MK soldiers return ‘home’
Justice and Correctional Services Minister Michael Masutha will today hand over the remains of two uMkhonto we Sizwe (MK) operatives who disappeared 30 years ago to their families in Durban.
Mandla Mjwara and Mfaniseni Mdlalose disappeared during the apartheid dispensation in 1987.
The two worked under the command of now Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs Minister Zweli Mkhize.
“Minister Mkhize will also pay tribute to the two fallen Umkhonto we Sizwe members that he worked with during one of the most difficult periods in the struggle for liberation.
“The minister will join the Minister of Justice and Correctional Services Michael Masutha, whose department is tasked with searching for missing persons and has organised the handover of the remains and the reburial of the heroes of the struggle,” department of cooperative governance and traditional affairs spokesperson Legadima Leso said in a statement.
Mjwara was born in 1967 and became politically conscientised at a young age.
He followed in his brother Sipho’s footsteps in joining MK, the ANC’s armed wing, in 1984.
“Mandla left South Africa for Lesotho and later met up with his brother in Angola in 1985.
“The last time anyone saw Mandla alive was in Umlazi in Durban in 1987.
“He operated under the command of Zweli Mkhize, Muzi Thusi and Kevin Qhobosheane.
“They were also with MK member Dumisane Phungula from Pietermaritzburg and the Chesterville group, including Sifiso Kunene and brothers Sabelo and Blessing Ngobese,” said Leso.
Mdlalose was born in 1954 and lived with his family in Chesterville, he said.
“He left the country with Chesterville activist Lucky Mthembu and others to join MK around 1983.
“He left behind his partner Busisiwe Nkomo and young daughter Xolile in Road 5, Chesterville.
“Little is known of his life in exile as most of those who operated with him have since died.
“However, it is known that he worked with the Ngobese brothers of Chesterville, who also fell under the command of Mkhize, Thusi and Qhobosheane.”
The missing persons task team at the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) is in charge of seeking and exhuming the remains of pre-1994 political activists. – ANA
Mandla left South Africa for Lesotho and later met up with his brother in Angola in 1985. Legadima Leso Dept of cooperative governance and traditional affairs