Mail & Guardian

Prosecute apartheid crimes

The Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission’s recommenda­tions should be taken seriously so justice can be done and families can have closure

- OPINION Mkhuseli Vimba Dr Mkhuseli Vimba is a legal consultant and a political analyst.

The state has a duty to prosecute the gross human rights violations committed during the apartheid era. The South African criminal justice system consists of the police, courts and prosecutio­n and the correction­al services department. The main tasks of the police are to enforce the law, protect the public, arrest suspects or perpetrato­rs and prevent crime.

The government has enough pieces of legislatio­n and instrument­s to prosecute serious human rights violations that took place during the apartheid era, especially those cases that did not pass the test of amnesty during the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission (TRC).

The TRC required those who were involved in apartheid crimes to divulge full informatio­n relating to human rights violations and killings based on apartheid laws. Those who did not divulge full informatio­n were not granted amnesty and the commission recommende­d that such individual­s be investigat­ed and, ultimately, prosecuted.

Since the TRC hearings drew to a close in 1998, very little has happened to bring perpetrato­rs to book. Justice has yet to be done.

Many political activists such as Sophia de Bruin, the late Archbishop Desmond Tutu and the families of those who were killed have called on the government, in particular the police and the National Prosecutin­g Authority, to take the recommenda­tions of the TRC seriously and implement them.

In the past week, allegation­s emerged that the administra­tion of former president Thabo Mbeki gave an instructio­n that apartheid human rights violations must not be investigat­ed.

Mbeki denies this.

This is against reports made by the likes of Vusi Pikoli, the former national director of public prosecutio­ns, and Dumisa Ntsebeza, the former head of investigat­ions for the TRC, who claim that there was indeed such an instructio­n and, at the centre of it, was the former min

ister of justice and constituti­onal developmen­t, Bridgette Mabandla.

It must be stated that Ntsebeza has said he made the assumption that because Mabandla served in Mbeki’s cabinet, he should have known about the decision not to investigat­e and prosecute those who were involved in apartheid criminal acts.

It is strange that Ntsebeza did not call the former president to verify the allegation before coming to such a conclusion.

Families of those killed during apartheid are longing for answers about what happened to their loved ones and want to see justice served.

The reports by Pikoli and Ntsebeza do not allege that Mbeki’s administra­tion concealed the outcomes of an investigat­ion or recommenda­tions by the police that the suspects be prosecuted.

In his report and interviews with Newsroom Afrika, Ntsebeza indicates

that his investigat­ions confirmed that the Mbeki administra­tion, through Mabandla, stopped the prosecutio­n of apartheid crimes. In the interview, Ntsebeza proposed a judicial commission of inquiry with powers to investigat­e the truthfulne­ss of the allegation­s, especially because Mbeki denies any instructio­n by his government.

But this suggestion is not a good one. Commission­s of inquiry are time consuming, expensive and a waste of taxpayers’ money. Our record as a country is not good when it comes to making good use of commission reports and recommenda­tions. The establishm­ent of a commission would be an exercise in futility.

Moreover, the country has had two administra­tions after Mbeki and those administra­tions did little to prosecute those involved in apartheid crimes. It would therefore not make economic sense to establish a commission.

If the National Prosecutin­g Authority has cases that are ready for court, it should promptly prosecute those involved. With the passage of time (more than 30 years since the end of apartheid and 15 years since the end of the Mbeki administra­tion), memories have faded and some potential witnesses and perpetrato­rs have died, which diminishes the chances of a successful prosecutio­n. Whatever evidence is still available should be used.

There is no doubt that some apartheid crimes will go unpunished.

The families are yearning for justice and the National Prosecutin­g Authority must do its best to deliver it, although the circumstan­ces are less than ideal.

 ?? Photo: Anna Zieminski/afp ?? Witness: The TRC’S investigat­ive unit head, Dumisa Ntsebeza (centre), watches as Freedom Front leader Constand Viljoen (right) hands his party’s submission to Archbishop Desmond Tutu.
Photo: Anna Zieminski/afp Witness: The TRC’S investigat­ive unit head, Dumisa Ntsebeza (centre), watches as Freedom Front leader Constand Viljoen (right) hands his party’s submission to Archbishop Desmond Tutu.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa