The Star Early Edition

Justice in sight for Simelanes

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More cartoons online at Angela Mudukuti is an internatio­nal criminal justice lawyer at the Wayamo Foundation, formerly with the Southern Africa Litigation Centre and the Internatio­nal Criminal Court.

LAST week the high court handed down an important judgment that will have an effect on justice for apartheid-era crimes. After seeking closure for over 30 years, Nokuthula Simelane’s family are finally one step closer to what seemed elusive and unattainab­le for so long – justice for their slain anti-apartheid heroine.

Simelane was a 23-year-old university student who acted as courier for the armed wing of the ANC, Umkhonto we Sizwe.

On September 8, 1983, she was kidnapped by the apartheid police, then known as the South African Police.

Nokuthula was brutally tortured and beaten to the point of being unrecognis­able. She was never seen again.

In 1996 a police docket was opened and subsequent TRC (Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission) proceeding­s revealed who her abductors and suspected murderers were. Amnesty for her abduction was granted, yet no one applied for amnesty for her murder. Amnesty for her assault and torture was denied. By law, those who were denied amnesty or failed to apply for amnesty remain liable for prosecutio­n.

After years of Simelane’s family engaging with the National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA), requesting an inquest into her unlawful killing or a decision for prosecutio­n to be made, the NPA and its various leaders since 1996 failed to act. Only after legal papers were filled by Simelane’s sister and mayor of Polokwane, Thembi Nkandimeng, in May 2015, seeking to compel the NPA to either refer the disappeara­nce of Simelane for an inquest or to make a decision with regard to prosecutio­n, did the NPA take action.

Papers filed included sworn affidavits from former NDPP Vusi Pikoli who stated that there was grave political interferen­ce, including politician­s obstructin­g prosecutor­s from pursuing apartheid-era cases.

In the hopes of avoiding a messy legal battle and finally acknowledg­ing its duty as the prosecutin­g authority, the NPA decided to prosecute four of the men suspected of having murdered Simelane.

Willem Coetzee, Anton Pretorius, Timothy Radebe and Frederik Mong were arrested and charged with the murder of Simelane on February 26, 2016. They were granted bail and their trial was set to begin on July 25, 2016 but due to the dispute regarding legal fees the case has been postponed four times since then.

Coetzee and Pretorius who left the SAPS in 1997, and Mong (who is still employed by SAPS) are of the opinion that the commission­er of police should pay their legal fees given that they were acting within the course and scope of their duties as employees of the erstwhile South African Police.

The commission­er, among other assertions, made the case that the accused “exceeded the power of their duties” and that it would somehow be against the state and the public interest to assist with their legal fees. Therefore, the police refused to assist with the legal fees, effectivel­y preventing the criminal trial from proceeding.

As explained by advocate Ntsebeza, the context at the time of Simelane’s abduction and murder was one where “state-sanctioned extra-judicial killings and rampant criminalit­y were the order of the day”. Therefore, although their actions were clearly unlawful, they were still acting in the course and scope of their duties as part of the apartheid machinery.

This however, is a matter that the trial court will likely determine when this trial eventually starts.

Last week, Judge C Pretorius ruled that the commission­er must pay reasonable legal fees as it was undeniably in the interests of justice, and because during the time of the abduction, torture and murder of Simelane, all three were employed by the then SAP and acting under instructio­ns from their superiors, the late Brigadier Hennie Muller and Brigadier Willem Schoon who is still alive.

This raises another important question that has been asked for years – when will the brigadiers and senior politician­s who called the shots during apartheid answer for their crimes?

Judge Pretorius also noted that the “state machinery had failed the deceased and her family abysmally” with all the delays and failure to institute criminal proceeding­s all these years. The NPA has had every opportunit­y to right the wrongs of the past and provide justice for apartheid-era crimes, yet it has taken over 30 years and the trial has not even begun.

Simelane’s father and brother have died without knowing what really happened to her and being able to bury her remains in a dignified manner. Hopefully, the trial will begin soon and run its course without further delay. This will be the first prosecutio­n of apartheid-era perpetrato­rs since the 2007 plea bargain in the Adriaan Vlok matter, and hopefully the first of many.

The wait has been long enough and this judgment emphatical­ly states that such untenable delay is unacceptab­le. No one should have to wait over 30 years for closure, justice and answers.

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 ??  ?? CRY FOR JUSTICE: Comrades and friends of former MK combatant Nokuthula Simelane singing outside the Pretoria Magistrate’s Court where the four men accused of her murder appeared.
CRY FOR JUSTICE: Comrades and friends of former MK combatant Nokuthula Simelane singing outside the Pretoria Magistrate’s Court where the four men accused of her murder appeared.
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