TRC Final Report
Page Number (Original) 140
Paragraph Numbers 398 to 418
Volume 2
Chapter 2
Subsection 39
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P> 398 Dawid Fourie was also res
ponsible for region 4 (Angola, Zambia and Tanzania), taking it over in 1988 from Meerholtz. Christo Nel handled the intelligence function while Ian Strange (aka Rodney) was also involved in this region. In terms of region 5 (Euro
pean and International), Jose
ph Niemoller jr. a
ppears to have been coordinator until 1987, when he was suddenly withdrawn following the arrest of a number of individuals living in England on charges of
plotting to kill ANC leaders. The intelligence function was
performed by Eeben Barlow. Various CCB members co-ordinated region 7 (Zimbabwe) including Wouter Basson and Lafras Luitingh. Others involved in sub-management were Ferdi Barnard (for a brief
period) and Alan Trowsdale. Region 8 (South West Africa) was headed by Roelf
van Heerden (aka Roelf
van der Westhuizen).
P><
P> 399 Joe Verster estimated that the CCB undertook between 170 and 200
projects. These included administrative arrangements like the setting u
p of a blue-line com
pany or a
pension
plan. As there were some one hundred ‘aware’ members and therefore a
pproximately one hundred businesses, at least half of all
projects were not directly linked to offensive o
perations.
P><
P> 400 There were two ty
pes of members in the CCB – aware (‘die bewustelike buitekring’) and unaware (‘die onbewustelik buitekring’). The former were recruited from within the ranks of the security organs, mainly the SADF, and were required to set u
p blue-line covers. They were all required formally to resign from the SADF, or whoever their em
ployer was, and sign a contract of em
ployment with what was known as ‘Die Organisasie’. They o
perated from a
part of S
pecial Forces headquarters known as ‘die Gat’.
P><
P> 401 These aware members in turn hired ‘em
ployees’ to work for them. These were the unaware members. In his a
ppearance before the Commission, Joe Verster estimated that there were about one hundred aware members and some 150 unaware members.
P><
P> 402 Christo Nel described the second grou
p as consisting of two ty
pes – those who thought they were connected to the government but were unsure of which
part, and others who were totally ignorant. He went on, however, to suggest that there was still a third category – “international criminals …
peo
ple who were usable for the ty
pe of work that was
planned”
p>25p>. Donald Acheson (see the Lubowski case above),
Peaches Gordon and Isgak Hardien, internal region 6 unaware o
peratives, were
perha
ps some of those he had in mind.
P><
P> 403 Region 6 was headed by the one-time head of the Brixton Murder and Robbery Unit (BMRU), Brigadier Daniel ‘Staal’ Burger. It became fully o
perational on 1 January 1989. Its inner circle was com
prised of other former BMRU members who were assigned to various sub-regions of South Africa. They were Abram ‘Slang’
van Zyl (western Ca
pe), Calla Botha (Transvaal) and ‘Cha
ppies’ Maree (Natal). Another region 6 member, after his re-de
ployment from Zimbabwe, was Ferdi Barnard. Region 6 o
perated under the designation of
Project Choice.
P><
P> 404 The objective of the CCB was “the maximal disru
ption of the enemy”. A CCB
planning document described disru
ption as having five dimensions: death, infiltration, bribery, com
promise or blackmail, and destruction. In his testimony to the Commission, Christo Nel stated that, when he underwent induction training into the CCB in 1988, this was not the order of
priorities. Killing was a goal, but the em
phasis, he argued, was on bringing about the death of an o
pponent by indirect means rather by the organisation’s assassins themselves.
P><
P> 405 Nonetheless, the CCB did kill some o
pponents of the government and tried to kill others. There is evidence that the CCB was involved in the killings of Mr David Webster [JB00218/01GTSOW], Mr Anton Lubowski, Ms Dulcie Se
ptember [CT03027/OUT], Mr Jacob ‘Boy’ Molekwane and Mr Matsela
Polokela in Botswana, and Ms Tsitsi Chiliza [JBO5088/02
PS] in Harare. (This last was an o
peration that went wrong: the intended target was Mr Jacob Zuma in Ma
puto.)
P><
P> 406 It also attem
pted, or cons
pired, to kill others. Amnesty a
pplications have been filed by CCB o
peratives Joe Verster, Wouter Basson, ‘Staal’ Burger and ‘Slang’
van Zyl for the
plots to kill Mr Dullah Omar and Mr Gavin E
vans.
P><
P> 407 Other information available to the Commission has linked the CCB to the killings of Ms Florence Ribeiro, Dr Fabian Ribeiro [JB03488/02
PS] and Mr
Piet Ntuli [JB02306/ 01M
PMOU], the attem
pted killings of Mr Godfrey Motse
pe [JB00606/02/
PS] in Brussels, Mr Jeremy Brickhill in Harare, Mr Albie Sachs in Ma
puto [KZN/JD/001/AM], Comrade Che Ogara (MK nom-de-guerre) in Botswana and Mr Frank Chikane [JB03725/01GTSOW]; the
plans to kill Mr Joe Slovo in London in the mid-1980s, Mr Oliver Tambo in Harare in 1987, Ms Gwen Lister, Mr Daniel Tjongarero and Mr Hidi
po Hamutenya in South West Africa, as well as Mr Jay Naidoo, Mr Roland White and Mr Kwenza Mhlaba in South Africa.
P><
P> 408 The CCB also
partici
pated in elimination missions with other security force elements, such as the security
police and the more overt wing of S
pecial Forces. One such joint mission was the attack on the ANC transit house in
Phiring, Botswana in 1988 in which MK regional commander
Patrick Vundla was killed.
P><
P> 409 Another o
peration in Botswana in 1988 went badly wrong. On 21 June 1988, a CCB grou
p inside Botswana was interce
pted by a Botswana
police
patrol and a shoot-out ensued. Two CCB members, Mr Johannes Basson and Mr Theodore Hermansen, were ca
ptured, and sentenced to ten years’ im
prisonment in December 1988.
P><
P> 410 A major CCB o
peration was undertaken in South West Africa in 1989. As
part of the South African government’s cam
paign against SWA
PO in the run-u
p to the December 1989 election in South West Africa, every aware member was transferred from their region to shore u
p the work of the existing South West African CCB set-u
p. According to Christo Nel, “we were told, ‘Double u
p your
production and you will get a
production bonus’
p>26p>”. It was in this context that Mr Anton Lubowski was killed.
P><
P> 411 As is evident from the above, one as
pect of the CCB’s modus o
perandi was the use of cash as an incentive to ‘
produce’. Thus, like other hit-squad or counterinsurgency units such as Koevoet and C10, CCB members were
provided with a
positive inducement to undertake actions which could, and often did, result in a gross violation of another individual’s rights.
P><
P> 412 As stated above, however, killing was not the sum of the CCB’s activities. A great deal of time and effort were ex
pended on disinformation cam
paigns designed to discredit o
pposition figures and sow confusion in the ranks. At the time that the CCB was being
planned, the SADF also launched its Stratcom (Strategic Communications)
programme as a vehicle for the deliberate s
preading of disinformation about targets in the ho
pe that this would at least create a sense of sus
picion about them, if not result in their elimination.
P><
P> 413 The CCB was also heavily involved in cam
paigns of infrastructural disru
ption through sabotage. Targets of such o
perations were bridges, railway lines, oil containers, strategic military targets, offices and houses, es
pecially those used to accommodate guerrillas in neighbouring states. Christo Nel told the Commission of one such o
peration in Botswana, in which Colonel Hekkies
van Heerden of the ELMC
placed a car bomb in a minibus and
parked it in front of the house it was intended to destroy. The bomb was so
powerful that it demolished three homes.
P><
P> 414 Another core activity was intelligence collection for o
perational
pur
poses. There seem to have been only three ex
perienced intelligence o
peratives amongst the aware members – Nel,
Pete Stanton and Eeben Barlow. The CCB could only collect intelligence for s
pecific o
perational
pur
poses. Again according to Nel, one of its successful
projects in this regard was a communications com
pany set u
p in Maseru by the CCB and staffed by some black S
pecial Forces o
perators. This firm sold and installed communications (tele
phone, fax, telex etc.) equi
pment in offices. One such contract was to a facility used by the ANC, which meant that all calls to and from this office were monitored by the CCB. The information so collected was used against MK structures
particularly in the western Ca
pe.
P><
P> 415 Another CCB concern was sanctions busting with a view to acquiring arms and technology. According to testimony in a court trial in Johannesburg in 1990, region 6 member Leon ‘Cha
ppies’ Maree conceded that
part of his CCB brief was to o
perate as a covert agent for the im
port of high-tech military equi
pment. He testified that he had undertaken a four-month tri
p to six Euro
pean countries in early 1990, brokering ‘business’ deals for the acquisition of war materials for the SADF. Other information available to the Commission indicates that sanctions-busting activities formed an im
portant com
ponent of some members’ activities.
P><
P> 416 The CCB engaged in a range of other miscellaneous activities, one of which was
Project A
pie, involving the nailing of a monkey foetus to a tree in the garden of Archbisho
p Tutu’s residence. Another was
Project Crawler, involving the
purchase of a so-called s
py shi
p, the Margit Rye, from Denmark for use in information-gathering activities on South Africa’s enemies. It was
purchased through a com
pany headed by a CCB member, André Groenewald (aka Kobus
Pienaar).
P><
P> 417
Project Direksie was an attem
pt to free South African agents Michael Smith, Kevin Woods, Barry Bawden,
Phili
p Conjwayo and Rory Macguire from Chikarubi
prison in Harare on the day they were due to a
ppear in court. The
plan was aborted at the last minute when the South Africans became aware that the Zimbabweans had ad
vance information on the attem
pt. One of those involved in the esca
pe attem
pt, Mr Denis Beahan, failed to get the message and was arrested and later sentenced to a long term of im
prisonment.
P><
P> 418
Projects Im
perial, Maagd and Maxi each involved the collection of information in other African countries.
P>
THE COMMISSION FINDS THAT THE CCB WAS A CREATION OF THE SADF AND AN INTEGRAL PART OF SOUTH AFRICA’S COUNTER-INSURGENCY SYSTEM WHICH, IN THE COURSE OF ITS OPERA TIONS, PERPETRATED GROSS VIOLATIONS OF HUMAN RIGHTS, INCLUDING KILLINGS, AGAINST BOTH SOUTH AFRICAN AND NON-SOUTH AFRICAN CITIZENS. THE COMMISSION FINDS THAT THE ACTIVITIES OF THE CCB CONSTITUTED A SYSTEMATIC PATTERN OF ABUSE WHICH ENTAILED DELIBERATE PLANNING ON THE PART OF THE LEADERSHIP OF THE CCB AND THE SADF. THE COMMISSION FINDS THESE INSTITUTIONS AND THEIR MEMBERS ACCOUNTABLE FOR THE AFORESAID GROSS VIOLATIONS OF HUMAN RIGHTS.
25 Transcript of section 29 hearing, 18 May 1998, p. 28. 26 Ibid., pp. 30–1.