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This article was not written by Baruch Hirson but by
Paul Trewhela. Shortly before his death Baruch insisted that this piece,
published in Searchlight South Africa, No.5 in July 1990
should get maximum exposure on a website.
INSIDE QUADRO
End of an Era
The first-hand testimony by former
combatants of Umkhonto we
Sizwe (MK) about the
ANC
prison regime, together
with press reports that began to appear in Britain in March this year, are
an event in South African history. Never before has such concentrated
factual evidence been presented about the inner nature of the ANC and its
eminence grise, the South African Communist Party.
If people wish to understand the operation
of the
ANC/SACP, they must look here. This is the view behind the proscenium
arch, behind the scenery, where the machinery that runs the whole show is
revealed in its actual workings.
The
ANC/SACP did a very good job in
preventing public knowledge of its secret history from emerging, and the
testimony of the Nairobi five shows how. (Two other South Africans, both
women, are with the five in Nairobi at the time of writing, but they have
not yet gone public about their experiences). Those who survived the Gulag
system of the
ANC/SACP did so knowing that to reveal what they had been
through meant re-arrest, renewed tortures and in all probability, death.
They had to sign a form committing them to silence.
As they repeat in this issue, the ex-detainees
in Nairobi have revealed that other prisoners, including Leon Madakeni, star
of the South African film Wanaka, as well as Nomhlanhla Makhuba and
another person known as Mark, committed suicide rather than suffer re-arrest
at the hands of their KGB-trained guardians. Madakeni drove a tractor up a
steep incline in Angola, put it into neutral and died as it somersaulted
down the hill (Sunday Correspondent, 8 April).
The ex-guerrillas in Nairobi displayed
immense courage in speaking out publicly, first through the Sunday
Correspondent in Britain on April 8 and then in the Times
on April 11. It was another indicator of the crack-up of Stalinism
internationally: a snippet of South African glasnost.
Their courage might have contributed to
secure the lives of eight colleagues who had fled Tanzania through Malawi
hoping to reach South Africa on the principle that better a South African
jail than the ANC ‘security.’ This group, including two leaders of the
mutiny in the ANC camps in Angola in 1984, arrived in South Africa in April,
were immediately detained at Jan Smuts Airport by the security police for
interrogation, and then released three weeks later. The day after their
release they gave a press conference in Johannesburg, confirming the account
of the mutiny published here.
This regime of terror, extending beyond
the gates of the
ANC/SACP ‘Buchenwald’ of Quadro, was a necessary element in
the total practice of repression and deception which made the Anti-Apartheid
Movement the most successful Popular Front lobby for Stalinism anywhere in
the world. No international Stalinist-run public organization has ever had
such an influence and shown such stability, reaching into so many major
countries, for so long,
In its thirty years’ existence, the AAM
put international collaborative organizations of the period of the Spanish
Civil War and of the Stalin-Roosevelt-Churchill alliance to shame. Extending
to the press, the churches, the bourgeois political parties, the trade
unions and the radical, even the ‘trotskyist’ left, the AAM has been an
outstanding success for Stalinism, as the review of Victoria Brittain’s book
in this issue shows.
Vital to its success has been a practice
of open and covert censorship now blown wide open, in which individuals such
as Ms Brittain have played a sterling part. The ANC’s prisoners were its
necessary sacrificial-victims.
The KGB in Africa
The prison system to which
they were subject goes back to the late 1960s. It was the successor and the
complement to the prison system on which blacks in South Africa are weaned
with their mothers’ milk. In 1969 one of the editors of this journal met two
South Africans in London who said they had fought in the first MK guerrilla
operation in mid-1967 – a disastrous fiasco across the Zambezi River into
the Wankie area of Rhodesia, along with guerrillas from the
Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU), then led by James Chikerema. (The ZAPU president,
Joshua Nkomo, was in detention). The two men described how they had
eventually succeeded in escaping from Rhodesia, and how their criticism of
the operation had led to their imprisonment in an ANC camp in Tanzania. An
article on the theme appeared the same year in the British radical newspaper
Black Dwarf then edited by Tariq Ali.
The revelations by the Nairobi five
indicate how little has changed. In his book on black politics in South
Africa since 1945, Tom Lodge, (Black politics in South Africa Since
1945, Ravan, 1987), writes:
In 1968 a batch of Umkhonto defectors
from camps in Tanzania sought asylum in Kenya, alleging that there was
widespread dissatisfaction within the camps. They accused their commanders
of extravagant living and ethnic favouritism. The first Rhodesian mission,
they alleged, was a suicide mission to eliminate dissenters. In political
discussions no challenge to a pro-Soviet position was allowed (p.300).
From 1968 to 1990, nothing basic altered
in the ANC’s internal regime in the camps, except that in the high noon of
the Brezhnev era it operated para-statal powers under civil war conditions
in Angola, where a large Cuban and Soviet presence permitted the ANC
security apparatus to ‘bestride the narrow world like a Colossus.’
From the account of the ex-mutineers, ANC
administrative bodies ruled over its elected bodies, the security department
ruled over the administrative organs, and KGB-trained officials – no doubt
members of the SACP – ruled over the security apparatus.
Umkhonto we Sizwe functioned as an extension
in Africa of the KGB. Its role in the civil war in Angola was to serve primarily
as a surrogate to Soviet foreign policy interests, so that when the ANC rebels
proposed that their fight be diverted to South Africa this counted as
unpardonable cheek, to be ruthlessly punished. Over its own members, the ANC
security apparatus ruled with all the arrogance of a totalitarian power.
There is a direct line of connection
between the ANC reign of terror in its prisons – which a UN High Commission
for Refugees official described as more frightening than Swapo prisons – and
the ‘necklace’ killings exercised by ANC supporters within South Africa,
especially during the period of the 1984-86 township revolt, but now once
again revived against oppositional groupings such as Azapo [
Azanian
People's Organization ]. (The ANC’s’
necklace’ politics was also a definite contributory element provoking the
carnage in Natal). Two former ANC prisoners, Similo Boltina and his wife
Nosisana, were in fact necklaced on their return to South Africa in 1986,
after having been repatriated by the Red Cross (letter from Bandile Ketelo,
9 April 1990).
This is the significance of the ‘Winnie
issue.’ When on 16 February last year, leaders of the Mass Democratic
Movement publicly expressed their ‘outrage’ at
Winnie
Mandela's, ‘obvious
complicity’ in the abduction and assault on 14 year-old Stompie Mocketsi
Seipe, leading to his murder, this was in response to very widespread and
very well-founded revulsion among Soweto residents – especially ANC
supporters such as members of the Federation of Transvaal Women (Fetraw).
They were enraged by the jackboot politics of the so-called Mandela United
Football Team, whose ‘coach‘ – to the satisfaction of Fetraw members – has
been convicted of Stompie’s murder.
This squad of thugs, based in Mrs
Mandela’s house, acted within Soweto in the same way that the ANC/SACP
security acted abroad, in Angola, Tanzania, Zambia, Mozambique, Ethiopia and
Uganda. (According to the ex-detainees, the KGB-apparatus in the ANC even
sent its troops to Rhodesia in 1979 to fight against the guerrillas of the
Zimbabwe African National Union, ZANU, which was not a Soviet client).
For this reason, the integration of
certain members of MK into the South African army and police – as the MK
commander, Joe Modise, and his second in command, Chris Hani, are seeking –
should not present any serious problems. They speak the same language, they
are ‘all South Africans.’ The welcome of Captain Dirk Coetzee, head of the
regime’s assassination squad, into the arms of the ANC is an indication of
the future course of development, as is the decision by the new Swapo
government in Namibia to appoint a number of top South African security
policemen, including the former chief of police in the Ovambo region, Derek
Brune, to head its secret organs of coercion.
The South African prison system was
replicated in the ANC prisons even into everyday terminology, above all at
Quadro. This is a name that requires to become common currency in political
discourse: it is the Portuguese for ‘No.4’ the name used throughout South
Africa for the notorious black section of the prison at the Fort. Sneers by
warders at soft conditions in ‘Five Star Hotels’, the common description of
punishment cells as ‘kulukudu’ (Sunday Correspondent, 8
April) and the whole atmosphere of brutal crassness is quintessentially
South African, spiced with the added sadism of the Gulag. The ANC prison
system combined the worst of South African and of Russian conditions fused
together, and it is this new social type – as a refinement and augmentation
of each – that is now offered to the people of South Africa as the symbol of
freedom.
Beginning of an Era
In returning to South Africa,
the ex-ANC detainees have the advantage of the Namibian experience before
them. They need an organization of their relatives, along the lines of the
Committee of Parents in Namibia, and an organization of former prisoners
themselves, such as the Political Consultative Council of Ex-Swapo Detainees
(PCC). The ex-detainees who returned to Johannesburg in April have already
mentioned that they intend to form an association of ‘parents of those who
died or were detained in exile’ (Liberation, 17 May).
These young people – the Nairobi five are
aged between 28 and 33 – represent the flower of the generation of the
Soweto students’ revolt. This was the beginning of their political
awakening. The experience of Stalinist and nationalist terror at the hands
of the ANC/SACP represents a second phase in a cruel journey of
consciousness. A third phase is now beginning, in which these young people
will be required to discover what further changes in society and thought are
needed to bring a richly expressive democracy into being in southern Africa.
Compared with the Namibian experience (see
Searchlight South Africa No.4 and this issue), South
African conditions are both more and less favourable. Unlike in Namibia, the
churches in South Africa are not absolutely glued to the torturers. A letter
from the group in Nairobi was sympathetically received by the Rev Frank
Chikane, secretary of the
South African Council of Churches. Archbishop
Desmond Tutu met the
ex-detainees when he was in Nairobi early in April and arranged for them to
get accommodation at the YMCA there, paid for by the All-African Council of
Churches. (Up to that time they had first been in prison in Kenya, since
they had arrived absolutely without documents, and had then been living
rough). The Archbishop later took up the mutineers’ demand for a commission
of inquiry with the National Executive Committee of the ANC. He got no
response.
We join with these ex-detainees in demanding
that the ANC set up an independent commission of enquiry into the atrocities
perpetrated in the
Umkhonto we Sizwe camps.
Mandela’s statement acknowledging that
torture had taken place was in any case very different from the ferocious
silence of President Nujoma, the chief architect of Swapo’s purges. The
ex-detainees’ demand for action against top leaders of the ANC, however,
goes way beyond what the organization is likely to be able to concede.
Therein lies its radical character.
These positive currents, however, are
negated by the convergence of very powerful capitalist and Stalinist
interests which together aim to fix the future with the utmost
Realpolitik. The leaders of the unions, previously independent and now
politically prisoners of the SACP, have become the engineers of the SACP/capitalist
fix, and the workers – even when eager for socialism – are disoriented.
It is likely that there will be a very
violent period as the ANC’s drive for its supposed target of six million
members gets under way, through which it aims to wipe the floor with rival
groupings that accuse it of sell-out. It is possible that the methods of
Quadro will become part of the daily metabolism of South African life.
Future capitalist profitability requires in any case that a massive defeat
be inflicted on the workers. The Young Upwardly Mobile (Yuppy) stratum of
black petty bourgeoisie will ruthlessly attempt to enforce and secure the
conditions for its material advance.
Under these conditions, the ex-detainees
will need to find the route to the consciousness of the workers, both to win
a base of support for their own defence (even survival) and to help speed up
the process of political clarification about the nature of the ANC. In the
meantime, defensive alliances need urgently to be made: with the left wing
of the unions, socialist political groupings of whatever kind, opponents of
the new capitalist/ANC autocracy, concerned individuals in the press, the
universities and the legal system; and not least, with the ex-Swapo
detainees in Namibia.
As a yeast in which the fermentation of
new ideas can develop, the ex-ANC detainees on their return to South Africa
will prove one of the most favourable of human resources for a democratic
future. They know the future governors of South Africa from the inside. They
need the greatest possible international and local support to protect them
under very dangerous conditions of life in the townships.
They too will need beware the siren voices
of their KGB-trained persecutors, who seek to persuade them that the
Brezhnev wolf in Angola has been transformed into a Gorbachev lamb in South
Africa. In particular, they will need to inquire whether Joe Slovo, the
scourge of Joseph Stalin in 1990, and general secretary of the SACP, is the
same Slovo who was chief of staff of MK in the glory days of Quadro. What
did he know? When did he know it? And what did he do about it?
A MISCARRIAGE OF DEMOCRACY:
THE ANC SECURITY DEPARTMENT IN THE 1984 MUTINY IN
UMKHONTO WE SIZWE
Bandile Ketelo, Amos Maxongo,
Zamxolo Tshona, Ronnie Massango and Luvo Mbengo
Prelude to Mutiny
On 12 January 1984, a strong delegation of
ANC National Executive Committee members arrived at Caculama, the main
training centre of
Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK) in the town of Malanje, Angola. In
the past, such a visit by the ANC leadership – including its top man, the
organization’s president, Oliver Tambo – would have been prepared for
several days, or even weeks, before their actual arrival. Not so this time.
This one was both an emergency and a surprise visit.
It was not difficult to guess the reason
for such a visit. For several days, sounds of gunfire had been filling the
air almost every hour of the day at Kangandala, near Malanje, and just about
80 kilometres from Caculama, where President Tambo and his entourage were
staying. The combatants of MK had refused to go into counter-insurgency
operations against the forces of the Union for Total Independence of Angola
(UNITA) in the civil war in Angola and defied the security personnel of the
ANC. They had decided to make their voice of protest more strongly by
shooting randomly into the air. It was pointed out to all the commanding
personnel in the area that the shooting was not meant to endanger anybody’s
life, but was just meant to be a louder call to the ANC leadership to
address themselves afresh to the desperate problems facing our organization.
Clearly put forward also was that only
Tambo, the president of the ANC, Joe Slovo the chief-of-staff of the army
and Chris Hani, then the army commissar, would be welcome to attend to these
issues. An illusory idea still lingered in the minds of the MK combatants
that most of the wrong things in our organization happened without the
knowledge of Tambo, and that given a clear picture of the situation, he
would act to see to their solution.
Joe Slovo, now secretary of the South
African Communist Party (SACP), had himself risen to prominence among the
new generation as a result of the daring combat operations which MK units
had carried out against the racist regime. In 1983 the SACP quarterly, the
African Communist had carried an article by Slovo, about
J.B. Marks, another of the ANC/SACP leaders, who had died in Moscow in 1972.
That article, emphasizing democracy in the liberation struggle, was a
fleeting glance into some of the rarely talked-of episodes in the
proceedings of the Morogoro Consultative Conference of the ANC, held in
Tanzania in 1969. It might have been written for a completely different
purpose, but for the guerrillas of MK it was a call for active involvement
into the solution of our problems.
Chris Hani was one of the veterans of the
earliest guerrilla campaigns of the ANC in the Wankie area of Rhodesia,
against the regime of Ian Smith, in 1967. He had had his name built by his
‘heroic’ exploits by claims that he escaped ‘assassination attempts’ against
him carried out by the South African regime in Lesotho, where he had been
head of the ANC mission. Despite these claims it is doubtful whether he
could have survived over a decade in Lesotho (1972-82) if he had posed a
threat as serious as those sometimes portrayed. Hani, it must be stressed,
never carried out any major operations in South Africa, and there are no
operations carried out in his name in the whole of MK combat history, unlike
Joe Slovo for instance.
The guerrillas in Angola levelled their
bitterest criticisms against three men in the NEC of the ANC, men who had
had a much more direct involvement in the running of our army. The first was
Joe Modise, army commander of the ANC since 1969. He was looked down upon by
the majority of combatants as a man responsible for the failures of our army
to put up a strong fight against the racist regime, a man who had stifled
its growth and expansion. He was above all seen as someone who engaged
himself in corrupt money making ventures, abusing his position in the army.
The second was Mzwandile Piliso, the chief
of security. He was then the most notorious, the most feared, soulless
ideologue of the suppression of dissent and democracy in the ANC. The last
one was Andrew Masondo, freed from Roben Island after twelve years of
imprisonment, who had joined the ANC leadership in exile after the 1976
Soweto uprisings. In 1984 he was the national commissar of the ANC, and was
therefore responsible for supervision of the implementation of NEC decisions
and political guidance of the ANC personnel. Masondo was to use this
responsibility to defend corruption, and was himself involved in abuse of
his position to exploit young and ignorant women and girls. He was also a
key figure in the running of the notorious ANC prison camp known to the
cadres as ‘Quadro’ (or four, in Portuguese). It was nicknamed Quadro after
the Fort, the rough and notorious prison for blacks in Johannesburg, known
to everybody as ‘No.4’.
Such was the situation when Chris Hani
together with Joe Nhlanhla, then the administrative secretary of the NEC and
now chief of security, and Lehlonono Moloi, now chief of operations, arrived
in Kangandala under instructions from the NEC to silence the ever-sounding
guns of the guerrillas. Chris Hani was suddenly thrown into confusion by the
effusive behaviour of the combatants as they expressed their grievances,
wielding AKs which they vowed never to surrender until their demands were
met. What were these demands?
First, the soldiers demanded an immediate
end to the war by the MK forces against Unita and the transfer of all the
manpower used in that war to our main theatre of war in South Africa.
Secondly, they demanded the immediate suspension of the ANC security
apparatus, as well as an investigation of its activities and of the prison
camp Quadro, then called ‘Buchenwald’ after one of the most notorious Nazi
concentration camps. Lastly, they demanded that Tambo himself come and
address the soldiers on the solution to these problems. All that Chris Hani
could do in this situation was to appeal for an end to random shootings in
the air, and to appeal to the soldiers to await the decision of the NEC
after he had sent it the feedback about his mission.
The Beginnings of Quadro
The demands mentioned above had far-reaching
political implications for the ANC, which had managed to win high political
prestige as the future government of South Africa. But for anyone to
appreciate their seriousness, one must go back to the history of the ANC
following the arrival of the youth of the Soweto uprisings to join the ANC.
This historical approach to the mutiny of 1984 is more often than not
deliberately neglected by the ANC leadership whenever they find themselves
having to talk about this event. More than anything else, they fear the
historical realities which justify this mutiny and show it to have been
inevitable, given the genuine causes behind it.
The mainspring of the 1984 mutiny, known
within the ANC as Mkatashingo, is the suppression of democracy by
the ANC leadership. This suppression of democracy had taken different forms
at different times in the development of the ANC, and it had given birth to
resistance from the ANC membership at different times, taking forms
corresponding to the nature of the suppression mechanisms. We shall confine
ourselves to those periods that had become landmarks and turning points in
this history.
The first such remarkable events of
resistance to the machinations of the ANC leadership were in 1979 at a camp
known among South Africans as Fazenda, but whose actual name was Villa Rosa,
to the north of Quibaxe, in northern Angola. The majority of the trained
personnel of MK had been shifted from Quibaxe in November 1978 to occupy
this camp, where they were expected to undergo a survival course to prepare
for harsh conditions of rural guerrilla warfare. With the promise that the
course would take three months, after which the combatants would be
infiltrated back into South Africa to carry out combat missions, everybody
took the course in their stride and with high morale. After the first three
months and the introduction of a second course, it became crystal clear that
we were being fooled, to keep us busy. Voices of discontent began to surface
in certain circles of the armed forces. The main cause of discontent was the
suppression of our uncontrollable desire to leave Angola and enter into
South Africa to supplement the mass political upsurges of the people.
Alongside this were also complaints about inefficiency of the front
commanders and suspicions that they were treacherously involved in the
failure of many missions, leading to the mysterious death of our combatants
in South Africa.
Mzwandile Piliso was accused of
over-emphasizing the security of our movement against the internal enemy, at
the expense of promoting comradely relations among the armed forces. He was
promoting unpopular lackeys within the army while suppressing those who fell
to his disfavour, branding them as enemy agents who would ‘rot in the camps
of Angola’. Most of those lackeys defected to the racist South African
regime whenever they found it opportune. Such was the case with the most
notorious traitors in MK like Thabo Selepe, Jackson, Miki and others, all of
whom wormed their way up in the military structures assisted by Piliso.
The late Joe Gqabi [assassinated in Harare
in 1981, while ANC representative in Zimbabwe] attended one such explosive
meeting and cornmended the soldiers for their spirit of openness and
criticism. Fazenda was getting out of hand, and the feeling of discontent
began to spill into certain nearby ANC bases.
Something had to be done to stamp down
this resistance. The security organ of the ANC, which till then had just
been composed of a few old cadres of the 1960s, began to be reorganized in
all of the camps. Young men from our own generation who had recently
undergone courses in the Soviet Union and East Germany were spread into all
the camps. It was during this time that construction of a prison camp near
Ouibaxe was speeded up, which later took the form of the dreaded Quadro. ANC
general meetings, which were held weekly, and had been platforms for
criticism and self-criticism, were now terminated.
The very first occupants of Quadro prison
were three men from Fazenda: Ernest Mumalo, Solly Ngungunyana and Drake, who
had defiantly left Fazenda to go to Luanda, where they hoped to meet the ANC
chief representative, Max Moabi, to demand their own resignation from the
ANC. The ANC did not accept resignation of its membership [still the same
ten years later, in January this year, after the authors of this document
had presented their resignations]. Worse still this was in Angola, a country
where lawlessness reigned. After being beaten in a street in Luanda by ANC
and Angolan security, they were bundled into a truck and taken straight to
Quadro. Solly was released after two years, Ernest in 1984 and Drake’s end
is still unknown. The camp remained highly secret within the ANC. Everyone
sent to work there as a security guard undoubtedly had to have proved his
loyalty to Mzwandile Piliso, and was expected not to disclose anything to
anybody. Even among the NEC, the only ones who had access to Quadro were
Mzwandile Piliso, Joe Modise and Andrew Masondo.
An
Internal-Enemy-Danger-Psychosis’
To completely efface the spirit of resistance
in Fazenda, the majority of the MK forces there were taken to Zimbabwe,
where they fought alongside guerrillas of the Zimbabwe African People’s
Union (ZAPU), led by Joshua Nkorno against the Smith forces as well as the
guerrillas of the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU), led by Robert
Mugabe. Many worthy fighters perished there. Fazenda camp was closed in
1980, and fighters there were distributed among the two main camps of the
ANC, Pango and Quibaxe, both to the north of Luanda. The chapter on Fazenda
was closed.
But a burning urge to liberate South
Africa, with the only language the boers understood, the gun, could not be
trampled on as contemptuously as that. Yet it had become very dangerous to
raise even a voice against the leadership. The ANC had become divided into a
force of the rank and file and that of the leadership clubbed together with
the security apparatus, which had grown to such enormous levels that
practically every administration of whatever ANC institution was run by the
security personnel, and practically every problem was viewed as a security
risk and an ‘enemy machination’.
In a bid to strengthen their repressive
apparatus, Andrew Masondo created a security crack force in a camp known as
Viana, near Luanda. This unit, known as ODP (Peoples’ Defence Organization),
was composed mainly of very young men or boys. Its tasks were to guard the
ANC leadership when they paid visits to different camps, to enforce
discipline and bash up any forms of dissent and ‘disloyalty’. By this time,
after the Fazenda events, the ANC leaders had begun to whip up an
’internal-enemy-danger-psychosis,’ and whenever they visited the camps they
had to be heavily guarded. Worse still if it was Tambo who visited: the
whole camp would be disarmed, and only the security personnel and those
attached to it would be allowed to carry weapons.
The next hot spot for the ANC was in
Zambia, where the headquarters of the ANC was based and where most of the
leadership was living. This was in 1980. MK cadres, who had been drilled for
months in ‘communist ideology’ of the Soviet-East European type to denounce
all luxuries and accept the hazards of the struggle, here came into direct
confrontation with the opposite way of life lived by the ANC leaders. It
became clear that the financial support extended to the ANC was used to
finance the lavish way of life of the ANC leadership. Corruption, involving
rackets of car, diamond and drug smuggling, was on a high rise. The security
department itself was rocked by internal dissent between those who supported
a heavy-handed approach and the predominantly young cadres who opposed it.
There was also the burning problem of the
insignificant progress made by our forces in South Africa, at a time when
our people were alone locked into bitter mass struggles against the racists.
This aspect was further complicated by the decision of the NEC to send back
to Angola a batch of MK forces who had survived the war in Zimbabwe and were
discovered by the provisional government authorities in the assembly points,
disguised as ZAPU guerrillas. These guerrillas, still itching to go to South
Africa and aware of the conditions in the camps in Angola, refused point
blank the instructions to return to Angola.
Faced with these and many other related
problems, a meeting was arranged between the leadership and the
representatives of the three detachments, the Luthuli, June 16 and Moncada
detachments. Among their representatives, the June 16 Detachment was
represented by Sidwell Moroka and Moncada by Timmy Zakhele, both of whom
later ended up in Quadro. The June 16 Detachment advanced the proposal to
hold a conference of the whole ANC membership where these issues could be
settled democratically. This proposal, which had popular backing from the
overwhelming majority of the young cadres, was rejected by the ANC
leadership, which never accepts any idea that puts in question its
competence and credibility to lead.
It was in the process of these discussions
that a discovery of a spy network was disclosed and a clampdown on the
‘ambitious young men who wanted to overthrow the leadership of Tambo’ was
put into operation. The ANC security went into full swing, detaining the
so-called enemy spies and those who were proponents of the conference. It
was said that this spy-ring was not only concentrated in Zambia, but was
everywhere that the ANC had its personnel. Many of these young men – Pharoah,
Vusi Mayekiso, Kenneth Mahamba, Oshkosh and others – were later known to
have died under torture and beatings in Quadro prison camp. Others such as
Godfrey Pulti, Sticks and Botiki were released years later, after torture
and the failure of the security department to prove their treachery. Men who
were bodyguards of President Tambo and were unwilling to continue serving in
the notorious security organs were almost all sent to serve punishments in
other camps in Angola. Sidwell Moroka, James Nkabinde (executed at Pango in
1984), David Ngwezana, Earl and others were among those men. The guerrillas
from Zimbabwe who refused to return to Angola were flogged and beaten and
were later smuggled into Angola.
After this clampdown, and with the
majority of the membership panic-stricken, a strong entourage of ANC
National Executive Committee members, including President Tambo, took the
rounds in all ANC camps in Angola in February 1981. Appearing triumphant but
with agonizing apprehension, the ANC leadership addressed the cadres about a
spy net-work that had besieged the ANC, and emphasized the need for
vigilance. Some awful threats were also thrown at ‘enemy agents and
provocateurs’ by Piliso, who rudely declared in Xhosa ‘I’ll hang them by
their testicles’.
Soon thereafter, a tape-recorded address
by Moses Mabhida, the late general secretary of the SACP, was circulated,
criticizing dagga-smoking and illicit drinking in ANC camps, and calling for
strong disciplinary measures to be taken against the culprits. Commissions
to investigate these breaches of discipline were set up in April 1981 in
every ANC establishment. They were supervised by camp commanders and
security officers in 4 the camps, and all those implicated were detained,
beaten and tortured to extract information. The issue was treated as a
security risk, an enemy manoeuvre to corrupt the culprits’ loyalty to the
ANC leadership. Most of those arrested were known critics of the ANC
leadership and were labelled as anti-authority.
During the whole period of investigation
they were tied to trees outside and slept there. In Camalundi camp in
Malanje province, Oupa Moloi, who was head of the political department, lost
his life during the first day of interrogation. Thami Zulu, (the travelling
name of Muzi Ngwenya) who was the camp commander, and who himself died in
ANC security custody in 1989, addressed the camp detachments about the death
of Oupa, threatening to kill even more of these culprits who, at that time,
swollen and in excruciating pain, were lined up in front of the detachment.
Zulu/Ngwenya died in the ANC security department’s hands in 1989 for alleged
poisoning.
In Quibaxe, Elik Parasi and Reggic
Mthengele were ‘finished off’ at the instruction of the camp commander,
Livingstone Gaza, at a time when they were in severe pain with little hope
of survival. Others like Mahlathini (the stage name of Joel Gxekwa), one of
the talented artists who was responsible for the composition of many of the
first songs of the Amandla Cultural Ensemble, were taken from Pango to
Quadro, where they met their death.
It is important to realize that most of
these atrocities were carried out in the camps themselves, and not in the
secrecy of Quadro, where only a few would know. The operation succeeded in
its objectives. Fear was instilled and hatred for the ANC security
crystallized. Every cadre of MK took full cover, and the security department
was striding, threatening to pounce on any forms of dissent. Camps were
literally run by the security personnel. Many underground interrogation
houses were set up in all places where the ANC had its personnel, and
underground prisons were established in the places known as ‘R.C.’ and Green
House in Lusaka and at a place in Tanzania disguised as a farm near the
Solomon Mahlango Freedom College (SOMAFCO) at Mazimbu, the main educational
centre of the ANC in exile. In Mozambique a detention camp was set up in
Nampula where ‘suspects’ and those who kept pestering the leadership about
armed struggle in South Africa were kept.
MK began to crack into two armies, the
latent army of rebels which kept seething beneath the apparent calm and
obedience, and the army of the leadership, their loyal forces. The former
was struggling for its life, kicking into the future, but all its efforts
were confined within the suffocating womb of the latter. Security personnel
were first-class members of the ANC. They had the first preference in
everything, ranging from military uniforms and boots right up to
opportunities for receiving the best military, political and educational
training in well-off institutions in Europe.
Face to face with this state of affairs,
disappointment and disillusion set in and the cadres began to lose hope in
the ANC leadership. The rate of desertion grew in 1982-83. There occurred
more suicides and attempted suicides. The political commissars, whose task
was to educate the armed forces about the ideological and moral aspects of
our army, became despised as the protectors of corruption and autocracy. It
became embarrassing to be in such structures. Cases of mental disturbance
increased. This was mostly the case with the security guards of Quadro,
rumoured by the cadres to be caused by the brutalities they unleashed
against the prisoners. It was this worsening state of the cadres that made
Tambo issue instructions in September 1982 to all the army units to discuss
and bring forward proposals to the leadership about the problems in which
the ANC was enmeshed.
A Change of Forms
Series of meetings followed and the MK
cadres, thirsty to exploit this oasis of democracy which the ANC president
had decided to have them taste, levelled bitter criticisms about the state
of our organization. Once again the issue of the need for a conference was
put forward. Among the questions raised by the paper issued by Tambo was
what our response would be if the South African military decided to attack
Mozambique. Were we ready to lay down our lives for a common cause with the
Mozambican people? This question was treated by the combatants in a
simplistic way, for it bore no significance to the nature of the problems we
were faced with in the ANC. But the answer to it was right, in that the
cadres emphasized the importance of intensifying armed action in South
Africa, rather than fighting in foreign territories.
The reasoning behind such an approach by
the MK cadres stemmed from their realization of the weakness of our army,
both numerically and in relation to the quality of training. This was a time
when the heroic P.L.O. guerrillas were locked into bloody battles. against
the invading Isracli army in Lebanon. One could not but call this to mind
eight months later, when the overwhelming majority of our armed forces were
mobilized for counter-insurgency operation against Unita in the Malanje and
Kwanza provinces. One could not but note the similarities when Tambo
appealed to the NIK forces to ‘bleed a little in defence of the beleaguered
Angolan people,’ as he addressed the MK forces in preparation for launching
a raid against the Unita bases across the Kwanza River.
With the discussions over and papers from
different camps submitted to the leadership, Masondo took rounds in all the
camps expressing the disappointment of President Tambo about papers
submitted from Pango camp and Viana. Claiming to be echoing the views of
President Tambo, he said the papers were ‘unreadable’ and that Tambo had not
expected that this opportunity would be used for launching attacks against
the leadership and military authorities.
In April 1983, some structural changes
were announced. The Revolutionaery Council, adopted at the 1969 Morogoro
Conference, was abolished by the NEC and a new body was set up, the
Political Military Council (PMC). Announcements of personnel to man the
Political Council and the Military Council were also made. The mere mention
that Joe Modise would remain the army commander demoralized many cadres, who
had speculated that he would be sacked as commander after rumours that he
had been arrested in Botswana for diamond dealing (some cadres were severely
punished for circulating that account) and because of his dismal failure to
lead our army into meaningful battles against the South African racist
regime.
All the changes announced by the NEC
became meaningless and a farce for the armed forces. Meaninglessness stemmed
from the fact that the cadres had come to realize that the change of
structures was not the main issue: the personnel that manned these positions
had to be changed. Their farcical nature derived from realization by the
membership that these changes had been advanced to forestall any demands for
a democratic conference where the NEC could be subjected to scrutiny. This
contempt for the demands and ideas of the grassroots, at a time when the
balance of forces was turning in disfavour of the leadership, could only
have the result that the ANC would pay dearly for it. To understand this
scornful behaviour, one needs to understand the deep-seated Stalinist
ideological leanings of the ANC leadership. We will consider this later. For
now, having briefly set out the general outline of the background to the
1984 mutiny, let us examine the course of events.
The Mutiny at Viana
Having received a dressing down from the
rebellious armed forces at Kangandala on 12 January 1984, and having been
presented with a package of demands, Chris Hani sped back to Caculama. where
he delivered the news to Tambo and his NEC. During his address that
afternoon in the camp at Caculama, which was composed overwhelmingly of new
trainees, President Tambo felt the need to introduce his NEC to the recruits
and to lay stress on certain political issues. Pointing at the NEC members
on the rostrum, he said: ‘This is the political leadership of the ANC...,’
and suddenly turning his eyes to a man next to him,, he declared: ‘This man
founded this army ...,’ patting him on his shoulder. That man was Joe Modise,
the man whom the armed forces, in their majority, were saying should be
deposed.
Acclaimed as a man of wisdom, a man no-one
could match in the way he had led the ANC, President Tainbo saw the need
even at that hour to firmly entrench Joe Modise in the MK, commanding
position. Tambo did not see a need to respond to the calls of the cadres to
come and address them, in spite of the fact that he was only an hour’s drive
away. But, perhaps, nobody knows about armed soldiers, and the life of the
most important man must be secured. Tambo and his entourage left Caculama
for Luanda that same evening, without having addressed even a message to the
mutineers.
No sooner had the NEC left for Luanda than
mutiny began to grow to higher levels. The whole of the Eastern Front was
engulfed in sounds of gunshots, and there were stronger demands for the
closure of the front and the deviation of the whole manpower to a war
against Pretoria. A few days later word came from the NEC that the front
would be closed and that all the soldiers must prepare themselves to leave
Malanje for Luanda, where they would meet with the ANC leadership. The first
convoy of a truckload of guerrillas left, followed by a second the following
day, all eager for the meeting which they expected to put the ANC on a new
footing.
Located at the outskirts of the capital
city, Luanda, the ANC transit camp of Viana had been evacuated of all
personnel, who had been sent to an ANC area in Luanda to prevent contact
with the mutineers. Strict orders were circulated by the ANC security
personnel that nobody in the district of Luanda should visit Viana or have
any form of contact with the mutineers. Guerrillas from the Malanje Front
entered Viana in a gun salute, shooting in the air with all the weapons in
hand. Later the security personnel in Viana, under the command of a man
known as Pro, a former security guard at Quadro and then also a camp
commander at Viana, also very notorious among the mutinying guerrillas,
demanded that every soldier surrender his weapons, explaining the danger
they posed to the capital. The demand was dismissed summarily with the
reason that arms provided security for the mutineers against the reprisals
the security department would launch, given that situation. Instead, all the
security personnel within the premises of the camp were searched and
disarmed, but never even once were they pointed at with weapons. The
administration of the camp deserted to other ANC establishments in Luanda.
In one of the metal containers, used for
detention, a corpse was found with a bullet hole in the head. It was the
corpse of Solly [not to be confused with the earlier named Solly], one of
the strong critics of the ANC military leadership. At some stage he had
tasted the bitter treatment of the security department and had in the
process got his mind slightly disturbed. At the news of the mutiny in
Malanje he had become vociferous and fearless, and that was the mistake of a
lifetime.
That same day, some crews of guerrillas
volunteered to round-up ANC establishments in Luanda to explain their cause
and to understand the political positions of others. Even though this was a
dangerous mission, given the mobility of the ANC security personnel in
Luanda and the likely collaboration with them of FAPLA [armed forces of the
Angolan state, controlled by the Popular Movement for the Liberation of
Angola, MPLA], the task was fulfilled. That very same day again, people from
all ANC establishments came streaming to Viana to join and support the
mutineers. The efforts of the leadership to isolate the mutineers were
shattered and they resorted to force by laying ambushes to attack those who
were travelling to Viana with guns. In one such an encounter, Chris Hani
with an AK submachine gun, made his appearance on the side of the loyalists
by chasing and firing at those who wanted to join the mutineers. For the
first time since the mutiny began, a series of mass meetings were held in an
open ground in Viana. Everybody was allowed to attend, even members of the
security department.
The Demand for Democracy
It was in these mass meetings that the
political essence of this rebellion began to solidify. A committee was
elected by the guerrillas themselves, to take control of the situation and
serve as their representative in meetings with the leadership. This body,
which became known as the Committee of Ten, was chaired by Zaba Maledza (his
travelling name). Zaba was a former black consciousness activist in the
South African Students’ Organization (SASO) during the days of Steve Biko
who had joined the ANC in exile during the early seventies and served as one
of the foremost propagandists in the ANC Radio programmes alongside Duma
Nokhwe. A brother to Curtis Nkondo, one of the leaders of the United
Democratic Front (UDF) in South Africa, Zaba had landed in Quadro in 1980
after some disagreements with the ANC military leadership while working for
the movement in Swaziland, and was released in 1981. He then rejoined the
Radio Broadcasting staff of the ANC in Luanda, where his unwavering
opposition to men like Piliso and Modise, and his clarity of mind, had
earned him the respect of both friends and foes within the ANC, something
which even the ANC security begrudgingly appreciated.
Other members of the Committee of Ten,
their real names given in brackets, included: 1. Sidwell Moroka (Omry
Makgale), who was formerly Tambo’s personal bodyguard and was one of the
group of security personnel who were punished by being sent to Angola
following a mop-up operation in Lusaka in 1981. At the outbreak of the
mutiny he was the district chief of staff in Luanda; 2. Jabu Mofolo, who was
at that time the political commissar of the Amandla Cultural Ensemble; 3.
Bongani Matwa, formerly a camp commissar in Camalundi; 4. Kate Mhlongo (Nomfanelo
Ntlokwana), at that time part of the Radio Propaganda Staff in Luanda; 5.
Grace Mofokeng, also attached to the Radio Staff; 6. Moses Thema (Mbulelo
Musi), a former student at the Moscow Party School and at that time serving
as the head of the political department at Caxito camp; 7. Sipho Mathebula
(E. Mndebela), formerly a battalion commander at the Eastern Front; 8. Mwezi
Twala (Khotso Morena); and 9. Simon Botha (Sindile Velem).
Also adopted at those meetings was a set
of demands addressed to the ANC National Executive Committee. They were:
-
An immediate suspension of the Security
Department and establishment of a commission to investigate its all-round
activities. Included here was also the investigation of one of the most
feared secret camps of the ANC, Quadro.
-
A review of the cadre policy of the ANC
to establish the missing links that were a cause for a stagnation that had
caught up with our drive to expand the armed struggle.
-
To convene a fully representative
democratic conference to review the development of the struggle, draw new
strategies and have elections for a new NEC.
The demands were a backhand blow in the
face of the ANC leadership. They threatened to explode the whole myth of a
‘tried and tested’ leadership. No wonder Chris Hani in one of those tense
and emotionally charged meetings, in bewilderment retorted: ‘You are pushing
us down the cliff. You are stabbing us at the back!’ And like a cornered
beast they used everything within their reach to destroy their opponents.
Election of people to leadership positions was long preached and accepted as
unworkable within the ANC. The last conference had been held in 1969 in
Morogoro, and it had also come about as a result of a critical situation
which threatened to break the ANC, and as a result of pressure from below.
The very elevation of Oliver Tambo from the deputy presidency in 1977,
something that never received support at Morogoro, was done behind the backs
of the entire membership, without even prior discussion or announcement. Not
that it did not have the support of the membership, but such decisions in a
politically prestigious body such as the ANC needed at least a semblance of
democracy, even if a sugar-coating.
The demand for a conference had been
deviated in 1981 through the discovery of a ‘spy-ring’, and all those who
talked about it then, feared even the word thereafter. When the same demand
had been voiced out in 1982, the ANC leadership came out with its own fully
worked-out changes and structures without the participation of the
membership, even changing structures adopted at the past conference. And
this time, as Joe Modise said later, a group of soldiers thought they could
send the ANC leadership to a conference room ‘at gunpoint’. Those demands
were clearly unacceptable to the leadership.
Commission of Inquiry, And
After
In anticipation of a heavy-handed reaction
from the ANC leadership, the committee members felt it was necessary to
secure protection by the people of South Africa and the world. Placards
calling for a political solution and reading ‘No to Bloodshed, We Need Only
a Conference’ were plastered on the walls of Viana camp. Journalists were
called, but they were never given the slightest chance to get nearer the
mutineers. Two men, Diliza Dumakude and Zanempi Sihlangu, both of them
members of the Radio Propaganda Staff, were intercepted by the security
personnel and murdered while on their way to the studios of Radio Freedom.
While all this was happening, the
presidential brigade of FAPLA (the Angolan army) was being mobilized and
prepared to launch of an armed raid on Viana. The decision was that the
whole mutiny must be drowned in blood. The ANC could not be forced by
soldiers to a conference hall ‘at gunpoint’. Early the following day, the
mutineers were woken up by the noise of military trucks and armoured
personnel carriers (APCs) as the forces of FAPLA encircled the camp. An
exchange of fire ensued as the guerrillas retaliated to the attack with
their arms. Shortly thereafter, shouts of ‘Ceasefire’ emerged from one of
the firing positions and Callaghan Chama (Vusi Shange), one of the
commanders of the guerrillas, rose out of a trench beseeching for peace. One
MK combatant, Babsey Mlangeni (travelling name), and one FAPLA soldier were
already dead and an Angolan APC was on the retreat engulfed in flame.
What followed were negotiations between
the national chief of staff of FAPLA, Colonel Ndalo, and the Committee of
Ten. An agreement was reached after lengthy discussions with the guerrillas,
with the Angolans trying to convince them that there would be no
victimizations. Weapons were surrendered to the FAPLA commanders and they
promised to provide security for everybody who was in Viana, and that even
the ANC security would be disarmed. Two member of the OAU Liberation
Committee arrived together with Chris Hani who delivered a boastful address
denouncing the whole mutiny and its demands as an adventure instigated by
disgruntled elements. Then the usual political rhetoric followed, that the
ANC was an organization of the people of South Africa, and that those
mutineers were not even a drop in an ocean and that the ANC could do without
them. To demonstrate this, Hani called on all those who were still committed
to serve as ANC members to move out of the hall. The hall was left empty.
All the mutineers were still committed to the ideals of the ANC, they were
committed to ANC policies. Nevertheless, they could discern deviations from
the democratic norms proclaimed in those policy documents and declared on
public platforms. It was a concern for this that had forced them to use arms
in conditions where criticism of the leadership and democratic election of
NEC members by the rank and file was branded as counter-revolutionary.
During the period of these events, another
rebellion was breaking out in Caculama, the very camp in which President
Tambo had delivered his address about the illegitimacy of the mutiny which
had then been in progress in Kangandala. Some groups of trained guerrillas
and officers, including the staff unit commissar, Bandile Ketelo (Jacky
Molefe), moved out of the camp, boarding trucks and trains to join and
support the mutineers at Viana. The training programme for the new recruits
came to an abrupt stop, and this was another slap in the face of the ANC
leadership because Caculama camp was their last hope to counterbalance the
popularity of the mutiny. With the support from Caculama, the mutiny
acquired a 90 per cent majority among the whole trained forces of MK in
Angola, which was then the only country where the ANC had guerrilla camps.
The Angolan government authorities played
a very dishonest role thereafter. They began to throttle this popular unrest
in collaboration with the ANC security, dishonouring all the agreements they
had made with the guerrillas. The security personnel of the ANC were allowed
to enter the camp armed, which was defended by the Angolan armed forces with
their weapons. Later Joe Modise and Andrew Masondo arrived, together with
five men from headquarters in Lusaka. The five men, James Stuart, Sizakhele
Sigxashe, Tony Mongalo, Aziz Pahad and Mbuyiselo Dywili, were introduced as
a commission of inquiry set up on the instructions of Oliver Tambo to
examine the whole episode. The following day, 16 February 1994, a group of
about thirty guerrillas, including all the members of the Committee of Ten,
were shoved with gun barrels of the ANC security into a waiting military
vehicle of FAPLA. The tension that had captured the moment was eased when a
group of guerrillas inside the closed truck broke out into a song,
Akekh’u Mandela, usentilongweni, Saze saswel’ ikomand’ ingenatyala
(Mandela is not here, he is in prison, we have lost a commander). The trucks
and some ANC security officers left for the Maximum State Security Prison in
Luanda, where the guerrillas were locked up. The rest of the mutineers in
Viana were transported to the two camps of the ANC north of Luanda, Ouibme
and Pango. Once again the Angolan authorities dishonoured the forces of
change within the ANC, and added another point in their collaboration to
abort a drive to veer the ANC towards democracy.
The mutineers in prison in Luanda were
thrown into dark, damp cells with very minimal ventilation. The cells had
cement slab beds without mattresses and blanket, and the toilets in the
cells were blocked with shit spilling out. The gallery in which the
mutineers were held was the one which housed Unita prisoners, and it had
last preference in all prison supplies, including food. Starvation and lack
of water was so acute that prisoners were collapsing and dying of hunger and
thirst, the only ones surviving being those who were allowed visits from
their families and relatives, who even brought them water from their homes.
Several days later, the commission of
inquiry arrived at the prison led by James Stuart [a former trade unionist
and ANC stalwart from the 1940s]. Interviews and recording of statements
followed. Five questions were asked:
-
What are the causes of the unrest?
-
What role have you played in the mutiny?
-
Why do you want a national conference?
-
What can you say about the role of the
enemy in this?
-
What do you think can be done to improve
the state of affairs in the army?
In the process of these interviews, those
in prison were joined by Vuyisile Maseko (Xolile Siphunzi), who had some
head injuries he had received while resisting arrest in one of the ANC
centres in Luanda. He had then decided to explode a grenade inside the
military vehicle in which he was being transported, which contained also
Chris Hani and Joe Modise, who had accompanied a group of security personnel
to round up those who had escaped arrest in Viana. Hani and Modise managed
to escape unharmed, and in the confusion that ensued Hani issued
instructions to the security personnel to shoot Maseko on the spot, but
Modise had intervened, saying ‘he (Maseko) must go and suffer first’. He had
since ‘suffered’, and was left in prison in Luanda when most of the
mutineers were released in December 1988, where he probably still is, if not
dead now.
Interrogation and Torture in
Luanda
The James Stuart Commission concluded its
work after more than a week. What followed were interrogations conducted by
the security department under two of the most notorious security officers,
Itumeleng and Morris Seabelo. These interrogations were conducted not in the
way the ANC security was used to. This was because, firstly, the armed
revolts that had surprisingly engulfed the whole army had been characterized
by open denunciation of the ANC leadership and a call to investigate the
crimes of the security department and Quadro. It was a great shock to the
entire leadership of the ANC to learn about their unpopularity within the
army. They therefore had to exercise caution in dealing with those arrested
so as not to confirm the allegations of atrocities that they were accused
of, and they therefore had to restrain their interrogation teams. Secondly,
the Angolan State Security Prison contained a lot of foreigners from
different parts of the world, and the Angolan authorities had to make sure
that those prisoners did not leave prison confirming the brutalities of the
ANC security.
But if you are trained and used to
extracting information through beatings and torture, it becomes difficult to
sustain a laborious and tedious process of interrogation without falling
back to your usual habit. So, here too, they started becoming impatient with
this sluggish method, and they resorted to torture and beatings. The prison
became more often than not filled with screams from the interrogation rooms
as the security personnel began beating up mutineers, hitting them with
fists and whipping them with electric cables underneath their feet to avoid
traces. Kate Mhlongo, a woman who was a member of the Committee of Ten, had
to be hospitalized in the prison wards for injuries sustained under
interrogation, followed by Grace Mofokeng, who was also subjected to
beatings.
The mutineers decided to take the matter
up with the Angolan prison authorities and, in particular, with a Cuban
major who was at the top of the prison administration. Promises were made by
the prison authorities to stop the torture, but the beatings continued and
no action was taken. When Angolan and foreign prisoners began to express
their indignation to the authorities about these tortures, beatings and
screams, the ANC prisoners decided to take action themselves. In mid-March
they embarked on a hunger strike, demanding an immediate end to physical
abuses, that they be charged and tried or released immediately, and that
President Tambo himself should intervene and understand the political
position of the mutineers. The hunger strike was broken up in its second
week when the ANC security took away to Quadro about eleven prisoners,
including Zaba Maledza (chairman of the Committee of Ten) and Sidwell Moroka.
The ANC security complained that Luanda
prison was a ‘Five Star Hotel’ and felt that we were taking advantage of
that. They told us that they would take us to ’ANC prisons’ where we would
never even think of taking any action to secure our release. The ANC
interrogation team was saying that the mutiny was an enemy-orchestrated move
to oust the leadership of President Tambo, and they wanted to know who was
behind this. They could not accept it as spontaneous, and to confirm that
they cited the sudden response of support the mutiny got from all the
centres of the ANC in Luanda. Coming out of one of those interrogation
sessions in Luanda prison, Zaba Maledza pointed out that the ANC security
had decided to frame him up as the one responsible for the whole unrest.
They had questioned him about his relationship with [first name?] Mkhize,
the chairman of the ANC Youth Section Secretariat, who had paid a visit from
Lusaka to Angola shortly before the outbreak. Mkhize had since been deposed
from the Youth Secretariat by the NEC.
Later in March while still in Luanda
prison, we were joined by Khotso Morena (Mwezi Twala), who had been in
military hospital following an incident in which he had been shot from
behind in the presence of Joe Modise and Chris Hani during their round-up of
other mutineers. A bullet had pierced through his lung and got out through
his front, and he was still in a critical condition. Later still, in April,
another three men were imprisoned for their role in the mutiny. The
conditions in the prison were worsening and almost everyone was sick, their
bodies skeletal and emaciated by lack of food and water. Some began to
suffer from anaemia. Their bodies were swollen because, of the dampness of
the cells, which they were not allowed to leave for exercise or to bask in
the sun like the other prisoners. To make things worse, the prison itself
had no medicines or qualified medical doctors and all our efforts to appeal
to the ANC security personnel to grant us medical treatment, which we knew
they could afford better than the Angolan government, were ridiculed. They
said the mutineers ‘chose to leave the camps, and what was there was only
for committed ANC members.’
In that ‘Five Star Hotel’, Selby Mbele and
Ben Thibane lost their lives in a very pathetic way. Selby was speeded to an
outside military hospital through the pressure of the mutineers themselves
when he was already losing his breath and he died the same day in the
intensive care wards. Ben Thibane was also speedily admitted into an
internal prison hospital on a Saturday evening, again through the pressure
of his colleagues, at a time when he could hardly walk In spite of his
critical condition, he did not receive any treatment and he lost his life
early the following Monday. Both these deaths happened within a space of ten
days of each other. With a clear probability of more deaths to follow, the
Angolan prison authorities and the ANC leadership were in a state of panic.
It was only then that we were allowed, for the very first time, after nine
months in that prison, to go out of the dark cells and do some exercises in
the sun. Lawrence, a Cuban-trained ANC security official, who coordinated
between ANC security and the Angolan prison authorities, for the first time
brought us some medicines and even two ANC doctors, Peter Mfelana and Haggar,
to examine us. He also brought some food from ANC centres outside.
In February 1985, we received the first
visit in Luanda prison from the leadership of the ANC: from Chris Hani, John
Motsabi (who died in 1986 after he was taken out of the NEC at the Kabwe
Conference in 1985) and John Redi, the director of ANC security. The
meeting, which was held in one of the lounges of the Maximum Security
Prison, was never fruitful as the guerrillas for the first time levelled
bitter criticisms directly at Chris Hani for the treacherous role he had
played in suppressing the mutiny. They further called directly on him to
stage a public trial of the mutineers. Hani tried his best to defend his
position and announced that the NEC had decided to hold a conference. ‘The
ANC is committed to justice,’ he said, and the mutineers would be given ‘a
fair trial’. He left the prison ashamed of himself. From that time on, Chris
Hani who had managed to win the support of the armed forces before the
outbreak of mutiny through false promises, would never even wish to meet
with the mutineers on an open platform, except with them as prisoners.
From the Pango Revolt to
Public Executions
It will do at this stage to go back a bit,
and have a look at one of the bloodiest episodes in the history of MK. This
was in Pango camp in May 1984, two months after the suppression of the
mutiny and the arrest of the first group at Viana. After the group
considered to be the main instigators and ringleaders of the mutiny had been
arrested on 16 February, the remaining soldiers at Viana were transported in
military vehicles to two camps of the ANC to the north of Luanda, Pango and
Quibaxe. These two were the oldest camps of the ANC in Angola and had been
evacuated following a mobilization of the whole army in preparation for the
war against Unita, leaving them with only a few guerrillas to man their
defences. On their arrival, the guerrillas from Viana had to go through
interviews with the Stuart Commission. With this over and the commission
gone, life began to be tough for the mutineers as the authorities of the
camp – composed squarely of those who were loyal to the military leadership
– started enforcing castigative rules on people whose emotional indignation
at the ANC leadership had barely settled.
A course was introduced arrogantly called
‘reorientation’. The political motives behind that were not difficult to
know. Mutiny had to be understood as the work of enemy provocateurs, who had
been detained, while others had just been blind followers who had fallen
prey to their manipulation. The immediate response of the whole group of
guerrillas was negative, arguing that their demand for a conference was not
disorientation and that they saw no need for the course. Through
intimidation, some of the mutineers conformed to pressure to undertake the
course but another group refused to comply. It is worth noting that the only
people who had weapons in the camp were those loyal to the leadership, and
fear and panic had gripped some of the guerrillas about the possible
retaliation of the ANC security. Already by that time the security
department was conducting interrogations on soldiers, and had been detaining
others secretly and sending them to Quadro. The fate of those still in
Luanda prison was becoming a concern of everyone, and a serious state of
insecurity had set in. This state of insecurity and harassment reached a
peak in Pango after some guerrillas had been beaten, tied to trees and
imprisoned by the camp security and administration, following an incident in
which the camp authorities pointed weapons at a ‘culprit’ who was between
them and the assembled guerrillas.
That Sunday, 13 May 1984, the guerrillas
stormed the ANC armoury in Pango camp, disarmed the guards and shot one who
refused to surrender his weapon, injuring him. Having laid their hands on
the weapons, gun battles ensued throughout the night between the rebel
guerrillas and those loyal to the administration of the camp. Zenzile
Phungulwa, who was the camp commissar and a staunch defender of the status
quo, Wilson Sithole, a staff commissar, Duke Maseko (another loyalist) and a
security guard who was guarding prisoners in the camp prison were killed
during the fighting that night. Cromwell Owabe was found dead in the bush
with bullet holes; Mvula and Norman were missing in combat. The camp
commander and other forces loyal to the administration managed to escape and
the camp was occupied and run by the mutineers.
The mutineers tried to reach the local
authorities of the nearest town to report the matter, but the squad was
intercepted by the security forces and after a short battle managed to
retreat safely. It became clear then that the ANC commanders had mobilized a
crack force of all its loyal cadres in all its camps and establishments in
Angola, and they were encircling the guerrilla base. Running battles ensued
from five o’clock in the morning the following Friday and continued the
whole day as forces under Timothy Mokoena, then a regional commander in
Angola and now the army commissar of MK and Raymond Monageng (then regional
chief of staff of MPC, arrested in 1988 by the ANC as an enemy plant)
struggled to overcome the camp occupied by the mutineers. At dusk that same
day the battle ended. About fourteen guerrillas were down, and a lot more
captured from the side of the mutineers.
Some managed to break out of the
encirclement and marched through the bushes further up north. Those captured
were subjected to beatings and tortures under interrogation, with melting
plastic dripped on their naked bodies and private parts, whipped while tied
to trees and forced under torture to exhume the bodies of the ANC loyalists
who had died several days before and wash them for a heroic burial. A
military tribunal was set up shortly thereafter, headed by Sizakhele Sijashe,
now head of ANC Intelligence, and composed predominantly of security
personnel such as Morris Seabelo, a former commander and commissar at Quadro,
and at that time chief of security in the whole of the Angola region of MK.
Seven men were summarily sentenced to death by public execution by firing
squad. They were James Nkabinde (one of Tambo’s former bodyguards), Ronald
Msomi, Bullet (Mbumbulu), Thembile Hobo, Mahero, Wandile Ondala and Stopper.
Motivated by a genuine desire to
democratize the ANC and push it forward to higher levels of armed
confrontation for people’s freedom, they demonstrated a bravery and a spirit
of sacrifice as they walked tall to the firing squad which shocked even
their executioners, not budging an inch from the demand for a national
conference and the release of their imprisoned colleagues. Chris Hani, a man
who endorsed their execution, was himself forced to comment that ‘had this
bravery and self-sacrifice been done for the cause of democracy and freedom
in South Africa, it would be praiseworthy.’ But history teaches us that the
jackboot of autocracy knows no limits, and should therefore be opposed
limitlessly, starting from wherever you are.
The executed MK soldiers were buried in a
mass grave in Pango. Later in the week a group of about 15 who had managed
to break through the encirclement of the loyal forces were caught in the
province of Uige. After many days marching through the bush, they had
decided to stop at one of the Soviet establishments in the region. After
explaining their cause, they requested temporary sanctuary and requested the
Soviet officials to inform the Angolan government and the ANC president
about the matter. To show that they posed no harm to them and to the local
population, they surrendered their weapons to the Soviet-FAPLA authorities.
The Soviet officials sent the message to the security department of the ANC,
whose personnel arrived in a convoy of military vehicles. The men were
surprised in their sleep, tied hand and foot, and under whips, lashings and
military boots they were thrown into the trucks, and all the way from there
to Pango they were tortured and beaten. In Pango, torture and untold
brutalities were unleashed against them, and in the process one of the
captured mutineers, Jonga Masupa, died. Others like Mgedeza were found dead
in the bushes nearby with bullet holes in them.
The mutineers were kept naked with ropes
tied on them for three weeks in the prison at Pango, and any security
officer or guards (who had been temporarily withdrawn from Quadro) could
satisfy their sadistic lusts on the helpless prisoners. The head of the ANC
Women’s Section, Gertrude Shope, appeared on the scene from Lusaka at that
time and was taken aback by what she saw. She ordered an end to executions
and tortures, and that the prisoners should be allowed to get clothes, which
was done. Eight of those arrested were taken to Quadro and the rest were
given punishments which they served in the camp.
The end of the episode at Pango closed the
chapter of armed resistance to enemies of democracy within the ANC. Zaba
Maledza, the elected chairman of the Committee of Ten, died in Quadro
shortly after these events in an isolation cell in which he had been kept
since 16 February. The spectre of these young fighters will never stop
haunting those who, for fear of democracy and in defence of their selfish
interests at the expense of people’s strivings for freedom, had nipped their
lives at a budding stage.
The Kabwe Conference – and
Quadro
Overwhelmed by shock as a result of the great
momentum of the forces for change, the ANC National Executive Committee
succumbed. Shortly after the events at Pango, it announced that it had
decided to hold a National Consultative Conference the following year, in
June 1985. Defensively, ANC leaders rushed to deny that they had been forced
to comply to the demands of the mutineers, and that it was the political
situation in South Africa that had made them take this decision.
Equivocally, they declared that the conference would not be the type of
conference that the mutineers had demanded. And what did they mean?
In April 1985, two months after Chris
Hani’s visit to the mutineers in the State Security Prison in Luanda and two
months before the National Consultative Conference at Kabwe, in Zambia,
thirteen mutineers were released from the Luanda prison and one from a group
imprisoned in Quadro. Propaganda was whipped up within the ANC membership
that those who had been released were innocent cadres who had been misled,
and that those remaining in jail were still to be thoroughly investigated.
On 12 April, all the remaining mutineers in prison in Luanda were
transported to Quadro in handcuffs under a heavy escort of ANC security
personnel. What followed, even as the conference proceeded at Kabwe, was
their humiliation and dehumanization in a place talked about in whispered
tones within the ANC.
Quadro was best described in a terse
statement by Zaba Maledza, when he said: ‘When you get in there, forget
about human rights.’ This was a statement from a man who had lived in Quadro
during one of the worst periods in its history, 1980-82. Established in
1979, it was supposed to be a rehabilitation centre of the ANC where enemy
agents who had infiltrated the ANC would be ‘re-educated’ and would be made
to love the ANC through the opportunity to experience the humane character
of its ideals. Regrettably, through a process that still cries for
explanation, Quadro became worse than any prison than even the apartheid
regime itself considered a crime against humanity – had ever had. However
bitter the above statement, however disagreeable to the fighters against the
monstrous apartheid system, it is a truth that needs bold examination by our
people, and the whole of the ANC membership. To examine the history of
Quadro is to uncover the concealed forces that operate in a political
organization such as the ANC.
Quadro, officially known as Camp 32, was
renamed after Morris Seabelo (real name Lulamile Dantile), one of its first
and trusted commanders. He was a Soviet-trained intelligence officer, a
student at the Moscow Party Institution and a publicized young hero of the
South African Communist Party. In late 1985 he mysteriously lost his life in
an underground ANC residence in Lesotho, where none of those he was with,
including Nomkhosi Mini, was spared to relate the story. Located about 15km
from the town of Quibaxe north of Luanda, Quadro was one of the most feared
of the secret camps of the ANC to which only a selected few in the ANC
leadership (viz., Mzwandile Piliso, Joe Modise, Andrew Masondo and also the
then general secretary of the SACP, Moses Mabhida) had access. The
administration of the camp was limited to members of the security forces,
mostly young members of the underground SACP. Such were most of its
administrative staff. for example, Sizwe Mkhonto, also a GDR-Soviet trained
intelligence officer and former political student at the Moscow Party
Institution, who was camp commander for a long time; Afrika Nkwe, also
Soviet intelligence and a politically trained officer, who was a senior
commander and commissar at Quadro, with occasional relapses of mental
illness; Griffiths Seboni; Cyril Burton, Itumeleng, all falling within the
same categories, to name but a few.
The security guards and warders were drawn
from the young and politically naive fanatic supporters of the military
leadership of Modise and Tambo, who kept to strict warnings about secrecy.
They are not allowed to talk to anyone about anything that takes place in an
‘ANC Rehabilitation Centre.’ The prisoners themselves are transported
blindfolded and lying flat on the floor of the security vehicle taking them
there. Upon arrival in the camp they are given new pseudonyms and are
strictly limited to know only their cellmates, and cannot peep through the
windows. From whatever corner they emerge, or any turn they take within the
premises of the prison, they must seek ‘permission to pass’. Any breaches of
these rules of secrecy, whether intentional or a mistake, are seriously
punishable by beatings and floggings. To crown it all, when prisoners are
being released they must sign a document committing them never to release
any form of information relating to their conditions of stay in the prison
camp, and never to disclose their activities there or the forms of
punishment meted out to them.
The place has seven communal cells, some
of which used to be storerooms for the Portuguese colonisers, and five
isolation cells, crowded so much that a mere turn of a sleeping position by
a single prisoner would awaken the whole cell. With minimal ventilation,
conditions were suffocating, dark and damp even in the dry and hot Angolan
climate. Even Tambo was forced to comment, when he visited the place for the
first time in August 1987, that the cells were too dark and suffocating. In
every cell there is a corner reserved for 5-litre bottle-like plastic
containers covered with cardboard, which serves as a toilet where to the
eyes of all cellmates you are expected to relieve yourself. With a strong
stench coming from the toilet area and lice-infected blanket rags that stay
unwashed for months or even years on end, the prison authorities would keep
the doors wide open and perhaps light perfumed lucky sticks before visiting
ANC leaders could enter the cells. Outside, the premises of the camp are so
clean from the beaten and forced prison labour that again Tambo found
himself commenting: ‘The camp is very clean and beautiful, but the mood and
atmosphere inside the cells is very gloomy.’
In the Hands of the SACP
The life activity of the inmates at Quadro is
characterized by aggressive physical and psychological humiliation that can
only be well documented by the efforts of all the former prisoners and
perhaps honest security guards combined. Confronted by questions from the MK
combatants before the outbreak of the mutiny, Botiki, one of the former
detainees who had lived through camp life in Quadro during its worst period,
simply answered: ‘What I’ve seen there is frightening and incredible.’ For a
long tinie, Quadro had been a place of interest to many cadres, and it was
so difficult to get knowledge of the place from ex-detainees. The ANC
security had instilled so much fear in them that they hardly had any hopes
that the situation could be changed. The meek behaviour and fear of
authority shown by ex-detainees, the intimidating and domineering posture of
the security personnel, attempted and successful suicides committed by
ex-prisoners such as Leon Madakeni, Mark, and Nonhlanhla Makhuba when faced
with the possibility of re-arrest, and the common mental disturbance of the
guards and personnel at Quadro, and what they talked about in their deranged
state, threw light on what one was likely to expect in this ‘rehabilitation
centre.’
In Quadro the prisoners were given
invective names that were meant to destroy them psychologically, names
‘closely reflecting the crimes committed by the prisoners.’ Among the
mutineers, we had Zaba Maledza named Muzorewa, after a world-known traitor
in Zimbabwe; Sidwell Moroka was named Dolinchek, a Yugoslav mercenary
involved in a coup attempt in the Seychelles; Maxwell Moroaledi was named
Mgoqozi, a Zulu name for an instigator; and there were many other
extremely rude names that cannot be written here. Otherwise, generally every
prisoner was called untdlwenibe, a political bandit.
The daily routine started at six with the
emptying of toilet chambers, during which prisoners would run down to a big
pit under whipping from ‘commanders’ (security guards) who lined the way to
the pits. After this, prisoners would be allowed to wash from a single
quarter-drum container at incredible speed. The whole prisoner population
was washing from a single container, with water unchanged, taking turns as
they went out to dispose of the ‘chambers.’ The last cells out would suffer
most, because they would find water very little and very dirty. The very
activity of prisoners washing was a very big concession, because before 1985
it was, not even considered necessary for the prisoners to wash and they
were infested with lice. Each group of prisoners was required to use
literally one minute to wash and any delay would lead to serious beatings.
Back to the cell after washing in the open
ground, the prisoners of Quadro would be given breakfast which would either
be tea or a piece of bread, or sometimes a soup of beans or even tea. They
were normally given spoiled food that was rejected by the cadres of the ANC
in the camps, and it was normally half-cooked by the beaten, insulted and
frightened prisoners. The two other meals, lunch and supper, were usually
mealie meal and beans, or rice and beans, sometimes in extremely large
quantities, which you were forced to eat. To make certain that you had eaten
all, there was an irregular check of toilet chambers to detect a breach of
this regulation. Alongside the emaciated prisoners there were security
guards who lived extravagantly, drinking beer every week: privileges unknown
in other ANC establishments. During periods of extreme shortages of food for
the prisoners, those who were working would bank their hopes on the left-overs
from the tables of the security officers and guards.
Simultaneously with the taking of
breakfast, those who wished to visit the medical point would be allowed out.
A clinic at Quadro was one of the most horrible places to visit. Usually
manned by half-baked and very brutal personnel, a visit to the clinic
usually resulted in beatings of sick people and a very inhuman treatment for
the prisoners. Errol, one of the mutineers, who had problems with his
swelling leg, was subjected to such inconsiderate treatment and beatings
whenever he visited the clinic that he finally lost his life. Some prisoners
would be forced to go to work while sick, for fear of revealing their state
of health that would land them in the clinic. Even reporting your sickness
needed a very careful choice of words. For instance, if you had been injured
during beatings by the ‘commanders’, you were not supposed to say that you
had been beaten. In Quadro, the ‘commanders’ don’t beat prisoners, they
‘correct’ them: this was the way the propaganda went. ‘A prisoner receives a
corrective measure.’
After the prisoners had shined the boots
of the commanders and ironed their uniforms, at eight o’clock the time for
labour would begin. In Quadro there are certain cells that are earmarked for
hard and hazardous labour. During this period, the cells predominantly
containing mutineers were subjected to the hardest tasks. Lighter duties
such as cooking and cleaning the surroundings were given to other groups of
prisoners, while the mutineers carried out other work such as chopping wood
and cutting logs, digging trenches and constructing dug-outs, and-most
feared of all-pushing the water tank up a steep and rough road.
A South African Labour
Process
Every kind of work at Quadro is done with
incredible speed. Prisoners are not allowed to walk: they are always
expected to be on the double from point to point in the camp. The group that
is chopping wood would leave the camp at eight to search for a suitable tree
to fell. Everybody had to have an implement, an axe. With work starting
after eight, chopping would continue without a break until twelve, and you
were not even expected to appear tired. ‘A bandit doesn’t get tired,’ so
goes the saying. Whipping with coffee tree sticks, trampling by military
boots, blows with fists and claps on your inflated cheeks (known as
ukumpompa) became part of the labour process. A work quota you are expected
to accomplish is so unreasonable and you are liable to a serious punishment
for any failure to fulfil it. Many prisoners at Quadro, had their ears
damaged internally because of ukumpompa, which was sometimes done by using
canvas shoes or soles of sandals for beating the prisoners. The same
situation prevailed in other duties. Unreasonably heavy logs for dug-outs
had to be carried up the slopes. Every prisoner was cautious to get a piece
of cloth for himself to cushion the heavy logs so as to protect his
shoulders, but you would still find prisoners doing these duties with
patches of bruises incurred through this labour form.
The most feared duty in Quadro was the
pushing of the huge water tank, normally drawn by heavy military trucks, by
the prisoners themselves for a distance of about three or four kilometres
from the water reservoir to the camp. Like cattle, they would struggle with
the tank and the ‘commanders’ wielding sticks would be around whipping
prisoners like slaves whenever they felt like it or when the pace was too
slow.
Prisoners in Quadro behaved like
frightened zombies who would nervously jump in panic just at the sight of
commanders, let alone at a rebuke or a beating, In the process of these
beatings during labour time, prisoners who could not cope with the work were
sometimes beaten to death. Such was the death of one prisoner who died from
blows on the back of his head from Leonard Mawen~one of the security guards.
Two others were unable to carry some heavy planks from a place far away from
the camp, after the truck that had been carrying them broke down. Upon
arrival in the camp they were summoned from their cell, under instructions
from Dan Mashigo, who was the camp’s chief of staff, and were taken for
flogging at a spot near the camp. One never came back to the cell, and the
other one died a short while after returning to his cell.
This was in complete conflict with what
Dexter Mbona – the security chief in Quadro and later ANC regional chief of
security in Angola – told the mutineers when addressing them on their very
first day of arrival. On that occasion, he said: ‘This camp is not a prison
but a rehabilitation centre, and it has changed from what you portrayed it
to be during the time of Mkatashingo [the mutiny].’ Quadro was still a place
of daily screams and pleas for mercy from physically abused prisoners.
Saturday was the worst. It was a day of strip and cell searches, the
‘comunanders’ would enter each cell with sticks and the search would
commence. At the slightest mistake made by a single prisoner as a result of
panic, the whole cell would be in for it, and to drown the noise of their
screams, other cells would be instructed to sing.
As already hinted, the whole matter about
this camp needs to be investigated to establish who were the masterminds
behind these gross violations of human rights. Both psychologically and
physically, the camp has done a lot of damage to those who unfortunately
found themselves imprisoned there. Some have become psychological wrecks,
while other have contracted sicknesses such as epileptic fits: for instance,
Mazolani Skhwebu, Hamba Zondi and Mzwandile, three colleagues of the
mutineers who were left in Quadro when other members of the group were
released in 1988. What is certain is that Andrew Masondo, Mzwandile Piliso
and Joe Modise were highly involved in these sinister political
machinations. But was the topmost leadership of the ANC unaware? Let justice
take its course, and with fairness and honesty let nothing be concealed from
the people of South Africa.
From Quadro to Dukawa
Such were the conditions of imprisonment in
which the mutineers were held without trial for almost five years, with the
sole purpose of breaking their commitment to the democratization of the
organization they loved. Occasional visits by the leadership of the ANC only
served further to frustrate the rebel inmates, to drive them to admit their
guilt and to reduce them to tools manipulated by enemy provocateurs. But, if
anything, the conditions in Quadro confirmed the justness of their cause and
strengthened their commitment to cleanse the ANC of such filth.
The conference on which the detained
mutineers had banked their hopes materialized at Kabwe on 16 June 1985, but
to their disappointment it never carried out the expected reforms. The
delegation from Angola, the main centre of internal strife, was
predominantly composed of selected favourites of the ANC military
leadership, who drowned the few who were sent with them as a compromise to
give the conference a semblance of representativeness and democracy. The
presidential report of O.R. Tambo never even touched the events that had
rocked the ANC and led to so much bloodshed, and which had forced the
convening of the conference. When the issues behind the mutiny were put on
the table by some of the cadres from Angola, the matter was hushed up by
Tambo under the pretext that it could divide the ANC. Mr Nelson Mandela had
sent a statement to the conference appealing for unity and rallying support
for the leadership of Tambo, and it was tactically read at the opening of
the conference. It was a further weight against the rebels. Unity, once
again, as always, was pushed forward at the expense of a fair and democratic
solution of the problems that had beset the ANC. The culprits were saved and
further strengthened their positions within the ANC. It was a miscarriage of
justice.
Members of the National Executive
Committee were to be elected from a list of candidates drafted by Tambo. At
the end of the conference we were confronted by our jailers in Quadro and
some members of the leadership boasting about unity in the ANC. Our demands
for free and fair elections and for an inquiry into the activities and
crimes committed by the security apparatus were ridiculed, and they bragged
about how isolated the rebels had found themselves in the conference. Pro,
one of the camp commanders of Quadro, commented to the mutineers in the
cells: ‘The people in Lusaka did not even want us to send your lieutenants
to the conference, but we insisted here in Angola that they should go, and
they experienced bitter isolation when they wanted to raise the disruptive
issues of Mkatashingo.’ Andrew Masondo was the only one who was sacrificed
on the NEC, and that was simply because he was so discredited in Angola that
he could not be saved. But the masterminds remained intact.
On 16 November 1988, exactly four years
and nine months after the beginning of their imprisonment, the mutineers
were summoned to the biggest cell in Quadro. There were about 25 of them in
all, and they were required to sign documents committing them to keep the
crimes of Quadro a secret. A security officer signed the same documents, as
a witness. After an emotional and angry address by Griffiths Seboni.
threatening to shoot anyone who repeated anything concerning such problems
within the ANC, the rebels were transported to Luanda and kept secretly in a
storeroom to avoid contact with MK cadres. [By this time the international
negotiations concerning the removal of Cuban troops from Angola were well
under way. The removal of the prisoners from Quadro preceded the departure
of the bulk of ANC personnel from Angola – Eds..] After two weeks
they were secretly taken to the airport and flown to Lusaka, where they were
kept in the airport until late at night. The following morning they were
transported in an ANC bus to the border between Zambia and Tanzania where,
without documents, they were crossed into Tanzania to an ANC Development
Centre at Dakawa, near Morogoro. The whole journey took place under the
escort of the security personnel and upon arrival in Dakawa they were
interviewed by the security officers in one of their bases called the Ruth
First Reception Centre. The main purpose of the interview was for the
security officers in Tanzania to check on the mutineers’ commitment to what
had landed them in prison in 1984. To the disappointment of the security
officers, the rebels still justified their cause. Again to the
disappointment of the security officers, the welcome they received when they
came into contact with the community was unbelievably warm and unique.
The political mood within the ANC in exile
had remained shaky since the mutiny of 1984. The divisions between the
security personnel and the general membership had continued to widen in
spite of cosmetic changes of personnel in the apparatus. Piliso had been
shifted from heading security to chief of the Development of Manpower
Department (DMD), replaced by Sizakhele Sigxashe, who had been part of the
commission set up to probe into the details about the mutiny in 1984.
Workshops had also been convened to look into the problems of the Security
Department, with the aim of reorganizing it in order to change its monstrous
face. But these were half-hearted efforts, and could not improve the
situation because they evaded the sensitive issues and left out the views of
those who had been victims. The old security personnel were, above all, left
intact. There was also the pressing issue of the running battles against
Unita that had resumed in 1987, in which MK cadres were losing their lives
in growing numbers. Armed struggle inside South Africa, one of the central
issues in 1984, was caught up in a disturbing state of stagnation. The
leadership of the ANC had become more and more discredited among the exiles,
and it was hard to find anyone bold enough to defend it with confidence, as
was the case earlier. Even within the security personnel you could detect a
sense of shame and unease in some of its members. But it was still difficult
for the membership to raise their heads, and the ANC security was in control
of strategic positions in all structures.
As a result of this political atmosphere
within the ANC, frustration and disillusion had set in at most of the ANC
centres. Dakawa, where the ex-Quadro detainees were taken after their
release in December 1988, was also trapped in political apathy, with
political structures in disarray. The Zonal Political Cominittees (ZPCs),
Zonal Youth Committees (ZYCs), Women’s Committees, Regional Political
Committees and all the other structures whose membership was elected, were
either functioning in semi-capacity or were completely dormant. Only the
administrative bodies were in good shape, and this was mainly because their
membership was appointed by the headquarters in Lusaka, and was composed of
either security or some people loyal and attached to it. These are the
structures that, contrary to the ANC policy of superiority of political
leadership over administrative and military bodies, wielded great powers in
running the establishments and which suffocated political bodies elected by
the membership. This state of affairs reveals clearly that after more than
15 years without democracy and elected structures, the ANC was finding it
difficult to readjust itself to the democratic procedures it was forced to
recognize by the 1985 Kabwe Conference. The leadership found itself much
more at home when dealing with administrators than with bodies that drew
support from the grassroots. This strangled political structures, and drove
many people away from political concern to frustration and indifference.
Between Democracy and
Dictatorship
When the mutineers arrived in Dakawa, the
political mood began to change as they managed to show the people, and those
who had taken part alongside them in Mkatashingo, the need to participate
and to demand to participate in all issues of the struggle. They themselves
took part in all the labour processes of the Dakawa Development Project and
showed a sense of keen interest in political matters. When the ANC
secretary-general Alfred Nzo visited Dakawa shortly after their arrival, he
commended their example and called on the community to emulate them. He also
announced in the same meeting that the ex-detainees should be integrated
into the community and were allowed to participate in all structures. This
never excited the ex-detainees, who took it for granted that they were full
members of the ANC whose rights were unquestionable, even taking account of
the leadership’s half-hearted and concealed admissions of past errors, and
even if the leadership still did capitalize on the methods used by the
mutineers.
With the decision to revive the political
structures, a general youth meeting was convened on 18 March 1989 and in the
elections a Zonal Youth Committee (ZYC) was elected into office, dominated
by former detainees and other participants in the mutiny. Out of its nine
members, five were ex-prisoners who had mutinied in 1984, including three
members of the Committee of Ten. This initiated the revival of other
structures such as the Cultural Committee and the Works Committee (a trade
union-like body for labourers in the project) at whose head we had former
mutineers. The ANC leadership was clearly eyeing this situation with a sense
of discontent, but it was difficult for it to interfere directly with the
democratic process under way, without provoking indignation from the
community. To them this was a move that absolved the people they had tried
to destroy and have ostracised.
The first political encounter between the
Dakawa ZYC and ANC headquarters was at the Third Dakawa Seminar, held on
24125 April 1989. The first and second seminars had been held in 1983 and
1985 respectively and had provided guidelines for the development of the
Centre. The objectives of the Third Seminar were to review progress
achieved, to establish an autonomous administration for the Centre, to
consider new project proposals and to establish proper co-ordination between
the Centre and regional and national structures. The Dakawa ZYC was not
invited to be one of participants. It challenged that decision, and was
ultimately allowed to send one delegate, Sidwell Moroka, its chairperson,
who was able to deliver its paper. This paper was prepared after taking
stock of the views expressed by the youth meeting of 7 April. Among the
participants at the Third Seminar were heads of departments from
headquarters including Piliso and Thomas Nkobi, the national treasurer. The
paper of the youth of Dakawa. was criticized by the leadership. The main
theme of the seminar was the need for the setting up of bodies of local
self-administration, with the youth pressing for elective bodies and the
other side, led by Piliso, dismissing the idea as unrealistic. After lengthy
discussions with the chairman of the ZYC uncompromising on the issue, Piliso
noted that the chairperson of the ZYC was ‘stubbornly opposed to appointed
personnel.’ However, the result was that a recommendation in favour of the
position of the ZYC was adopted.
After this seminar, the ANC leadership was
to reconsider its attitude towards the former detainees. In June 1989, when
the ANC youth section was to attend a World Youth Festival in Korea, a telex
was sent to Tanzania from headquarters in Lusaka cancelling the names of
four delegates democratically elected by the youth in Dakawa to represent
the zone. The four names were all of former mutineers. When an explanation
was sought, nobody in the HQ claimed responsibility, but it became clear
from discussions between the Dakawa ZYC and Jackie Selebi, chairman of the
National Youth Secretariat (NYS), that this had the hand of security. The
Dakawa ZYC and other upper structures in Tanzania expressed their discontent
with this practice that undermined democracy and infringed on the rights of
the membership.
The Dakawa Youth Committee had by this
time already established its Youth Bulletin and was also
making its ideas clear in the paper of the whole community, called
Dakawa News and Views. The local security department and its
administrative tools became very uneasy about the articles that began to
appear sparing nobody from criticism and with a clear stand for openness and
democracy. On several occasions the ZYC found itself a target of attack as
instigators, and its office-bearers were intimidated to the point where some
of its full-time functionaries, such as Amos Maxongo, were forced to abandon
their post. Following a paper prepared by the ZYC in September on ‘housing
problems in Dakawa,’ the committee was called to account to the Zonal
Political Committee and Administration meeting, and its members were
threatened that they should either terminate their contributions in the
local newspaper or change their language. The ZYC refused to back away from
its position and called for freedom of expression.
This state of political wrangling and the
rise in popularity of the Dakawa ZYC approached its climax in September
1989. At this time, the Regional Political Committee (RPC) – a supreme body
responsible for political guidance and organization in different ANC regions
– was elected into office in a meeting attended by delegates from all ANC
Centres in Tanzania. Sidwell Moroka was elected its chairperson and Mwezi
Twala its organizing secretary. Both of them were former members of the
Committee of Ten elected by the mutineers at Viana in 1984. The closing
session, on 16 September, was filled with tension as some of the ANC leading
personnel who attended, including Andrew Masondo, Graham Morodi and Wiffle
Williams, and the members of the ANC security, showed clear expressions of
disapproval of the results. Morodi, then ANC chief representative in
Tanzania, forced himself to occupy the platform and made a comment
insinuating that the results should be sent to the NEC for approval. On 18
September he sent a letter to the incoming chairman, Sidwell Moroka,
suspending accession of the new Regional Political Committee into office
with the excuse that he was still awaiting approval from Lusaka. On 5
October the body was dissolved by order of the chief representative, Morodi,
who stated that the decision had the backing of the office of the secretary
general of the ANC, Nzo. The reasons advanced were that there had been
violation of procedures in the meeting and that nominees had not been
screened prior to the election: meaning that the ANC security has powers to
determine who is eligible for election to the political structures of the
ANC. It has a right to dissolve a democratically elected structure if it
dislikes those elected by the ANC membership.
Later a body was appointed from ANC
headquarters called the Interim RPC, to replace the democratically elected
RPC and to fill the ‘political vacuum’. The ZYC circulated a letter in which
it disapproved of the imposition of ‘dummy structures’ and suppression of
the democratically elected ones. It further raised the matter at the annual
general meeting of the youth on 14 December. Rusty Bernstein, head of the
ANC department of political education, and his staff, and the regional
chairman of the youth, Gert Sibande (that is, Thami Mali who was responsible
for the 1985 stayaway that rocked Johannesburg), had been invited to attend,
and were present. At the annual general meeting, the youth in Dakawa called
for the refusal of the personnel appointed to this structure to participate
in it. Members of the department of political education and the regional
chairman of the youth, Sibande, also expressed their disapproval of this
undemocratic action and promised to consider their positions in relation to
it. This meeting, which Bernstein admitted had shown unheard of openness in
the ANC, signalled the doom of the Interim RPC, which had until then failed
to take office due to its unpopularity and the hesitation of the appointed
personnel to play the shameful political role allotted to them. At this
point the ANC leadership collected its strength and could not restrain
itself any longer.
The Destruction of Democracy
Under instruction from the NEC, Chris Hani
and Stanley Mabizela arrived in Tanzania from the HQ shortly thereafter and
called for ANC community meetings in Mazimbu, and on 24 December 1989, in
Dakawa. At these meetings, Stanley Mabizela announced the decision of the
NEC concerning groups of people who had been imprisoned by the ANC. There
were three categories that they mentioned: 1. A group of self-confessed
enemy agents who had been imprisoned and released unconditionally. These had
a right to take part and even occupy office in ANC structures; 2. A group of
enemy agents who had been imprisoned and released conditionally. These had
no right to take office in the structures of the movement; and 3. A group of
1984 mutineers who had been imprisoned by the ANC. These were also not
allowed to take office in ANC structures. And hence, he concluded, the NEC
had decided to dissolve the RPC. He then instructed the communities to
support and strengthen the Interim RPC.
This announcement was immediately
challenged by the people in the meeting and the former mutineers themselves,
with the following arguments: i. That the National Executive of the ANC was
acting autocratically, as it had no moral or political justification for
taking a decision so important that it infringed on the right of the
membership without even prior consultations with the general membership; ii.
That the very issue of the mutiny and the causes behind it had never been
opened for discussion by the entire membership of the ANC, and that the
mutineers themselves had been denied platforms on which to explain their
actions, and that they had never been tried by any court or competent body
in the movement; and iii. That the very people who took the decision to
dissolve the RPC were still continuing with tortures and murder of detainees
and their political opponents.
The last point related to two young men
who had escaped from the prison in SOMAFCO at Mazimbu, and who had reported
themselves at the Morogoro Police Station. One of them was Dipulelo, who had
headed the Dakawa News and Views, and who had been accused
of subversion, and detained and tortured by a security department man called
Doctor. They arrived at the Tanzanian police station in handcuffs and naked,
the way they had been kept in prison at SOMAFCO [where the secondary school
principal by this time was Masondo]. They had been detained in July 1989,
and they related horrifying stories about the torture to which they had been
subjected until they escaped in November.
At the meeting at Dakawa on 24 December,
Chris Hani felt he could not tolerate the confrontation and howled from the
rostrum at those who challenged the decision. ‘The decision is unchallenged,
it is an order from the NEC,’ he shouted, beating the table with his fist. A
commotion ensued as Hani’s security tried to arrest those who talked, and a
reinforcement of the armed Tanzanian Field Force was called to the hall by
Samson Donga. The meeting ended in confusion and the whole community was
astonished by the autocratic behaviour of that ANC leadership delegation. On
28 December a paper was circulated, officially banning nine members of
different committees in Dakawa. This time again, those who sought the
democratization of the ANC were arrogantly silenced by a decree from the
strong opponents of apartheid undemocracy. What an irony!
Resignation from the ANC
Widespread discontent filled the air in
Dakakwa, and it spread to nearby Mazimbu, as the leadership reversed the
process of political and cultural renewal that had marked the period in
which the ex-mutineers had been free to develop their ideas among the ANC
membership. This process of renewal was suppressed, not because there was
anything wrong with it but because it threatened the ANC leaders with
democracy, which they were not prepared to tolerate. Some members of the
department of political education, such as Mpho Mmutle and Doctor Nxumalo,
were summoned by the security department and questioned about their
association with ex-mutineers, and instructed never again to visit Dakawa. A
sense that anything might happen at any time set in, as the community
awaited the reprisals that might follow. The whole of the ANC in Tanzania
was filled with tension. From sources close to the security department, word
came to the ex-mutineers about meetings held to decide on action to be taken
against those who embarrassed the ANC leader and the man who wanted to take
Mandela’s mantle, Chris Hani.
It was at this time, on 31 December 1989,
that the ex-mutineers considered the issue of resigning from the ANC. The
reasons are glaring to any realistic minded person. There was a need to
pre-empt the actions of the security department, which would have definitely
followed. There was a need also to look for better avenues for continuing
the struggle against apartheid, given that the ANC had banned the cx-mutineers
from freedom of political expression. And there was also a need to relate
this state of affairs to the leadership of the ANC inside South Africa, to
the leadership of the Mass Democratic Movement (MDM) and to all the people
of South Africa.
We appeal to the people of South Africa
and the members of the ANC to support our call for an independent commission
to investigate these atrocities.
AN OPEN LETTER TO NELSON MANDELA FROM EX-ANC
DETAINEES
YMCA Shauri Moyo
P.O.Box 17073
Nairobi.
14.04.90
Dear Cde Mandela Revolutionary Greetings!
The news through the press about our horrific experiences at the hands of
the ANC security organs must have left you in a state of bewilderment. Fully
aware of that, we realise the need to write you this letter giving an
account of our vicissitudes in combating the enemies of democracy within the
ANC and putting across also our incessant efforts to have these problems
resolved democratically with the full participation of the entire
membership. By this we hope to dispel any misunderstandings regarding our
decision to expose this disgraceful and shameful page in the history of our
organisation, which we hold at high esteem, even at this hour.
First, it is a fact, undisputable indeed,
that the 1984 mutiny was a spontaneous reaction of the overwhelming majority
of the cadres of MK to crimes and misdeeds, incompatible with the noble and
humane ideals of our political objectives, carried out by certain elements
in the leadership of the ANC. These included, among other things, acts of
torture and murder through beatings, committed by the ANC Security personnel
under the leadership of Mzwandile Piliso; brutal suppression of democracy
denying the membership of the ANC any opportunity, for a period exceeding
thirteen years, to decide through democratic elections who should lead them;
and misleading our people’s army by locking it into diversional battles from
which our struggle did not benefit, thereby weakening and destroying its
fighting capacity.
Second, it remains our firm belief that,
had the ANC leadership acted honestly at the very early stages of mutiny,
and most of all, had President Tambo responded responsibly to our appeal for
his immediate and direct intervention, many lives could have been saved.
Regrettably, in a manner identical to our political enemy, the South African
regime, the ANC leadership fished out the “ringleaders” and their most
plainspoken opponents and unleashed virulent brutalities against them.
Third, having gone through close to five
years without trial in the most notorious prison within the ANC, and having
endured the humiliating, dehumanising and hazardous conditions in which some
of us perished, we remained committed to the ANC. This was in recognition of
the justness of our cause, in honour of men like you and the multitudes in
our beleaguered homeland who languished in racist dungeons and got murdered
in this noble cause, and lest we forget our comrades whose lives were cut
short by those who deceptively made noise and declarations about democracy
on behalf of our people.
Fouith, embarrassed at the way the ANC
community in Dakawa absolved us by electing us into the political structures
in the Tanzanian ANC region, Chris Hani and Stanley Mabizela,
acting on behalf of the National Executive Committee, then muzzled us by
banning us from participating freely in ANC political life and dissolving
democratically elected structures. Our efforts to challenge such an
undemocratic action and to explain the causes of the 1984 mutiny for which
we were being unjustifiably treated were answered by shouts from Hani
himself, taking us down [from] the platform and even calling for armed
Tanzanian Task Force Unit to surround the hall.
It’s the realization of the last-named
factor that sealed and shattered our long-standing commitments and hopes to
reform the ANC from within, and we resigned in December last year. But let
it be stressed still, that even at that time, we still limited our
activities to consulting the internal leadership of our movement to avoiding
embarrassing the organisation we so dearly loved. We contacted through
letters and attempted to send our document (captured at the Dar-es-Salaam
Airport by ANC and Tanzanian security) to such stalwarts of our
anti-apartheid struggle as Frank Chikane, General Secretary of SACC
leadership from prison and Archbishop Desmond Tutu.
Knowing you as a personality who
distinguished himself by unflinchingly fighting and standing for human
rights and ideals of highest democracy, we receive with bitterness your
praises showered at these corrupt and atrocious elements, whilst a shroud of
secrecy wraps around the noblest sons and daughters of South Africa who
perished in pursuit of the same ideals as yours[,] at the hands of these
fake custodians of our people’s political aspirations. It is this that
pricks our conscience to remove this shroud. Nothing can be more treacherous
than to allow such crimes to go unchallenged and unknown. Nothing can be
more hypocritical when some of us even at this hour are languishing in those
concentration camps. Even much more disturbing is that these enemies of
democracy are to be part of that noble delegation of the ANC to negotiate
the centuries-long denied democratic freedoms of our people. What a mockery!
What a scorn to our people’s sacrifices for freedom! We back your tireless
efforts and of all those peace-loving South Africans who see the need for a
peaceful settlement of our problems, but we also believe that our people’s
yearnings for justice can only be competently secured by a morally clean
leadership.
We know how difficult it is to accept
these bitter but objective truths, and how mammoth the task is of taking
appropriate actions against these individuals. But we know also how
[undermined ?] they are even within the ANC membership, and we are certain
also that, if only they could talk, much more horrific stories will come out
of those who tasted the bitterness of the ANC security’s treatment. Hence,
our sincere call to you and the fighting masses in south Africa and within
the ANC to back our demand for a commission to inquire into these
atrocities. This, contrary to short-sighted ideas, will not weaken
the ANC, but will demonstrate to our people and the world the ANC’s
uncompromising commitment to justice and democracy. No better guarantee can
be made to our people that when our organisation ascends to power, their
rights and freedoms will thrive in competent and responsible hands.
Amandla! NGAWETHU!!
POWER TO THE PEOPLE!!
Yours in the Struggle,
Ex-ANC Detainees
(Copy from fax-message) |