Apartheid Commander Testifies on Cradock Four Murder in South Africa
Notorious Apartheid Police Commander Eugene de Kock (Prime Evil) testified to a South African hearing over the 1985 "Cradock Four" killings, part of renewed probes into apartheid-era crimes & accountability gaps in post-1990 justice processes.
March 24, 2026Clash Report
South Africa’s renewed inquiry into apartheid-era killings is exposing unresolved accountability gaps, with testimony from former police commander Eugene de Kock revisiting one of the most emblematic cases of state violence.
De Kock, now 77, testified at a hearing in Gqeberha into the 1985 killing of four activists - Matthew Goniwe, Fort Calata, Sicelo Mhlauli and Sparrow Mkonto - whose burned bodies were discovered after abduction at a police roadblock.
Known as “Prime Evil,” De Kock was sentenced in 1996 to two life terms plus 212 years and released on parole in 2015.
De Kock denied involvement in the Cradock Four case but described broader police practices. He said security forces held photographs of around 6,000 anti-apartheid activists labeled “known terrorists” who could be targeted if arrest was not possible.
He also testified to alleged cover-up efforts, stating an implicated officer asked if he could obtain another firearm and “if we could interfere with the ballistics.”
Two prior inquiries - in 1987 and 1993 - failed to deliver accountability, concluding the killings were carried out by unknown or unnamed individuals. Despite six policemen being identified and denied amnesty during the late 1990s Truth and Reconciliation process, none were prosecuted. All six have since died.
The current inquiry, launched in 2025 after sustained pressure from victims’ families, forms part of a broader reopening of apartheid-era cases, including the 1967 death of Albert Luthuli, the 1981 killing of Griffiths Mxenge and the 1977 death of Steve Biko.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has ordered a parallel investigation into whether post-apartheid governments intentionally blocked prosecutions. The renewed focus reflects tensions between reconciliation-era compromises and contemporary demands for justice.
Debates over historical memory continue to shape domestic politics. A renaming dispute in Graaff-Reinet tied to anti-apartheid figure Robert Sobukwe has exposed divisions over identity and legacy, while external narratives have also emerged.
In February 2025, white South Africans held a pro-Trump rally over land expropriation, prompting U.S. criticism and sanctions. By August 2025, South Africa accused Washington of reviving “apartheid 2.0” after launching a refugee program favoring white Afrikaners.
The inquiry underscores how unresolved apartheid crimes intersect with present-day political tensions. While proceedings focus on events from 1985, they are unfolding within a broader contest over historical accountability, national identity, and international narratives surrounding South Africa’s past and present.
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