As hierdie berig in die City Press waar is moet Derby Lewis nie net onmiddellik vrygelaat en vergoed word nie maar elkeen wat daarby betrokke was behoort self elk vir twintig jaar toegesluit te word. Hoewel daar géén vergoeding is wat vir twintig verlore jare kan vergoed nie, sal sy onmiddellike vryheid om met sy gesin sonder ekonomiese knelling sy laaste jare te kan deurbring, ,’n welkome uitkoms wees.
Indien dit waar is dat Derby Lewis geoffer was om die Britse wapenindustrie te beskerm, is dit net ‘n beklemtoning dat die Britte se veragtelike ingesteldheid om mense en selfs volkere en nasies te offer om hulle doel te bereik, sedert hulle verskroeide aarde beleid tydens die Anglo Boereoorlog nie ‘n jota of tittel verander het nie en ook nie hulle onderduimsheid om die blaam op ander dan hulleself te plaas nie. Die Engelse volk sal in die oë van die Afrikanervolk dieselfde status as die barbare van Afrika hê, veral in die lig dat hulle tot nou toe weier om verskoning aan te bied vir die wandade waarvoor hulle teen ons volk verantwoordelik is, saamgelees met betrokkenheid by die omstrede wapenskandaal ten koste van mense se lewens in ruil vir geld.
‘CHRIS HANI WAS KILLED BEFORE HE COULD EXPOSE JOE MODISE’
#ArmsDeal 8 October 2014 14:24
Joe Modise. Picture: Joyrene Kramer
Leader of the South African Communist Party Chris Hani was murdered before he could expose the role that former defence minister Joe Modise played in the arms deal. And Modise didn’t die of cancer; he was poisoned, the Seriti Commission of Inquiry has heard.
Arms deal critic Terry Crawford-Browne told the inquiry that this information was relayed to him by Bheki Jacobs, an African National Congress functionary who was trained in the Soviet Union as an intelligence operative
“I was told by Bheki Jacobs six weeks before Mr Modise died [in 2001] that he was being poisoned, and that his death would be ascribed to cancer,” Crawford-Browne told the inquiry’s hearings in Pretoria today.
“Mr Modise was known to have many enemies and it is also known there was considerable animosity between him and Mr Chris Hani dating from their times in exile.”
Jacobs, also known as Uranin Vladimir, Hassan Solomon and Hassan Osman, died at his mother’s home in 2008 after a six-month battle with cancer.
In 2003, Jacobs was arrested, and later exonerated, for allegedly plotting an assassination. The charge of conspiring to commit murder was watered down and finally dropped.
At the time, Jacobs reportedly believed his one-time comrade and later nemesis, Moe Shaik, to be behind his surprise arrest. They had both been involved in the ANC’s intelligence structures in the early 1980s.
Crawford-Browne testified that there were allegations that when Hani was assassinated by Janusz Waluś in 1993, he was on the verge of exposing Modise’s involvement in, and corruption relating to, the arms deal.
“It has been alleged that Mr Janusz Waluś was ultimately employed by the [British arms manufacturer] BAE, perhaps by way of John Bredenkamp, the Rhodesian/Zimbabwean who was the second-largest recipient of those BAE bribes,” he told the inquiry.
He said blaming Clive Derby-Lewis for Hani’s murder was merely a red herring to blame white right-wing elements, diverting attention from the British arms industry.
Derby-Lewis was convicted of conspiring to kill the South African Communist Party general secretary by providing the gun Polish immigrant Waluś used to kill him in the driveway of his home in Boksburg, on the East Rand, on April 10, 1993.
The 78-year-old former Conservative Party MP, who was sentenced to 25 years behind bars, has served more than 20 years of his sentence.
Derby-Lewis was initially sentenced to death, which was commuted to life imprisonment when the death penalty was abolished in 1995. He has been repeatedly denied parole.
Today, Crawford-Browne said Jacobs told him that an investigating team’s report into the arms deal was doctored pending Modise’s death “so that dead men can tell no tales”.
“I have now consequently reported the allegations of poisoning to the deputy commissioner of police in the Western Cape, but no action was taken,” he said.
The commission was appointed by President Jacob Zuma three years ago to investigate alleged corruption in the arms procurement deal.
The government acquired, among other hardware, 26 Gripen fighter aircraft and 24 Hawk lead-in fighter trainer aircraft for the air force, and frigates and submarines for the navy
