
South Africa opens a new inquiry into apartheid-era killings known as Cradock Four
A sign displayed on a beach in the Western Cape Province reads "White Area" during the apartheid in South Africa on June 23, 1976. (AP Photo, File)
JOHANNESBURG — When Nombuyiselo Mhlauli was given her husband's body back for burial, he had more than 25 stab wounds in his chest and seven in his back, with a gash across his throat. His right hand was missing.
Sicelo Mhlauli was one of four Black men abducted, tortured and killed 40 years ago this month by apartheid-era security forces in South Africa. No one has been held accountable for their deaths.
But a new judge-led inquiry into the killings of the anti-apartheid activists who became known as the Cradock Four — and who became a rallying cry for those denied justice — opened this month.
It is part of a renewed push for the truth by relatives of some of the thousands of people killed by police and others during the years of white minority rule and enforced racial segregation.
Mhlauli described the state of her husband's body during testimony she gave at the start of the inquiry in the city of Gqeberha, near where the Cradock Four were abducted in June 1985. Relatives of some of the three other men also testified.
Thumani Calata never got to know her father, Fort Calata, who had been a teacher. She was born two weeks after the funerals of the Cradock Four, which drew huge crowds and galvanized resistance to apartheid.
'I don't know how it feels, and I will never know how it feels, to be hugged by my dad,' Thumani Calata, now 39, told the inquiry as she wept.
Two previous inquiries were held during apartheid. A two-year inquest that started in 1987 found the men were killed by unknown people. Another in 1993 said they were killed by unnamed policemen.
Desmond Tutu
FILE - in this April, 20, 2006 file photo former Truth And Reconciliation Commissioner Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu, during a public debate on the legacy of the TRC. in Cape Town, South Africa. Tutu has questioned Thursday, Feb. 11, 2016, why it took so long for South African prosecutors to charge former members of the apartheid-era security forces for the 1983 murder of an activist. (AP Photo/Obed Zilwa, File)
(Obed Zilwa/The Associated Press)
Police officers implicated have since died
Relatives of the Cradock Four likely will never see justice. The six former police officers directly implicated in the abductions and killings have died, the last one in 2023. None was prosecuted despite the post-apartheid Truth and Reconciliation Commission identifying them and denying them amnesty in the late 1990s.
That commission, set up by then-President Nelson Mandela, attempted to confront the atrocities of apartheid in the years after the system officially ended in 1994. While some killers were granted amnesty, more than 5,000 applications were refused and recommended for criminal investigation.
Hardly any made it to court.
Oscar van Heerden, a political analyst at the University of Johannesburg, said the bitter emotion of relatives at the Cradock Four inquiry showed wounds have not healed.
'Where it was felt that truth was not spoken and there wasn't sufficient evidence to warrant forgiveness, those were cases that were supposed to be formally charged, prosecuted and justice should have prevailed,' van Heerden said. 'None of that happened.'
South Africa-Apartheid Killings
FILE - National Party leader and former South African president F.W. deKlerk, left, talks to his associate, Leon Wessel, after handing over his party's submission to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission to the commission's chairman Archbishop Desmond Tutu in Cape Town, Aug. 21 1996. (AP Photo /Sasa Kralj, File)
(SASA KRALJ/AP)
Taking the government to court
The failure by post-apartheid governments for 25 years to pursue cases is now being scrutinized. Frustrated, the families of the Cradock Four finally forced authorities to rule last year that there would be a new inquiry into the killings.
They also joined with a group of relatives of other apartheid-era victims to take the South African government to court this year over the failure to investigate so many crimes.
As part of the settlement in that case, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa ordered a national inquiry led by a retired judge into why apartheid-era killers were not brought to justice. The inquiry, which has not opened yet, threatens to expose further uncomfortable moments for South Africa.
While the majority of victims of political violence during apartheid were Black and other people of color, some were white, and families have come together across racial lines. A group of survivors and relatives from the 1993 Highgate Hotel massacre, where unknown men opened fire in a bar full of white customers, joined with the Cradock Four families and others in the case against the government.
They allege that post-apartheid authorities deliberately blocked investigations.
Other inquests have been reopened, including one into the 1967 death of Albert Luthuli, who was president of the banned anti-apartheid African National Congress movement when he was hit by a train. Luthuli's death has been viewed with suspicion for more than 50 years.
Last chance to know the truth
At the Cradock Four inquiry, which is expected to resume in October for more testimony, Howard Varney, a lawyer for the families, said this is their last chance to know the truth.
The new inquiry has attempted to retrace the killings, from the moment of the men's abduction at a nighttime police roadblock to the time their bodies were discovered, burned and with signs of torture. The families also want a former military commander and ex-police officers who may have knowledge of the killings to testify.
Lukhanyo Calata, the son of Fort Calata, said he accepted it was unlikely anyone would ever be prosecuted over the death of his father and his friends Mhlauli, Matthew Goniwe and Sparrow Mkonto. But he said he wants official records to finally show who killed them.
'Justice now can really only come in the form of truth,' Lukhanyo Calata told The Associated Press. 'They may not have been prosecuted, they may not have been convicted, but according to court records, this is the truth around the murders of the Cradock Four.'
Article by Michelle Gumede.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
22 minutes ago
- CTV News
Dutchie's fined for employment violations
Dutchie's Fresh Market and its business director Michael Renkema have been sentenced after pleading guilty to wage theft. CTV's Heather Senoran reports.


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
Killer gets life sentence, no parole for 12 years for 2022 homicide in Mission, B.C.
A home in Mission was behind police tape on Dec. 14, 2022, and homicide investigators were called to the scene. (CTV News) A Chilliwack man has been sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 12 years for murdering a 64-year-old man in his home in Mission in 2022. Matthew Bauer received his sentence Thursday, according to a news release from the Lower Mainland's Integrated Homicide Investigation Team. A jury convicted Bauer in February of the second-degree murder of Mission resident Holbert Tew. The killing happened on Dec. 14, 2022, at Tew's home on 4th Avenue near Mary Street in Mission. Around 7 a.m. that day, local Mounties were called to the home for a report of a stabbing. They arrived to find Tew suffering from stab wounds. He died at the scene. IHIT took over the investigation and identified Bauer as a suspect. The then-27-year-old was arrested on Jan. 6, 2023, and a second-degree murder charge was approved the following day. Bauer has been in custody ever since. At the time of the arrest, police said they believed the killing was targeted, though the motive was unknown. From IHIT spokesperson Sgt. Freda Fong's comment in Friday's release, it seems years of investigation and the trial have not answered the motive question. 'This was a senseless and unprovoked attack that resulted in the loss of Mr. Tew, an innocent man,' said Fong, in the statement. 'With the support of the community, IHIT and our policing partners worked expeditiously and diligently to identify the suspect and forward charges. Our thoughts are with Mr. Tew's family and friends as the court proceedings come to an end.'

CBC
3 hours ago
- CBC
Crown ordered to pay accused sex offender's $190 taxi fare due to N.S. courthouse closure
A Nova Scotia judge is ordering the provincial Crown to cover a $190 round-trip taxi fare for an accused sex offender whose hometown courthouse in Windsor, N.S., is being closed, forcing his trial to be heard at a justice centre a 40-kilometre drive away. The Department of Justice announced last month it will be closing the Hants County courthouse at the beginning of July, a facility with a number of problems including issues with the cells and no elevator to the second-floor courtroom, a barrier for people who can't climb stairs. But in a ruling Friday, Judge Angela Caseley noted there is no public transit from Windsor to the justice centre in Kentville, and that Jeffrey Mitchell Wile, 35, doesn't have the money to get there, or friends or family who can drive him. It means that Wile, who has pleaded not guilty to sexual interference and is on social assistance, will not be able to make it to Kentville to attend his September trial. The defence argued that if he misses that date, the judge said, he will likely be arrested on a warrant. Even if he's released, he will miss future court dates, face arrest again and could be held in custody pending trial. Moving the trial to Kentville, Caseley said, is "solely and directly" the result of the government's decision to close the Windsor courthouse. If Wile is eventually acquitted, she said the defence argued "he will effectively spend time incarcerated simply because he's poor." Wile is represented by legal aid lawyer Jonathan Hughes. Caseley said that for 251 years, people living in Hants County — where Windsor is located and which now has a population of 45,000 people — have been able to access justice "in their community." She remarked on Nova Scotia's "esteemed history" contributing to three pillars of Canada's democracy, including the country's first independent court, representative government, and freedom of the press. Prosecutor Nathan MacLean opposed the defence application for taxi fare on legal grounds, but agreed to the facts surrounding Wile's difficulty getting to Kentville for court. Current courthouse 75 years old The province operates 23 courthouses across Nova Scotia. Nine of them, including in Windsor, are "satellite" courts that only run part time and rely on employees from the larger courthouse in their area. The current Windsor courthouse is in the Hants County Court House building, which was opened in 1950 and is owned by the Municipality of West Hants. The Windsor site often hosts provincial court three days a week. The Nova Scotia Supreme Court also schedules sittings at the courthouse. Department of Justice spokesperson Lynette Macleod said in an email that officials would be reviewing the judge's decision. The email said the Kentville Justice Centre serves both Kings and Hants counties, and is fully accessible, modern and "helping improve access to justice for Nova Scotians in the Valley area." It was necessary to close the Windsor courthouse due to the overall condition of the building, the email said. In particular, the holding cells that housed people in custody who were appearing in court were inspected in January and it was decided they must be closed. There are no plans to open a new courthouse in Windsor.