DATE: 4TH OCTOBER 2000
NAME: ANTON PRETORIUS
APPLICATION NO: AM4389/96
DAY: 3
--------------------------------------------------------------------------MR VISSER: Morning Mr Chairman, Members of the Committee. Chairperson, we are going to call Mr Anton Pretorius. He's available, and he has no objection to taking the prescribed oath. He prefers to address you in Afrikaans.
ANTON PRETORIUS: (sworn states)
CHAIRPERSON: Please be seated.
EXAMINATION BY MR VISSER: Mr Pretorius, you are also an applicant in this application.
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And you request amnesty for offence or delict committed by, with regard to the Botswana Raid of 14 June 1985, is that correct?
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: You have timeously handed up an application form that appears in bundle 1, from page 204, do you confirm the contents of that statement as true and correct to the best of your knowledge?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Subject to your evidence which you will render today.
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: You have studied Exhibit A, the General Background to Amnesty Applications.
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, I have.
MR VISSER: Is there any part of it which you cannot confirm?
MR PRETORIUS: No, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Do you then request that those parts mutatis mutandis be applicable and incorporated with your evidence?
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: You deal with this incident in your amnesty application in bundle 1, from page 213, under the heading:
"Fourth Incident"
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: I want to ask you to briefly give the Committee a background. Please just tell us first, where were you working during 1985?
MR PRETORIUS: I was attached to the Intelligence Unit at the Soweto Security Branch, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And what was your rank?
MR PRETORIUS: At that stage I was a Lieutenant, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And who was your immediate Commander?
MR PRETORIUS: At that stage it was also Lieut Willem Coetzee, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And above him, who was the Commander?
MR PRETORIUS: I think at that stage, he was a Major at that stage, Major de Jager.
MR VISSER: And under whose general command did you stand?
MR PRETORIUS: That was the late Brig Muller.
MR VISSER: Can you briefly just tell the Committee how Soweto became involved in Botswana during that time.
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson. Because of the Intelligence Unit's capacity to generate information surrounding the activities of the onslaught of the ANC, by MK, we were tasked in Soweto, we were tasked in Soweto to place agents and informers in Botswana and we had regular intelligence co-ordinating meetings which we attended at Western Transvaal.
MR VISSER: And what was the revolutionary climate like in 1985?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, at that stage in Soweto, there was a heavy onslaught, specifically with regard to handgrenade attacks. Handgrenade attacks were the order of the day in Soweto, during that time, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Were you successful with your informers and deep cover agents in Botswana?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson. I think we succeeded in - if I may start with MK, MK Special Operations, MK Military Intelligence, we infiltrated all those agencies, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: With your application on page 213, you refer to, amongst others, certain names.
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Who were those?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, as I said there, Tim Williams, Patrick Thomas Ricketts, Christian Lungile Pepane, MK Jeff, Riaz Saloojee, alias MK Calvin Khan. Then I have some other additions here.
MR VISSER: Yes, we will get to the other persons who were involved, Mr Pretorius. Will you please briefly tell the Committee, Tim Williams, what was his involvement?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, he was highly active MK Military Intelligence operative in Botswana.
MR VISSER: Was he a target of format for you in the Security Branch, in the sense of someone whom you monitored and whom you watched all the time?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson, he was a high priority person.
MR VISSER: And Ricketts?
MR PRETORIUS: Patrick Thomas Ricketts ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: When was he described as a high priority?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, if I may answer you, I cannot recall the exact year, but I want to say this was already months before this specific incident. Tim Williams, as well as Patrick Thomas Ricketts and the following person that I mentioned, were high priority, because Ricketts occupied a reasonably senior position in MK in Botswana.
CHAIRPERSON: Was this one of the persons that were killed?
MR PRETORIUS: No, Chairperson.
CHAIRPERSON: So why are we discussing his details?
MR VISSER: Chairperson, you will hear evidence from this witness that they presented their information to the South African Defence Force, and at the end of the day you will see that not all the targets who were affected in this raid, came from the present applicants before you, they must have come from somewhere else, and some of the targets that were mentioned by them, were not affected. And ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: I thought that would have been common cause by now. I don't know, Mr Berger. That was always our understanding that what Loots and Steyn had was information from various quarters.
MR BERGER: Chairperson, I'm not sure that that's what Mr Visser is saying.
MR VISSER: Sorry, I didn't hear you.
MR BERGER: No, the Chairperson is saying that Loots and Steyn had information on targets from various quarters, and my understanding is that their target list was a comprehensive target list, but now I think what Mr Visser is saying is that in relation to Soweto, perhaps their targets were different, I'm not sure.
MR VISSER: Well Chairperson, for example, Tim Williams is mentioned in the book of Stiff, as having been a target and we just thought that it wouldn't have hurt for you to get some background as to where it came from.
CHAIRPERSON: It hurts if it's irrelevant. If it's relevant, it's okay.
MR VISSER: It was target one, Bravo, ANC safehouse in Tlokweng, Gaberone East, where Tim Williams had a lucky escape. And that was a target of the SADF, according to ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: I think Tim Williams is on the list here, but I'm talking about Ricketts. Tim Williams is number 20 on the list. I don't know how Ricketts fits in here. If you in your judgement think it's necessary, well ...
MR VISSER: Let us then continue, Mr Pretorius.
You confirm in any case your whole statement as part of your evidence.
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Is it the case, and you've already referred to it, that you attended various co-ordinating meetings in Western Transvaal, or with the Western Transvaal Security Branch, is that correct?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Was there anything mentioned at any stage about an attack at any of these meetings?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Firstly, can you recall when this took place, that this possibility was mentioned?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, if my memory does not fail me, approximately a month before the incident, during a co-ordinating meeting, the possibility of an action against the ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: Mr Visser, was this the same meeting that the others ...
MR VISSER: Chairperson, we're talking about a meeting in Western Transvaal ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: You don't have to get upset, I'm just asking, is it the same meeting or not?
MR VISSER: I'm not getting upset, Chairperson. And really, Chairperson, I would like to present the evidence in a comprehensive and reasonable fashion to you, and I'm sorry if you think that this signifies aggression, because it doesn't, it doesn't Chairperson, but there's some background which we believe is necessary for you to know about and we're trying to do this as briefly as we can. If you will bear with us. We won't waste time.
CHAIRPERSON: ...(no microphone) Mr Visser, is not to introduce irrelevant things. That's all I'm saying this morning.
MR VISSER: Mr Pretorius, you said a possibility of an attack was mentioned at a meeting in the Western Transvaal.
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Was it then discussed as to who would launch the attack?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, what I can recall at that meeting, a decision was taking that the option to execute such an attack would be taken to Security Head Office and Military Head Office, in order to get approval whether they can continue with it and how they should go about it and plan it and so forth.
MR VISSER: And do you agree with the evidence of the previous witnesses that said that the Western Transvaal Security Branch was actually the co-ordinator of information with regard to Botswana?
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Was a request directed to you and Coetzee during this meeting?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: To do what?
MR PRETORIUS: We had to continue collecting information about high priority activities, persons with whom we were involved in.
MR VISSER: And to give that information through?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes correct, Chairperson, and directly send it to Western Transvaal, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: What happened afterwards, was there anything that happened afterwards?
MR MALAN: Just before you continue. The expression "first copies sent to Western Transvaal", does that mean other copies went to Head Office?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR MALAN: Did you send other copies elsewhere?
MR PRETORIUS: If I may explain Chairperson, let us say that we had information saying that Mr Tim Williams came from Johannesburg, that is where he was registered, then a copy would be sent to Johannesburg as well. So that would have been the third copy, Chairperson.
MR MALAN: Or the second copy.
MR PRETORIUS: Or the second copy.
MR MALAN: Yes but it's Head Office co-ordination and other interested areas?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR MALAN: Thank you.
MR VISSER: You were at the point of telling us that after a meeting had taken place, how it came about.
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, Col de Jager who was the overhead Intelligence Commander, tasked Col Coetzee and myself, as I've said he was also a Lieutenant at that stage, to accompany him to Special Operations Head Office in Pretoria, for a meeting Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Can you recall who was present at this meeting?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson. Before I mention the names, can I just tell you that three-quarters of the persons present were military staff, they were from the Navy, the Air Force and the Army itself, Chairperson. And then from the police's side that I can recall, was Gen Steyn, Mr Loots, Maj Craig Williams was present at that meeting and as I've said, it was myself, Col de Jager and Col Coetzee.
MR VISSER: And then various people from, I said from the Defence Force, I should have actually said the Army.
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct.
MR VISSER: Were there any senior officers from the Army there?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes Chairperson, the Commander, Gen Kat Liebenberg. Shortly after the Soweto people came there, he walked into the meeting and he was the most senior officer during the meeting, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: In order to eliminate any confusion, did you ever attend a meeting at Wachthuis, at Security Head Office, with regard to this incident?
MR PRETORIUS: Never, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: So you were not present at the meeting that Gen Steyn testified about?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: What were you informed about at this meeting?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, if I can inform you briefly what I saw during this conference, right in front there were these tremendously large boards on which easily - I think in my application I made note of about 30 targets that had already been placed on boards. These were charts with photos of houses and there were photos of persons, individuals that were known to me, that were connected with lines to the houses. There were photos of vehicles and everything. So in other words, it was clear to me that we walked into a presentation, the Army was ready to give a presentation.
MR VISSER: Was it your impression that information had been collected beforehand and that the Army was at the ready to act against targets?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson, everything was there on the board.
MR VISSER: And were you also told the day at the meeting that such an operation was being considered?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson. I cannot recall the Defence Force officer who stood in front, he informed everyone there that the purpose of the presentation was to discuss the targets on the board and the Commanding General was to give final clearance as whether they can continue with the operation and whether the targets on the board would be attacked.
MR VISSER: Was there any talk of authorisation from higher up, in that meeting?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, if I recall correctly, the person who did the presentation there said and mentioned that Gen Kat Liebenberg had to go after this meeting and get final approval from higher up for the final approval of the operation.
MR VISSER: Can you try and assist the Committee with regard to more-or-less when this meeting took place at Special Operations Head Office?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, I'm sure it was not sooner than two weeks, but this was about two and a half weeks when this meeting took place.
MR VISSER: Would you also agree with the estimation of other applicants that it was about between two and three weeks before?
MR PRETORIUS: That sounds right to me, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: Chairperson, perhaps I'm getting confused, but this witness has just said that he wasn't present at the meeting that Mr Steyn and Loots spoke about two to three weeks before the attack, so I don't know how he can confirm their estimation. Perhaps I missed something in my understanding.
MR PRETORIUS: This was the meeting at Special Operations Head Office. I think the meeting that Mr Steyn and Mr Loots referred to was at Security Head Office. I am referring to the one at Special Forces Head Office.
INTERPRETER: The speaker's microphone is not on, Sir.
CHAIRPERSON: ...(indistinct)
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, if I may guess, following on the evidence that I have here and that was led here, it would sound as if this meeting was the one after Gen Steyn and Mr Loots were at Security Head Office, but I cannot confirm it. But it sounds as if this meeting was after that meeting.
MR VISSER: But your recollection is that it was two to two and a half weeks afterwards?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Who did the target presentation at that meeting?
MR PRETORIUS: As I've already said, Chairperson, this was an Army officer.
MR VISSER: And of this large amounts of targets, what was the decision with regard to this number of targets?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, it is here where I heard for the first time when Gen Kat Liebenberg requested and asked of all the Intelligence officers, which included myself and Soweto staff, he wanted to know which of the targets there on the board were children and women who were not military trained, whether there were children and women who were not military trained at those houses. That was the first.
Let us say they started with number 30 and worked back and they wanted to know from each and every one, was there a woman who was not military trained or who had any direct contact with any military activities and if there were children and if an Intelligence officer put up his hand and said that there were children there, then this target would immediately be removed from the target list. And then there were targets that were removed because of their geographical location.
I can tell you that there was a deep underground MK facility in Mogoditsane that Gen Liebenberg immediately removed because of the distance from Gaberone, they said no, they would not be able to address that target. And then there were definitely at least two targets in Francistown that was higher up, that they also removed immediately because of the distance from Gaberone.
MR VISSER: During that meeting, can you recall how many targets remained?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, in my application I said that I can recall when I left there I mentioned the number, 12, that I can recall.
MR VISSER: What did these targets comprise of?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, the targets cantered around facilities, let us call it the primary targets were the facilities and then connected to the facility was the relevant MK Military Intelligence and Special Operations. Members who were connected to these houses. And the third was the availability of possible documentation or literature in the houses. The fourth point was vehicles and the last one - I don't want to say that that's the sequence, except for the facility. The fifth was possible arms and ammunition at this specific facility.
MR VISSER: What did you leave with at that meeting, did you leave there with further instructions or further requests? What were you supposed to do when you left that meeting?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, the last thing that we were told, that the officers said there, was that officers of the Army would contact certain of us concerning the remaining number of targets because they needed - what I did know they were very interested in was the infrastructure of the inside of the house, was it a one-bedroom, two-bedroom house, was there a bathroom.
The location of certain of these facilities they were not hundred percent sure and it was told to us that certain Intelligence officers would liaise with us and then we would have to assist them with whatever they requested.
MR VISSER: And did you also have to collect on a continual basis?
MR PRETORIUS: And that included that, Chairperson, a requested was directed at everyone to attempt to convey the fresh intelligence with regard to that facility where it was humanly possible.
MR VISSER: The three of you then went back to Soweto, what did you do then?
MR PRETORIUS: Following on this request, Chairperson, I can recall three occasions where Intelligence Officers contacted me. In the one instance I recall that he showed me a set of aerial photos of a facility, where I had to show the photos to the agent and the informer, where he had to indicate which house it was. And then they brought photos of a person, one photo I can recall quite clearly is the one of Riaz Saloojee that I can recall.
I could recall where his vehicle was parked and where the agents identified Riaz Saloojee. And as I've said, there was various other information they wanted: was it a brick house, was the colour of the house blue or pink, and so forth. That was the typical information that was collected during the following week, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: So we can say it was more strategic operational information.
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: What did you and your agents and informers do after this meeting?
MR PRETORIUS: From my side, Chairperson, as well as from Mr Coetzee's side, our agents, informers were possible, they still moved in and out of Botswana and the longest that they could stay inside was from the Friday evening till the Sunday night, maybe Monday morning. We would send them in to certain of these facilities, to go and determine whether certain subjects were still there, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Now in your application you mention a further meeting at Western Transvaal, where further information was given to you.
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson. I know you will ask me the time, I would say this is approximately a week before the physical attack. I was delegated by Mr de Jager to go to Western Transvaal, to Mr Loots and Mr Steyn, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: What happened there?
MR PRETORIUS: Except for the intelligence co-ordination that took place there, Mr Steyn and Mr Loots told me that the operation was authorised and the codename for the operation was "Plexy", Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Operation by whom?
MR PRETORIUS: By the Defence Force, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And were you told who authorised it?
MR PRETORIUS: That it came from the top, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: What did you do afterwards?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, I immediately went back to my base after the meeting, where I informed Mr de Jager and Coetzee that the operation was approved and that it would take place.
MR VISSER: And what happened then?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, during that same time, Commandant Charl Naude from Special Forces contacted me personally and asked me whether he could not use a person that would be able to point out one of the targets to the military operatives during the operation, because they had a problem with the identification, they could not find the house. I then said that I would have to clear this up with Col de Jager, because I do not have the authority to do something like that. I cleared it up with Col de Jager and he said fine I can send a person because he was not a member of the Force ...(intervention)
MR VISSER: Who was that?
MR PRETORIUS: That was Sgt Manuel Olifant.
MR VISSER: He's also an applicant?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, he's also an applicant, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: What happened to him then?
MR MALAN: Before you continue, you say he was not a member of the Force then, what was he then?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, he was an R contract worker, he was in-between an informer and a policeman, if I can try and explain it to you in layman's terms. He worked for the police, but he was not a police officer.
INTERPRETER: The speaker's microphone is not on.
CHAIRPERSON: ...(indistinct)
JUDGE MOTATA: Was he on your books?
MR PRETORIUS: He was on our books, Chairperson. As I say, officially there was a contract signed with him, he received a monthly salary and so forth, but he was not a member of the Force.
MR VISSER: Is it then so that this type of person you referred to was actually earmarked to become a Constable later?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct.
MR VISSER: And did Mr Olifant join the Force later?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, that is correct.
MR VISSER: But was this after the 14th of June?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, that was after the 14th of June. Chairperson, when I called Commandant Charl Naude back and told him it was fine we had a person that would be able to point out that house, he gave me instructions to take Mr Olifant, I think it was the next day, to take him to Hammanskraal. I see here they refer to 44 Parachute Battalion, in Mr Stiff's book. I had to take him there. I drove Mr Olifant there. I just dropped him off there. They did not want me to be present and I came back to Soweto, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: So Mr Olifant can tell the Committee what happened afterwards to him. Now if we can get to the 13th of June 1985, where were you then, what were your instructions?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, because of Mr Olifant's involvement in the entry into Botswana and then from Soweto we asked to be present because we wanted to look after Mr Olifant's interests, and we received permission to join at Nietverdiendt at tactical headquarters.
MR VISSER: Now with regard to Mr Olifant, the final aspect, it was decided that he would accompany the Defence Force into Botswana.
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct.
MR VISSER: Under whose command would he have acted if he went into Botswana?
MR PRETORIUS: Under the Defence Force's command.
MR VISSER: And you say that you went to Nietverdiendt then.
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Who accompanied you?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, it was myself, Col de Jager, Col Coetzee and today, Col Jan Meyer.
MR VISSER: And there are all other applicants here?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And at Nietverdiendt, were you allowed in the operational centre? What was the position?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, I may only mention that we were told that we should not arrive early at tactical headquarters because they did not want to attract any attention, because this tactical headquarters was quite close to the tar road.
If I should guess, we arrived about half an hour before sundown at Nietverdiendt. We went into this large hall where they had set up a tactical operational room, where Commandant Hills, I think he was a Commandant at that stage, he was very strict, he immediately removed us from tactical operational room. He did not want to have anyone other than his staff there and a person like Gen Steyn and Mr Loots. So we were told that we could not be inside tactical headquarters, or the operational room.
MR VISSER: So you were not allowed in there?
MR PRETORIUS: No, we were not.
MR VISSER: This tactical headquarters or operational centre, was this in contact with the operatives that went into Botswana?
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: How did they have that contact?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, how I know about it is ...(intervention)
MR VISSER: No, what type of contact was it?
MR PRETORIUS: It was radio contact, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Did you listen to any radio communication while the attack was ongoing?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Between the operatives and operational headquarters?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And could you hear what they were telling each other?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Were instructions given from time to time from the operational room?
MR PRETORIUS: What was noticeable, just for your information Chairperson, was that the messages that came from Botswana to tactical headquarters and then went out from tactical headquarters to the operatives on the ground was all in code. In other words, it was not: "we stopped before house number so and so." There I came to the conclusion that each independent team used certain code words to explain certain actions, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And you then went into Botswana and we know there was an attack, and the people came back, is that not so?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: If I may just diverge here by asking you, or maybe perhaps I should complete this part of your evidence. After the return of the people, what happened then?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, after the whole attack ...(intervention)
MR VISSER: After the attack, where did you go to?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, I was instructed by Col de Jager, on request of Gen Steyn, that we had to fly back per helicopter by the team leaders of the Defence Force.
MR VISSER: And what happened then?
MR PRETORIUS: Then each team leader or the sections came with a plastic bag, the things with numbered, these were all the things they found in the houses and then team leader 1 would then go and place his contents of his bags at number 1, and that's how they continued, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Were there documents?
MR PRETORIUS: There were many documents there, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Anything else?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, I can recall that at one of the specific targets there were handgrenades, F1 defensive handgrenades, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And you say each section leader brought his loot, so to say, there. Can you recall if some of the senior staff members from the Security Branch were present there?
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson, when we arrived there, Gen Herman Stadler and Maj Craig Williamson were there already there at Special Forces Headquarters.
MR VISSER: And what did you infer, what was their purpose there?
MR PRETORIUS: Sir, amongst others I knew that shortly after the arrival of the teams they prepared for a press
release and it was at that stage when Mr Coetzee and I were very tired and we said that we would withdraw because we did not see any purpose of us being there.
MR VISSER: So that in general deals with the part of the attack and your part therein. Just by the way, after the operation of the 14th of June, was there communication between yourself and Mr Coetzee and certain deep cover agents in Botswana?
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Who were those persons?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, the first was RS282, his name was Freddie Baloyi and then ...(intervention)
MR VISSER: I beg your pardon. Freddie who?
MR PRETORIUS: Freddie Baloyi. And then RS276 ..(intervention)
MR VISSER: Just before you continue, was he a Constable?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, he was a Constable, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And he was infiltrated or penetrated into these MK structures, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: That was RS282?
MR PRETORIUS: RS276, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Who was he?
MR PRETORIUS: Isaac Mazibuku.
MR VISSER: Was he a Constable?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, he was a Constable, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And was he also penetrated?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Or he penetrated.
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And what else?
MR PRETORIUS: There was a lady, she was R103, she was also a contract worker Chairperson, and then a Cecilia Maake.
MR VISSER: And was she a Constable?
MR PRETORIUS: No, she was a contract worker like Mr Olifant, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And was there then contact with these three persons after the attack?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: What was the content of this contact?
MR PRETORIUS: Amongst others, these three gave us information that the MK and ANC Special Operations and MK Military Intelligence was in total chaos and that they were fleeing in all earnest, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Where did they have to go?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, Mr Coetzee would be able to tell you about Mazibuku and Maake. I can testify about Baloyi, Baloyi was the person who, amongst others, was connected with Tim Williams. He gave me feedback that his situation was very positive, that Tim Williams did not suspect him at all. As well as Christian Numgile Pepane, alias Jeff, also did not suspect him and that they wanted to take him along to Zambia and he actually asked me what was the status quo, what was he supposed to do, did he have to come back to South Africa or was he supposed to accompany them.
MR VISSER: And what did you tell him then?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, I told him he's at ground level, he can read the situation, he would have to give me an indication and he was satisfied, Chairperson, that the situation was of such a nature that he believed that he was not suspected and that he would go along with Tim Williams and company to Zambia.
MR VISSER: Did you later receive information with regard to what happened to him?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson, Freddie Williams - Freddie Baloyi, Chairperson, was immediately shot dead upon his arrival on Lusaka, Zambia.
MR VISSER: Where did you receive that information?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, we had many other agents that monitored and infiltrated the ANC up to the highest level, firstly. Secondly, we had people who in this cleaning up situation of the ANC, were taken hostage and were held at Quatro, who gave us this information, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Can we just speak about targets. Mr Pretorius, did you supply information to the Army for the purposes of their use for this attack in Botswana?
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Was that also the position with regard to Mr Coetzee, under the command of De Jager?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Will you please study Exhibit B. This is an extract from the statement of the ANC to the TRC, dated August 1996. On page 93 certain names were indicated, I will just read them to you and then you must just firstly please give the Committee an indication whether you know something about this person. If you say no, then we can discuss later what you know about him. Number 2 ...(intervention)
MR MALAN: I beg your pardon, Mr Visser, give me a reference where you are now.
MR VISSER: It's Exhibit B, it's the extract and it's page 93 thereof, the left-hand top column, Chairperson. Number 2: Geer Achmed Mohammed?
MR PRETORIUS: Never heard about him, Chairperson, only after the attack I became aware of his name, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Number 3: Hamlyn?
MR PRETORIUS: Michael Hamlyn, I also heard of him after the attack, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And then number 4: Kelape, Kesopile Gladys Kelape?
MR PRETORIUS: Never heard of that one, Chairperson, only after the attack.
MR VISSER: Number 5: Kobole Euginia Kakale?
MR PRETORIUS: Also only after the attack, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Number 6: Themba Duke Machobane?
MR PRETORIUS: I've heard about Duke Machobane, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Was he one of the persons that you monitored?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, Duke Machobane was not a subject of Soweto, but during my service period I saw many intelligence reports on Duke Machobane with regard to his connections in MK and so forth.
CHAIRPERSON: But you, did you give any information about Duke Machobane?
MR PRETORIUS: Never, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And then if we could go to number 10: Mofoka, Peter Mohelo?
MR PRETORIUS: Never, Chairperson, only after the attack I heard about this person's name.
MR VISSER: And then if we could go to number 14: Mnyele?
MR PRETORIUS: I knew him very well, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Can you tell us what you knew about him.
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, I know that Mr Mnyele - if I can go as far back as 1979, he fled from Tembisa in 1979, if I recall correctly, Chairperson. He was officially declared and registered as a refugee, where his photo appeared in the terrorist photo album and after that time various reports were generated from various divisions regarding Mr Mnyele's involvement with MK, with the ANC.
But what was prominent with regard to Mr Mnyele, was that his wife Rona Segale, was a highly trained MK operative who had various agents, who had trained various agents and given them crash courses and supplied them with arms and ammunition. As it served before the Committee, it was well known that Mr Mnyele was a very good artist, but I can assure you that Mr Mnyele used his artwork in Botswana as a cover to operate in Botswana. That is so, everybody knew him as the artist. As I have already said that he was a very good artist, but that was his cover. He was involved in these underground structures. He was extremely involved in SACTU, South African Congress of Trade Unions and so forth, and so forth.
MR VISSER: Was he a subject that was monitored by you?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, I wish to say that he was a secondary subject, his wife was the primary subject, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And if you say that Rona Segale trained agents, to which agents do you refer?
MR PRETORIUS: Amongst others, Chairperson, RS282 and RS276, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Received military training from her?
MR PRETORIUS: She gave them military training crash courses. The agents were present where other persons from South Africa received crash courses. Arms were supplied to RS282.
MR VISSER: Number 15: Mtsweni, Dick?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, this was a person that I also knew about. I did not personally work on the late Mr Mtsweni, but I do have knowledge of his involvement, because if intelligence notes which were available to me.
CHAIRPERSON: But you yourself did not have firsthand knowledge?
MR PRETORIUS: No.
CHAIRPERSON: And you were not able to give information about Mtsweni.
MR PRETORIUS: No, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Did you have and convey information to Special Forces about Harry Mnyele and Rona?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson. If I can just get some clarity here, I think that was the house about which Mr Olifant will testify, that he could not find with the identification. That was the house where Rona Segale lived. That was one of the specific targets that I know that they could not find.
MR VISSER: One of those that was abandoned?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Can we then go to number 17, a person by the name of Pahle, Cecil George.
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson. I once again wish to say that this was a person that I have seen many intelligence notes about, and I can recall that Mr Coetzee and I, once or twice, maximum five times, we supplied information about Mr Pahle to Western Transvaal, but I cannot recall - but it was coincidental information, where our agents or informers met with Mr Pahle at other subjects that we were busy with, Chairperson.
CHAIRPERSON: Do I understand you correctly, you were not in a position to, during this operation, to give information with regard to him in this operation?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
CHAIRPERSON: ...(inaudible)
MR PRETORIUS: No, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Number 18: Lindi Pahle?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, once again I had knowledge of her, but I did not generate information about her.
MR VISSER: And then the last person on that list, number 20: Basil Amos Zondi?
MR PRETORIUS: I do not know that person either, Chairperson.
CHAIRPERSON: Tim Williams, Mr Berger, is he deceased?
MR BERGER: No, Tim Williams is not dead, he's very much alive.
CHAIRPERSON: ...(indistinct - no microphone)
MR BERGER: Well I don't act for him, I don't represent him.
CHAIRPERSON: ...(inaudible)
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, he's a Commissioner. I think he is one of the four Generals in Pretoria, Commissioner Tim Williams. In the police. I think he's number 4.
INTERPRETER: The speaker's microphone is not on.
CHAIRPERSON: ...(inaudible) You spoke about him?
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
CHAIRPERSON: I would just want to know, did you say anything about him with regard to this incident?
MR PRETORIUS: Well I mentioned him in my report, Chairperson. I think he's first.
CHAIRPERSON: But was he a target"
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, he was.
CHAIRPERSON: Was he attacked?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes Chairperson, I see in the book of Peter Stiff, he says that he was the person who barely
escaped with his life.
CHAIRPERSON: Well except for what this man says in his book, was he a target? Was he attacked?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson, he was attacked.
MR VISSER: To state it more correctly Chairperson, he was not in the house that was attacked. At that stage when the house was attacked, he wasn't there. But the house in which he was expected was a target and was attacked.
What were the primary targets, as you inferred it from the Defence Force?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, as I've already said ...(intervention)
MR VISSER: I beg your pardon, you've already said that.
MR PRETORIUS: ... facilities connected to priority suspects.
MR VISSER: It was stated here concerning Mr Hamlyn, that he stayed in Mr Marius Schoon's house, in which Schoon and his family had previously lived. Have you any knowledge about that?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, it sounds to me correct that it was the same house, unfortunately I cannot recall the street address, but the house that was struck was because of a person that lived there Urial Abrahams who lived there, a highly active MK person, Urial Abrahams.
MR VISSER: Was this someone with regard to whom you supplied information?
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And was there somebody else who also lived in that house?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, that's correct, that was the lady, I think Mr Loots referred to her. She was Muff Anderson, she was a reasonably senior person with MK Military Intelligence. Muff Anderson, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And Chairperson, she was also not present at the time when the attack was launched, she was in fact under arrest by the Botswana Police at that time, for possession of weapons or something. It's at page 81 of volume 2.
CHAIRPERSON: Of course South African Military didn't know that at the time?
MR VISSER: Apparently not.
CHAIRPERSON: Lucky for the Botswana prison.
MR VISSER: You have now told us, Mr Pretorius of what your part was before the time. The information that you supplied and the updating of information, did you know that this would be used by the Army for purposes of an attack in Botswana, in which persons would be killed and/or injured?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes.
MR VISSER: And in which buildings would be destroyed or damaged?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Did you also realise that it was possible that innocent persons could be caught in the cross-fire?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Did you reconcile yourself with this information?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Afterwards was there any reflection?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, yes.
MR VISSER: I'm not referring to the documents at Special Forces Headquarters, I refer to reflection in general.
MR PRETORIUS: No, there was no general debriefing meeting that I attended, but once again Special Forces gave us copies of photos of certain of the deceased persons that we had to try to identify, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And did you do this then?
MR PRETORIUS: I think I can recall that we could positively identify Mr Mnyele.
MR VISSER: And according to your perception, did the Army there attack so-called innocent targets?
MR PRETORIUS: No, Chairperson, these were facilities that were used by MK Special Operations, MK Military Intelligence. Over a time period of months, they used these facilities for multiple activities.
MR VISSER: And did these facilities appear in security reports that you had studied during that time?
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson.
MR MALAN: I beg your pardon, is this applicable to all of the targets?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson.
MR MALAN: Did you got through then one by one?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, the targets that were on the board there ..(intervention)
MR MALAN: No, you misunderstand me. My question is, the targets that were struck, were they all used? Not that were identified.
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And you are satisfied from your own knowledge, that that was so.
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Is it also so that - I think that's self-explanatory from your evidence, but there were other instances that also collected information in Botswana.
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct.
MR VISSER: Who were they?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, in the Army it was Special Forces, they had their own Intelligence Officers and operatives there and then it was DCI, Directorate of Covert Intelligence. They collected intelligence. Then there was the normal intelligence legs that gave their inputs, Chairperson. Then there was National Intelligence, their people also collected information, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: And were the targets put together from all the information, according to you?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: After the attack that night, while you were at Nietverdiendt and the people came back, did Mr Olifant report to you there?
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Can you recall today - if you cannot, please indicate so, what did he say?
MR PRETORIUS: What I can recall what he told me was that they could not find the target that he was supposed to identify and that there was chaos in Gaberone itself when the shooting ensued and that some of the military persons at whose section he was, was in contact with people or with vehicles ... (interven-tion)
MR VISSER: What do mean by "in contact"?
MR PRETORIUS: That they had to shoot people or shoot at people who were a threat to them or something. I think there was one specific instance of a vehicle that drove away and some of the Army people shot at this vehicle.
MR VISSER: Was this in essence what he told you?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Thank you, Chairperson, I believe that is all that I wish present from this witness.
NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR VISSER
CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR COETSER: Thank you, Mr Chairman.
Mr Pretorius, just to assist in clarifying certain aspects, my instructions are, and the evidence reveals that Mr Olifant, before he came to Soweto and fell under your control, in essence, was a Koevoet operative in South West Africa.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR COETSER: And he, together with a number of these operatives, were transferred to Soweto, under your control. Or your unit's control, to put it that way.
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct.
MR COETSER: I understand that they had the status of so-called Special Constables up there in South West, effectively also under contract to the South African Police Services.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR COETSER: Is it also correct that with the transfer, these individuals' transfer to your unit, there was a process that was followed whereby they were initially informants and they were required to be assessed for the purposes of determining ultimately, whether they were suitable to become fully-fledged members of the South African Police Services.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR COETSER: And at the stage of this raid and the months leading up to it, Mr Olifant and some others status had been improved in this evaluation from simply been paid informers, to actually being contracted to the South African Police Serves as permanent employees in the form of so-called agents.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR COETSER: If I understand the situation correctly, also to a large extent their task as these contract employees, was to do observational work for you in relation to the activities of the ANC, PAC, etcetera.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct.
MR COETSER: They were also used on various operations as well, conducted by the police.
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct.
MR COETSER: Okay. And I take it that these particular individuals were useful also from the point of view that they had had combat experience.
MR PRETORIUS: Definitely, Chairperson.
MR COETSER: Given the fact that Mr Olifant had combat experience before, was that one of the reason why he was considered to be a suitable choice to accompany the military on this particular raid?
MR PRETORIUS: I do not want to say that that was the primary motivation, Chairperson, if my memory serves me correctly, then Mr Olifant at that stage was already aware of the location of that specific house.
CHAIRPERSON: Mr Pretorius, was Mr Olifant paid for what he did?
MR PRETORIUS: He received a monthly salary, Chairperson.
CHAIRPERSON: But to do that work?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson.
CHAIRPERSON: That was his work?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson.
CHAIRPERSON: He wasn't a policeman?
MR PRETORIUS: No, each and every month he received a pre-determined salary according to his contract, Chairperson.
CHAIRPERSON: To do this specific type of work?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Mr Chairman, if I might be of assistance, I think Mr Coetzee refers - or Olifant himself refers to the fact that he was paid. It will be confirmed by Coetzee.
MR COETSER: I'd just like to clarify one aspect of that. Insofar as these monthly payments are concerned, were these particular contracted agents paid cash on a monthly basis?
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson, we paid them in cash.
MR COETSER: Then just another aspect, just to clarify things ...(intervention)
MR MALAN: I beg your pardon, this may become important later. You say you paid them in cash but you also said that he had a contract and if I understand you correctly, as a permanent member of the Force.
MR PRETORIUS: Maybe I expressed myself incorrectly there, Chairperson, but what I meant was that, in other words, let us say that he was supposed to receive R1 000, I could not only give him R900, because then that would be a breach of contract. So what I mean is that he received a set salary each month.
MR MALAN: But you also referred to him as registered, he was registered with you, there was no central register.
MR PRETORIUS: No, he was registered at Security Head Office. This person had to be registered under contract.
MR MALAN: But he would not have been on any salary roll?
MR PRETORIUS: No, Chairperson, he was paid from the Secret Fund.
MR MALAN: My question is, did you see him as a member of the Force, or did you see him as someone who had a contract with the Force?
MR PRETORIUS: Well this is in-between ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: I think we want to confirm this, he wasn't a policeman.
MR PRETORIUS: But I handled him as if he was a police officer.
CHAIRPERSON: But he was not a police officer, he was not in the Force and he was contractually paid for what he did.
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR COETSER: Just one last aspect on this issue. At the time of this particular raid, we know he was under contract, was a process at that time underway for the purposes of in fact incorporating him into the South African Police Serves, as a fully-fledged policeman?
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR COETSER: And he was eventually thereafter appointed as a Constable.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR COETSER: And Mr Olifant was aware at the time of the raid that this process to have his permanent appointment as a Constable in the South African Police Serves, was under way.
MR PRETORIUS: I think he was very aware of it, Chairperson.
MR COETSER: Moving on, if one has a look at Mr Olifant's statements attached to his application, what he indicates is that it was a Lieut Coetzee that approached him closer to the time of the raid and simply asked him if he could still remember the houses in Botswana that he had observed, and he was then advised that he was going to be taken by yourself to the military, in order to join an operation into Botswana. In essence this is what he says, that was all he was really advised of at that time.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR COETSER: What I'd like to ask you in connection with this is, was the information provided to Mr Olifant by yourselves at that time, before and when you handed him over to the military, was the information given to him on a basically need-to-know basis?
MR PRETORIUS: Definitely, Chairperson.
MR COETSER: So he was only really advised as to the essence of what he needed to know at the time?
MR PRETORIUS: That's a hundred percent correct, Chairperson.
MR COETSER: Because my instructions from Mr Olifant are that eventually, for the purposes of the raid, the military asked him to point out - this is the day of the raid, we know it took place in the evening, but on that day, he was requested by the military to go and point out five houses in total, for verification purposes. Do you know anything about that?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, no, I do not know about that.
JUDGE MOTATA: If I may come in.
Did he mention when he made a report to you, after the return, that is after the raid, which houses he could not point out?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, he only indicated to me about the specific house that he had to go and identify, it was North-West from The Oasis Hotel, and he could not find the house, he could not lead the people to the house. That's the only thing that he said. He did not tell me whether he pointed out other houses, it's the first time I hear about this today.
JUDGE MOTATA: Thank you Mr Coetser, you may proceed.
MR COETSER: Were yourselves aware of exactly the role that the military intended to use Mr Olifant for, during the course of the raid? What were you told?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, if I recall Mr Naude's words when he told me over the telephone, he said that they had a problem identifying the specific house by means of existing information and aerial photos, and then they wanted to know if we have a person that we can send with the combat team, who would walk in front and identify this house, and I eventually said that yes, we have such a person, and that was Mr Olifant.
MR COETSER: So you understood that that was what his role was going to be?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, he had to go and identify the house for the combat team.
MR COETSER: Then just one other aspect. If one goes through Mr Olifant's two statements that were eventually provided in support of his application, in the one statement, if one reads the two statements together, he mentions two occasions prior to the raid when he went to Botswana under instruction to observe certain houses and the activities going on there. If one looks at page 24, I think it was, of the record, bundle 1, the first paragraph, he says:
"In May 1985, Willem Coetzee instructed me to go to Botswana, Gaberone, to observe certain houses which were shown to me by Mapule Sekonyela, during our visits there.
Willem Coetzee gave me specific addresses in Gaberone North and Broadhurst. He instructed me to spend six to seven days in Gaberone observing those houses"
and afterwards he came back and gave Willem Coetzee a briefing about what happened. Were you aware, can you remember that specific incident where he was sent to go and observe houses, based upon what Mapule Sekonyela had pointed out?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, if I may say, I think right from the start of 1985, we on a weekly basis, I think not a weekend passed ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: The question is, do you knowledge with regard.
MR PRETORIUS: To this specific incident, Mr Coetzee would be able to ...
CHAIRPERSON: So you don't know about it?
MR PRETORIUS: No, I do not want to say that I recall this specific one.
MR VISSER: My learned friend also asked another question, more than one question rolled into one, Chairperson, and that is that he was sent in twice into Botswana, and I think that's what the witness is trying to respond to.
CHAIRPERSON: ...(inaudible)
MR PRETORIUS: It sounds right, I don't have a problem with it, but I cannot - this specific incident, because I know there was more than one incident, not only two but there were definitely more than two movements by Mr Olifant.
MR MALAN: That you know of, but you cannot connect it to a date?
MR PRETORIUS: Unfortunately not.
MR MALAN: But you aware of it that he was sent in more than once by Coetzee.
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, ...(intervention)
MR MALAN: Or by yourself.
MR PRETORIUS: Or by myself to go and undertake tactical reconnaissance ...(intervention)
INTERPRETER: The speaker's microphone.
CHAIRPERSON: ...(inaudible)
MR PRETORIUS: You're referring to this global attack?
CHAIRPERSON: ...(inaudible)
MR PRETORIUS: No, we definitely did send him in.
CHAIRPERSON: ...(inaudible)
CHAIRPERSON: ...(inaudible) before the incident. Do you have knowledge of this, can you confirm it? It's there in his affidavit, can you confirm it?
MR PRETORIUS: I do not want to confuse you, Chairperson, I beg your pardon if I am doing that. What I can recall is that from the time that we had the first meeting at Potchefstroom that I said was at least a month before the time, in that time, during that time I know that Olifant, let us say was sent in at least twice into Gaberone. I can confirm that but I cannot recall the dates. I do not know ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: Well I don't know why the question was asked, but it's clear from what you've explained. Thank you.
MR COETSER: Just to finish off on this aspect. If one reads his other statement at page 17 of the record, bundle 1, paragraph 2 on page 17, or 1 and 2, he indicates on another occasion, this is prior to the raid as well, that he was instructed to enter Botswana in order to verify information provided to the Security Forces concerned. So he went in on another occasion specifically to verify certain information provided to or by, I'm not quite sure, the Security Forces, as such.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct.
MR COETSER: Just one last aspect, perhaps just as background history, I don't know, were you aware that prior to Mr Olifant being involved in Koevoet, he was also employed by the South African Police Services in the Rhodesian war? Did you know about that at all?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, I do not see the relevance, but what I can say is that I do not have proof of this but I heard stories that they were involved with Renamo, and immediately when one mentions Renamo, one mentions Rhodesia.
CHAIRPERSON: Mr Coetser, what did you mean by "employed in Rhodesia"?
MR COETSER: I'm sorry?
CHAIRPERSON: What did you mean by the word "employed in Rhodesia"?
MR COETSER: Well employed in the broader sense of the word.
CHAIRPERSON: ...(indistinct - no microphone) the infamous Mr Hall?
MR COETSER: If it becomes relevant to go into Mr Olifant's background, military background history, ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: That's why I'm asking what did you mean, because you raised it. I want to understand it when it does become relevant.
MR COETSER: Well my instructions are that as a youngster, together with a great many others, he was under arrest by the South African Government for allegedly being an illegal immigrant. He emanated from a part of Natal very close to the Mozambican border and my instructions are that him, together with many others who were arrested there, were taken to Pretoria and thereafter whilst under arrest, were given the offer ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: Do you intend to use that as psychological justification for his participation?
MR COETSER: Absolutely not, it's just a question of, it may be relevant to understand for certain reasons, I don't know where this man comes from and what his background history is. That's all.
NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR COETSER
CHAIRPERSON: Mr Cornelius, have you got any questions?
MR CORNELIUS: For the record, Wim Cornelius for McPherson, I've got no questions, thank you Chair.
CHAIRPERSON: Mr Berger, can we start in 15 minutes time?
COMMITTEE ADJOURNS
ON RESUMPTION
ANTON PRETORIUS: (s.u.o.)
CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR BERGER: Thank you, Chairperson.
Mr Pretorius, you say you've read annexure A, Exhibit A, "Algemene Agtergrond".
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: Who wrote it?
MR PRETORIUS: It is the general background ...(intervention)
MR BERGER: No, I don't want you to go through it, I want to tell me who wrote it.
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, it is extracts from Gen Johan van der Merwe, amongst others, Brig Cronje. It was drawn up by our legal representatives, Mr Wagener and Mr Visser, next to me, to hand up. So it's a multiple of incidents, judgments, that are in this document.
MR BERGER: And how does that relate to you, to your specific application here today?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, I think the introduction of this document commences by explaining where the political motive emanated from, to at the end of the day, if I can refer to it as political indoctrination, how the red danger, the total onslaught that was directed at South Africa and so forth and so forth.
MR BERGER: As I understand your application in this case, you acted under orders.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: Okay. Now you've confirmed the contents of your application, particularly from pages 213, through to 222 of volume 1, is that correct?
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: Okay. Now I want you to go to page 213, please. About two-thirds of the way down you say that you and Lieut-Col Coetzee, used your existing undercover agents to infiltrate the networks, the ANC networks in Botswana. Besides the three undercover agents that you referred to earlier, were there any others?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes many, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: How many were there?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, if I can estimate, I handled a number of 15 to 20 and I think Mr Coetzee had the same number. Unfortunately I cannot say it was 10 or 12, but it was quite a few.
MR BERGER: I'm not going to ask you to give the names of all of them but I'm going to ask you to try and be specific, because you say in the next paragraph, you say that these undercover agents managed to make contact with the following four MK members, and you list them, Tim Williams, Patrick Ricketts, Lungile Pepane and Riaz Saloojee.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: Now which of the undercover agents made contact with these four?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, maybe I should just explain. When I drew up this document I should have used the words "amongst others", these following persons, because there were more persons than just these four persons.
CHAIRPERSON: You misunderstand the question. The question is, who of your agents could have given information about these four persons?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, names that I've mentioned already were RS282 and there were then various others.
MR BERGER: Let's deal with them person by person. Tim Williams, who were the agents who were infiltrating Tim Williams?
MR VISSER ADDRESSES: Chairperson, if my learned friend wants to know the identities of the agents or informers, if that is what his question is about, then Chairperson, I'm going to object to that, for the sake of the safety and for the sake of, and on the basis of the rule in our laws that stands that unless there are certain exceptional circumstances, Chairperson, none of which are, incidentally, present here, the identity of informers must be protected. So Chairperson, with great respect, one fails to see the relevance of what the identity of the informer has to do with the merits of the application. In fact, I have noticed somewhere in the papers before you, that one or more of the family of the victims are very keen to find out who the informers are. Now that's not a basis, Chairperson, with respect.
CHAIRPERSON: I've always wondered about this you know, Mr Visser, we are busy with a very unusual process here and I raised the issue in my own mind and I want to raise it with you now that you've raised this. That in the quest to find out how my son died or how my father died, the process was intended to enlighten people precisely about that. And if it's going to be said that my father was killed because of certain information given by an informer, I would like to know how my father's killers came to that information and how they made that decision, because then it would be putting me in a better position to understand his death. I don't know, I'm not too sure whether our normal rules relating to informers would apply here because of the unusual process that we are busy with.
And like I said, I often wondered about this, because this is not the first time such questions are being objected to, but at the time before when it was objected to, it didn't seem to be relevant and therefore I upheld the objections. I really don't know what the question is asked for now.
MR VISSER: That's why I specifically made my point that I'm not sure in which direction we're moving, but if it is an issue of who the informers were, Chairperson, then I would submit to you, it takes the matter no further, one way or the other, from the applicants' point of view, from the Committee's point of view, or from the victims' point of view, as to who the person was, as long as they know it was a police informer. But if needs be, we can argue that Chairperson, I'm ready to argue it straight away, and to refer you to the authorities in this regard. And I would submit to you that there ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: That's an issue of ... (indistinct - no micro-phone) authorities.
MR VISSER: Oh, yes ... (indistinct - no microphone) Commis-sion of Inquiry.
CHAIRPERSON: Not only a Commission of Inquiry, this specific type of Commission of Inquiry. It's the first time it's held, I understand, in the world.
Mr Berger, what is your attitude here?
MR BERGER ADDRESSES: Chairperson first of all, Mr Pretorius through Mr Visser, opened the door and gave the names of three informers who are now dead, so we are told. That evidence must have been relevant, otherwise it wouldn't have been tendered in the place. Secondly, there's certain information which Mr Pretorius has put before this Committee, in regard to certain targets, people who were killed and people were not killed, but who were nevertheless targets. That information about what people were doing is, by definition, hearsay. The veracity of that evidence can only be tested if we know the identity of the person who passed on that information.
CHAIRPERSON: I understand where you're heading, but before you carry on any further, let me just raise this issue with you, perhaps if you need to deal with it, if you don't agree with my thinking, then please deal with it. That is information that was relied upon by the applicant, whether it was true or not, I'm not too sure that that is a point that's going to take the matter any further or not. If you don't accept that that is so, then please argue the matter, but if you are saying that you need to test the veracity of it, of the information, does it matter, because this witness has indicated that he relied on it? So whether the information that came to him upon which he relied, was the truth or not, is neither here nor there.
MR BERGER: Well Chairperson, how do we know what information this witness got? It's his say-so, there's no documentation, there's nothing to support him, other than his say-so. Now if we know the identity of the person who supposedly gave that information, we can question that person to find out whether that information was passed on in the first place. By questioning the veracity of that information, if that information turns out to be untrue, one can then pose the question, was that information passed on in the first place or not?
So it's not only the veracity of the information, but whether the information was passed on at all. If, for example, Tami Mnyele was not involved in MK activities and one of the informers supposedly infiltrated Tami Mnyele's circle, well we could ask that informer whether he got such information or whether she got such information and whether that information was passed on to Mr Pretorius. It has a direct bearing on the credibility of this witness, as to what information he relied upon.
CHAIRPERSON: Or if it turns out to be untrue, why did that person spread that kind of story?
MR BERGER: But, Chairperson, I'd return to the first point, Mr Visser and Mr Pretorius opened the door by giving us the names of three informers. They were not identified, they were identified by their codenames in this statement, what was the relevance of providing their names now for the Committee? If it was just because they're dead and so therefore we might as well give the names, well then that evidence is, according to my learned friend, now irrelevant evidence. Why was it tendered? I submit it is relevant evidence, just like the names of all the other informers is relevant evidence. And I've limited myself, I've said to the witness, I don't want to know the names of all 15/20 informers, I want to know the names of those people who infiltrated people who subsequently became targets. That's all.
CHAIRPERSON: Mr Visser, have you got a reply to that?
MR VISSER IN REPLY: Very briefly, Chairperson. The reason why Mr Pretorius mentioned these persons and why I invited him to give their identities, appear from page 221, because he in his amnesty application stated that he would like to see that the circumstances of the death of these members be investigated by the TRC. That was the reason why it was mentioned. Of course they're dead now, we can't protect them anymore, the law can't protect them anymore, Chairperson, and that is why - and it wasn't a matter that was just easily decided on, but we believe that you're entitled to know who these people are, in order to put a name to the suggestion that they have been murdered here. And from that point of view we thought that, and we believe correctly so, that we should make that known. But we opened no doors, not of people who are still alive ...
CHAIRPERSON: Let the Panel decide whether you opened doors or not. Can you deal with the proposition that Mr Berger submits, that it is important for him to investigate whether this person in fact, this witness, in fact received that information.
MR VISSER: Chairperson, the issue of motivation, be it political or otherwise in any amnesty application, is to be judged on the evidence of the applicant, and as you quite correctly, in my submission, put to Mr Berger, if the man - I'm first dealing with the issue of whether, not whether, but if he did receive the evidence and that evidence might even be false, then the issue is for the Committee to decide whether in the circumstances, he was entitled to act in the bona fide belief of the truthfulness thereof.
On the issue, Chairperson, of whether the information was given in the first place, we submit that on the probabilities and on what you have before you here, it's quite clear that it is extremely probable that this was the type of information which he would have received. In fact, Chairperson, one can hardly appreciate why the police would run a network of informers if it was to be expected that - although it did happen in the past ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: It wasn't a perfect system, Mr Visser.
MR VISSER: It happened, it happened. I immediately hasten to say that it has happened, but that was an exception to the rule, Chairperson. And with great respect, your Committee and yourself will be well able to find that the probabilities are that Pretorius did receive this type of information.
Chairperson, just to refer you to the fact that this matter has come up often before Committees on amnesty, in fact it first came up in February 1997, before the original Amnesty Committee, and a ruling was made and that ruling has never been changed and we've been held to that ruling, Chairperson, throughout. And that ruling is in the Cronje amnesty application of the evidence on page 519 to 520, and I can read it to you. Judge Mall ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: But wasn't that Committee, I say it with the greatest of respect, too quick to rely on traditional practices? Given the unusual circumstances of this process.
MR VISSER: Chairperson, that remains a matter for you to decide. What I'm submitting to you is that certainly on the authorities which we have gathered on this issue and which we have argued, and I believe Mr Malan was part of the Committee in Natal, in the Ndwandwe matter, in which this argument was put forward fully, there is no ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: It has been submitted to me before and I found in its favour, before.
MR VISSER: May I just finish what I'm saying, Chairperson. We attempted to point out that there was no authority that made any exceptions to the rule as far as the process was concerned, in which the issue of the identity of an informer was mentioned. In fact, the authorities deal with identity of informers even outside the scope of litigation, in general. So we would argue and we would urge you, Chairperson, to find that even though this is a singular and a new process, not known anywhere else in the world, that the legal principles are not changed by that fact.
CHAIRPERSON: Well consider this also, that it's not only an unusual process, we must also consider the purpose of the process. And one of the purposes of the process is to put the victims or the survivors of the victims, in a position to appreciate why their loved ones became victims.
MR VISSER: But Chairperson, with respect, not at the risk of placing other people ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: ... crux of the matter. We've got to weigh up the interests and why and where, or at what is the process directed, the Act.
MR VISSER: Well it could never be said that the process would be directed to the benefit of one interested party at the expense of the life and well-being of another.
CHAIRPERSON: Ja, as between applicant and victim. We're not talking about applicants or victims here.
MR VISSER: No, as between victims and informers, former informers. Because we know what happens ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: Informers are not a party here. But I don't know if you're correct when you said it can never be said that that is the position, that it can never be weighed up against an informer. The unusual circumstances of this process puts that argument or that balance in another perspective.
MR VISSER: No, no, I didn't submit that it can never be taken into account, I wouldn't make such a submission.
CHAIRPERSON: No, listen to me, Mr Visser, you submitted that when one has to balance the interests of victims, it can never be found or said to be that that balance must be found in favour of the victims to the detriment of informers.
MR VISSER: Yes, that is my submission.
CHAIRPERSON: That's your submission. And I'm saying that that's easier said than done, given the peculiar intentions of the Act.
MR VISSER: Yes Chairperson. Well, ...(intervention)
MR MALAN: Mr Visser, just for the record, you referred to the Ndwandwe, the application regarding the murder of Ndwandwe, the issue there was not whether an informer's name should be released, but whether the informer who happened, on the evidence, to have been also involved as a co-perpetrator, was to be released.
MR VISSER: Yes, but that's even worse, that ...(intervention)
MR MALAN: ...(indistinct) what I'm saying? The issue there and the debate there, it was not asked that an informer's name, as a matter of principle, be released, but an informer who happened to be a co-perpetrator.
MR VISSER: Absolutely, Chairperson. And if I may be so bold as to say that we were of the impression that the Committee had no problem with the issue, if it was just a mere informer, then he would be protected. But the question, as you correctly point out, was now but if that informer is also a co-perpetrator, what is the situation then?
MR MALAN: I'm not referring to the Committee's position, because the Committee still has to come to a decision if my memory serves me well, but the application of the victims legal representatives was on the basis of the informer also being a co-perpetrator.
MR VISSER: Quite correctly so, Chairperson, I didn't want to burden this Committee with that detail, but that was a worse case scenario from the point of view of the objection, the fact that that was the additional factor that came into play.
But Chairperson, I don't want to burden the matter but I'm instructed by the clients that I appear for, that they're not prepared to divulge the names of any of their informers and in fact I was told that they prepared to go to jail for that if they have to.
CHAIRPERSON: Mr Visser, what if the information upon which this applicant relied was not true? Doesn't that beg the question as to whether the information was in fact transmitted to the applicant?
MR VISSER: Sorry, Chairperson, would you just please repeat that for me?
CHAIRPERSON: I'm saying, if the information that he says he received and relied upon, was in fact a pack of lies, doesn't that beg the question as to whether the information was in fact transmitted to him? Because it wasn't true. In other words, if it wasn't true, could he not be making up that story?
MR VISSER: Well there are one or two scenarios. The one is that he did get the information, but the information was a pack of lies. The other is that he never got the information and he just made it up. Well Chairperson ...
CHAIRPERSON: In that case, where the information that he says he received is a set of circumstances that is patently wrong and a dishonest set of circumstances ...(intervention)
MR VISSER: Well that's obviously one of the tests.
CHAIRPERSON: ... would there not be any scope to investigate that then? He says: "I got it from an informer", there's reason to believe that what he says he received from the informer is a lie, if he did in fact receive it. But from a legal perspective, an evidence perspective, would that not entitle anyone to then say "look, it is wrong, I question whether this witness in fact did get this information? Where did you get it from, because we want to investigate it from that person you say you received that information, where in heavens name he got it, or whether he in fact gave you this information."
MR VISSER: One would obviously start with what you've just stated, that there must be clear indications that the information was wrong. Now I'm not sure whether this is going to be presented to you at some stage or other, but it certainly doesn't exist at this stage.
CHAIRPERSON: ...(indistinct - no microphone)
MR VISSER: But Chairperson, one must not forget that the fact that these applicants and applicants in other amnesty applications feel themselves duty bound not to divulge identities of informers, is something which serves to their prejudice, because it would be the easiest thing in the world to call the informers to come and support your story. They are prepared to run the risks of not doing that, so from an evidential value, they ware already running a risk. So it's not just for refusing for the sake of refusing. That's the first point I want to make.
But Chairperson, we would submit that unless there is a clear indication that the information which the particular witness says he received, could never have been information given to him, the issue won't even fall for consideration. And what we're saying is, there is no such indication before you here today, unless you take the allegations made in cross-examination that none of these persons that were killed had anything to do with MK, at face value and being the truth. But if you don't do that, Chairperson, well then the question really falls away at this stage. It may come up again at a later stage.
CHAIRPERSON: Mr Visser, deal with the following issue then also. You argued that there are tons of authority for the proposition that the identity of informers who assist police in solving cases, should not be divulged for various reasons, and most of those reasons I agree with because they are social and helps the system work, to a large extent. Two questions. Where such informers were party to crime, are they still protected? Secondly, if those informers are guilty of a crime, they have not applied for amnesty, and this is the important difference between a normal criminal case in which these practices are employed, and this system.
After this process - I don't know if he's going to do it or not, the prosecuting authority of South Africa is entitled, in terms of the Act, to then investigate the possibilities of prosecuting who he thinks are guilty of crimes. But the accident of being an informer, the identity of a prospective accused, is that identity protected?
MR VISSER: Chairperson, I can deal with it ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: ...(indistinct) who are charged with investigating that matter then adopt the same attitude.
MR VISSER: Chairperson, with great respect, how's that relevant here? What indications are there for you or for anyone, that any of these informers committed any offence? I mean how does the question even arise in this case?
CHAIRPERSON: ...(indistinct - no microphone) please deal with the question that I asked. We're talking about the status of an informer in these proceedings, as opposed to the normal criminal ...(indistinct)
MR VISSER: Well Chairperson, it's my submission and that it's a rule of public policy and it's a rule that applies equally, whether it's before a court of law, whether it's outside a court of law, and I would submit, also before this Committee. Chairperson, and I would rely upon the authorities - I don't know whether you still have available the general written argument which we drew after the meeting of the 6th of February 1999, with Judge Wilson and Mr Malan, in order to shorten proceedings, but at page 51 we deal with exactly these issues, we deal with the authorities Rex v Van Schalkwyk 1938 (AD) 543, which incidentally was the authority relied upon by the original Amnesty Committee on Amnesty, to make the ruling that the identity of informers not be divulged and that no questions be asked in that regard.
JUDGE MOTATA: What worries me is that stemming from what my Brother has said, that we have a very important component within the Act, which says we should also be satisfied in our opinions that full disclosure has been arrived at. And we say if an informer is branded about, shouldn't we go into the relevance of the information they seek to get out of that? Because even applicants say an informer said X, Y, Z, for instance, and it turns out that none of that existed, how would we get closer to full disclosure?
MR VISSER: Yes Chairperson, but one presupposes with that question that one is already at the point where you ask yourself the question, but how could anybody ever have thought so, because the evidence is clear that it wasn't so? And my submission to you is that we don't reach that point in the quest of finding an answer to whether full disclosure has been made before you reach that point. And there's no indication here that these people were that innocent as they are now being held out to be, the victims, and nor is there any indication to suggest that the information which this witness gave evidence about was not in fact given to him and was not in fact correct.
Now Chairperson, I'm making a simple submission to you, in the sense that before you reach the point of looking at the TRC Act, and saying these are the requirements of the TRC Act, and we can't investigate whether this requirement has been fulfilled unless we know the name of the informer, then Chairperson, why go through the exercise, why not wait until you reach that point?
JUDGE MOTATA: No, no, not necessarily, because I'm speaking here for myself, that a question was asked, we don't know, up to now I don't know the relevance of the question, and three, for instance, 282, 276 and R103, supposing the question of Tim Williams, 103 or 276 or 282 gave that information, would it still change the question which Mr Berger intended asking in that respect?
MR VISSER: I'm not certain that I follow the question, Judge Motata.
JUDGE MOTATA: I don't know the question, where it was leading to, he says "but there are these four persons whom you named and in that respect there were these three or four informers who were giving information, among the host which Mr Pretorius and Mr Coetzee deal with. I say, if this question which is intended to be asked would elicit one of the three, would we still fall outside the realm, or we should we still cover the question which is something very important like my Brother has said, that we accept that in any Commission, quasi-judicial or what, the normal rules which we have in court apply. But now we are coming into something which is sui generis on its own and that it also extends, its ramifications are wider in that it says we are going to bring reconciliation, we want people to live as one, we should know what happened in the past and if we are going to say to ourselves, but there's certain information that has got to be swept under the carpet, would we still achieve what we are here for?
MR VISSER: Chairperson, if I may attempt to answer the question raised. The first issue, before one goes anywhere else in regard to full disclosure, is the issue that the Act prescribes that there should be a full disclosure of all relevant evidence. So the first issue for determination is whether the identity of a witness is relevant, and my learned friend argues, "it is relevant in the sense that I want to test the veracity of what this witness says."
Chairperson, we say that without a foundation that points to the fact that this witness could never have received that information and therefore he's lying, the issue doesn't arise. That's the first argument.
On the second issue, Chairperson, that leaves you with merely the knowledge, or not knowing the identity of the information.
Now the authorities which we have been able to find, tell you that informers lives, as a rule, and the lives of their families are in grave danger the moment their identities are made known. One has got to question why do the victims want to know who the informers are, if there is no sound ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: Where did you get that from, Mr Visser, that the question has been directed at the witness because the victims want to know it? Mr Berger's indicated to us that he wants to investigate the truthfulness of the allegations.
MR VISSER: That was the basis on which Mr Berger presented it and I've acknowledged that, but I've also stated, Chairperson, that in these documents, and if you want me to, I'll find it, before the Human Rights Violations Committee at least one of these victims family members said they want to know who the informers are. The question is why? For what reason?
CHAIRPERSON: Well I often ask myself as a practitioner, my instructions are X, Y and Z and the State witness who happens to be a police, says it's A, B, C, where did this policeman get it from?
MR VISSER; Or where did your client get it from?
CHAIRPERSON: Ja, possibly, but I assume you've understood it, I had reason to believe my client, because I didn't just believe his say-so.
MR VISSER: Well on that score of course, the Committee is objective position, and in fact in the fortunate objective position, that you only deal with what is presented to you, Chairperson, and thereby the applicant, including this witness, has to stand and fall.
Chairperson, there's a request from the very witness about whom we are now arguing, that he's got to take a short adjournment. Perhaps he could just be excused.
Chairperson, my submission to you is that it's an issue of public policy, the protection of ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: ...(indistinct - no microphone) before you read, you can read it, is it public policy, the protection of the identity of an informer? Is that public policy in this instance?
JUDGE MOTATA: Before you answer, is it not overridden by these people coming to confess their sins, in the sense that other people should forgive them for those sins?
MR VISSER: But must they do that at the expense of the almost certain knowledge of the detriment that's going to befall the informers who worked for them during the conflict of the past? In my submission, not Chairperson. That's too much to expect of anybody, to say that "you're obliged to make a full disclosure" and he says "yes, well let me tell you that A, B and C were my informers and I know now that I've mentioned their names, that I've almost certainly sent at least one of them to the gallows, but I'm unburdening myself in order to obtain amnesty." With great respect ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: Mr Visser, we have heard many cases where applicants have mentioned the co-perpetrators, aren't they in the same danger?
MR VISSER: Chairperson, a co-perpetrator is not in exactly the same position ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: I'm not saying in the same position, I'm saying in the same danger that you say an informer would be.
MR VISSER: No, Chairperson, no. What one must bear in mind here is that there was a political struggle going on, the issue is a political one, that is not necessarily so with co-perpetrators. A co-perpetrator might be in a similar position in certain instances, and one can possibly think of many, but an informer, he's a sell-out. We know what the ANC thought of informers, for example, they encouraged their members and the public to deal with informers in the harshest way. That is the situation in which you find yourselves having to apply the provisions of this Act. And we're still dealing with that very political issue, Chairperson.
JUDGE MOTATA: ...(inaudible - no microphone) situation which prevailed then, that whilst there was this war raging, that is the ANC and the then regime, that they said: "...(indistinct), because our struggle is sold out by the informers, deal harshly with those people." And now we get the two parties coming together and saying "hey, let's correct the past" and to correct the past is that everybody should know what obtained.
CHAIRPERSON: One of the main informers of the South African Police during those days, was two weeks ago forgiven in public by the Port Elizabeth ...(indistinct)
MR VISSER: Well he wasn't an informer, he was simply an operative of Ferdi Barnard.
CHAIRPERSON: I'm not talking about Ferdi Barnard, I'm talking about an informer, Mr Visser, I know what I'm talking about. Mr Hlongwane.
MR VISSER: I see.
CHAIRPERSON: ...(inaudible)
MR VISSER: Yes. Let me read to what ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: ...(inaudible) must read it in the context of this Act. I'm asking, in view ...(intervention)
MR VISSER: I'm trying to do that, Chairperson. I'm submitting to you that the context of this Act deals with a political past and I'm not so sure, Chairperson, whether anybody can be as bold as to say that after 1994, informers can now rest assured that they face no retribution from certain quarters if their identities are known. I can give you an example.
CHAIRPERSON: How is it affected by public policy?
MR VISSER: That's the very point of public policy, is the protection of those people because of what they did, Chairperson. That's the very thing. Because of the acceptance by our courts of law, that those people are in dire danger the moment their identities are divulged. It doesn't matter whether it's in a criminal case or whether it's in this case. In fact, also in our situation, because of the political angle.
CHAIRPERSON: But when those policies were developed, it wasn't developed in the background of the intentions and the spirit of this Act.
MR VISSER: I accept that, I'm arguing to you ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: That's why I'm asking you, how does this Act impact on your submission?
MR VISSER: I'm arguing that the circumstances which this Act is supposed to deal with makes it even more important for you to protect the identity of the informant, because of the political implications, because of the political background and because of what we know had occurred in the past. And with respect, we beg to disagree with Judge Motata, if his suggestion is that today everybody has reconciled at Kempton Park and all of this is over and the ANC has won and therefore informers have no problem. We have this problem on a day to day basis, we have situations where, for example, black applicants who were formerly members of the police, come to the Committees on Amnesty and you can see the trauma through which they're going, because they want to make a full disclosure but they can't because they're afraid for their lives. We've had direct evidence.
CHAIRPERSON: Mr Visser, do you think Mr Tim Williams doesn't know who pimped on him?
MR VISSER: Doesn't know?
CHAIRPERSON: Do you think Mr Tim Williams doesn't know who informed on him?
MR VISSER: Well I don't know whether he does or whether he doesn't.
CHAIRPERSON: Well what's the probabilities, he's a top ranking officer, by the evidence of your own witness.
MR VISSER: Well Williams isn't part of the issues before you, because Mr Berger doesn't appear for him. But Chairperson, to deal with Mr Tim Williams, the fact that he might know who it is - well look, if the identity of the informer has already been made public, then there's no issue of trying to protect his identity, clearly. If ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: I raised the issue because you say these people are in danger of being killed if their identity is divulged.
MR VISSER: Absolutely, yes.
CHAIRPERSON: Now I wonder if Mr Tim Williams would have killed anybody now.
MR VISSER: Well Chairperson, I'm not going to suggest that Mr Tim Williams might kill somebody, somebody else might do it on his behalf, I don't know, or off his own bat, I don't know. Why should we speculate when we have a rule of public policy that the identity of informers ought to be protected, unless there are circumstances, and they are set out in the authorities and I can tell you what they are. They are, in the first place, where the identity of an informer, the divulgence of the identity of an informer will serve to either prove the guilt or the innocence of an accused person, then the Court will usually order the identity to be made known. Secondly, Chairperson, where the identi-ty has already become known, because then it becomes pointless trying to protect it. I can't remember offhand, Chairperson, there may be one or two others.
But the point that I'm trying to make is that on the authorities, it all deals with the issue of public policy and the protection of people who were informers. And Chairperson, certainly we submit that it's a very real issue and we would perhaps be wrong to think that this problem has gone away, because we see signs of this all the time in the amnesty applications. You might see here with Mr Olifant, I don't know.
But you were involved in cases where there had been conflicts in the evidence, on the one hand between the blacks and on the other hand, between the white applicants, and you could almost in hundred percent of those cases, put it down to the very fact of their fear of confessing and why they worked with the South African Security Forces. Why? It's because they fear for their lives.
Well Chairperson, I can give you the authorities and I can ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: I'm aware of the authorities, Mr Visser, I'm aware of the policy, all I asked you was whether the policy is applicable within the confines of this Act, the spirit of this Act.
MR VISSER: Well Chairperson, if we're concerned here with justice and I submit we are, then let me just read to you an extract from Kalla's case, Kalla v Minister of Safety and Security 1994 (4) 218W, the Myburgh J.
CHAIRPERSON: Just repeat that.
MR VISSER: 1994, volume 4 of the SALR, page 218W, per Myburgh J, and Chairperson, there's an extract at page 233, which says this:
"The starting point in considering the Defendant's justification for docket privilege (it's the same thing, Chairperson, it deals with privilege) is acceptance that the administration of justice is a fundamental public interest. It is an aspect, a crucially important one of a broader public interest in the maintenance of social peace and order."
That's with reference to Lord Simon in D v National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children and it continues:
"Accordingly, as a matter of public policy, it is reasonable that some information in a public docket should be privileged. Our law in regard to preserving the anonymity of police informers is in keeping with the common law and statutory law of democratic societies, such as the United States of America, the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand."
In D v National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, Lord Diplock said:
"The rationale of the rule as it applies to public informers, is plain. If their identity were liable to be disclosed in a court of law, these sources of information would dry up and the police would be hindered in their duty of preventing and detecting crime. So the public interest in preserving the anonymity of police informers has to be weighed against the public interest. That information which might assist a judicial tribunal to ascertain facts relevant to an issue on which it is required to adjudicate, should be withheld from that tribunal. The balance has fallen on the side of non-disclosure."
And a reference is made to Wigmore, which says, paragraph 2374 in the decision:
"The various Freedom of Information Acts referred to earlier, all create an exception to the public's right of access to information held by government agencies in the case of information which would reveal the identity of a confidential source of information."
And on the same basis, ex parte Minister of Justice in Re Rek v Pillay 1945, AD 653, the Watermeyer Chief Justice at 667-8, Chairperson:
"The purpose of the rule is to encourage information as to offences in which the State is interested. When without such encouragement, the information might not be forthcoming. Even if it be taken that the State is at least indirectly interested as the guardian of public security in all crimes, whether they be offences against the person or property of individuals, or offences against public rights. Yet it would seem that it is an informer with regard to offence against public rights and against the State, the type of informer often kept in the background, who stands more in need of encouragement than an informer in crimes against the person."
And we would submit, also of protection, not only encouragement. And this deals really with the issue which I touched on earlier, Chairperson, it's the political issue which is of importance here. I may refer you, Chairperson, to Swanepoel v Minister of Veiligheid en Sekuriteit 1999 (4) SALR 549T, to which his Lordship, Mr Justice van Dyk at 553 stated this, he said:
"His (now that was the informer) his claim was based upon the fact that he had a substantial right that his identity as an informer not be disclosed."
And he deals with the evidence and he says:
"I come to the conclusion that an informer has a substantial right that his identity not be disclosed."
He's got a substantive right to it. That is the state of our authority at the moment, Chairperson.
And there's State v Rossouw, per Hoekstra J, before he became Judge of Appeal, 1873(4) 608 SWA, which also deals with the issue. The Criminal Procedure and Evidence Act deals with it, Chairperson, Section 202. And I don't want to belabour the matter, Chairperson. Perhaps I should only refer you to Sefadi's case if I may. It's The State v Sefadi, it's an important matter 1995(1) SALR 433 and we would refer you to what Marnovick(?), Acting Judge, said at 441, with reference to British authorities, Chairperson. And perhaps I can just read to you an extract. He says:
"The rule clearly establishes and acted on is this, that in a public prosecution a witness cannot be asked such questions as will disclose an informer, if he be a third person. (as the victims are here) This has been the settled rule for 50 years, and although it may seem hard in a particular case, private mischief must give way to public convenience."
And we think the principle of the rule applies to a case where a witness is asked if he himself is an informer, which was the case there. But he deals with all the authorities, Manovick does, and he comes to the conclusion that over 50 years the rules has been established of the right of an informer to protection of his identity.
Chairperson, what you're asked now is to breach that rule of 50 years, where there is no real grounds placed before you as to why you should do that. And we would submit that, Chairperson, you would refuse to do so.
CHAIRPERSON: Is that all, Mr Visser?
MR VISSER: Yes, Chairperson. I would ask you not to allow Mr Berger to ask question or to ask the witness to respond to questions which would divulge the identity of former informers.
MR BERGER: Chairperson, might I reply?
CHAIRPERSON: You had a chance to ...
JUDGE MOTATA: Are you controverting the rules? He had to reply, you had to answer. Haven't you answered?
MR BERGER: Was that a reply, it sounded more like an argument in-chief.
CHAIRPERSON: Is there any other of the representatives wanting to contribute to this debate?
MR COETSER: No, I have no relevant comment, thank you.
MR CORNELIUS: Neither have I, Mr Chair.
ADV STEENKAMP: Me neither, Mr Chair.
R U L I N G
CHAIRPERSON: We've been confronted with the issue of whether in this hearing, a witness has to divulge or disclose the identity of an informer on whose information he allegedly relies for his application. We don't intend to give a long judgment, unless at a later stage this is requested, but the ruling of the majority of this Panel is that the witness is NOT OBLIGED to answer the question.
MR VISSER: As it please you, Mr Chairman.
MR BERGER: As it pleases the Committee.
CHAIRPERSON: Mr Berger, continue.
CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR BERGER: (cont)
Thank you, Chairperson.
Mr Pretorius, in relation to the informers who you relied upon, the ones who infiltrated the four MK members referred to at the bottom of 213 and the top of 213, can you tell the Committee how many informers there were. I'm not asking for identities ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: I think you ...(indistinct) I don't want to refer to this process again. Mr Pretorius, can you answer the question please.
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, it is the three persons that I have already mentioned there, RS282, 276 and R103 primarily who worked on the four deceased persons.
CHAIRPERSON: What were their names?
MR PRETORIUS: The first one was Freddie Baloyi, that's RS282, and then it was Isaac Mazibuku, RS276, and then R103, Cecilia Maake, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: Mr Pretorius, the whole argument before the lunch adjournment was in relation to the informers who are still alive, so I'm asking how many other informants were there?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, if I may state it as follows. There could have been at least two or three other informers as well that had reported on the specific four persons, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: And those two or three others are still alive?
MR PRETORIUS: I believe so and I hope so, Chairperson. I do not have contact with them.
MR BERGER: Now Tim Williams, according to the information that you received, what was he involved in?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, he was very active in all aspects of MK activities, this was from the instruction giving that "this person should receive instant training", it was giving instructions like "take these handgrenades to South Africa, establish underground MK cell structures in South Africa, recruit new members for MK cell structures in South Africa." And then he was also involved in the general intelligence collection, about which the MK members needed, Chairperson.
CHAIRPERSON: Of the persons that were injured and/or killed in this incident, do I understand your evidence that only Mnyele, you dealt only with Mnyele?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson.
CHAIRPERSON: And it was only on Mnyele that you gave information that contributed to his death.
MR PRETORIUS: That was on the person, Chairperson, and then I gave information with regard to other facilities.
CHAIRPERSON: What other facilities did you contribute to?
MR PRETORIUS: These were firstly, the facilities where Mr Tim Williams stayed, unfortunately I cannot recall the addresses off the top of my head, then the address where Urial Abrahams lived and Muff Anderson, Chairperson.
CHAIRPERSON: It was the same house, wasn't it?
MR PRETORIUS: No, it was another house.
MR MALAN: I beg your pardon, Urial Anderson and Muff Anderson is the same house?
MR PRETORIUS: That's the same house.
MR MALAN: Yes, but Williams was another house?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, that's another house.
CHAIRPERSON: ...(indistinct - no microphone)
MR PRETORIUS: I beg your pardon, I misunderstood you there, Chairperson.
And then with regard to the Mnyele incident, Chairperson, the Tami Mnyele incident, there were two houses in issue, the first house was the house where Rona Segale physically lived in. That is the house, as I've already said, that could not be found and the second house I know for a fact was the house where Tami Mnyele was killed, Chairperson. So those are the houses that I supplied information about, Chairperson.
MR MALAN: I beg your pardon, just to pick it up from there, it was four targets that you gave information on?
MR PRETORIUS: That were used, that's correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: Thank you, Chairperson.
Mr Pretorius, I want to come back to the question I was asking. So Tim Williams you had information on, he was a highly active member of MK, active in planning and carrying out, or facilitating operations against South Africa?
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: Patrick Ricketts?
MR PRETORIUS: Patrick Thomas Ricketts, exactly the same, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: Also a highly trained MK ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: He said it's the same.
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson. He was also in the terrorist album, listed as a terrorist.
MR BERGER: Well you know Mr Pretorius, being in the terrorist album you didn't have to be involved in any acts of violence, or do you disagree with that?
MR PRETORIUS: I accept that if you say it, but I just that in further support, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: You see, I'm concerned with the information that you received and the information that you relied upon.
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, today no-one can take me on about that, RS282 was with Mr Tim Williams and Mr Patrick Thomas Ricketts, over a period of months. Information came in that was verified, that was confirmed, as Mr Loots and Mr Steyn said, by other divisions. The Army confirmed it, National Intelligence confirmed it. So they were trained MK terrorists, Chairperson. And I am sure that if the Committee had Mr Williams here, he could also testify that he was military trained.
CHAIRPERSON: Mr Pretorius, will we not use that descrip-tion, because the police can also be accused of using the same tactics.
MR PRETORIUS: I beg your pardon, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: Christian Lungile Pepane?
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: You also had specific information from your informants on him, and what was the extent of that information?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, once again the same as the previous two persons.
CHAIRPERSON: Mr Berger, what value has this evidence got, I mean it's not one of your clients and it's not one of the people whom this witness says he gave information about to be killed?
MR BERGER: Well Chairperson, I don't want to reveal exactly where I'm going, but ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: ...(inaudible)
MR BERGER: It will become apparent very, very shortly. I just want to establish - and Riaz Saloojee as well, also a high ranking MK official?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, with regard to Mr Riaz Saloojee, MK Calvin Khan, I can take it a little bit further, that I can recall he was the father and the founder of the so-called, if I may call it and describe it as such, that was known to as the "Handgrenade Units" that operated in Soweto or in the Witwatersrand area. He was attached to MK Ordinance. That is where arms were the issue, military warfare arms, Chairperson. And we know already at that stage they were links to MK Special Operations, if I may describe it as such, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: Okay. Now when you refer in your amnesty application, you refer continually to "die vermelde MK lede", if you have a look at the top of page 214, do you see you refer to:
"Over a period of months these mentioned MK members gave these deep cover agents instant training courses at houses in Gaberone and Botswana."
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: When you refer to "die vermelde MK lede", can I take it that you are referring to these four members, Williams, Ricketts, Pepane and Saloojee?
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson, when I drew up the report I referred to them, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: And then again in the next paragraph:
"On instruction of those mentioned ..."
you're referring to those four?
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: And again at the bottom of page 214:
"Concrete evidence was found that the mentioned MK members planned onslaughts of terror and executed them"
MR PRETORIUS: That is correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: So would it be correct then to say that these four MK members were your primary targets?
MR PRETORIUS: It was some of the priority targets, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: No, no.
MR PRETORIUS: No, it was not only these four, it was some of them, that is why I have already said at an earlier stage that I should have used the words "amongst others" in here, Chairperson.
MR VISSER: Well in fact he did say "onder andere". If you look at page 213, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: But you see, that's why I asked you the question, that when you were referring in 214 to "die vermelde MK lede", were you referring to those four and you said yes.
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson, but as I've already said ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: What problem does that present?
MR BERGER: If I can just proceed. My point Mr Pretorius is, why have you not mentioned any other people by name? Why have you not mentioned people who you say you gave information on, who were also involved in MK activities? For example, ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: Who were also priority listed?
MR BERGER: Yes.
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, an easy answer from my side is that I think my legal representative, Mr Wagener, will testify to this, when we initially - I'm just mentioning it, when we drew up these applications it was to me personally under severe stressful circumstances, I had to list everything, acts where I was involved. As you have already seen, you see this is incident number 4, I did not have all the facts available to me at that time. I want to say that this was done very quickly under stressful circumstances. This statement was drawn up by myself to place the application on record and I believed and I was under the impression that I would get the opportunity during a hearing like today, to give all the particulars. It was impossible for me at that stage during the time that I had to put it in writing.
CHAIRPERSON: I can believe that. Carry on.
He believed that he would be able to clear up everything today.
MR BERGER: Well one of the people that you say you had specific information on was Tami Mnyele.
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: Not only him, you also say you had specific information on his wife, Rona Segale..
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: So much so that you say that:
"Rona Segale was a highly trained MK operative"
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: And because of the pressure under which you were labouring - was she a target by the way?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, I've already stated so, Chairperson, she was a primary target.
MR BERGER: And because of the pressure that you were under in getting your amnesty application in on time, you didn't mention her.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson, but it was not purposefully omitted.
MR BERGER: And Tami Mnyele was also a target.
MR PRETORIUS: A secondary target, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: Well you know, when the bullet hits you it doesn't matter if you're a primary target or a secondary target.
MR PRETORIUS: I think that is what we from the police's side tried to say here, Chairperson, that the houses were targets and unfortunately the Army executed the operation. And as I have told you previously, it is so that other persons are shot dead because of their coincidental presence there. But Mr Tami Mnyele, as I have already said in my evidence, was not only an artist, he was involved in MK activities along with his wife and the persons that I mentioned here, amongst others, Freddie Baloyi, who was present in the house when Tami Mnyele was present where instant crash courses were given to him and where arms were given to him. So Mr Tami Mnyele, according to the information at that stage available to me, was that he was involved directly or indirectly with MK.
MR BERGER: So then why wasn't he a target, a primary target?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, as I have said, he was a secondary target. The houses were targets, not persons.
MR BERGER: But then Rona Segale was also a secondary target?
MR PRETORIUS: Her house was a primary target, as I've already said, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: And his house was a primary target?
MR PRETORIUS: That is the second house. I do not know whether that was his house where he was shot dead, Chairperson. That house where he shot dead for the second time - oh, I beg your pardon, where he was shot dead.
MR BERGER: I don't understand your evidence, I really don't understand your evidence. We've heard that the buildings, targets were identified according to buildings.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct.
MR BERGER: And linked to buildings were the people that were expected to be found in those buildings. The buildings were blown up because either they were used for specific activities, or they stored weapons, or certain key people lived there. Now you say that the house where Rona Segale lived was a primary target.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson
MR BERGER: Because Rona Segale was a target.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: The house where Tami Mnyele lived ...(intervention)
MR PRETORIUS: Was also a target.
MR BERGER: Because Tami Mnyele lived there.
MR PRETORIUS: I did not say that, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: Why was it a target?
MR PRETORIUS: I said that he was shot dead there. I cannot recall who was the person that was supposed to live there. May I just ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: No, answer the question. Why was the house where he was killed, why was that a target?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, one of the MK members about whom information was given was supposed to live at that house or came there, and I've also said that Mr Tami Mnyele visited that house. That is what I'm trying to explain to you. This was one of the problems of the intelligence people why initially they decided on the houses. We said ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: We know that, Mr Pretorius, we only want to know why that house where Tami lived, why was that a target.
MR PRETORIUS: Tami Mnyele visited that house, that I know, but Mr Tami Mnyele was a secondary target in Rona Segale's house.
CHAIRPERSON: So why was that house blown up, or do you not know?
MR PRETORIUS: I cannot from the top of my head recall who was the chief suspect ... because that is what we tried to tell you ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: No, no, listen carefully. We know there were various reasons why a house was identified as a target. The house where Tami was eventually shot, why was that identified as a target, what happened there, who lived there that could have been a secondary target? Or what is the position?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, if I recall correctly then I know it was one of the houses because this house - if I can give a description as I can recall it, this house where Mr Mnyele was shot dead, as the crow flies from the Oasis Motel, it was directly north. This was one of the houses that we knew a person like Lambert Maloyi, the MK Chief of Operations, if he came into Botswana and he saw people at the Oasis Motel, he went to this house and he stayed over at this house because he did not want the persons meeting him at the Oasis Motel, to know exactly where he lives, but coincidentally we knew through the agents that we had there that this was one of the places where Mr Lambert Maloyi, Chief of MK Operations came.
MR MALAN: Mr Pretorius, initially you said that you supplied information about four targets, amongst others, the house where Tami Mnyele was shot, the information that you gave, except that Maloyi went there, what other information did you give about that?
MR PRETORIUS: Sir, I know for a fact that Tim Williams and Christian Pepane, at that stage he was MK Jeff, they also used that house to give crash courses to recruits from South Africa.
MR MALAN: Thank you, Mr Berger.
MR BERGER: Which house was that?
MR PRETORIUS: That is the house where Mr Tami Mnyele was shot dead.
MR BERGER: Yes, which house?
MR MALAN: He's already said he doesn't know what the address is, it was due north of Oasis.
MR PRETORIUS: Sir, I do not think that - that was the problem with that area, if I can describe it, at that stage it was a typical squatter camp development, there were no straight roads with numbers and street names and so forth, the people literally found a tree and built a house next to the tree and the following neighbour found a tree and he built a house. So there were no straight streets.
MR BERGER: But how do you know where Tami Mnyele was killed?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, as I've already told you, Special Forces afterwards supplied photos to us at Soweto, of deceased persons and we did the identification of Tami Mnyele, that he was in that house. So I knew which house it was at that stage and I saw the photo of Tami Mnyele and after I showed to the informers they said that that was Tami Mnyele. That is how I knew for a fact that Tami Mnyele was killed in that house.
MR MALAN: I beg your pardon, so you actually found him in the wrong house when the Army reported to you?
MR PRETORIUS: Mr Stiff also said in his book ... (interven-tion)
MR MALAN: But I'm asking you, I don't want to know what Mr Stiff says. Are you saying that you recognised the house as the one which you gave information about?
MR PRETORIUS: And when the photo ...(intervention)
MR MALAN: And Mnyele was coincidentally shot dead there, coincidentally as far as you're concerned?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, Chairperson.
MR MALAN: Thank you, Mr Berger.
MR BERGER: Thank you, Mr Malan.
You say that in Rona Segale's house there were two targets, primarily Rona Segale and secondarily, Tami Mnyele?
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: Do you agree with the evidence that we've heard previously, that if X living in a house was a target because of his or her MK activities, but it was known to you that Y lived with X and Y was not a target, because he or she did not, was not involved in MK activities, do you agree with the evidence that that house was then removed from the list of targets?
MR PRETORIUS: I think I've already said that, Chairperson, that when we were at the Speskop meeting those types of targets were removed from the initial figure or number that was placed on the boards.
MR BERGER: So the answer is "yes"?
MR PRETORIUS: Yes.
MR BERGER: So therefore, both Tami Mnyele and Rona Segale were targets in the proper sense of the word, because that house was going to be hit and both of them were going to be killed.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: And that was on the basis of information that you supplied to ...(intervention)
MR PRETORIUS: And was confirmed by the other intelligence communities, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: Well, Mr Pretorius, you're applying for amnesty for things you did, so I'm asking you about the information you supplied.
MR PRETORIUS: I say, Chairperson, I gave the information, as well as other people. I don't know if that's a mistake, but I'm saying that I gave it but there were also other people.
CHAIRPERSON: ...(inaudible)
MR PRETORIUS: My contribution, Chairperson, as I have already said the information that we collected over months and with the newest information that was available to us with regard to Rona Segale, firstly the house, Rona Segale and Tami Mnyele, I supplied.
MR MALAN: I think your question whether that emanated from the information that he gave and his response was simply: "Yes, but there were also other reports which confirmed that. It was checked, it was not unconfirmed information." But he accepts it, it's just that it wasn't the only source of information related to those targets, as I understood him.
MR BERGER: And that wasn't my question, whether it was the only.
MR MALAN: You question was, and I made an Afrikaans note here, that: "The houses were attacked because of the information that you supplied", and he said: "Yes, but not only on my information, also on other information."
MR BERGER: Now Themba Duke Machobane, you said you did not give through any information in relation to Themba Machobane, is that right?
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: But you knew about the existence of Themba Machobane before the attack.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: From reports that you had read.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: And after the attack, did you - you were shown photographs of the deceased, including Themba Machobane?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, what I did say was that I can recall the picture of Mr Mnyele. I know there were other photos, but I cannot tell you in all honesty today who the other persons' photos were that I saw.
MR BERGER: So the only photograph that you remember seeing ...(intervention)
MR PRETORIUS: Which was positively identified.
CHAIRPERSON: That he recognised was that of Mnyele.
MR BERGER: Well recognised through your informers.
MR PRETORIUS: And by means of the photos that were available in our files, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: Okay. And then in relation to Mr Dick Mtsweni you said you also had - you knew about him, but you never submitted any information in relation to him.
MR PRETORIUS: Not with regard to the attack, no Chairperson.
MR BERGER: And the same for Mr Cecil Pahle.
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, if I recall correctly I said with regard to Mr George Pahle I may have known some more and I can recall that ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: The point is you did not give information which led to this attack.
MR PRETORIUS: That's correct, Chairperson.
CHAIRPERSON: About George.
MR PRETORIUS: Correct, Chairperson.
REGTER MOTATA: "En u het net baie notas gesien van George."
MR PRETORIUS: Yes, that's quite correct, Chairperson.
MR BERGER: And the same for Lindi Pahle, you never gave through any information.
MR PRETORIUS: No, Chairperson, I only of her.
MR BERGER: So the only people that you gave through any information on, in relation to this attack, was Tim Williams, Patrick Ricketts, Christian Lungile Pepane, Riaz Saloojee, Tami Mnyele and Rona Segale?
MR PRETORIUS: Chairperson, there were others as well, other persons that I can recall today that were involved ...(intervention)
CHAIRPERSON: ...(inaudible)
MR PRETORIUS: No