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SA Coat of Arms 4.jpg

The Presidency, Union Buildings, Pretoria, 25 June 2015

 

 

Release by President Jacob Zuma

 

of the Report of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into the events

 

at the Marikana Mine in Rustenburg

 

 

Fellow South Africans,

 

On 26 August 2012, I appointed a Commission of Inquiry to investigate
matters of public, national and international concern arising out of the
tragic incidents at the Lonmin Mine in Marikana, Rustenburg in the North
West province, during 11 to 16 August 2012.

 

About 44 people lost their lives and many others were injured.

 

The Commission was chaired by Retired Judge Ian Farlam, assisted by
Advocates PD Hemraj SC and BR Tokota SC. I wish to express my sincere
gratitude and appreciation to them for the professional, efficient and
effective manner in which they conducted the Commission.

 

I also thank the families of all the persons who lost their lives, both
those who died before and during 16 August 2012, for their cooperation with
the Commission despite being in pain and immense difficulties, because of
the tragic loss of their loved ones.

 

Our hearts also go out to the families of those persons who were killed
after 16 August 2012 whose murders fell outside the scope of the inquiry.

 

We also thank the witnesses, legal teams and injured workers. The
participation of all ensured the success of the Commission.

 

The Commission was tasked with enquiring into and making findings and
recommendations concerning the conduct of Lonmin Plc, the South African
Police Service (SAPS), the Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union
(AMCU), the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), the Department of Mineral
Resources (DMR) and other government departments, as well as individuals and
groupings. 

 

The main findings and recommendations can be summarized as follows: 

 

1. FINDINGS 

 

FINDINGS AGAINST LONMIN 

 

The Commission has found that Lonmin did not use its best endeavours to
resolve the disputes that arose between itself and its workers who
participated in the unprotected strike on the one hand and between the
strikers and those workers who did not participate in the strike.  

 

It also did not respond appropriately to the threat of, and the outbreak of
violence. 

 

Lonmin also failed to employ sufficient safeguards and measures to ensure
the safety of its employees. 

 

Lonmin also insisted that its employees who were not striking should come to
work, despite the fact that it knew that it was not in a position to protect
them from attacks by strikers.

 

The Commission also criticized Lonmin's implementation of undertakings with
regards to the Social and Labour plans.

 

FINDINGS AGAINST AMCU

 

The Commission has found that officials of AMCU did not exercise effective
control over AMCU members and supporters in ensuring that their conduct was
lawful and did not endanger the lives of others.  

 

They sang provocative songs and made inflammatory remarks, which tended to
aggravate an already volatile situation. 

 

The Commission also noted that the President of AMCU, Mr Joseph Mathunjwa,
did his best before the shootings to persuade the strikers to lay down their
arms and leave the koppie. 

 

FINDINGS AGAINST NUM 

 

The National Union of Mineworkers did not exercise its best endeavours to
resolve the dispute between itself and the strikers. 

 

The NUM wrongly advised Rock Drill Operators that no negotiations with
Lonmin were possible until the end of the 2 year wage agreement. 

 

The union also did not take the initiative to persuade and enable Lonmin to
speak to the workers. 

 

The NUM also failed to exercise effective control over its membership in
ensuring that their conduct was lawful and did not endanger the lives of
others. 

 

It encouraged and assisted non-striking workers to go to the shafts in
circumstances where there was a real danger that they would be killed or
injured by armed strikers.

 

FINDINGS AGAINST INDIVIDUAL STRIKERS

 

Individual strikers and loose groupings of strikers promoted a situation of
conflict and confrontation which gave rise, directly or indirectly, to the
deaths of Lonmin's security guards and non-striking workers, and endangered
the lives of the non-striking workers who were not injured. 

 

FINDINGS IN RESPECT OF MR CYRIL RAMAPHOSA

 

The Counsel for Injured and Arrested Persons alleged that Mr Cyril Ramaphosa
is the cause of the Marikana massacre and that he must be held accountable
for the death of 34 miners. 

 

The Commission has found that it cannot be said that Mr Ramaphosa was the
cause of the massacre, and the accusations against him are groundless.

 

FINDINGS IN RESPECT OF MINISTER NATHI MTHWETHWA

 

The Counsel for Injured and Arrested Persons alleged that Mr Mthethwa is the
cause of the Marikana massacre and that he must be held accountable for the
death of 34 miners.

 

The Commission found that the Executive played no role in the decision of
the police to implement the tactical option on 16 August 2012, if the
strikers did not lay down their arms, which led to the deaths of the 34
persons.

 

FINDINGS IN RESPECT OF MINISTER SHABANGU 

 

The Counsel for Injured and Arrested Persons submitted that Minister
Shabangu should be prosecuted on charges of corruption and perjury. 

 

No findings were made against Minister Shabangu.

 

FINDINGS AGAINST THE POLICE 

 

In respect of the tragic incident of 16 August 2012, the Commission found
that the Police drew up an operational plan which entailed the encirclement
of a relatively small group of strikers, who would be in the koppie early in
the morning. 

 

The strategy entailed encircling the strikers with barbed wire, and offering
them an exit point through which they would need to move while handing over
their weapons. 

 

This phase was only capable of being implemented early in the morning when
there was a relatively small number of strikers. Attempts were also made to
negotiate with the strikers by the police.

 

The encirclement plan was replaced by the tactical option which was
defective in a number of respects. 

 

The tactical option was implemented at about 15h40 on that day, resulting in
the death of strikers in scene 1 and scene 2.

 

The Commission found that the police operation should not have taken place
on 16 August because of the defects in the plan. 

 

The Commission has found that it would have been impossible to disarm and
disperse the strikers without significant bloodshed, on the afternoon of the
16th of August.

 

The police should have waited until the following day, when the original
encirclement plan, which was substantially risk free, could have been
implemented.

 

The Commission also found that the decision that the strikers would be
forcibly removed from the koppie by the police on 16 August if they did not
voluntarily lay down their arms, was not taken by the tactical commanders on
the ground. 

 

The decision was instead taken by Lieutenant-General Mbombo, the North West
Police Commissioner, and was endorsed by the SAPS leadership at an
extraordinary session of the National Management Forum.

 

The Commission also found that the operation should have been stopped after
the shooting at scene 1 and that there was also a complete lack of command
and control at scene 2. 

 

The Commission has also questioned the conduct of the police management
during the inquiry.

 

The Police leadership did not initially disclose to the Commission, the fact
that the original plan was not capable of being implemented on the first
date and that it had been abandoned.

 

In addition, police leadership did not inform the Commission that the
decision to go ahead with the tactical option, if the strikers did not
voluntarily lay down their arms and disperse, was taken at the National
Management Forum meeting on 15 August. Instead, they informed the Commission
that this decision was taken on the 16th of August, and only after the
situation had escalated.

 

The Commission has also raised serious concern that there was a delay of
about an hour in getting medical assistance to the strikers who were injured
at scene 1, and asserts that at least one striker might have survived if he
had been treated timeously. 

 

2. RECOMMENDATIONS 

 

The Commission recommends that Lonmin's failure to comply with the housing
obligations under the Social and Labour Plans should be drawn to the
attention of the Department of Mineral Resources, which should take steps to
enforce the performance of these obligations by Lonmin.

 

The Commission has recommended that a Panel of Experts be appointed,
comprising:

 

.    Senior officers of the Legal Department of the SAPS;

 

.    Senior Officers with extensive experience in Public Order Policing;

 

And

.    Independent experts in Public Order Policing, both local and
international, who have experience in dealing with crowds, armed with sharp
weapons and firearms, as presently prevalent in the South African context. 

 

This panel should, amongst others:

 

.    Revise and amend all prescripts relevant to Public Order Policing;

 

.    Investigate the world's best practices and measures available for use,
without resorting to the use of weapons capable of automatic fire, where
Public Order Policing methods are inadequate.

 

In Public Order Policing situations, operational decisions must be made by
an officer in overall command, with recent and relevant training, skills and
experience in public order policing. 

 

All radio communications should be recorded and the recordings should be
preserved. 

 

Plans for Public Order Policing operations should identify the means of
communication which SAPS members will use to communicate with one another.

 

A protocol should be developed and implemented for communication in large
operations including alternative mechanisms, where the available radio
system is such that it will not provide adequate means of communication.

 

The SAPS should review the adequacy of the training of the members who use
specialized equipment such as water cannons and video equipment.

 

All SAPS helicopters should be equipped with functional video cameras. 

 

In operations where there is a high likelihood of the use of force, the plan
should include the provision of adequate and speedy first aid to those who
are injured.

 

The commission also emphasizes that all police officers should be trained in
basic first aid.

 

There should be a clear protocol which states that SAPS members with first
aid training, who are at the scene of an incident where first aid is
required, should administer first aid.

 

Specialist firearm officers should receive additional training in the basic
first aid skill needed to deal with gunshot wounds.

 

The Commission adds that the recommendations by the National Planning
Commission, for the demilitarization and professionalizing of the SAPS,
should be implemented as a matter of priority. 

 

With regards to accountability, where a police operation and its
consequences have been controversial, requiring further investigation, the
Minister and the National Commissioner should take care when making public
statements or addressing members of the SAPS. They should not say anything
which might have the effect of 'closing the ranks' or discourage members who
are aware of inappropriate actions, from disclosing what they know.

 

The standing orders should more clearly require a full audit trail and an
adequate recording of police operations.

 

The SAPS and its members should accept that they have a duty of public
accountability and truth-telling, because they exercise force on behalf of
all South Africans, the Commission states.

 

The staffing and resourcing of the Independent Police Investigations
Directorate (IPID) should be reviewed to ensure that it is able to carry out
its functions effectively.

 

REFERRAL FOR FURTHER INVESTIGATION IN TERMS OF SECTION 24(1) OF THE NPA ACT

 

The Commission recommends a full investigation, under the direction of the
Director of Public Prosecutions in North West, with a view to ascertaining
criminal liability on the part of all members of the SAPS who were involved
in the incidents at scene 1 and 2.   

 

For the purposes of the investigation, a team should be appointed, headed by
a Senior State Advocate, together with independent experts in the
reconstruction of crime scenes, expert ballistic and forensic pathologist
practitioners and Senior Investigators from IPID, and any such further
experts as may be necessary. 

 

REFERRAL FOR PROSECUTION

 

The Commission also recommends that all the killings and assaults that took
place between 11 and 15 August 2012, should be referred to the Director of
Public Prosecutions, for further investigation and to determine whether
there is a basis for prosecution.

 

The Commission states that the propensity in South Africa presently for the
carrying of sharp instruments and firearms and the associated violence even
in service delivery protests, requires the strict enforcement of the laws
that prohibit such conduct.

 

It pointed out that the Lonmin workers can be seen very clearly on videos
and photographs in possession of dangerous weapons at the public gatherings
or in public places. 

 

The Commission has thus called for a further investigation of offences, in
terms of the Regulation of Gatherings Act and the Possession of Dangerous
Weapons Act. 

 

ACTIONS TO BE TAKEN BY THE PRESIDENT

 

The affected Ministers will study the Commission report and advise me on the
implementation of the recommendations.

 

The Commission has also recommended that there must be an inquiry into the
fitness to hold office, of the National Police Commissioner as well as the
North West Provincial Police Commissioner in terms of Section 9 of the South
African Police Service Act.

 

I have written to the National Commissioner to inform her of the
recommendations pertaining to her.

 

The Minister of Police will inform the former North West Police Commissioner
on matters affecting her. 

 

Further updates on these matters will be provided in due course.

 

Fellow South Africans,

 

I have provided highlights of a Report which in full, is more than 600 pages
long. 

 

I have ordered that the full report be published in the Government Gazette
as well as the Presidency and GCIS websites to enable public access.

 

Compatriots,

 

The Marikana incident was a horrendous tragedy that has no place in a
democracy, where all citizens have a right to protest and where workers have
the right to go on strike peacefully and negotiate working conditions with
their employers, peacefully.

 

Breadwinners were taken away from their families in a brutal manner and
untold pain and suffering befell the families and relatives.

 

The entire South African nation was shocked. The world was also shocked as
nobody expected this to happen in a free and democratic South Africa. 

 

We should, as a nation learn from this painful episode. We should use it to
build a more united, peaceful and cohesive society.

 

Violence has no place in our democracy that we worked so hard to achieve and
build.

 

I thank you.

 

 
<http://107.6.66.171/Report%20of%20the%20Marikana%20Commision%20of%20Inquiry
.pdf> Please click here to download the full report.

 

 

From:  <http://www.thepresidency.gov.za/> http://www.thepresidency.gov.za/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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