Adriaan Vlok

Adriaan Johannes Vlok (born 11 December 1937)[2] is a South African politician. He was Minister of Law and Order in South Africa from 1986 to 1991 in the final years of the apartheid era. Facing increasingly intense opposition and political unrest in this period, the South African government through the State Security Council of which Vlok was a member planned and implemented drastic repressive measures, including hit squads, carrying out bombings and assassination of anti-apartheid activists.[3]

Adriaan Vlok
Minister of Correctional Services
In office
July 1991  1994
PresidentFrederik Willem de Klerk
Minister of Law and Order
In office
December 1986  July 1991
PresidentPieter Willem Botha
Frederik Willem de Klerk
Preceded byLouis le Grange[1]
Succeeded byHernus Kriel
Personal details
Born (1937-12-11) 11 December 1937
Sutherland, South Africa
Alma materUniversity of Pretoria

Early life

Adriaan Vlok was born in the Northern Cape town of Sutherland in the then Cape Province on the 11 December 1937 to Nicolaas Vlok and Bett Oliver where he grew up on a rural small holding along the Orange River. He attended Neilerdrift Primary School and matriculated from Keimoes High School in 1956 located in Keimoes. He obtained a Dip. Proc. from the University of Pretoria in 1962.[4]

Career

Vlok started his career working in the magistrates office for the Department of Justice in Keimoes and Upington joining the National Party in 1959. From 1959 to 1966 Vlok served in Pretoria as the under-secretary for the Department of Justice whilst studying for an Attorney's Diploma at the University of Pretoria. He was then made assistant private secretary to South African Prime Minister B. J. Vorster.[5]

He resigned from the Department of Justice with the aim of entering politics in 1970, running a court messaging service. In 1972 he was elected to the Verwoerdburg (now known as Centurion) City Council and was elected to represent the area in the national Parliament in 1974. In September 1984 he was appointed Deputy Minister of Defense and was then made Deputy Minister of Law and Order a few months later in early 1985. During his time as Deputy Minister of Law and Order his ministry was responsible for the suppression and detention of around 30,000 people. In 1988 as minister of Law and Order he oversaw the restriction of 17 anti-apartheid organisations.[5]

Vlok's position as minister became especially controversial after 1990 during the negotiations to end apartheid, with the African National Congress insisting on his dismissal. President FW de Klerk responded by moving him to a less controversial post as Minister of Correctional Services in July 1991. In 19931994 he was the last chairman of the minister's council of the House of Assembly, the white chamber of parliament.

TRC amnesty

In 1999, Vlok was granted amnesty by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) the sole cabinet minister to have admitted committing crimes, including the bombing of the headquarters of the South African Council of Churches at Khotso House, and the COSATU trade union headquarters.[6][7]

Conviction and apologies

In mid-2006, Vlok came forward with public apologies for a number of acts that he had not disclosed to the TRC, and for which he could therefore be prosecuted. In a dramatic gesture, he washed the feet of Frank Chikane who, as secretary-general of the South African Council of Churches, had been targeted by Vlok for assassination.[8] Subsequently, he washed the feet of the ten widows and mothers of the "Mamelodi 10", a group of anti-apartheid activists who had been lured to their death by a police informant.[9] He said he had become a born again Christian prior to his public apologies for his actions as Minister of Law and Order and cites this as the cause of his change of heart about his role in apartheid and his need to seek forgiveness. On 17 August 2007, the High Court in Pretoria handed him a suspended ten-year sentence for his role in the 1989 plot to kill Frank Chikane.[10]

In 2014 he publicly called for more apartheid era perpetrators to come forward and apologise for their actions.[11]

As of 2015 he started and runs a child feeding charity named the Feed a Child initiative.[12]

References

  1. http://www.sahistory.org.za/dated-event/cabinet-reshuffle-louis-le-grange-minister-law-and-order-replaced-adriaan-vlok-deputy-mi
  2. ANC Today Archived January 24, 2008, at the Wayback Machine 8–14 September 2006
  3. Adriaan Johannes Vlok, South African History Online, accessed 3 December 2007
  4. http://www.whoswhosa.co.za/adriaan-vlok-5623 Archived 2012-03-25 at the Wayback Machine Adriaan Vlok Retrieved June 25, 2011
  5. "Adriaan Vlok". South African History Online. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
  6. Amnesty Decision AC/99/0349, Truth and Reconciliation Commission, 1999, accessed 3 November 2006
  7. Amnesty Decision - Khotso House incident AC/99/0242 Archived December 30, 2004, at the Wayback Machine, Truth and Reconciliation Commission, 1999, accessed 2 November 2006
  8. Feet washed in apartheid apology, BBC News, 28 August 2006, accessed 3 November 2006
  9. "Many feet to wash". South Africa - The Good News. 2006-09-08. Archived from the original on 2012-02-29. Retrieved 2007-12-10.
  10. Apartheid murder plotters guilty, BBC News, 17 August 2007, accessed 18 August 2007
  11. Leila Samodien (24 April 2014). "Apartheid perpetrators must apologise - Vlok". Cape Times. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
  12. Johnny Masilela (6 September 2015). "Why Vlok is still apologising". The Sunday Independent. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
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