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De Klerk Knew About Hit Squads, Assassin Alleges

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Eugene de Kock, one of the apartheid era’s most notorious assassins, accused former President Frederik W. de Klerk on Wednesday of deliberately lying when he denied even knowing about government death squads operating in the run-up to the 1994 all-race elections.

De Kock told a Pretoria court that his secret police hit squad carried out a predawn raid on a house allegedly used to store arms in the former Transkei homeland in October 1993. Five youths were killed as they slept.

De Klerk, then president, confirmed at the time that he had authorized the attack but indicated it was a purely military operation. He denied as recently as last month that he ever approved the use of a death squad or was even aware of such groups.

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“Surely he knew there were covert units with this ability,” said De Kock. “Who did he think was going to launch the attack?”

The Pan Africanist Congress, a black militant group targeted in the attack, insisted the five victims were schoolchildren. De Klerk’s government, then in the twilight of the apartheid era, said they were terrorists.

De Klerk last month told the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which is investigating the political crimes of the apartheid era, that he never authorized “assassination, murder, torture, rape, assault or the like” during his years in government. He told a news conference later that he was “at no stage aware of any unit carrying out assassinations.” He added, “I was never part of any decision to assassinate or murder anyone.”

De Klerk insisted that he closed illegal government operations as soon as he learned of them. De Kock’s covert Vlakplaas unit was publicly exposed in newspapers and court proceedings starting in 1989. But it was not formally disbanded until 1993.

In a statement Wednesday, De Klerk said he had approved the 1993 raid because intelligence reports indicated a “substantial hidden cache of arms” was present and it thus appeared a “legitimate military target.” He said his authorization specifically excluded attacks on civilians.

De Klerk, who heads the opposition National Party, is hailed overseas as a bold politician who released Nelson Mandela from 27 years in prison in 1990, legalized anti-apartheid groups and helped negotiate the fragile transition from apartheid to democracy.

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At home, he is far less popular. Mandela, who succeeded him as president and shared the 1993 Nobel Peace Prize with him, bitterly accused him of doing nothing to stop massacres of blacks during the preelection period.

And De Kock, who testified for the third day at a pre-sentencing hearing for six murders and 83 other charges of which he was found guilty, denounced the former president for supposedly surrendering without a fight.

“I regard him as one of the greatest cowards the country has ever produced,” De Kock said. “Not because he wanted peace--that is a noble cause. But because, like a small puppy, he turned on his back and wet himself.”

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