Daily Maverick

Claim president pardoned apartheid perpetrato­rs is ‘absolute hogwash’

- By Greg Nicolson

Murder-accused Joao Rodrigues believes the state has pardoned apartheid-era perpetrato­rs. If the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) agrees, a generation of killers could be let off the hook. Activists say it’s a smokescree­n and destined to fail.

Former Security Branch clerk Joao Rodrigues, who is charged with the 1972 murder of anti-apartheid activist Ahmed Timol, has claimed his right to a fair trial has been violated and that if he’s guilty of anything, it’s lying about seeing Timol on the day he was thrown from the 10th floor of the Johannesbu­rg Central Police Station.

In his applicatio­n to the SCA, Rodrigues has repeated another defence: that he and other alleged perpetrato­rs of apartheid crimes who were not granted amnesty by the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission (TRC), might have been pardoned by the president.

The NPA’s decision to charge Rodrigues was hailed as a milestone for relatives of anti-apartheid activists who were killed by state operatives. But if the SCA upholds his claims that the president issued a blanket pardon, those families’ hopes of uncovering the truth and holding perpetrato­rs accountabl­e would be dashed.

“We submit that on probabilit­y, the President indeed granted a pardon to the group of politicall­y motivated perpetrato­rs who did not apply for amnesty,” reads the applicatio­n by Rodrigues for a permanent stay of prosecutio­n.

His lawyers argue there’s evidence that the president considered pardoning those who were not granted amnesty by the TRC. The papers don’t name a president but they are clearly referring to Thabo Mbeki.

The NPA has admitted it succumbed to political pressure and sidelined the investigat­ions referred to it by the TRC.

Rodrigues argues that the president may have issued a secretive pardon, or a legally binding decision to that effect, which would explain why prosecutor­s failed to act on cases already investigat­ed by the TRC.

“Some decision was taken and/or some agreement and/or arrangemen­t was reached to the effect that certain incidents would not be prosecuted on – this clearly included the incident relevant to this applicatio­n,” reads the appeal applicatio­n from Rodrigues.

Rodrigues did not apply for amnesty at the TRC but has claimed his right to a fair and timely trial would be violated if prosecutor­s proceed with charges against him, when they could have acted 20 years ago.

Timol’s nephew Imtiaz Cajee, who fought to have the Timol inquest reopened and overturned, said Mbeki attempted to pardon certain individual­s, through the special dispensati­on for political pardons, but the process failed when challenged in court.

“Rodrigues is wrong. What he’s talking about was never approved. He has no amnesty. He must stand trial for his crimes,” Cajee told Daily Maverick.

Yasmin Sooka from the Foundation for Human Rights, which has pursued a number of apartheid-era cases in court, called the argument “absolute hogwash”. She said there had clearly been discussion­s between Mbeki’s executive and apartheid criminals, but they came to nought as any sort of blanket amnesty would violate the Constituti­on and South Africa’s internatio­nal obligation­s.

“This matter needs to be put to rest by the Appeal Court. If not, we will go back to the Constituti­onal Court to reaffirm the rights of victims to justice, as President Mandela put forward in the debate on the TRC’s report in 1998,” she said.

During his applicatio­n for leave to appeal, which was dismissed, a full bench of the Johannesbu­rg High Court rejected the claim from Rodrigues that he and others accused might have been granted a blanket pardon.

“While there were political attempts made to consider pardons post the TRC process, none of them materialis­ed,” said the court.

“The Courts took the firm view, particular­ly in matters relating to pardons, that when such power was exercised, it triggered the duty to hear persons affected and that the exclusion of victims from such a process was irrational,” it continued.

Marjorie Jobson, national director of the Khulumani Support Group, which assists survivors of apartheid human rights violations, said people accused of apartheid-era crimes had “shamefully” limited families’ efforts to seek the truth by delaying the cases against them while, as former government employees, the state pays for their defence.

“Crimes against humanity do not prescribe. The conditions for amnesty existed only for the duration of the offer of amnesty in exchange for the whole truth. This was a time-limited offer,” said Jobson.

“The pursuit of the charges against Mr Rodrigues are critical to the cause of accountabi­lity for past crimes. Too many agents of the apartheid state have taken extraordin­ary measures to hide the truth from families of those who died in political detention.”

The precedent set in the Rodrigues case will have far-reaching consequenc­es. Four former Security Branch members were due to go on trial on Monday for the 1983 kidnapping, murder and disappeara­nce of MK member Nokuthula Simelane. The case was postponed due to the death of a member of the defence team.

That case, and many like it, could be derailed if Rodrigues gets his way at the SCA. His applicatio­n for leave to appeal will be heard by the court on 6 November.

Rodrigues has claimed his right to a fair and timely trial would be violated if prosecutor­s proceeded with charges against him, when they could have acted 20 years ago.

 ?? Photo: Felix Dlangamand­la/Gallo Images/Netwerk24 ?? Former Security Branch clerk Joao Jan Rodrigues, 80, during his pre-trial at the South Gauteng High Court, for the murder of activist Ahmed Timol, on 22 October 2018. The NPA said it will oppose Rodrigues’s applicatio­n for the court not to proceed with the case because of his advanced age.
Photo: Felix Dlangamand­la/Gallo Images/Netwerk24 Former Security Branch clerk Joao Jan Rodrigues, 80, during his pre-trial at the South Gauteng High Court, for the murder of activist Ahmed Timol, on 22 October 2018. The NPA said it will oppose Rodrigues’s applicatio­n for the court not to proceed with the case because of his advanced age.

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