Paul Erasmus Explained

Paul Erasmus was a South African Security Police officer who testified to the Goldstone Commission,[1] and later the Truth and Reconciliation Commission about police dirty tricks and violence during the apartheid era.[2] This testimony revealed the existence of a unit in the Security Police called STRATCOM (Strategic Communications) that specialised in misinformation and propaganda against opponents of the regime.[3] [4] Erasmus also testified on the police efforts to discredit Winnie Madikizela-Mandela by spreading false rumours about sexual affairs and drug use.[5] [6]

Before joining STRATCOM, Erasmus had served in the counter-insurgency campaign in Namibia, as part of the Koevoet police unit.[7]

Trashing music industry

Erasmus appears in a documentary, Stopping the Music: the Roger Lucey Story, in which he explains Stratcom's campaign against South African folk rock guitarist Roger Lucey, which led to banning and disruption of gigs, confiscation of records, and an overzealous campaign against Shifty Records and the South African music industry in general. Erasmus's revelations were published in a biography, which was then extracted by an article in the Mail & Guardian.

Torture as treatment

Erasmus was a feared interrogator. His methods of persuasion included burning, choking, beating, drowning, and administering electric shocks.[8]

Biography

Foot Soldier for Apartheid, an unpublished manuscript, has extracts available online.[9] [10]

External links

Notes and References

  1. David Goodman Reconciliation or Chaos? Mother Jones May/June 1999
  2. http://docs.newsbank.com/g/GooglePM/WT/lib00179,0EB0F16433B409D3.html De Klerk linked to `dirty tricks' to sabotage ANC
  3. http://www.anc.org.za/ancdocs/pr/1997/pr0909c.html Press release by Paul Erasmus
  4. Web site: Atrocious crimes: Apartheid hitman's brutal confessions serve as a warning for South Africans. Dolley. Caryn. 13 November 2021. Daily Maverick. 13 November 2021.
  5. Suzanne Daley Winnie Mandela Discredited Herself, Police Official Says New York Times November 29, 1997
  6. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/34148.stm Winnie Mandela defended by white former agents
  7. David Goodman and Paul Weinberg (2002) Fault Lines: Journeys Into the New South Africa University of California Press p93
  8. News: Reconciliation or Chaos?. Mother Jones. 2018-10-23. en-US.
  9. Web site: 3rd Ear Music Forum - Foot Soldier for Apartheid . www.3rdearmusic.com. 2018-10-23.
  10. News: The day the music died. Leonard. Charles. The M&G Online. 2018-10-23. en.