Mail & Guardian

Dr Death’s legacy

A deliberate­ly dense exhibition reveals the ghastly underbelly of Wouter Basson’s Project Coast

- Kwanele Sosibo

Under Dr Wouter Basson’s supervisio­n, Project Coast, apartheid South Africa’ s chemical and biological warfare programme, mastered the idea of hiding things in plain sight. Fashioning tools of assassinat­ion masked as everyday objects, Project Coast’s arsenal included poisoned drinks, T-shirts and envelopes, and walking sticks capable of shooting poisoned pellets.

Poisoned Pasts: Legacies of the South African Chemical and Biological Programme, on show at the Nelson Mandela Foundation in Johannesbu­rg, is an exhibition highly aware of the failure of words and language to encapsulat­e the scale and ghastlines­s of Project Coast.

Perhaps in acknowledg­ement of this, Kathryn Smith, one of its curators, states: “Poisoned Pasts is not an expansive exhibition, but it has been designed with a deliberate density and a nonlinear internal logic that does not seek to ‘choreograp­h connection­s’ or ‘overstate juxtaposit­ions’.”

Project Coast, which was created to deal with the increasing threat of chemical warfare from South Africa’s cross-border enemies and how this could be studied and used domestical­ly, operated on both a mass and a micro scale, and, as such, its mythology sometimes outweighs its establishe­d devastatio­n.

By the early 1980s, about 200 members of the South West African People’s Organisati­on (Swapo) were poisoned with muscle relaxants and dumped in the Atlantic Ocean. In 1987, the notorious askari Joe Mamasela “recruited” 10 young men (between the ages of 15 and 22) “into the ANC”, only to lace their drinks and blow them up in the minibus taxi they were travelling in.

In between, attempts at poisoning ANC bigwigs such as Pallo Jordan and Ronnie Kasrils — between 1985 and 1988, Basson’s men tried twice but could not succeed in eliminatin­g the two with poison — Basson’s antics were also concerned with maximum reach, involving his researcher­s looking into putting birth control drugs in water supplies, the spraying of MDMA into protesting crowds to neutralise them and applying covert sterilisat­ion methods through the disseminat­ion of vaccines.

When the evidence of just how far Project Coast was made public during the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission — former head of the military research laboratory Daan Goosen told the TRC that they were considerin­g developing bacteria that would kill only black people — there was an overwhelmi­ng sense that Basson’s impact would be felt long after the TRC, with many people believing that Project Coast went as far as to influence the rapid spread of HIV in South Africa in the 1990s and beyond.

Here was a man who could play God successful­ly: kill us in our sleep one night and wake up to save some lives the next day, depending on his mood.

After the TRC, Basson went on trial to face 54 charges, ranging from the possession of drugs to conspiracy to murder. He was acquitted in 2002.

The Health Profession­als Council of South Africa found him guilty of unethical conduct in 2013, but the process of finalising his penalty is still stuck in the appeals system, which Basson has made full use of.

Indeed, one can pore over the material of Poisoned Pasts for several days, stacked as it is with countless videos and voice recordings of Basson’s victims and the family members of those his operation brutalised.

There are also research papers and investigat­ion findings of various purchases of poisons by members of Project Coast.

The documents, displayed in small, cubicle-like shelves, are not only limited to informatio­n on Project Coast, but also record the continuanc­e of Dr Death’s — Basson’s nickname conferred on him by the media — public life and the outrage it generates.

In a letter to the editor published in the Cape Times in 2013, a reader, Shuaib Manjra, is appalled that “Dr Death” is invited to the Kelvin Grove Club to give a “motivation­al speech”.

He writes: “Diversity and freedom of expression do not extend to providing a platform for those associated with human rights violations.”

The display of this letter vindicates the curator’s logic that “deviations may throw up unexpected connection­s”.

Reading the letter, I was momentaril­y transporte­d to the Franschhoe­k Literary Festival earlier this year and conversati­ons that ensued over how the most decorated of apartheid’s killing machines should be accepted in public.

Although it may be easy to vilify the Dr Deaths and the Prime Evils (Prime Evil was the press’ nickname for apartheid police officer Eugene de Kock), how far does complicity extend? If one follows this logic, Swapo’s missing 200, represente­d graphicall­y by anonymous silhouette­d profiles suspended from above, are also the equivalent of the missing supporters of apartheid, hiding out in plain sight or, perhaps, seeking motivation­al words from Dr Wouter Basson.

Although I expected to be aghast at the sight of the gestation stages of a genocide and overwhelme­d by the documentar­y evidence of what it takes to set it in motion, it is the photograph­s of Basson, smug and wincing from cigar smoke at a dinner table or goofing about in the back of a bakkie in Mozambique, that have me shaken and confounded. Because — surrounded by insurmount­able evidence that lives were compromise­d, thrown out over the water, poisoned through food, beer and clothing, and set up for systematic wipe-outs — there are also, as former United States secretary of defence Donald Rumsfeld says, “unknown unknowns”.

To paraphrase him: Throughout the history of our country and other free countries, it is the “unknown unknowns” that tend to be a difficult category.

Looking into Basson’s carefree eyes while pondering Rumsfeld’s words, I am struck by the fact that I may never know what it truly means to be human.

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 ?? Photos: Paul Botes ?? Chemical warfare: Dr Wouter Basson attempted to poison several ANC leaders, and Swapo members were poisoned with muscle relaxants and dumped from aeroplanes into the Atlantic Ocean.
Photos: Paul Botes Chemical warfare: Dr Wouter Basson attempted to poison several ANC leaders, and Swapo members were poisoned with muscle relaxants and dumped from aeroplanes into the Atlantic Ocean.
 ??  ?? Deadly staple diet: A Project Coast scientist did an experiment to see how much cyanide could be added to mealie meal before the blue colour was noticeable
Deadly staple diet: A Project Coast scientist did an experiment to see how much cyanide could be added to mealie meal before the blue colour was noticeable
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