TRANSPORT Minister Dullah has lashed out at a decision by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s amnesty committee to move the hearing of eight policemen who conspired to murder him in 1989. Omar said the moving of the venue from the Early Learning Centre in Athlone to the TRC’s offices in town is a gross insult to the people of the Cape Flats. Eight Civil Co-Operation Bureau members have applied for amnesty for conspiring to kill minister Dullah Omar in 1989. The eight applicants, Carl Casteling Botha, Leon Andre Maree, Wouter Basson, Abram Van Zyl, Daniel Du Toit Burger, Pieter Johan Verster, Edward Webb and Ferdinand Barnard planned to kill Omar by switching medicine he regularly took with poison. They never went through with the plan. The eight have also applied for amnesty for conspiring to murder journalist, Gavin Evans and for bombing the Early Learning Centre in Athlone in 1989.