A new Hani murder investigation could be a political bombshell

WALUS DEPORTATION

A new Hani murder investigation could be a political bombshell

It's one of the most infamous unsolved assassinations, alongside those of John F. Kennedy, Robert Smit, Tupac Shakur and Senzo Meyiwa: Who really killed Chris Hani? The man who pulled the trigger, Janusz Walus, was deported this week, but the pressure is mounting for a fresh investigation. MAX DU PREEZ tries to make sense of all the questions and theories.

ANGELA TUCK
ANGELA TUCK

Saturday, April 10, 1993. Dawn Park, Boksburg.

CHRIS HANI, hero of Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK) and the South African Communist Party, had just returned from his local café with a newspaper and a plastic bag filled with groceries. As he got out of his car in the driveway of his home, a blonde man approached, pointed his gun at him, and shot him four times. Hani died instantly, on the scene.


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The Polish-born Janusz Walus was arrested shortly afterwards, along with his friend and political mentor, Clive Derby-Lewis, a member of parliament from the Conservative Party. Both were later found guilty of the murder and sent to prison.

Janusz Walus
Janusz Walus

Their defence, which they expanded upon during an amnesty application before the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), was simple: Hani was a communist; the assassination was an act of resistance against the communist ANC takeover; the murder was meant to derail the settlement process and mobilise white right-wingers.

Clive Derby-Lewis
Clive Derby-Lewis

Derby-Lewis until his death at the age of 80 in 2016 and Walus until his deportation this week both maintained that this was the whole story and that only the two of them were involved in the murder.

This is the weak point in all the theories, and the only possible explanation offered for their consistent mea culpas, a rather flimsy one, is that the two men were afraid that their superiors would kill them if they told the truth.

No smoking gun

Theoretically, it certainly is possible that the two men wanted to remain loyal to their masters or organisations to the end. Or could it be that Walus and Derby-Lewis themselves didn’t realise they were being used as pawns?

Hani's wife and daughters, along with his comrades in the ANC and SACP, have maintained from day one that there was a wider conspiracy.

Hundreds of articles and several books have been written about it. And yet, no one has ever been able to produce a smoking gun that could prove any of the many theories. Yet with Walus's departure back to Poland, Hani's widow, Limpho, the SACP, ANC, MK and EFF still lamented that he had “escaped with his secrets".

What all the research and revelations over the past 30 years have achieved is the nagging suspicion that the full truth has not been told, and many troubling questions could cause significant damage to political reputations.

As expected, fingers are pointed at operatives of the old National Party government, which was still in power at the time, and at the ANC itself, where Hani had many enemies. Particularly the former MK commander and later defence minister, Joe Modise, as well as former presidents Thabo Mbeki and Jacob Zuma, all of whom had previously clashed with Hani, are implicated.

The gossip within the SACP over the years was that Mbeki was afraid of Hani’s popularity in the ANC and wanted to prevent Hani from standing in his way of one day becoming president.

Joint project

Then there is a theory that cannot be dismissed outright: That it was a joint project between certain ANC leaders and the old security forces, with Walus merely serving as the foot soldier.

The first question remains: Why did one of the best-protected political leaders in South Africa not have a single bodyguard on that Saturday morning with him?

A popular theory is that Hani was somewhat of a womaniser and that he personally let his bodyguards off duty that weekend because he was entertaining a woman. But all information suggests that only Hani’s daughter Khwezi was with him that morning.

Hani's close friend and confidante, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, claimed at the time that the ANC's security department had withdrawn the bodyguards precisely to enable the assassination.

The second question is whether the several eyewitnesses who claimed that a second car, a white one, had sped away from the scene next to Walus's red Mazda, are telling the truth, lying, or had been mistaken. Limpho has always been convinced that Walus was not alone at the scene. She and others believe that the police suppressed the issue of the second car in their investigation to cover up the truth.

The American Executive Intelligence Review stated as a fact in May 1993 that there was a second car, but references to it in the police reports were erased within days. (The EIR speculated that British intelligence had a hand in the murder.)



What would the motive be?

But what would the motive for the murder be if it weren’t as simple as Walus and Derby-Lewis said?

Two recent books on the Hani assassination - former judge Chris Nicholson's Who Really Killed Chris Hani? (2024) and Dutch/South African journalist Evelyn Groenink’s Incorruptible: The Story of the Murders of Dulcie September, Anton Lubowski and Chris Hani (2018) - contain a deluge of information, wild claims and untested conclusions.

A popular theory is that Hani threatened to derail the big arms deal finalised in 1999 but which was already planned before then. Here particularly Modise, who was close to Mbeki, is implicated. Modise and his friends and partners received large sums of bribe money. Mbeki, as deputy president, chaired the cabinet committee overseeing the arms purchases.

Groenink claims in her book that Walus's then employer, Peter Jackson, to whom the red Mazda belonged, had ties to Osprey, agents of British Aerospace. BAE Systems allegedly paid large sums of money in bribes to secure the aircraft contract.

Nicholson writes, based on various news reports over the years, that a senior national intelligence official and former MK officer, Mheli Madaka, claimed in a confidential report that Mbeki received R30 million in bribe money from Ferrostaal for the purchase of submarines, which was allegedly brought into the country in cash by the presidential jet. Madaka died in a car accident in 2007, and it was found that the car's brakes had been tampered with.

Nicholson cites a 2001 book by former security policeman J.G. Scholte, High Treason – An Intelligence Report on South Africa, which states that the then head of the ANC's security and Mbeki's confidant, Tito Maleka, ordered that Hani be killed.

A former policeman who later worked as an agent for military and national intelligence, Eugene Riley, apparently is the source. He claimed in memos to his handlers in military intelligence just before Hani’s death that one of his sources, who also worked for ANC intelligence, a certain Ramon (also known as Mohammed Amin Laher, Mark Todd, Joseph Khan and Mark Laher), predicted the assassination plans for April 10.

Ramon claimed that the ANC's department of intelligence and security (DIS), which was under Zuma's command, intended the attack on Hani as a way to disrupt the Codesa negotiations and heal the “rift between MK and the SACP”.

Polish member of strike unit

According to Riley's memo, dated the day before the assassination, DIS ordered that Hani's bodyguards be withdrawn on April 10. Riley writes that Ramon told him there was a Polish member of DIS's “strike unit" who would be used as the driver during the assassination attack.

Veteran journalist Hazel Friedman wrote on January 13, 1997, in the Mail & Guardian that she had an interview with Riley a few days before the Hani murder, during which he told her there would be an attempt on his life.

Riley's partner, Julie Wilken, testified in an affidavit she had typed up the Riley memos – she even passed a lie detector test about it. She knew Ramon and said he threatened her that she should never speak about the ANC’s involvement in the assassination plans.

Riley was shot dead in January 1994 at his home, according to journalist Chris Steyn, by some of his old CCB associates. Wilken was in official witness protection for eight years.

According to the Sunday Times of London, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela claimed a week after Hani's death that ANC leaders had conspired with the apartheid government to eliminate him. She allegedly said that ANC people provided details of Hani’s movements and when he would be without bodyguards to agents of the old government, who then passed this on to Walus.

If the Riley memos are indeed authentic, and the murder plans were passed on to military intelligence in advance, the question arises as to why MI did nothing to warn or protect Hani.

Shadowy front organisation

This brings us to one of Nicholson’s favourite theories. He writes extensively about the shadowy front organisation, the South African Institute of Maritime Research (SAIMR). When an investigator from the TRC, Christelle Terreblanche (also a former editorial member of Vrye Weekblad), received the national intelligence file on the Hani murder, there was nothing about Hani in it, but there were documents about SAIMR that was also involved in the alleged murder of former UN secretary-general Dag Hammarskjöld. SAIMR is also linked to the failed coup in the Seychelles in 1981. Read more about SAIMR here.

According to testimony before the TRC during Walus and Derby-Lewis's amnesty application, Walus had at one point applied to become a mercenary with SAIMR.

Nicholson writes: “General Tienie Groenewald is central to the whole saga. Not only was he Chief Director of Military Intelligence, which was behind virtually everything in the Hani murder, but he also headed SAIMR.” He writes that SAIMR had ties to 49 right-wing nationalist organisations in the West and intelligence communities around the world.

Groenewald was, along with generals Constand Viljoen and Kobus Visser, a member of the “committee of generals" and leader of the Afrikaner Volksfront, which was formed shortly after Hani's assassination to halt the Codesa negotiations and mobilize forces nationwide. He died in 2015.

Can the ANC afford a truly in-depth, independent investigation into Hani's assassination?

VWB


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