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Amnesty Hearings

Type AMNESTY HEARINGS

Starting Date 07 October 1999

Location DURBAN

Day 8

Names ZAHRAH NARKEDIEN (NEE GRETA APELGREN)

Case Number AM4028/97

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MR DEHAL: Thank you, Mr Chairperson. Mr Chairperson, sorry, the point I was going to raise earlier is that Ms Narkedien was otherwise known as Greta Apelgren, has a blood pressure problem. She has a low blood pressure. She has some lollies in front of her. She takes those just to keep her sugar level fine. I just didn't want that to sound disrespectful if she did so.

CHAIRPERSON: No and Ms Narkedien, if you need to have any break or whatever, just let Mr Dehal know and we can take any short break that you require.

MS NARKEDIEN: Thank you.

CHAIRPERSON: Do you wish to take the oath, or do you wish to make an affirmation?

MS NARKEDIEN: Affirmation, please.

MS NARKEDIEN: (affirms)

MR DEHAL: Thank you.

EXAMINATION BY MR DEHAL: Ms Narkedien, is it correct that you were previously known as Greta Apelgren?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, it's true.

MR DEHAL: Do you confirm your application for amnesty as contained in bundle A1 on pages 180 to 186?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, I do.

MR DEHAL: That application is brought in the name of Zarah Narkedien, correct?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: I think you clarified in that application how your name came to be changed?

MS NARKEDIEN: I'm not sure.

MR DEHAL: Okay, we'll deal with that briefly. Ms Narkedien, is it correct that you have prepared a written statement and would like to read that into the record? Perhaps before we begin, if I may just give copies to everybody? Thank you. Do you mind?

CHAIRPERSON: Will this be Exhibit P I think. Exhibit P.

MR DEHAL: Thank you.

CHAIRPERSON: Thank you. Yes, we'll mark this Exhibit P and I think that that formerly should be "erly", rather than "ally".

MR DEHAL: I would think so, yes. I'm sorry.

Ms Narkedien would you read paragraph 1 which deals with identifying particulars, into the record?

MS NARKEDIEN: Okay.

My name is Zarah Narkedien, formerly Greta Apelgren. I was born in Durban on the 14th of August 1956.

MR DEHAL: Slower please. You see the interpreters would have to go through them and interpret them bit by bit. We've just handed a copy to them, so they would be able to do so easily. Let's just wait until they get it. Fine, you may proceed.

MS NARKEDIEN

I spent most of my life in the working class township of Wentworth. I presently reside in Kimberley. I've been resident in Kimberley since December 1995, when I took up the position as Director of Welfare for the Northern Cape Administration.

I graduated from the University of the Western Cape in 1978 with majors in Social Work and Sociology. During the 1976 student protests, I learned the full realities of how oppressive and destructive apartheid was in the lives of black youth,

MR DEHAL: Sorry, slower.

MS NARKEDIEN

particularly in terms of the old black education and the merciless violence of the previous government towards black youth, shooting children in the school yards and in the streets.

MR DEHAL: Ms Narkedien is it correct that your application for amnesty relates to simply four counts in regard to which you were convicted during the trial that we spoke of in which you were the co-accused with Mr McBride?

MS NARKEDIEN: Actually five counts.

MR DEHAL: Sorry, five counts. Thank you. And is it correct that you were acquitted of all the other counts that you were charged with?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that is correct.

MR DEHAL: And you seek amnesty only in regard to those counts that you were convicted on?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true.

MR DEHAL: Sorry, before I proceed - and this application for amnesty is in your handwriting, correct?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, thank you, it is.

MR DEHAL: Were you assisted in completing this application by any attorney, advocate?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, I completed it myself.

MR DEHAL: Thank you. Now will you go to paragraph 2, which deals with your civic involvement?

MS NARKEDIEN: Okay.

From 1980 to 1986, I helped establish and manage the Wentworth Development Centre, which focused mostly on the social development needs of the youth of Wentworth. I was an executive member of the Board of Management of the centre. I was an executive member of the Local Civic Organisation. I was an active member of the local Catholic church, working mostly with youth programmes, I was an active member of the Natal Youth Organisation. Prior to my arrest, I was employed as a professional community development officer by the Durban Child and Family welfare Society, dealing mostly with issues affecting township women and children, impacted upon mainly by the inequalities of apartheid.

MR DEHAL: And the next paragraph in Exhibit P, your statement, deals with your political involvement. It's purely a very brief summation of your political involvement. Is it correct that you have precis’d it and brought it down as much as possible to what is now here?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that is true.

MR DEHAL: Okay. Will you read that please? Slowly please.

MS NARKEDIEN: Okay.

During 1983 to 1985, I was an active member of the political organisation known as the United Democratic Front, UDF, as well as an active member of my local township branch of the UDF, referred to as the Wentworth United Committee of Concern, UCC. Through these structures, I campaigned actively against the tricameral elections because it deliberately excluded African people from that political dispensation. African people would continue to be denied their democratic rights to vote. Shortly after the unbanning of the ANC in 1990, I became an executive member of the Wentworth branch of the ANC, an executive member of the Provincial Natal ANC Youth League, an executive member of the Provincial Natal ANC Welfare Committee.

MR DEHAL: And the next paragraph of course deals with your recruitment into Umkhonto weSizwe, MK, the armed wing of the ANC. That again you have substantially precis’d.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true.

MR DEHAL: Will you read what's recorded in paragraph 4, Exhibit P, into the record?

MS NARKEDIEN

In January 1986, I was recruited by comrade Robert McBride to become a member of a Special Operations Unit of Umkhonto weSizwe, the military wing of the African National Congress. My role at that stage was only to provide support, example transport, money, screening of more women recruits and so on to the Commander and operatives in our unit. I was involved in this unit from January 1986 to July 1986, when I was arrested together with comrade Robert McBride and his father comrade Derick McBride.

MR DEHAL: Is it correct that you lived in Wentworth with Mr McBride, Robert and Mr Derick McBride in your neighbourhood?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true.

MR DEHAL: And you featured prominently in the social environment, social upliftment of Wentworth?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true.

MR DEHAL: The next paragraph deals with your amnesty application. Will you please read that into the record. That's paragraph 5.

MS NARKEDIEN

I was arrested on the 17th of July 1986. I was detained under Section 29 of the Internal Security Act until early November, 1986 when I was transferred to Westville Female Prison and held in solitary confinement. I was charged with 15 counts of furthering the aims of a banned organisation, ANC, terrorism, murder, attempted murder, aiding a prisoner to escape and harbouring a terrorist. From February to mid May 1987, I stood trial at Pietermaritzburg Supreme Court. I was convicted of 5 of the 15 counts. 4 counts relate to the escape of Gordon Webster from the Edendale Hospital and one account relates to the reconnaissance I undertook of electrical substations, located between Nigel and Ladismith. I applied for amnesty for these five counts, that is aiding a prisoner to escape, harbouring a terrorist, assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm, as regards the two policemen, and terrorism.

MR DEHAL: And the two policemen you talk of are the policemen who featured at the Edendale operation?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true.

MR DEHAL: And the terrorism counts here dealt with, sorry and the terrorism counts together with all the acts on which you apply for amnesty are not acts of gross human rights violations?

MS NARKEDIEN: No.

MR DEHAL: Is it correct when you appeared at the Section 29 inquiry you were told by the persons there presiding that you would not be required to attend any Hearing and that your application for amnesty would be heard in chambers?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true.

MR DEHAL: But you were then served with a notice to attend here?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true.

MR DEHAL: And you're cited as an applicant?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: Thank you. Now before you proceed, is it also correct, that you testified before the TRC Human Rights Violations dealing with torture in prisons and detention cells?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: You dealt with your detention prior to your trial and thereafter?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: That's contained in the TRC report in the 6th volume of 5 volume TRC report, correct?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes it's true.

MR DEHAL: What we have here Mr Chairman, is only the one page from the report. Unfortunately it came to me about half and hour ago. I don't have copies made. I will arrange for those copies. Ms Narkedien, may I just take you firstly to paragraph ...(intervention)

JUDGE PILLAY: Ms Narkedien, can you explain something here? You formulate the one offence as harbouring a terrorist, would that be Mr Webster?

MS NARKEDIEN: Gordon Webster, yes.

JUDGE PILLAY: Is that the period where you assisted in getting him out of the country?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

CHAIRPERSON: Sorry, Mr Dehal, do you intend to hand this in as an Exhibit? We'll call it Q.

MR DEHAL: Yes, I think that will be wise.

CHAIRPERSON: And then copies will be made and circulated to all concerned as soon as they're available?

MR DEHAL: Correct. Thank you.

MS NARKEDIEN: Okay, what I'm going to read is actually the effects of solitary confinement, when I spent 7 months in the basement at Klerksdorp Female Prison.

"I had to go down and live in the basement in isolation for 7 months".

MR DEHAL: You're reading an extract of your testimony then, which is contained in the TRC Report, correct?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: It's on page 211 to 212, in Volume 4, chapter 7. Sorry Chairperson, this is contained in those volumes of TRC reports. They are not here. I don't think any of us have it. I had it here the other day, but I returned them, sorry.

MS NARKEDIEN: Okay.

"That was very, very painful. I don't even want to describe psychologically what I had to do to survive down there. I will write it down, I will write it one day, but I could never tell you, but it did teach me something and that is that no human being can live alone more than, I think, even 1 month, because there's nothing you can do to survive by yourself every single day. The basement was an entire wing of the prison, it was actually an entire floor. I felt as the months went by that I was going deeper and deeper into the ground. Physically I wasn't, but psychologically I was. I became so psychologically damaged that I used to feel that all these cells, because there were a whole lot of other cells that were empty but they were locked, that to feel all these cells are like coffins and there were all dead people in there. It was as if I was alive and all these people were dead. I was so disturbed but I would never, never let the wardresses know, but they did destroy me. My suggestion is that no prisoner, regardless of their crimes, should ever be in isolation per se, not even this Section 29 business for two weeks. I know it serves a purpose but ultimately when it's prolonged, I don't think anybody can handle it. I've been out of prison now for more than 7 or 10 years, but I haven't recovered and I will never recover, I know I won't." I have tried to. Sorry.

CHAIRPERSON: Would you like to have a short break?

MS NARKEDIEN

No, it's okay. The first two years after my release I tried to be normal again and the more I struggled to be normal, the more disturbed I became. I had to accept that I was damaged. A part of my soul was eaten away as if by maggots, horrible as it sounds, and it will never get back again.

Sorry, this was the worst part of my life. I think I'll be okay later on.

MR DEHAL: Sorry. Ms Narkedien, is it correct that the preceding paragraphs, paragraph 40 and 41 which we are not going to deal with, dealt with equally horrific torture experiences you had, which you testified on, prior to your trial at the hands of the then Security Police.

MS NARKEDIEN: Sorry, where are you reading from? Oh yes, unfortunately I didn't photocopy the pages properly, but I had also testified about the torture during the first 7 days that I was arrested by the Security Police.

MR DEHAL: Thank you. If I may take you back to Exhibit P, we stopped at paragraph 5. We now go to paragraph 6, which deals with the escape of Gordon Webster, the Edendale Hospital Operation. You begin there by dealing with aiding the prisoner to escape. I see here you've dealt with each of the counts as you were convicted of and you have paraphrased it into each of those succeeding paragraphs, correct?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: Now, let's deal with the first, dealing with aiding a prisoner to escape.

MS NARKEDIEN: Okay.

On the evening of the 4th of May 1986, I assisted Robert McBride, Derick McBride, Welile Khumalo, Antonio Du Preez and Matthew Lecordier to rescue our MK Commander, know to me by the name of Steve Mkhize, but later identified by the name of Gordon Webster. He had been in the intensive care ward at the Edendale Hospital under armed police guard at the time of his escape. My role was to wait under a bridge near the hospital to where Robert and others would bring Gordon and I then had to drive him immediately back to Wentworth, to Robert's father's workshop. I was unable to fulfil my actual role that evening because Welile had approached my car and insisted I drive him away from the scene, because of the presence of a traffic control officer further down the road, which made him very agitated. Robert and the other unit members drove Gordon to Wentworth.

MR DEHAL: You then deal with the next count that you are convicted of, namely harbouring or concealing a terrorist, namely Gordon Webster.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: Will you read that please?

MS NARKEDIEN: Okay.

During the week of the 5th to the 8th of May 1986 I assisted Robert and others to move Gordon from the workshop to a house somewhere in the Umlazi township. On Friday the 9th of May 1986 I assisted Robert to transport Gordon Webster and his girlfriend Anne to Botswana where they were then transported by MK comrades to a safe-house in Gaberone.

JUDGE PILLAY: Mr Dehal, can you tell me what section of that Act this harbouring is a transgression of?

MR DEHAL: Judge, I would be able to tell you that. I have volume 1 here, shall we go through this and come back to that or shall I deal with it now?

JUDGE PILLAY: No, no you carry on.

MR DEHAL: Thank you. Ms Narkedien, we now deal with paragraph 8, assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm. Now before we begin with this, this is the assault in regard to which you were convicted based on the doctrine of common purpose on the Edendale operation relating to two policemen, correct?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true.

MR DEHAL: Before we begin, can I just get to that? Would this be - sorry that's the operation in which Mr Buthelezi died and the victims were Constable Ngcobo, Constable Visagie, Siphiwe Shangeni, Nkosinati Nkabinde. Which would the two policemen be, do you remember?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes. Constable Ngcobo and Visagie, Constable Visagie.

MR DEHAL: Thank you. Will you please read the content of that paragraph then into the record?

MS NARKEDIEN: Okay.

During the rescue operation at Edendale Hospital, two armed police officers on guard in the intensive care ward, were wounded during the shoot-out and returned fire inside and outside intensive care ward. Although my role and my position were situated approximately two kilometres from the scene, I was nevertheless convicted of the assault of these two police officers on the grounds of common purpose.

MR DEHAL: Thank you. Judge the aspect dealing with harbouring or concealing - Oh sorry, I see you've got some pages with you, it's dealt with on page 16 of the indictment, column 12, it's Section 54(iv) of Act 74 of 1982 and it's dealt with in the summary more fully from page 41 onwards.

JUDGE PILLAY: Why I asked is just that I thought it would be more pleasing on the palate to refer it to as a contravention of a section, rather than terrorists.

MR DEHAL: I agree. Thank you. Okay, Ms Narkedien, you're at paragraph 8, did you read that in? No sorry, I don't think you did that.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, I did.

MR DEHAL: Did you?

CHAIRPERSON: She's read paragraph 8. We're now going on to paragraph 9.

MR DEHAL: Thank you, Mr Chairperson. Paragraph 9 deals with the reconnaissance of substations. You were there convicted of terrorism, correct?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: And you said during July 1986 on your trip from Johannesburg to Durban on Robert's instructions you recorded the positions of several electrical substations from Nigel to Ladismith?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true.

MR DEHAL: These were recorded on an envelope that you had on your person when you were arrested.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: And when the Security Police saw this envelop, they questioned you about it.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: All that was recorded on the envelope were positions from Johannesburg to here and different distances.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true.

MR DEHAL: Is it correct that when you speak of Johannesburg to Durban, this was a return trip before your intention to finally depart from the country?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: When I say yours, I mean yours and Robert McBride's.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: And what was the purpose of doing this reconnaissance? Was it to take it out of the country or was it to carry out the operations?

MS NARKEDIEN: At the time Robert didn't explain to me why I should take down those notes, but I just assumed in my own way that if he's recording these substations, so many kilometres from this town to that town, that probably it could have been for sabotage, because at that time electrical substations were being sabotaged in different parts of the country, so I thought and we were leaving the country within a few days, perhaps he was going to give that to the MK Commanders or something.

MR DEHAL: But that didn't happen?

MS NARKEDIEN: No.

MR DEHAL: Yes. Now do you know of the discipline commonly referred to as need-to-know discipline?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: Were you formerly recruited by Mr McBride into MK?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, I was formerly recruited by him.

MR DEHAL: And were you educated in the policies, guidelines, etc of the ANC, of MK?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, I was trained by Robert and by our Commander, Steve Mkhize, well Gordon Webster eventually, about the importance of, we actually used to call it military code words. In other words you could only be told what your role is. At that time there were so many police informers and so on and we were all so paranoid, so that any person could only be told exactly what you had to do, he could not be told everything, I mean it wasn't a social club that we were working in, it was a very strict unit.

MR DEHAL: And you understood this principle well?

MS NARKEDIEN: I understood it and I accepted it.

MR DEHAL: Is it correct that in the execution of that discipline, that principle, if you were told to do something, especially by a Commander in your unit, you were not allowed to ask questions, you were not expected to ask questions, you were simply required to follow them?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, I could not ask questions and I knew even if I did, people would be suspicious of me. Why do you want to ask questions, are you going to carry this information to somebody else. There was far too much paranoia at the time.

MR DEHAL: For good reasons.

MS NARKEDIEN: For good reasons, which I understood yes.

MR DEHAL: Before you - sorry - before you were recruited by McBride into MK, you were sufficiently active at the time though in Wentworth and about?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: And you were familiar with Setchabas, Radio Freedom, Allan Taylor Residence?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes. I had access to a lot of banned literature at that time, so I was well informed about what the ANC's policies were, what the Kabwe Conference was and all the needs for the codes of secrecy to be upheld at all times and the discipline of MK units, so I was well-informed, yes.

MR DEHAL: And I think it's fairly common knowledge by now that both you and comrade Robert had developed a personal relationship during the course of all these operations. Did that personal relationship in any way interfere with the code and the discipline of need-to-know basis?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, it didn't interfere at all because Robert and I were first and foremost revolutionaries and comrades. It was in this working together that we developed an intimate relationship but we didn't start off as intimate people.

MR DEHAL: The relationship was incidental?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: Okay, I take you to paragraph 10 wherein you deal with the commitment to reconciliation. Will you please read that?

MS NARKEDIEN: Okay.

It is clear that I was associated in operations which resulted in injuries sustained by victims and the death of Mr Buthelezi. Despite the minimal role I played in these operations, I accept political responsibility for such injuries and death. I express my deep sorrow to the victims concerned and mostly to the parents and the family of the late Mr Buthelezi.

MR DEHAL: Thank you. Ms Narkedien, we dealt briefly with the other acts in regard to which you were charged but acquitted.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: One of those acts is commonly known as the Why Not, or otherwise colloquially referred to as the Magoo's bar operation.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: You have heard much testimony in these proceedings on that operation. To begin with you've heard Mr McBride's full disclosure on the Why Not operation. Do you agree with his disclosures relating to your role play on that operation, the Why Not operation?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, I fully accept what he said.

MR DEHAL: To deal briefly with the Why Not operation, is it correct that you drove the parties from Wentworth to the Why Not area and then back again? At some stage you drove one car and at other stages with them, correct?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: But that you did not know of the car bomb and that this was the version in the trial and you were acquitted on it?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true.

MR DEHAL: In regard to the second Chamberlain Road incident, which comrade Robert deals with in Exhibit G in paragraph 8, is it correct that there as well in as much as you were charged, you were acquitted, but you had simply driven Robert and others away from that substation for about a kilometre away from that substation which is from his father's workshop?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true.

MR DEHAL: And that in that operation you had not known of the substation explosion either before or after it?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, I did not know before and after it, but subsequently I did discover it because the whole township lights went out.

MR DEHAL: And then there are those two DLBs, the Shangweni DLBs, which were termed as acts of terrorism in your trial. These are the two that you were acquitted of. Here again, all you did was support as per your role with an MK, in that you drove Robert and various persons in those two operations to the DLB, to the site of the DLB and back, correct?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true.

MR DEHAL: The Edendale operation of course, you were convicted on some counts. There are I think about five or six counts that you were acquitted on.

MS NARKEDIEN: There were four, four of the six.

MR DEHAL: Murder and the other things?

MS NARKEDIEN: I was acquitted yes, of the murder and attempted murder.

MR DEHAL: Yes. There again your role was purely a support role?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: Now your sister, Jeanette Apelgren was a State witness in these trial proceedings at some stage. Do you remember that?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: She suffered terribly as a result.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: Both before she testified and after?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true. Mostly psychological damage.

MR DEHAL: And she's now living in Australia in Victoria in Australia, correct?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: You had facilitated the service of the notice in these proceedings that were addressed to Jeanette Apelgren sent to me and then I gave to you and you sent to Jeanette in Australia, correct?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true.

MR DEHAL: Now you've had discussions with her since, by E-mail and on telephone.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR DEHAL: Is it correct that she cannot avail herself at these proceedings primarily because of the enormous costs for her to come here and she has no monies and none were offered to her?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true.

MR DEHAL: Secondly, is it correct that you have discussed with your sister Jeanette Apelgren the disclosures that McBride, comrade Robert has made here before this Commission and that which you intended to make?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true.

MR DEHAL: And what is your sister's attitude to these full disclosures?

MS NARKEDIEN: Well she said she wishes us luck with our amnesty application. She supports our amnesty application and she would really like it if we do get that amnesty and though, I suppose to some extent she did express some anger still towards the system of apartheid, but yes, she fully supports it.

MR DEHAL: And has she any reservations, misgivings about your full disclosure, the version in your full disclosure and McBride's?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, she has no problem with that.

MR DEHAL: Thank you. Sorry, if you'll bear with me. Yes, Chairperson, that is all, thank you.

NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR DEHAL

CHAIRPERSON: Thank you Mr Dehal. Mr Berger, do you have any questions you'd like to put to Ms Narkedien?

MR BERGER: Chairperson, we support Ms Narkedien's application for amnesty. We have no questions.

NO QUESTIONS BY MR BERGER

CHAIRPERSON: Thank you. Ms Kooverjee, do you have any questions that you would like to put?

MS KOOVERJEE: None, thank you Mr Chairperson.

NO QUESTIONS BY MS KOOVERJEE

CHAIRPERSON: Mr Richard?

MR RICHARD: A number, but I won't be that long though.

CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR RICHARD: Now, in and during the months January to end of June 1986, ending at the time that you were arrested, did you travel to and from Botswana with Mr McBride on a number of occasions?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that's true.

MR RICHARD: Do you recall how many?

MS NARKEDIEN: I can't recall how many, but I can just try to roughly count on my fingers. I think we went once in February and once again in March, in April, in June, possibly May as well. I think almost once a month virtually, so it was about four or five times.

CHAIRPERSON: And you would travel in a motor vehicle together by road?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR RICHARD: Now when you went to Botswana, did you meet with the first applicant, Mr Ismail?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, I did.

MR RICHARD: Were you present at any discussions between him and Mr McBride?

MS NARKEDIEN: On the first occasion when I met him there were discussions with a lot of us sitting there. Robert and Rashid were present, but that was a social occasion, probably for just about 5 minutes or so.

MR RICHARD: Now did you know what the purpose of the trips to Botswana was?

MS NARKEDIEN: Well when Robert recruited me early in January 1986, he explained to me that he cannot explain the purposes to me. In fact he didn't even tell me that we were going to Gaberone. I discovered when we were in Mafikeng that we were now going - that's where we're actually going. All he could say was that he was a Commissar for the ANC, absolutely nothing else, so I never knew what the purposes really wee.

MR RICHARD: Now in and during the same period, were you aware that there were various attacks on substations and other installations in and around Durban?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, I read about some in the newspapers.

MR RICHARD: Did you connect your trips to Botswana with the various attacks and various infrastructures?

MS NARKEDIEN: No. No, not necessarily.

MR RICHARD: Did you know you were bringing ammunition and weapons and equipment back into South Africa?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, he didn't tell me, he didn't show it to me, so I didn't know.

MR RICHARD: Now, you gave evidence concerning dead letter boxes. What's a dead letter box, do you know?

MS NARKEDIEN: Well I subsequently, when we were preparing for our trial, that it really mean caches of arms that would be stored in some remote place by person A or person B to come and collect.

MR RICHARD: But at the time, did you know what was being done?

MS NARKEDIEN: At which time?

MR RICHARD: At the time you transported Mr McBride and other members of his unit to various places?

MS NARKEDIEN: No it was not possible to know.

MR RICHARD: Now on the evening of the 14th of June, 1986 when you went towards the centre of Durban from Wentworth, were you aware that you were going on a mission?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, I wasn't aware, not at all.

MR RICHARD: Now, were you aware that two motor vehicles were involved in whatever you were doing?

MS NARKEDIEN: Sorry, that two vehicles were being used?

MR RICHARD: > Yes.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, because we travelled in two vehicles.

MR RICHARD: Now when you arrived, in the centre of Durban, did you drive directly to where you parked the car, or was there a certain amount of driving around to different places?

MS NARKEDIEN: When I got to the centre of Durban, the city centre...(intervention)

CHAIRPERSON: Take it from when you left the - did you come down the southern freeway when you got off the southern freeway, I think, is that what you're asking?

MR RICHARD: Yes.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR RICHARD: Did you drive directly to a destination or did you go to a number of places?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, we did go into the city centre round about the, what is it, house and home Hyperama, or something like that and then after that we did go directly down to the beach front area.

CHAIRPERSON: But Ms Narkedien, if one were coming from the Southern freeway and going to the beach front area, that wouldn't really be out of the way much, would it, to go past that Hyperama? Was that in West Street, or Smith Street or something?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, it's in West Street and you would come off the freeway into West Street and then we stopped there.

CHAIRPERSON: But what I'm trying to say, it wasn't a circuitous route to get to ...

MS NARKEDIEN: Oh I see, yes it was on the way, so to speak.

MR RICHARD: At what time did you leave Wentworth?

MS NARKEDIEN: I don't recall the time, but I would say it was very early evening.

MR RICHARD: Early evening on the 16th of June, 14th of June, is near as anything to mid Winter. At what time did it get dark?

MS NARKEDIEN: Maybe about seven or so. It was like dusk, just getting to dark.

MR RICHARD: I don't have an almanac with me at this ...

CHAIRPERSON: It's probably, I know where I live which isn't too far off the longitude of Durban, in mid-winter it's getting dark about half past 5, you're battling with light.

MR RICHARD: So you'd agree with ...(intervention)

MS NARKEDIEN: Sorry, I think I must just correct myself, I'm a bit confused now. I think it was much later than that. Dusk had already settled so it would have been much later.

MR RICHARD: So let's go back again. You left Wentworth. Was it dark?

MS NARKEDIEN: It was dark already yes.

MR RICHARD: Was it long after dark?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, I would say it was quite a few minutes after dark. I was confusing the dusk with some other time, I'm sorry.

MR RICHARD: Then you drove into Durban and you stopped outside the house and home complex. How long were you stopped there?

MS NARKEDIEN: A few minutes, maybe two minutes.

MR RICHARD: So what time about was that?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, I don't know.

MR RICHARD: Was it - if it got dark at half past five to six, quarter past six, was it hours after dark, or shortly after dark?

MS NARKEDIEN: I'm sure it was much later than us having left, than the times you mention, so what time we left House and Home, staying there for just a few, two minutes of so, I think it would have been quite late into the evening already. I don't know if I answered your question.

MR RICHARD: No, my time periods came from your statement, early evening.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, no I corrected it. I'm probably confused it with some other time.

MR RICHARD: I accept that. It's a long time ago. Now, once you left House and Home, did you go anywhere else, or did you drive directly to the Marine Parade?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, we drove directly to the beach front, the Marine Parade area.

MR RICHARD: And what did you do there?

MS NARKEDIEN: Well, just following Robert's instructions to drive along the Marine Parade, at that time we had Matthew with us as well. Well, I can't remember how we were driving, or where we were driving, but I do remember driving on the Marine Parade and then we drove back to town because we had left the Cortina there, so we had gone back to House and Home.

MR RICHARD: So, all three of you drove down to the Marine Parade. Now what was the traffic like on the Marine Parade, was it quiet or busy?

MS NARKEDIEN: I don't remember. Probably the normal Saturday evening.

MR RICHARD: Well Durban, a normal Saturday evening, it depends on what time of the year you are. Normal in December is crowded. Normal in September I suppose is less crowded.

MS NARKEDIEN: I didn't pay attention, so I can't give you an accurate answer there.

MR RICHARD: Now on that first trip to the beach front, where did you drive to?

MS NARKEDIEN: On the first trip to the beach front?

MR RICHARD: Yes.

MS NARKEDIEN: No we didn't stop anywhere, we just went onto the Marine Parade and came back into town.

MR RICHARD: Well to get onto the beach front you had to join up with the Marine Parade. Where did you join up with the Marine Parade?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, I don't remember what route we took. It could have been straight down West Street and straight onto the Marine Parade, that road that leads right down to the Marine Parade.

MR RICHARD: Now once on the Marine Parade, did you drive from one end of the beach front to the other?

MS NARKEDIEN: I don't know up to what point did we drive. I mean I should know, but I can't remember.

MR RICHARD: Now did you spend a long time driving along the beach front? Did you stop anywhere while driving?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, we didn't stop anywhere.

MR RICHARD: So, you drove along the beach front. Do you remember what part of the beach front you drove down?

MS NARKEDIEN: I know we drove on the Marine Parade itself, what do you call that road? Yes, I think it's called the Marine Parade, that road directly facing the beach and the hotels on the opposite side.

MR RICHARD: What I'm trying to ascertain is whereabouts on that road you drove. Did you drive down on the South Beach side, or the North Beach side?

MS NARKEDIEN: All I can remember that it was on that part of the beach where most of those hotels were, that I can remember.

JUDGE PILLAY: ...(indistinct) subsequently you know where the car bomb was placed. Did you drive in that vicinity?

MS NARKEDIEN: Well, I don't know if we passed that hotel, but I know we passed most of the hotels, so probably we did pass that one.

CHAIRPERSON: So you went that way rather than past Addington Hospital?

MS NARKEDIEN: Oh I see what you mean. Yes definitely in the direction of those hotels, towards the Why Not then.

MR RICHARD: So you would have drive past the Parade Hotel, is that correct?

MS NARKEDIEN: Most probably, yes.

MR RICHARD: Now, you drove back to where the blue Cortina was?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR RICHARD: Now, once you got to the blue Cortina, what happened? There were three of you in the car, what happened?

MS NARKEDIEN: Okay. Once we got back there, the two of them just jumped back into the Cortina and Robert said, "Follow me", so I followed them. Then we drove the two cars to a place in Pine Street, I don't know what route we took, but we got there to Pine Street and then Matthew stayed in that Cortina and Robert came into my car after that.

MR RICHARD: And then what did Robert say to you or instruct you to do?

MS NARKEDIEN: He asked me to drive back to the beach front, back to the Marine Parade.

MR RICHARD: And ...(intervention)

CHAIRPERSON: Just for record purposes, I think Pine Street is a street that runs parallel with West Street, is it, I think it might be the next to West Street.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, we would have had to turn and go back into West Street.

CHAIRPERSON: Yes. No I just wanted to put that on.

MR RICHARD: So from the Pine Street stop, you drove back to the beach front. Did Robert, sorry, did Mr McBride tell you where to drive on the beach front?

MS NARKEDIEN: I just drove until he wanted me to stop somewhere or whatever he wanted, then when we got to the Parade Hotel, he did ask me to stop the car there.

MR RICHARD: On which side of the road were you, on the left or the right? Which way were you going, better still?

MS NARKEDIEN: We were driving down towards, like maybe the snake park if I can put it like that, so we would be on the left-hand side of the road?

MR RICHARD: So you were driving from Addington side to the snake park side, which is in a northerly manner. Now you said, when you got to the Parade Hotel, what were you told to do?

MS NARKEDIEN: What he asked me to do was, there was a parking space that he saw there on the corner, so to speak and he asked me to drive the Mazda into that corner, ag, into that space.

MR RICHARD: Now did you observe anything about what was going on at the Parade Hotel?

MS NARKEDIEN: Actually it was very quiet, if I can recall. It was very quiet in terms of, I didn't see any people at that time. I did notice that corner bar, whatever it's called, that it had tinted glass, but I couldn't see anybody in there. There was no one walking in and out of the hotel. It actually was just quiet, I would say.

MR RICHARD: You didn't hear music, people going in and out?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, my windows were all closed, so I didn't hear music.

MR RICHARD: Now was parking a problem in that area, or not?

MS NARKEDIEN: How do you mean a problem?

MR RICHARD: Was the traffic busy, was it easy to find parking?

MS NARKEDIEN: Well I wasn't the one looking for parking, so...

CHAIRPERSON: When you went there, Ms Narkedien, did you have to go around the block until a parking space became available, or did you, when you got to the vicinity of the hotel, find an open space in which the vehicle was parked?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, as we got near to this hotel, he did point out a parking space to me, so it was there just as we arrived.

MR RICHARD: Now on the Marine Parade in general that particular night, when you drove up and down, were parking spots easy to find and many parking spots available, or was the parking congested.

MS NARKEDIEN: As I say, I was not looking for the parking, I simply drove with him and waited for each instruction, so we drove down that road, as we got to that hotel, there was a parking, you could actually see it as we were coming up, so we didn't drive around.

MR RICHARD: And that was on your first attempt to find parking in that area or going past that place?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, the first time we went past, I actually didn't notice any parking.

MR RICHARD: And you wouldn't have noticed any other parking spots available anywhere else on the Marine Parade that evening?

MS NARKEDIEN: No I didn't bother, actually.

MR RICHARD: Fair enough. Now you parked the car and what were you told to do next?

MS NARKEDIEN: Well, when I parked the car he was still in the car with me and then he said to me "Wait here. Stay here, I'm coming back just now." Then he simply got out and disappeared.

MR RICHARD: And now you were left alone in the car, did you stay in the car?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, I stayed in the car.

MR RICHARD: For how long were you alone in the car?

MS NARKEDIEN: It could have been ten, fifteen minutes.

MR RICHARD: Then after ten, fifteen minutes, what happened?

MS NARKEDIEN: Then Robert appeared with the Ford Cortina, I can't remember which of the two was driving, but I remember that he indicated with his finger sort of that I must come out, so I drove the Mazda out of there. Then I didn't quite know what to do next, so I just drove it back into the Marine Parade and I just stood there, but eventually I had to go because there were a lot of cars behind me and people were hooting for me, so I just drove the car into the next road and just waited there, because I didn't quite know what to do next.

MR RICHARD: Had you not been instructed where to go to next?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, he didn't instruct me at all.

MR RICHARD: So when you say you drove to the next road, which road was that?

MS NARKEDIEN: I don't know the name of it, but it's a very short lane, just on the other side of the hotel.

MR RICHARD: So you would have driven past the front of the Parade Hotel, past the next building and turned left.

MS NARKEDIEN: No there wasn't another building. We passed the front of the hotel. It was actually the end of the hotel. Maybe there was another, but it was one big compact building, if I can put it like that, so I just went into the very next, the first road actually.

MR RICHARD: Let's go through it again. You were driving from South to North on the left-hand side, correct?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR RICHARD: You came to a parking spot outside the Parade Hotel and were instructed to park the car, correct?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

CHAIRPERSON: I don't think we have to go through the whole...

MR RICHARD: After you had moved out of that parking spot, you carried on in a northerly direction and so that meant, whether it was one complex or two complexes, you drove away from the Parade Hotel and turned left at the next available left-hand turn?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

MR RICHARD: Now did you know to stop and wait for them there?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, I didn't know what to do. I just had to get out of the traffic of Marine Parade. I didn't know how to contact him to say "I'm here". I didn't know what to do.

MR RICHARD: Then how long did you wait there?

MS NARKEDIEN: I would say about 5 minutes.

MR RICHARD: Could it have been ten minutes, or less than five minutes?

MS NARKEDIEN: I don't know.

MR DEHAL: Sorry Mr Chairperson, I don't know where this is taking us.

CHAIRPERSON: Yes, you estimating five minutes.

MS NARKEDIEN: I estimated five minutes.

CHAIRPERSON: I mean whether it's a bit longer or shorter, I don't think much swings on it.

MR RICHARD: Then what happened?

MS NARKEDIEN: Fortunately from where I was I could sort of see to the next road, you know along the pavement so to speak, so I was quite anxious to see whether they would see me or what would happen. Fortunately I could see them now walking along the front of the hotel, so and then they must have seen my car then eventually so then they came towards my car and got in and Robert said "Drive, we're going back home."

MR RICHARD: Now did you drive away or did Robert drive the car away?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, I was driving still.

MR RICHARD: Where did he tell you to drive to?

MS NARKEDIEN: At that point he said "Drive to Wentworth", so I drove out, I drove that way, back down the small lane and made my way into Argo Road, I wasn't so familiar with that area at that stage, but I know I managed to get to Argo Road which I was more familiar with and tried to get to Wentworth from there.

MR RICHARD: Now, what did you think was happening that evening, when they had told you to park the car and now substituted another car for the car that you were driving? Did you think anything?

MS NARKEDIEN: Well initially I thought perhaps we're just going to hand the car over to some comrades or something, but it did seem once we left House and Home that this is rather an elaborate way to hand over a car, but then we did do things at time which seemed silly, but because we wanted to shake of people who maybe are watching us, or following us, or because of the secrecy and covert nature of what we did, I then took it that you know this is like a routine, or a normal type of thing. I know to other people it would be down right stupid, but that's all I really thought at the time.

MR RICHARD: Now, when did you learn that a car bomb had been placed there?

MS NARKEDIEN: I only discovered the following morning actually, when I heard the news on the radio and then later on in the day when my sisters brought the newspaper and I read the newspaper that an explosion took place directly outside that hotel, more or less in the place where we had parked that car, so I concluded that what we actually did there was not just park an ordinary car for others who needed it, other comrades who needed it, it was in actual fact a car bomb.

MR RICHARD: No further questions.

NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY MR RICHARD

CHAIRPERSON: Thank you. Mr Prior, any questions?

ADV PRIOR: Just one or two aspects for clarity Mr Chairman.

CROSS-EXAMINATION BY ADV PRIOR: Ms Narkedien, on that evening, the vehicle that you were driving, was that your sister's car?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

ADV PRIOR: And you had asked her to use it that evening?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

ADV PRIOR: Did she normally lend, or did you normally or usually ask her for the loan of her vehicle, when you were going out with Mr McBride?

MS NARKEDIEN: That's true, I normally did. We shared it, so to speak.

ADV PRIOR: Did Mr McBride indicate that you were going anywhere specific on that evening, that you had to get dressed up, or...?

MS NARKEDIEN: You see at the time I was actually a fugitive because there was this state of emergency and my brother Eric and my sister Jeanette were arrested. Actually it was my mother who gave me, who asked her to let me use the car, and my parents told me that I was also wanted. When the police came to arrest them, they walked into the house with all these big rifles demanding where am I and they said they didn't know. I was actually in Botswana, I had gone away for the weekend.

ADV PRIOR: Yes. Sorry, if I may just stop you there. You learned when you returned with Mr McBride on the 12th of June.

MS NARKEDIEN: No the morning of the 13th actually.

ADV PRIOR: The morning of the 13th, that the police had been there, they had arrested certain members of your family and were looking for you.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, so I realised I had to go into hiding immediately, so I was in hiding at the time when he came to ask me that evening, "You know I don't think it's good for you to stay indoors for so long, you need to go out. I want to take you to the drive-in." I was actually afraid, I didn't want to expose myself to the police and be arrested.

ADV PRIOR: So he told you you were going to the drive-in.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

ADV PRIOR: Had you gone to the drive-in with him before?

MS NARKEDIEN: We'd gone to bioscope a lot, that was the first time we would go to the drive-in.

ADV PRIOR: Alright. Just from that aspect, when you returned from Botswana and apparently that's when you learned there was a state of emergency, that your family had been treated quite shabbily by the Security Forces, almost in an inhumane way, what was Mr McBride's reaction to that? Was he calm? Was he angry at what had happened?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, I think he was actually quite calm because, in fact I was the one that was extremely anxious and all I said, I was in control of the situation, I was the one that said I want to go into hiding. I don't want to be arrested.

ADV PRIOR: Alright and by that stage, although you had not been given specific information, you had basically put two and two together and realised that every time Mr McBride and the other members went out, usually the next day or that evening, you heard about an explosion or substations were knocked out, something to that effect. Had you concluded then that what he was busy with was with sabotage and similar acts?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, that was actually the first time that I was involved with him on that particular evening and then discovered the following day that an explosion took place. In all the others I was not involved with him.

ADV PRIOR: So was that the first time that you realised that he was possibly involved in causing explosions?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, that was the first one because although I was charged with the Chamberlain one, when I picked them up after they had done something there, I didn't know that. I picked him up from his father's workshop and even though I discovered later in the evening that there was an explosion there, the lights had gone out, I didn't know that, I didn't even suspect that he and the others did it. I discovered it much later.

ADV PRIOR: Had you seen the Chamberlain Road, the second explosion that occurred there?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, I didn't see it. In fact I was slightly out of town at the time because I had to drive Robert and some of the others, Welile into town to take a taxi, so when we came back in, I saw the township was in darkness.

ADV PRIOR: I just want to deal with one last aspect. You drove onto the Marine Parade, you went to near the Parade Hotel, then you returned back to Pine Street, where the Cortina was, is that correct?

MS NARKEDIEN: You mean the first time we went to the ...(intervention)

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, you went in the direction or past the Parade Hotel and went back to the Pine.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, I don't know at what point did we turn around and come back.

ADV PRIOR: Because from that you went back to Pine street and then...(intervention)

CHAIRPERSON: My understanding was and correct me if I'm wrong please, Ms Narkedien, was when they first drove on the Marine Parade, there were three of you in the vehicle and the Cortina was somewhere else other than Pine Street and then you went back to where the Cortina was and then you drove it from there to Pine Street, left Matthew and then you and Mr McBride went and parked the vehicle, as described by yourself.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

CHAIRPERSON: I think that was the ...

ADV PRIOR: Thank you, Mr Chairman, I was a bit confused. On that occasion it seems that you, or at least Mr McBride was driving past and having a look at the place. Was anything discussed that you can remember?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, there was no talking in the car.

ADV PRIOR: Whether you were going to be coming back to that spot or not?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, not at all.

ADV PRIOR: I just get the impression, when you returned there, in other words when you came out of the parking space and you were simply, there was an indication from Mr McBride that you should move out of that parking spot on the corner, that you really didn't know where to go.

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes. I hadn't further instructions, so I didn't quite know what to do next.

CHAIRPERSON: If no traffic came, would you have just stayed there in Marine Parade?

MS NARKEDIEN: I would have stayed there, exactly, I would have stayed just there, where I came out.

ADV PRIOR: When you learned the next day about the explosion and the blast outside the hotel, did you ever discuss that with Mr McBride?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, I did, I had to try and send a message to him that he had to meet with me at another place and explain to me you know, what's really going on and I wanted to get out of Durban. I just wanted to have no association with what had happened and I realised also that he also, well I didn't quite know what he was feeling, but he also then suddenly wanted to get out, so I said, "Well fine, you can come with me, but I'm going." For me it was very disorientating.

ADV PRIOR: Yes, what I'm actually asking, was he still calm, was he agitated, was he depressed, did he express any remorse to you, anything like that? Did he express any ...

MS NARKEDIEN: Well this is the part I don't really like because Robert is the big macho, bravado man, but yes he was extremely remorseful and very depressed for a very long time.

ADV PRIOR: I understand that from there you went to Johannesburg, is that correct?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

ADV PRIOR: There's just two more aspects. Thank you Mr Chairman. The Klein family, we've heard evidence about Mr and Mrs Klein, did you know Mr and/or Mrs Klein?

MS NARKEDIEN: I didn't know Mrs Klein so well, but Mr Klein, yes I knew him very well.

ADV PRIOR: And you heard evidence, I'm not going to rehash from you, he was a former principal etc, member of the Labour Party and a sometime police reservist?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, he was all those things and I knew he carried a weapon like all the others.

ADV PRIOR: Did you know whether they had children, or not?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, I think all the children were married actually, they were married and living elsewhere.

ADV PRIOR: You did say you did know Mrs Klein as such, but did you know whether she was actively involved in politics at the time, Labour Party or anything like that?

MS NARKEDIEN: I think she was involved in the Labour Party, but maybe not the way Mr Klein was in the terrorising the township, so to speak.

ADV PRIOR: Did you say he used to terrorise the township?

MS NARKEDIEN: It was a group of them.

JUDGE PILLAY: What did they do?

MS NARKEDIEN: I know they terrorised my brother actually, Eric, because he was also a political activist. They, I don't know where they picked him up from and took him to the police station and arrested him and swore him and so on. I know of my cousin who also spoke of another incident where, I don't know what they were looking for these two youngsters for, whether they had dagga on them or whatever and they actually came bursting into her house. My cousin is actually sitting in the audience now and they actually threatened to shoot her unless she released him and she had to really reason with Mr Klein, Mr Moosa and some other people. I think we even called them sergeants. We referred to them as sergeants or constables, because they had that status of police reservists.

ADV PRIOR: Just to follow, nothing really turns on it, was any action taken against these people, for example, were they ever reported or did you think that would serve no purpose?

MS NARKEDIEN: Those days nobody reported the police if they arrest you, you just suffered it out.

ADV PRIOR: These trips to Botswana and particularly the return, we heard evidence that on those occasions that you returned to the Republic, normally material, explosives, ammunition, weapons were brought in. You passed through formal border posts, is that correct?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes, we were always searched and they never ever found anything, with sniffer dogs and everything.

ADV PRIOR: That was my question. It just struck me during the evidence that there was never an occasion where there was even the slightest suspicion.

MS NARKEDIEN: So that's why it was hard for me to think that there is something here, when nobody finds it.

ADV PRIOR: It wasn't a question that the customs or whoever had to be bribed to turn ...(intervention)

MS NARKEDIEN: Well, they were never bribed in my presence, I don't know.

ADV PRIOR: Alright. There's just one last aspect. We do have regard to your treatment during your detention, are you aware from the - sorry before I go there, did you appear before the Committee on Human Rights Violations of the Commission?

MS NARKEDIEN: Yes.

ADV PRIOR: Are you aware whether anyone has applied for amnesty for your, for the way in which you were treated in detention?

MS NARKEDIEN: No.

ADV PRIOR: And I'm referring specifically to any member of the Security Branch?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, I'm not aware.

ADV PRIOR: And likewise for your sister's treatment?

MS NARKEDIEN: No, I'm not aware.

ADV PRIOR: Thank you Mr Chairman.

NO FURTHER QUESTIONS BY ADV PRIOR

CHAIRPERSON: Thank you Mr Prior. Mr Dehal, do you have any re-examination?

MR DEHAL: Thank you. I have none.

NO RE-EXAMINATION BY MR DEHAL

CHAIRPERSON: Thank you. Adv Sigodi, do you have any questions you would like to ask?

ADV SIGODI: No thank you Chair.

CHAIRPERSON: Thanks. Judge Pillay, any question?

Thank you Ms Narkedien, that concludes your testimony.

MS NARKEDIEN: Thank you.

WITNESS EXCUSED

ADV PRIOR: Mr Chairman, I know we've not sat the full day today. However, I think we've made quite good progress. I see it's almost quarter to four. We do have another three applicants left. It's my assessment that we would comfortably finish within the time allocated at least by Monday. What I'm saying is, is there any purpose of starting a witness now and obviously not finishing?

CHAIRPERSON: I don't know. Who is the intended next witness, Mr Dehal?

MR DEHAL: Thank you, Mr Chairperson. We proposed calling Mr Pearce next. I don't know, I've lost touch whether Ms Kooverjee represents him, or I, but it doesn't really matter. His statement needs to be amended.

CHAIRPERSON: Yes, no I'm just asking you whether, what's your attitude, do you want to start now or would you prefer to start tomorrow morning?

MR DEHAL: I'd much rather tomorrow morning, if you don't mind. Thank you.

CHAIRPERSON: Yes, would half past nine be convenient?

Thank you. We'll now adjourn until half past nine tomorrow morning, the same venue. Thank you.

COMMITTEE ADJOURNS

 
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