Difference between revisions of "Magnus Malan"

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(CCB Assassins and Lockerbie)
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Outside South Africa he deployed troops on bloody raids against African National Congress bases in Lesotho, Mozambique, Zambia and Zimbabwe. He also stationed troops in Angola to fight alongside Unita rebels against Cuban troops aligned with the government in Luanda.
 
Outside South Africa he deployed troops on bloody raids against African National Congress bases in Lesotho, Mozambique, Zambia and Zimbabwe. He also stationed troops in Angola to fight alongside Unita rebels against Cuban troops aligned with the government in Luanda.
  
But as President [[F W de Klerk]] began to seek a peaceful resolution of the crisis, Malan’s draconian approach began to seem increasingly out of line. In 1990, he was accused of involvement in paramilitary operations in the eastern province of KwaZulu-Natal amid reports that the apartheid government had made payments from a secret slush fund to the Zulu Inkatha Movement. In 1991 the government was forced to admit that it had indeed contributed to Zulu Inkatha from a 300 million Rand fund.
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But as President [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F._W._de_Klerk F W de Klerk] began to seek a peaceful resolution of the crisis, Malan’s draconian approach began to seem increasingly out of line. In 1990, he was accused of involvement in paramilitary operations in the eastern province of KwaZulu-Natal amid reports that the apartheid government had made payments from a secret slush fund to the Zulu Inkatha Movement. In 1991 the government was forced to admit that it had indeed contributed to Zulu Inkatha from a 300 million Rand fund.
  
 
De Klerk was angered by the way the scandal had been mishandled by Malan and, to appease the ANC’s leader [[Nelson Mandela]], in early 1991 he demoted Malan from the ministry of defence to the forestry ministry, effectively bringing an end to his political career.<ref>"State security in South Africa: civil-military relations under P W Botha", publisher M E Sharpe Inc, ISBN 0-87332-877-9</ref><ref>[http://www.sahistory.org.za/pages/chronology/general/1990s.html Chronology 1990-1999], South African History Online, accessed 3 December 2007</ref>
 
De Klerk was angered by the way the scandal had been mishandled by Malan and, to appease the ANC’s leader [[Nelson Mandela]], in early 1991 he demoted Malan from the ministry of defence to the forestry ministry, effectively bringing an end to his political career.<ref>"State security in South Africa: civil-military relations under P W Botha", publisher M E Sharpe Inc, ISBN 0-87332-877-9</ref><ref>[http://www.sahistory.org.za/pages/chronology/general/1990s.html Chronology 1990-1999], South African History Online, accessed 3 December 2007</ref>
  
===Assassinations by the CCB===
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===CCB Assassins and Lockerbie===
By the time [[F W de Klerk]] was sworn in as president in September 1989, the clouds were already gathering around Magnus Malan. In early 1990 a police investigation was ordered into the suspected involvement of the Defence Force’s shadowy [[Civil Cooperation Bureau]], known as the [[CCB]], which operated under his authority, in the assassination of two prominent anti-apartheid activists, [[David Webster]] and [[Anton Lubowski]], the previous year. Malan ignored calls for his resignation and issued a categorical denial that he had ordered [[CCB]] members to commit murder.
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In a 2011 article entitled "Lockerbie: Ayatollah's Vengeance Exacted by Botha's Regime", former diplomat [[Patrick Haseldine]] alleged that operatives of the apartheid regime's [[Civil Cooperation Bureau]] cut the padlock on security door CP2 at Heathrow airport, leading to the Pan Am baggage area, and planted the suitcase bomb which sabotaged ''[[Clipper Maid of the Seas]]'' over [[Lockerbie Bombing|Lockerbie]] on 21 December 1988.<ref>[http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=1770061725559&l=78adbc28db "Lockerbie: Ayatollah's Vengeance Exacted by Botha's Regime"]</ref>
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 +
South African president [[P W Botha]] was forced to stand down in February 1989, and by the time his successor [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F._W._de_Klerk F W de Klerk] was sworn in in September 1989, the clouds were already gathering around Magnus Malan. In early 1990 a police investigation was ordered into the suspected involvement of the Defence Force’s shadowy [[CCB]], which operated under his authority, in the assassination of two prominent anti-apartheid activists, [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Webster_(anthropologist) David Webster] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anton_Lubowski Anton Lubowski], the previous year. Malan ignored calls for his resignation and issued a categorical denial that he had ordered [[CCB]] members to commit murder.
  
 
But in November 1990 an official government commission of inquiry found that the (now disbanded) [[CCB]] had assumed powers to try, sentence and punish people without disclosing the charges against them. The [[CCB]], the commission declared, had contaminated the entire security system in South Africa by hiring murderers and people 'with personality defects'. These conclusions were followed by a report by the Auditor-General into the finances of the [[CCB]] which disclosed that Malan’s department had spent millions of Rand in unauthorised payments to 'hit squads'.
 
But in November 1990 an official government commission of inquiry found that the (now disbanded) [[CCB]] had assumed powers to try, sentence and punish people without disclosing the charges against them. The [[CCB]], the commission declared, had contaminated the entire security system in South Africa by hiring murderers and people 'with personality defects'. These conclusions were followed by a report by the Auditor-General into the finances of the [[CCB]] which disclosed that Malan’s department had spent millions of Rand in unauthorised payments to 'hit squads'.
  
Magnus Malan fought off demands for his resignation, saying he could not be held responsible for possible offences committed by members of [[CCB]]. But the revelation of the 'secret slush fund' sealed his fate. [[F W de Klerk]] removed Malan from his post and in 1993 Malan retired from politics. The following year [[Nelson Mandela]] became the President of a fully democratic South Africa.<ref>[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/8648347/General-Magnus-Malan.html "General Magnus Malan"]</ref>
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Magnus Malan fought off demands for his resignation, saying he could not be held responsible for possible offences committed by members of [[CCB]]. But the revelation of the 'secret slush fund' sealed his fate. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F._W._de_Klerk F W de Klerk] removed Malan from his post and in 1993 Malan retired from politics. The following year [[Nelson Mandela]] became the President of a fully democratic South Africa.<ref>[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/8648347/General-Magnus-Malan.html "General Magnus Malan"]</ref>
  
 
==After politics==
 
==After politics==

Revision as of 17:13, 29 October 2013

General Magnus Malan, apartheid South Africa's Defence Minister

General Magnus André De Merindol Malan (30 January 1930 – 18 July 2011[1]) was the Minister of Defence in the cabinet of President P W Botha, Chief of the South African Defence Force (SADF) and Chief of the South African Army.

Magnus Malan founded the Civil Cooperation Bureau (CCB) which targeted and killed anti-apartheid activists. He and Pik Botha were in South Africa's delegation which traveled on the morning flight Pan Am 101 from Heathrow to JFK, New York on 21 December 1988 for the following day's signing ceremony of the Namibian Independence Agreement.


Personal life

Malan's father was a professor of biochemistry at the University of Pretoria and later a Member of Parliament (1948–1966) and Deputy Speaker and Chairman of Committees (1961–1966) of the House of Assembly. Magnus Malan started his high school education at the Afrikaanse Hoër Seunskool but later moved to Dr Danie Craven’s Physical Education Brigade in Kimberley, where he completed his matriculation. He wanted to join the South African armed forces immediately after his matric, but his father advised him first to complete his university studies. As a result of this advice, Malan enrolled at the University of Stellenbosch in 1949 to study for a Bachelor of Commerce degree. However, he later abandoned his studies in Stellenbosch and went to University of Pretoria, where he enrolled for a BSc Mil. degree. He graduated in 1953.

In 1962 Malan married Magrietha Johanna van der Walt; the couple had two sons and one daughter.

Military career

At the end of 1949, the first military degree course for officers was advertised and Magnus Malan joined the Permanent Force as a cadet, going on to complete his BSc Mil at the University of Pretoria in 1953. He was commissioned in the Navy and served in the Marines based on Robben Island. When they were disbanded, he was transferred back into the Army as a lieutenant.[2]

Magnus Malan was earmarked for high office from early on in his military career; one of the many courses he attended was the Regular Command and General Staff Officers Course in the United States of America from 1962 to 1963. He went on to serve as commanding officer of various entities, including South-West Africa Command, the South African Military Academy and Western Province Command.

In 1973 he was appointed as Chief of the South African Army and three years later as Chief of the South African Defence Force (SADF). As Chief of the SADF he implemented many administrative changes that earned him great respect in military circles. During this period he became very close to P W Botha, the then Minister of Defence and later Prime Minister.

Political career

In October 1980, P W Botha appointed Magnus Malan Defence Minister in the National Party government, a post he held until 1991. As a result of this appointment he joined the National Party and became Member of Parliament for Modderfontein. He was also elected to be a member of the Executive Council of the National Party.[3]

Total Onslaught

As chief of the South African Defence Force from 1976, and Minister of Defence from 1980 until 1991, Malan pursued a strategy of intervening in neighbouring states which supported the overthrow of apartheid. Inspired by the ideas of the French military strategist General André Beufre, he viewed domestic and foreign threats to white rule in South Africa as a "total onslaught" that could only be answered with a "total solution".

During the 1980s Malan and his forces were given free rein to repress anti-government riots in South Africa’s black townships, leading to frequent violence and loss of life and the declaration, in 1986, of a state of emergency. Political rights, Malan claimed, were not a relevant concern among the black masses.

Outside South Africa he deployed troops on bloody raids against African National Congress bases in Lesotho, Mozambique, Zambia and Zimbabwe. He also stationed troops in Angola to fight alongside Unita rebels against Cuban troops aligned with the government in Luanda.

But as President F W de Klerk began to seek a peaceful resolution of the crisis, Malan’s draconian approach began to seem increasingly out of line. In 1990, he was accused of involvement in paramilitary operations in the eastern province of KwaZulu-Natal amid reports that the apartheid government had made payments from a secret slush fund to the Zulu Inkatha Movement. In 1991 the government was forced to admit that it had indeed contributed to Zulu Inkatha from a 300 million Rand fund.

De Klerk was angered by the way the scandal had been mishandled by Malan and, to appease the ANC’s leader Nelson Mandela, in early 1991 he demoted Malan from the ministry of defence to the forestry ministry, effectively bringing an end to his political career.[4][5]

CCB Assassins and Lockerbie

In a 2011 article entitled "Lockerbie: Ayatollah's Vengeance Exacted by Botha's Regime", former diplomat Patrick Haseldine alleged that operatives of the apartheid regime's Civil Cooperation Bureau cut the padlock on security door CP2 at Heathrow airport, leading to the Pan Am baggage area, and planted the suitcase bomb which sabotaged Clipper Maid of the Seas over Lockerbie on 21 December 1988.[6]

South African president P W Botha was forced to stand down in February 1989, and by the time his successor F W de Klerk was sworn in in September 1989, the clouds were already gathering around Magnus Malan. In early 1990 a police investigation was ordered into the suspected involvement of the Defence Force’s shadowy CCB, which operated under his authority, in the assassination of two prominent anti-apartheid activists, David Webster and Anton Lubowski, the previous year. Malan ignored calls for his resignation and issued a categorical denial that he had ordered CCB members to commit murder.

But in November 1990 an official government commission of inquiry found that the (now disbanded) CCB had assumed powers to try, sentence and punish people without disclosing the charges against them. The CCB, the commission declared, had contaminated the entire security system in South Africa by hiring murderers and people 'with personality defects'. These conclusions were followed by a report by the Auditor-General into the finances of the CCB which disclosed that Malan’s department had spent millions of Rand in unauthorised payments to 'hit squads'.

Magnus Malan fought off demands for his resignation, saying he could not be held responsible for possible offences committed by members of CCB. But the revelation of the 'secret slush fund' sealed his fate. F W de Klerk removed Malan from his post and in 1993 Malan retired from politics. The following year Nelson Mandela became the President of a fully democratic South Africa.[7]

After politics

On 2 November 1995 Magnus Malan was charged together with other former senior military officers for murdering 13 people (including seven children) in the KwaMakhutha massacre in 1987. The murders were said to have been part of a conspiracy to create war between the African National Congress (ANC) and the Zulu Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP), and maintaining white minority rule. The charges related to an attack in January 1987 on the home of Victor Ntuli, an ANC activist, in KwaMakhutha township near Durban in KwaZulu-Natal. Malan and the other accused were bailed and ordered to appear in court again on 1 December 1995. A seven-month trial then ensued and brought hostility between black and white South Africans to the fore once again. All the accused were eventually acquitted. President Mandela supported the verdict and called on South Africans to respect it.[8] Nonetheless in South Africa, the Malan trial has come to be widely seen symbol of failure of the legal process in achieving justice for the atrocities committed under apartheid.[9][10][11][12][13][14][15]

Magnus Malan also had to appear before the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

Awards and decorations

Malan was awarded the following military decorations:

  • Star of South Africa (1975)
  • Southern Cross Decoration (1977)
  • Pro Patria Medal with Cunene Clasp (1977)

Death

General Magnus Malan died peacefully at home on Monday 18 July 2011. He is survived by his wife, 3 children and 9 grandchildren.[16][17]

See also

References

  1. "Magnus Malan, Apartheid Defender, Dies at 81"
  2. "Magnus Malan's career"
  3. "Magnus Andre De Merindol Malan", South African History Online, accessed 3 December 2007
  4. "State security in South Africa: civil-military relations under P W Botha", publisher M E Sharpe Inc, ISBN 0-87332-877-9
  5. Chronology 1990-1999, South African History Online, accessed 3 December 2007
  6. "Lockerbie: Ayatollah's Vengeance Exacted by Botha's Regime"
  7. "General Magnus Malan"
  8. 1995: Ex-minister charged with apartheid murders, BBC News, accessed 3 November 2006
  9. 10 S. Afr. J. Crim. Just. 141 (1997) Failing to Pierce the Hit Squad Veil: An Analysis of the Malan Trial; Varney, Howard; Sarkin, Jeremy
  10. 1989 Acta Juridica 165 (1989) Sub-Contracting the Dirty Work; Plasket, Clive
  11. Herbert M. Howe (1994). The South African Defence Force and Political Reform. The Journal of Modern African Studies, 32
  12. 16 S. Afr. J. on Hum. Rts. 415 (2000) After the Dry White Season: The Dilemmas of Reparation and Reconstruction in South Africa; Jenkins, Catherine
  13. The "New" South Africa: Violence Works Bill Berkeley World Policy Journal , Vol. 13, No. 4 (Winter, 1996/1997), pp. 73-80
  14. 117 S. African L.J. 572 (2000) Second Bite at the Amnesty Cherry - Constitutional and Policy Issues around Legislation for a Second Amnesty, A; Klaaren, Jonathan; Varney, Howard
  15. Shattered voices: language, violence, and the work of truth commissions Teresa Godwin Phelps. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004 p. 64
  16. "Magnus Malan dies"
  17. "Magnus Malan dies 'peacefully' at 81"

External links


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