The indictment of 26 alleged Boeremag
members on charges of terrorism and sabotage shows that there are still
diehard right-wingers who are willing to resort to armed struggle
against the new order. Interestingly, their ranks include men of
substance - doctors, wealthy farmers and military officers. Even more
interesting was the cynical manipulation of public opinion by elements
in the NIA and SAPS that took place after the Boeremag bombings, and
following the publication of a letter from the Group of 63 to president
Mbeki. The Group of 63, founded by Afrikaner intellectuals to debate
issues critical to the future of Afrikaners, condemned the attacks but
warned that they were a sign of growing Afrikaner alienation which
could result in further violence if the root causes were not addressed.
It identified these as the ‘elimination’ of Afrikaans in the courts and
civil service, the targeting of Afrikaans schools by the government’s
‘policy of Anglicisation’, affirmative action, and the ‘apparent
reticence’ of the government to halt farm attacks. It was clear that
the Group was asking the government for help in holding the middle
ground against extremist ‘perpetrators of violence’. Nevertheless,
articles in two Sunday papers reported that the Group was suspected by
the NIA and SAPS of providing intellectual leadership to the Boeremag,
similar to that provided by Sinn Fein to the IRA, and that the Boeremag
had nominated Group members Danie Goosen and Hermann Giliomee for
political office after the overthrow of the ANC government. In letters
to the Sunday Times, Danie du Plessis described the allegations as
absurd, and Giliomee stated his belief that they came from people
within the presidency who wanted to discredit ‘legitimate opposition’.
Professor Goosen said he was reminded of the way in which the apartheid
regime deployed its ‘security forces to curtail democratic debate’. He
also accused the English media of denigrating the Group. Certainly the
newspapers seemed unaware of the possibility that the NIA and SAPS were
using them. Some prominent Afrikaners believe the Group has overstated
the degree of alienation within the Afrikaner community, and that
debate continues. In the meantime, it seems the presidency has changed
its views on the Group of 63. According to Northern Cape premier Manne
Dipico, Mbeki admitted that the matter had been handled wrongly and
that the government should have entered into discussions with the
group. It is not too late for those discussions to take place.
The arrest late last year of five suspected Boeremag fugitives, and
their subsequent indictment on charges of treason, terrorism and
sabotage, brought the number of alleged members of the Boeremag accused
of conspiring to overthrow the democratically elected African National
Congress-led government to 26. These headline-making events closed
another chapter in the chronology of threatened or actual armed
resistance to the momentous changes that have swept across South Africa
since 1990.
The hunt for and capture of the five alleged Krygers van die Boerevolk
- Warriors of the Boer Nation - in the wake of a series of bomb
explosions at the end of October last year served as prism through
which important threads in the fabric of the post-apartheid polity were
refracted and thereby magnified.
One of the strands highlighted the continued existence of diehard
right-wingers or contemporary bittereinders prepared to deploy armed
struggle against the new order. Another showed that the ranks of the
latest bittereinders included men of substance: doctors, wealthy
farmers - one of whom, Lourens du Plessis, was later freed when charges
were withdrawn against him - and military officers. The former soldiers
allegedly serving in the Boeremag had greater military skills than
those possessed by the Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (AWB) bombers who
sought to terrorise and demoralise South Africans on the eve of the
1994 election that brought the ANC to power.
If, however, the latter day bittereinders had jettisoned political
debate for violent coercion, quite different and equally disturbing
trends were manifest in the aftermath of the detonations in Soweto and
Bronkhorstspruit. They pointed to the cynical manipulation of public
opinion by elements in the National Intelligence Agency (NIA) and the
South African Police Service (SAPS).
The manipulation exercise came as a response to the release of an open
letter to President Thabo Mbeki from the Group of 63, a formation of
Afrikaner intellectuals seeking to stimulate public debate on issues
they deemed to be critical to the future of Afrikaners. Their missive
to Mbeki provided a perspective on the bombing of electricity
sub-stations, railway junctures and a mosque in Soweto and an explosion
at a Buddhist temple in Bronkhorstspruit.
Founded in May 2000, the Group of 63 specifically stated in its
communiqué that the bombing could not be condoned and characterised the
blitz as "senseless and reprehensible". But their letter warned that it
would not be enough to apprehend and punish the bombers. The bombings
were a sign of growing Afrikaner alienation under the ANC-led
government and, the letter argued, if Afrikaner alienation was not
addressed there was a danger of further violence.
The Group listed several causes of Afrikaner alienation. Two of the
causes identified were the "elimination" of Afrikaans in the courts and
the civil service and the targeting of historically Afrikaans schools
by the government's "policy of Anglicisation". Reinforcing causes
delineated by the Group were the negative impact on Afrikaners of
affirmative action or reverse discrimination and the "apparent
reticence" of the government to halt the murderous attacks on farms in
which the victims were "mainly Afrikaners".
It required no great feat of exegesis to conclude that the Group
feared that the hands of extremists would be strengthened if the causes
of Afrikaner alienation were not tackled vigorously. They were seeking
to persuade the ANC-led government to help them hold centre and, in the
process, to help bolster its own position by addressing the grievances
that were fuelling the resentments of Afrikaner desperados. As the
Group noted in a later statement: "People who do not want to address
the alienation felt in Afrikaner ranks directly play into the hand of
the perpetrators of violence".
But, judging from a report in the Sunday Independent, their message
was misunderstood or, worse still, wilfully distorted by the NIA and
the SAPS. The NIA and the SAPS suspected that the Group of 63 might be
providing intellectual leadership to the Boeremag, the newspaper
reported. It quoted an unidentified "security official" as comparing
the relationship between the Group of 63 and the Boeremag with the link
between Sinn Fein and the IRA. "The political arm does not embark on
armed activities and violence but it is ready and willing to explain
why the violence is continuing", the anonymous security official
reportedly said.
A contemporaneous report in the Sunday Times went a stage further. It
linked the Group of 63 to the Boeremag conspirators more directly. It
stated that Boeremag documents nominated Group of 63 chair Professor
Danie Goosen and Emeritus Professor Hermann Giliomee, a historian and a
patron of the Group of 63, to serve on the parliamentary portfolio
committee for education, culture and language after the envisaged
overthrow of the ANC government. The NIA or the SAPS presumably passed
on the contents of the purported document to the Sunday Times. The
report gave the impression that the Boeremag had nominated the two men
as a reward for their alleged intellectual leadership of the planned
coup.
For intelligence officials and/or police investigators to portray the
Group of 63 as rightist intellectuals seeking to promote the cause of
the Boeremag in particular, and the Afrikaner radical right in general,
implied gross ignorance of the Group. The founders of the Group
eschewed violence at a means of achieving political ends. They sought
through dialogue to achieve an accommodation that would be less
threatening to the Afrikaans language. In an earlier era they would
have been known as verligtes. The patrons (beskermhere) of the Group
were respected Afrikaner intellectuals who favoured and worked for
negotiation with the ANC in the 1980s when it was still a prohibited
organisation.
Apart from Giliomee, the patrons included sociologist Lawrence
Schlemmer, a long time protagonist of negotiated settlement, and
Frederik van Zyl Slabbert, the former leader of the now defunct
Progressive Federal Party. After quitting parliament in the mid-1980s,
Van Zyl Slabbert carved a role for himself as an extra-parliamentary
leader in favour of a negotiated settlement with prohibited black
nationalists and their communist allies.
He was described by the ANC as a modern Voortrekker in the 1980s in
recognition of his pioneering role in promoting dialogue between the
Afrikaner notables and ANC leaders.
In a letter to the Sunday Times, Professor Danie du Plessis, a member
of the Group of 63, described the attempts to link the Group to the
Boeremag as absurd. He noted the Group's members espoused liberal
democratic values, supported the settlement talks in the early 1990s
that led to an ANC government and were consequently berated as
volksverrairers (traitors to their volk) by right-wing
Afrikaners.
In another letter published on the same page Giliomee expressed
astonishment that the newspaper had given credence to the reported
offer of a senior post-coup position to him. He deduced that the
information (or disinformation) emanated from highly placed people in
the presidency and that its purpose was to discredit "legitimate
opposition" articulated by the Group of 63 to aspects of government
policy. He added sombrely: "As the history of Stalin's dictatorship
shows so clearly, it is not the rumour that is important but the deadly
use the party-state makes of it... cheered on, or given credibility by
lackeys in the press".
In his response to the "mean and slanderous attempt" by the official
intelligence agency to cast suspicion on the Group of 63, Goosen was
reminded of the apartheid era and the manner in which the old regime
deployed its "security forces to curtail democratic debate". He pledged
that the Group would not be deterred by the "lies, distortions and
misrepresentations" about it and would continue to convey its points of
view "in the interests of greater democracy" and the "legitimate
interests" of the Afrikaner minority. In would thereby contribute to
the "fight against foolish rightist extremists" and against the
"culture of pernicious conformism and parrotry".
The commitment of the Group of 63 to dialogue aside, there was another
important difference between its ethos and that of the Afrikaner
radical right. It did not share the Christian fundamentalism of the
Boeremag and its kindred Afrikaner organisations. The Group's
declarations were singularly devoid of the religious bigotry or radical
religiosity that oozes from the political propaganda of the Boeremag
and its political siblings. The nexus between political zealotry and
radical religiosity was evident in the testimony in January of the
three Afrikaner men charged with plotting to blow up the Vaal Dam to
fulfil the prediction of the Boer prophet "Siener" Van Rensburg.
Goosen accused the "English news media" of denigrating the Group of
63, of casting doubts on its authenticity as a "democratic and moderate
interpreter" of Afrikaner interests. There was more than a little
justification to his complaint (and that of Giliomee in his letter).
The reports in the Sunday Independent and the Sunday Times referred to
above contained little or no awareness by the journalists concerned of
the possibility that the NIA and the SAPS were using them. There was no
evidence that they had scoured the Group's website to acquaint
themselves with the sociological profile of its membership, its origins
and history and its objectives.
Leaving aside the criticisms voiced by Giliomee and Goosen of the way
in which major newspapers allowed themselves to be used as a conduit
for state-inspired propaganda, there was a wider sense in which the
media generally failed to fulfil its duty as the "fourth estate" in
contemporary South Africa.
There was an interesting parallel between the spate of bombs
attributed to the Boeremag in October and November last year and the
first foray into armed resistance by Umkhonto we Sizwe in 1961. Like
the Umkhonto saboteurs in 1961, the Boeremag bombers focused on
structural rather than human targets: electricity sub-stations, railway
junctions and stations, a police airplane hangar and the bridge across
the Umtamvuna River, as well as, of course, the mosque in Soweto and
the Buddhist temple in Bronkhorstspruit.
The targets aside, the attacks usually took place when there were few
people about (after midnight in Soweto when most people were in bed). A
Soweto resident, Claudina Mokone, was killed during the Soweto attack.
But her death - she was crushed by falling debris - appeared to be the
accidental by-product of an explosion rather than the calculated result
of bombing attack. There was a clear contrast between the attacks
ascribed to the Boeremag - pending the outcome of the trial of the 26
suspects, they are entitled to the presumption of innocence - and those
carried out by AWB bombers in 1994. The AWB saboteurs detonated their
bombs in crowded places, including taxi ranks, in daylight, with the
obvious intention of killing civilians and terrorising the citizenry,
particularly that part of it that was black.
In their reportage of the Boeremag bomb attacks, however, few, if any,
South African journalists address either the similarities with
Umkhonto's early campaign and/or the differences in the modus operandi
between the Boeremag and the AWB. Presumably they neglected to fulfil
their professional duty because they were fearful of being castigated
as Boeremag sympathisers. They could, however, have noted the parallels
and reflected the differences listed above without condoning the use of
violence to attain political ends in post-apartheid democratic South
Africa. They were free, of course, to add the rider that Boeremag
propaganda, in the form of letters to the press after the Soweto
bombing, appeared to presage a bloodier phase in its armed
rebellion.
It should be noted that there was disagreement within the Afrikaner
community over the extent of Afrikaner alienation in post-apartheid
South Africa. It was noteworthy, too, that the Afrikaans language press
did not escape criticism for its coverage of the Group.
Thus Tim du Plessis, editor of Rapport, downplayed the degree of
Afrikaner alienation. He compared it with the disaffection experienced
by supporters of Jan Smuts after the National Party came to power in
1948. He observed, too, that some traditional leaders feel estranged
from the ANC-led government in post-apartheid South Africa because of
the priority it gives to elected leaders over hereditary chiefs.
Giliomee, writing before the open letter was sent to Mbeki, noted that
some Afrikaner notables had reservations about the credentials of the
Group of 63 in its campaign to halt the downgrading of Afrikaans. They
saw the Group as taalstryders (language fighters) rather than
taalonderhandelaars (language negotiators), Giliomee observed of
university and media reaction to a Group of 63 conference on the future
of Afrikaans in Stellenbosch in June 2002. Giliomee's analysis left no
doubt that he thought vigorous intellectual defence of the Afrikaans
language, in schools and universities no less than the civil service,
was justified and necessary.
Dan Roodt, leader of the Pro-Afrikaanse Assiegroep, weighed in on
behalf of the Group of 63 when he referred scathingly to the "almost
hysterical condemnation" of the Group in Afrikaans newspapers in the
Naspers stable. He agreed that "the current crisis among Afrikaners,
compounded by crime, farm murders, affirmative action and (Education
Minister Kader) Asmal's Anglicisation policies, provides an ideal
environment for recruitment to extremist groups, whether left or
right".
But the reservations of some Afrikaners about the Group of 63 -
Rapport's editor labelled them "self-appointed" pleaders on behalf of
alienated Afrikaners - did not justify depiction of them as
intellectual leaders of the Boeremag or establish beyond doubt that
they had over-stated the degree of alienation in the Afrikaans
community. That was - and still is a disputed issue in the
intra-Afrikaner debate.
Information relayed later to Danie Goosen by Northern Cape Premier
Manne Dipico, however, pointed to a change of view in the presidency
about the Group of 63. Dipico, a fluent Afrikaans-speaker, told Goosen
that the Group's open letter to Mbeki had been discussed at a meeting
between the President and the provincial premiers. Mbeki admitted,
according to Dipico's account of the meeting, that the matter had been
handled wrongly and concluded that, instead of tainting the Group of 63
as the brains trust of the Boeremag, the government should have
initiated discussions with the Group.
It is not too late for those discussions to take place.