The overarching goal of the trc in south africa is best described as reconciliation.

In 1996, Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu authorized a TRC in South Africa, in which victims and witnesses could publicly testify their experiences under apartheid. Perpetrators could also request amnesty from prosecution in exchange for providing testimony.

Problems and Purpose

Authorized by Nelson Mandela and chaired by Desmond Tutu, the Promotion of National Unity and Reconciliation Act charged the South African TRC with investigating gross human rights violations committed under Apartheid between 1960 - the Sharpville massacre - to 1994 - the inauguration of Nelson Mandela, the first democratically-elected President of the Republic of South Africa. The Report sought to document and reflect the motives and perspectives of the perpetrators and their victims, and, hopefully, achieve justice among the people of South Africa by using a court-like restorative justice body to promote reconciliation and national unity in post-Apartheid South Africa. Its findings consist of information regarding the structural and historical background of the violence, individual cases, regional trends, and the broader institutional and social environment of the apartheid system. Records were systematically destroyed in massive quantities between 1990 and 1994, which was continued by the National Intelligence Agency as late as 1996.

Because of the limited time granted to the Commission, its focus on 1960 to 1994 only covers a fraction of South African history. In a continental context, this period reflects the tail end of the struggle for African decolonization. As such, the Report only tells a small part of a much larger history of human rights violations in South Africa.

Background History and Context

The atrocities committed between 1960 and 1994 must be contextualized within South and southern African history. According to the Report, it is important to consider [1]:

  • The importation of slaves to the Cape and the brutal treatment they endured between 1652 and 1834
  • The many ways or dispossession and colonial conquest from the first war against the Khoisan in 1659, through several so-called frontier conflicts as white settlers penetrated northwards, to the Bambatha uprising of 1906, the last attempt at armed defense by an indigenous grouping
  • The systematic hunting and elimination of indigenous nomadic peoples such as the San and Khoi-Khoi by settler groups, both Boer and British, in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
  • The Difaquane or Mfecane where thousands died and tens of thousands were displaced in a Zulu-inspired process of state formation and dissolution
  • The South African War of 1899-1902 during which British forces herded Boer women and children into concentration camps in which some 20,000 died
  • The genocidal war in the early years of this century was directed by the German colonial administration in South West Africa at the Herero people, which took them to the brink of extinction

The Commission’s focus was, therefore, narrow, as it was restricted to the post-1960 period, during which millions of South Africans were subjected to racial and ethnic oppression and discrimination [2]. Under apartheid, skin colour determined an individual’s civil and political rights. The government segregated every aspect of political, economic, cultural, sporting, and social life [3]. Apartheid, thus, was an ideology that constructed a totalitarian order that served white supremacy through social change. To do this, the government implemented legalized racial discrimination and “constructed a huge internal security apparatus and armed it with awesome legal powers to crush opposition” [4].

Organizing, Supporting, and Funding Entities

Section 46(2) of the Promotion of National Unity and Reconciliation Act provided for the appointment of a chief executive officer who would also act as the chief accounting officer. As the Commission was to remain “independent and separate from any party, government, administration or other functionary or body directly or indirectly representing the interest of any such entity,” there were a number of unusual financial ambiguities in the setting up of the Commission [5].

Many international donor countries expressed an interest in the Commission and offered financial assistance [6]. This includes donations from the Danish Government, the Government of Sweden, the Netherlands Government, the Austrian Government, the Flemish Government, the Human Sciences Research Council, USAID, the Norwegian Embassy, Belgium, and a local donation from Justice in Transition [7].

Participant Recruitment and Selection

The President appointed the commissioners and their names were released to the public on December 15, 1995. They included Archbishop Desmond Tutu as Chairperson, Dr. Alex Boraine as Vice-Chairperson, Yasmin Sooka as Vice-Chairperson, Mary Burton, Adv. Chris de Jager, Rev. Bongani Finca, Sisi Khampepe, Richard Lyster, Wynand Malan, Rev. Dr. Khoza Mgojo, Hlengiwe Mkhize, Dumisa Ntsebeza, Dr. Wendy Orr, Adv. Denzil Potgieter, Dr. Mapule F. Ramashala, Dr. Fazel Randera, and Glenda Wildschut. The commissioners were divided into Chairpersons, the Amnesty Committee, whose role was to consider applications for amnesty that were made in accordance with the provisions of the Promotion of National Unity and Reconciliation Act, the Reparation and Rehabilitation Committee, the Human Rights Violations Committee, and the Investigation Unit. They were then aided by the Department of Justice.

Methods and Tools Used

The Commission’s research largely stemmed from the statement-taking of 21,000 South African individuals. Some statements were then selected for public hearings.

What Went On: Process, Interaction, and Participation

The Human Rights Violation Committee primarily gathered and processed 21,000 statements. The deponents came to the Commission on their own volition, and only victims who testified to the TRC were eligible to take part in the reparations program, which led to a significant increase in testimonies.

Statements were taken over a two-year period and largely discussed gross violations of human rights [8]. Of the 21,000 statements, there were 38,000 allegations of gross violations of human rights, 10,000 of which were killings [9]. Ninety percent of those who came forward were Black, and most of them were women, approaching the Commission on behalf of late men to whom they were related [10].

Influence, Outcomes, and Effects

Reparations were granted to the 21,000 victims that provided testimonies. The implementation of a reparations program included financial, symbolic, and community reparations: each victim or family should receive approximately $3,500 USD each year for six years. South Africa’s society and political system were to be reformed to include faith communities, businesses, the judiciary, prisons, the armed forces, the health sector, media, and educational institutions in a reconciliation process.

For perpetrators, amnesty from civil and criminal prosecution was granted to 849 out of 7,111 amnesty applicants to the individual that committed abuses during the apartheid era as long as the crimes were politically motivated, proportionate, and there was full disclosure by the applicant. The Commission’s subcommittee denied amnesty in numerous cases, but few trials were actually held. The Institute for Justice and Reconciliation was established in 2000 as the successor organization of the TRC.

Controversially, the TRC was empowered to grant amnesty to perpetrators who confessed their crimes truthfully and completely to the commission. Only victims who testified to the TRC were eligible to take part in the reparations program, which led to a significant increase in testimonies. After long delays in payment, the reparations paid to 21,000 victims were far lower than the amount recommended as the government refused to release the amount of remaining money reserved for reparations.

See Also

Link to the South African TRC: https://hmcwordpress.humanities.mcmaster.ca/Truthcommissions/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/SouthAfrica.TRC_.Report-FULL.pdf

References

Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Report. Vol. 1. Cape Town: The Commission, 1999.

Notes

[1] Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Report, Vol. 1 (Cape Town: The Commission, 1999), 25-26.

[2] Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Report, 29.

[3] Ibid, 30.

[4] Ibid.

[5] Ibid, 294.

[6] Ibid, 299.

[7] Ibid, 317-318.

[8] Ibid, 170.

[9] Ibid.

[10] Ibid, 173.

The first version of this case entry was written by Sarah Slasor, McMaster University.

Truth Commission: Commission of Truth and Reconciliation (TRC)

Dates of Operation: December 1995 – 2002 (7 years; the original mandate ended in 1998 but was extended.)

Background: Apartheid was a system of legally enforced racial segregation in South Africa between 1948 and 1990. The National Party that controlled the government formalized and expanded segregationist policies that had existed less formally under colonial rule. Institutionalized racism stripped South African blacks of their civil and political rights and instituted segregated education, health care, and all other public services, only providing inferior standards for blacks and other non-Afrikaans. Internal resistance was met with police brutality, administrative detention, torture, and limitations on freedom of expression. Opposition groups, such as the African National Congress (ANC) and other movements, were banned and were violently repressed.

After a series of international sanctions – and the end of the Cold War – a mostly peaceful transition from the Apartheid system started with a series of negotiations between the government party and the ANC between 1990 and 1993. Democratic elections were held in 1994, and an interim constitution was passed. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was set up by the newly elected parliament and was endorsed by opposition leader Nelson Mandela and other prominent South African figures.

Charter: Promotion of National Unity and Reconciliation Act, No. 34 of 1995, July 26, 1995.

Mandate: The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was created to investigate gross human rights violations that were perpetrated during the period of the Apartheid regime from 1960 to 1994, including abductions, killings, torture. Its mandate covered both violation by both the state and the liberation movements and allowed the commission to hold special hearings focused on specific sectors, institutions, and individuals.  Controversially the TRC was empowered to grant amnesty to perpetrators who confessed their crimes truthfully and completely to the commission.

Commissioners and Structure: The TRC was comprised of seventeen commissioners: nine men and eight women. Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu chaired the commission. The commissioners were supported by approximately 300 staff members, divided into three committees (Human Rights Violations Committee, Amnesty Committee, and Reparations and Rehabilitation Committee).

Report: The commission's report was presented to President Mandela in October 1998. The report was widely disseminated and is available online (select ‘the trc report’ from the left-hand menu).

Findings:

Special Notes: The TRC had an annual budget of $18 million USD. Its work was widely broadcast on the national television; hour-long episodes on its work as well as live hearings were broadcast every week. Only victims who testified to the TRC were eligible to take part in the reparations program, which led to a significant increase in testimonies. The National Intelligence Agency continued to destroy documents in defiance of two government moratoria on the destruction of records.

Sources: