The Citizen (KZN)

De Klerk still under fire

TONY LEON: FORMER DA LEADER LATEST TO SLAM FORMER PRESIDENT

- Eric Naki ericn@citizen.co.za

Pushback to comments about apartheid not being crime against humanity.

Former Democratic Alliance leader Tony Leon is the latest high-profile leader to lambast the FW de Klerk Foundation for entering the fray to defend apartheid, as some organisati­ons call for a Nuremberg-type trial for De Klerk for apartheid atrocities.

Leon, who is former ambassador to Argentina, added his voice to a chorus of criticism from the ANC, the Congress of the People (Cope) and a host of others aimed at De Klerk and his foundation.

De Klerk opened a can of worms when he claimed that apartheid was not a crime against humanity and his foundation reiterated that, adding that genocides that occurred were worse than the apartheid system.

“I think FW de Klerk was disgracefu­lly abused by the EFF [Economic Freedom Fighters] in parliament last week. He deserves credit for his 1990 speech but his foundation has done neither him nor his legacy any good by entering the lists on how apartheid was not a crime against humanity,” Leon said.

“Totem-polling it by suggesting genocides were worse or other systems more depraved simply suggests his previous apologies for apartheid were without proper meaning,” he added.

The United Nations at the weekend reiterated its declaratio­n that apartheid was a crime against humanity and the ANC challenged De Klerk to research history on the matter, instead of playing ignorance about it.

The African Transforma­tion Movement (ATM) harshly lambasted De Klerk for his “racist, inhumane and insensitiv­e utterances”. The ATM called for De Klerk to be punished for the apartheid sins.

“ATM is calling for a Nuremberg-type trial for De Klerk and his ilk for the atrocities committed during apartheid under his watch and arguably under his direct command.

“ATM calls on [the South African Human Rights Commission] to investigat­e the utterances of De Klerk for hate speech,” ATM said.

The party said De Klerk’s “abhorrent outbursts” flew in the face of the spirit of the constituti­on, which requires that “apartheid perpetrato­rs like him recognise the injustices of the past”.

ATM said De Klerk again hatefully rubbed salt into the wound by confirming his lack of remorse when he described the declaratio­n of apartheid being a crime against humanity as “agitprop”, or political propaganda.

“Put differentl­y, De Klerk is actually saying the killing of our people by his regime was of no consequenc­e and, in fact, that the struggle to liberate the people of South Africa was an illegitima­te political crime against his racist regime,” the party said.

ANC national spokespers­on Pule Mabe slammed De Klerk, saying that his statement of denial “flies in the face of our commitment­s to reconcilia­tion and nation-building”.

Cope warned De Klerk to stop opening old wounds “caused by his cruel, evil and illegitima­te apartheid government”.

“It is clear that Mr De Klerk does not want to accept the declaratio­n of the United Nations, that apartheid was a crime against humanity. He says it was propaganda of the Soviets. That this is an insult to the millions of people who lost loved ones in the Sharpevill­e and Boipatong massacres,” said Cope spokespers­on, Dennis Bloem. –

Racist, inhumane and insensitiv­e utterances

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