m not asking you whether you read it correctly.  Are the facts correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1399">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>As I have said, your Honour, that might have occurred, but I bore no knowledge thereof.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1400">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, do you agree that if this is correct;  that it is capable of the interpretation that this was not an accidental hitting against the wall, but a charged, a wilful charge against the wall so that Mr Biko&#039;s head would bang against the wall?  Do you agree with that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1401">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1402">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What would the words mean?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1403" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Ons het hierna al drie vir Biko vasgegryp, waarna ons met hom in die rigting van die hoek van die vertrek beweeg het en met hom in die muur vasgehardloop het.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1404">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s not an accident.  That&#039;s using him as a battering ram.  Isn&#039;t that so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1405">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, that should have been due to the momentum of the movement.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1406">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did they try to get him into the corner?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1407">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>If I recall correctly, all of them fell on top of each other in the corner of the room.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1408">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did they try to push him to the corner.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1409">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>In order to restrain him, it might have been possible to move him into the corner ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1410">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>... the system again.  I can&#039;t hear you.  I&#039;m sorry.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1411">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is possible that when they attempted to restrain him;  that in the course of the scuffle, they moved into the corner of the room.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1412">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you still maintain that this hitting of his head</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1413">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>against the wall, despite your own version at the bottom of page 6 and this passage that were read out from Mr Siebert&#039;s application, that it was not an attempt to actually hit his head against the wall?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1414">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1415">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Very well.  If we can go back to the 7th;  was there any discussion as to what you were going to tell the doctor?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1416">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I had no part in that, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1417">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Please repeat that, because this system isn&#039;t working again.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1418">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I had no knowledge of what the doctor said.  I never went into - I never conferred with the doctors.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1419">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Was there any suggestion made that the doctor should be told that Mr Biko had had a stroke?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1420">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I am not aware of any of the medical negotiations made by Col Goosen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1421">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you know of the suggestion that Mr Biko had had a stroke?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1422">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m not able to recall that, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1423">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>In any event, on the morning of the 7th, you were either told or you saw that Mr Biko was not in a state to answer any of your questions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1424">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is the case, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1425">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>That was from way back on the 6th right up to the</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1426">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>morning of the 7th.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1427">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1428">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Where were you when Dr Laing came to this interrogation room?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1429">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I was continuing with my work on the fifth floor and I was no longer involved in the interrogation room.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1430">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did anybody, even Dr Laing, or anybody else, ask you how this injury was inflicted?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1431">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>At no point did I enter into conversation with the medical doctors.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1432">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>We know that Dr Laing gave Col Goosen a false certificate.  You know about that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1433">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I have heard of the certificate.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1434">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Was it a false certificate.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1435">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would not be able to say, since I had not been present when the doctor saw Biko.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1436">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But you knew that the certificate said that there was nothing wrong with him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1437">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That occurred between Col Goosen and the doctor.  What he told the doctor, I would not know.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1438">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you know that the doctor certified that there was nothing wrong with Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1439">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I didn&#039;t bring the word of the doctor into doubt</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1440">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>when he had issued a certificate.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1441">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But a man is injured and he can&#039;t be interrogated and this urgent interrogation has got to be interrupted. 	That means the certificate given by the doctor that there was nothing wrong with him, must be false, or you must be mistaken and you must have thought that it was okay for you to go on with the interrogation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1442">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.  Col Goosen handled the entire matter, also the visits of the doctors and I had not been present.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1443">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But you&#039;ve heard that the doctor had given a certificate that there was nothing wrong with Mr Biko?  You&#039;ve already said that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1444">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1445">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But you also knew that he was injured and that he could not answer any of your questions and you therefore were frustrated in your investigation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1446">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1447">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But did you continue your investigation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1448">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1449">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why not?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1450">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Because they told us that he was not in a state that we could continue with the interrogation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1451">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why should anybody say that if you have a medical certificate, say that there&#039;s nothing wrong with the man?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1452">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I did not have this medical certificate in my possession.  It was between Col Goosen and the district surgeon.  No-one brought information to me or came to tell me that there was nothing wrong with him and gave me instructions to continue with interrogation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1453">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>It was handled by Col Goosen after the visit of the doctor.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1454">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Were you not anxious after the visit of the doctor to try and find out what was wrong with Mr Biko and for how long he expected to be indisposed?  How long the doctor thought he would be indisposed in order for you to carry on with your work?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1455">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I was instructed to continue with my work already.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1456">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The work that you had to do with Mr Biko, I&#039;m talking about.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1457">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I am sorry, your Honour, but my work was on the fifth floor in my section.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1458">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Didn&#039;t you want to know from anyone when it was expected that you would be able to continue interrogating Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1459">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>How did it come to your knowledge that this man was not fit enough for you to continue questioning him?  How did that come to your knowledge?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1460">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, on the 7th he was not yet fit enough for us to continue with the interrogation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1461">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you subsequently receive a further report that he</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1462">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>was not yet fit enough?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1463">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I believe that I was told by the people guarding him that he was not yet fit enough for us to continue with the interrogation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1464">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>The question that is being put to you by Mr Bizos is:  were you not concerned about when he was likely to be better for you to carry on with your questioning?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1465">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, surely I was concerned about his state of well-being, but I was clearly instructed that I was not to handle the matter any further and that it was now to be dealt with by Col Goosen and that he was in good hands.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1466">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>In the good hands of Col Goosen for what?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1467">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>With regard to that fact that I withdrew and Col Goosen handled the matter from then onwards.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1468">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What would he deal with further?  The interrogation or the state of health or non-health of Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1469">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, that is the reason why I went to report to him;  with a view to obtaining medical treatment.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1470">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>I went to him.  I reported that the person was injured.  One can certainly understand it that once you have reported it, you would expect there to be medical treatment.  I therefore did not involve myself any further.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1471">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You see, this certificate must obviously have been obtained for the purposes of misleading people that may enquire about the state of health of Mr Biko.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1472">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That might well be the case, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1473">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And if you are correct in your observation and the people that were looking after him after you had left the room, were of the view that he was not a fit person to be interrogated any further and Mr Goosen - Col Goosen must also have know that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1474">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is the case, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1475">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Then the only inference that can be draw is that either Dr Lang and Col Goosen conspired to put a lie out to the world, or Mr Goosen lied to the doctor?  Can you think of any other possibility?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1476">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1477">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And surely you must agree with me, that if you could see that Biko was not a fit and proper person or rather was not fit for further interrogation, that must have been even more obvious to the doctor?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1478">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That would be the case, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1479">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>So, would you agree that one of the persons that was in that building, that a conspiracy must have been entered into between Col Goosen and Dr Laing to lie about Mr Biko&#039;s condition?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1480">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is the case, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1481">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And I want to suggest to you that the reason why that conspiracy to lie was entered into, was that if Mr Biko lived and complained about his injuries, he would have been branded as a liar if he complained about it by producing a certificate of good health, which was false.  You knew that, didn&#039;t you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1482">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would agree with you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1483">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS OBJECTS</speaker>
			<text>Sorry that I speak, M&#039;Lord, there was a double-barrelled question again.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1484">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, let&#039;s take them separately.  You agree that there must have been a conspiracy to let out a falsehood between the doctor, Dr Laing and Col Goosen?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1485">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is possible, your Honour, although as I have said, I had not been present when the doctor and Col Goosen discussed the matter.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1486">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No, but you agreed that that is entirely possible from the facts as you knew them.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1487">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is possible.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1488">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now you make it a possibility and before you said that that was so?  But let&#039;s be satisfied with both your answers for the time being.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1489">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Isn&#039;t that the time that the falsehood trail started,  long before the Saturday that you say that you were told that you had to lie?  On the morning of the 7th, the trail of falsehood had already started?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1490">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.  I had no part in that discussion with the medical doctors.  That was done exclusively by Col Goosen.  Only the subsequent Saturday, after his death, did we meet.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1491">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The trail of falsehood had started on the 7th, partly for your benefit and for the benefit of Siebert and Niewoudt and Beneke, not so?  For whose benefit was this conspiracy to give out a false picture to the world?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1492">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The only conclusion that I could make is that the commanding officer, Col Goosen wanted to protect the security branch and the Government of the day by not giving the true facts out.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1493">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And you who were responsible for the injuries and the torturing of Mr Biko?  So it was partly to protect you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1494">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I did not torture him, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1495">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t think it&#039;s necessary for us to go very much further along those lines.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1496">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1497">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Whether it&#039;s to protect him or the security branch.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1498">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1499">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Was that the only untruth that was made at an earlier stage?  Let me remind of a few others.  Was Mr Biko hyper-ventilating? You know breathing heavily and irregularly from the time that he </text>
		</line>
		<line number="1500">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>was injured?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1501">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, I could not answer that question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1502">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Didn&#039;t you see him or hear him hyper-ventilating?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1503">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, I had already withdrawn.  I do not know beyond that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1504">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you know that he had been a medical student?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1505">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1506">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you and your colleagues give out that this hyper-ventilation was done deliberately by him and that he could simulate hyper-ventilation, because of his medical training?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1507">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, I would not be able to say, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1508">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>There was another untruth that was brought into being as soon as he was injured;  that he was doing a form of yoga which enabled him to behave in this unnatural way to pretend that he was ill when in truth and in fact there was nothing wrong with him.	I am not for one moment suggesting that yoga is used for this purpose, but among your colleagues this was another myth that was created.  Did you hear anything about that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1509">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1510">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, if you and your colleagues didn&#039;t start these myths, who did?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1511">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it was not me personally and with the drafting of the statements we were given instructions by the commanding officer.  Whether he had further knowledge, medically, I would not know.  He had conferred with the doctors.  He might have heard something from the specialists?  I would not be able to answer that question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1512">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you know of any reason why Mr Biko was not sent to hospital?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1513">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would not be able to answer that question.  That was the task of the commanding officer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1514">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Didn&#039;t you ask?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1515">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He had instructed me to withdraw and I assumed that he was going to take the necessary steps.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1516">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Didn&#039;t you feel any moral responsibility for this person to even ask how is he, why isn&#039;t he being sent to a hospital, how is he getting on?  Did you never ask anybody any of those questions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1517">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, my moral responsibility, when I reported the matter to my commanding officer and he told me that he would handle the matter from there on, had ended.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1518">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You had been given a very important task in order to investigate Mr Biko and Mr Jones.  Did you make any enquiries at all between the 6th, when you knew that he had an injury to the time that you heard that he had died?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1519">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I had mentioned earlier that I made enquiries from the people guarding him concerning his health.  They then informed me that nothing had changed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1520">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Whose decision was it to send him to the prison hospital?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1521">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That must have been Col Goosen.  I had not been involved in that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1522">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Who took him to the prison hospital?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1523">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I cannot tell you, I do not know.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1524">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you make enquiries as to how he was getting on at the prison hospital?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1525">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I made no further enquiries, since people were giving him attention.  I had withdrawn already.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1526">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Didn&#039;t anybody tell you that he couldn&#039;t handle a spoon and that he had to be fed by a warden?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1527">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I do not know whether this finer detail had been reported to me, but I had heard that he had been moved to the prison hospital.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1528">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Didn&#039;t anybody tell you that he got into a bath of water with his clothes on?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1529">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I cannot recall whether anyone told me that at that time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1530">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Didn&#039;t anybody tell you that he suffered from echolali - that is baby-talk that if you say mummy, the baby says mummy and if you say daddy, the baby says daddy;  that he was merely repeating the words used by others?  A clear indication that his</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1531">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>mind had been smashed up?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1532">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I am not aware of that, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1533">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Would there have been any reason for anyone to keep you in the dark about this condition of the person that became what he then was as a result of interrogation in your interrogation room?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1534">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I had heard that he was taken to the hospital and also heard that certain specialists paid attention to him. I saw no further need to be involved as I had been instructed to withdraw.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1535">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did anybody tell you why he was moved from Eben Le Roux Dementery Hospital facilities at the hospital to a police cell?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1536">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is possible that someone might have mentioned it to me.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1537">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why?  Why would they have taken him away where he had some sympathy at least from the prison personnel back to a police cell?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1538">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That did not occur under my instructions.  I had no part in that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1539">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But when you heard about it, did you not care?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1540">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>What about confining your questions to what he does know and what he did do.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1541">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, but I then ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1542">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>You know putting questions to him why so</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1543">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>and-so didn&#039;t do or why he wasn&#039;t told about it.  There might have been many reasons why he might not have been told about it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1544">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I&#039;ll accept that, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1545">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Did you know anything about his trip on - in an ordinary vehicle from Port Elizabeth to Pretoria?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1546">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I have heard of that, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1547">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Before it happened?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1548">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1549">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>After it happened?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1550">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I believe I heard of it on the day during which he had been transported.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1551">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>That would have been before there was any agreement to tell lies, wouldn&#039;t it?  Before Saturday?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1552">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That would have been arranged by Col Goosen;  the transport arrangements to Pretoria.  I had no hand in it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1553">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>When did you hear for the first time that he was on a hunger strike?  He was supposed to be on a hunger strike.  When did you hear that for the first time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1554">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I cannot remember, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1555">
			<speaker>CHAIRMAN</speaker>
			<text>Did you hear being told - were you ever told that he was on a hunger strike?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1556">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(No audible reply).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1557">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Were you ever told that he was on a hunger</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1558">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>strike?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1559">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Not as far as I can recall, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1560">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you see him as he was being taken away from Port Elizabeth to Pretoria?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1561">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1562">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you know what his condition was at that time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1563">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1564">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m going to read to you from page 58 of your evidence which reproduces your statements.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1565" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;I was present on 11/9/77 when Capt Siebert and other certain members went with Steve Biko from Walmer Police Station to Pretoria&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1566">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Was that true or false?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1567">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I cannot recall.  If it is stated like that in my statement, it might be the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1568">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, why did you say that you didn&#039;t know when he was taken - you didn&#039;t see him being taken to Pretoria?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1569">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, with respect, this is 20 years ago.  I cannot recall every detail and I do really honestly not know whether I had been present.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1570">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>These were not ordinary everyday events, were they?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1571">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would agree with you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1572">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What was his condition when he was put into that vehicle?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1573">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I did not see him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1574">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You say that you were there, in an affidavit made shortly after the events. I just want to put the date on record, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1575">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>If I may assist my learned friend, M&#039;Lord, I think all those affidavits were taken on the 17th of September, the Saturday.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1576">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The one that I am referring to, was made on the 20th of October as appears on page 54 of the record, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1577">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	You said in a statement on the 20th of October, according to page 54 of the record, that you were at the police station when he left.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1578">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That can&#039;t be correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1579">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why would you have said a thing like that in your statement in October if it was not correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1580">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I have no explanation for that, but I am convinced that I had not been present.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1581">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, did you know why he was being taken to Pretoria?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1582">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(No audible reply).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1583">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you hear my question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1584">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="1585">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I heard that he had been moved to Pretoria, yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1586">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The question was: did you know then why he was being taken from a police cell in Port Elizabeth to Pretoria?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1587">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, Col Goosen would have controlled those matters.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1588">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The people that took him there were in your unit and your juniors?  Correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1589">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour, but they were then under the command of Col Goosen since he had arranged that trip to Pretoria.  I was not involved.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1590">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>If your affidavit on the 20th of October is correct, you must have been - you were there.  Was there any discussion as to what was to be reported to the prison in Pretoria when they got there?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1591">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS OBJECTS</speaker>
			<text>M&#039;Lord, with respect, that&#039;s ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1592">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I bear no knowledge of that, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1593">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS OBJECTS</speaker>
			<text>With respect, that&#039;s not a proper question.  The witness has said that he&#039;s not even certain whether he was there;  that he cannot comment whether he was there when they - and now my learned friend is putting the question as if he was there and if he should have knowledge.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1594">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s not a proper question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1595">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;ll accept the criticism and I will alter the form of the question, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1596">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Whether you were there or not;  was there any talk as to what would be reported to Pretoria as soon as your underlings got there with the very seriously ill Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1597">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I bear no knowledge thereof, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1598">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I am going to put to you that you and your underlings were going to mislead - before the Saturday when you told us that Mr Goosen told you to mislead people.	Before they got to Pretoria it was agreed that it would be reported to Pretoria that this person was not really ill, but that he was shamming?  Do you know anything about that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1599">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1600">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>That they mustn&#039;t be taken in by his hyper-ventilation?  Do you know anything about that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1601">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I bear no knowledge thereof, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1602">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And they mustn&#039;t be taken in on his pretence of being disorientated?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1603">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, I bear no knowledge thereof, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1604">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And they must not be taken in by any feigning of illness, because he was merely trying to mislead the security police in order to avoid interrogation?  Do you know anything about that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1605">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I bear no knowledge thereof, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1606">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Can you advance any reason if that is what happened according to the prison officials who made affidavits why that misinformation should have been kept away from you by your juniors?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1607">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I was no longer involved.  I was not involved with that particular incident.  It was handled by Col Goosen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1608">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did your junior not owe you the duty of keeping you informed of what happened to this - to this important detainee that you were supposed to interrogate.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1609">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, subsequent to Col Goosen taking over the entire matter, it was not necessary for them to bring any report to me.  It was in the hands of my commanding officer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1610">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Or that he - that he had been on a hunger strike?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1611">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, I do not know of that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1612">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>If I were to put to you that the apparent reason for removing him from here, was because the senior officer, Johan Coetzee and others at the head office were very concerned that Mr Biko in his miserable condition may be recognised by some decent person and make it known that he had been smashed up?  What would you say to it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1613">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(No audible reply).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1614">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you want me to explain the question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1615">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="1616">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Pleas do explain it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1617">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I have suggested to you that the reason why he was taken to Pretoria, was because it was realised that someone would recognise him here in his smashed up condition and make his condition known to the public, to the media.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1618">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I could not comment on that.  As I have said, the entire matter was now in the hands of Col Goosen.  What he had known and what he had discussed with people at head office, I would not know.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1619">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Can you think of any reason why, while he was so obviously sick, he was so urgently transported into another jail all the way in Pretoria? Can you think of any reason?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1620">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, I could not comment on that.  I had no part in that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1621">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Where were you when you heard about Mr Biko&#039;s death?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1622">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Probably at the office.  I can no longer recall on what day I heard this news.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1623">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Who told you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1624">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I do not know.  Probably it was common knowledge.  It might even have been in the newspapers.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1625">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Was the event so insignificant to you that you don&#039;t remember how you heard about it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1626">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is not that it was insignificant to me.  Probably it would have come by means of an official telex message or a phone call to our office, but I can no longer precisely recall how and when I was informed, but I did bear knowledge that he had died.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1627">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The Minister responsible for your department;  who was it at the time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1628">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, if I recall correctly it would have been Mr Jimmy Kruger, but I am not sure.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1629">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you hear him say that Mr Biko died as a result of being on a hunger strike?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1630">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is possible that I might have bore knowledge of this.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1631">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, did you or did you not hear it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1632">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I cannot recall.  I did not ever tell the Minister anything about a hunger strike.  It&#039;s probably something that happened via Col Goosen, my commanding officer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1633">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You knew it would be false.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1634">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s possibly false.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1635">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You&#039;re not really putting in issue that it was in fact false.  Even after what you know today, are you, Mr Snyman?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1636">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Bizos, let&#039;s carry on.  Let&#039;s move on.  I don&#039;t think this kind of cross-examination is taking you much further.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1637">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1638">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	When you decided to apply for amnesty in relation to this matter;  who drew your application?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1639">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>If I recall correctly, this was done during the month of December.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1640">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Who drew the application?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1641">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Attorney Francois van der Merwe.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1642">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>On your instructions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1643">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, Your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1644">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And who drew what is said in paragraph 10?  Who drew that paragraph?  You needn&#039;t read it all at this stage.  I&#039;m just asking you who drew this up?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1645">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That would have been done in consultation with my attorney.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1646">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>It was done, was this on your instructions?  Now, please put that document away, Mr Snyman and please tell us in your own words, in your own words what was the political objective that you wanted to achieve by any act that you committed?  	Please tell us in your own words what was the political objective that you wanted to achieve?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1647">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, our actions ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1648">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I asked you, you personally;  what objective did you want to achieve?  I am not interested in the draft that your attorney has dished out in numerous applications.  I am asking you for your</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1649">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>reasons, personally?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1650">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	What objective did you want to achieve by committing any wrongful act that lead to Mr Biko&#039;s death?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1651">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, the purpose had been that I as a member of the security branch served the Government of the day, namely the National Party.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1652">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Since I believed that what we were doing at that time was right, it was the right thing to do.  We had anarchy in our country.  It was expected from us by the Government, by the National Party, by our head office, that we had to act in the circumstances.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1653">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I felt that because of the sacrifices that we had to make, that I in fact could apply for amnesty.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1654">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No, I did not ask you whether you have the right to apply for amnesty or not.  I asked you in your own words to please tell us what political objective did you wish to achieve by performing any unlawful act relating to the death of Mr Biko. Please try and answer that question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1655">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Since we were at the sharp end of the struggle against the SACP/ANC alliance and the Black Consciousness and Black Power Movements and since we had to put everything into the struggle to attempt to prevent the subversion of the then Government and since by means of the politicians and of our head office, we were encouraged to fight this fight.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1656">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I feel that now at the end of this period and at the beginning of a new democracy, I have the right to apply for amnesty.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1657">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I will not put the same question, but let&#039;s try and analyse what you have said yourself and not what is in the document.	Did you understand ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1658">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I want to ask you, I am very tired.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1659">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>(Commotion in hall).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1660">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Please!</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1661">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>(Commotion in hall).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1662">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Please,  want you to allow these proceedings without much further interference or disturbance from you.  Please allow this witness, this applicant, to give his evidence in a quiet atmosphere.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1663">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Proceed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1664">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I am not a healthy person and I cannot - do not feel that I can continue.  I am using medication.  My age must be taken into account.  I do not feel that I can continue any longer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1665">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I would, with respect, I am not likely to finish, even if we do go on for the next fifteen minutes.  I would suggest, with respect, that we take the adjournment and ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1666">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Booyens, it&#039;s quite clear that your client is not well enough to proceed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1667">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="1668">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1669">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>And am inclined to agree with his request that we adjourn this stage..</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1670">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Certainly, M&#039;Lord.  Yes, I in fact have got a medical certificate relating to what ailments he suffers from.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1671">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1672">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>So I could perhaps, if necessary hand that up to you ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1673">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>If it&#039;s necessary you may do so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1674">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>MR BOOYENS HANDS IN MEDICAL CERTIFICATE ON MR SNYMAN</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1675">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I will adjourn these proceedings now.  Mr Bizos, may we resume at 09:30 tomorrow morning?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1676">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Of course, Mr Chairman, as you please.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1677">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Mpshe?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1678">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>That is in order, Mr Chairperson.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1679">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Erasmus?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1680">
			<speaker>MR ERASMUS</speaker>
			<text>That would be in order, Sir.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1681">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>We adjourn these proceedings now and resume at 09:30 tomorrow morning.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1682">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>COMMITTEE ADJOURNS</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1683">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>ON RESUMPTION ON 11 SEPTEMBER 1997 - DAY 2</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1684">
			<speaker>HAROLD SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(Still under oath).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1685">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Booyens, is your client well enough?	  Is your client well enough, Mr Booyens?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1686">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, M&#039;Lord.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1687">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Proceed, thank you,  Mr Bizos.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1688">
			<speaker>CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>(cont)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1689">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Thank you, Mr Chairman.  When we adjourned yesterday, we asked you to please give us in your own words what the political objective was that you wanted achieved by doing what you say you did together with your colleagues to the late Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1690">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	You have had overnight to think about it.  Could you please in your own words tell us precisely what the political objective was?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1691">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, the goals of the security branch as one of the structures of the National Party Government, had been to maintain internal safety and security by means of combating terrorism and protecting the State order against expansion of Communism which found expression in the activities of the liberation organisations;  the ANC/SACP alliance, the PAC, the Black Consciousness Movement and the South African Students&#039; Organisation as well their military wings;  Umkhonto weSizwe, APLA and BCN and the struggle which they waged in order, by</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1692">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>violent means, to subvert the status quo.  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="1693">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	In this process we found it necessary to detain people, to arrest people and detain them, to interrogate them in order to restrain the activities of the organisations mentioned and to prevent the overthrow of the then State order by means of violence.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1694">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Finished?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1695">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1696">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The question was what political objective did you and your colleagues in the security branch hope to achieve by what you did and your colleagues did to Mr Biko on the morning of the 6th of September 1977. Would you mind answering that question please?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1697">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I think the question is directed to what happened to Mr Biko and not all the various organisations.	What did you hope to achieve in treating the late Mr Biko in the way he was treated?  I think - is that what you&#039;re really trying to achieve?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1698">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Precisely, Mr Chairman, thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1699">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, the detention of Mr Biko was intended to obtain information from him with regard to his activities within the Black Consciousness Movement, or rather the Black People&#039;s Convention and in that way, by means of what we could obtain from him, to gather the necessary evidence with which we could later bring a case to court.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1700">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The reason for the scuffle, if it was in fact a scuffle and not a beating up, came about as a result of his refusal to get off the chair.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1701">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1702">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>That is not a refusal to give information.  It is a refusal by a man who thought of his human dignity as having a right to be seated when there was a chair available.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1703">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.  His human dignity might well have been violated ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1704">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1705">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The instruction had been from our seniors that we should break him down in order to obtain information from him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1706">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But let us just take this step by step.  He didn&#039;t refuse to answer your questions that led to this scuffle or beating up?  Correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1707">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, he was resistant and did not want to reply to our questions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1708">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>He insisted on sitting down.  That is the evidence that you have given us, and the scuffle or beating up came about as a result of a stubborn person in your view of not wanting to get up at your request or command?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1709">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it was clear that he did not want to co-operate with us.  It was clear from his behaviour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1710">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>His behaviour was that he refused to submit to your will that he should not be seated?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1711">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it had been the instruction that we were not allowed to let him sit down;  that we had to break him down in order to obtain the information.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1712">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why would his remaining in a seated position - it would just not be possible for you to interrogate him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1713">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.  It remains that the instruction to us had been that he was not to be allowed to sit down.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1714">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Specifically you had an instruction that he should not be allowed to sit down?  Is that what you are saying?  Or was it your decision that this particular detainee should not sit down?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1715">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, during his interrogation by the interrogation team he was instructed to stand up from the chair.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1716">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>In the background in which you grew up and in which you had a training;  we are not talking about now when you profess to be a democrat, but at that time, was it your general view that a Black man had to obey an order of a White man, particularly a White man who was in the security police?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1717">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, according the State system or State order of that time, it had been our thinking that that is the way that things should be done.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1718">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Your state of mind at that time and having regard</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1719">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>to the words that you used in your application, was that the late Mr Biko was stubborn, &quot;parmantig&quot; and too big for his boots for a Black man.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1720">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, that was the case.  That is the impression that he created to - for us;  that he did not really want to listen to us.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1721">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, but he was a proud man and that your self-respect would have been insulted if he continued sitting on the chair?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1722">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, we had to realise that he was a high profile person in the Black Consciousness Organisations.  He was a president of one of these organisations and by sitting he maintained his own status.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1723">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I see.  So that you were offended, personally offended that you, a White man, had a pretender of political power before him and that you were not going to tolerate it and you told him to get up?  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1724">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1725">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And had it not been for your personal pride, combined with the personal pride of your fellow security policemen, and he was allowed to sit down, the scuffle or beating up may not have happened at all?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1726">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, our instruction had been very clear from our commanding officer with regard to the manner in which we</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1727">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>had to break down this person.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1728">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I want to read your own words in your application at the bottom of page 4 to the top of page 5</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1729" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Biko appeared resistant, challenging and aggressive.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1730">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Was that because he insisted on sitting down?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1731">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, his entire attitude was recalcitrant, challenging and aggressive.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1732">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Siebert described him as &quot;weerbarstig, minagtend en aggressief&quot;.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1733">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1734">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now, did he show all those attitudes by insisting on his right to sit down?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1735">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, when we started with him it already appeared clearly that he was not going to co-operate with us.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1736">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But he sat down right away.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1737">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour, and then he was taken from the chair and he was instructed to stand again.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1738">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Taken from the chair; how was he taken from the chair?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1739">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it was by one of the members of the investigative team, who grabbed him up from the chair or lifted him up from the chair and told him to remain to standing.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1740">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="1741">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>How did he lift him up?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1742">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, I just got a request that the witness be requested to speak a bit harder.  Apparently the interpreters have got a difficulty in hearing him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1743">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Tell the witness that he should speak a little louder.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1744">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>How did he pick him up?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1745">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He lifted him up as indicated and he lifted him up by holding his clothes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1746">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did he say anything - first of all, who was it that lifted him up by his clothes?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1747">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was done by one of the members of the investigative team, Capt Siebert.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1748">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did Mr Siebert say anything whilst he was doing this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1749">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>If I can recall correctly he said to him;  you must stand up.  You must stand.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1750">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes and did Mr Biko say anything as a result of that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1751">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I cannot recall, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1752">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did anybody say to him that he was now in security police territory and he had to do what he was told?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1753">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is possible that that was said to him, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1754">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, and then he disobeyed that and he sat down?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1755">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="1756">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1757">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>In your personal life and in your professional life, did you personally resent Black people not listening to you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1758">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, in this particular case it was very clear that he was going to be recalcitrant and that he was not going to want to listen to us.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1759">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why don&#039;t you answer the question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1760">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The instruction had been that this man was not going to sit down.  We obeyed this instruction.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1761">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Would you please answer the question.  In your personal and your professional life, did you resent Black people not listening to you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1762">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1763">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, why didn&#039;t you say so when the question was asked the first time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1764">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I said at the beginning that through the attitude of the detainee it was clear that he was not going to co-operate with us.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1765">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You must have hated this &quot;parmantige&quot; man whom you would have probably have described by another word for his actions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1766">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, I did not hate him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1767">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Were you upset by his behaviour?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1768">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was clear that he was not willing to co-operate with us, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1769">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Were you upset by his behaviour?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1770">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, we did probably have enough time to continue with the interrogation.  It had been our hope that he would find some or other way in which to answer questions when these were directed to him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1771">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I will ask the question for the last time.  Were you upset by his behaviour?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1772">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, his behaviour did not really anger me or upset me.  We did endeavour to get information from him and at that time it appeared to us that we were not going to get the information from him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1773">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you at that time try to persuade him that you were not upset;  you just wanted to facilitate the performance of your duty and ask him to please sit down?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1774">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The idea had not - was not that he was going to be allowed to sit down.  He was going to stand while the interrogation was in process.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1775">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You told us yesterday that you couldn&#039;t tell us how big this room was, 619.  We went there yesterday and it&#039;s a room hardly bigger than four by five metres.  Would you agree with that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1776">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That might be the case, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1777">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>It was an ideal interrogation room from the point of view of not being interrupted and not being detected for any crimes that may be committed within it, because it did not have any door to any passage.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1778">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1779">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>It was enclosed by 621, which was a much larger room and 617, which was smaller than 621, but a little larger than 617.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1780">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1781">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>There was no access to 619 unless you went through either 621 or 617?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1782">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1783">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>It was also a room hidden at the back of the building, overlooking a small yard.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1784">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That might be correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1785">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why might it not be correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1786">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I am not saying that it is not correct, but as you know I had been in that building only a very long time ago.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1787">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>That would have been even more - more helpful to you to say whether what I put to you, was correct or not.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1788">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I understand by a gesture made by my learned friend that he has a plan.  If that would be the case, could we have a look at it and consider whether we should put it in as an exhibit?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1789">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>COMMITTEE MEMBERS VIEW THE PLAN AND DISCUSS IT QUIETLY</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1790">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The plan that is tendered here is not what we saw and we are instructed by Mr Jones that it is not what he knew at the time.  So I will not hand it in.  My learned friend can have a look at it and do whatever he wants to do with it.	During interrogations in room 619, where the doors of 617 and 621 kept closed?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1791">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1792">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The two doors leading from 619 to 617 and 621, were they kept closed during interrogations?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1793">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is possible, your Honour, but I cannot recall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1794">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, generally speaking, in view of the highly sensitive matter that you dealt with and also as a cover up for any unlawful activities that you may have wanted to perform in that room, you would not leave doors open or ajar for passers by to hear screams or to hear protests or even perhaps to hear the information that was being imparted, do you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1795">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, that had not been the idea.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1796">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, why was such a little hole at the back of the building comparatively speaking chosen as the interrogation room?  Four by five at most for a table, a chair, a filing cabinet, four or five interrogators and the detainee?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1797">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Why was that room chosen for this purpose?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1798">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, that room was always used for interrogation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1799">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>That was the only room that was used for interrogation?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1800">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>To the best of my knowledge, yes, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1801">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The question was, why did you choose such a comparative small hole in order to do your job?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1802">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, that was the office in which interrogations were carried out with all other detainees.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1803">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>All the more reason;  why?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1804">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(No audible reply).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1805">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Any answer?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1806">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Could you please repeat your question, I did not clearly hear it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1807">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why was this particular little room, so isolated from the rest of the world, chosen as the room at which all interrogations were to take place?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1808">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, that was the office used by the section which dealt with Black issues or Black matters.  It was common usage to use that room for that purpose.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1809">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1810">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I cannot offer a reason for that practice.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1811">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>May I suggest one to you: so that the screams of your</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1812">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>victims could not be heard.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1813">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1814">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And where you felt confident that the detainees that you interrogated were completely helpless.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1815">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, that is not the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1816">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Was Mr Beneke in that room from the time of the arrival of Mr Biko in it to the time that he was picked up from the chair and told that he was not allowed to sit?  Was Mr Beneke in that room?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1817">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, he was not present in the room throughout since he had not been a member of the investigative team.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1818">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Oh!  Where was his office?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1819">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was one of the offices in that area, but I cannot recall exactly which one of these offices.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1820">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Was it 617 or 621, the two adjoining offices of 619?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1821">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It might possibly be one of these, yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1822">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You don&#039;t remember where his office was.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1823">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, this was not my section and I was not exactly sure where these people were placed, but I would presume that it was one of these offices.  My office was on the 5th floor.  The 6th floor was not my everyday office.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1824">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Who were the people - what was the job of the people</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1825">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>in their offices around 619 and 617?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1826">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, these were all of the persons who dealt with Black matters.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1827">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Did Mr Beneke have no - nothing to do with the interrogation of Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1828">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1829">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why did you in Exhibit C1 - did you say</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1830" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Maj Snyman reports that on 7/9/77 at about 07:00 in the morning, he, Capt Siebert and Warrant-Officer Beneke interrogated detainee Bantu Steven Biko at the security branch offices in the Sanlam Building.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1831">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it had probably been the time when Warrant-Officer Beneke came in to assist us when we were involved in the scuffle with Mr Biko.  He was in one of the adjoining offices at that time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1832">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, you now say that Mr Beneke&#039;s entry was by chance.  He had nothing to do with the interrogation.  Why did you in your handwriting make an entry on the 7th saying that he, you and Siebert were to interrogate him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1833">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That would probably have been an oversight on my part when I made the entry into the occurrences book, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1834">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But why did you say that he was part of the interrogation team?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1835">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He was not a member of the interrogation team, but he was involved in the scuffle or the fight that morning of the 7th.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1836">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The question, is why do you now say he was not, when you wrote down on the morning of the 8th that he was?	Have you any explanation for that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1837">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1838">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Isn&#039;t it because you are trying to assist him by keeping him out of this as far as you possibly can?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1839">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1840">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now please tell us in your own words what happened after Mr Siebert had picked him up?  What happened then?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1841">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, when Capt Siebert plucked him from the chair and when he punched at Capt Siebert, a fight ensued.  The noise was heard by Warrant-Officer Beneke, who then entered the room to assist.  He then shouldered the detainee in his stomach.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1842">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Let&#039;s take it step-by-step.  You say that Mr Biko punched Mr Siebert.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1843">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1844">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS OBJECTS</speaker>
			<text>With respect, he said he punched at him, M&#039;Lord.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1845">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No, that&#039;s not what he said.  I&#039;ll put the question again and he repeated it, M&#039;Lord.	I will appeal to my learned friend to let the record speak.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1846">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>He has on a previous occasion said that he can&#039;t say whether the punch landed or not.  He attempted to punch.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1847">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>That was the previous evidence.  Now he twice said that he punched Capt Siebert, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1848">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Ask him to clear that up.  What did he mean by that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1849">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He did punch at Mr Biko, your Honour.  Capt Siebert then ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1850">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Just one moment, please.  Did the punch land on Mr Siebert?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1851">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I cannot recall whether he in fact managed to hit him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1852">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now, whether he punched him or punched at him with a blow that did not land, how did you feel about the cheek of this Black man towards your White colleague?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1853">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it was clear at that time that he was recalcitrant, that he was not willing to co-operate.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1854">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>The question is how did you feel about that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1855">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, since it had been clear that we were not going to get co-operation from him and that he was not willing</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1856">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>to stand up as instructed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1857">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>How did you feel about the fact that your security police colleague, a White person, was punched at or punched by a Black man?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1858">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, at that moment it meant nothing to me.  The goal had been to interrogate this man and it was clear that he did not want to co-operate.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1859">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>If you felt that his failure to stand up - I want to use your own words, was &quot;weerbarstig, uitdagend en aggressief&quot;, what words would you use to describe your feelings when he had the cheek, on your version, to punch or attempt to punch your colleague? What words would you use, which must obviously be stronger than those that you have already used.	What stronger words would you use to describe your feelings?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1860">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it was clear that he did not want to co-operate with us.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1861">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why don&#039;t you try to answer the question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1862">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Please just answer the question, it&#039;s simple.  How did you feel about all this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1863">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, we felt that we had to obtain the co-operation of the man in order to continue with our interrogation and it was clear that we were not going to obtain this co-operation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1864">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>My question is very directed; whether you were</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1865">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>annoyed, whether you were angered by what you saw or whether you were untouched by what you saw?  That is the kind of answer that is being asked by Mr Bizos.	How did you feel about this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1866">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I felt that we were not obtaining co-operation from the person.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1867">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You don&#039;t want me to ask the question again, I take it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1868">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1869">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;ll accept your non-answer.  Now, please tell us that - what happened after that punch was thrown, precisely what happened; who did what?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1870">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Capt Siebert was the first person to act.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1871">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What did he do?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1872">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He pulled him up from the chair by his clothes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1873">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>He had already done that.  The question was, what did he do after this punch or attempted punch?  What did Mr Siebert do, or anyone else?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1874">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Capt Siebert pushed against the chest.  At the same time Warrant-Officer Beneke entered the room and shouldered him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1875">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Just a moment, please.  Where was the chair when the attempt was made to punch?  In what part of the room, the small room, was the chair?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1876">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The chair had been pushed by the detainee.  I cannot recall on what side of him it was standing on the floor.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1877">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I know that chairs stand on the floor.  What part of the room was it on?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1878">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was close to where the detainee was standing.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1879">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Obviously if he was picked up from the chair, it must have been close.  The question is, what part of the room was this chair on when that happened?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1880">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I cannot at the moment remember exactly where in the room it was standing.  It was in the room.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1881">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>On the southern wall; on the northern wall; on the western wall or the eastern wall?  Please give us some idea where this chair was when this attempted punch was made?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1882">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It would have been closer to the northern wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1883">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The northern wall, yes.  What was the result of Mr Biko being pushed on the chest by Mr Siebert?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1884">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He staggered backwards, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1885">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did he not fall?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1886">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The moment when the other man joined in and bumped him with the shoulder, a general melee then happened.  There was a scuffle amongst everyone and in that process, there was a pushing around.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1887">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Let me give you notice that it was easy in 1977 and it may be easy now for you to say that there was a scuffle without giving us any details as to how it may have happened.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1888">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I&#039;m going to suggest to you that if you persist of just speaking of a general scuffle, we will submit to his Lordship that you are not telling the truth and that the reason for it is that you have converted a beating-up to a scuffle.	If you want your story to be believed that there was a scuffle, you will please tell us details of it and not try and evade the questions.	Have I made myself clear?  </text>
		</line>
		<line number="1889">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Now let me try again.  What happened to Mr Biko when he was pushed immediately after he tried to punch Mr Siebert?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1890">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1891">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>END OF TAPE 1 - DAY 2 - SIDE A</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1892">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>... in your prepared version.  I am asking you specifically;  what happened to Mr Biko as soon as he was pushed by Mr Siebert?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1893">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>He had already told us that he staggered backwards.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1894">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.  He did stagger backwards.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1895">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did he fall?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1896">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He would have fallen after he was bumped by the other man.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1897">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>We&#039;re not talking about the other man yet.  Did he fall when he was pushed by Mr Siebert?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1898">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, I doubt that he had fallen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1899">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="1900">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did he stagger with the chair behind him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1901">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is possible, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1902">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, anything is possible.  Where was the chair when he staggered backwards?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1903">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I cannot exactly say where the chair had been.  It was somewhere on the northern side of the room.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1904">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Was Mr Biko in front of the chair or behind the chair when Mr Siebert pushed him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1905">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would say that it was on his side.  It was next to him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1906">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>He was next to the chair, yes.  Then you say that Mr Beneke rushed in?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1907">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1908">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>How many people were in the room before Mr Beneke came in?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1909">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it would have been myself, Capt Siebert and I believe also Warrant-Officer Niewoudt.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1910">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you try to do anything before Mr Beneke came in?  Did you try to do anything to restrain Mr Biko on his alleged aggressive behaviour before Mr Beneke came in?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1911">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1912">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did Mr Niewoudt try and do anything before Mr Beneke came in?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1913">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="1914">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I cannot exactly recall, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1915">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What did Mr Siebert do after Mr Biko had staggered back?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1916">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He made an attempt to restrain him, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1917">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>By doing what?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1918">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>By means of the scuffle that then ensued, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1919">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The scuffle that had ensued is a generalisation that I will not accept, Mr Snyman.  Please answer the question.  What did Mr Siebert do immediately after he pushed Mr Biko and Mr Biko staggered backward?  What did Mr Siebert do?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1920">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I am certain that there were punches dealt out at that point.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1921">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Punches dealt out by whom?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1922">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That would have been by Capt Siebert and also Beneke who then joined and at a later point the other two men also joined in.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1923">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Please, I appeal to you to remember we are going to take this step by step, as painful as it may be to you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1924">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>What did Mr Siebert do after Mr Biko staggered back.  You say punches were administered.  Who administered punches on Mr Biko before Mr Beneke came in?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1925">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I cannot recall who hit what when, but there certainly, in the scuffle, there would have been punches administered.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1926">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Administered by whom at whom?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1927">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That would have been by Capt Siebert who took the first action against the man.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1928">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Against who is the man that he took first action against?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1929">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That would have been the detainee.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1930">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>He has a name, Mr Biko.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1931">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Mr Biko, that is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1932">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>So that we now have established that before Mr Beneke came in, Mr Siebert punched Mr Biko.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1933">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1934">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What part of his face or body did he strike him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1935">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I cannot tell you specifically, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1936">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Was it his face that was struck before Mr Beneke came in?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1937">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is possible, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1938">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>When we have this shiner above his eye, is that how that injury came about?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1939">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, Your Honour, I cannot answer that, because I do not know.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1940">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="1941">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>How many punches did Mr Siebert throw?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1942">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would not be able to say, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1943">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Please tell us how many punches Mr Siebert threw before Mr Beneke came into the room?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1944">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it is not possible for me to tell you, I do not know, I cannot recall that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1945">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, you recall that he was punched and you would recall that he was punched by Mr Siebert on a number of occasions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1946">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Please try and remember on how many occasions Mr Siebert punched Mr Biko before Mr Beneke came in?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1947">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, Mr Beneke entered the room very shortly thereafter, since he had heard the scuffle.  It would have been a matter of seconds and he was in the room.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1948">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Within that period, however long or short it may have been;  how many blows did Mr Siebert administered against the body of Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1949">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I cannot say, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1950">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You spoke in the plural.  It must have been more than one.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1951">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is possible, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1952">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And we know that there was, I can think of the Afrikaans word only, because it&#039;s used in the papers, a &quot;geweldige aanval&quot; on his face and there was a cut lip.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1953">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Can you say whether those two prominent injuries were administered by Mr Siebert before Mr Beneke came in or as Mr Beneke was coming in?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1954">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I would say that that occurred during the scuffle when the other men also joined in.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1955">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Right.  Let us see.  Who else threw punches at Mr Biko&#039;s body before he fell?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1956">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, when Mr Beneke joined in, as well as officers Niewoudt and Marx, at that point the fight started, the effort to restrain him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1957">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m talking about the punches.  Who else, besides Mr Siebert, punched Mr Biko before he fell?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1958">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, there were punches dealt out, administered left and right.  I cannot recall where - who hit whom.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1959">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did Mr Siebert throw punches at Mr Biko?  You have already told us that.  Did Mr Niewoudt throw punches at Mr Biko before he fell?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1960">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is possible that in the fight punches were dealt out or administered, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1961">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Before Mr Biko fell, did Mr Niewoudt throw punches at Mr Biko, yes or no?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1962">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS OBJECTS</speaker>
			<text>M&#039;Lord, with respect, the witness have said it&#039;s possible.  To expect he must say yes or no in the</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1963">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>circumstances is hardly fair.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1964">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Bizos, I think you should remember that it has occurred 20 years ago and maybe some allowance must be made for that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1965">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1966">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>If he does not have a detailed ball-by-ball recollection of what happened.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1967">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m not expecting that, Mr Chairman, but I am entitled, with respect, to say when I say to him in that Mr Siebert threw punches and how many and he says there were others that threw punches as well;  I am entitled, with respect, to try and determine who were the others that threw punches. I am not going to insist that I should have a precise account, but the identity of the person that threw punches, is of the absolute importance.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1968">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Well, there&#039;s no doubt about that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1969">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1970">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>There&#039;s no doubt.  As long as you don&#039;t ask him who threw how many punches and give us an account of each one and where the punch landed ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1971">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No, I ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1972">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>That kind of cross-examination is not really ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1973">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No, I merely want to know the identity of the persons</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1974">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>who threw punches at Mr Biko before he fell.  He told as that Mr Siebert did so.  When I asked you how many, you said I don&#039;t know many he threw, but that there were others as well.  I want to know who the others were that threw punches at Mr Biko before he fell. Was it Mr Niewoudt?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1975">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, in the fight it was Cpt Siebert, Mr Niewoudt, as well as Mr Beneke.  It is possible, as I have told you, I cannot recall who hit what.  With respect, as your Honour have said, this was 20 years ago.  I am not able to recall this.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1976">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>As you stand there, you recall Mr Beneke and Mr Niewoudt throwing punches and that is what you mean that they took part in the fight.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1977">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That was part of the fight, your Honour.  In the attempt to restrain Mr Biko.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1978">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, we&#039;re going to come to the other parts.  We are talking about the throwing of punches.  Did Mr Niewoudt and Mr Beneke throw punches at Mr Biko before he fell?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1979">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, that is possible, but I am not able to say.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1980">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Are you able to say whether anybody did not punch Mr Biko?  Can you recollect of somebody who did not punch Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1981">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, Mr Marx and myself were in the background.  The scuffle were between the other men and Mr Biko in the effort to restrain him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1982">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>That means that you and Marx as far as you can remember, did not throw punches?  Is that what you&#039;re saying?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1983">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1984">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But the others must have done, once you have made that distinction.  Why do you remember, I can understand you yourself that you kept out of it.  You can remember Mr Marx not doing it.  Does that not mean that the others must have of necessity or highly probably joined in in punching Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1985">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I think it follows, Mr Bizos.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1986">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Thank you. Thank you, Mr Chairman.  I will leave it there. From what door did Mr Beneke come?  Did he come from 617 or 621?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1987">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I cannot tell from which office he came, but he did hear the  - he did hear what happened and then he entered the room.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1988">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Wasn&#039;t, which door was - had a grille on leading to 619?  Was the grille, that you&#039;ve manacled Mr Biko in, between 617 and 619 or 619 and 621?  Which one did you manacle him on?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1989">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That would have been in room 609.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1990">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s possible that the witness said 619, but the</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1991">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>interpreter could not hear clearly.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1992">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, 619; was it the door between 619 and 617 or 619 and 621?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1993">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it would have been from the passage to room 619.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1994">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Was that door not - did that door have a grille on?  The door between 621 and 619, did that have a ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1995">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS OBJECTS</speaker>
			<text>No, M&#039;Lord, he referred to the - he said the &quot;gang&quot;, the passage.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1996">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Don&#039;t you agree that there is no door.  I think we have already agreed that there is no door from 619 directly onto the passage.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1997">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>In other words, can you enter the room 619 from the passage?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1998">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Directly from the passage?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="1999">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2000">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Without going through either 617 or 621.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2001">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I believe that it is possible, your Honour, but I cannot exactly remember.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2002">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now, where was Mr Biko when Mr Beneke entered 619?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2003">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>To the northern side of the room, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2004">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Could I just clarify with the witness from the campus</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2005">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>point?  Is that north this way?  Well, we will make a copy of this for the court during the adjournment?  Is that north?  Yes, he was, you say, on the northern side of 619.  Was he on the western side of the door between 617 and 619 or on the eastern side of the door in 619, between 619 and 617?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2006">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I cannot exactly remember at that stage.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2007">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>At that stage, when Mr Beneke came in, there were five people in the room, a desk, a cabinet and a table.  Or rather, I beg your pardon, and a chair.  Correct?  Five people; the detainee, four of you, a cabinet, a desk or table and a chair. Correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2008">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>How many people did you refer to?  Could you just repeat the number of people?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2009">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Five.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2010">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>There were five, Mr Biko and four of you, would that be correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2011">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That would be correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2012">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Now, you would hardly have been able to swing the proverbial cat in a room so small with five people in it, a desk and a chair, could you have?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2013">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would agree with you that this was a very small office.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2014">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Now, ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2015">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s obvious that even if they didn&#039;t swing cats, they swung punches.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2016">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Unhappily that is so, Mr Chairman.  Now tell me of necessity,  when Mr Beneke came in there must have been at least a couple of you between Mr Biko and him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2017">
			<speaker>INTERPRETER</speaker>
			<text>The interpreter could not hear the speaker.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2018">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, the people then present were Mr Beneke, Mr Siebert, Mr Niewoudt and Mr Marx, who then joined in.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2019">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Were punches being thrown when he came in, when he, Beneke, came in?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2020">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, at that time, at that point, Mr Beneke came in to assist in the restraining of Mr Biko.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2021">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What was the question?  Don&#039;t you pay any attention to the questions, Mr Snyman?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2022">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	When Mr Beneke came in, were punches being thrown at Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2023">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>In the process of restraining him there would probably have been punches dealt out.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2024">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Nobody cleared the way for Mr Beneke to come in as a sort of eighth man for a rugby tackle?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2025">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, Mr Beneke entered after he heard the scuffle inside.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2026">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The gravamen of the question, is that nobody would</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2027">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>have had to open the way for Mr Beneke to come in when he decided to do so, because of necessity. Having regard to the smallness of the place and that probably punches were being directed at Mr Biko at that stage, he could not have done this rugby tackle, unless the five - the other four people there, made an opening for him to do this tackle?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2028">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Do you agree with that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2029">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2030">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Right.  Please tell us, I want to go away from the sequence and finish up where you say Mr Biko hit his head against the wall.  Which portion of the wall did you say Mr Biko&#039;s head hit?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2031">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It would have been on the northern side of the room, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2032">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Is that where he was originally?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2033">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2034">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;ll ask you again.  On the western side of the door between 617 and 619 or the eastern side?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2035">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would say the northern part, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2036">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>We know that, but the room as small as it is, has a door leading to 617. Was it on the left-hand side of that door which would have been the west or the right-hand side of that door which would have been the east? Where was he when Mr Beneke charged him with a rugby tackle?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2037">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="2038">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I could not say exactly, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2039">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, let us assume for the time being that it was either the one or the other. Where was the chair in relation to Mr Biko when this tackle was executed?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2040">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I would not be able at this stage to tell you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2041">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>When these punches were being directed at Mr Biko, did he put up his arms or take any defensive action against his attackers?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2042">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, he was a large man and also from his side that would have been the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2043">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The question was whether he took any defensive action by putting up his arms in order to deflect the punches from his attackers?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2044">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it would not have been clear for me to distinguish from that which exactly occurred.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2045">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, we don&#039;t know what that means, but let us proceed.	Mr Siebert, Mr Niewoudt were young, properly trained policemen, fit, I take it - correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2046">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2047">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>They also had the advantage of having you and Mr Marx as reserves if the need arose?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2048">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2049">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You also had a welcome reinforcement in the person of Mr Beneke?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2050">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2051">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>As soon as Mr Beneke charged him, what happened to Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2052">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, there was a general fight, an effort to restrain Mr Biko at that point and to be able to handcuff or shackle him again.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2053">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Was he surrounded at that stage against the northern wall by the five of you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2054">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The people involved in the fight were the persons that I&#039;ve already mentioned.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2055">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No.  Was he surrounded by the five of you against the northern wall?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2056">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, we were in the office.  However, the men whom I have already mentioned, joined in the fight in an effort to restrain him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2057">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now what did they do in that fight at that stage?  What do you mean, the fight?  What did they do?  What did the men do; that is Siebert, Niewoudt, Marx, Beneke and yourself?  What did each one of you do?  Let us start off with Mr Siebert.  What did Mr Siebert do after Biko was rugby-charged?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2058">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, the fight then ensued to restrain him.  In that process they fell, they bumped against chairs and tables in an effort to restrain him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2059">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What did you see Mr Siebert doing in this fight immediately after the rugby tackle?  What did Mr Siebert do?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2060">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would not be able to say exactly, but there was a roundabout scuffle.  You must remember, Mr Biko was a strong man and in this wrestling scuffle there was an effort to pin him down so that he could be chained or cuffed again.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2061">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, what did Mr Siebert do in this effort?  Did he grab his hand and try and twist it perhaps behind his back or did anyone of them try to pin his arms against his body? Did Mr Siebert do that or any of those things?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2062">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS OBJECTS</speaker>
			<text>M&#039;Lord, really, the witness have told my learned friend now he cannot give exact details what was happening.  Your Lordship pointed that out to my learned friend as well that this happened.  This is really getting to a stage where I think I must object to this specific line of questioning being unfair at this stage and should be disallowed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2063">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>You&#039;re being asked questions on matters of detail about what each of your colleagues did or what you remember them doing.  Now if you can remember what each one did, then you must answer the questions, but if you can&#039;t, then you must say so.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2064">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I want to say that at this point I do not recall every single punch or every single part of the struggling or scuffle.  This was very long ago.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2065">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>So as far as Mr Siebert is concerned, you cannot remember whether or not he punched Mr Biko after he was rugby tackled by Mr Beneke?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2066">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>He has already given his answer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2067">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Is that the answer?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2068">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I cannot say exactly, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2069">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You can&#039;t tell us whether Mr Beneke or Mr Niewoudt or Mr Marx punched Mr Biko after he was rugby tackled?  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2070">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s possible, your Honour, that punches would have been administered to bring him under restraint.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2071">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Punches on his face?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2072">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I cannot say that it was on the face or on what part of the body, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2073">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Although you cannot mention specifically which person may have punched at that stage, you do recall that punches were thrown at Mr Biko by one or other of them?  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2074">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2075">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The punches were being thrown for the purposes of restraining him, you say?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2076">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="2077">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2078">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Isn&#039;t it a strange way to try and restrain a person when you - to punch him when he is so heavily outnumbered?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2079">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, he would have offered resistance and in order to restrain him it was necessary for these people in order to shackle or cuff him again  ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2080">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, you ...</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2081">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>... and it&#039;s possible that people were pushed around or bumped.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2082">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You&#039;re trying too hard to give an innocent explanation for the serious injuries.  Just listen to the question and answer it, please.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2083">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Would you not agree that it&#039;s a strange way when you have a five against one situation and the objective is to restrain a person, punching him unless you intend to knock him out, is the least effective way of subduing him.  Would you not agree with that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2084">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2085">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>If you want - if you have a person so outnumbered as five to one;  the one can take the one arm, the other the other arm, the other the one leg and another the other leg and you&#039;ve got one to spare and you are in complete control.  Not so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2086">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>All five did not take part in the fight, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2087">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What I&#039;m saying to you;  that to punch a person for the purposes of restraining him when he&#039;s outnumbered five to one, is laughable.  Do you agree with that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2088">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2089">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, if it&#039;s so laughable, can you explain why your colleagues were punching him if the intention was to restrain him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2090">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, Mr Biko was a strong man and force had to be applied to restrain him in order to shackle him again.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2091">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>When you say force had to be applied;  are you really saying that in addition to punching him, he was kicked.  They grappled with him, they held him.  Was all that done or was he merely punched?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2092">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>There was no kicking, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2093">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now, don&#039;t you agree that punching would only add to the fury of a man who was aggressive, unless the punch rendered him unconscious?  Then you would have had an opportunity to subdue him effectively.  Do you understand the question.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2094">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2095">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you agree with the proposition;  that unless you knock a man out, you do not restrain him by punching him?  It&#039;s as simple as that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2096">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, he was not knocked out.  It was in the scuffle that he fell and bumped his head against the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2097">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The question was, your colleagues that were punching him would only have infuriated him by continuing to punch him and not to subdue him.  They would only have subdued him by punching him if they knocked him out?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2098">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, this was not a continuing fight of several minutes.  It was a very brief event.  Then everyone fell on top of each other and in that process it is clear that Mr Biko bumped his head against the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2099">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I won&#039;t ask the question again, but we will submit that you do not want to answer it. Now, you told us that he knocked his head on the northern wall.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2100">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2101">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>He never really moved away from the northern wall?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2102">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is possible that in the scuffle he might have moved away from the wall, but when he fell, he bumped against that wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2103">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>If he was against the northern wall when he was being punched and then he was, in some way or another, dropped down, he must have been facing his assailants?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2104">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2105">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2106">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Just to make it doubly clear;  he didn&#039;t turn to put his head against the northern wall against which he had his back when his assailants were punching him when he fell.  He was still facing his assailants?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2107">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2108">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>So that when he fell, he fell back onto the northern wall?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2109">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2110">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>If his condition was as a result of a fall and an injury to the head, it must have been an injury to the back of his head?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2111">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I cannot say exactly where his head touched the wall, but his head did touch the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2112">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>At the time when he had in front of him his assailants against whom he tried to protect himself?  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2113">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It was in order to restrain him, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2114">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, but we&#039;re only dealing with the positions now.  He was facing into the room.  He was against the wall and his assailants brought him down against the wall, his head to the back of the wall and facing his assailants.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2115">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2116">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Therefore, if he did injure his head in this fall, he injured the back of his head?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2117">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is possible, your Honour.  I am not able to say.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2118">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Whether he injured his head or not, but you know that a logic tell us from what, if what you told us, is correct, that he must have knocked the back of his head against the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2119">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is possible, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2120">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But you saw this fight.  We&#039;re not interested in possibilities.  On the basis of the positions that you had given us, he must have knocked the back of his head?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2121">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2122">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It is correct that he bumped his head, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2123">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But from the positions that you gave us when that happened, was that he could only have bumped the back of his head.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2124">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That might well be the case, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2125">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2126">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I have some difficulty in understanding all this.  Please help him.  We all know there was medical evidence that Mr Biko received an injury to his head. My question to you is, did you actually see Mr Biko&#039;s head bump against the wall or is that a conclusion you draw from what you had heard?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2127">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I could deduce out of the fight that he bumped his head against the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2128">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>In other words you didn&#039;t see the head bumping against the wall.  It&#039;s a conclusion you drew?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2129">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I had heard it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2130">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s the position. You&#039;d &quot;hoor&quot; what?  The sound of the head bumping against the wall or you had heard that he had hurt his head?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2131">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Ek het gehoor dat hy sy - oh sorry - I heard that he bumped his head against the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2132">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>You didn&#039;t see how the head bumped the wall?  That&#039;s correct, isn&#039;t it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2133">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="2134">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>And you won&#039;t know whether Mr Biko was standing at the time that he bumped his head or he was kneeling or whether he was on the ground when his head bumped the wall?  You wouldn&#039;t know that either?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2135">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>It would be my opinion that he was on the ground when he bumped his head.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2136">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s an opinion, but you didn&#039;t see?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2137">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2138">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Well now, Mr Bizos, this question of whether the back of the wall hit him;  the back of his head hit against the wall or the front or his head hit the wall, is irrelevant, really.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2139">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m indebted to the clarification and I will proceed further, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2140">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.  We might consider adjourning at this</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2141">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>stage.  We&#039;ll break for 15 minutes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2142">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2143">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>COMMITTEE ADJOURNS</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2144">
			<speaker>HAROLD SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>(Still under oath).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2145">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Mr Bizos.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2146">
			<speaker>CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>(cont)</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2147">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	At the inquest in Pretoria, you were shown coloured photographs.  Do you recall?  Which clearly showed an injury above the eye, do you recall that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2148">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="2149">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>And also show a cut lip.  Do you recall that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2150">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2151">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, you didn&#039;t really need the photographs to remember that there was an injury above the eye and that there was a cut lip. You yourself saw it when it happened?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2152">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I didn&#039;t see the bang on his head or punch against his head.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2153">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What about the punch that cut his lip?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2154">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I mentioned that in my occurrence book entry.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2155">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you see him bleeding?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2156">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>There might have been blood on the lip, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2157">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Never mind might, did you see him when you were busy restraining him against the grille and putting the handcuffs on on his arms and the leg-irons, did you see that he was bleeding?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2158">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I saw the injury to his lip, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2159">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you see him bleeding?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2160">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>There was blood on the lip, that is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2161">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Was he bleeding?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2162">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The blood was not dripping, but there was some blood on his lip due to this injury.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2163">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did anybody put any disinfectant or try to attend to this injury of his?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2164">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I cannot recall, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2165">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, wouldn&#039;t you&#039;ve remembered if a small piece of humanity was shown to him in the circumstances that prevailed in that room?  Would you have forgotten if any human behaviour was exhibited towards him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2166">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I might be able to describe this as inhumane, but at that point I reported the matter to my commanding officer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2167">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What good does it do to a man with a bleeding lip that you report it to his officer.  There were five of you there.  Did any of you take any immediate step to give him any disinfectant or a painkiller or to attend to the wound on his lip?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2168">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>He said that his behaviour, their behaviour was inhuman and I think implicit in that is the answer that they did nothing to him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2169">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, I&#039;m going to put to you that a person that beats someone up is not likely to behave in a humane manner, but if the injuries were accidental, you would probably have done so.  Do you understand what I mean?  Can I put it in a more plain fashion for your comment? If the injuries to his head and his lips were accidental, you and your colleagues would have done the decent thing, because of an accident.  But because you hated Mr Biko and what he stood for, you did nothing.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2170">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I did not hate him, your Honour.  The fact that I reported it to my commanding officer and that he indicated to me that he personally would handle the matter from there onward, I had thought that he would call in a doctor to pay attention to him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2171">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Your superior spent all his time to cover up,  not to help Biko and you knew it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2172">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I did not know of the deception. I did not know with whom the commanding officer had contact and from whom he obtained information.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2173">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, we have handed in a copy of the rough plan. I don&#039;t know whether you want to receive it as an exhibit?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2174">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Bizos, has counsel for the applicants seen this</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2175">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>diagram?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2176">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>M&#039;Lord, yes, we have been given this diagram.  The plan that - this may be what it looks like now, but we&#039;ve got another plan and our plan looks different, I should add at this stage.  It shows different doors and so on, so my learned friend can obviously make use of it, but we do not accept the correctness of this plan, because on what I am told, this is not what it looked like at the time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2177">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I see.  Mr Bizos, is it claimed that the diagram you&#039;ve got, reflected the position as it was at that time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2178">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Mr Chairman, Mr Jones was there in a similar position as Mr Biko.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2179">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I see.  All right.  For what it is worth, this is now going to go in as EXHIBIT, I think F.  Is it E?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2180">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>E, Mr Chairperson.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2181">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>EXHIBIT E, thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2182">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>EXHIBIT E HANDED IN</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2183">
			<speaker>MR ERASMUS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2184">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I should have asked you as well.  Have you had a chance of looking at it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2185">
			<speaker>MR ERASMUS</speaker>
			<text>I did look at it and I do want to say that we will inspect the site and on a further occasion, we will indicate whether we agree with or disagree with the exactness of the plan.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2186">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Erasmus.  I&#039;m sorry, I should have asked you first.  Carry on, Mr Bizos.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2187">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Tell me, what did Mr Biko do with this chair and at what stage?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2188">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He pushed the chair away, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2189">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>How did he push it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2190">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He rapidly pushed it forward, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2191">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>How did he do that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2192">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>What is the meaning of that question; with one hand, with two hands?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2193">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>With his hands or his feet or his body?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2194">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  There&#039;s a difficulty sometimes ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2195">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I can understand.  Thank you for giving me an opportunity to clarify it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2196">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2197">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>How did he move it,  with his hands, his foot, his body?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2198">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Will the people in the audience please sit down?  This demonstration must not take place while these proceedings are on.  You can do that during the adjournment.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2199">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Yes, please, do carry on.  You asked whether he pushed this chair, whether he kicked it or whether he pushed it with his hands, </text>
		</line>
		<line number="2200">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>or how?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2201">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>He pushed it with his hands, very quickly, your Honour and he pushed it forward.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2202">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Away from himself?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2203">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>In the direction of Capt Siebert, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2204">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>He didn&#039;t throw the chair?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2205">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.  He pushed it quickly or bumped it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2206">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Will you have a look at Exhibit C1, the note that you made at the time?  You say</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2207" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;The detainee took on a very aggressive attitude. He went beserk. He picked up some of the chairs in the office and threw these at Maj Snyman.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2208">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Now, you yourself contradict that version in your evidence, don&#039;t you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2209">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2210">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why did you record that chairs were thrown at you by Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2211">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS OBJECTS</speaker>
			<text>With respect, that is not what the entry says.  It does not say that chairs were thrown at the witness.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2212">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I&#039;m sorry.  I&#039;m sorry - that one of the chairs in the room was thrown at you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2213">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That was part of the false statement, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2214">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>But you told us yesterday that the only falsity in it was the date and also that instead of your name, it should have been Siebert. You didn&#039;t tell us about that it was false, that a chair was thrown at one of the security personnel there, did you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2215">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The circumstances are as they are now explicated in our amnesty application, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2216">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>That is not the question that I am asking you.  The question that I am asking you, is why did you write a lie and why when you were asked whether this report was correct or not, you mentioned the two details in respect of which it was wrong, but you failed to mention that it was wrong to say that there were chairs in the room and that one of them was thrown at either you or you Mr Siebert. Why did you do that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2217">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That was a lapse on my part, your Honour, an oversight.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2218">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, once you were prepared to lie in this manner before the Saturday meeting and it appears that you lied about the number of chairs in the room, whether a chair was thrown at you or Mr Siebert;  how can you suggest to the court that why they should believe anything that you may have to say about the correctness of this entry?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2219">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it is correct that that matter is false or is wrong.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2220">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, then in yesterday when you pointed out to the two matters which were wrong, you were asked and this was your answer, which was recorded by my learned friend;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2221">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	&quot;The remainder was as I had observed it.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2222">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>You recall saying that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2223">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2224">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You&#039;ve told the Chairman this morning that you didn&#039;t see Mr Biko hit his head against the wall?  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2225">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I said that he did bump his head against the wall, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2226">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No, you said that you did not see it.  Don&#039;t you remember what you said to the Chairman just shortly before the adjournment?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2227">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.  It was however clear that during the scuffle his head somehow ended up against the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2228">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Is there any difference between seeing and &quot;waar te neem&quot;?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2229">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>There is no difference, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2230">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Of course not, so that when you said yesterday that you saw, when you confirmed C1 wherein it says that he bumped against his head, you were not telling the truth yesterday when you said, you saw that. &quot;Die res is wat ek waargeneem het&quot;. (The remainder is what I observed.)  That was false.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2231">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.  I said that he had bumped his head in the scuffle or fight.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2232">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You said you didn&#039;t see it in answer to the Chairman.  Yesterday you said that &quot;u het dit waargeneem&quot;.  Both can&#039;t be true.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2233">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I said heard the sound.  I heard his head bump against the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2234">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why did you say that to the Chairman before the adjournment?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2235">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it is difficult for me after such a long time to put everything into perspective and to recall everything.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2236">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>What is the difference of a sound between an elbow or a knee or any other part of the body, hitting the wall and the head hitting the wall?  What is the difference in the sound that it makes? Is there any difference.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2237">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t know.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2238">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Because what you have just said after the adjournment shows that you were prepared to tell lies yesterday and that you even made up a lie a few moments ago when you said you heard the sound when you can&#039;t distinguish the sound, whether it&#039;s the head or any part of the body in order to justify a previous lie. What do you say to that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2239">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, his head hit the wall first.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2240">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Which you didn&#039;t see.  Anyway, let&#039;s leave it at that</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2241">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>for argument.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2242">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	I want to turn to the basic attempted justification on your part.  That is that this was done for a political purpose, because of the National Party politicians&#039; statements and your superiors.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2243">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Please remember that we are talking about 1977.  Was torture sanctioned to your knowledge by any National Party politician?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2244">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>There was no pertinent instruction give to us in this regard, but there was pressure placed on us at all times to bring the situation under control and this did occur by means of the detention of persons.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2245">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Do you recall that the Minister of Justice, the Minister of Police, the Prime Minister even when he became a President, that the politicians were expressly saying that detainees were ill-treated, was untrue and that it was the false propaganda of the enemies of South Africa, the ANC, the Communist Party and more particularly the Press.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2246">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Do you recall that that was the gravamen of their public statements?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2247">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I cannot recall, but this might well be the case.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2248">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, well if need be, we will put newspaper cuttings before the Committee as to how strongly and publicly they protested that no-one was authorised to ill-treat detainees.  Are you able to deny that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2249">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="2250">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I am not able to deny it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2251">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Furthermore, do you recall that after Mr Biko&#039;s death, there was a commission of inquiry headed by the chief Justice, Mr Justice Rabe?  Do you recall that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2252">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I do recall something like that, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2253">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, and the police and more particularly the security police were very anxious to persuade the chief justice and the members of the committee that detainees were not ill-treated, but this was merely false propaganda to besmudge the good name of the security police and South Africa.  	Do you remember that that was the gravamen of the police submissions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2254">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I can no longer recall all of those things.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2255">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Now, if we show to the Committee that those in authority disclaimed any instruction or authority given to anyone to ill-treat detainees, will you accept that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2256">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t understand the question entirely.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2257">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  If in fact, the public record shows that torture was considered a lawful, unjustifiable and frowned upon by the leaders of the National Party, you can hardly be heard to say that you believed that you were furthering the objectives of the National Party in 1977 by ill-treating detainees and particularly Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2258">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, if they stated it in that way then I</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2259">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>would suppose that it is such, but pressure was placed on us from both the Government and our own head office to rescue the situation, to solve the situation with regard to the unrest.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2260">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, but you could have done that by being good policemen and being efficient and working overtime and using scientific methods in order to detect or possibly get more informers. Where was there the authority to torture people?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2261">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.  We did have to work very long hours to bring the situation to good order.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2262">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Why don&#039;t you want to admit the obvious;  that there was no directive at that time from any politician that you should use torture, because their public statements were completely to the contrary?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2263">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That might be the case, your Honour.  However, pressure was exercised or exerted on us that when we did an interrogation like this we had to break down the person in order to obtain the information from the person with regard to his activities.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2264">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>By using torture, do you say, or by using legitimate means?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2265">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>By legal means, but irregularities might well have occurred or might possibly have occurred.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2266">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>So that you admit that you had no instruction or any encouragement from any politician to torture detainees?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2267">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, the instructions were that when a person was in detention, these instructions were received from the commanding officer who gave directives with regard to how the interrogation should be managed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2268">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>We&#039;ll come to your superiors in the police force.  Let&#039;s finish with the politicians.  Do you admit that no politician, either privately or publicly ever told you that torturing detainees was to be used?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2269">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, they did not state this pertinently, but from their speeches it was clear that they exerted pressure on us to bring the situation under control.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2270">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Are you really saying that what politicians said publicly for public consumption and what they allowed to happen, were two different things?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2271">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2272">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Which politicians do you say knew that this chamber at Sanlam Buildings was used as a torture chamber?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2273">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, no politician to the best of my knowledge ever entered that office.  I cannot recall anything like that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2274">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>By the way, what was the filing cabinet in this little chamber for; what was in it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2275">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it was an office that was also used by staff.  It was not continuously or continually used for interrogation.  It was also used by members of the branch as an office.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2276">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Where was the hosepipe used then by Mr Niewoudt, kept?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2277">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t know, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2278">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>How did it appear on the day in question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2279">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I have said that I cannot recall it.  It might have been there and it might have been used to administer lashes, but I cannot recall it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2280">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Let us deal with your supposed orders from you superior.  Did Col Goosen ever tell you that you were entitled to beat up people or to allow people to be beaten up by your juniors?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2281">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, the instruction from my commanding officer was or had been that Mr Biko had to be interrogated intensely and that his resistance had to be broken down.  In other words, he was not to be allowed to sleep and so forth.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2282">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  The question was:  he never told you that people could be beaten up.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2283">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2284">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did he ever tell you that you were authorised to inflict injuries such as those we&#039;ll submit were inflicted by you and your</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2285">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>colleagues, in common purpose, to Mr Biko&#039;s head and lips?	Did anybody - did your superior officer tell you that you can punch up a person if in fact you could have done it by less violent means by subduing him when he was outnumbered?	Were you ever told that you had the right to beat people up?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2286">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, these circumstances were of such a nature that the person who resisted us, that we had to restrain him and in that process violence was used to restrain him, since he offered resistance.  It was necessary in order to restrain him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2287">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did Mr Goosen tell you that you were entitled to restrain a person with handcuffs and leg-irons against a grille door in the manner in which you described yesterday?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2288">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, he was not shackled during the scuffle.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2289">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No, I didn&#039;t say during the scuffle.  I said  did he ever authorise you to restrain a person with his arms outstretched and his legs in leg-irons with a chain shortened, in the manner in which you described, you did to Mr Biko, yesterday?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2290">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That was the instruction, your Honour, that he should be chained like that after this fight.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2291">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now did you get specific instructions to do that from Mr Goosen before you actually did it, or did you do it and did Mr Goosen come in thereafter?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2292">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>This was done after we restrained him, since we thought that he would created further difficulties and that he would offer continued resistance.  That is why he was shackled.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2293">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>That he was shackled before Mr Goosen came in?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2294">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2295">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now, Mr Snyman, I respect your rights that not to refer to the other applications for amnesty that you have made, except to the extent that they are necessary in order to test your bona fides in relation to this application.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2296">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	You have made an application for amnesty in relation to the killing of Matthew Goniwe and his three passengers in the car.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2297">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2298">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You also made an application for amnesty for the killing of the persons known as the Pebco three?  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2299">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2300">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now I only want to deal with one point for the purposes of comparison.  You used the same form and you are asked to describe the political objective which you wanted to achieve.  Do you recall that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2301">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Would this have been this morning or when, your Honour?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2302">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>No, when you filled in the forms or the forms were</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2303">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>filled in for you for amnesty for the killing of Mr Goniwe and for the amnesty for the killing of the Pebco Three, you were asked to describe the political objective that you wanted to achieve?  Do you recall that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2304">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, your Honour.  These applications were drafted in the presence and with the assistance of my attorney.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2305">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  Well, in each one of these cases you give substantially the same, if not the same reasons that prompted you to kill Mr Goniwe and three others and the Pebco Three.  You give the same reasons for killing them as you give for whatever may have happened to Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2306">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Do you accept that?  I see your attorney shaking his head, but will you please have a look at page 7 of this application, page 8 of the application for amnesty ... (intervention).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2307">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Watter aansoek is dit nou? (Which application is this now).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2308">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>... for the killing of Mr Goniwe and page 8 for the killing of the Pebco Three.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2309">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Ek het nie daardie ding voor my nie. (I haven&#039;t got that thing in front of me).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2310">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, let me get it - please ask your attorney who shook his head to put those three documents in front of you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2311">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS OBJECTS</speaker>
			<text>We haven&#039;t got them available here, M&#039;Lord.  We are dealing with the Biko application, not with the Goniwe application or the Pebco Three.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2312">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I think you must just try and confine yourself as far as possible to this case and if you are going to tell him that you&#039;re advancing the same reasons in those applications as you have done in this and if he says, yes, that&#039;s the end of the matter.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2313">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s the end of the - that&#039;s all I want, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2314">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>No, well, perhaps it&#039;s the way you put it, I think.  Please understand me, we&#039;re trying to clear matters up.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2315">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Ek kan nie hoor nie.  (I can&#039;t hear).</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2316">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>The reasons you have given, your political objectives for what you did in the Biko case, is it correct that you&#039;re advancing the same objectives in respect of your applications in the other matters?  Is that so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2317">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it might be so.  I don&#039;t have the applications in front of me, but I believe that it is in fact the same.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2318">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>You believe that it is in fact the same?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2319">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2320">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2321">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s a matter of record.  I will not take up time reading them, we have checked them and they are substantially similar.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2322">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, granted.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2323">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Now, wasn&#039;t there a fundamental change in relation to the Government&#039;s policy between 1977 and 1985, 1986 when Goniwe and the Pebco Three were murdered?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2324">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2325">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Did you ever hear of a Security Council resolution passed in 1986 in relation to the elimination of activists?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2326">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, that is possible.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2327">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>You served in a committee in Port Elizabeth in relation to - it was called GOS, wasn&#039;t it - G-O-S.  What did that stand for?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2328">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I served on the GBS (Gesamentlike Bestuursentrum) JMC, the Joint Management Centre.  In Afrikaans that would be GBS.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2329">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>GBS?  When was that formed?  Well, you don&#039;t need to give us a precise date.  That was after 1977, was it not?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2330">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2331">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>The total onslaught policy of President - of PW Botha was unheard of in 1977, isn&#039;t that so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2332">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>At that time he was not the Prime Minister, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2333">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>I want to cut this short, because I don&#039;t want to deal with your applications for amnesty in relation to Goniwe or Pebco Three, but I want to put to you that your reasons for the death of Mr Biko, in your mind were the same?  Is that correct?  Otherwise you</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2334">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>wouldn&#039;t have signed the application?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2335">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.  In 1977 there was also a struggle.  There was also general unrest.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2336">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Once you gave the same reasons, if you are in good faith in the matter, you must have believed that in 1977 you were entitled to beat Mr Biko to death as you killed the other seven?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2337">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, I did not kill him.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2338">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, then why did you give the same reasons for trying to justify whatever you may or may not have done to Mr Biko?  Can you explain?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2339">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, the drafting of this amnesty application was done, as I have said, in co-operation with my attorney.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2340">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Well, that only means that neither you nor your attorney really gave any attention as to why you did what you did to Mr Biko, but you signed it, on oath.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2341">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>That&#039;s a matter for legal argument, I think.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2342">
			<speaker>MR BIZOS</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairman, I have no further questions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2343">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR BIZOS</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2344">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Mpshe, are there any questions you wish to put to this witness?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2345">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Mr Chairman.  Mr Chairman, with respect, I</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2346">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>think it should be Mr Burmeister first.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2347">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Mpshe.  Do you have any questions to put to this witness?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2348">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I do, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2349">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes, please do.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2350">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>EXAMINATION BY MR BURMEISTER</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2351">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Thank you.  Mr Snyman, you have given us an oversight as to the role that Col Goosen played in the whole scenario.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2352">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Would I be correct if, from what you&#039;ve told the hearing, that he was persuasive and prepared to lie in order to protect the security police and their actions and misdeeds.  Would that be a correct summing up of Col Goosen?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2353">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That would be correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2354">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Would you also agree if, it is apparent from what you&#039;ve placed before us at, Col Goosen was prepared to mislead anybody who he possibly could in endeavouring to protect the reputation of the security police.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2355">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2356">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Amongst the persons who he misled was the magistrate and the assessors who sat at the inquest during 1977, November.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2357">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2358">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Did you know Dr Laing who was a district surgeon at the time of this incident?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2359">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I did know him, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2360">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Did you know him personally or did you know of him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2361">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I knew him personally, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2362">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Now we&#039;re speaking about the situation prior to 1977 when this particular incident occurred.  Did you know him or did you get to know him afterwards?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2363">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, he was the district surgeon.  We, as policemen received medical attention from the district surgeons in earlier times and I became acquainted with him in that capacity.  As district surgeon, I became acquainted with him as his patient.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2364">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>But as far as the treatment of prisoners and detainees were concerned, there was in fact a difference between ordinary prisoners and detainees?  Is that correct?  As far as the medical treatment was concerned and who treated them in 1977?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2365">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t understand that question.  What is the difference?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2366">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, may I just put it to you possibly - now may I make the statement to you that at that point in time Dr Laing looked after prison prisoners, in other words those who were confined to a prison, in other words ordinary prisoners and another district surgeon attended to section 6 detainees.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2367">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I will not be able to say, your Honour, which doctor performed which function, but it was the function of the district surgeon to visit prisoners, if necessary.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2368">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, but what I am saying and evidence was led to this effect at the inquest that it was Dr Laing&#039;s duty at that point in time to deal with ordinary prisoners and another doctor attended to section 6 detainees? Can you dispute that or can you throw any light on that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2369">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, all that I can recall is that subsequently I was informed that Dr Laing was called in by Col Goosen to attend to Mr Biko.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2370">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Yes, were you aware of the fact that the reason why Dr Laing was called in on this particular day was because the district surgeon who normally attended to section 6 detainees, was out of town and it was purely by chance that Dr Laing was called in?  Were you aware of that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2371">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, I was not aware of that.  I had no contact with the doctors whatsoever.  This was done by Col Goosen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2372">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>On the 7th of September 1977, you came back to office.  That was after Mr Biko had spent the night at your offices?  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2373">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2374">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Can you recall at what time you returned on that morning? Would it have been your normal office hours;  half past seven or seven o&#039;clock or whatever?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2375">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2376">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Did you, when you came to office, make any enquiries as to the condition in the situation relating to Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2377">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>As I have said earlier, I was informed by my colleagues what his situation was.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2378">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>So you did not actually go and inspect or examine him personally on the morning of the 7th of September?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2379">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, Col Goosen then informed me that he was going to take the matter from there onwards and I presumed that should a doctor be called in, which of course should have been done, that he would have attended to that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2380">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>The question was, on the morning of the 7th you yourself did not go and see the state in which Mr Biko was?  That&#039;s the question.  Did you or did you not?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2381">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I am not able to recall exactly, but it is possible that I went to look and I might have seen that his state had not changed.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2382">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>During your cross-examination I understood you to say that you had in fact gone to see him and you also described his state at that point in time on the 7th of September.  Was that conjecture on your part?  Are you not sure at this point in time?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2383">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, it is possible that I went to see.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2384">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>But you can&#039;t specifically recall?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2385">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I might have been there that morning and what would have interested me, would have been whether we could continue with the interrogation or not.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2386">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>You mentioned to Col Goosen that it was your assumption that Mr Biko had suffered a blow to the head.  When I say a blow I mean his head was bumped against the wall.  Did you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2387">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2388">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Col Goosen mentioned that he was going to call in medical assistance.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2389">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.  I requested him to obtain medical assistance.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2390">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Was there any discussion between yourself and Col Goosen as to what you would tell the district surgeon as to the reason for Mr Biko&#039;s condition and what could possibly have caused it?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2391">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.  That was exclusively handled by Col Goosen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2392">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Did Col Goosen not advise you what to say if Dr Laing possibly asked you or anybody else how the state, the medical state of the detainee had arisen?  What your answer was to be at that stage?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2393">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, he did not discuss this with me.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2394">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>You&#039;re no doubt well aware that at the inquest it was mentioned that Dr Laing was told by Col Goosen that it was suspected that Mr Biko had suffered a stroke.  Are you aware of that evidence having been led at the inquest?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2395">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I am not aware of it.  That was a conversation between Col Goosen and the medical doctor.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2396">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Was there ever any discussion between yourself and Goosen as to what you were going to tell Dr Laing?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2397">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2398">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Was the question of a stroke ever raised between yourself and Goosen?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2399">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, not to the best of my memory.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2400">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Bearing in mind what you&#039;ve told us about Col Goosen&#039;s character and his objectives, would it have been in keeping with what you knew of him to try and mislead Dr Laing as to - as far as the condition of Mr Biko was concerned?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2401">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That would be the case, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2402">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Are you aware of the fact that on the 8th of July 1977, Dr Hirsch, a physician, was called in to examine Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2403">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I was informed of this subsequently, but this was all still dealt with by Col Goosen.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2404">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>So did it also come to your attention at a certain stage that Dr Keyle, a neurologist&#039;s opinion had also been gained in the matter. Did you hear about that at a later stage?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2405">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I heard of this at a later stage, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2406">
			<speaker>MR BURMEISTER</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2407">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR BURMEISTER</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2408">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Mpshe.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2409">
			<speaker>EXAMINATION BY MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Chairman.  Mr Snyman, the reason for the interrogation of Mr Biko, was that only due to the pamphlets which he would have authored?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2410">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it had to do with the breach of his restricting orders - restraining orders, his travel or trip to Cape Town, the pamphlet as well as other information available to the security branch at that time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2411">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>You&#039;ve given testimony on a question of the Chair that you did not see when Mr Biko&#039;s head knocked against the wall, but however that you were informed thereof.  Can you recall this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2412">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I do not exactly understand your question, what you mean by saying that I was informed thereof?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2413">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>You said that you heard of it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2414">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, I heard the knock against the wall.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2415">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>So, you heard the knock against the wall?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2416">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2417">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>You gave testimony in addition that subsequent to the fall of Mr Biko, Niewoudt and Marx came to assist.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2418">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2419">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Can you tell us exactly what you did at that point?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2420">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I was present in the office, but I was not involved in the scuffle or the fight.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2421">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>So you stood on the side and you watched the events?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2422">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>As allowed by the space in the office, yes, I was standing there.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2423">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>You made no effort to bring assistance to your colleagues to restrain Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2424">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour, the younger members took part in this fight.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2425">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>In addition in your testimony you gave testimony and I will quote</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2426" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;The body was on the ground, the head against the wall.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2427">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>And then you said:</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2428" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;It appeared like a person who was knocked out in a boxing match.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2429">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2430">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Would you agree with me that if this is the case;  if he looked like a person knocked out in a boxing match, that this would indicate that there had been an assault on him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2431">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2432">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>What then would it mean if you&#039;re saying that he&#039;s knocked out as if in a boxing match?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2433">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, that was as a result of the struggle, the fight to restrain him.  In the process his head knocked against the wall and he was temporarily dazed and confused.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2434">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>With regard to the so-called Goosen statement;  at that time what would your rank have been, when you made the statement?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2435">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I was a major, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2436">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>So you were a major?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2437">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2438">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>You also knew, as a major, that it was wrong to act in this manner?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2439">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2440">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>According to testimony and according to my learned friend, Mr Bizos&#039; questions to you;  this would imply that you were not responsible for the death of Mr Biko.  Would that be the case?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2441">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2442">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>However, at that time, in the year 1977, you did make false statements. In addition you come to us today and you remain silent.  You fail to inform this Committee what exactly you said?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2443">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, we have - of course we&#039;ve said that that was a false statement.  The statement at the judicial inquest.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2444">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>If it is the case that you did not - were not responsible for the death of Mr Biko, why then lie; why make false statements?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2445">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>The false statement, your Honour, was made under the instructions of the commanding officer who put the words in our mouths, in a manner of speaking, with regard to what we had to say in our statements.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2446">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>But you could have said to Col Goosen that you were not willing to lie, because you were not responsible for the death of the man?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2447">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, that would have been the correct procedure, but we just fell in with the plan of the Colonel.  He might well have had more information than we did at that time.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2448">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>According to your application;  you were promoted to the rank of sergeant in the year 1955; from sergeant to a colonel in the year 1985 - that would be on page 2 of your application.  1955 - sergeant?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2449">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2450">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text></text>
		</line>
		<line number="2451">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>And then at the end of it, 1985 - colonel?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2452">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>1964 - warrant-officer, 1968 - lieutenant, 1971 -captain, 1976 - major, 1981 - lieutenant-colonel and 1985 - colonel.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2453">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>From the rank of colonel to the - sorry - from the rank of Sergeant to the rank of colonel;  how did you obtain these promotions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2454">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I studied very hard to obtain these promotions.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2455">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>So this was because of your studies;  not because of your efforts to restrain unrest and so on?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2456">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, I did not receive any of these promotions for free, I worked very hard to achieve them.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2457">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>With reference to your application on page 7, the first paragraph thereof, the second last sentence, I will read it;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2458" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Many of the real facts were concealed or kept silent with regard to it, during the drafting of our statements in that matter.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2459">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Would that be on page 7, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2460">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Yes, page 7, right at the bottom.  My question to you, is what would the other facts be with regard to which you remained silent?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2461">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>In the first place, I do not believe that the knock of his head against the wall had been mentioned.  In my folly, I did not know why we had to colour in the statements in this way, but in</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2462">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>honesty I must say to you that this was under the instructions of Col Goosen, who put the words, as in a manner of speaking, in our mouths with regard to what we had to say in the statements.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2463">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Would that be all?  Then on page 8 of your statement, with reference to paragraph 2.2 and I read</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2464" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Information had to be obtained at all costs in order to combat the revolutionary struggle by means of the arrest of people, the detention of people and the criminal prosecution of people.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2465">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Do you see that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2466">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I see that.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2467">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Does that include assault or murder?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2468">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2469">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Then paragraph 2.4 on the same page, somewhat lower;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2470" isquote="true">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>&quot;Steven Bantu Biko was personally involved and in addition had access to valuable information which would have allowed the security branch to effectively neutralise the BMC and the BPC to restrain them and in this way, to stabilise the unrest situation.&quot;</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2471">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>Did you read this, did you see this?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2472">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, I saw it or I see it.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2473">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>This person, of such importance, this person with such important or valuable information has now been arrested and assaulted.  How did you now intend to obtain this valuable information from this person?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2474">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I have said in my testimony - my statement or my testimony that Mr Biko did not want to offer us his co-operation.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2475">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>So the best method was to kill this valuable information.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2476">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.  After the events of that morning it was no longer possible to obtain information from this man.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2477">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Just one moment, Mr Chairman.  Could you explain to the Committee why are you applying for amnesty in this matter?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2478">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, because during those years I was involved in this struggle that was being fought by the South African Police and since certain members of our branch at that time applied for amnesty, since the opportunity had been offered by the State to apply for such amnesty, I then decided to apply for amnesty.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2479">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Sir, you know, I&#039;m asking this particularly because of your testimony that you did nothing.  You simply stood on the side and watched.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2480">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, I was in command of the investigative team and I think that as such it was necessary for me to apply for amnesty.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2481">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Would I be correct in concluding or deducing that you made this application for this reason;  you identified yourself with the assault or the attack on Steve Biko, because you were involved in the investigative team.  Not because you identify yourself with the actual incident.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2482">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I don&#039;t exactly understand what you mean by your question?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2483">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>You see, you stood there.  You gave testimony that you did nothing.  You were just watching?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2484">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2485">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>My question is now;  why this application?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2486">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Because I took part in the events of that morning.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2487">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>And because you identify yourself with the incident in that office?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2488">
			<speaker>INTERPRETER</speaker>
			<text>The interpreter could not hear the response of the applicant.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2489">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Was it a practice by the security police to conceal information, or correct information pertaining to detainees who die whilst in their custody?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2490">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, Your Honour.  This was done under the</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2491">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>instructions of our commanding officer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2492">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>It was done under the instruction of your commanding officer and can I accept it that it was not done only once in this instance?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2493">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I could not comment on that, Your Honour, but that is possible.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2494">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>That is possible, yes.  If that is possible;  do you remember one of the detainees who died in custody, one George Botha, who died in 1977 as well?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2495">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I recall the incident, Your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2496">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>And you recall your involvement in that incident as well in 1977?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2497">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Yes, Your Honour.  I lived in a place that morning where Mr Botha was held in detention and it was my duties, with another person who drove with me, to pick him up every morning at the cells in Despatch and to bring him to the Sanlam Building.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2498">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>And you recall that also in the case of Mr George Botha, he died as a result of a head injury, whilst in custody?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2499">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, he died as a result of head injuries during his detention.  On the 6th floor of the Sanlam Building, while we were unlocking the gate, the metal gate, he jumped over, off the stairs, landed on the ground and as a result he died.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2500">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Finally on this aspect.  Do you remember that an inquest was held, presided over by magistrate Mr J A Coetzee and the police were absolved.  Do you remember that?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2501">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, Your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2502">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>Was also in that inquest, was the message told, untruth as well, same as in Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2503">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.  Those were the true facts.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2504">
			<speaker>MR MPSHE</speaker>
			<text>I see.  Mr Chairman, that would be all.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2505">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR MPSHE</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2506">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Thank you.  Mr Booyens, re-examination?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2507">
			<speaker>RE-EXAMINATION BY MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Only briefly on a few aspects, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2508">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>	Colonel, my learned friend, Mr Bizos had asked you questions with regard to the attitude of Col Goosen.  The deceased was shackled to the metal gate as you&#039;ve illustrated and then you went to Col Goosen.  Is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2509">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2510">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Col Goosen then returned with you?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2511">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2512">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Col Goosen saw the deceased in that position, is that correct?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2513">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2514">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did he give any instructions that he should be untied or unshackled?  Did he give any instructions?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2515">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2516">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Did he indicate that the actions which he saw or that which he saw, was in any way not allowed?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2517">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2518">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2519">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Is that all?  Are you finished?  Thank you.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2520">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Yes, thank you, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2521">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR BOOYENS</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2522">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Mr Snyman, did you make any attempt to have the family of Mr Biko informed about the condition Mr Biko was in whilst he was in custody?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2523">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>No, your Honour.  I presumed that after the matter was reported to the commanding officer and after I was instructed that I may withdraw, I presumed that he would do so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2524">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Why did you presume that he would do so?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2525">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I did not presume that he would do it.  I did, however, report the matter to him.  He then indicated very clearly to me that I should withdraw at that point and resume my normal activities.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2526">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Did you personally have any contact with Mr Biko</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2527">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>before the scuffle you have referred to?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2528">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, if I recall correctly, because this is many years ago, I would along with Col Goosen, prior to the interrogation, we went to the cell at Walmer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2529">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>I understand from your evidence that at some stage it was necessary for a number of members of the security police to guard Mr Biko whilst he was handcuffed and shackled.  Why was it necessary to have these members guarding a man who was handcuffed and shackled?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2530">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, it was the practice that guards would be present with any detainee.  There would be a police watch.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2531">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>What were they doing there?  Did they just stand around and look at him?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2532">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would not be able to tell you what they were doing, but their instructions were to guard the man through the course of the night.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2533">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>All in all, who would you say in your knowledge, killed Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2534">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, as we have described with regard to the scuffle that took place that morning, we would have to ascribe this that it would have been the possible consequence thereof.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2535">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Did you personally do anything that would have caused the injuries on the head of Mr Biko?  You personally, did</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2536">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>you do anything?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2537">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>Your Honour, what I did at that time was immediately to report the matter to my commanding officer.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2538">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Perhaps to conclude I can just put all my questions together.  Are you saying you are somehow and somewhat to blame for what happened to Mr Biko?  Is that the gist of your testimony?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2539">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>That is correct, your Honour.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2540">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Can you explain that very briefly?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2541">
			<speaker>MR SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>What exactly would you like me to explain, your Honour?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2542">
			<speaker>MR SANDI</speaker>
			<text>How are you personally to be blamed for what happened to Mr Biko?</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2543">
			<speaker>ADV SNYMAN</speaker>
			<text>I would say that the fact that I took part or was a part of the investigating team.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2544">
			<speaker>ADV SANDI</speaker>
			<text>Thank you, Mr Snyman.  Thank you, Mr Chairman.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2545">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Mr Snyman, thank you very much.  You are excused.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2546">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>WITNESS EXCUSED</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2547">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>Mr Chairman, may I suggest that this is an appropriate time for taking the long adjournment.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2548">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2549">
			<speaker>MR BOOYENS</speaker>
			<text>It&#039;s only five minutes and there are some other matters that we would like to deal with in the chambers.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2550">
			<speaker>CHAIRPERSON</speaker>
			<text>Yes.  We&#039;ll now adjourn and resume at 14:00 o&#039;clock.</text>
		</line>
		<line number="2551">
			<speaker></speaker>
			<text>COMMITTEE ADJOURNS</text>
		</line>
	</lines>
</hearing>