Investigations were continuing into the origins of some of the artefacts at Johannesburg’s SA National Museum of Military History, a South African National Defence Force (SANDF) spokesperson said on Monday.
This follows a raid last week and the arrest of the museum’s director John Keen and curators Richard Henry and Susanne Blendulf under laws governing the way military items are disposed of.
The arrests followed information that the museum held ”war-capable weapons and vehicles” and that some of the items were shown on military records to have been destroyed.
Some of the items seized include four tanks and these are still in the possession of the SANDF and will remain there until the investigation is finalised, Colonel Louis Kirstein said.
The director and the curators were released from custody on Friday afternoon without being charged.
Kirstein said last week that according to SANDF information, the equipment seized was in working order ”meaning they can be used for the purpose they are intended for”.
The museum’s acting director Sandy Mckenzie said that the four vehicles had been disarmed.
They were an Eland 60, and Eland 90 and a Ferret — all light armoured vehicles, as well as a Ratel infantry fighting vehicle.
Most of the small arms under threat of confiscation, including pistols, machine guns and rifles, had been disabled — except for ”one or two” that had just came into the museum’s possession.
All the contested items were recorded on the museum’s acquisition books — some since 1947.
In December Sapa reported that the museum’s staff regularly start up a selection of their restored fleet to keep them in running order and on occasion invited the public to watch them do so — a highlight for children and for military enthusiasts.
Museum staffers also devoted time to restoring the vehicles. In December, the museum, run by the Department of Arts and Culture, had 18 vehicles in running order and planned to rehabilitate more.
The confiscated Ratel was used by the old SA Defence Force in the Angolan war, and many of the small arms were antiques and irreplaceable.
Further items were expected to be confiscated on Monday but Kirstein said only that ”investigations are continuing”.
Comment from the museum and the Department of Arts and Culture was not immediately available. – Sapa