Detentions

Video Interviews

"During the first 48 hours, we were all severely tortured."
Video interview segment with Laloo Chiba [7:57]
June 16, 2007 Cape Town, South Africa.
"I believed that my arrest had killed my mother. It was all hallucinations because of the psychological pressure."
Video interview segment with Eddie Daniels [6:07]
May 27, 2005 Cape Town, South Africa.
"You don't come out of seven months in solitary confinement and feel you're even remotely sane or even a normal human being."
Video interview segment with Renfrew Christie [2:35]
May 27, 2005 Cape Town, South Africa.
"We carried his coffin for miles. There were cops all over watching that procession... That was my awakening. My mischievousness ended that day."
Video interview segment with Yusuf Omar [5:54]
September 6, 2006 East Lansing, Michigan, United States.
"'If you give us trouble, we'll take you to the workshop' ... It was very scary. We knew what the workshop meant - death."
Video interview segment with John Biyase [3:58]
October 7, 2006 Johannesburg, South Africa.
"She was going to chain herself to the railing of Parliament the next time someone died in detention, and it just happened that the next death was that of Johannes, who was 12."
Video interview segment with Maria MacDiarmid (Mary) Burton and Diana Oliver [2:14]
May 23, 2005 Cape Town, South Africa.
"They said I'm the ring leader and I will stay in jail until my head is straight."
Video interview segment with Lettie Malindi [1:44]
May 23, 2005 Cape Town, South Africa.
"Concealed in the banana was a needle, a pencil lead, and thread. So that got my mind working ..."
Video interview segment with Ahmed Kathrada [3:43]
March 23, 2006 East Lansing, Michigan, United States.
All the things that ... the regime was doing, it was just encouraging us... You would be arrested and come back a hero.
Video interview segment with Roseberry Sonto [1:33]
2007 Cape Town, South Africa.
SABC Truth Commission: Special Report interview with three women detainees - Kate Serokolo, Zubeida Jaffer, and Shirley Gunn
[11:29]
August 11, 1996 From Truth Commission Special Report, digital archive created by SAHA of the SABC television series
SABC Truth Commission: Special Report testimonies by Singqokwana Malgas and Joe Jordan about their torture in detention.
[3:10]
April 21, 1996 From South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission Videotape Collection, Yale Law School Lillian Goldman Library
SABC Truth Commission: Special Reports segment on deaths in detention - Nicodemus Kgoathe, Ahmed Timol, Neil Aggett, and Suliman Saloojee
[7:06]
April 29, 1996 From Truth Commission Special Report, digital archive created by SAHA of the SABC television series

Summary

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission concluded in its Final Report (1998) that the apartheid government’s detention of its political opponents was "widespread and systematic." The purposes of detention were to interrogate people, frequently using beating and other forms of torture; to hold people as potential witnesses to testify against their colleagues; and preventive detention to take political leaders out of circulation. Approximately 80,000 detentions occurred, all without legal charges being brought against the accused and outside the jurisdiction of the courts.

Beginning in the early 1960s, in response to successive waves of protest, the South African government enacted increasingly draconian laws which, among other things, permitted lengthy and secretive detentions of anti-apartheid activists. For example, the General Laws Amendment Act was used to justify the detention of members of the Umkhonto we Sizwe High Command while a case was prepared against them at the Rivonia Trial. The Internal Security Amendment Act in 1976, following the uprisings of students in Soweto that spread across the country, allowed for renewable 12-month periods of preventive detention and six-month detention of potential witnesses in solitary confinement. As mass protests grew in the 1980s, a new Internal Security Act was enacted in 1982 streamlining previous legislation. Section 29 of this Act allowed for detention until "all questions are satisfactorily answered" or "no useful purpose will be served by further detention." As thousands of people were held in detention in the mid-1980s, the Detainees’ Parents Support Committee sought information about detainees and provided valuable information to the media.

Web Images

Photograph: Unlock Apartheid's Jails 1987
From: African Activist Archive
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Web Documents

Report: "TRC Report: Torture and Death in Detention"
October 29, 1998
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Resource: "List of Deaths in Detention"
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Book Chapter/Excerpt: "Introduction: A Journey to Reclaim an Uncle, Comrade, and Martyr", Timol: A Quest for Justice
By Imtiaz Kajee 2005
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Testimony: Testimony by Hawa Timol before the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Human Rights Violations Committee in Johannesburg, April 30, 1996.
By Hawa Timol 1996
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Testimony: Testimony by Ben Kgoathe before the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Human Rights Violations Committee in Johannesburg, April 29, 1996
By Ben Kgoathe 1996
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Testimony: Testimony of Singqokwana Malgas before the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Human Rights Violations Committee in East London, April 17, 1996
By Singqokwana Malgas 1996
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Newspaper Article: "Detainees Speak! Zou Kota", Grassroots
By Zou Kota 1985
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AODL African Studies Center MSU NEH Matrix