Griffiths Mxenge

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Griffiths Mlungisi Mxenge

King Williams Town, Eastern Cape. He was a civil rights lawyer, a member of the African National Congress (ANC) and a South African anti-apartheid
activist.

Early life

Griffiths Mlungisi Mxenge was the eldest son of Johnson Pinti and Hannah Nowise Mxenge. His parents were farmers in KwaRayi. He began his high schooling at Forbes Grant Secondary school in Ginsberg but matriculated from Newell High school in Port Elizabeth in 1956.[1]

In 1959, he received a bachelor's degree from

Roman Dutch Law and English. He joined the African National Congress Youth League while he was studying. The Defiance Campaign and the Congress of the People in Kliptown contributed to his political consciousness [1]

He enrolled for an LLB degree at the University of Natal but in 1962, the same year he married Victoria Mxenge.

In 1966, his studies were interrupted when he was detained for 190 days. In 1967, he was imprisoned for two years on

ANC. Mxenge's first son, Mbasa, was born while he was in detention.[2]

In 1969, Mxenge was released from Robben Island and served with a two-year banning order that among other things prohibited him from entering University premises. With the help of the Dean of Law Faculty, the late Professor Tony Matthews, he was still able to complete his LLB and graduate in 1970.

His second son, Viwe was born in 1970.

Career

In 1971 Mxenge began serving his articles under Rabie Bugwandeen of the Natal Indian Congress. He was issued with a five-year banning order the same year.

In 1974, he was admitted as an attorney of the Supreme Court of South Africa. The following year, in 1975, he opened his own legal practice in Durban. His daughter, Namhla, was also born. He represented members of the African National Congress and other parties. Notably, he defended Joseph Mduli, a member of the

Umkonto weSizwe, who was brutally murdered. In an unprecedented move, following Mxenge's efforts and international pressure, four policemen were charged with the murder of Mduli.[3]

Mxenge was later detained for his involvement in the murder case.

He was an active member of the Release Mandela Committee and served as a member of the Lawyers for Human Rights. Mxenge was a founding member of the South African Democratic Lawyers Association.[1]

Death

In 1981, Mxenge was assassinated by the apartheid death squad, led by Dirk Coetzee, in Umlazi township south of Durban. He was abducted before the death squad stabbed him 45 times, beat him with a hammer and slit his throat.[4] His body was found near a soccer field in Umlazi.[5] Four years after her husband's murder, Victoria Mxenge was shot and hacked to death in front of her children at their Umlazi home in Durban.

In 1989, Butana Almond Nofomela, a former member of Coetzee's death squad, confessed to his involvement in Mxenge's murder hours before he was scheduled to be executed for an unrelated non-political murder. Coetzee later confirmed Nofomela's story. [6] On 4 November 1996, former Vlakplaas commander, Dirk Coetzee, testified about his involvement in the murder of Griffiths Mxenge. He also asked for amnesty from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Despite protests from Mxenge's family, Coetzee was granted amnesty.[7]

Nofomela, who'd been granted a stay of execution in the unrelated murder case, later had his death sentence commuted to life in prison. He was released on parole on September 2009.[8]

Legacy

Mxenge and his wife were both awarded the Order of Luthuli in Silver by the South African government. His award recognised his contribution to the field of law and the supreme sacrifice he made in the fight against apartheid in South Africa [9]

The Victoria and Griffiths Mxenge memorial lecture is hosted annually at the University of KwaZulu Natal's Howard College.

See also

External links

References

  1. ^ a b c [Mona G.V. New Dictionary of South African Biography Mxenge, Griffiths Mlungisi. Online. Accessed 17 August.]
  2. ^ 1989. Griffiths Mlungisi Mxenge Online. WITS Historical Papers. Accessed 17 August.
  3. ^ 2015. Joseph Mduli. Online. South African History Online. Accessed 17 August.
  4. ^ 1985. Victoria Mxenge and the "act of cowardice" Online. Mail & Guardian. Accessed 17 August.
  5. ^ "Griffiths Mxenge is murdered". sahistory.org.za.
  6. ISSN 0362-4331
    . Retrieved 14 July 2023.
  7. ^ 1996. Dirk Coetzee Amnesty Application: TRC Knows the Grisly Story. Online. South Africa Press Association. Accessed 17 August.
  8. ^ "Nofomela a free man". News24. Retrieved 14 July 2023.
  9. ^ 2011 Griffiths Mxenge, Fallen Hero! Online. South African History Archive. Accessed 17 August.