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  1. report to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (the Commission). This formed part of the Final Report handed to President Mandela on 29 October 1998. The Final Report contains a broad overview of the functioning and activi-ties of the Committee. In addition, Chapters Four (‘The Mandate’) and Five

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  2. The report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (the Commission) consists of five volumes, each with a particular focus. It is important to note that, once the Amnesty Committee finishes its work, an additional volume will report on the work of that Committee, based on amnesty hearings conducted and findings made.

  3. Welcome to the official Truth and Reconciliation Commission Website. The South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) was set up by the Government of National Unity to help deal with what happened under apartheid. The conflict during this period resulted in violence and human rights abuses from all sides.

  4. 18 The Commission devised a form, referred to as a ‘protocol’ or ‘statement form’, for recording the statements made to the Commission by people who believed they had suffered gross violations of human rights. It appointed and trained ‘statement takers’ to listen to the accounts related by such persons, and to record

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  5. 1 de jun. de 2020 · South's Africa's violent and complex history is chronicled in the five-volume Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Report, a chilling record of the hearings that exposed atrocities perpetrated by the South African apartheid government and opposing parties over the thirty-four year period of 1960-1994.

  6. South African National Defence Force South African Police Service Van der Merwe, J V Williamson, C M Business and Labour Afrikaanse Handelsinstituut Anglo American Corporation of South Africa Ltd Anti-Apartheid Movement Armaments Corporation of South Africa (ARMSCOR) Avalon Cinemas South Africa (Pty) Ltd Ball, C Bernstein, A Black Management Forum

  7. the defence of South Africa should take place outside its borders. The South African government’s principal armed opponent, Umkhonto weSizwe (MK) also recognised, after the arrest of many of its personnel and the destruction of its internal organisation in the early 1960s, that its war had of necessity to be waged from outside South Africa.