Sunday Times

Proof needed before word of a master propagandi­st can be trusted

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Apartheid was an evil, corrupt, brutal and oppressive system, designed to deny generation­s of South Africans their basic human rights in their country of birth, their freedom and opportunit­ies to improve their lives and fulfil their potential. Not only that, it dehumanise­d and stripped them of their dignity. For the apartheid project to succeed, among many other things, it needed to have a strong propaganda machinery. While this state-sponsored machinery was brutal and was fully supported by the army, the police, the secret services and aided by heads of state, arms dealers, faith-based organisati­ons and donor organisati­ons and many other such collaborat­ors, on its own it was not enough. This is exactly why the architects of the apartheid project had to come up with a co-ordinated disinforma­tion campaign — as part of the regime’s broader psychologi­cal warfare strategy. To execute this it enlisted the services of a number of journalist­s from some of the country’s leading media houses, who were recruited and became key players in the project.

Details of this elaborate plan were laid bare this week by Vic McPherson, the former head of the apartheid government’s propaganda arm, known to many as StratCom. McPherson revealed how his strategic communicat­ions department and the security branch had Winnie Madikizela-Mandela under 24-hour surveillan­ce, monitoring her every move and making her the target of its misinforma­tion campaign. He revealed how the security branch infiltrate­d the ANC, SACP and the trade unions.

“We had surveillan­ce teams with cameras and tape recorders and so forth. When it came to Winnie

Mandela, she was always on the radar. We were aware of her activities, listening to her telephone conversati­ons.

We were following her around. She was closely monitored by the security branch,” McPherson said.

More revelation­s followed. Paul Erasmus, a security branch operative, dropped another bombshell, claiming that the entire Mandela United Football Club, which provided close-protection services to Madikizela­Mandela in the 1980s at the height of state repression, was used to spy on her. Erasmus also claimed that

Stompie Seipei was among those who were recruited to spy on Madikizela-Mandela.

While these revelation­s are nothing new, it is the claim by McPherson that while heading StratCom he maintained a network of 40 journalist­s on his payroll which must be taken with a pinch of salt. While it is a wellknown fact that there were indeed journalist­s who worked closely with and aided the apartheid project, we caution against taking to heart and accepting as gospel truth what is revealed by these notorious special branch operatives and apartheid propagandi­sts.

South Africans appear to have forgotten the role McPherson played in the apartheid government’s fight against the liberation struggle. He was a propagandi­st of note, who was once tasked by none other than PW Botha to draw up a psychologi­cal warfare strategy. He was the head of StratCom, a division that was specifical­ly tasked to create and carry out disinforma­tion and smear campaigns against those the apartheid government considered its enemies.

In a documentar­y aired this week, McPherson claimed his brief to the 40 journalist­s was simple — they had to write malicious and damaging news articles about Madikizela­Mandela and publish them in newspapers and other media platforms. Soon after the airing of the documentar­y, the rumour mill, as is always the case in South Africa these days, went into overdrive, naming some of the country’s respected journalist­s and editors as having been among those who worked for StratCom. McPherson has promised to release the list. But he has to release more than just a list. Any list of journalist­s claimed to have been employed to spread propaganda for the apartheid government has to be accompanie­d by evidence proving that they were indeed in the state’s employ.

The claim by McPherson . . . must be taken with a pinch of salt

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