logo
Apartheid police may have bugged car the 'Cradock Four' travelled in, inquest hears

Apartheid police may have bugged car the 'Cradock Four' travelled in, inquest hears

Eyewitness News05-06-2025
JOHANNESBURG - The inquest into the assassination of the "Cradock Four" has heard how apartheid police may have bugged the car that the anti-apartheid activists were travelling in.
Prominent anti-apartheid activist Professor Derrick Swarts is the first witness to take the stand in the inquest.
The court has spent the last two days on an in loco inspection, where significant spots related to the lives and killings of the "Cradock Four" were visited.
Matthew Goniwe, Fort Calata, Sicelo Mhlauli and Sparrow Mkhonto were assassinated by the apartheid special branch police in 1985.
Swarts was the general secretary of the United Democratic Front, an anti-apartheid group to which the "Cradock Four" belonged.
ALSO READ:
Swarts was in the same meeting as Goniwe, Calata, Mhlauli and Mkhonto in what was then Port Elizabeth.
He recalls warning them as they returned to Cradock after the meeting.
"He indicated that he's got to make his way back because of family pressures; they had not made the arrangements, but he agreed that he would not stop unless it would be a police car or a traffic warden stopping him."
Mhlauli and his comrades would be stopped that very evening by the security branch police at the Olifantskop Pass on the N10 highway, taken back to PE and killed.
When the Goniwe family lawyer, Tembeka Ncgukaitobi, pointed out how the "Cradock Four" were stopped suspiciously, matched the warning given by Swarts who said Goniwe's beige Honda Ballade could have been tapped by police.
IN PICS: Gqeberha High Court Judge visits key locations linked to lives of 'Cradock Four'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

One million trees campaign kicks off at Botanical Gardens
One million trees campaign kicks off at Botanical Gardens

The Citizen

time12-07-2025

  • The Citizen

One million trees campaign kicks off at Botanical Gardens

One million trees campaign kicks off at Botanical Gardens The Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE) recently launched its One Million Trees campaign at the National Botanical Gardens. Led by Deputy Minister Bernice Swarts, various stakeholders attended the July 7 launch. It followed the One Employee, One Tree launch at the DFFE Head Office in April. 'The country has borne the brunt of climate change and the resultant devastation it causes in communities and economies. We have witnessed fires, deadly heatwaves, heavy rains, floods, and prolonged droughts. These events underscore our shared vulnerability, but also our shared responsibility to act, to adapt, and to do so in a way that leaves no one behind,' Swarts said. President Cyril Ramaphosa has directed that 10 million trees, comprising 60% fruit and 40% indigenous, be planted in the country over five years, ending in 2026. Among others, attendees included: – Deputy Minister of Women, Youth, and Persons with Disabilities, Mapaseka Steve Letsike – Dean of the Diplomatic Corps and Ambassador of Eritrea, HE Mr Salih Omar Abdu – High Commissioner of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, HE Mr Malik Muhammad Farooq – His Majesty Morena Moremoholo Motebang Mopeli of the Bakoena Royal House (Qwaqwa). The DFFE plans to use the campaign to create employment opportunities through tree planting and tackle the high cost of living by integrating fruit trees into food security efforts. 'Tree planting is one of the mitigating factors that are recommended to slow down this environmental threat. It is for this reason that the department is pursuing the co-ordination and implementation of the National Greening Programme,' Swarts stated. She said that if trees that are suitable for a particular area are planted, and we continue working with researchers, the battle against climate change will slowly be won. The DFFE has developed a list of suitable trees that can be planted in different provinces and climate zones. They have also developed a database of nurseries where trees will be sourced through the QR system developed to access the pledge form and the catalogue of the nurseries. Swarts said, 'We have made a provision to accommodate those sponsors who intend to contribute trees. The South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI) has designated spaces to be used as a tree bank, where the donated trees will be stored. 'The donated trees will be stored at the 11 National Botanical Gardens across the country and DFFE nurseries, while we are finalising logistics for the one million trees planting day, September 24. We are dedicating that day to planting trees across the country, as we commemorate Heritage Day.' The department has also identified spaces where trees will survive for generations, and the trees will be planted there. These are areas where most of the requirements to plant and care for trees, such as availability of water, dedicated people to take care of the trees, security or fencing, are met. These include public institutions, early childhood development centres, churches, schools, police stations, clinics, some low-cost housing units, and many other places. To date, a list of sites where trees will be planted has been developed and is being refined as input from stakeholders is gathered. Swarts closed off with a quote from the first African woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize, Kenyan Wangari Maathai: 'When we plant trees, we plant the seeds of peace and hope.' Do you have more information about the story? Please send us an email to [email protected] or phone us on 083 625 4114. For free breaking and community news, visit Rekord's websites: Rekord East For more news and interesting articles, like Rekord on Facebook, follow us on Twitter or Instagram or TikTok. At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

'The Freedom Charter lies in ruins in democratic South Africa'
'The Freedom Charter lies in ruins in democratic South Africa'

IOL News

time27-06-2025

  • IOL News

'The Freedom Charter lies in ruins in democratic South Africa'

The Freedom Charter was the historical culmination of progressive organisations, leaders, and individuals united in a country-wide endeavour to re-imagine and co-author a better future, says the writer. Image: African News Agency Kim Heller In his address at the 1993 ANC national conference, Pallo Jordan said, "The ANC is not the master of the people. It is the servant of the people." Today, the portraiture of the ANC as a devoted and dutiful servant to its citizenry has all but collapsed. The party of the people has abandoned its scripture. ANC leaders rule over South Africa as if they are remote landlords. Many avoid ordinary citizens as much as possible and visit poor communities in fancy motorcades when there is a calling to collect electoral votes. Seventy years ago, in the dark days of apartheid, thousands of ordinary citizens gathered in Kliptown, Soweto, to adopt the Freedom Charter, a blueprint for a democratic and just South Africa. The ominous presence of armed policemen and the ever-present fear of political intimidation failed to subdue the revolutionary ring of "The People Shall Govern!" or the heady exuberance of grassroots activism. The Freedom Charter was not an exclusive enclave or quick talk shop. It was not a political prank or political theatre, but the hard work of political purpose, collaboration, and community mobilisation. The Freedom Charter was the historical culmination of progressive organisations, leaders, and individuals united in a country-wide endeavour to re-imagine and co-author a better future. ANC leader Walter Sisulu described the Freedom Charter as the soul of the struggle for liberation and a symbol of the people's will, which cannot be muted. In 1990, South Africa's first democratically elected President, Nelson Mandela, said, "The Charter is more than just a call to action. It is the foundation of our democratic Constitution." Although the principles of the Charter have been inscribed into the Constitution of democratic South Africa, these ideals have been neglected, if not vandalised. The dire and despairing state of Kliptown is a living testimony to this. Shacks of misery and a tableau of poverty and joblessness mar the topography and serve as an everyday reminder of an incomplete liberation. Yearnings for a better tomorrow are now a ferment of discontentment, not only in Kliptown but across South Africa's poor and neglected communities. The Walter Sisulu Square of Dedication, in the centre of Kliptown, is a bleak picture of dereliction. What should have been a proud monument to the Freedom Charter has become a crime scene—a tragic historical betrayal. The Freedom Charter and the formation of the United Democratic Front (UDF) were expressions of democracy in action. Both were assertive and valiant acts of the power of the people in highly restrictive and perilous times. They were both strong covenants with ordinary people. Today, in the open planes of democracy, conversations of national importance are more likely to take place in deluxe, air-conditioned boardrooms. VIP invitations and events have replaced volunteerism. The proposed National Dialogue by Ramaphosa, estimated to cost R700 million, lacks the nation-building heart of the Freedom Charter initiative and its integrity of process. It lacks the spirit of volunteerism and grassroots involvement that underpinned the Freedom Charter and the birth of the UDF. For now, the President's dialogue appears to be an excessively extravagant elite talk shop with poor reach into communities. EFF MP Sinawo Thambo spoke of the irresponsibility of the extravagant exercise. "While millions go hungry, the ANC splurges on dialogues that exclude the poor." Economist Duma Gqubule reflected this week in Business Day about Ramaphosa's National Dialogue. 'The dialogue,' Gqubule writes, "will be like a distraction to pacify a restless, rebellious and polarised nation." The Freedom Charter lies in ruins in democratic South Africa. Despite its broad and largely unthreatening liberal undercarriage and appeal, the Charter has not been enacted in democratic South Africa. This is yet another example of the ANC's systemic failure to deliver meaningful transformation. This week, the ANC's national chairperson, Gwede Mantashe, was quick to defend the wins of the ANC, claiming that the majority of the Charters' promises have been implemented. However, despite some great strides, access to quality education remains uneven, wealth distribution has favoured elites, not citizens, and land justice is in permanent paralysis. The ANC's calligraphy of today is poor governance, political expedience, and incomprehensible arrogance. Its inability to effectively implement meaningful radical policies has seen neo-liberalism score over nationalisation, and land justice being surrendered. Mandela's vision of education as the great equaliser remains a work in progress.

UDF teams up with farmers for major export drive to the Middle East
UDF teams up with farmers for major export drive to the Middle East

The Citizen

time26-06-2025

  • The Citizen

UDF teams up with farmers for major export drive to the Middle East

Former UDF activists are working with black farmers, traditional leaders and youth to boost exports and unlock economic growth in rural areas. An emblem of the UDF during a 2019 memorial at the Rocklands Community Hall in Mitchells Plain, Cape Town. Picture: Gallo Images The erstwhile anti-apartheid movement United Democratic Front (UDF) has launched a project to help subsistence and commercial farmers export their products to the Middle East. The initiative includes traditional leaders, women and youth business enterprises. It aims to uplift more than 3 000 black subsistence farmers. The Land Bank is already involved in the project, while commercial banks have expressed keen interest. Investors are also interested in the project. UDF helps farmers access export markets The UDF was established on 20 August, 1983 to fight against the tricameral parliament system and segregation laws. It became a forum with over 500 progressive organisations comprising, among others, trade unions, women, youth, students, business and civic associations as its affiliates. ALSO READ: UDF returns in new form Although it was not established by the ANC, the UDF was seen as an internal wing of the movement, which was banned, and many of its leaders were jailed. However, the UDF was dissolved on its anniversary on 20 August, 1991, a year after the liberation movement and a host of other political organisations were unbanned. Former UDF activists and struggle veterans have since revived the organisation as a nonaligned civic movement aiming to represent the interests of all citizens and to hold the state accountable to the people. Revive its civic mission UDF-SA member Juliet Diratsagae said the produce targeted in the project includes beef, lamb, goat meat, chicken, fruit, seeds and vegetables. Diratsagae said eight South African food processors who are all certified as Halaal-compliant had been contracted as the local intermediaries of the consortium, which is led by Mboweni Brothers Incorporated, comprising brothers and family of the late minister Tito Mboweni. ALSO READ: Return of United Democratic Front in change-making meeting Other consortium members are three South African poultry producers and two beef and lamb producers. The project would also introduce 'at least new 1 200 women and youth-owned poultry, beef and lamb producers'. UDF-SA's Mpho Nchabeleng said various traditional leaders were consulted and most of them bought into the idea. Traditional leaders sign agreements allowing access to communal land They have already signed agreements with the UDF-SA allowing it access to their communal land and other resources. Nchabeleng said the consultation process with traditional leaders should be concluded by October. ALSO READ: 'New' UDF to be reborn, debate about anti-apartheid body contesting elections They have also scheduled meetings with ministers and heads of departments for agriculture, land reform and rural development.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store