Marikana cops received food parcels

Miners on strike chant slogans as they march in Nkaneng township outside the Lonmin mine in Rustenburg May 13, 2014. South Africa sent more police to the strike-hit platinum belt on Tuesday to protect miners returning to work this week as producers pushed ahead with plans to end the sector's longest and most costly bout of industrial action. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko (SOUTH AFRICA - Tags: POLITICS BUSINESS COMMODITIES CIVIL UNREST EMPLOYMENT TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)

Miners on strike chant slogans as they march in Nkaneng township outside the Lonmin mine in Rustenburg May 13, 2014. South Africa sent more police to the strike-hit platinum belt on Tuesday to protect miners returning to work this week as producers pushed ahead with plans to end the sector's longest and most costly bout of industrial action. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko (SOUTH AFRICA - Tags: POLITICS BUSINESS COMMODITIES CIVIL UNREST EMPLOYMENT TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)

Published Jul 31, 2014

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Pretoria - An entry showing that police officers deployed to Marikana in August 2102 were supplied with food parcels by Lonmin was deleted from an occurrence book, the Farlam Commission of Inquiry heard on Thursday.

Deleted material from Lonmin occurrence books took centre stage at the public hearings in Pretoria when Lonmin group mining emergency and security manager Graeme Sinclair was cross-examined.

Commission chairman retired judge Ian Farlam read out a deleted entry discovered by evidence leaders.

“Why was this deleted? An entry of August 29, 2012 saying a Warrant Officer Thebejane called to request 150 food parcels to court tomorrow. (A Lonmin employee) Botes confirmed that the food parcels can be ordered for tomorrow morning.

“Hannes Human (another Lonmin employee) then informed the buyer Patricia to order 150 extra food parcels. Why was that deleted? Who was the food parcels for?” said Farlam.

Sinclair stuttered that he “wouldn't have an idea” why it was deleted.

“There was no particular reason for it to be deleted. If I gave that instruction, I don't know,” he said.

Farlam repeated: “Who were the food parcels for?”

“The food parcels were for our guards. They were for additional people that were around, people we required,” said Sinclair.

Farlam asked again: “Did you have 150 extra guards at the magistrate's court. Huh?”

Sinclair responded: “We assisted with food parcels for any police officers that travelled long distances. It could have been for that, or the guards, or our staff.”

Farlam still wanted to know why the entry was deleted.

“I am puzzled, I would be glad if you help me out of my state of puzzlement,” said Farlam.

Sinclair responded: “Mr Chair, I cannot explain why that particular line was deleted. It wasn't significant. I have listened to your opinion very clearly.”

Farlam interjected: “It is not my opinion. I haven't given my opinion on this.”

He said Sinclair had told his personal assistant to delete other lines but this did not seem to fit in with those instructions.

Sinclair said he could not explain.

Sinclair said earlier he instructed his personal assistant, identified as Amanda, to “clean up” the documents before they were used in “public”.

“I think she told herself, 'this is Graeme's instruction, let me take it out'. Did I ask her what exactly she deleted? No, I didn't. Did I go back and check? No, I didn't,” said Sinclair.

Evidence leader Kameshni Pillay said most of the deleted information related to incidents involving Lonmin security guards firing at protesters on several days in August 2012. She said the complete Lonmin records of the August 2012 Marikana shootings were unearthed in the evidence leaders' own investigations.

“Had it not been for two processes instigated and initiated by evidence leaders, this version 1/8of the Lonmin occurrence book 3/8 would not have been before the commission,” she said.

“Exhibit XX2.10 is the document that Lonmin put forward as the occurrence book. This was the OB 1/8occurrence book 3/8 that this commission was working with for a while until we requested the hard drive of Colonel Duncan Scott and discovered the other occurrence book late last year.”

Lt-Col Scott of the police special task force was in charge of drawing up the intervention plan to manage the strike-related violence at Lonmin's platinum mining operations at Marikana, near Rustenburg in North West, in August 2012.

“Until August last year, the version which this commission was working with was the version with significant deletions. Those deletions were made at your instance,” said Pillay.

Sinclair said he did not want to comment on what was given, or not given, to the inquiry.

“Whatever I was ever asked for was certainly always made available. For me to comment on that, it would be incorrect of me,” he said.

On Tuesday, evidence leader Matthew Chaskalson said according to one of the versions Lonmin security guards fired rubber bullets when striking miners approached National Union of Mineworkers members on August 11, 2012.

Chaskalson asked Lonmin security risk manager Dirk Botes if he knew why such entries about the shootings were removed from Lonmin's version given to the inquiry.

Botes said he was in the dark regarding this.

The three-member commission is probing the deaths of 44 people during the wage-related protests at Lonmin's platinum mine in Marikana.

On August 16, 2012, 34 people, mostly striking miners, were shot dead, 78 were wounded, and some 276 were arrested when police fired on a group gathered at a hill near the mine. They were apparently trying to disperse and disarm them. In the preceding week 10 people, including two policemen and two security guards, were killed in strike-related violence.

Sapa

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