Clive Derby-Lewis' failed parole application points to political considerations and double standards
Political considerations and double standards had without a doubt played a decisive role in the government's decision on the parole application of Clive Derby-Lewis, Dr. Pieter Mulder, leader of the FF Plus says.
Dr. Mulder says amnesty had in the past been granted to people such as Robert McBride who had murdered numerous innocent people with a bomb attack at the Magoose Bar in Durban and the PAC members who had murdered innocent churchgoers in Cape Town.
"They were all given amnesty because the Interim Constitution stated: ‘The opportunity exists now to put it (the abuses of the past) right on the basis that there is a need for understanding and not for vengeance, a need for repair and not for retribution, a need for humanity and not victimisation.'
That is why these attackers received amnesty for acts committed with a political motive," Dr. Mulder says.
Mr. Michael Masutha, minister of Justice and Correctional Services, in the ‘spirit of nation building and reconciliation' approved the parole application of Eugene de Kock, who legally qualified for it.