/ 26 April 1996

Torture victimswere given no help

Rehana Rossouw

THE failure of some magistrates and members of

the medical profession to assist victims of

human rights abuses emerged as a theme in the

Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s Western

Cape hearings this week.

The family of Looksmart Ngudle, a journalist

and Umkhonto weSizwe operative who died in

detention in September 1963, testified that

they did not believe a police account that he

committed suicide.

Although a district surgeon who conducted a

post mortem for the state had found no

evidence of ill-treatment or injuries on

Ngudle’s body, the TRC heard evidence that he

had been tortured. Corroborating witness,

Senator Christmas Tinto, who had been detained

at the Caledon Square police station while

Ngudle was interrogated there, said he heard

policemen celebrating one evening. “They were

saying, ‘We got Looksmart’. I don’t even think

they knew his surname.”

Tinto said he had seen security police beating

Ngudle and named two of them as Sergeant

Spyker van Wyk and a Sergeant Greeff. “I was

in a cell directly facing a flight of stairs.

The security policemen came rushing up with

him, kicking him and beating him as they

climbed the stairs.

“They pulled out his beard on half of his face

and he was bleeding heavily from his mouth. My

cell was opened and they threw him in. They

were surprised to see another person in there

and pulled him out. During that short period

Sergeant Greeff and Sergeant Van Wyk were

beating him up.”

Ngudle was transferred to Pretoria and was

visited on three occasions by a magistrate and

an interpreter. On the third visit he

complained that he had been assaulted and had

coughed up blood as a result. He died the next

day.

Isaac Rani, who had been kidnapped in the

then-Rhodesia and brought to South Africa to

face charges of leaving the country without a

passport, told the commission he had been

beaten by the police until he vomited blood.

A doctor came to see him while he was in

detention, but he did not expect the doctor to

help him as he would probably have been killed

if he did.

“I was tortured and beaten up for three days.

The doctor came and said there was nothing he

could do for me. He told me I only have a

month to live,” Rani said.

Nomakula Zweni, who testified that she had

been assaulted by police in 1960 during the

pass law protests and again in 1976 during the

student uprising, told the TRC she couldn’t go

to hospital for treatment “because we would be

identified as rioters”.

Her husband was shot in the shoulder at the

Langa anti-pass protest on March 21 1960, and

she removed the bullet herself. After she was

severely beaten in 1976, she also treated

herself. “My face was swollen, every part of

me was swollen. Nobody takes you to the

hospital because then you just get beaten

again. The best thing is just to treat

yourself in your own house,” Zweni said during

her testimony, during which she broke down in

tears several times.

Margeret Titus told the commission how her son

Johannes had been shot in the stomach by

police in 1976. He was hospitalised for a year

and had nine operations to close the gaping

hole in his stomach. Johannes lifted his shirt

during the hearing to show the concave hollow

in his stomach.

“Before Johannes was released from hospital

the police came there and said he must go to

Pollsmoor (Prison). The doctor said he was too

sick to go. After he was released we got a

subpoena for court. The magistrate said he had

already been punished, he didn’t need further

punishment.”

Titus said she was not sure what the charges

were against Johannes. He had been on his way

to buy fish and chips for his siblings when he

was shot, and she was told there was no

rioting in the street where he had been

walking. The policeman responsible had come to

her house afterwards to apologise, but she

could not remember his name.

Nomvuyo Zantsi, whose brother Sonny Boy (15)

was shot and killed by police in September

1976, said her father had attended the inquest

into his death at the Wynberg Magistrate’s

Court. “He came back and told us nobody was to

blame. The magistrate said the kids threw

stones at the police. It really affected my

father mentally. Why did they have to shoot as

much as that? Why didn’t they just arrest the

boys instead of killing them?”

Sisana Maphalane told the commission she did

not take legal action against the police when

her 15-year-old son was shot dead by police.

“They will just say the children were throwing

stones and there won’t be any case.”

Edward Juqu, whose son Fuzile was shot and

killed by police, told the TRC how rudely he

was treated by Salt River mortuary staff when

he went to look for his son there after he did

not come home one night.

Juqu had gone to three hospitals and had

searched wards before going to the mortuary.

“My son had been shot, and no one came to tell

me he was at the mortuary. When I got there

they tried to chase me away, they said I was

wasting their time. They told me to sit down.

Then I saw him lying there on his stomach. His

whole back was covered in bullet holes.” Juqu

became increasingly emotional as he told of

his search. Abruptly, he refused to say more.

“My heart is broken,” was all he would say.