The assassination of Chris Hani

April 10 2008 

By Janet Smith and Beauregard Tromp

Fifteen years ago today (Thursday), South African Communist Party 
secretary-general Chris Hani was assassinated outside his Boksburg home. Janet 
Smith and Beauregard Tromp recall the events of that day.

On February 6, 1993, SAA flight 232 took off from Johannesburg en route to 
London. On board were South African Communist Party secretary-general Chris 
Hani and a man who would later be intimately connected with his killing - 
right-wing journalist Arthur Kemp.

Hani was on his way to Cuba. Kemp, who worked for The Citizen, was already 
close to another reactionary zealot, Gaye Derby-Lewis, who worked for the white 
supremacist mouthpiece Die Patriot.

It is unlikely Hani would have known or even noticed Kemp, but Kemp would 
certainly have spotted Hani.

Around that time, he had drawn up a list of 19 names and addresses, including 
those of Nelson Mandela, Mac Maharaj, Steve Tshwete and Hani.

The list had been reshuffled and redrawn over time in order of priority.

The former chief-of-staff of the ANC's armed wing, uMkonto weSizwe, was at No 3.

Derby-Lewis's husband was Conservative Party MP Clive Derby-Lewis, whose party 
regarded President FW de Klerk's decision to pursue negotiations with the ANC 
as nothing less than a cynical diktat.

After all, in the late 1980s, the CP had been the official opposition, and 
there was a view that most whites found De Klerk's reformist mood so 
distasteful that the CP could win a future election.

Against this backdrop of furious political disappointment, Clive Derby-Lewis 
had taken possession of the list and discussed it with a right-wing associate, 
Polish immigrant Janusz "Kuba" Walus, a member of the Afrikaner Weerstands 
Beweging (AWB).

Walus, who would later argue with the Derby-Lewis couple over what had been 
agreed at the time of the discussion, had abandoned his communist homeland of 
Poland in 1982, and emigrated to South Africa because he believed apartheid's 
ideological machinery would protect him from what he feared the most.

Derby-Lewis and Walus discussed the possibility of an assault on Hani, and by 
early March 1993 they had decided to kill him.

It had been dubbed the Year of the Great Storm. Disturbed by the slow pace of 
moves towards democracy, the Azanian People's Liberation Army had carried out 
attacks on restaurants, churches, farms and bars, killing mainly whites.

Days were bloodied by extreme violence in the Natal midlands, with even 
children caught up in the ANC and Inkatha Freedom Party's war against each 
other.

Even as it sought to manage the anarchy there, the ANC was still reeling from 
the previous September, when Hani and his former MK comrade Ronnie Kasrils had 
led a protest in Bisho, Ciskei, against the continuing oppression of the 
homeland government.

Thirty people had been killed and 200 wounded.

Hani's face and voice were everywhere as he embarked on an exhausting journey 
through townships and villages, city halls and TV studios, talking peace, 
accelerating the cause of freedom.

The ANC had laid down its guns upon its unbanning in 1990 and, many times, in 
different ways, he urged: "I can't accept people calling for war."

Later, Tokyo Sexwale, then the chairperson of the ANC's Gauteng region, would 
say it was precisely because Hani had been talking peace that he had become 
"dangerous to this country".

In early March 1993, Clive Derby-Lewis received an unlicensed Z88 and had it 
fitted with a silencer.

The gun, typical of those used by policemen and state security personnel, had 
started its journey at the Voortrekkerhoogte military base when it was stolen 
in a raid on the armoury led by rightwinger Piet "Skiet" Rudolph.

West Rand rightwinger Lionel du Randt was to deliver the weapon, wrapped in a 
jersey, to Derby-Lewis at his house in Krugersdorp. The weapon had been dropped 
off at Du Randt's house by Faan Venter, who had procured it out of the lot 
stolen from the armoury.

Du Randt took the weapon to Derby-Lewis, who organised for a silencer to be 
fitted by Cape Town rightwinger Keith Darroll, who used a sympathetic gunsmith 
in Tokai.

Derby-Lewis gave Walus the gun on April 6 over breakfast, although it still 
required ammunition. The former MP would insist their arrangement was still 
loose at this time, with no date fixed for the hit.

But on the morning of April 10, Walus set out in his red Ford Laser from his 
flat in the shadow of the Union Buildings in Pretoria.

He bought ammunition in Johannesburg then eased on to a road he had taken many 
times on reconnaissance - Hakea Crescent in Dawn Park, Boksburg.

He would later say it was to do a final look around the Hani home, situated on 
a gentle curve, with a secluded driveway.

Pulling up outside the house, Walus encountered Hani leaving home alone, so he 
followed him the few blocks to the local superette, where Hani bought a 
newspaper.

"At that moment, I decided it would be the best opportunity to execute my task 
and that this opportunity would never be repeated," he would later testify.

"I decided not to do it in the shopping centre because there were a lot of 
people."

Walus took a different route back to Hakea Crescent, arriving just as Hani 
pulled up in his Toyota sedan.

Donning his gloves, and armed, Walus was ready. He pulled up in his car 
directly behind Hani's in the driveway.

"I put the pistol in the belt of my trousers behind my back," Walus later 
confessed.

"Seeing Mr Hani move away from the car, I did not want to shoot him in the 
back. I called to Mr Hani. When he turned I fired the first shot into his body. 
As he turned and fell down, I fired a second shot at his head."

In the doorway was Hani's 15-year-old daughter Nomakhwezi. Having heard her 
father pull up into the driveway, she was opening the front door to greet him 
when the gunshots rang out.

"What child should witness such a barbaric crime?" she demanded in a private 
piece which was only read out at her own funeral by her sister Lindiwe, after 
her death following an asthma attack in 2001.

Noxolo Grootboom, an SABC journalist and neighbour, was in her kitchen and saw 
the distraught girl. By the time Grootboom had rushed out of her house and 
grabbed hold of Nomakhwezi, the red Ford Laser had disappeared around the curve 
of the crescent.

Retha Harmse - another neighbour - had seen it.

At that moment, Harmse had no real sense of exactly what had happened, but her 
instinct was to call the police straight away.

The information she gave them - the numberplate and description of the car - 
led to an almost immediate arrest.

Walus, thinking he had made a clean escape, was driving towards the Boksburg 
city centre when police squad cars pulled up behind him and began to box him 
in, gesturing for him to pull over.

Even at that stage, he would testify, he thought this was a routine event, so 
certain was he no one had seen him.

But the police ordered him out of the vehicle. In searching it, they found the 
murder weapon in its box with all the accoutrements of the killing neatly 
placed around it.

Walus admitted at his murder trial: "I knew then that my time was counted."

In his address to the nation that night, then-ANC president Nelson Mandela made 
special mention of the "white Afrikaner woman" whose swift actions would 
eventually bring Hani's killers to justice.

Many believe that had the police not got this crucial information timeously, 
the killers would never have been caught.

With South Africa very much in the international news at the time, the killing 
resounded throughout the world, always with the echo of the terrible grief 
expressed by Sexwale, one of the first people to arrive at the scene after the 
liberation fighter's slaughter.

"There is a time to cry," he said, standing in the road outside the house.

"I saw Chris Hani dead in the driveway next to his car, his body lay."

Not long afterwards, ANC chairperson Oliver Tambo arrived. There was absolute 
silence as he stepped out of his vehicle wearing a bright red neckerchief and 
strode down the guard of honour towards the mortuary van to see Hani before his 
body was taken away.

Tambo's wife, Adelaide, could only take a glance before she burst into tears 
and was comforted by Walter Sisulu. MK commander Siphiwe Nyanda glared around 
him.

"Hamba kahle Umkhonto, Umkhonto, Umkhonto we Sizwe." The chant wafted across 
the horrified gathering.

"We heard it," recalls Pebetsi Lerutla, who lived nearby.

"Everybody was running. Everybody was emotional. Everybody was crying.

A few months later, Lerutla found herself back at the house that was now for 
sale, and she bought it. She hasn't changed a thing.

A small hole ripped through the wood near the centre of the double garage door, 
scarcely knee-high, is a reminder of how Hani fell when Walus pumped three more 
shots into his head at close range.

Walus and Derby-Lewis insisted they had hoped the assassination would propel 
whites into rebellion, if not revolution, and that the assassination would so 
destabilise the fragile relationships being established that negotiations would 
shut down and mayhem would rule.

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission refused Walus and Derby-Lewis amnesty 
in 1997, following the commuting of their death sentences to life imprisonment 
in 1994.

Today, songs will be chanted at Hakea Crescent and wreaths will be laid, as has 
happened every year since 1993.

Those who have been at commemorations before say that Hani's widow Limpho will 
probably retreat to a corner of her old garden to smoke and cry quietly behind 
her dark glasses.


 



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