DECISION
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The applicants  apply for amnesty in respect of:
 the attempted  murder of Sipho Ndlovu at Sweetwaters;
 an attack upon  unknown  persons  at Jesmondene;
 the  murder of Solomon Dlamini on 19th November 1992 at  Shongweni; 
 the murder of Sathanathum Padayachee on 29th November  at Pietermaritzburg;
 the murder of  Sipho Zulu on 3rd December 1992 in the  Claridge area;
 and the murder of Jeffrey Durugiah on 21st April 1993 at  Umkomaas.
Anilraj Singh( 1st applicant) and Praveen Ramdas ( 2nd applicant)  were, at all  relevant times, members of the South African  Police (the SAP). They were both  stationed  at the Mountain Rise police  station  where the 1st applicant  held the rank of constable and the 2nd applicant  that of  warrant officer.
Both the applicants testified that they, on separate occasions  during 1990, attended a Specialised Weapons, Arms  and Tactics course ( a SWAT course) which  was  conducted  by the SAP.
They state that they  were indoctrinated at that course. They, who were both Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) supporters, were told  that  the African  National Congress (ANC) were the enemy, that ANC members targeted and killed policemen and that, should  the ANC gain power and govern  the country, their jobs as policemen would be in jeopardy.
After the SWAT course and after a fellow policeman had been killed  in the presence of the 2nd  Applicant while he was on duty,  the 2nd Applicant  decided  to form a  " private hit squad". He discussed  the matter  with the 1st Applicant  and they agreed  that it would  be a good  idea  to form a hit squad. They  then  approached other members  of the SAP who were stationed at Mountain Rise and they formed their hit squad. The initial members were the applicants, constable Ndaba, constable  Mchunu and constable Williams. The hit squad, according  to the applicants, was  assisted  from  time to time  by other  persons, including constable Maistry, constable Aiyer, constable Mohammed, all of whom were also stationed at Mountain rise, and Nilesh Singh, a relative  of the 1st Applicant.
The applicants state that the aims of the hit squad was to "disperse and conquer" the  ANC in the area and to eliminate  ANC trouble causers. They say  that  they made contact with a local  IFP leader in the Harewood area, one Skiza Zuma, who  provided them with  firearms and who at times gave the names of the ANC supporters who were to be executed.
Their first operation was an attack on one Sipho Ndlovu at Ghanda-Ghanda location in the Sweetwaters area. The 2nd Applicant states that  Ndlovu's name was given  to him as a target by the said Zuma via constable Ndaba. Sipho Ndlovu was allegedly an ANC warlord who instigated attacks on the IFP members. The  applicants, together  with constables Ndaba and Mchunu, went to Ghanda-Ghanda location. Constable Ndaba, who was dressed  up as a woman , and constable Mchunu proceeded to the house of Mr Ndlovu and the applicants remained some distance away as back-up cover for them. Constable Ndaba knocked at the door  of the house  and when  it was opened by Mr Ndlovu he shot him at close range. Mr Ndlovu fell to the ground. The extent of the injuries suffered by Mr Ndlovu is not known.
The next  incident  took place at Jesmondene informal settlement which, according to the applicants, was  an ANC stronghold. One night two friends  of the 1st Applicant, Isaac and Joe, who were IFP members, were attacked by a number of people at  Jesmondene. The 1st Applicant, who happened by, intervened and the attackers ran away. The 1st Applicant reported to the 2nd Applicant who ordered that  there should be revenge attack on the inhabitants of Jesmondene. 
The next night  the applicants together with constables Williams, Ndaba, Mchunu and  Mohammed as well as Isaac and Joe went  to Jesmondene. They came across a group  of men  who  were sitting  around a fire. Constable Ndaba fired shots at them and they ran away. It is not known if anyone was injured in the incident.
The next incident in  which  the hit squad  was involved  was the killing of Solomon Dlamini, a taxi operator. The applicants  testified  that Mr Dlamini was  one  of the  leaders at the taxi- related  disturbance which took place in Pietermaritzburg during  October 1991.  He, at the scene of disturbance, spoke through a loudhailer and threatened IFP supporters and claimed that he was a  trained MK cadre. Thereafter,  during March 1992 , the ANC held a march at Freedom Square, Pietermaritzburg. The applicants state that during the march ANC cadres in camouflage uniform  burnt  the national flag and that this distressed them. They also  stated  that the police  received  a fax that  day in  which  it was  stated  that MK cadres would shoot  policemen. The applicants  then, on that day, decided that Solomon Dlamini should  be killed. They  state  that they  then made  several  unsuccessful attempts to locate him. They  found  him  at his  home on 19th November 1992. They  took him  to the Shongweni bridge. Present were applicants and constables Williams, Mchunu, Ndaba and  Maistry. At the bridge  he was shot  several times  by constable  Williams. He was not  killed  by the  shots. He  was then thrown  over the bridge. The applicants  estimate the bridge  to be approximately 1500 metres  above  the river and ground below it.
Mr Dlamini had  laid  a charge of malicious  intention  to damage  property against constable Maistry. The charge related to an incident  in which  constable  Maistry and a constable Budrum (who is since  deceased) allegedly  caused damage to his taxi. 
On  19th November 1992, shortly  before the  abduction  of  Mr Dlamini, constable Maistry showed the 2nd applicant the summons  he had received  to appear  in court  in regard  to the said charge. The applicants state that the charge laid against Mr Maistry by Mr Dlamini in no way influenced them in their decision to kill  Solomon Dlamini.
Their next  operation  was the murder of Sathanathum Padayachee which took place at Pietermaritzburg on the 30th November 1992.  The 1st Applicant stated that constable Ndaba  brought  him a note  from the said Zuma as well  as the sum of  R5000,00. The note  contained the names  of the three people who were to  be killed, namely Mr  Padayachee, a Mr Khan and one Zodwa. According  to Ndaba, Mr  Padayachee was to be killed  as he was a financial advisor to the ANC members.  Zodwa was to be killed because she formally lived  in an IFP area but was now living with Mr Padayachee. It was suspected that she was passing on information about the IFP members to the ANC via Mr Padayachee. The note was shown  to the 2nd Applicant  who ordered that the three persons mentioned therein be killed. Endeavours to find  Mr Khan  failed  and he was  never attacked. 
On 30th November 1992 the 1st Applicant, constable Mchunu and constable Ndaba went to Padayachee's house. Mchunu and  Ndaba went to the house and knocked on the door. They could  not gain entry  into the house as there was a safety  chain on the door. They  were therefore  not able  to kill  Zodwa. She disappeared after the incident and was not seen again  by any members of  the hit squad. Zodwa was the girlfriend  of Constable Ndaba prior to  her living  with Mr  Padayachee.
With regard to the R5000.00 received  from the said Zuma  the testimony of the applicants  given at the  hearing  of this matter was to the effect that the 1st Applicant  was told by Ndaba  that the money was a payment for services rendered. He then divided  it and gave  R1 000.00 to each of the five members of the hit squad. The 2nd Applicant, who was the leader of the squad, was very  upset about this as he knew that the money  was meant  to be used  to purchase  weapons  and equipment. He demanded  that the 1st Applicant recover the amounts that had been given  to the  other members. This was  done and the 2nd Applicant then used the R5000.00 to purchase weapons and equipment. He states that he purchased two telescopes, two  silencers and .22  pistol and that  he also  paid  to  have the barrel  thereof  threaded.
In a written statement submitted together with his  application for amnesty  the 1st Applicant  stated  the following  concerning the R5000: 
"Seeing that this was a big job (the proposed assassination of Messrs. Padayachee and Khan and Zodwa) and  previous 3 attacks  went according  to plan  Ndaba  brought  back a sum of  R5000 to us and said that Zuma  sent this to us  as an incentive for good work. Warrant officer Ramdas, Williams, Mchunu, Ndaba and I each took R1000 for ourselves".
He made  no mention in the statement  of him and the others  having to hand the money over to the 2nd Applicant in order that it be used to purchase weapons and equipment. The 2nd Applicant  made no mention  at all of the R5000 in his statement  which was submitted  by him together with his application form for  amnesty.
When asked  to explain these differences between  their testimony and their written  submission, both  applicants  stated that their written  statements  had been  completed in a hurry in order  to meet  the deadline for the  submission  of amnesty applications. They further  stated that they previously  made statements  which  were submitted  to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) in which they  explained  that  the R5 000 was ultimately used to purchase weapons and equipment, but  they were informed  by  the TRC that  such  statements had been lost.
The penultimate operation of the hit  squad  was  the murder of Sipho Zulu which took place on 3 December 1992 at Claridge. During  May 1992 the 1st Applicant  was  attacked by a group of  people  who tried to rob  him of  a shotgun. Included in the group of attackers  was Sipho Zulu and his brother, Petrus Zulu. During  this  incident  the 1st Applicant  shot and killed Petrus Zulu and injured Sipho Zulu and one Muzi. The 1st Applicant  states  that Sipho was an ANC activist and the other attackers were ANC comrades.  Sipho Zulu swore revenge and threatened that he would kill  the 1st Applicant. The 2nd Applicant  then ordered that he  should  be killed.
On  3 December 1992 Sipho Zulu was seen in the near vicinity of the 1st Applicant's home. The 1st Applicant, constable Mchunu and constable Ndaba caught him, put  him in a motor vehicle and drove  off with him. They picked up constable Williams and drove  to a cane field in Claridge. In the cane field Sipho Zulu was throttled  by  constable Williams and shot several times by  the 1st Applicant. He died. They left  the body  in the cane field.
The next  day the 1st Applicant  together with constables Ndaba, Mchunu, Aiyer and Mohammed went to bury  the body. Ndaba, on seeing  the body  with his eyes open, ran away. The others  took the body  to a place in Bakerville where they buried it.
At the time of the death of Sipho Zulu a civil claim for R30 000 instituted  by him against the 1st Applicant was still pending.
The last incident involving the hit squad was the murder of  Jeffrey Srinivasen Durugiah on 21st April 1993 at Umkomaas. Captain  Durugiah was a superior officer of the 2nd Applicant  at Mountain Rise before his retirement from the SAP. He retired before the 1st Applicant joined the Force. The  applicants  state  that he was an ANC sympathiser who fraternised with ANC activists. They believed that he was passing  sensitive information about  police  procedures on to  the ANC.  It was  for  this reason  that  the 2nd Applicant decided  that he should be killed.
On 21st April 1993  the 1st Applicant, 2nd Applicant, constable Mchunu, Williams and Aiyer and Nilesh Singh proceeded to Umkomaas in two  motor vehicles. One  was  an  SAP vehicle  and the other  was a  vehicle that could  achieve  very high speeds which was owned and driven by Nilesh Singh. They went  to Captain  Durugiah's house. Mchunu and Aiyer went to the front  door and  knocked  thereon. The applicants  stood  at the gate  of the property. When  Captain  Durugiah opened  the door  he was  shot  at by both Mchunu and Aiyer. He died  as  a result  of the shooting.
During 1988, Captain Durugiah was  the investigating  officer in a case against the 2nd Applicant  which led to the 2nd Applicant being convicted of perjury. The conviction was set aside on appeal  by Appellate Division  of the Supreme Court during 1993. The 2nd applicant states that he was not influenced in his decision to kill Captain  Durugiah by the role  played  by captain Durugiah in the  perjury case.
The applicants were charged and convicted in respect of the murders of Solomon Dlamini, Sathanathum Padayachee, Sipho Zulu and Jeffrey Durugiah. They are both  presently  serving  long terms  of imprisonment.
Section 20(1) of the Promotion of National Unity and Reconciliation Act, No .34 of  1995 (the Act) provides  that the Committee shall grant amnesty  if it is satisfied that  the application  complies  with  the requirements  of the Act; that  the act  or offence  to which  the application relates  is an act  associated  with a political objective committed  in the course  of the  conflicts  of the  past, and that  the applicant has made a full  disclosure of all relevant facts. Section 20(3) of the Act provides, inter alia, that  an  act  or offence  associated with a political  objective does not  include  any act  or offence  committed by any  person who acted for personal gain or out of personal malice, ill-will  or spite  directed  against  the victim of the  acts committed.
The applications of the applicants comply  with the requirements  of the Act in the  sense that the relevant application form was duly  completed and attested to and  timeously  submitted. We are, however, after consideration  of all the evidence before  us, not satisfied  that the applicants have made a full disclosure  of all relevant  facts  or that  the offences  committed  by them were acts associated  with a political  objective  as  contemplated by the Act.
We do  not accept the evidence  of the applicants  that their sole motive  in the killings of Messrs. Dlamini, Padayachee, Zulu and Duragiah was political. In each  of these  instances there is  undisputed evidence that the applicants or some of their colleagues  who assisted  them in the killings (Maistry and Ndaba) had reasons other than political to target their victims. The  disposal of the bodies of Messrs Dlamini and Zulu is also  inconsistent with a political assassination. 
It  is also, in our view, inconceivable  that a private political hit squad would make use of persons who were  not members  thereof  as co-perpetrators in their  crimes.
Both  the applicants stated  that they were supporters of the IFP. The 1st Applicant stated that he became a member thereof  during 1993 and  it is clear  from the 2nd Applicant's  membership card, which was handed in at the hearing of this matter, that he became  a member during 1998. There is no evidence before  us that either  of the applicants was politically active within the party, that they  attended political meetings and gatherings or that they  were even  aware of the policies and ideologies of the IFP. The only  evidence  of them having  contact with a person  in a leadership position was within the Harewood area, and who provided them  with hit lists and  with arms and money to purchase arms.
In his statement, which was submitted together with his application  for amnesty, the  1st Applicant  stated that Mr Zuma  paid them an amount of R5000,00 as an "incentive for good work"  and  that the members  of the hit squad, namely, the applicants, Williams, Mchunu and Ndaba  each received  R1000,00 thereof for themselves. 
Also at page 20 of such statement, the 1st Applicant states the following:
"During  judgment by Justice Andrew Wilson he called  us  the accused, "hit men for hire" and described the murders  not as killings  but as "execution" style  killings, this  we do  not  deny  as we accepted a sum of R5000.00 from  Chief Skuza Zuma of the IFP for  shooting Sipho Zulu and Mr Padayachee and attempting  to shoot two others."
At the hearing  of this matter  both the applicants  acknowledged  receiving  the R5000,00 from Mr Zuma but stated  that it  was  used to purchase  firearms and equipment.
The explanation given  by the 1st applicant concerning  these differences is that  the written  statement  before us is a hurriedly  composed  shorter  version of the original  statement  submitted by him, which  original  statement was lost by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. He states further that he made mention  of the fact  in his  original statement that the monies  received  from Mr Zuma  were used  to purchase  equipment. This explanation is rejected by us as being false. It is clear from the  records  that the original submitted  by the 1st Applicant with his  completed application form for amnesty (which was dated 7th May 1997) was  mislaid. The 1st Applicant's attorneys  then supplied  the TRC with a copy  of the  original statement on 26th February  1998. Details of the original statement which was later  mislaid  were captured on the TRC computer on 22nd July 1997  and included in the details captured are the statements that Zuma paid the hit squad  R5000,00 for their "good work" and  that the  1st Applicant and others each took  R1000 of the money  given by Zuma. 
The explanation given  by the 1st Applicant  also  does not in any way  explain away  the admission  contained  in page 20  of the statement to the effect  that  the R5000 constituted  payment for the murders of Messrs. Ndlovu and Padayachee. In the circumstances we are of the view that such  admission must stand.
No records relating to the  alleged attack on unknown persons  at Jesmondene have  been traced. The versions  of the attack  given by  the applicants  does not  persuade  us  that  the attack  was carried  out by their " private squad" with a political objective. The fact  that Joe and Isaac, who had themselves  been assaulted  by unknown persons in Jesmondene  shortly before the  attack as well as constable  Afsal Mohammed, who was also a member  of  the hit squad, participated in the attack leads us to the  conclusion that the attack was a random retaliatory attack  carried out by  a gang  rather than a politically inspired operation of a hit squad.
We are accordingly  of the view  that all  the crimes  committed  by the  applicant  in  respect of which they apply for amnesty were committed out of personal malice or ill-will directed  against  their victims or for personal gain. Their application  for amnesty is therefore REFUSED.
Dated at ........................  this.......... day of ........................... 1999.
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JUDGE  S. M. MILLER
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JUDGE R.PILLAY
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MR.W.MALAN