COOLIE
JOURNALIST
AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF VETERAN STRUGGLE
JOURNALIST, MARIMUTSUBRAMONEY-
(aka SUBRY GOVENDER)
(Security policemen of the notorious apartheid
regime search Subry Govender’s desk at the Daily News in the mid-1970s. The
Daily News was situated in the former Field Street in central Durban at that
time.)
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(Fawzia Moodley working in the office of Press
Trust of SA News Agency in the 1980s.)
FOREWORD: 1
By Fawzia
Moodley
Former colleague who
worked with Subry Govender at the Press Trust of SA News Agency
South Africa’s struggle
history is replete with stories of ordinary people who fought extraordinary
struggles in a bid to overthrow the shackles of racial subjugation under
Apartheid.
One such person is
Marimuthu Subramoney (aka Subry Govender), an unsung hero from a working- class
family in Ottawa/Verulam on the North Coast of KwaZulu Natal, whose political
consciousness
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was awoken by his personal
experience of Apartheid.
A descendant of indentured
labourers who were recruited from India by the British colonialists to work in
the then Natal Colony’s sugar cane fields, Subry carried the tenacious gene of
his forebears, who through sheer determination rose out of the near slave
conditions under which they had to survive in the strange new land they found
themselves.
It was this grit that
allowed him to fight the injustices of Apartheid which so-called non-white
people – native African, those of Indian origin and mixed heritage (coloured)
people – were subjected to.
From humble beginnings, he
rose to become a prominent journalist who belongs to a pantheon of fearless
anti-apartheid journos like Zwelakhe Sisulu, Mthata Tsedu, Rashid Seria, Juby
Mayet, Percy Qoboza and Aggrey Klaaste, who used the pen to buck the system of
racial oppression.
For this they paid a heavy
price with detentions and bannings, and were prevented from earning a living
through their craft. They were regularly harassed by the dreaded security
branch (SB) police who raided their homes in the middle of the
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night, disrupting family
lives and traumatising elderly parents and young children.
The title ‘Coolie’ is a
reference to the derogatory term used by the white bosses to refer to the
indentured labourers brought from India to toil on the sugar farms of the then
Natal Colony. It is an insulting term akin to the ‘K’ word used to refer to
African people. For that was what Subry was in the eyes of the white government
that detained, banned and harassed him – an upstart Coolie journalist bent on
exposing the cruelty that lay behind the veneer of a civilised system of
government.
Yet Subry, like all the
other ordinary people who dared to challenge the mighty Apartheid machinery,
proved more than a match for the white National Party government. With dogged
determination he ensured that the truth about Apartheid was broadcast not only
to South Africans but also to the international community. His news reports
were carried as far afield as India, Germany, Netherlands, France, Scotland,
the United States, Britain, Australia, New Zealand and
Singapore. Far from silencing him, the
Apartheid government ended up courting international condemnation because Subry’s
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banning order and the
Government’s vengeful refusal to grant him a passport to take up offers of
scholarships, galvanised Amnesty International, the churches and the trade
union movement against Apartheid.
Living in a post-apartheid
South Africa where many of our youth are ignorant of the blood, sweat and tears
of the hundreds of thousands of people who contributed to the liberation of
this country, “Coolie Journalist”, makes an important contribution to our
struggle history.
Simply told, it is a book
that every school child should have access to, lest we forget that we owe our
freedom to people of all races, classes and creeds. We all know of the role of
Nelson Mandela, Walter Sisulu, Govan Mbeki, Ahmed Kathrada, Albertina Sisulu
and Winnie Mandela in fighting Apartheid. Now we need to learn about the Subry
Govenders’ of this country who played an equally important role by chipping
away patiently at the Apartheid monolith until it was eventually destroyed.
Fawzia Moodley
– September 2023
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(R. Brijlall, leading
editor and journalist, who worked in the 1970s and 1980s as a reporter for the
Post Newspaper. In the background are Deven Moodley and I A Khan – seated.)
FOREWORD: 2
By Brijlall
Ramguthee
JOURNALISM is not for the
faint-hearted. The trials, tribulations,
and challenges that one faces in this so-called noble profession, is, at best,
daunting. No, you are unlikely to end up
wealthy, unless, of course, you have those winning Powerball or Lotto numbers.
However, there’s
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another kind of richness
that you will be endowed with – that of personal, inner satisfaction of being a
messenger or purveyor of information that benefits the community. And for being
a crusader for freedom, and justice, never mind that you are labelled a ‘Media
Terrorist’ in the process.
Marimuthu Subramoney, aka
Subry Govender, Soobs, or Sadha, has encapsulated and chronicled his life and
times in this autobiography, “Coolie Journalist”. The book traces his formative
years in Ottawa near Verulam, (where he occasionally worked in a sugarcane
field), to climbing the rungs of his journalism ladder, in a career spanning
over 50 plus years. And no, he has not yet put away his pen, not just yet, for
like others in his field, the ink runs deep in his veins.
But it has been no easy
ride for this avid golfer, who faced Security Police harassment, detention, banning
restrictions, the denial of a passport, and the tragic loss of his son,
three-month-old Vishen, whom Subry could not take for urgent medical treatment
due to being confined to his Verulam, North Coast, home during certain hours,
in terms of his banning order, under the Suppression of Communism Act, leaving
his wife Thyna and helpful neighbours to act.
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For Subry, though, his has
been an eventful journey in many respects. From being a clerk in an insurance
company, to being a freelance and later full-time journalist, to being a radio
correspondent, to a stint as an SABC employee, and running a local newspaper,
and being a correspondent for overseas print and electronic media outlets, he
has seen it all.
All of these remarkable
achievements are succinctly captured in detail in the ‘Coolie Journalist’, so
read on, to get your fill on how and why the author chose this title for his
book. Caution: This is an ‘incisive read’ with many anecdotes, so take your
time because you will discover that Mr Marimuthu Subramoney did find, like the
iconic Nelson Mandela, had said that “after climbing a great hill, one finds
that there are many more hills to climb.”
BRIJLALL
RAMGUTHEE
(Former Editor of POST
NEWSPAPER and colleague of Subry Govender)
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FOREWORD: 3
By Ravi
Govender
When I joined SABC radio,
circa. 2006, the name Subry Govender was already a legendary one. Over the
following years I was not blessed to work closely with him personally. But I
certainly knew of him.
However, it is only when I
was editing this publication that I learned why "legendary" is a
worthy adjective to describe Govender.
He served time in the
trenches - literally and symbolically. His tale is one of courage, pathos, and
truth. His life took a beating from many angles and he is still
standing...testament of resilience, bravery and honour. I don't use these words
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loosely. Immerse yourself
in this, his life story and draw your own conclusion.
My view is that this
publication is essential reading and should take its rightful place among South
African great writings. Peek into Subry's world...it is a fascinating one and
not easily forgettable.
Ravi Govender
(author, former radio
presenter and film producer in training.)
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
i). Forewords by Fawzia
Moodley, Brijlall Ramguthee and Ravi Govender.
ii). Introduction
iii). “Coolie Journalist”
iv). Banning
v). Natural Entry into
Journalism
vi). “Why are you causing problems in our office”
vii). Joined Daily News on a full-time
basis in early 1973
viii). Social and Political awareness
started while still at primary school in Ottawa
ix).
“Wipe your shoes with the Republic flag”.
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x).
Coolie field workers.
xi). Journalists pay the price for
media freedom.
xii). Solidarity support by SACC and
international organisations.
xiii). Abhorrent nature of banning
orders.
xiv). “Bannings, I would not wish on P
W Botha.”
xv). Denial of passport.
xvi). Passport issued in error
withdrawn
xvii). “Do not bother again”, “Editor
told as passport is refused”.
xviii). “Subramoney finally gets his
passport”.
xix). Relationship of Trust with
activists
xx). Interview with Ahmed Kathrada
after his release in 1989
xxi). Interview with Nelson Mandela in
June 1990
xxii). Interview with Professor Fatima
Meer.
Xxii1. Conclusion
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“For me, Journalism is not an 8 to 5 job. It is a profession to
make a difference for the better in the lives of the people.” - Subry Govender
INTRODUCTION
(Subry Govender when heading the Press Trust of SA News Agency at
his offices in Durban in the 1980s.)
I entered the field of journalism in the late 1960s at a time when
I became an angry young man following the racial discrimination I had
experienced after I matriculated in 1965. I wanted to use journalism to
highlight the suffering of the
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people and to promote freedom and democracy - that we
euphemistically enjoy today.
Let me give you just one example.
One fine day in my early teens I boarded a train from my home
village of Ottawa, on the North Coast in the then Natal province in South
Africa, to
Durban, now known as eThekwini, the main city in our province.
When the train arrived at the Durban Central Station – it stopped
at platform eleven. One had to ascend a bridge to get to the entrance of the
station. The only problem was that the bridge was divided into two sections -
one for people, referred to as whites, and the other for those like me,
described at that time as "non-whites".
The bridge for "whites" took you straight to the
entrance of the station, while the "non-white" section took you to
the far end of the station.
I was stumped for a while and gave it some thought. I figured that
since I had been using the "non-white" section of the bridge without
question for some time, I would, this time, use the "white" bridge –
irrespective of the consequences.
I told my accompanying fellow passengers that I was going to defy
the segregation laws and began to climb the "white" section of the
bridge. As I
arrived at the end of the bridge, a white commuter
confronted me.
"Hey coolie, don't you know that this bridge is for
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whites only?"
I responded by saying that it did not make any
sense to me that there should be one bridge for whites and a
separate one for so-called "non-whites".
He retorted: "You cheeky coolie, come with me."
He grabbed me by my shoulders and escorted me to the Railway
Police station offices in the station building.
“This cheeky coolie used the white bridge, charge him", he
told an African policeman who was at the counter.
The policeman looked at me and then politely told me that I should
take a seat. He then told the white person that I would be attended to and that
he should leave.
After the white commuter had left, the policeman called me a few
minutes later and said:
"Young man I cannot charge you. You can leave."
I noticed that the African policeman was embarrassed that he was
in such an awkward position where he had to implement racist laws.
That incident was an eye-opener for me and there and then I decided
that I had to do something to highlight what I termed “racist, discriminatory”
laws. I thus entered the field of journalism as it was for me an
ideal platform to channel my aspirations.
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"Hey look at what this Coolie
journalist has been scribbling on the wall! You are wasting your time. We are
not going to let that terrorist out of prison. He will rot in jail."
“COOLIE
JOURNALIST”
It was around 3am in the morning on a
weekday in the fourth week of May 1980. I heard frantic knocks on our door. It
was my mother. Speaking in our Tamil mother tongue, she said: "Sadha,
rende vela karagango inga irakarango. Una pakanoma."
(Translated: “Sadha (that's my cultural
name) two white men are here. They say they want to see you.")
My wife, Thyna, and our son, Kennedy
Pregarsen, and daughter, Seshini, and I, used to occupy at that time the
outbuilding at number 30 Mimosa Road, Lotusville, Verulam - just north of
Durban.
My mother, Salatchie, my father, Subramoney
Munien, and my brothers - Dhavanathan (Nanda), Gonaseelan (Sydney), and
Gangadharan (Nelson) and sisters - Kistamma (Violet) and Natchathramah
(Childie) - used to occupy the main building.
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My eldest sister, Mariamah (Ambie), was
married at this time and she was staying in the area of
Phoenix - about 15km south of where we were
residing.
Clearly in a sleepy mood, I opened the door
to find two white security policemen with awkward smiles on their faces. I
recognised one of them as
Sergeant De Beer. He was one of the
security policemen who questioned my position when I worked at the Daily News
from the early 1970s to late 1980. I saw him questioning one of my Daily News
colleagues outside the Daily News building at the former Field Street in the
city of Durban. My colleague informed me later that De Beer had questioned him
about my work at the Daily News.
On this occasion at my home in Lotusville,
Verulam, he looked at me and with a quirky smile and said:
"Mr Subramoney, we have come to search
your house and for you to accompany us back to the office."
At the same time, members of the security
police were conducting similar raids at the homes of my colleagues and
officials of the Media Workers Association of South Africa (MWASA) in the
cities and towns of Johannesburg, Pretoria, Cape Town, Port Elizabeth, East
London, Bloemfontein and other parts of the country. In addition to us as
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journalists, the security police also
raided the
homes of political activists, such as Vijay
Ramluckan, who became one of Nelson Mandela’s doctors after his release in
1990, and Yunus Shaik, brother of Moe Shaik, who became an ambassador in the new South
Africa.
I informed De Beer that my family members
were asleep and their visit was inappropriate. Their unannounced visit at such
an unearthly early hour was an intrusion and would be disturbing my family. De
Beer did not seem to care and he and his colleague just pushed their way in.
"Where are all the communist books you
keep?", De Beer and his colleague asked in gruff voices.
"I don't know about communist books
but here are all my files and literature," I responded.
I did have some communist literature but
this was stored away in the ceiling of the house. I used to receive material
from the banned Communist Party of South Africa despite me not being a member.
I used to read the booklets and then store them in the ceiling.
"We want you around when we search
your files and books," they said.
So, I watched them go through my files with
a “fine tooth comb" and read each-and-every letter in one of the files.
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Suddenly they burst out laughing and one of
them said: "Here's an interesting letter."
It was a letter I had written sometime in
the late 1960s to the then Prime Minister of India, Mrs Indira Gandhi.
I was still a "greenhorn" at that
time. I was just
learning about the political situation, the
world and the land of my ancestors - India. I did not know what went through my
head that on one fine day I sat at my typewriter and penned a letter to Mrs
Gandhi. I told her about the oppression of the people of colour in South Africa
and asked her whether India was doing anything about it.
Mrs Gandhi knew something about South
Africa. As a teenager she stayed a few days in Durban while enroute from London
to India. She was the guest of members and officials of the progressive and
influential Natal Indian Congress, a powerful ally of the African National
Congress (ANC) during the dark days of the struggle against white minority rule
and domination in the 1940s, 1950s, 1960s, 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s. I was
informed that two of the people she had met were struggle stalwarts, Mr Ismail
Meer, who was a member and official of the Natal Indian Congress, and his wife,
Professor Fatima Meer, who was a sociologist, author and social activist at
that time.
-18-
The letter to Mrs Gandhi read: "Dear
Mrs Gandhi. I am a South African whose forefathers and mothers had come down
from India to the country since the 1860s to work as indentured labourers on
the sugar cane plantations of the former Natal Colony.
"Our people have made great strides
despite
decades of slavery, colonial rule and
apartheid oppression.
"Leaders of our community such as Dr
Yusuf Dadoo, Dr Monty Naicker, Dr Kesaval Goonum, George Singh, J N Singh,
Ismail Meer, Fatima Meer, Billy Nair, Mac Maharaj, Sonny Singh and
thousands of others have made enormous contributions and sacrifices in the
struggles against White minority rule and oppression.
“The situation is now deteriorating and I
would like to know whether the Government of India will be doing anything to
promote our liberation."
I did not post that letter. But I did not
tell the security policemen that. I wanted them to believe that I had really
sent that letter to Mrs Gandhi.
After about an hour of searching through my
files, the two security policemen put everything they wanted together in a pile
and then told my wife:
"You are not going to see your husband
for some time. He would need some clothes."
-19-
They did not clean up the mess they caused
through their invasion and search. My wife, Thyna, had to clean up after I was
taken away.
While they were conducting their search, my
son, Kennedy Pregarsen, who was six years old and daughter, Seshini, who was
three years old, woke
up and they were wondering what these
strange white men were doing in our home.
It was around 6am when De Beer and his
colleague said they were finished and I should join them.
As I was walking with the security
policemen, I could see my son, Kennedy Pregarsen, watching with concern in his
eyes and my wife, really worried. When my son was born, I was looking for a
name, in addition to a Tamil cultural name, for him. I recalled the
assassination of John F. Kennedy two decades earlier when our family stayed in
the neighbouring rural village of Ottawa. I was studying for my matriculation
examinations at this time when I heard over the radio that President John
Fitzgerald Kennedy was assassinated. I considered Kennedy to be a great liberal
who introduced reform measures to uplift the lives of the discriminated
African-American people.
That is how my son got the name
Kennedy. From an early age he became
aware of our struggles and punching his right fist into the air and shouting
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"Amandla Awethu" (Power to the
People) became a norm for him.
I told my wife not to worry and to
telephone my news editor, Mr David James, at the Daily News.
My mother and my younger brothers and
sisters were also watching closely.
(An
article published by the Daily News after I was detained in May 1980.)
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In the car, the two security policemen told
me that I was involved with communists and that I was in big trouble.
De Beer said: "Mr Subramoney, you have
a young
family, why are you involving yourself with
communists? You are associating yourself with terrorists. You are nothing more
than a Coolie journalist and we will make your life very difficult."
I just kept silent. I was too shocked.
This was not the first time that I had come
into
contact with the security police at close
range.
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(Daily News article on October 19 1977
about the raids at the homes of journalists and activists throughout the
country.)
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On October 19 1977 when the South African
Government carried out one of the most oppressive actions against the media by
banning the Union of Black Journalists (UBJ) and 18 other anti-apartheid and
anti-regime organisations, the security police also visited my home in Verulam
in the early hours of that fateful day. The security police also conducted
similar raids at the home of my then colleague at the Daily News, Mr Dennis
Pather, and at the homes and offices of my colleagues of the UBJ in
Johannesburg, East London, Port Elizabeth, Cape Town and other major centres of
the country.
Then about two years later, on June 3 1979,
two “Indian-origin” members of the security police called at our home in
Verulam and questioned me about the visit to South Africa by a journalist from
Norway, Mr Olie Ericksen.
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(Daily News published a report on June 4
1979 about security police visiting my home in Verulam and questioning me about
the visit of a Norwegian journalist, Olie Ericksen.)
-25-
Mr Ericksen was on a fact-finding mission
for the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) and I hosted him in
Durban.
The security policemen questioned me for
about one-and-half hours on Mr Ericksen’s trip and about the Writers
Association of South Africa (WASA), which we, black journalists, had
established after the Union of Black Journalists (UBJ) was banned by the
apartheid regime on 19 October 1977. One of the security policemen was a Major
Benjamin. He was well known to be a notorious security police officer who
followed and pursued with passion most of the activists at that time. Although
being a person of Indian-origin, he failed to understand the struggles for a
non-racial and free South Africa. He was more interested in serving the “white
baas”.
But after 1994 when the ANC was elected to
power and Nelson Mandela was elected president, Major Benjamin became a member
of the ANC.
There were many “turncoats” like Major
Benjamin in the political and business world who also changed their costumes
and colours and suddenly became staunch supporters of “liberty and freedom”.
After the visit of Benjamin and his
colleague, the only other time the security police showed extra
-26-
interest in my work as a journalist was
when I was in my second year as a full-time staffer at the Daily News in 1975.
Some of the members of the security police
questioned a white colleague about me. They wanted to know: “who is this Coolie
journalist working in your office?”.
They were apparently interested in me
because of my regular and comprehensive reports on black trade unions and about
the struggles of anti-apartheid sports organisations and their leaders.
On this particular day at the end of May
1980, De Beer and his colleague, after taking me into custody, drove straight
to the offices of the Daily News at 85 Field Street (now Joe Slovo Street) in
the centre of Durban. We took the lift to the second floor where our newsroom
was located.
Without speaking to anyone or obtaining
permission they just asked me to point out my desk. My colleagues looked on in
shock and dismay. At that time members of the Security Branch of the police in
South Africa were notorious for their brutality and no one, not even white
citizens, dared to square up against them.
De Beer and his colleague began to search
my desk and the drawers. They collected a pile of stories that I had written
and put them together to
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be taken away.
Unknown to me or the security policemen,
one of the Daily News photographers, Robert D'avice, snapped away at the action
of the security branch policemen. This photograph was given to me after I was
released from solitary detention.
(Security policemen searching my
desk at the Daily News in Field Street - now Joe Slovo Street - in Durban in
May 1980.)
The security policemen, thereafter, drove
me to the Brighton Beach police station, near the Bluff on the outskirts of the
city of Durban. Here they spoke to a policeman on duty and then locked me in a
cell. They did not say anything. They just left.
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I was left to myself. All kinds of emotions
ran through me. But in the end, I was sure that I did not commit any crime and
the security policemen were just "fishing".
At about 9pm that evening, Sgt De Beer and
two other security policemen turned up at the police station.
"Mr Subramoney, we have come to take
you to our office."
They drove me to their security police
headquarters in Fisher Street (now Masobiya Mdluli Street) in Durban. Here I
was given a notebook and told to write down my personal history - where I was
born?, who were my parents?, which schools I went to?, which organisations I
belonged to?, and where I worked?.
After I finished writing what they wanted,
they began to fire questions at me about my work: why was I covering the trade union movement?
why was I only concerned about black politics? and about non-racial sport?
"You. You are playing with fire. The white
man has developed this country and Coolies like you think we are just going to
hand it over to the 'k…..s' (a derogatory term used by the white man at that
time to describe black African people)," one of the security policemen
shouted at me.
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It was around midnight when they took me
back to the police cells at Brighton Beach.
The next day, my first visitors were my
cousin, Lutchmee, and her husband, Benny Reddy, who lived in the nearby
township of Merebank.
(My cousin, Mrs Lutchmee Reddy,
and her husband, Benny Reddy, who visisted me at the Bluff Police Station where
I was detained in June 1980.)
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My cousin was the second daughter of my
mother’s eldest sister, Baigium. As a family we were very close. When I was a
little boy, I used to visit their home in the “tin town” area of Merebank on a
regular basis during the school holidays. I also, during my school holidays,
travelled to Merebank by train and bus to sell the guava fruit to the
residents. I collected the guavas on Friday afternoons from trees near the
Ottawa river. I then used to, on a Saturday, travel by train to Durban and from
there catch a bus to Merebank from the Warwick Avenue bus rank.
After we got married in February 1973, my
wife, Thyna, and I stayed in an outbuilding at my cousin’s new home in
Merebank. Early in the 1970s my cousin, her elder brother, Soobiah, and their
families moved into a council house at 16 Nagpur Place, Merebank.
My wife had informed them earlier that I
was being held at the Brighton Beach Police Station nearby and they should try
to visit me.
The white policeman in charge knocked on
the cell gate and said: "You have some visitors. You are not allowed any
visitors but I am going to allow them to see you."
-31-
I was surprised to see my cousin and
brother-in-law. They brought me some lunch, for which I was very grateful.
Before I could greet them, my cousin spoke
with a lot of concern:
"Why are you getting into all this
trouble? You are causing a lot of worries for everyone.
"You have a good job. Your wife and
children are very young. Why do you have to get into trouble with the white
man?", she asked with a great deal of anxiety in her voice.
I told my cousin and brother-in-law not to
worry.
"I will be okay," I told them.
But they were not too happy. They departed after giving me these words of
advice: "Please be careful."
I went back to the cell and began to ponder
about life in general. Why was I here? How long am I going to be here? What are
they going to do to me?
I found a pen on the floor and took to the
wall. I began to write: "Release Nelson Mandela and all your problems will
be over."
I wrote this on almost every available
space on the wall to pass my time.
Later that evening when the security branch
policemen came for me again, one of them blurted:
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"Hey look at what this Coolie
journalist has been scribbling on the wall!"
"You are wasting your time. We are not
going to let that terrorist out of prison. He will rot in jail," said the
other security policeman.
"We have come to take you to our
office."
They drove along the Brighton Beach road,
through the Bluff and along the main road to the city. The lights and the
moving cars took my thoughts away from the situation I found myself in. I
noticed some people walking along the roads - the working-class people who did
not know what the security policemen in the country were up to.
At the security police headquarters, there
were four security policemen seated around a table.
"Tell us what are you guys up
to?", asked one of them.
"I see your people are making a lot of
noise", said another. I did not know what he was talking about but I
learnt later that our Daily News editor, Mr John O'Mally, had made
representations to higher authority about my detention and demanded that I be
charged or released immediately.
-33-
I knew that the security policemen did not
have anything against me. After accusing me of being a “terrorist”, “communist”
and warning me that I should watch my steps, they drove me back to the Brighton
Beach police station at about 11pm.
My news editor, Mr David James, insisted
that I was not involved in anything illegal and reiterated that I should either
be charged or released.
It was the same David James who in June
1976 wanted to know where I had been on June 16 when the school children of
Soweto had protested against the imposition of the Afrikaans language as a
medium of instruction in African schools. I was away on holiday at that time
but he jokingly said:
"Hey Subry, you have been up to your
tricks in Soweto!."
I knew he was just trying to “pull my leg”
and he did not mean anything.
I did not tell my news editor that I had in
fact travelled to Soweto a few weeks after the June 16 uprisings to join
Zwelike Sisulu, Joe Thloloe, Philip Mthimkulu, Ms Juby Mayet, Mathatha Tsedu,
Thami Mazwai, Rashid Seria, and other colleagues from Port Elizabeth, East
London, Cape Town and Bloemfontein to launch the Union of Black Journalists
(UBJ).
-34-
The UBJ, however, did not last long as the
apartheid regime cracked down on the UBJ and 18 other anti-apartheid
organisations on October 19 1977.
Now three years later in May 1980, while I
was being detained, the security police demonstrated their brutality once again
when they told me in no uncertain terms that they could hold me as-long-as they
liked and the Daily News or anyone else could not do anything about it.
"We know you are an instigator.
Wherever the children have been boycotting classes, we have seen you there.
What were you doing, beside encouraging the children to stay away from
school?", they asked accusingly.
"I was only doing my job", I
protested.
"Please behave Mr Subramoney. We don't
want to see any more of your slogans on the wall", said one of them.
-35-
On the sixth day of my detention, Sgt De
Beer and another security policeman arrived early. It was about 9am.
-36-
"We are going to release you. But we
are warning you, we are not finished with you."
They drove along the North Coast road from
the city of Durban and dropped me off at home at 30 Mimosa Road, Verulam at
about 10:30am.
My mother was overjoyed. She was carrying
my daughter, Seshini, who jumped off and ran towards me. I picked her up and
just held her for some time.
It was a great feeling to be back at home.
But the troubles with the security police
had just begun.
-37-
“The authorities no doubt disliked the
brand of radicalism propounded by these journalists. Many of their own
colleagues, black and white, were uneasy about their avowed policy of using
journalism for the express purpose of ‘Black liberation’. But one cannot lock
up ideas.” – Durban Daily News Dec 30 1980
BANNING
I returned to the Daily News a stronger
person, determined to continue my work with passion. I began to concentrate on
reporting what we as black journalists termed: "struggle politics"
and the "political struggles" of the non-racial sporting movements,
such as the South African Soccer Federation, the South African Non-Racial
Swimming Federation, the Tennis Association of South Africa, the South African
Council of Sport (SACOS) and the day-to-day struggles of ordinary people.
The non-racial sports leaders who were in
the forefront of the struggles at this time included Mr Norman Middleton, Mr R
K Naidoo, Mr Dharam Ramlall, Mr Abdul Bhamjee, Mr Ramhori Lutchman,
-38-
and Mr George Singh. There were also
football non-racial activists such as Danny Naidoo, G K Naidoo, Nel Pillay,
Ajam Majid, Charles M Pillay, George Bailey, Bobby Naicker, Ashwin Trikamjee, S
K Chetty, and Q Osman.
Then there were other leaders - M N Pather in tennis and the S A Council of
Sport; Mr Don Kali in tennis; Mr Morgan Naidoo in swimming; and Mr Hassan Howa,
Mr Pat Naidoo, Mr Harold Samuels,
Abdullah Khan and Mr Krish Mackerdhuj in
cricket and Mr Cassim Bassa in table tennis.
The resistance against apartheid had been
hotting-up and I was considering the role I could play in this struggle. I
began to consult with some of the resistance leaders inside the country at that
time. The people I spoke to included Griffith Mxenge, a prominent
anti-apartheid lawyer, United Democratic Front (UDF) leader Archie Gumede, Dr
Korshed Ginwala, and Dr A E Gangat. At one of our meetings, it was decided that
we should start a newspaper, to be called UKUSA, and that I should initiate the
project. We chose the name UKUSA as it meant the new “DAWN” of freedom that the
oppressed people were fighting for.
It was during this period that one of the
activists, Pravin Gordhan, who after 1994 became a prominent personality in the
new Government
-39-
under Nelson Mandela, Thabo Mbeki, Jacob
Zuma and Cyril Ramaphosa, telephoned me and asked me to meet him outside the
Daily News building.
I quickly walked out from our second-floor
newsroom office and waited for him at the corner of Field and Pine Streets (now
Joe Slovo and Monty Naicker streets).
After a while, he walked up to me from
behind a wall and greeted me as comrades.
He discussed our newspaper project and
indicated that he was asked to relay a message “from the movement” outside the
country.
“They fully support the initiative by
Griffith Mxenge and other members of the group. They say that they will
encourage anti-apartheid groups outside the country to support the publication
of the newspaper in every way possible.”
At this time Pravin was operating as an
“underground cadre” of the ANC along with a few other activists.
It was during the late 1970s that I had
witnessed Pravin in a car that was parked in West Street between Field Street
and Gardiner Street (now Joe Slovo and Dorothy Nyembe streets).
There were a few white men, who looked like
the dreaded security policemen, in the car as well. I
-40-
managed to attract his attention and I
gained the impression from his facial reactions that he was being detained by
the security police.
The police car with Pravin and the white
security policemen was parked only about 100 metres from where Pravin had met
me only a month or two after his release from detention.
After my conversation with Pravin, I went
back to my office. While sitting at my desk, I greeted a number of my
colleagues and at the same time
thought about my future at the Daily News.
After a while I wrote a letter of
resignation and handed it to the Editor, Mr Michael Green. He wrote back,
saying that I would be greatly missed and that should I think of returning to
the Daily News at any time, I would be welcomed back. Mr Green and his news
editors acknowledged my commitment to journalism and the extent to which I
would go to chase developments after stories related to anti-apartheid sporting
and political events were highlighted in the media.
-41-
(Letters by the Editor, John O’Mally, about
my commitment as a journalist in following up top stories.)
-
-42-
(This letter was written by Mr Roy Rudden
when I wanted to travel to Zimbabwe to work at the local Herald newspaper.)
After I wrote my letter of resignation, I,
at the same time, wrote a letter to a prominent editor in Johannesburg who also
worked for the Argus Group of newspapers at that time.
-43-
I explained to him that I would be leaving
the Daily News at the end of December and I would be honoured to file some
stories for him from Durban. The mistake I made was to tell him that I felt the
Daily News was not covering all the stories affecting black people and that is
the reason I had decided to leave the Daily News to start a black newspaper
with Mr Griffith Mxenge, Mr Archie Gumede, Dr Khorshed Ginwala, Dr A E Gangat
and the other black leaders.
It was an action that boomeranged.
A few days later I found a letter on my
desk from Mr Green. He stated in no uncertain terms that he was surprised that
I found the Daily News was not covering most of the news affecting black people
effectively and that he did not know that I was unhappy at the Daily News. He
said in view of this I should empty my desk of my personal belongings and leave
immediately. I was sacked. It left me devastated.
Mr Green’s action shocked me, especially
after he had earlier sent me a letter saying that I would be sadly missed at
the Daily News. What brought about this sudden change in his attitude? I was
confused. Then I realised I had sent the letter to the editor in Johannesburg.
This editor had forwarded the letter I had sent him to my editor in Durban.
-44-
I had not anticipated him doing this
because I considered him to be "one of us" as he had also been
detained by the notorious security police in 1977 and had been one of the
bravest editors promoting the cause of the liberation of the people. He also
suffered a five-year banning order.
I did not inform anyone of what had just
happened but instead began to concentrate on launching the Ukusa newspaper and
an alternative news agency, the Press Trust of South Africa.
The name, Press Trust of SA, was a
suggestion given to us by another journalist colleague, Gary Govindsamy, who
had just returned from his very first trip to his “mother” country. During his
visit, Govindsamy made contact with editors at the Press Trust of India (PTI)
in Bombay (now Mumbai). He passed on their names and contact details to me. I
immediately wrote to the editors at PTI and finalised an agreement to supply
them with news from South Africa. At first, we used to post our stories to them
and later send them breaking news stories by a telex machine via the Post
Office.
We continued with this mode of transmission
for more than 10 years from our offices in Durban and later in the early 1990s
from our office in Johannesburg.
Life became easier for us when the email
was introduced in the mid-1990s.
-45-
Up to and even after freedom in 1994, Govindsamy
never forgot to remind me on a regular basis that he was the one who made the
arrangements with PTI and that I should tell the “comrades” in South Africa
about his efforts.
At that time in the 1980s if you as a black
person wanted to run a business or operate an office in the centre of Durban
you had to obtain a special permit for this venture.
This was imposed on us by the Security
Police when we operated from three buildings in the former West Street and from
one office in the former Smith Street. In order to overcome this hurdle, I
spoke to one of my former Daily News colleagues, Ms Ingrid Stewart. She agreed
to sign a document to make it clear that she was the one who was leasing the
office. In April 1983, Ingrid, and my
wife, Thyna, signed an agreement of partnership for Press Trust to operate from
Escoval House, near the Durban High Court, in the former Smith Street.
This was the agreement that we put together
in order to overcome any harassment from the Security Police.
-46-
(Ingrid seen here with her husband, Richard
De Villiers, during a visit to our home in Verulam when I was banned in the
early 1980s.)
-47-
Ingrid Stewart and her family and our
family became very close friends and we used to meet regularly at each other’s
homes to socialise and discuss the political situation.
Ingrid also came to our assistance when we
moved to Johannesburg in 1991 after I was appointed as a Foreign Correspondent
of the Press Trust of India (PTI). I was looking for a place to stay and Ingrid
used her position for me to purchase a house in the “white” residential area of
Sandringham.
In the 1980s, while the Press Trust of SA
News Agency was going to be our mode of contact with the PTI and newspapers and
media organisations around the world, the UKUSA newspaper was to be part of the
broad "struggle" newspapers around the country. The news agency was
to submit "struggle" stories to the outside world.
At this time my struggle colleagues,
Zwelike Sisulu, was involved in plans to set up an alternative newspaper, New
Nation, in Johannesburg and Rashid Seria in Cape Town was setting up another
alternative newspaper called Grassroots.
-48-
In Durban, with the assistance of one of
the activists, Govin Reddy, who was banned and house-arrested at this time, and
I set up office on the second floor of the 320 West Street building, near the
Post Office and the old main railway station in central Durban. Reddy, who had
a few years earlier returned home after studying overseas, had been a
researcher at the South African Institute of Race Relations (SAIRR). He was one
of the people who had organised several protest meetings with the involvement
of Catholic Archbishop, Denis Hurley, and several others. For his service to
the cause of liberation he was slapped with a five-year banning order.
Reddy was forced to leave the SAIRR.
Reddy and I became very close friends after
one day early in the 1970s he walked into the Daily News office at 85 Field
Street (now Joe Slovo Street) in Durban, carrying a press release. He was
smiling and looking for someone to talk to. I noticed him and immediately went
up to him and introduced myself. He informed me that he had just been appointed
by the SAIRR to work in their office in Durban and that the press release was
about his appointment. I promised him that there would be no problem and that I
would write a news story
-49-
about his appointment.
Our relationship thereafter grew and we
became very close friends, joining in the broader anti-apartheid struggles. It
was against this background we decided that he would work with me in promoting
the UKUSA newspaper.
He decided to work discreetly with me and
he had an office next to mine on the second floor of the 320 West Street
building.
While setting up the infrastructure for the
launch of the newspaper, I started to immediately work for the Press Trust of
India (PTI), BBC Africa Service, Radio Nederlands, Radio Deutsche Welle, Radio
France Internationale, American Public Radio, WHUR News in Washington, and
other radio stations in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Namibia and
Zimbabwe.
Without any self-censorship, I began to
bravely supply all the news outlets with stories that mainly related to the
struggles of the people for freedom and liberation.
But this was not to last.
About two weeks after my birthday on 15
December 1980, security policeman De Wet and one of his colleagues walked into
our office
-50-
without any warning and just looked at me.
A few minutes earlier, Govin Reddy had
walked in and had settled in his office, reading the morning newspaper, the
Natal Mercury. He became aware of the presence of the security policemen and
was listening intently to what was to unfold.
The security policemen carried a document
and one of them said:
"Mr Subramoney, we have brought along
a belated birthday present for you."
Without waiting for my response, De Wet
said:
"You have been declared a communist
and a threat to the security of the state. You have been issued with a banning
and restrictive order which prevents you from continuing with your work as a
journalist."
De Wet warned me that I should leave the
office immediately because my banning order restricted me from entering any
newspaper or media office and that I was restricted from entering any so-called
African, Indian or Coloured residential area, except for the town of Verulam,
where I lived, about 30km north of the city of Durban.
I was also warned that I was restricted to
my home between 7pm and 6am daily and at weekends and that I was not allowed to
receive
-51-
any visitors or talk to more than one
person at a time.
The banning order was for a period of three
years.
The restriction order not only prevented me
from continuing with my work as a journalist - to edit the UKUSA newspaper; but
also prevented me from supplying the foreign media - news about the oppression
and suppression of the black majority.
One of my colleagues at the Daily News,
Quraish Patel, was in my office at the time the security policemen served me
the banning order. He looked on in dismay. Patel was one of the journalist
colleagues at the Daily News who also came under the scrutiny of the security
police. He and another colleague, Wiseman Khuzwayo, who used to stay in the
area of Mpumulanga, near Pietermaritzburg, were detained and kept in solitary
confinement for three months under the apartheid regime’s notorious Internal
Security Act. Another local journalist, Vas Soni, was also detained at this
time. They were released without being charged or taken to court.
Patel knew very well the base character of
the security police and, therefore, he did not find their behaviour and action
in our office to be a surprise and any different to his own experiences.
After the security policemen issued another
warning to me, they left.
-52-
As soon as De Wet and his colleague
departed, Govin came out of his office and told me not to
worry.
"It's the price one has to pay for
speaking out against oppression," he said.
After further discussions with Govin, I
walked out of the office carrying the banning order document with me. I walked
to the offices of the president of the Natal Indian Congress (NIC) at that
time, Mr M J Naidoo. Mr Naidoo had his office in the so-called “Little India”
section of the city called the “Grey Street area”.
“I am in big trouble”, I informed Mr
Naidoo.
“What’s the problem, Subry?,” he asked.
“I have just been issued with a banning
order and I don’t know what to do,” I said.
“It seems the security police came to know
of our UKUSA project and they want to silence us.”
He advised me as follows: “Don’t worry
Subry. We all have to pay the price for what we are fighting for. You are just
another casualty in this process. Go home and think about what has just
happened and then plan your road ahead.”
I was banned on the same day as one of my
colleagues in Johannesburg, Zwelakhe Sisulu. Our banning orders generated a
storm of protest, both in South Africa and internationally.
-53-
My immediate former newspaper, the Daily
News, published the following story as a front-page lead article on December 29
1980 under the headline: “Worldwide uproar at blows to the Press” and strap
headline: “Waldheim urged to act on bannings.”
-54-
Thereafter, several other colleagues, Phil Mthimkulu,
Juby Mayet, Joe Thloloe, Mathatha Tsedu and Johnny Issel were also banned and house arrested.
-55-
(Joe Thloloe)
-56-
(Juby
Mayet)
(Phil
Mthimkulu)
Mthimkulu and I represented the Writers
Association of SA (WASA) at a conference of the International Federation of
Journalists (IFJ) in Nice in France in September 1978 at a time when I was
still at the Daily News.
-57-
(Philip Mthimkulu and Subry Govender
attending the IFJ conference in Nice in France in 1978.The date on the photo
represents the day a copy was made.)
We
established WASA early in 1978 after the Union of Black Journalists (UBJ) was
banned along with 17 other anti-apartheid organisations on October 19 1977.
I presented a comprehensive paper
at the conference about the barbarity of the former apartheid regime against
journalists, especially black media professionals, in South Africa. (This Paper
is published under the headline:
“SUPPRESSION OF BLACK JOURNALISTS
BETWEEN 1976 AND 1978” on page )
-58-
MY FORMER NEWSPAPER – DAILY
NEWS – SPOKE OUT AGAINST OUR BANNINGS
The Daily News and other newspapers
belonging to the Argus Group spoke out against our bannings. The Daily News in
an editorial on December 30 1980 had this to say:
Under the headline, “Bannings”, the
editorial read:
“Quite apart from the moral considerations
of silencing a man who has committed no crime (otherwise he would presumably be
charged in --
-59-
court) and depriving him of his livelihood,
one has to ask what the security authorities hope to achieve, even in their own
terms, by doing so.
“Two black journalists have been served
with banning orders. One is the son of a Robben Island prisoner who is regarded
in many overseas circles as a martyr. The other is a local correspondent of the
BBC and news agencies in West Germany,
Canada, the Netherlands, and Zimbabwe. The
bannings, therefore, are guaranteed maximum publicity and South Africa’s
critics will extract maximum benefit, as they did when black newspapers
were closed down in 1977. Whose cause are the security authorities serving?
“And if the security considerations are
genuinely so weighty, surely there must be a shred or two of evidence that
could be produced in court?
“The authorities no doubt disliked the
brand of radicalism propounded by these journalists. Many of their own
colleagues, black and white, were uneasy about their avowed policy of using
journalism for the express purpose of ‘Black liberation’. But one cannot lock
up ideas. Argument and example are the country.
“Meanwhile, the bannings, along with the
stopping on a technicality of three Black newspapers, are an ominous pointer to
official attitudes.”
-60-
But despite the strong sentiments against
our bannings, we were seen as "media terrorists".
I was especially charged with being “an
instigator” by some politicians who worked the homeland system at that
time.
A few days after I was detained on May 28
1980, the “homeland” politicians had accused me of recruiting black people at
the Daily News in Durban to join the ANC. They warned me that I was near the
Indian Ocean and that I would be made to "swim back to India".
They had also referred to my action in
visiting the township of KwaMashu in Durban to cover a story about school
children who were holding a meeting at a local community hall. The school
children were part of the thousands of children who had embarked on a boycott
of "apartheid" education.
Here, I befriended a number of school
children to get the inside story. One of the youngsters, Skumbuzo Manyoni, later
became a very close friend and also worked with me at the alternative Press
Trust of South Africa (PTSA) news agency we had started late in 1980.
Some reporters of the Ilanga Zulu
newspaper, which at this time was owned by the Inkatha political party, were
also at the meeting.
After my story about the meeting was
published in the Daily News, several members of the KwaZulu
-61-
homeland took a swipe at me when addressing
a session of the homeland assembly in the capital of Ulundi.
-62-
Some of the members accused me of
“instigating” the children of the KwaMashu township in Durban to boycott
classes and to join the country-wide education protests.
The Daily News published a report about the
allegations under the headline: “Daily News reporter under fire in KwaZulu
Assembly.”
-63-
This report was written by a colleague,
Arthur Konigkramer, who used to cover the KwaZulu Homeland legislature and the
Inkatha political
-64-
movement. He and I should sit opposite each
other in the newsroom. We became very good friends but did not share the same
political views about the country.
After I left the Daily News early in
December 1980, Konigkramer also left the newspaper to take up the editorship of
a newspaper owned by the Inkatha political party. After 1990, he joined the
Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) and became a member of the KwaZulu-Natal Provincial
Parliament.
The IFP’s attack on me in the KwaZulu
Homeland Assembly at the same time of my detention and banning orders by the
security police raised some questions.
Filing from Ulundi, the capital of the
KwaZulu homeland, Mr Konigkramer published a report under the headline: “Daily News reporter under
fire in KwaZulu Assembly” early in June. The report read:
“Several members of the KwaZulu Legislative
Assembly last night again attacked a Daily News reporter, Mr M. Subramoney, for
the role he has allegedly played in the boycott of classes by African school
children in KwaMashu.
“The Chief Minister, Chief Gatsha
Buthelezi, said African reporters of the newspaper Ilanga had been chased out
of a meeting of students at the
-65-
KwaMashu cinema “no doubt egged on by the
iconoclastic anarchists like Mr Subramoney”.
“Can you imagine? African reporters are
chased out of a meeting in KwaMashu, while Mr Subramoney is not touched. That
is strange to say the least. He owes us an explanation – that is very strange
conduct.”
“Chief Buthelezi said he could also produce
sworn statements from African drivers employed by The Daily News to the effect
that Mr Subramoney had denigrated him and Inkatha and suggested to the drivers
that they join the African National Congress.
“He could produce further examples of Mr
Subramoney’s activities against Inkatha and the Black Alliance.
“Dr B S Ngubane said he wished to warn Mr
Subramoney and his ilk that there comes a time when people must be told that
they are going to feel the wrath of God”.
The normally soft-spoken Dr Ngubane showed
signs of extreme anger when he warned ‘Mr Subramoney and his cohorts not to
misuse our children’.
It appeared to him that there could be a
tragedy in
-66-
KwaMashu in which many children would be
hurt, but the action by the pupils ‘would not even make
a small dent in the apartheid structure’.
“Our people have suffered. They have borne
that suffering with dignity. We will not allow the Subramoneys and those who
live in Reservoir Hills (a suburb in Durban where some activists and leaders of
the Natal Indian Congress lived) to denigrate our leader and to misuse our
children”.
Mr Subramoney was also attacked by Mr
Stephen Sithede and Mr R.R. Mdongwe.
“Mr Mdongwe managed to defuse the tense
atmosphere in the Assembly when he said: ‘He must be very careful. He is very
close to the Indian Ocean and the Inkatha current is very strong’.”
In another article published in the same
week, Mr Konigkramer reported that the members had issued a warning that they
would adjourn the Assembly so that Inkatha could deal with people who were
organising and agitating among African school children in the township of
KwaMashu.
Under the headline, “A warning for ‘agitators’”
and a sub-headline, “Chief hits out over school protest”, Mr Konigkramer
reported that the leaders also claimed that those behind the efforts to get
African children to join the schools boycott were being supported by “activists
sitting in white newspaper offices”.
-67-
He wrote: “He named Mr Marimuthu Subramoney
of The Daily News and said he wished to warn him as well that if he was trying
to challenge Inkatha, the challenge would be met”.
“Chief Buthelezi said it was now clear that
exactly the same pattern that occurred during the Soweto troubles of 1976 were
now being followed in Natal.
“He said there were people who were
prepared to misuse African school children and if necessary ‘walk over their
dead bodies in order to achieve their own selfish aims.”
Mr Konigkramer was good enough to publish
my reaction to the claims against me.
He wrote in the same article: “Commenting
on Chief Buthelezi’s statement Daily News reporter, Mr Subramoney said: ‘I am
totally mystified by Dr Buthelezi’s attack on me. I reject the statement that I
am an activist.
‘I have merely reported the school boycotts
truthfully and honestly.
‘I covered the schools boycott in KwaMashu
only after The Daily News was telephoned by pupils from that area’.”
-68-
"I understand you want to become a reporter
and you want to do some sports stories for us……. . “I see you are very keen and
I would give you an opportunity to write stories for us." – Bobby
Harrypersadh, Editor of Golden City Post in Durban in the early 1970s.
NATURAL
ENTRY INTO JOURNALISM
My keen interest in community life and sport took
an upward turn ever since I had started work after matriculating at the Verulam
High School in 1965.
My father, Mr Subramoney Munien Govender, spoke to
an acquaintance about finding me a job now that I had completed my schooling.
This friend, Mr Govee Govender, used to meet my father on the train taking them
to Durban. My father used to board the passenger train from Ottawa, our home
village, and Mr Govender hailed from the next station stop of Mount Edgecombe.
Mount Edgecombe is one of the towns and districts
where most of the Indian indentured labourers and
-69-
their children had worked and settled since the
early 1880s. Mr Govender’s great-grand-parents had
also arrived as indentured labourers from the Tamil Nadu state of India since
the 1860s. After completing their indentures most of them continued to work in
the sugar cane fields, in the sugar mills and in factories in and around the
city of Durban.
Mr Govender himself worked as a clerk at the
Guardian Assurance Company and he told my father that there was a chance of me
obtaining a clerical position at his work place. At that time,
the offices of Guardian Assurance company were
situated in a building at the corner of the former Gardiner (Dorothy Nymebe)
and Smith (Anton Lembede) streets in central Durban.
It was early in 1966 that I was invited for an
interview for a job as a clerk. The manager, a Mr Coleman, was a big, burly
person and he gave the impression that he was in charge and no one should
question his authority. During the interview in his office, he started off by
asking me: “What is 2 plus 2?” I was taken aback a bit because I did not expect
him to start with such a question.
But I gave him the answer.
He, thereafter, informed me that I would receive a
salary of R40 a month, which I was told was half the salary that the white
clerks were paid. I did not
-70-
question him or other senior staff about this
discrepancy but his statement did stir something
in me.
I asked myself how is it that white junior clerks
were paid R80 a month, while young people like me were offered half the
amount?
I travelled on the train daily from Monday to
Friday from Ottawa to Durban and to pass the time I read the morning, Natal
Mercury, and afternoon, Daily News, newspapers avidly.
I devoured every item in the newspapers but first
used to go to the back pages to read the sporting news and thereafter turn to
the news pages.
It was during these periods that I told myself that
I also wanted to become a reporter soon to cover the community news and the
sporting events from my home district of Verulam. At this time, I was also very keen on
football and took an active interest in social and community life. I thought
that it would be a good idea to cover these events in order to highlight the
good work done by the community and sporting organisations.
I made enquiries at the local newspapers and at the
same time enrolled with a correspondence college to study journalism. I
completed my journalism course through correspondence in 1968.
-71-
I found the reporters and news editor at the
afternoon Daily News newspaper very co-operative
-72-
and responsive. The news editor at that time at the
Daily News was Mr Roy Rudden. After I made contact with him, I found that he
was a liberal and very interested in the struggles of the black people. He had
previously worked in Zambia and had some contacts with members of the ANC who
had been in exile in that country.
He loved his job at the government-owned newspaper
but did not take lightly to the President of Zambia, Kenneth Kaunda,
scrutinising the political stories before they were published or broadcast.
He returned to South Africa and found a job with
the then Argus Group as a senior journalist and news editor.
He was very supportive of my passion to become a
reporter and suggested that I should attend community meetings and sports
events, and write news stories and articles for the newspaper. He also
encouraged me to read the books written by the British author, Graham Greene,
and West Indian authors, V.S. Naipaul and Shiva Naipaul.
Up to this day the Graham Greene novels adorn my
bookshelves. Some of the books by Greene that I still enjoy reading include –
The Quiet American,
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Brighton Rock and the Comedians.
I greatly appreciated the other two authors, V.S.
Naipaul and Shiva Naipaul – because they were of
Indian-origin and had their roots in the West Indies. V.S. Naipaul’s books that
I thoroughly enjoyed were: “A House for Mr Biswas”, which was mainly about the
life of Indian-origin people in the West Indies; and “A Bend in the River”,
which was about the changing African continent after independence, and “The
Mimic Men”, which was about a colonial man’s experience in a post-colonial
world. Shiva Naipaul’s novel that caught my attention was “North of South”, which
he had written after making a journey through East Africa. I was very keen on V
S Naipaul’s books because I wanted to know in detail the lives of people of
Indian-origin in Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana, Suriname and other West Indian
islands where they had settled as indentured labourers.
At the time I made contact with Mr Rudden, I
noticed that he had close relations with the Inkatha political leader, Prince
Mangosuthu Buthelezi. On one occasion while I was visiting the Daily News in
the late 1960s, I saw Prince Buthelezi being welcomed by Mr Rudden to the
offices of the Daily News in Field Street (now Joe Slovo Street).
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The opportunity Mr Rudden gave me, I grabbed with
both hands.
While working at my day job at the Guardian
Assurance Company, I also kept an eye on developing events within the
"Indian-origin” community. Guardian Assurance in the early 1970s moved to
the 10th floor of Eagle Building in West Street (now Dr Pixley KaSeme), which
was only about 120 metres from the Daily News building at 85 Field Street (now
Joe Slovo).
In order to equip myself for the freelance
reporter's work, I needed a typewriter. I scouted around various shops in
Durban for a typewriter and eventually purchased one from a furniture
establishment at the bottom end of Smith Street (Anton Lembede), near the
Catholic Cathedral, which had become the home for many protest meetings under
the leadership of Archbishop Denis Hurley.
I entered into an agreement with the furniture
company to purchase the typewriter for an amount of R135 to be paid back over a
few years at R2 a month.
One of the first stories that I covered was a
meeting addressed by a professor, Dr Gavin Maasdorp, lecturer in Economics,
from the then Natal University at the old Verulam Town Hall in
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(Todd Street) sometime in early 1969. He was
invited by the local civic association to speak
about the changing life patterns of the
"Indian-origin” people. The hall was packed to capacity with some of the
local "Indian" leaders also in attendance. They included Mr Y S
Chinsamy, Mr Ismail Kathrada, and Mr R L Beharie.
The professor gave a lengthy account of the
“Indian” people. How they had arrived from India as indentured labourers since
1860 and till the early 1900s; how they toiled on sugarcane plantations on the
north and south coasts of the then Natal Colony and thereafter when Natal
became part of the Union of South Africa in 1910; how they had concentrated on
education and in many cases built their own schools despite the hardships; how
they had made progress as market gardeners; how they had risen above all odds and
discrimination and moved into the different professions - clerks, teachers,
doctors and lawyers - and how "they now no longer want to dirty their
hands".
I wrote the story and the next morning before
heading for my work at the insurance company, I went to the Daily News and
handed Mr Rudden my typewritten news story. He looked at it and said: "It
looks okay, Subry. I will see what I could do.
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Leave it with me."
I went to my insurance office and waited for the
afternoon newspaper. When the first edition of the
Daily News was out in the streets by mid-day, I quietly sneaked out of the
office and went to one of the vendors and asked him whether I could look at the
newspaper. The newspaper vendor, who happened to be of Indian-origin, looked at
me and said there would be no problems.
I flipped through the pages and it was in pages
five or six that I noticed a one column story with the headline: "Indians
don't want to dirty their hands."
It was my first news story to be published and I
was on top of the world.
I rushed back to the insurance office and told my
colleagues that I had just had my first story published in the Daily News.
Govee Govender, Krish Naidoo, Steve Naidoo and Philip Francis and I used to
occupy an office at the back of the main front office where all the white
clerks had their desks. We were "non-whites" and we were not allowed
to sit with whites in the large main front office. We were closed off in a back
office. Although it was the law of the land, it could have easily been broken
in our office. But the company (a British subsidiary) wanted to maintain
cordial relations with the apartheid rulers and, therefore,
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went along with the segregation of their staff.
My colleagues expressed their joy at the
information I relayed to them but warned me that I
should take care that the “whites” in the office do not become aware of my
journalistic work.
It was the start of my freelance journalistic work
that lasted for nearly five years. While doing community news stories for the
Daily News, I, at the same time, covered soccer and cricket events for the
Golden City Post, the Leader, and Graphic.
As a young man I was very energetic and
enthusiastic about becoming a reporter. At weekends I used to travel by train
from Ottawa to Verulam to cover the major soccer and cricket matches at the
Verulam Recreation Ground. I even took photographs.
I used to return to our wood and iron house in Munn
Road, Ottawa, and write up the sports stories, utilising my newly-purchased
typewriter. I used a table in the open lounge and open bed room and under a
paraffin lamp, to type my stories. The next morning, I used to drop them off at
the offices of Post, which was based at the Goodhope Centre in the Grey Street
(now Dr Yusuf Dadoo) area of Durban.
I remember my first visit to the Post newspaper
office as being a nerve-wracking experience. As a
-78-
cub reporter with very little experience, I walked
into the office with my typewritten sports story in
my hand. I introduced myself and told the
receptionist that I had written a sports story and wanted it to be published in
the newspaper.
The newsroom was a hive of activity and the
reporters were busy typing and chatting away.
They looked at me and must have wondered:
"Here's another young man who thinks he can be a reporter."
The guys in the office, who later became very close
friends, were Deven Moodley, M S Roy, Farook Khan, Morris Reddy, Tix Chetty, I A
Khan and Rajendra Chetty. I gave Deven my typewritten story and he told me that
he would look at it.
I informed Deven that I wanted to cover the sports
stories in Verulam every week and would give it to Post for publication. He
listened to me very intently and then asked me to talk to his editor, Mr Bobby
Harrypersadh.
"Good morning Sir," I greeted Mr
Harrypersadh.
"Don't worry about Sir, just call me
Bobby," he responded.
"I understand you want to become a reporter
and you want to do some sports stories for us," he said.
Mr Harripersadh was a rounded man who dressed
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very neatly, in a tie and long sleeve shirt.
I informed him that I was from the North Coast
village of Ottawa, near Verulam, and that I was working for the Guardian
Assurance Company as a clerk but my ambition was to eventually become a full-time
journalist. I told him that I first wanted to do some freelance work and to
obtain some
experience.
"Subry", he said, "don't
worry".
"I see you are very keen and I would give you
an opportunity to write stories for us."
Mr Harrypersadh called Deven and informed him that
I was going to be their Verulam correspondent and that he must assist me.
At the same time, I was introduced to Mr G R
Naidoo, who occupied an office right next door to Mr Harrypersadh. Mr Naidoo,
sporting a smart-shaped beard, at this time was the Durban Editor of Drum
Magazine.
It was the start of a relationship that opened up
many opportunities for me.
I covered mainly local sporting events in Verulam,
and, also, community news.
Every Monday afternoon, after I finished my work at
the Guardian Assurance Company, I used to rush from my offices at the corner of
West and Field Streets to the offices of Post and assist them
-80-
wherever I could. Then when all the work was
completed, all of us - Roy, Deven, Farook, Tix and
I - used to drive to the Louis Botha Airport to drop off a package - containing
the stories from the Durban office – to be sent to the head office of Post in
Johannesburg.
(M S Roy -centre- with Deven Moodley and another
colleague who were working at Post Newspaper in the 1970s and 1980s.)
Thereafter, we used to drive to a local hotel,
Railway Hotel, in Isipingo, where we used to enjoy ourselves drinking lots of
beer. At times these drinking sessions led to some extra activities like
chatting and picking up ladies of the night. On one occasion, I recall that
after picking up a lady of the night, we drove to the Isipingo beach. Here one
of
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our colleagues, drunk beyond comprehension, took
the lady outside the car.
Deven, Farook, Tix Chetty and I could hear him
saying: "Come on madam, be nice." And he was using some colourful
language to get his message across to the young lady.
After sessions like these I used to return home
late in the night at about 11 and 12 pm or in the early hours after mid-night.
My mother used to worry but I would tell her that I wanted to become a fulltime
reporter and I must be grateful to Post for allowing me to work with them on
Monday evenings.
At the same time while writing sports articles for
Post and news items for the Daily News, I also used to write community news for
the Leader and Graphic newspapers – two newspapers that catered mainly for the
Indian-origin community. It was at the Leader that I first met Brijlall
Ramguthee, who at that time used to go as R. Brijlall; Dennis Pather and Sunny
Bramdaw. I also encountered the "Old Lady" Mrs Bramdaw at the offices
of the Leader, which was situated a few blocks away from the Post newspaper
offices in the former Queen Street, (now Denis Hurley Street).
Dressed in a sari, she appeared to be a person who
had total control over the running of the
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newspaper, which was started by her husband.
Ramguthee later joined the Post newspaper and it
was here that our bond and friendship grew and strengthened. Pather later moved
to the Graphic newspaper.
Our work as reporters and I, as a freelance reporter,
brought all of us together and we held regular gatherings at the homes of Bobby
Harrypersadh and other colleagues. These were occasions we looked forward to as
it gave us an opportunity to get pasted and, also to talk about the major
events and topics gripping the people. We especially concentrated on soccer,
cricket, swimming, tennis and the role players involved.
-83-
(R Lutcman)
(Mr Bijou)
(Morgan
Naidoo)
(Photo of some of the anti-apartheid
sports leaders during the sports anti-aparteid struggles.)
Some of the sports leaders at this time were Norman
Middleton, Ramhori Lutchman, R K Naidoo, George Singh, SK Chetty, Charles
Pillay, Vic Pillay, Dharam Ramlal, M N Govender and others in football; M N
Pather in tennis; Pat Naidoo, Harold
-86-
Samuels, Krish Mackerdhuj and others in cricket;
Cassim Bassa in table tennis and Morgan Naidoo in swimming. All these leaders
used their different codes not only to call for the isolation of racist sport
but also used the sporting arena to articulate the creation of a non-racial,
free, and a new democratic South Africa.
I was learning a great deal about the struggles of
the people in the social, educational, sports, and political fields. This
helped me a great deal in covering community and other news stories for the
Daily News as a freelancer. I soon also became involved in doing freelance
sports reporting for the Sunday Tribune and later for the Natal Mercury after
Deven Moodley left the Post to join the morning newspaper. Weekends used to be
hectic for me as I used to write whatever top sports stories for the Sunday Tribune
on Saturday afternoons and then on Sunday, I used to report on the professional
soccer matches played at Currie's Fountain under the auspices of the South
African Soccer League (SASL) and later the Federation Professional League (FPL)
for the Natal Mercury. I also had contacts in the different areas such as
Chatsworth and in Johannesburg who acted as correspondents. I used to telephone
the sports officials from the offices of the Mercury to obtain the results and
reports of soccer and cricket matches.
-87-
“WHY ARE YOU CAUSING PROBLEMS
IN OUR
OFFICE?”
My stay at Guardian Assurance did not last. It was
sometime late in 1968 or 1969 that I gathered enough courage to write an
article for the company’s magazine. I used the platform to pose the question
why separate premiums were applied to people of colour on one side and to “whites”,
on the other, for motor and other short-term insurances.
Mr Coleman called me to his office and asked: “Mr
Subramoney, why are you causing problems here. Your article sent to the
magazine is not acceptable.”
He then warned me that the he and other staff
members were aware about my freelance work as a reporter and that I should not
infringe office hours.
I apologised and said I would take the necessary
precautions. But sometime in 1969, I was spotted by some staff members leaving
the office and taking the lift down to the ground floor. The lifts in this
building were also separated for people
-88-
according to their colour lines. Most of the lifts
were for “whites only” and at least two for “non-whites”.
I observed the segregation laws when “whites” were
around but there were occasions when I got into lifts that were reserved for “whites
only”.
On this occasion I used a lift for “whites” and
this action was witnessed by one of our office “messengers”, who I knew as
Jackson Ndhlovu. He approached me and said: “Subry, please take care. The whites
here only like Africans, Indians and Coloured people who say ‘Ja baas’.”
I told Ndhlovu, who used to stay in the township of
KwaMashu near the area of Duffs Road in Durban, that I was not concerned about
them because I am not going to treat myself as a “second class” citizen.
I continued my walk to the nearby Daily News office
to speak to Mr Rudden.
When I returned, I was called to the office of Mr
Coleman and given a letter.
The letter informed me that I had broken office
rules and because of this I was dismissed forthwith.
Although it was a major shock, I just walked out
after informing my colleagues of what had just
-89-
taken place. I even saw Ndhlovu and he was not
pleased to hear that I had been fired for leaving the office during working
hours.
When I returned home that evening, I did not tell
anyone of what had taken place. The next morning, I left for “work” as normal
and boarded the usual train for Durban. When I arrived at the station, I
quickly purchased the Mercury newspaper and went through the vacancy columns to
see if I could find any job. I noticed that there was a vacancy for a clerk at
the SA Wire Company near where the Durban Central Prison was situated. The area
has now been transformed and is where the International Convention Centre (ICC)
is located.
I walked to the company offices and enquired about
the job. I was interviewed by the manager and was immediately hired to work as
a clerk.
This brought me great relief and I worked there for
about six months before I obtained a position as a clerk at the Pearl Assurance
Company in West Street. Here the manager, Mr Gabriel Sabido, a former American
with Mexican roots, was impressed with my enthusiasm to work for an insurance
company. I informed him about my freelance work as a reporter. He did not mind
and assured me that he had no problems as long it did not interfere with my
work at his office.
-90-
Mr Sabido’s stance encouraged me to continue with
my freelance work for the Daily News, Post and other publications.
JOINED DAILY NEWS ON A FULL-TIME BASIS IN EARLY
1973
The chance to join the Daily News on a fulltime
basis came at the beginning of March 1973. This was about five years after I
had worked as a freelance reporter for the newspaper and other publications
such as the Golden City Post, the Leader, Graphic, The Natal Mercury and the
Sunday Tribune.
The only “Indian-origin” reporter on the Daily News
staff, Mr P M Chetty, passed away sometime early in 1973 and I was invited by
Mr Rudden and interviewed by Mr O’Mally, the editor.
Mr O’Mally told me that this was a great
opportunity for me and they were fully aware of my work as a freelancer. They
appreciated my commitment and my willingness to work long hours in pursuing
breaking and other stories.
He told me that I would be paid R250 a month.
Of course, when I joined, no one, including Mr
Rudden and other colleagues, had come forward to
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inform me that the canteen for the workers had been
divided along race lines. One section was for whites and another for “non-whites”.
I questioned my colleagues about this and they said that I should ignore the
segregation rules and join them in the main section.
My enquiry of this situation soon led to the
management of the Daily News doing away with the segregated facilities. All the
staff members were told that they could purchase their lunch and other meals
from one large canteen.
During my stay at the Daily News from March 1973 to
December 1980, I earned the reputation of being a committed journalist who went
the extra mile to cover most of the anti-apartheid sports and political stories
and who earned the respect of not only the anti-apartheid leaders but also my
news editors, editors and my colleagues.
On November 12 1975, our news editor, Mr David
James, wrote a letter to the editor, Mr John O’Mally, pointing out my passion
for my work as a journalist.
-92-
-93-
This is what he said:
“It is fairly common knowledge that Mr Subramoney
is one of the most enthusiastic and competent members of the newsroom staff.
This point hardly needs belabouring, but I feel that his performance today does
bear some comment.
“I was approached early this morning and advised,
in view of the ‘Leon sacking’ report, that I should recall Mr Subramoney from
leave to handle the story in view of his contacts in the Coloured Council.
“My reply to this advice was that a telephone call
to Mr Subramoney would be an unnecessary expense, as I was confident that he
would come in any way.
“Sure enough, ten minutes later, Mr Subramoney was
at his desk, talking to the Coloured Representative Council Executive in Cape
Town.
“It has been my experience that there are very few
reporters left nowadays with the above kind of dedication and I would merely
like it brought to your attention that Mr Subramoney’s completely professional
approach to his job is a tonic to those senior to him, and an example to all
his colleagues.”
To this, Mr O’mally, responded as follows:
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-95-
“He is, as you say, a first-class reporter and an
example to all his colleagues. I trust that we will be able to show our
appreciation of his contribution in more material terms at the end of the
year.”
-96-
-97-
And then he went on: “David, Please tell Mr
Subramoney how much his zeal in the pursuit of good stories is appreciated. Two
recent examples – the Norman Middleton passport scoop which was a model of
diligent following up, and the Mabandlas flee S.A. story where Mr Subramoney’s
first-class contacts paid off handsomely. And of course, the Pather’s passports
story.”
When Mr O’Mally was talking about the Mabandlas he
was referring to activists, Mr Lindeliwe Mabandla, and his wife, Brigitte, who
skipped the country early in October 1975. There was no news about which
country they had fled to but through my contacts I was told that they had found
refuge in Botswana.
This is the story that I had written.
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SOCIAL AND POLITICAL AWARENESS: THE OTTAWA
COMMUNITY EXPERIENCE
My interest in politics began while I was still a
young boy growing up in the small village of Ottawa, which was situated between
the towns of Mount Edgecombe and Verulam on the north coast of the province of
Natal in South Africa. The people who settled here were mainly former
indentured labourers (slaves) and their children who worked on the neighbouring
sugarcane plantations of Ottawa, Mount Edgecombe, Blackburn, Sacks Estate and
other nearby sugarcane estates.
Most of the residents in the Ottawa village had
their roots in the Bihar state in northern India. They had come to work on the
sugarcane estates here via Calcutta, now Kolkatta.
My ancestors started their lives as indentured
labourers at the Blackburn Sugar Estate where my grand-mother, Muniamma, and
her sister, Yellamah, were born in 1882 and 1884 respectively.
The Ottawa village also comprised a number of Tamil
families, a few Muslim families, and some Christian families who were Tamils.
There was at
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least one Muslim family whose ancestors had
come from Tamil Nadu. There was also one
Gujarati Hindu family.
At least two of the Muslim families – the Latiffs
and Hans – ran local shops in the village. They had their roots in the north
Indian state of Gujerat.
We all lived like one “big extended family” and
every one participated in each other’s cultural festivals. This was done
irrespective of whether one’s mother tongue was Tamil, Hindi, Urdu, and
Gujarati or whether we belonged to the Hindu, Muslim or Christian faiths.
We used to be in and out of our neighbours’ homes
and we were treated as children of all the families.
In one incident, I recall that one of Mr Latiff’s
sons, Cassim, and I became close friends after he enrolled at the University
for Indian-origin students at Salisbury Island in Durban. I was at this time
doing standard nine.
Our discussions would always revolve around the
activities of the students who had become involved in fighting against
apartheid and white minority rule. I used to visit the Latiff home in Central
Ottawa on a regular basis and also when the family moved to the Uplands area of
Ottawa after relocating their shop to the area of
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Springvale, near Avoca.
I used to join Cass and help him at the shop in
Springvale. He used to compensate me with some
cash for helping out at weekends.
On one occasion during my visit to the home, Mrs
Latiff lightened up my visit with these words: “Welcome Marimuthu. You are also
one of our sons.”
I had a similar experience with one of our
neighbours, Mrs Dutt, in Munn Road. Her husband was our local plan drawer who
had an office in the neighbouring town of Verulam.
Mrs Dutt and her husband had a large family of
several sons and daughters and I used to visit their home on a regular basis to
be in touch with two of the sons, Gokool, and Mannia. Mannia was a very good
football player and we used to train at the nearby school ground daily.
Mrs Dutt, who we used to call “Baynee”, was one of
the most kind-hearted, gentle and helpful persons in our neigbourhood. In
addition to treating us as one of her own children, she also used to take care
of my youngest sister, Childie, on weekdays when my mother had to work at the
local Flash Clothing Factory.
About 10km from our little village of Ottawa was
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the sugar estate of Blackburn, which was one of
several sugar estates nearby where many
descendants of indentured labourers continued to
toil in the sugar cane fields of major sugar
companies and their bosses.
My great grandparents, who were also indentured or
“coolie” labourers, worked at the Blackburn Sugar Estate when they arrived in
early 1881 from their little village in the state of Tamil Nadu in India.
My research into their lives revealed that my
ancestors, Mr Kandasamy Naiken, and his “wife”, Thanjee, had to flee their
village of Navalpore in the District of North Arcott because they had fallen in
love and conceived my grandmother, Muniamma, out of wedlock.
My father and mother, who started their married lives in Cato Manor and
later in the town of Isipingo, moved to Ottawa in 1956 after my father was
informed by relatives that descendants of indentured labourers had also settled
in the village.
He made contact with some of my mother’s relatives and friends and
managed to rent a piece of land in Munn Road in the Tin Town area of the town.
He was assisted in building a wood and iron house of one-bedroom, open lounge
that was also a
-102-
bedroom at night, and a kitchen with the help of
neighbours in the area - Narain Naicker, Jack Naidoo, Tip Top Naidoo,
Reggy Pillay and Pushpa
Naicker.
We moved into the tin house sometime in late 1956. I remember that our
bathroom was cut out of an old water tank that was situated outside the house
and our toilet was situated some distance from the main wood and iron house.
The toilet was also built of wood and iron and a large hole was dug into the
ground. A few years later we were provided the bucket system by the local
municipal Board. The buckets were removed once a week by workers of the
municipal board.
For
water we used to walk to the nearby Ottawa river to fetch both drinking and
washing water in large tin containers. We used to carry two of the containers
in what used to be called a banga (aka a slug) placed over one’s shoulder.
We had a number of neighbours, who were mainly Hindi speaking. They
included Johnny, his wife Sookaya and his family; the Bobby Singhs; the
Balmohans; the Duttoos; Bhagwandeens; Harrys, and the Dutts. Then we had the
Tamil families in our Tin Town area who included the Narain Naickers; the Jack
and Tip Top Naidoos; Ganesan,
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Kandasamy, and Nanda Naidoo family, John Chetty
family and the Ganas Govender family.
Although we all were very poor, all the families worked very hard –
either in the sugarcane fields,
or on the railways, in clothing factories and as ordinary labourers. My
mother worked as a machinist for Mr S S Maharaj at his Flash Clothing factory
in the village. My father worked in Maydon Wharf in Durban for Lever Brothers.
He worked as a labourer and laundry hand for nearly 40 years, earning as little
as R10 a week.
It was here in Munn Road, Ottawa, that my youngest sister, Natachtramma
(Childie) was born. She was delivered in our tin shanty home by the local
midwife, who lived nearby. We used to refer to the midwife as “medicine ayaa”
(granny).
We all celebrated the festivals of Deepavali
(Diwali), Kavady, Eid and other Muslim festivals, Christmas and New Year
without any inhibitions and used to be in and out of our and our neighbours’
homes like one huge family. We took part in the multi-cultural festivities even
though all our parents struggled to “put food on the table” and provide us with
new clothing on special days. For instance, I got my first pair of shoes on the
last day of my schooling at the Jhugroo Primary School
-104-
in 1961.
The kind-hearted personalities of Mrs Latiff, Mrs
Dutt, several other neighbours and their children at that time demonstrated
that people of Indian-origin in the early days never thought of being divided
along religious, language, caste or cultural lines.
The way of life for us was not unique as similar
patterns prevailed in all villages and towns where people of Indian-origin
settled after completing their indentures on the sugar cane fields in sugar
estates around the city of Durban and on the north and south coasts of
Natal.
-105-
(Ottawa
community leader, Mr S S Maharaj, with his wife.)
“WIPE YOUR SHOES WITH THE REPUBLIC FLAG”
It was against this kind of background that
prepared me for my journey as an activist journalist.
It started in 1960 when I was 14 years-old.
At this time the white and apartheid South African
Government was busy preparing to celebrate the
-106-
withdrawal of the country from the British
Commonwealth and the establishment of a Republic.
The Government had asked all its provincial administrations, including the
schools for “Indian-origin” children, to celebrate the establishment of the
Republic. Miniature versions of the new Republic flag had been distributed to
all government-controlled institutions and the people were expected to wave the
flags in order to welcome the establishment of the Republic.
Mr S S Maharaj, a former South African "non-white"
tennis champion, was the owner of the local Flash Clothing Factory in the
village. He was not only a local leader but a great humanitarian, who made
enormous contributions towards the building of our new Jhugroo Government-Aided
Indian School, which I attended at this time. His sons - Pravin and Veeran -
and daughters - Prithima and Rishla - were my good friends and we often played
together. He
had another son, Santosh, who was way too young to
be a playmate at this time.
In addition to helping to build our new village
school, Mr Maharaj also set up a voluntary organisation to provide a free
funeral service for the people of the village and the nearby town of Verulam
and its surrounding areas.
A few days before the main celebrations, I
-107-
approached Mr Maharaj at his office and told him
that we, as school children, had been asked to
carry the new flags and to join in the
celebrations. I don’t know why I did this but it seems that it was within me to
ask questions.
"I don't know anything about this big
celebration. What should we do?,” I asked Mr Maharaj.
He looked at me with some surprise and wanted to
know why I was asking all these questions.
"Young man this celebration is about the white
man showing that he's the ruler and he wants all of us to join him. I want to
suggest that you don't have any reason to celebrate but what you could do is
take the flags and use them to wipe your shoes," he said somewhat
seriously.
I did not know what Mr Maharaj was saying but it
definitely made an impression.
The construction of the Jhugroo Government-Aided
Indian school, which was built by voluntary labour
and through the sweat and toil of the local people, was made possible mainly
through Mr Maharaj’s initiative and hard work. I recall that my father, Mr
Subramoney Munien, known as Freddy; Mr Munoo Maharaj of Maharaj Road; Mr Dunoo
Singh of School Road; Mr S S Badlu of Kissoon Road, Mr M M Naicker of Tin Town,
our neighbour; Mr Parthab,
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the local market gardener and farmer; Mr Latiff and
scores of others used to volunteer their labour every weekend to build the new
school. Mr Badlu,
in fact, was the general manager and supervisor of
the building operations.
One of Mr Badlu's daughters, Yamawathie, was in my
class in standard five at the time the school was preparing for the launch of
Republic Day celebrations. She was a very good friend and class mate. She knew
about my interest in politics but we did not talk about this. We were very
naïve about what was happening in the country at that time. One of her
brothers, Kemraj, had gone to India to study medicine and I was keen to find
out more about this place called “India”.
After I started to attend the Verulam High School
in the neighbouring town with the same name in 1962, I lost contact with
Yamawathie.
The Ottawa school principal, also known as Mr S S
Maharaj, was busy putting into place a programme
for the celebration of the advent of "Republic Day". As a pupil in
standard five I took careful notice of what was going on.
Teachers and pupils were busy putting up a pole
where the new flag would be unveiled at the start of the celebrations. A day
before the celebrations, March 30 1960, the teachers had rolled the flag up the
pole - all in readiness for March 31 - Republic
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Day.
The school at that time had no gates or security
guards. That evening I took a cool walk from our
wood and iron home, which was only about 200 metres
away. I went up to the pole where the flag was hoisted and slowly and deftly
untied the knot and pulled down the flag. I folded the flag into a tiny piece
and briskly walked away with it. I went down to the nearby Ottawa River and
threw the flag into the fast, flowing waters.
The next morning, as usual, I went to school and
walked into my classroom, where our teacher, Mr Ken Rajoo, was already waiting
for us.
"Boys and girls Mr Maharaj is in an angry
mood. He is busy walking up and down wanting to know what has happened to the
flag that was put up yesterday for today's function," said Mr Rajoo, who
had qualified as a teacher only recently at the
Springfield Teachers’ College of Education in
Durban.
I maintained my silence and allowed Mr Rajoo to
tell us that Mr Marahaj was in a furious mood because he would not be able to
obtain another flag to hoist and celebrate the start of the new Republic of
South Africa.
"That would be very sad," I heard one of
my fellow
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classmates saying. The celebration was not much of
an affair but the boys and girls did enjoy the cool drinks and the sandwiches
that were provided.
The pulling down of the flag and dumping it into
the river was my first act of "sabotage"
- carried out all by myself at an age when I did not know what politics was all
about; when I did not know that Nelson Mandela was being hunted by the
apartheid regime; when I did not know that we "Indian-origin" people
were subjected to all kinds of racial discrimination in the same way and just
like our fellow African and coloured brothers and sisters.
“COOLIE SUGAR CANE FIELD WORKERS”
My social and political awakening took another
upward turn when after completing my standard six at the Jhugroo
Government-Aiden Indian School in 1960, I began attending Verulam High School.
Verulam was also a place where mostly former
indentured or “coolie” labourers and their children had settled. Although the
people of Indian-origin made up the majority of residents, the town was run by white
people who were immigrants from the British Isles.
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Here in standard seven, my history master was Mr
Kissoon. He did not come across as a political activist or political agitator
but during his history lessons, he would on almost every occasion say
something about the racial discrimination that
Indian-origin people, along with African and Coloured people, encountered in
their everyday lives. He informed us about the fact that the "non-white"
people - as we were referred to by the apartheid authorities at that time - had
no political rights and that "we were ruled by the white government".
During the school holidays my father made it clear
that I should not stand around and be idle. He
wanted me to engage in some kind of work to earn “a
few bobs”. (In those days we used to refer to coins as “bobs”.)
My friend who lived near our home in the Tin Town
part of Ottawa, Ruthnam “George” Naidoo, and I decided to work as casual
labourers during the school holidays in the sugar cane fields owned by the
Ottawa Sugar Estate.
When we were in standard six at the new Jhugroo
school, Ruthnam and I used to make sure that we were well prepared for our
examinations despite the lack of proper lights and appropriate conditions at
our homes. We decided that in order to
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overcome the lack of lights we would study in the
evenings under the street lights near our homes. So, it was not a surprise when
every evening during the examinations, Ruthnam (who was also
known as George) and I stood under the street
lights in lower Munn Road to study. Our neighbours, Sookiya and Johnny, and the
Bobby Singh family used to praise us for being that innovative.
“These boys are an example to our children,” Johnny
used to tell my mother and father.
When we joined together to work in the sugarcane
fields during our high school holidays, it attracted the attention of Mr S S
Maharaj, the clothing
factory owner.
He congratulated us for our initiative and asked
his son, Veeran, to join us. But we were not too happy about this because
Veeran was the son of a factory owner and it would not be appropriate for such
a person to work in the fields.
But Mr Maharaj told us: “Let Veeran join you all
because he must also learn about what it’s like to work in the sugarcane
fields.”
So, it was sometime in April 1961 that Ruthnam,
Veeran and I pitched up on a hill top, known as Gazards, near Ottawa where all
the workers of the
-113-
sugarcane estate had gathered to start their day’s
work. We joined them and were told because we were high school boys on holiday,
we would be paid thirty cents for a day’s work of weeding the sugarcane fields.
Most of the women, dressed in saris, were surprised
to see us. One woman asked in the Tamil language:
“Yena intha payinango intha vela porongo? Angu
vanthu high school porongo.”
Translated it meant: “Why do these boys want to do
this work. They are going to high school”.
We informed the women that we also want to work in
the sugarcane fields because we want to make
some money during our school holidays.
It was on the third day of our work in the fields
when I noticed the supervisor, who was called a “sardaar”, using some foul
language and shouting at the women about their work.
I don’t know what went through my head that I
dropped my hoe and went up to the supervisor and confronted him about his
unkindly attitude towards the women workers. I asked him why was he shouting at
the women labourers and why can’t he talk to them in a decent manner?
The supervisor, a person of Indian-origin, was
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taken aback. He couldn’t believe that a young man,
who was still in school, was questioning his authority and his attitude to his
workers.
“What business is it to you? You are just a worker
here and you must not question me as to how I talk
to the workers. You must know I am in charge here.”
Then he went to the point.
“If you don’t want to work under my supervision,
you can return the hoe and just leave.”
I retorted: “Keep your job.”
I walked back to my friends, Ruthnam and Veeran,
and reported to them about my interaction with the supervisor. They said if I
was not going to continue
to work then they would also leave.
We wished the other workers goodbye and told them
that their “sardaar” was not a “good man”. He was just like his bosses.
After a week, all three of us received 90 cents
each from a representative of the sugar company for working three days on the
sugarcane fields.
The incident was yet another experience that
contributed to my education about the political, social and economic situation
in South Africa in the early 1960s.
And then in my final two years at high school in
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1964 and 1965, we had another history teacher, Mr P
A Pillay, who was from the town of Dundee in Northern Natal. We used to refer
to him as PAPs.
Mr Pillay was more forthright during his history
lessons. He would speak out against the racial
policies of the White government and inform the
pupils that there were many people and organisations involved in the struggles
to be free in the land of their birth.
Mr Pillay left the teaching profession after a few
years and became an attorney. It was this profession that boasted most of the
activists who became members of organisations such as the NIC, ANC and PAC. I
learned after I entered the field of journalism that Mr Pillay was a member of
the Non-European Unity Movement (a radical
political movement that was not interested in negotiations but instead the
immediate transfer of power to the people). The organisation called for radical
transformation of the country.
Mr Pillay was one of my teachers at high school who
was responsible for sowing the seeds of a “rebellion” in me against the white
government. I was not the only pupil who was inspired by Mr Pillay. I can clearly
recall that another class mate, Shireen Akbar, also displayed an interest in
the political and social situation at that time. On one
-116-
occasion, without any fear, Miss Akbar asked Mr
Pillay about the apartheid policies and what should be done to defeat the
proponents of the evil system.
Her action also encouraged me.
(My matric class at the Verulam High
School in 1965. Shireen Akbar is seated extreme right, and I am standing top
row extreme left.)
Mr Pillay, after he entered the legal field,
married an activist, Miss Navanethan Pillay, who after South Africa attained
its freedom in 1994, served two terms as the Human Rights High Commissioner at
the United Nations.
-117-
OTTAWA RED CROSS SOCIETY
(Mr Moses and Mr Dicky Maharaj - second and third
from right are Ottawa Red Cross officials who provided leadership in the early
days.)
In addition to my love for soccer while growing up
in Ottawa in the mid-1960s, I also became involved with the Ottawa branch of
the S A Red Cross Society. I was only a high school kid and together with a
fellow pupil, Chotu, who lived with his family in the Uplands area of Ottawa
village, I joined several adults to get involved in the Red Cross.
Our branch of the SA Red Cross Society comprised
several people who I regarded as leaders of the community. They included Mr
Balmohan (Mr Barley), who lived at the bottom end of Munn Road in the Tin Town
area; Mr Dicky Maharaj, who was a
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manager at his brother, Mr S S Maharaj’s Flash
Clothing Factory at the corner of School and Munn Roads; Mr Moses, who
lived in a house near Chotu and his family; Mr Ramnanan, who owned a shop in
the Uplands area; and Pastor Daniel, who lived with his wife, in a house owned
by the Dunoo Singh family in School Road.
They all, together with Mr Padaychee from the head
office of the Red Cross, instilled the values of “service to humanity” in my
early teens – values that prepared me for my work as an activist journalist for
more than 50 years of my life in the media world.
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JOURNALISTS PAY THE PRICE FOR MEDIA FREEDOM
(Joe Thloloe)
-120-
(Mona Badela
and Zwelike Sisulu)
(Mathatha
Tseudu and Juby Mayet)
-120-
(Mona Badela
and Zwelike Sisulu)
(Mathatha
Tseudu and Juby Mayet)
-121-
Leslie
Xinwa, Phlip Mthimkulu, Isaac Moroe, and Duma Ndlovu)
The darkest day in the history of
Press Freedom no doubt was this day on October 19 1977 when the notorious
apartheid Minister of Police, Jimmy Kruger, not only banned the UBJ but also
banned the only two newspapers that earned the respect of majority of the
people - the World and Weekend World.
-122-
Mr Kruger, who became infamous for
describing Steve Biko’s death two months earlier as – “It leaves me cold” – at
the same time banned the UBJ publication - AZIZTHULA; religious and student
publications; locked up the editor and news editor of the World and Weekend
World – the late Percy Qoboza and the late Aggrey Klaaste respectively; and
banned for five years the Editor of the Daily Dispatch, the late Donald Woods.
Six other journalists were also
detained at this time – including Thenjiwe Mntintso, who became an ANC
functionary after 1994 and appointed as an ambassador; and Enoch Duma – who
worked for the Star newspaper at that time. He fled into exile after being released
from more than two years in detention.
Almost every member of the UBJ was
visited by the security police all over the country; their homes and offices
raided and searched and interrogated. All the raids were carried out at the
unearthly hours of 4am and 5am in the morning. I remember my mother knocking on
my door and saying in our Tamil mother tongue: “Some white people are here
asking for you.”
When representations were made to Mr
Kruger for the release of the detained journalists, he had the temerity to
announce that the detentions were not
-123-
meant to intimidate the Press and
that his Government had good reasons to detain the journalists.
It was during this traumatic period
that another publication of the UBJ, UBJ Bulletin, and all subsequent editions
were banned. The UBJ Bulletin contained some revealing articles about the
activities of the South African Police during the Soweto uprisings. Four UBJ
officials – Juby Mayet, Joe Thloloe, Mike Nkadimeng and Mike Norton – were
charged for producing an undesirable publication.
Inspite of world-wide condemnation of
the banning, detention and harassment of journalists, the state security police
continued with their jack-boot tactics.
In Durban two Daily News journalists
– Wiseman Khuzwayo and Quraish Patel – were detained without trial for more
than three months.
-124-
(Zwelike Sisulu and Juby Mayet leading
the march in Johannesburg against the banning of the UBJ and other
organisations)
On November 30 1977, the day white
South Africa went to the polls to give John Vorster another mandate to continue
to oppress the majority, 29 journalists, including Zwelakhe Sisulu and Ms Juby
Mayet, staged a march in the centre of Johannesburg against the banning of the
UBJ and the detention of journalists. They were detained for the night at the
notorious John Vorster Police station and charged under the Riotous Assemblies
Act and fined R50 each.
Some of our colleagues who found it
impossible to continue to work in South Africa skipped the country under trying
circumstances. They included Duma Ndhlovu, Nat Serache, Boy Matthews Nonyang
and Wiseman Khuzwayo.
-125-
Those who remained – including Juby
Mayet, Zwelakhe Sisulu, Philip Mthimkulu, Joe Thloloe, Charles Nqakula, Rashid
Seria, this correspondent and many others – vowed to continue the struggle. We
committed ourselves in the belief that there could be no Press freedom in South
Africa as long as the society in which we lived was not free. But the regime
was also determined to make life difficult for us.
In July 1977, when we scheduled to
hold a gathering of former UBJ members in Port Elizabeth to chart our future
course of action – the regime banned our gathering and prohibited us from
travelling to Port Elizabeth. But being determined to take on the regime
head-on we quickly re-scheduled our meeting to be held at the Starlite Hotel in
Verulam, about 25km north of Durban.
Unknown to us the dreaded Security
Police tapped our telephone conversations and had the Starlite Hotel in Verulam
bugged. The Security Police were listening to the entire proceedings of our
meeting and immediately decided that we were a bunch of “media terrorists” who
should be taken out of society.
At our meeting we decided to
establish our own daily and weekly newspapers and a news agency because we were
of the firm belief that the
-126-
establishment media was not catering
for the majority. The establishment media of that era, as you have already been
informed, was aimed at protecting and promoting the privileges of the minority.
But, sadly we did not have the
resources to embark on such ambitious projects. Nevertheless, many of us who
became frustrated with the establishment media began to make arrangements for
the establishment of regional newspapers that would provide an alternative
voice to the mainstream media and the National Party-controlled SABC.
But resistance led to more
repression. In June 1980 when school children all over the country boycotted
classes against the unequal and inferior education system for children of the
majority, the security police once again targeted journalists. They detained
many of us for lengthy periods, claiming that the journalists had been
encouraging the children to boycott classes.
Zwelakhe Sisulu was during that
period of repression detained for nearly two years. In Durban, Cape Town,
Johannesburg, Port Elizabeth, East London and other centres – black journalists
continued to work with the community in an attempt to establish alternative
newspapers.
-127-
In Durban, the Press Trust of South
Africa Third World News Agency was established as one of the first moves to
provide the outside world with accurate information about the situation in
South Africa. The news agency was established to operate alongside the running
of the alternative newspaper, UKUSA.
But just when the newspaper was set
to start publishing with the blessing of the community, the state struck again
and banned its Managing Editor – this correspondent; and also Zwelakhe Sisulu,
Joe Thloloe, Philip Mthimkulu, Mathatha Tsedu and Charles Nqakula in December
1980.
This was a massive blow for the
alternative media because all the journalists were fully involved in the
various projects.
Some of the publications that they
were involved in were UKUSA in Durban, Grassroots in Cape Town, Speak in
Johannesburg and Umthonyama in Port Elizabeth. The South African Council of
Churches also sponsored the publication of a newspaper
-128-
called The Voice. Philip Mthimkulu
and Juby Mayet worked for this newspaper before they were banned.
Despite being classified as “agitators”,
“activists” and “terrorists”, Zwelakhe Sisulu, Philip Mthimkulu, Juby Mayet,
Mono Badela, Mathatha Tsedu, Thami Mazwai, Rashid Seria, Enoch Duma, Joe
Thloloe and I received the support of the progressive forces from inside and
outside the country.
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SOLIDARITY SUPPORT FROM SOUTH AFRICAN COUNCIL OF
CHURCHES, AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL AND EDINBURGH UNIVERSITY
The South African Council of Churches, which was
headed by Bishop Desmond Tutu at that time, wrote this letter to all the banned
and house-arrested media people:
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Bishop Tutu, who later became the Archbishop of the
Anglican Church, wrote the letter on March 2 1981.
He wrote: “Dear Mr Subramoney,
“I have been instructed by the Executive
Committee of the South African Council of Churches
meeting in Johannesburg from Feb 23 – 25 to send the following resolution:
“That this Executive Meeting, noting with grave
concern:
“a). the closure of Post (Transvaal) and Sunday
Post;
“b) the banning of five Black journalists, all of
whom were executive members of the Media Workers’ Association of South Africa
(MWASA);
“And further, realising that this action is not
only part and parcel of the so-called “total strategy” but also a serious
attempt to silence the Black voice in the country, condemns the Government’s
action as unchristian and totally out of step with the accepted principles of
the civilised world with regard to the freedom of the press, speech and the
individual.
“God bless you richly.
“Yours sincerely
“Bishop Desmond Tutu
“General Secretary.”
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All of us banned journalists were adopted by the
different chapters of Amnesty International in most parts of Europe. I was
adopted by the Edinburgh branch of Amnesty International.
-132-
This was their initial response after they took up
my struggles against the bannings we journalists suffered:
-133-
This letter was sent to the then Prime Minister of
South Africa, Mr PW Botha.
It read: “Your Excellency,
“I wish to express my concern to you about
violations of human rights in South Africa. In particular, I wish to draw your
attention to the case of Mr Marimuthu Subramoney. Without charge or trial, he
was placed under a three-year banning order in December 1980. He has been
restricted to his local district on weekdays, and to his house every evening
and weekend. He cannot enter any industrial complex, harbour area, educational
institution or newspaper office. He is allowed few visitors. He is not allowed
to publish anything, and so cannot continue his occupation as a journalist.
“It is because Mr Subramoney has committed no
crime, and has never used or advocated violence, that I believe his banning
constitutes a grave abuse of human rights. This can only damage the good name
of your country in the eyes of the world. I must appeal to you to lift the
banning order on Mr Subramoney, to end the use of banning as a means of
repression, and to introduce genuine respect for the fundamental human rights
of all South
Africans. “Yours sincerely
“Secretary,
“Edinburgh branch, “Amnesty International.”
-134-
Two activists in Edinburgh, Mr Ritchie Walker, and
his wife, Mrs Margaret Walker, were the people who readily adopted me as a
“prisoner of conscience” and highlighted my situation.
Amnesty International members in Edinburgh also
signed a petition of more than 1 000 people and handed it to the South
African Embassy in London.
(Mrs Margaret Walker – left – with two of her
Edinburgh Amnesty International colleagues in front of the South African
Embassy in London in 1982.)
This was an article published by the Star on July 8
1982:
-135-
Under the headline, “Lift ban, 1000 urge the PM”,
the Star newspaper’s Bureau in London, reported:
“London – About 1000 copies of a letter to the
Prime Minister, Mr P W Botha, asking him to lift a banning order on former
Durban journalist, Mr Marimuthu Subramoney, were handed in at the
-136-
South African Embassy in London this week.
“The letters are signed by MPs, bishops and staff
members and students at Edinburgh University. They are part of a campaign
organised by the Edinburgh branch of the British section of Amnesty
International.
“The branch adopted Mr Subramoney as a ‘prisoner of
conscience’ in 1981, and has worked to raise support for him in Britain.
“It enlisted the support of Mr Roy Jenkins, Mr
David Owen and Mrs Shirley Williams of the Social Democratic
Party; Mr David Steel, leader of the Liberal Party; Mr Edward Heath of the
Conservative Party; and Mr Len Murray, secretary of the Trade Union Congress.
“The delegation which handed on the letters was led
by Mr David Bendix, an Edinburgh University student.
“The letters express concern at violations of human
rights in South Africa and they say banning of Mr Subramoney could only damage ‘the
good name of your country’.
They say Mr Subramoney has committed no crime and
not advocated violence.
“The letters appeal to Mr Botha to end the use of
banning as a ‘means of repression’ and introduce respect for the fundamental
human rights of all South Africans.”
-137-
The University of Edinburgh had also taken up my
case and highlighted the lives of banned people in South Africa through various
programmes. In one programme, the students nominated me for the position of
Rector in order to highlight the situation of house-arrested and restricted
persons in South Africa under the rule of the white minority regime.
Here are some of the articles that were written
about this programme:
-138-
One
organisation, Index on Censorship, worked with the Edinburgh branch of Amnesty
International to highlight my restricted life during the banning. The Editor of
the Index on Censorship newspaper, John Martin, wrote a lengthy article on
October 15 1981 on my situation under the headline: “Living the life of the
silenced”.
-139-
After writing about my letters to the Edinburgh
branch of Amnesty International, Martin wrote:
“Subramoney, 35, had just become editor of the
newly established Press Trust of South Africa and was editor-designate of a new
Black newspaper, UKUSA, when he was banned in December 1980.
“Just before the banning order was served,
Subramoney, who was also a regular correspondent for BBC Africa Service, was
interviewed by a visiting BBC staff reporter. He said that he had just received
an early morning visit from two members of the Durban Security Branch. They
wanted personal details about himself and his family. They asked which room he
slept in, how he got to work and by which route. No charges were made, but
Subramoney told the BBC man: ‘I don’t think I have got much time left’.
“He was banned within a matter of days.
“Subramoney cannot be employed as a journalist
until December 1983, when the banning order expires; even then, he cannot be
sure that the order will not be extended.
“As well as confining him to his house for most of
the week, the order bans him from entering any industrial compex, harbour area,
educational institution or newspaper office, which gravely limits Subramoney’s
already bleak prospects of
-140-
employment.
“The only place he may move beyond his own suburb
is the largely white commercial centre of Durban, where he has tried to get
jobs with banks and commercial firms.
“In one letter, he writes: ‘Barclays Bank, Standard
Bank, Unilever and several others turned me down as
soon as they heard I was banned.’
“The only visitors he is permitted to receive are his
two married sisters and his brothers-in-law.”
In another letter, Subramoney says his Press Trust
aimed to supply ‘alternative news’ which other agencies did not record. And in
his interview with the BBC, he said: ‘We are not trying to slant the news or
reflect discredit on the Government but we are trying to give a Black
perspective. We feel that Blacks in this country have been neglected for far
too long. We look at what led up to an event, and this, the South African
Government feels, is not in their best interests. They are worried that our
news is having an effect on their friends overseas.’
“The banning order may have caused the death of
Subramoney’s third child early this year, a few weeks after his ban came into
force the six-month-old boy fell ill. When the doctor came he advised that the
child, Vishen, be taken to hospital. It was
-141-
6:50pm, just 10 minutes before Subramoney’s
personal curfew came into effect: however, he was
the only member of the family with a driving
licence; so he rang the local police station to request a temporary relaxation
of his house arrest on compassionate grounds.
“The police refused. Subramoney’s wife ran to the
home of their immediate neighbour. Late that evening a magistrate agreed an
exception could be made to the house arrest order.
“The sick child was driven to hospital, but died
early the following morning. In one of his letters Subramoney said he had not
been told the cause of death, but he understood it was as a result of
respiratory problems.
“In another letter to the Amnesty group in
Edinburgh, he says that on July 3 three White policemen raided his home and
made a two-hour search. They took away books and some documents brought home
from her office by his wife, Thyna. Subsequently he was informed that the
police were considering prosecuting him for possession of banned books.
“ ‘It seems they are bent on intimidating and
harassing me. I take solace from the fact that thousands of other people are in
the same position and that people like the Black leader Nelson
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Mandela are imprisoned on Robben Island for life;
my incarceration, small by comparison, is part of my contribution to the
liberation struggle’.
“Members of Amnesty in Scotland would like to help
Subramoney. We do not share all his views, but there is no doubt about his
ability, dedication
and courage.
“We would be glad to hear from anyobody who can
suggest ways of helping: you can find us in the telephone directory.
“Meanwhile, Thyna Subramoney is attempting to carry
on the work of the Press Trust, as well as bring up her surviving children,
Pregarsen (7) and Seshini (3).
-143-
(Mrs Thyna Subramoney at work in the Press Trust
office in Durban in the 1980s.)
“She has some help, but they are all inexperienced
and the enterprise is in financial difficulties.
“Subramoney feels that it is important for the
South African Government that the Press Trust, and other similar Black ventures
in journalism succeed.
-144-
“ ‘If they do allow alternative news agencies, at
least they will know what we Black people think. It
would be in their interest to allow us to continue. I don’t think they will
allow it’.”
“The last communication with Subramoney was by
phone on October 3. He was very cagey in his conversation with the Amnesty
caller from Edinburgh, but on one matter, at least, he was firm: ‘Don’t forget
me. Publicise my case’.”
The Edinburgh branch of Amnesty International,
which had adopted me as prisoner of conscience early in 1981, also supported
efforts by members at the University of Edinburgh to highlight the plight of
banned people in South Africa.
One of its senior officials, Lucy Nokes, wrote a
lengthy article under the headline, “Support Subry”, and had it published in
one of the local newspapers.
This was what she published:
“When we read about public heroes such as Lech
Walesa or the Sakharovs we tend to forget that such people are not a race
apart, endowed with some special psychological makeup which renders them
somehow braver than the rest of us.
“Most of us duly admire these people, but of course
admiration alone has never really got anybody out
-145-
of trouble. Amnesty International uses peaceful and
diplomatic methods to provide concrete aid to
prisoners of conscience: here is just one of the
cases that the Edinburgh University group is
dealing with at present.
“Marimuthu Subramoney, then, is a fallible human
being like the rest of us, who realised that he could not compromise with the
politics in his country of South Africa.
“Subramoney, Subry to his friends, was an
influential Black South African journalist who has now been banned by the
authorities. Subry’s main ‘crimes’ were twofold:
“ *He started up the first independent South
African news agency called the Press Trust of South Africa. Through his agency
Subry became a regular correspondent for BBC Africa Service.
· There are two types of unions in South Africa. Regulated unions are white-controlled
and do little for non-white members. In recent years ‘unregistered’ unions have
grown up independently and one of these is the Media Workers Association of
South Africa. Subry became vice-president of this union.
“In 1980 the MWASA led a strike in order to get
union recognition from the two main newspaper
-146-
publishers. After eight weeks the strike ended in
victory for the union.
“When the Edinburgh University group heard of this
last year they worked out a clever way of giving Subry support: they put him up
as a
candidate in the elections for a new Rector of the
university.
“In an expression of sympathy and solidarity, 10
percent of the students gave Subry their vote. All of the other electoral
candidates, including David Steel, lent Subry their support, and David Steel
agreed to go along to the South African Embassy with 1000 letters of support
for Subry which had been signed by the students, University staff and a
sprinkling of stars such as Shirley Williams, Dame Judith Hart, David Owen and
other MPs.
“However, the Embassy flatly refused to receive
Steel, saying what they did was their own business.
“Not to be deterred, the Amnesty group decided that
a delegation would go along to the Embassy in the summer holidays and try their
luck on the off chance.
“On the assigned date the party arrived outside the
Embassy – a David Bendix, a third year student, Margaret Walker and Frances
Crook, an Amnesty official. Bendix spoke to the guard
-147-
through an intercom and a pregnant pause ensued,
after which they were allowed to enter
the building.
“Once inside, there was another strained silence as
the receptionist figured out just who the party
ought to see. Finally, the information attache was
sent for.
“This man’s tactics were to remain quite silent,
volunteering no information at all, whilst the group came out with their
party-piece on human rights, free speech etc.
“After this, the attache graciously accepted the
1000 letters from various people enquiring after Subry.
“So, was there any point in this visit at all? The
whole thing may sound rather futile and quite probably the 1000 letters went
straight into an incinerator. Well, yes, it was a success for two reasons:
· - few groups manage to get protests into the South African embassy, but
the Amnesty group used decorum and a superficial politeness as an effective
weapon. By playing the authorities at their own game they managed to score a
few points!
· The incident was reported in two newspapers
-148-
in South Africa and Subry himself has written of
the psychological boost that this has given to himself and his sympathisers.
“At this very moment Subry is being harassed by the
South Africa police, so it is important that the campaign continues, for a
government will go to great lengths to avoid being embarrassed,
and the South African authorities will not harm
Subry if they know that the eyes of the world are upon him.
“Students could therefore write letters in support
of Subry to the South African embassy or the government – the more letters that
they receive, the more pressured they will feel, and the less inclined to renew
his banning orders. – Lucy Nokes’.
In November 1982, just about two years after my
banning, one prominent journalist, Fred Bridgland, working for the Edinburgh
newspaper, Scotsman, also interacted with me and the Edinburgh branch of
Amnesty International about my situation as a banned person.
-149-
--
-150-
He published an article under the headline,
“Unperson in a White man’s world” and a sub-headline, “Fred Bridgland on the
plight of one of South Africa’s banned persons”.
Bridgland introduced his article by stating that
Sri Lankan cricketers, who were visiting South Africa at that time against the
wishes of the local anti-apartheid organisations, had been bestowed with --
honorary white status during their visit.
He wrote that the ironies of the riches and status
given to the Sri Lankans by South Africa’s Whites “will not be lost on
Marimuthu Subramoney, a leading South African journalist who was banned
and house arrested in December 1980”.
He referred to my years at the Daily News since
early 1973, my reporting for foreign radio stations such as the BBC Africa
Service and Radio Deutsche Welle, and my involvement in the establishment of
the Press Trust of SA news agency and the new newspaper, UKUSA, in December
1980.
He went onto to write about the frustrations of
banned people and disclosed that the Scottish Amnesty International group
“began corresponding with the banned journalist in June 1981”.
-151-
The following is what he wrote:
“The first letter from Subramoney described how
he had applied for clerical
jobs with Barclays Bank, Standard Bank and Unilever in Durban and how they all
turned him down when they heard of his banning order.
“Subsequent letters described police raids on his
house to take away books and papers, and the tragic death of his youngest
child, six-month-old Vishen.
“The Press Trust continued to function, run by
Subramoney’s wife, Thyna.
“A September 1981 letter described two visits by
security police to the Press Trust office. They questioned one of the
reporters, Neil Lewis, who is
also a trade union official, and suggested he look
for another job or stay with Press Trust and supply them with information.
Lewis refused to comply.
“In December 1981 Subramoney thanked Amnesty
International for sending him a cutting of an article which had appeared in The
Scotsman about his plight. The letter also contained bad news: ‘On November 19
one of my personal buddies, a committee member of the Press Trust and of the
black newspaper I was about to start, was assassinated in a brutal fashion.
-152-
“The murder victim, Griffith Mxenge, seems to have
been an exceptional man. He had struggled across the obstacles of the apartheid
system to become a trial lawyer specialising in the defence of political
dissidents.
“At his funeral at the weekend – which I was
prohibited from attending because of my banning – more than 20 000 people
gave him a hero’s farewell. It is not yet known who is responsible for his
death but the Black people are convinced that his death was the work of the
‘system’.
-153-
(Interviewing one of the struggle activists, Florence Mkhize, in
the office of Griffith Mxenge in the former “Little India” in Durban. Mrs
Mkhize who was resident in Lamontville in Durban was one of the tireless
activists at that time. She was closely involved with Griffith Mxenge, Archie
Gumede, and other stalwarts.)
“In April this year came another visit to his home
by three security policemen who questioned him about the Press Trust and warned
him that his banning order could be extended for another five years. By now
Subramoney had started studying for a degree by correspondence course.
“A letter in June said that another four journalist
friends – two Asians, Quraish Patel and Vas Soni, and two Blacks, Joe Thloloe
and Mathatha Tsedu – had been detained under the security laws. In July his
frustration spilt over. He had taken a part-time job selling insurance.
‘Insurance selling is not my
-154-
cup of tea. I took it on to keep me busy, but I am -
pretty fed up. It is a great pity that people like
me are not given the freedom of movement and speech to challenge these
facists’.
“In August, Subramoney demonstrated that he is
either a humourist or a wild-eyed optimist. He said he had asked the Justice
Minister, Mr H. J. Coetzee, to relax his banning order so that he could attend
a ‘Third World communications conference’ in Nairobi in September. In the same
month he wrote that the request had been turned down, and he went on: ‘I just
cannot understand the mentality of these people. I have not done anything
subversive or terroristic, yet I am branded as a communist, terrorist, a threat
to the state and subversive. I have not been taken to court and charged, but
yet I have been sentenced to ‘prison’ before being found guilty.
“A letter of September 23 said security police had
again visited the Press Trust and told Neil Lewis that he could expect a
banning order soon.
“The latest letter, in October, told of another
security police visit to Subramoney’s new home, to which he had moved to get
away from pressures of the extended family. The security police said he should
not have moved without permission from the Law and Order Minister, Mr Louis Le
Grange.
-155-
They expected him to have obtained retrospective
permission by the time of their next visit. They also told Thyna to look for
new premises for the Press
Trust because its office was in a White area.
“Subramoney’s final words in this letter were:
‘Have you got any suggestions for me. I am getting desperate’.
“When Sri Lanka’s cricketers finally depart for
home their presence will have made no difference to Subramoney. They will still
be honorary Whites. He will still be a banned person and probability, going on
past evidence of the application of the Security Act, is that the ban will be
renewed for another two to five years when it expires in December 1983.”
While progressive forces outside the country had
taken up my case, the denial of my human rights by the apartheid regime was
causing me a great deal of stress and pain.
DEATH OF SON
In the second month after my banning, our
three-month-old baby boy, Vishen, became very ill and I could not take him to
hospital one evening. My banning order restricted me from leaving home between
7pm and 6am. When I telephoned the Verulam Police Station for permission to
take my son to hospital, the police officer who answered
-156-
the phone said he could not grant me permission to
break my banning order.
My wife, Thyna, meanwhile, ran to our neighbour’s
home for help. Mr Anand Punchee, a school teacher, and his wife assisted us and
rushed my wife and the ailing child to St Aidan’s Hospital in central Durban.
Here my baby was treated for a few days but he
succumbed to his ailment.
The death of our baby boy highlighted the
oppressive manner in which the regime treated those who were at that time
fighting for a just, democratic and non-racial society.
-157-
-158-
-
(Archbishop Denis Hurley of the Catholic Church in
Durban came to our support when we were banned in 1980. This photo shows me
interviewing the Archbishop at his office sometime in 1995 when I joined the
SABC.)
The Catholic Church under the leadership of
Archbishop Denis Hurley, who I had interviewed several times while I was
working at the Daily News and also sometime after 1995 when I joined the SABC,
sent me and my wife, Thyna, a letter on April 7 1981 expressing the church’s
condolences and support.
The letter was written by the church’s Commission
for Justice and Reconciliation.
-159-
-160-
The letter, dated April 7 1981, read: “Dear Mr and
Mrs Subramoney.
“On behalf of the Justice and Reconciliation
Commission of the Catholic Archdiocese of Durban I would like to express to you
our sincere sympathy on the death of your son last month.
“The Commission deplores the restrictions placed on
your freedom of movement by the government and particularly the lack of
compassion shown at the time of the illness of your child.
“Be assured of our prayerful support for you and
your family in your time of sorrow.
“Yours sincerely
Louise Goemans
J and R Worker”.
The local newspapers and even the media in
Edinburgh and the UK in general published several articles about the problems
we encountered when our child took ill two months after I was banned.
My former newspaper, The Daily News, in Durban
published the following article under the headline: “Banned man’s baby son
dies” in February 1981.
-161-
-162-
“ABHORRENT NATURE OF BANNING ORDERS”
“The arbitrary conditions of banning orders were
attacked this week after banned Natal journalist, Marimuthu Subramoney’s
five-month-old son died when he was unable to break his restrictions to take
the boy to hospital.
“The baby, Vishen, third child of the Subramoneys,
died at St Aidan’s Hospital in Durban a day after he was admitted.
“The baby boy suffered the first convulsions on
Monday night. His departure to the hospital was delayed by red tape while Mr
Subramoney, battled frantically with Verulam police to get permission to travel
to the city after his restricted time of 7pm.
“His wife, Thyna Subramoney, said the local station
commander said he did not have the power to permit her husband to travel to the
city and suggested that Mr Subramoney contact a magistrate.
“A magistrate gave Mr Subramoney permission on
condition he reported after the trip to the Verulam police.
“By this time the baby’s condition worsened and our
neighbour rushed me to hospital,” Mrs Subramoney said.
-163-
“The baby suffered the second convulsions on
Wednesday.
“A funeral attended by 100 mourners was held at
their Mimosa Road, Lotusville home on Thursday.
“Professor J D van der Vyver of law at the
University of the Witwatersrand and vice-president of the Lawyers Human Rights
Association, said: “This emphasises again the abhorrent nature of banning
orders.
“Although provision is made in the Internal
Security Act and the Riotous Assemblies Act for permission to contravene the
banning order, the red tape attached to acquiring such permission may make such
exceptions meaningless. This is dramatically illustrated by the facts of the
present case.
“Mr Subramoney’s case highlights the fact that the
State officials, when issuing banning orders, are not particularly meticulous
in selecting the words that would restrict the freedom of the person involved.
It is appalling.”
“Mrs Joyce Harris, national president of the Black
Sash, agreed.
“It is really horrifying. There is absolutely
nothing to condone this indiscriminate arbitrary banning. This case is tragic,
and it serves only to highlight the horror of banning orders in general.”
-164-
“ABHORRENT NATURE OF BANNING ORDERS”
“The arbitrary conditions of banning orders were
attacked this week after banned Natal journalist, Marimuthu Subramoney’s
five-month-old son died when he was unable to break his restrictions to take
the boy to hospital.
“The baby, Vishen, third child of the Subramoneys,
died at St Aidan’s Hospital in Durban a day after he was admitted.
“The baby boy suffered the first convulsions on
Monday night. His departure to the hospital was delayed by red tape while Mr
Subramoney, battled frantically with Verulam police to get permission to travel
to the city after his restricted time of 7pm.
“His wife, Thyna Subramoney, said the local station
commander said he did not have the power to permit her husband to travel to the
city and suggested that Mr Subramoney contact a magistrate.
“A magistrate gave Mr Subramoney permission on
condition he reported after the trip to the Verulam police.
“By this time the baby’s condition worsened and our
neighbour rushed me to hospital,” Mrs
-165-
Subramoney said.
“The baby suffered the second convulsions on
Wednesday.
“A funeral attended by 100 mourners was held at
their Mimosa Road, Lotusville home on Thursday.
“Professor J D van der Vyver of law at the
University of the Witwatersrand and vice-president of the Lawyers Human Rights
Association, said: “This emphasises again the abhorrent nature of banning
orders.
“Although provision is made in the Internal
Security Act and the Riotous Assemblies Act for permission to contravene the
banning order, the red tape attached to acquiring such permission may make such
exceptions meaningless. This is dramatically illustrated by the facts of the
present case.
“Mr Subramoney’s case highlights the fact that the
State officials, when issuing banning orders, are not particularly meticulous
in selecting the words that would restrict the freedom of the person involved.
It is appalling.”
“Mrs Joyce Harris, national president of the Black
Sash, agreed.
“It is really horrifying. There is absolutely
nothing to condone this indiscriminate arbitrary banning. This case is tragic,
and it serves only to highlight the horror of banning orders in general.”
-166-
VISITING WINNIE MANDELA IN BRANDFORT AFTER BANNING
ORDERS LIFTED IN MID 1983
In June 1983, the apartheid regime, faced with
overwhelming campaigns against it by anti-apartheid organisations both inside
and outside the country, lifted my banning orders and those of a number of
political activists. They included leaders of the Natal Indian Congress (NIC)
such as Mewa Ramgobin, M J Naidoo, George Sewpersadh and Paul Devadas David.
This came as a surprise development because most of
our banning orders were to have expired in December 1983 and thereafter.
A few days after our banning orders were lifted,
Mewa Ramgobin informed me that they had decided to travel to Brandfort in the
Free State province to visit Mrs Winnie Mandela. Mrs Mandela, wife of the
jailed freedom icon Nelson Mandela at that time, was banished to the Free State
town from her home in Soweto in Johannesburg. Here she was banned and
restricted and denied any visitors.
But Mewa, M J Naidoo, Paul David and George
-167-
Sewpersadh made a unanimous decision that they
wanted to visit Mrs Mandela to discuss the
political struggles and the road ahead.
(George Sewpersadh, Mewa Ramgobin, M J
Naidoo meeting with Mrs Winnie Mandela outside her home in Brandfort in the
Free State in June 1983 after our banning orders were lifted.)
The four Congress leaders invited me to join them
in the trip to Brandfort, which is a small rural town in the Free State
province of the country.
Mr M J Naidoo used his car and the five of us left
in the early hours of the morning to Brandfort. We arrived at about 12 noon.
Mrs Mandela first looked at us and was surprised to
see us outside her small house.
She recognised Mewa and the rest of the gang and
-168-
readily welcomed us to her home despite the fact
that she was not allowed to receive visitors without the permission of the
security police.
(Mrs Winnie Mandela talking to us in the lounge of
her house in Brandfort in the Free State province in June 1983.)
We sat down and was caught up in discussions about
the struggles of the people and the repressive actions of the apartheid regime
in an attempt to crush the movement for democracy and liberation.
While Mewa and his fellow comrades were busy
chatting away and obtaining all the information they needed, I was busy taking
down notes and
-169-
photographs of the historic occasion.
We spent about three hours with Mrs Mandela before
driving back to Durban.
I clearly recall the words of advice that Mrs
Mandela gave us before we departed:
“Don’t worry comrades. You now have the freedom to
continue with the struggles until Madiba and our other leaders are released and
until we gain our liberation.”
(Mrs Mandela talking to us – M J Naidoo, George
Sewpersadh, Mewa Ramgobin, Paul David and Subry Govender at her home in
Brandfort in the Free State in June 1983.)
-170-
“BANNING! I WOULD NOT WISH IT ON PW BOTHA, SAYS
SUBRAMONEY”
When we returned home, I was contacted by
journalist colleague, Dennis Pather, who was editor of the Post newspaper at
that time. He asked me to write an article about the lifting of the banning
order. I wrote an article that was published under the headline:
“BANNING: I would not wish it on PW Botha, says
Subramoney” and the following introduction: “Durban journalist Marimuthu
Subramoney was served with a banning order on December 29 1980. For the past
two and half years he has lived in the twilight world of South Africa’s banned.
Last week
-171-
his banning was lifted. TODAY he tells his story
for the first time…”
“When on the morning of December 29, 1980, two
White Special Branch members of the South African Police called at the offices
of the newly-established Ukusa newspaper and the Press Trust of South Africa
News Agency to serve a three-year banning order on me, the severity of the
system did not affect me immediately.
“Before that date I had not known what it was like
to be a banned and house-arrested person. Being a journalist, I had only
reported about the imposition of banning orders on other people and the denial
of their “freedom” of movement, speech and assembly.
“Even when one of the security policeman told a
colleague, Quarish Patel, who was in the office at that time, that he should
explain the implications of the banning order to me, I did not take the comment
seriously.
“But I soon
realised the full impact of the order when I read the details and found that I
was not only prevented from continuing with my work as a journalist, but also
house-arrested every weekday from 7pm to 6am, and on weekends and public
holidays.
“In addition,
I was not allowed to enter newspaper offices, the lifeblood of my work, and
prevented
-172-
from receiving
any visitors whatsoever, except for three close relatives and my doctor.
“Within a
matter of a few months I began to realise that the banning order was not only
taking its toll on my meagre resources but my family life was beginning to show
strains. Not being able to visit relatives, friends and journalist colleagues
and attend weddings, public meetings and Federation soccer matches was
beginning to cramp my family and myself.
“The prospect
of the security police paying a surprise visit to our home was also an
unnerving experience for the whole family – mainly for my four-year-old
daughter, Seshini, who once fell asleep with fright on the sitting-room couch
after one of their visits.
“But above
all, being prevented from pursuing my career was a constant frustration –
especially with so many events just passing me by.
“I soon found
that for a journalist the banning order is the most de-humanising trick the
authorities can pull on you.
“While a
banned doctor, lawyer, insurance salesman, lecturer or a clerk is allowed to
continue with his or her work, a journalist is simply robbed of his occupation
and made to pay the price for being the ‘eyes and ears’ of the community.
“I found
solace, however, in the thousands of ‘good
-173-
wishes’ cards
that were sent by sympathisers from Holland, France, Belgium, West Germany,
United Kingdom, Sweden and Austria – all Western countries.
“I also found
solace in the stream of letters I received from members of the Edinburgh branch
of Amnesty International who had ‘adopted’ me as a “prisoner of conscience” in
an attempt to highlight the position of the silenced and restricted person in
South Africa.
“Their concern
was a regular reminder that the banned person had not been forgotten.
“But now,
two-and-half years later, the South African Government has suddenly lifted the
banning order of some 55, including myself, in terms of the new Internal
Security Act of 1982.
“There is no
doubt that I am relieved at this new found ‘freedom’ – but it is still a
mystery to me why I was banned in the first place. Being robbed of two-and-half
years of your life at the peak of your career by an administrative action is a
travesty of justice and complete disregard for the rule of law.
“It is going
to take some time to reorientate myself because after being disorientated for
so long, it is simply not easy to get back into the ‘groove of things’.
“But, in spite
of the unjust incarceration, I would
-174-
not want to
wish banning and restriction on anyone – even PW Botha.
“I bear no
malice or grudge against anyone except the system which forces good men to turn
to evil methods to silence their critics.
“I only want
to be allowed to continue with my work as a journalist so that I can contribute
to the undoing of the social, economic and political injustices so rife in
South Africa.”
After the
lifting of our banning orders, I went on to establish two local community
newspapers while at the same time working for foreign radio stations and news
agencies. With the help of the Natal Indian Congress leader, Mewa Ramgobin, I
first launched the Guardian newspaper and thereafter until the end of the
1980s, the North Coast Times. These newspapers were published in my home town
of Verulam and distributed in towns such as Tongaat, Stanger, and Phoenix. I
used the newspapers to cover local developments while at the same time
promoting the struggles of the Natal Indian Congress, the United Democratic
Front and anti-apartheid sports organisations and leaders. I stopped publishing
these newspapers in early 1990 following the lack of funds. I instead concentrated
my efforts in
working for foreign radio stations, the Press Trust of India and other foreign
media organisations.
-175-
“THE
MAN WITH NO PASSPORT”
During the 1970s and 1980s, the apartheid regime
not only employed its restrictive policies to silence me but also denied me the
opportunity to take up scholarships in the United Kingdom and in
-176-
Germany. After my banning order was lifted in June
1983, I was invited by several international organisations to undergo training
at their institutions. But the White National Party Government at that time
refused to make any concessions.
-177-
Sometime in late 1981, I was invited to attend a
media conference in Nairobi in Kenya. But my applications to the then Minister
of Louis Le Grange, were turned down without any reasons being given.
Two specific invitations stand out. In 1986 and
1987 I was offered a scholarship to do my post graduate studies in
International Politics and Relations at the University of Edinburgh and in 1988
I was once again offered a scholarship to work for one year at Radio Deutsche
Welle (Voice of Germany) in Koln.
But the Minister of Home Affairs at that time,
-178-
Stoffel Botha, refused to oblige and point blankly
told me not to waste their time in applying for a passport again.
Several journalist colleagues locally and
nationally wrote about my situation during the 1980s when the apartheid regime
refused to grant me a passport.
One of my colleagues at the Sunday Tribune at that
time, Denyse Armour, wrote this story about the Minister’s refusal to grant me
a passport to take up the scholarships. The story was published on August 2
1986 under the headline: “Newsman can’t accept dream overseas scholarship”.
-179-
NEWSMAN CAN’T ACCEPT DREAM OVERSEAS SCHOLARSHIP
“A journalist has been refused a passport for the
seventh time in three years, forcing him to give up a once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity to accept an overseas scholarship.
“Marimuthu Subramoney, managing editor of a
Durban-based independent news agency, the Press Trust of South Africa, was
offered a two-year scholarship to study African Politics and History at the
University of Edinburgh in January.
“But his efforts to persuade the Government to give
him travel documents have met with blank refusal from the Minister of Home
Affairs, Mr Stoffel Botha, and the Prime Minister, Mr P W Botha.
“Neither gave reasons for turning down his
application.
“Mr Subramoney, 39, was banned and placed under
house arrest for more than two years in 1980. Since the expiry of his banning
order in mid-1983, Mr Subramoney has repeatedly applied to obtain a passport.
“After being offered a place in the University of -
-180-
Edinburgh’s Social Science Department in January
this year, Mr Subramoney and the university tried to persuade Stoffel Botha to
grant him permission to accept the scholarship.
“It’s so frustrating. I’m getting on in years and
this sort of opportunity won’t come again. If I am to accept the scholarship, I
must be in Edinburgh next month.
“I was looking forward to studying in Edinburgh
because it would have given me an opportunity to broaden my knowledge in
International Politics – a subject I have specialised in,” said Mr Subramoney.
“Colin Eglin, the leader of the Progressive Federal
Party, the British Embassy in Pretoria and the International Press Institute
have all approached the State President, Mr PW Botha, independently in their
attempts to get him to give Mr Subramoney a passport.
“Mr Subramoney is a foreign correspondent for
several American, European, New Zealand and African radio stations.”
-181-
-182-
-183-
“PASSPORT ISSUED IN ERROR WITHDRAWN”
But despite the totalitarian standpoint of the
Minister, I continued to make applications for a passport at the Department of
Home Affairs in Durban. I don’t know what the development was but in December
1986 I was granted a passport. This would have allowed me to take up my
scholarship in Edinburgh.
I was overjoyed. But my mistake was that I informed
some people that I would be leaving for Edinburgh soon as I managed to obtain a
passport. This was another error on my part. The first was when I resigned from
the Daily News in December 1980 and informed an editor in Johannesburg about my
resignation.
Now this information about my passport being
granted reached the security police in Durban.
Two members of the security police visited our
offices at Escoval House in Smith Street and handed me a letter to inform me
that my passport had been withdrawn.
-184-
The letter, dated December 29 1986, was written by
the Director General of the Department of Home Affairs in Pretoria.
-185-
The letter was addressed to me and read:
“Sir
“NOTICE OF WITHDRAWAL OF SOUTH AFRICAN PASSPORT
“I am directed to inform you that the Minister of
Home Affairs has in terms of paragraph 1 of the Conditions of Issue of South
African passports, decided to withdraw with immediate effect South African
passport no DA325208 which was issued in your favour. The passport has
therefore ceased to be a valid document for the purposes of the Departure from
the Union Regulation Act, No 34 of 1955.
“You are called upon to surrender the afore mentioned
document immediately to the officer serving this notice on you.
Yours faithfully
Director General”.
This latest development was covered by several
newspapers in Durban and nationally in January 1987 under the headlines:
“Durban journalist’s passport withdrawn”, “Passport issued in error”, “Passport
issued, then withdrawn”, and “Erroneously issued passport withdrawn”.
-186-
-187-
Despite the latest “Stalinist” attitude of the
Pretoria regime, I continued to make representations through the assistance of
a number of local progressive political leaders and the foreign embassies of
Germany and Britain in 1988. This time I had stepped up my efforts after I was
granted a two-year scholarship by the German Government to work at Radio
Deutsche Welle (Voice of Germany).
During my efforts, I was informed that the
apartheid regime was not prepared to respond to my representations but the
officials would be ready to grant me a “one-way exit permit” if I was prepared
to leave the country for good.
-188-
One of the journalists who captured this in March
1988 was Fawzia Moodley, who worked for the Leader newspaper at this time.
Fawzia later joined me and colleagues, Neil Lewis, Deven Maistry, Rob
Montgomery, Diane Coetzer at the Press Trust of SA News Agency. There were
several other journalists who worked at various periods for
-189-
PTSA. They included Jabulani Sipho Sikhakhane, Mark
Bennett, Skumbuzo Cyril Manyoni, Liz McGregor, and Fiona Ann Crooks. One of
South Africa’s well-known academics and authors, Ashwin Desai, also worked for
a few months with us at PTSA in early 1982.
Fawzia Moodley’s article was published on March 3
1988 under the headline, “One-way ticket, claims newsman” and sub-headline: “No
passport, but police offered”.
The article read:
“The South African authorities, who for years have
denied Durban journalist Marimuthu Subramoney a passport to travel abroad, had
indicated to him that they were prepared to grant him a one-way (exit) passport
within an hour.
“Mr Subramoney, who was recently awarded a two-
year scholarship to get on-the-job training at
Radio Deutsche Welle (Voice of Germany), is afraid that as in the past when he
was given a scholarship to study at Edinburgh University, the government would
refuse to grant him a passport.
“The Durban journalist who runs a press agency in
the city told ‘The Leader’ this week that although the German Government had
undertaken to make representations to the South African Government to grant him
a passport, he was not too hopeful
-190-
that it would succeed.
“Mr Subramoney who also had to forgo opportunities
to take up invitations from the Swedish and British Governments, as well as
human rights organisations in Europe, United States, and Australia, claimed
that he had been told by the authorities that they were prepared to give him
“one way ticket” to leave South Africa.
“ ‘What will I do with an exit permit? South Africa
is my home and I do not want to leave’, said Mr Subramoney, who is believed to
be a target of government action because of his avowed opposition to apartheid.
“Mr Subramoney claimed that in addition to being
denied his passport – an action which was a violation of the basic right of
freedom of movement – his offices had been regularly raided since the state of
emergency was imposed.
“This year alone my offices had been raided three
times by the security branch – the latest raid being on February 12.
“He pointed out that despite the constant
harassment the State had never laid any charges against him.
“On each occasion the security police confiscated
large quantities of documents, cassettes, files and other literature from his
offices”, he claimed.
-191-
“But while he lives in uncertainty about whether he
would get a chance to take up the scholarship offer, Mr Subramoney is taking
comfort from the fact that there is worldwide support for him and others in his
position.
“The Committee to Protect Journalists in London and
several of the radio stations to whom he supplies news material have protested
to the South African Minister of Police about his continued harassment and to
the Minister of Home Affairs for refusing him his passport.
“A spokesperson for the South African Police Public
Relations Division in Pretoria said the visiting of the premises was regarded
as part of routine police duties and since his office did not comment on such
duties, he was not prepared to make enquiries about whether Mr Subramoney’s
allegations were true.
“The spokesperson rejected allegations regarding an
exit passport for Mr Subramoney, saying that such applications were not dealt
with by the police.”
-192-
-193-
In March 1988 when my efforts to obtain a passport
showed no success whatsoever, I wrote a letter to two local newspapers and the
Guardian newspaper in London about the detrimental actions of the South African
government in refusing to grant me a passport.
The Natal Witness based in Pietermaritzburg and the
Daily News in Durban published my articles on March 17 and 18 1988 under the
headlines: “Two hoots for freedom” and “The man with no passport”.
-194-
-195-
The article read:
“Over the past eight years, during and after the
banning and house arrest order imposed on me, I have made more than a dozen
applications to the Pretoria authorities for a passport.
“But on every occasion I was denied a passport
without any reasons being given in spite of the fact that a wide range of
people had made representations on my behalf. Some of the people who made such
representations included Mr Wynand Malan, Mr Colin Eglin, Mrs Helen Suzman, Dr
Frederick Van Zyl Slabbert, the British Embassy and foreign organisations such
as the Committee to Protect Journalists in New York, and the
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International Press Institute, based in London.
“In my latest application, which I made on January
8, I specifically informed the authorities that I needed a passport to take up
a scholarship granted by the Otto-Beneke Foundation in Bonn for me to undergo
“on the job training” at Radio Deutsche Welle in West Germany. My application
this time was supported by the West German Embassy in Pretoria and several
overseas organisations in West Germany, France, Britain, United States, Holland
and Australia.
“But to my shock and horror I was informed by the
Minister’s secretary today (March 9) that the Minister had decided against
granting me a passport and that the Minister has not given any reason for his
decision.
“The same Minister had also denied me travel
documents in 1986 and 1987 to take up a two-year scholarship to study
International Relations at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland.
“The denial of a passport to me has coincided with
various acts of harassment and intimidation that I have suffered at the hands
of the Pretoria authorities over the past 15 years. I have been banned,
house-arrested, detained and my mail and telephones have been tapped.
“This harassment and intimidation was stepped up
-197-
over the past two years. I cannot understand the
attitude of Minister Stoffel Botha in repeatedly denying me a passport because
I feel that if he has any reasons for his actions then he should make them
known to me. His actions, I believe, run contrary to the eloquent statements by
State President Botha and Foreign Minister Pik Botha that in South Africa all
citizens enjoy the right to ‘freedom of movement, freedom of association,
freedom of assembly and freedom of speech’.
“It seems to me that State President Botha and
Foreign Minister Botha should stop pretending that all citizens are allowed
their basic rights when Minister Stoffel Botha cannot give reasons for his
undemocratic actions.
“If Minister Stoffel Botha believes in the concept
of democracy, then he should allow me an opportunity to put my case to him
‘face to face’ rather than take decisions without giving reasons for his
actions.
“From its actions it seems that Pretoria cares ‘two
hoots’ about the niceties of ‘freedom of association, freedom of speech,
freedom of movement and freedom of assembly’”. – Marimuthu Subramoney, Managing
Editor, Press Trust of SA News Agency, Durban.
-198-
“DO NOT BOTHER AGAIN, EDITOR TOLD AS PASSPORT
REFUSED”
-199-
Then in July 1988 another of my journalist
colleagues, Nagoor Bissetty, who was a veteran at the Mercury newspaper, wrote
the following article about my passport problems.
“Don’t come back.
“That’s the blunt reply a Durban journalist has
received from Minister of Home Affairs, Stoffel Botha, to his latest
application for a passport.
“Marimuthu ‘Subry’ Subramoney has been refused
travel papers several times in the past eight years. Now Mr Botha has told him
not to make representations to him again.
“Mr Subramoney, who is managing editor of the Press
Trust of South Africa news agency, says he needs a passport so that he can take
up a two-year scholarship at the radio station, Voice of Germany, in Cologne.
“The Minister’s refusal – and reaction – have come
as a disappointment, he says.
“Mr Botha’s letter to him, said: ‘I would like to
give you my personal assurance that I am not indifferent to your own, as well
other, representations.
‘However, at this point in time I am not prepared
to deviate from my decision. I must, therefore, inform you that further
correspondence on this matter will
-200-
Then in July 1988 another of my journalist
colleagues, Nagoor Bissetty, who was a veteran at the Mercury newspaper, wrote
the following article about my passport problems.
“Don’t come back.
“That’s the blunt reply a Durban journalist has
received from Minister of Home Affairs, Stoffel Botha, to his latest
application for a passport.
“Marimuthu ‘Subry’ Subramoney has been refused
travel papers several times in the past eight years. Now Mr Botha has told him
not to make representations to him again.
“Mr Subramoney, who is managing editor of the Press
Trust of South Africa news agency, says he needs a passport so that he can take
up a two-year scholarship at the radio station, Voice of Germany, in Cologne.
“The Minister’s refusal – and reaction – have come
as a disappointment, he says.
“Mr Botha’s letter to him, said: ‘I would like to
give you my personal assurance that I am not indifferent to your own, as well
other, representations.
‘However, at this point in time I am not prepared
to deviate from my decision. I must, therefore, inform you that further
correspondence on this matter will
-201-
serve no useful purpose.’
“Mr Subramoney, who was banned for a period from
December 1980 to mid-1983, applied in 1984, 1986 and 1987 for a passport to
enable him to take up a scholarship at the University of Edinburgh.
“Representations were made to the Government on his
behalf by several House of Assembly MPs – including Jan Van Eck, Helen Suzman,
Dr Van Zyl Slabbert – and by the governments of West Germany, Britain and the
United States, without any success.
‘I feel disappointed, especially in the light of
the government’s statements that it is committed to allowing all citizens
freedom of movement, association and speech’, he said.”
Despite the crass attitude of the Minister, I made
another application in May 1989. But
this was also turned down. This was reported in the local media under the
headlines: “No passport for former banned journalist”, and “Journalist refused
passport for second time”.
-202-
“SUBRAMONEY FINALLY GETS HIS PASSPORT”
Then in the second week of December 1989 when
reports of negotiations between the apartheid regime and Nelson Mandela emerged
in the local and international media, I took the chance and made another
application for a travel document.
I was not surprised when the apartheid Department
of Home Affairs responded favourably to my request. This latest development
also attracted the attention of the local media. The Daily News and the Mercury
published the story under the headlines: “Subramoney finally gets his
passport”, and “Passport granted after 10 years.”
-203-
-204-
The Daily News story published on December 25 1989
read:
“Durban journalist Mr Marimuthu Subramoney (43) has
been given a passport after being denied one for 10 years.
“Department of Home Affairs officials handed him
his passport on his birthday last week. It is valid for two years.
“Mr Subramoney made numerous applications to the
Government for a passport over the past decade. He also visited Cape Town and
Pretoria three times to see officials in the Department of Home Affairs.
“The officials told him openly that he could not
get a passport because the Government did not like his style of journalism, nor
his analysis of South African politics.
“Mr Subramoney sent copies of his latest
application to Mr Eugene Louw, Minister of Home Affairs, to State President, FW
de Klerk, and to six foreign ambassadors in South Africa.
“During the time he was not allowed out of South
Africa, Mr Subramoney lost out on several invitations by foreign governments
and overseas groups, including a scholarship at Edinburgh University to do a
post-graduate course in international relations.
-205-
“ ‘Many people I have spoken to overseas about
getting a passport have said they cannot believe it and that things must be
really changing here.
‘Personally,
because I have lost out on the invitations, I feel bitter, although I am happy
to get a passport.’
“Mr Subramoney now plans to take his family and to
live in Germany for two years, working for Radio Deutsche Welle.
“A journalist for nearly 20 years, he worked for
the Daily News for eight years and is now a freelance journalist. He is the
South African correspondent for Radio Deutsche Welle, the Press Trust of India
and several other radio stations and news agencies.
“Mr Subramoney was banned for three years and was
placed under house arrest.”
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RELATIONSHIP OF TRUST WITH ACTIVISTS
My involvement as a journalist in the struggles for a free, non-racial
and democratic South Africa led me to interact and forge strong bonds with
political activists and leaders across the social, educational, sporting and
political fields.
This relationship of trust was forged since the late 1960s and right up
to and after the 1990s when the former apartheid regime was replaced by a new
democratic government in April 1994.
Some of these activists and leaders included George Sewpersadh, Mewa
Ramgobin, Paul David, M J Naidoo, Ramlal Ramesar, Farooq Meer, Pravin Gordhan, Yunus Mahomed and Jerry
Coovadia of the Natal Indian Congress and later the United Democratic
Front(UDF); Archie Gumede, Dharam K Singh, Griffith Mxenge, and Don Kali, four
Durban lawyers who worked as anti-apartheid activists; RS Naidoo and Pat
Samuels, who were leaders in the educational sector; and sports leaders such as
M N (Manikam Nadarajen) Pather (tennis and SA Council of Sport), Morgan Naidoo
and Archie Hulley
-207-
(swimming), Cassim Bassa (table tennis), Pat
Naidoo, Harold Samuels and Krish Mackerdhuj (cricket) and Norman
Middleton, R K Naidoo, SK Chetty, Dharam Ramlall and M N Govender (football).
All the UDF, Natal Indian Congress and anti-apartheid sports leaders
provided me with the opportunity to file regular reports, after my banning
order was lifted in 1983, for international radio stations and the Press Trust
of India and other world media organisations through our Press Trust of SA News
Agency.
The radio stations that I filed daily breaking reports included BBC
Focus on Africa and other programmes, Radio Netherlands, Radio Deutsche Welle
and Radio France International.
My reports for Radio Deutsche Welle, which was based in Koln, and other
international radio stations were followed by listeners all over Africa and
South Africa.
White listeners in South Africa did not like my reports and criticised
Deutsche Welle for using me as their correspondent.
-208-
One listener, calling himself Colin and based in Pretoria even wrote a
letter to the Citizen Newspaper in Johannesburg expressing his disillusionment
at my reports for Deutsche Welle and other radio stations.
The letter was published under the headline - “Feeding overseas media”
on June 25 1987:
-209-
“As a regular listener to Radio Deutsche Welle (Newsline Cologne), I
have over the years become more and more disillusioned about the outright
anti-RSA propaganda emanating thence as ‘news’. At times I felt that it would
be pointless to continue subjecting myself to diatribes, distortions and just
plain lies which this station (which in the past used to be known for balanced
and objective reporting) directs at the RSA on a daily basis.
“Much of its ‘news’ concerning the situation inside the country could
just as well been scripted by the ANC.
“One name that keeps cropping up is that of Subry Govender. Curious to
find out more about this person’s background, enquiries pointed to an
organisation known as “Press Trust of SA” (PTSA). Further enquiries turned up
the fact that PTSA appears to be feeding overseas sources with virtually
totally biased propaganda against South Africa. – COLIN PRETORIA”
This “COLIN” did not fully identify himself but there is no doubt that
judging from his knowledge of my work as a journalist, he could have been more
than just an ordinary listener. My suspicions are that he was a member of the
dreaded security police at that time.
-210-
The activities of people like “COLIN” did not deter me one bit. I, in
fact, took my direction from anti-apartheid leaders and others who shaped my
thinking and who I used to interview on a regular basis about the numerous
socio-politico issues affecting the people.
I recall once I interviewed M N Pather at his offices near the Naaz
cinema in the Grey Street area of Durban about his views for a future South
Africa. He told me he was not openly political in nature but he wanted to see a
South Africa where all people would be treated with respect and fairness in all
fields of life.
Regarding his involvement in the anti-apartheid sporting arena, he said:
“Listen Subry, I am involved in isolating apartheid sport because I want
to see all people given a fair chance in an open society. When we reach a stage where all sportsmen and
women can represent the country, then I think my work has been done.
“In an open society I would like to see the best sportsmen and women
selected to represent the country and, in this regard, I would not care whether
those selected are Blacks or Whites. As long as the teams are selected on
merit, then I wouldn’t care about the colour of those chosen.”
-211-
The involvement by people such as MN Pather, Norman Middleton, Hassan
Howa and Morgan Naidoo in the sporting arena, and by people such as Archie
Gumede, Mewa Ramgobin, Griffith Mxenge, Rev Msibisi Xundu, Dr Alan Boesak,
Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Dr Nthatho Motlana and sociologist and activist,
Professor Fatima Meer, and her husband, Ismail Meer, who was banned at that
time, provided me, a “Coolie Journalist”, and my other colleagues such as
Zwelike Sisulu, Philip Mthimkulu, Juby Mayet, Mathatha Tsedu, Rashid Seria, Joe
Thloloe, Charles Nqakula, and others
such as R. Brijlall, Deven Moodley and Dennis Pather, the ammunition to
highlight the struggles both locally and internationally.
The “struggle journalists” remained undaunted in their work and
increased their reportage despite the repressive actions of the apartheid
security establishment and the declaration of emergency regulations in the
mid-1980s. There’s no doubt that the fearless work by journalists in reporting
the activities of the anti-establishment people and leaders on one side and the
repressive actions of the apartheid forces, on the other, during this period
had definitely had some impact on the thinking of the world towards South
Africa.
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TURNING POINT: A NEW DAWN – INTERVIEWING AHMED KATHRADA, NELSON MANDELA
AND PROF FATIMA MEER
It, therefore, came as no surprise when in the late 1980s it was
reported that the Pretoria regime had begun initial talks with Nelson Mandela
in prison about the deteriorating political situation.
It became clear, at the insistence of leaders inside and outside the
country, that negotiations with the Pretoria regime will only take place when
all political leaders were released and the ANC and other organisations were
un-banned.
Sometime towards the end of September 1989 I received information that
we should prepare for the release of Walter Sisulu, Govan Mbeki, Andrew
Mlangeni, Raymond Mahlaba, Elias Motsoledi and Ahmed Kathrada.
They were all sentenced to life imprisonment along with Denis Goldberg
and Nelson Mandela in 1964.
Goldberg was released in 1985 after being imprisoned for 21 years.
Walter Sisulu and his colleagues were released within a month in October
1989.
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THE KATHRADA INTERVIEW: “Cultural heritages of all people should be
guaranteed”
Being a correspondent of the Press Trust of India, I was commissioned by
my editors in New Delhi to make arrangements to travel to Johannesburg to
interview Ahmed Kathrada, because he had his roots in the state of Gujarat in
North India.
I telephoned some of my contacts, including Cassim Salojee, and only a
few days after his release I was told that I could travel to Johannesburg to
talk to Mr Kathrada.
I was picked up by a young man from the then Jan Smuts International
Airport and taken to his family home in Lenasia, Johannesburg. The young man
told me that he was related to Mr Kathrada.
At the Lenasia home, I found Mr Kathrada and Mr Cassim Salojee waiting
for me. Mr Kathrada was dressed in a white t-shirt and brown pants. He was
smiling broadly and told me that he had heard about me and was very keen to
grant me an interview.
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(Mr Ahmed Kathrada -right – with Mr Cassim Salojee at a family home in
Lenasia in Johannesburg in October 1989 after his release from Robben Island.)
I asked Mr Kathrada about his roots and he informed me that when he was
a small boy about 7 years old, his parents had
departed from their village in Gujarat in the late 1920s to seek a new life in
South Africa. They settled in the town of Schweize Reneke in the then Transvaal
province.
He went to primary school in the small town and later continued his high
school in Johannesburg.
After talking
to Kathrada about his involvement in the liberation struggles, his imprisonment
in 1964 at the end of the famous Rivonia Trial and his nearly three decades on
Robben Island and Victor Verster Prison in Cape Town, I asked him about the
role played by people of Indian-origin and, among other things, their continued
involvement in a future South Africa.
-215-
“Well, the
role of the Indian community as an oppressed community,” he said, “is to
increasingly throw in their lot with the rest of the oppressed people of South
Africa, namely the African and Coloured people and the democratic Whites, to
strengthen the national liberation movement.
“The Indian
people, like other communities, must play a more active, more important role in
the struggles.”
Mr Kathrada
was fully aware and informed of the leading roles played by Indian-origin
activists in various sporting, social, community, and political organisations
in the anti-apartheid struggles during his years of imprisonment. He told me
these struggles must continue until a non-racial and democratic South Africa
was realised.
“We are very
encouraged by the political consciousness, especially among the younger
Indians. All I can say at this time is that there is room for greater
participation on the part of the Indian people,” he said.
I asked him
what he thought of those people who had collaborated at that time with the
apartheid regime to implement the racial policies of the tri-cameral
parliament.
This was his
response:
-216-
“Well, they
certainly don’t represent the aspirations of the Indian people or the Coloured
people or the people of South Africa. This has been proved in the first
election that has taken place and in the election that took place last year.
The Indian and Coloured masses have shown that they have no confidence in the
people who are participating in the tri-cameral system. They have not been able
to rally the Indian masses behind them, they have not called public meetings
where people would give them a vote of confidence. They have not reported back,
so there is no way they can claim that they represent the aspirations of the
people of this country.”
I told Mr
Kathrada that despite the enormous contributions and sacrifices made by him and
leaders like Dr Yusuf Dadoo, Dr Monty Naicker, Dr Kesaval Goonum, J N(Jaydew
Nasib) Singh, Billy Nair, and thousands and thousands of other activists, there
were many people within the Indian-origin community who had expressed their
fears about their future. This is how he responded:
“Well just as
I have said about Whites that the fears of the Indian-origin people are really,
unfounded. Such fears arise as a result more of ignorance than anything else.
“Unfortunately,
because of years and years of
-217-
apartheid and
separation, the Indian, Coloured and African and the Whites for that matter
have not mixed sufficiently. They are ignorant of each other and the media
particularly, the commercial media, and the government have gone out of their
way to further separate the people so that they don’t know each other. As a
result, suspicions grow, suspicions develop and fear develops.
“Of course,
there have been some nasty unfortunate incidents, particularly in Inanda, and a
few other places, Everton here in the Transvaal in the 1980s, which are very
unfortunate. I don’t know to what extent the authorities or the police had a
hand in those incidents, I don’t know, I wasn’t here.”
Mr Kathrada
then went onto emphasise the non-racial and democratic policies of the ANC.
“The ANC
policy has never ever been for a Black majority government. The ANC policy has
always been for a majority government, based on policies which it espouses. An
ANC government could be purely Black, it could be mixed, it could be all-White,
it could be majority White, Coloured and Indian because the ANC does not look
on the colour of the government of the people.
“The ANC is
interested in the policies that a
-218-
government
pursues. The basic thing is not the colour of the people.
“What we
should try to forget about as we tried to do on Robben Island is that we were
Indians or Coloureds, we were just people and once our people outside jail
start to think of themselves just as people, I think we would go more than half
way towards allaying any fears that exist in the
country.”
Mr Kathrada
was very clear that what should be protected in a future non-racial and
democratic South Africa was not minority rights but individual human rights.
“We believe
that any solution to the problems of South Africa cannot be successful if
anyone wants to protect minority rights or group rights. We believe that what
is needed is a Bill of Rights which guarantees individual rights, individual
human rights, and we believe once you guarantee individual human rights you are
covering group rights as well.
At the same
time, we would like to guarantee cultural rights and language rights. But these
are not based on ethnicity. There are large numbers of people who are not White
but speak Afrikaans.
-219-
That should be
guaranteed in any Bill of Rights, not only Afrikaans but all languages. All
cultural heritages of all people should be guaranteed. But that can be
guaranteed in individual rights in a Bill of Rights.”
The ideals for
a new South Africa, he told me, were emphasised in the Freedom Charter which
was adopted during a mass gathering of the Congress of the People at Kliptown
in Johannesburg in 1955.
“We have
already in 1955 embraced what we stand for, what the Congress movement stands
for, in the Freedom Charter. Since then, we have reiterated our belief in the
fundamentals of the Freedom Charter. We believe that any future South Africa -
a society, state, and government – must be based on the ideals of the Freedom
Charter that lays the foundation for a free, non-racial, democratic, and
peaceful South Africa.”
During the
interview, Mr Kathrada expressed the ANC’s gratitude to the Government and
people of India for always supporting the release of Nelson Mandela and other
political prisoners and internationalising the liberation struggles of South
Africa’s oppressed people.
“We are very
grateful to the Government of India.
-220-
It should be
remembered that in 1946 the Government of India took the lead in responding to
a resolution of the South African Indian Congress. It took the lead in imposing
sanctions against South Africa and it took the lead again at the instigation of
the South African Indian Congress in raising the oppression of the people at
the United Nations. It also took the lead in raising the question of Namibia at
the United Nations.
“The Indian
Government, following the resolutions of the South African Indian Congress,
helped or initiated the internationalisation of our struggle and the Namibian
struggle. We believe that the Indian Government will continue to play the role
that it has played in movements such as the Non-Aligned Movement, the UN, and
other international bodies. We are very grateful that they have done that and
we look forward to India continuing to do that.”
I wrote a
lengthy article after this interview and submitted it to PTI in New Delhi. The
article was published in most of the major newspapers in India.
Then, when his
fellow Robben Island comrade, Nelson Mandela, was released on February 11 1990,
I was there along with scores of foreign and local journalists to witness this
historic event in
-221-
front of the
Pollsmoor Prison, near Cape Town.
This time, not
only the Press Trust of India, but news organisations and radio stations from
several parts of the world assigned me to report every aspect of this historic
development.
-222-
-223-
-224-
The Indian
media was not only interested in the freedom accorded to Mandela but also to
Mandela’s statement during a press conference at the home of Archbishop Desmond
Tutu in Cape Town.
(Nelson
Mandela addressing the media at the home of Archbishop Desmond Tutu in Cape
Town after his release on February 11 1990. Seated at the far left is Subry
Govender.)
The meeting
with the large contingent of media people was scheduled after Mr Mandela had
earlier addressed masses of people in the centre of Cape Town.
It was at this
media conference that I had the privilege of talking to Mr Mandela for the
first time – by me asking him a question. I wanted to know that now that he had
been released, which country
-225-
in the world
he would first like to visit?
In response,
Mandela said now that he was free, one of the first countries he would like to
visit was India.
The article I
wrote about his response was given headline coverage by Indian newspapers such
as The Hindu, Hindustan Times, Indian Express and the Statesman.
Here are some
of the reports:
-226-
-227-
-228-
FIRST EVER VISIT TO INDIA
A month after the release of Nelson Mandela in February 1990, I made
arrangements to visit India after being granted my passport. I had been denied
a passport for more than 10 years from late 1980 to 1990.
During my visit to India, I not only tried to locate the village of our
ancestors in the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu, but I also finalised my
contract with the Press Trust of India to work as their correspondent in
Johannesburg. When I returned in April 1990, I made arrangements to move to Johannesburg
and it was only in January 1991 that I migrated to Johannesburg. Here I
purchased a property in the White area of Sandringham and had to obtain special
permission to reside in the suburb.
Soon after
Nelson Mandela was released from life imprisonment on February 11 1990 and the
ANC and other liberation movements were unbanned, South Africa experienced a
shocking increase in political violence in many townships around the country.
Scores of people were killed in areas in and around townships in Johannesburg,
Durban,
-229-
Pietermaritzburg,
and other areas.
At the same
time, certain forces, linked to the security elements of the former apartheid
regime, began to sow seeds of fear and anxiety among people of Indian-origin in
KwaZulu-Natal. It was clear that this was done in, an attempt to prevent most
people of Indian-origin throwing in their lot with Mr Mandela and the African
National Congress (ANC).
The actions of
the apartheid security elements in promoting fear among people of Indian-origin
affected a
number of communities in and around Durban and the leaders of the Natal Indian
Congress (NIC) expressed their concerns about this new development and held
discussions with Mr Mandela and other ANC leaders.
It was against
this background that I made arrangements for an interview with Mr Mandela at
his offices in Johannesburg after he took over the leadership of the ANC.
His personal
assistant and spokesperson at that time in 1990 was Ms Gill Marcus. When I
telephoned to ask for an interview with Mr Mandela, she was more than
supportive and said she would make all the arrangements.
-230-
Sometime in
June 1990, she called me to say that she was successful in arranging for me to
interview Mr
Mandela at 8:30am sharp.
When I arrived
at the building (now known as Luthuli House), Ms Marcus was waiting for me. She
guided me to an office in one of the floors where one of Mr Mandela’s
bodyguards conducted a body search on me.
Ms Marcus
walked into another office to inform Mr Mandela that “Mr Subramoney of the
Press Trust of India” had arrived to speak to him.
Within a few
minutes she came out of the office and told me that Mr Mandela was ready for
the interview.
When I was
escorted to Mr Mandela’s office, it was the second time in about five months
that I had come into such a close meeting with the freedom icon.
The first time
was on February 11 1990 when he was released and was addressing local and
foreign journalists at the home of Archbishop Desmond Tutu.
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(Interviewing
Mr Nelson Mandela at his office in central Johannesburg after his release on
February 11 1990.)
INTERVIEWING
NELSON MANDELA, JUNE 1990
“We
will not forget our friends…”
Now, a few
months later in Johannesburg, I once again sat a few metres from Mr Mandela to
interview him about the future relations with India and his views about the
concerns expressed by people of Indian-origin about the actions of certain
security elements in sowing seeds of fear and anxiety.
Mr Mandela was
as welcoming as ever and told me: “Mr Subramoney you can ask me any question
you want, you don’t have to worry.”
I was
relieved.
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During my
interview, I told Mr Mandela that it seemed the violence that was sweeping the
country appeared to be the work of the apartheid security and intelligence
forces to sew fear and anxiety among the minority communities.
I asked Mr
Mandela what would be the approach of the ANC as a future government in
protecting the rights of all people in South Africa, including those
citizens who
are of Indian-origin.
He
acknowledged the contributions of leaders and organisations coming from the
Indian-origin community and said he would travel the length and breadth of the
country to reassure citizens about their future in a non-racial and democratic
South Africa.
He was firm in
his view that the rights of minority communities would be protected in a Bill
of Rights for all people. This is what he told me:
“The only way
of entrenching minority rights in this country is a Bill of Rights which sets
out the rights of every South African, irrespective of the national group he or
she belongs to. That we have done. We have gone further to say that the
constitution will not only be amended by a two thirds majority. We have also
declared that there will be proportional
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representation.
Any party that gets more votes
than a certain
percentage will be entitled to representation.
“Those
strategies are intended to protect the rights of the minorities.”
He added: “We
have and I have addressed a number of Indian occasions like Diwali and Eid/
Ramadaan, and I am due to address further rallies
in these
communities. I have addressed Indian businessmen twice already in Durban since
I came. I have addressed Indian businessmen in Johannesburg. We are addressing
the Indian community because of the vital role which they played in the past
and which they are likely to play in the future.”
I also wanted
to know what kind of relationship a new South Africa will have with India since
India has been one of the first countries to take up the freedom struggles of
South Africans at the United Nations and also provided support to the ANC.
Mandela
acknowledged the role that India has played in promoting the cause of South
Africans through the ANC and said the relationship would be very close.
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This is what
Mandela told me: “Oh naturally they
will be very
good because of the relationship between the ANC and the Government of India.
We are looking forward to the further strengthening of those relations. We will
not forget our friends, I can assure you.”
Mandela said
he personally was inspired by the freedom leaders of India such as Mahatma
Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru. He
expanded: “Well, the
writings and
speeches by Pundit Jawaharlal Nehru about the unity of India, the letters which
he wrote to his daughter, Indira, from prison, provided us with a great deal of
literature. Also, the writings of Mahatma Gandhi on Satyagraha and other issues
of the Indian struggle. Not only that they taught us, they (also) demonstrated
how freedom fighters should handle the problems facing the country and the fact
that they were in and out of prison raised our esteem and respect for them.”
The ANC was conducting full negotiations with De Klerk and his
Government for the transition to the new South Africa. In order to cover
events, we as local and foreign correspondents had to register with the ANC.
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This was the card that was issued to me in 1991.
Working as a correspondent for international radio stations, especially
Radio Deutsche Welle, BBC Focus on Africa and Radio Nederlands, once again
earned me the respect of listeners who expressed their support for my tenacity
in reporting bravely from South Africa.
One listener of Radio Nederlands in the town of Tibro in Sweden, K
Hasseltig, had this to say after listening to my report on the station’s
Newsline programme on January 9 1989:
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“The chat you had with your South Africa correspondent a few weeks ago
regarding the situation for journalists was very interesting. I had not
realised that he was a citizen of RSA, and that fact in my eyes makes his work
even more admirable.”
One listener of Radio Deutsche Welle from Uganda, Orapa-Okello Jimmy
Michael, wrote a special letter after listening to one of my reports on the
station’s Africa Report programme:
-237-
“As you might have known from my previous letter, I am a regular
listener of Deutsche Welle.
“There is one thing which has interested me much is about your South
African correspondent – Subry Govender.
-238-
“I have liked the way this journalist organises and reports his reports.
On top of that he takes trouble to include every detail in stories that always
dominate the media in South Africa.
“According to me he is the best correspondent Deutsche Welle has ever
got since I began to listen to Deutsche Welle with interest seven years ago. To
tell you more he is followed by Alfred Shader and David Julius in the U.N.
“Now I have the interest especially in learning more about him. Can you
please send his biography and his photograph especially now as he covers the
South African situation. I will be grateful if your reaction will be positive.”
In June 1994, I joined the state broadcaster, SABC as a senior political
journalist, in order to contribute to the development of our new South Africa.
I joined the SABC only after the democratic elections in April 1994, after the
ANC was elected to power and Nelson Mandela was elected as president.
Here, I used my position to compile the profiles of a number of leaders
who had contributed to the realisation of our new South Africa. I created a
programme called “Our Rich History” and compiled radio documentaries on
anti-apartheid sports, community and political leaders and important
-239-
events such as the launch of the UDF in August 1983 in Cape Town; the
release of Nelson Mandela in February 1990, the April 1994 democratic
elections, the election of Nelson Mandela as President in May 1994, the visit
of Mandela on an official visit to India in 1995 and the official visit of
President Thabo Mbeki to India.
I also travelled to India in 1995 to cover the visit of Nelson Mandela
on his official visit to India.
(I took this photo of Mr Ahmed Kathrada and a senior official visiting
the home of Mahatma Gandhi in the state of Gujerat during the official visit to
India with President Nelson Mandela.)
Mr Mandela was accompanied on this visit by fellow Robben Island
comrade, Mr Ahmed
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Kathrada, and a number of other politicians and business personalities.
In 1999, after Thabo Mbeki succeeded Mandela as the second democratic
president of the new South Africa, I made another trip to India when Mbeki made
a state visit to the land of our ancestors. I covered his visit to the cities
of Mumbai, New Delhi and Hyderabad.
Then in early 2004 when Tamil Nadu and other southern states in India
were hit by the Tsunami, I made another visit to cover the aftermath of the
natural disaster.
Then in 2008, I made another visit when I was invited by the Government
of India to attend a conference of people of Indian-origin in the cities of
Chennai and New Delhi.
In 2009 when I just completed 15 years of my service at the SABC, I
chose to resign and continue with my work as an international
correspondent.
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INTERVIEW WITH FATIMA MEER: “NIC SHOULD BE REVIVED.”
During my stay at the SABC, one of the Indian-origin leaders that I
interviewed once again was Professor Fatima Meer in 2008 when she turned 80.
(Prof Fatima Meer with her advocates, Ismail Mahomed and Norman Mailer,
and son-in-law, Bobby Mari during the 1980s.)
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I spoke to Professor Meer at her home in Burnwood Road, Sydenham,
Durban.
This was the home that I used to visit on a regular basis to talk to
Professor Meer when I was working at the Daily News between the early 1970s and
1980.
This time in 2008 I was keen to get her views about certain politicians
making all kinds of racist statements, inspite of the fact that we had passed
the apartheid era and were now living in a new non-racial and democratic South
Africa.
I am writing about this interview because Professor Meer outlined in
clear terms the mistakes that some leaders of the Natal Indian Congress had
committed in the 1990s by succumbing to calls for the NIC to be disbanded. This
move was not acceptable to many of the leaders in the NIC but they were pushed
aside by certain leaders who felt that there was no longer a need for the
organisation in a new non-racial and democratic South Africa. These leaders
even went against the views of Nelson Mandela who felt that the NIC was an
historical organisation and there was no need for it to be disbanded.
Professor Meer did not pull any punches in that
-243-
final interview I had with her. She informed me that she had written to
President Thabo Mbeki at that time expressing her concerns about the racism
being spread by some of the new politicians.
She was of the view that the Indian-origin community was being targeted
by some of the new politicians because, according to her, the community lacked
leadership and organisations to take up issues affecting the communities.
At this time South Africans were observing our 15th
year of our new democracy and she was concerned about the lack of interest in
the political affairs of the country by most people of Indian-origin.
She was very candid in her view that the Natal Indian Congress
should not have been disbanded and that NIC leaders should have listened to
Mandela for the organisation to have remained.
She, therefore, was of the view that the Natal Indian Congress
should be revived.
This is what she told me: “The Natal Indian Congress should be
revived because it has a very rich history. You don’t want to miss out on that
history. You want to build on that history, so revive the Congress. It is a
pity that it was disbanded at all.”
-244-
Professor Meer told me in that interview that it was a major
tragedy that some ANC people forced leaders of the NIC to disband the
organisation just before the democratic elections in 1994. She had written to
President Thabo Mbeki in 1999 about what she referred to as ‘this grave
mistake’.
“You see the Indians had a very strong organisation in the Natal
Indian Congress and I wrote to Mr Mbeki in 1999, pointing out that it has been
a tragedy that the ANC had asked the NIC to be disbanded.
“It was an organisation that stood by the ANC at all times. Now
the ANC had made the biggest mistake, I pointed out to Mr Mbeki, by saying you
don’t need the NIC, you can belong to the ANC. But the reality is that we first
have to mobilise ourselves.
“As a political party, the ANC is fine and totally acceptable but
to organise the Indian people, the people need an organisation.”
Professor Meer told me that she was deeply disappointed that in
view of the absence of a progressive organisation like the NIC, the ANC after
1994 had chosen to associate itself with reactionary and opportunistic elements
within the Indian-origin community.
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“The ANC deluded itself into thinking that some opportunistic
elements represented the Indian-origin people. I pointed out to Mr Mbeki that
the ANC should deal with an organised group of people who have principles and
programmes that are akin to the ANC, instead of going around piecemeal, picking
up people who have money. I pointed out that the NIC should be revived because
of its history and its role in the liberation struggle.”
CONCLUSION
A few years after I joined the national broadcaster, SABC, as a
senior political journalist in 1995, at least one ruling party politician in
KwaZulu-Natal tried to influence us about the kind of stories that we should
cover and tackle.
I rejected this interference and pointed out to the politician
concerned that journalists like us, who were involved in the struggles for
media freedom during the apartheid era, would never become stooges of the
state.
I emphasised this to my colleagues that media freedom in our new
democracy should not be tampered with because without “freedom of speech and
freedom of the media”, democracy would not survive in the new South Africa.
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This is the legacy that I would like to leave behind for aspiring
journalists and for them to make a contribution to development by ensuring that
as a journalist “they make a difference in the lives of the people and
society”.
I would like to emphasise that I am grateful that we had been able
to launch our new non-racial and democratic Government in April 1994.
The ruling ANC had initially introduced a number of measures to
uplift the lives of the people. But, sadly over the past three decades many of
the new politicians at all levels of government had forgotten the values and
principles of the Mandelas, Sisulus, Mbekis, Kathradas and others.
But, despite the negative developments, I would like to express
confidence that the new South Africa will return to the values and principles
of the struggle stalwarts and positive conditions would be created for the
economy to grow and for all the people to look forward to “a better life for
all”.
I would like to end by quoting Nelson Mandela when he delivered
his speech at the end of his treason trial in 1974.
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This is what he repeated when he was released
from life imprisonment on
February 11 1990 when addressing thousands of people at the Grand Parade in
Cape Town.
“I have fought against White domination, and I have fought against
Black domination. I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society
in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities. It
is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve. But if needs be, it is an
ideal for which I am prepared to die.” Ends – subrygovender@gmail.com Oct 31 2025
