
INTRODUCTION
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INTRODUCTION
The
South Africa Truth
& Reconciliation Commission
by
Bronwyn Leebaw
What
is the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission?
In
1993, leaders in South Africa successfully completed a long series
of negotiations that would end apartheid and set in motion the institutions
of majority democracy. The Interim Constitution that resulted from
the negotiations ends with a postamble that articulates "a need for
understanding but not vengeance, a need for reparation but not retaliation,
a need for ubuntu but not victimization." The main voice of the liberation
struggle, the African National Congress, had agreed that a selective
amnesty would be granted with respect to the brutal crimes committed
under apartheid as part of the negotiation process. Ubuntu is a term
found in the Nguni-based languages of Southern Africa and refers to
"humaneness" and community interdependence. By including it in the
new constitution, the new leaders of Africa presented the amnesty
in the spirit of an overall call for community-building in the new
country. Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who chaired the TRC, associates
the African concept of ubuntu with "restorative," community-based
justice as opposed to prosecutorial, retributive justice.
In 1995, the new democratically elected parliament enacted the National
Unity and Reconciliation Act, which detailed the terms of the selective
amnesty and called for the creation of a Truth and Reconciliation
Commission. Under the guidelines of the Act, individuals may be eligible
for amnesty if they meet three basic conditions. They must provide
"full disclosure" of all knowledge pertaining to "gross human rights
violations," explain a political objective for their involvement in
such violations, and demonstrate a proportional relationship between
the political objective and the violations. In line with agreements
made during the negotiations, members of the apartheid regime as well
as members of the liberation groups would have to apply for amnesty
or face prosecution.
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Where
did South Africa get the idea to have a truth and reconciliation commission?
Truth
commissions are not a new idea. Latin American countries emerging
out of long periods of authoritarian rule, such as Chile and Argentina,
developed truth commissions or investigative commissions in order
to expose and condemn the mass violence committed under outgoing military
regimes. The new governments in these countries generally were unable
to consider prosecution for such abuses because the outgoing military
was still powerful and capable of staging coups. Many Latin American
leaders and scholars, however, came to see that truth could be a very
strong tool with which to judge the past. Much of Latin America's
violence, such as "disappearances" and tortures, was denied and hidden
by the regimes. As such, official acknowledgment of these violations
and details about the crimes often proved very valuable to the families
of victims.
South
African leaders held conferences in 1994 and 1995, where they met
with leaders from Latin America, and Eastern Europe to discuss lessons
they learned through their own experiences with the process of coming
to terms with a legacy of violence. Leaders in South Africa also held
numerous public debates and requested input from NGO leaders around
the country on how to structure the TRC. It was as a result of public
pressure from NGOs, for instance, that the legislators behind the
TRC departed from the original plan for in camera hearings and instead
held hearings that were very accessible to the public. South Africa's
Truth and Reconciliation Commission was the first to hold such open
televised hearings, and it was also the first to link truth-telling
to the threat of prosecution. As a result, South Africa presented
the world with the dramatic spectacle of televised police confessions
to involvement in brutal killings. It also presented the diverse voices
of thousands of victims describing what it felt like to experience
the worst brutalities of apartheid.
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Why
is the TRC so controversial?
The
TRC has been very controversial in South Africa and among human rights
advocates outside of South Africa. The most visible controversy surrounding
the TRC has to do with the amnesty process. Ntsiki Biko, the widow
of Steve Biko, challenged the TRC in court on the grounds that the
amnesty was a denial of her right to prosecution and civil redress.
In 1996, the Constitutional Court (South Africaâs version of the Supreme
Court) upheld the TRC enabling legislation against this challenge,
maintaining that such individual rights were limited by the constitutional
postamble and its call for "national unity and reconciliation." This
case drew a great deal of attention from the western press and human
rights groups because it cast the drama of the TRC and the stakes
of amnesty in sharp relief. The TRC would ask victims of terrible
crimes to accept a process of forgiveness for those who had committed
them on the principle of "national reconciliation." This is especially
tricky as it invokes a national community that had never really existed.
When
the TRC was designed, South African leaders expressed the hope that
the process of telling their stories would help victims to move on
with their lives. They worked to construct a friendly environment
for the victims and hired trained therapists and spiritual leaders
to walk victims through the process and to comfort them if it became
painful. However, mental health professionals have often been very
critical of the TRC, and have argued that it encouraged people to
open up old wounds without making any provisions for long term mental
health care. This issue was exacerbated by a misunderstanding connected
to the TRC about reparations. The TRC was never empowered to pay reparations.
However, it had a committee that was to work on recommending reparations.
Many victims assumed that the TRC would be able to help them much
more than it was able to and this perception was possibly influenced
by an optimism at the TRC about reparations that was not to last.
The TRC recently announced that it will pay only 3,000 Rand to 16,700
identified victims.
Finally,
the TRC was controversial because the crimes of the way it presented
the truth. First, the TRC dealt with the excesses of apartheid, rather
than apartheid itself. As a result, people such as Professor Mahmood
Mamdani have argued that the truth of the TRC is misleading. It presents
the truth about apartheid as the extreme violence of torture and murders,
when the day to day brutalities, such as forced removals, contributed
to the most stubborn and tragic legacy of apartheid, the terrible
poverty and gross inequality that persists to this day in the country.
Second, the vague definition of "gross human rights violation" meant
that violence committed by the ANC and other liberation movements
was given the same label as violence committed by the state. Although
the ANC was instrumental in creating the TRC, this issue did cause
the ANC to contest some of the findings of the TRC as stated in the
report.
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What
resulted from the TRC?
Despite
these controversies, even many of the TRC's critics will say that
they are glad that South Africa had a TRC. Its proceedings helped
to shed light on key controversial issues in South Africa's history
of struggle. For example, in 1997, the TRC released details of the
1992 Steyn Report, which showed that de Klerk knew about the training
of a "third force," a network of security and ex-security operatives
acting with right-wing Inkatha Freedom Party elements to foment violence,
long before he relinquished power. This detail and other confessions
pertaining to "third force" activities helped to show that the state
was instigating much of the so-called "black on black" violence prior
to the transition. The TRC also conducted a special investigation
into South Africa's Chemical and Biological Warfare Programme. The
investigation uncovered that under the leadership of Dr. Wouter Basson,
and with the sponsorship of the military, this program was responsible
for numerous individual poisonings with toxins such as anthrax, paroaxon,
and botulism. The commission conducted special hearings on South African
institutions, such as the media, businesses, and legal institutions,
to determine the extent and nature of their complicity with apartheid.
The TRC also set in motion and facilitated a large-scale public debate
on how to come to terms with its violent past. In the process, it
gathered together many voices that might not otherwise have been heard
at all, let alone placed in the same room with their former enemies.
In 1998, a survey conducted for Business Day (a newspaper) by ACNielsen
Market Research Africa, attracted a lot of negative attention for
the TRC by claiming that only 18% of those surveyed did not feel the
commission would worsen race relations. However, few people involved
with the TRC expected the truths revealed in the process to lead directly
to reconciliation. As Mary Burton states in the film, the success
or failure of the TRC cannot be judged by the feelings at the moment
and is rather the beginning of a long process of dealing with the
legacy of South Africa's brutal past.
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Bronwyn
Leebaw is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Political Science
at the University of California Berkeley, where She is also a Research
Assistant at the Human Rights Center.