Events

Exhibitions

Exhibition at Freedom Park on display until end of January 2020

Upcoming Exhibition now in 2020

ONLINE AHMED TIMOL ELECTRONIC EXHIBITION – COMING SOON

Book Launch – March 2020

The Murder of Ahmed Timol
My Search for the Truth

Imtiaz Ahmed Cajee

The 27th October 2019 will mark the 48th anniversary of the murder of political detainee Ahmed Timol.

“Twenty-one years [since the TRC] that have led to this Pretoria courtroom, and to the appearance of this giant man who, 46 years ago, claimed to have been the only eye witness to Uncle Ahmed’s suicide.

Joao Rodrigues was the state’s star witness at the 1972 inquest. He would have been deemed pretty perfect for the job of covering the murder of Uncle Ahmed. A white South African of Portuguese descent, he worked as an administrative clerk at security police headquarters in Pretoria. After more than 10 years of service he had ascended just one step up the police hierarchy, to the rank of sergeant – proof, if nothing else, of his loyalty to the cause for his role in covering up the murder of Uncle Ahmed.”

Follow Ahmed Timol’s nephew, Imtiaz Ahmed Cajee, on his 20-year journey to find his uncle’s killer and bring him to justice. In 1971, a state inquiry found that Ahmed Timol, held by the security branch of the 10th floor of John Vorster Square, committed suicide by jumping to his death. 46 years later, a new inquiry found that Ahmed Timol was murdered. Only one man remained alive who could tell the truth, a lowly clerk from the police, who was in the room when Timol was pushed. Joao Rodrigues has now been charged with murder and defeating and or obstructing the administration of justice. The book is a wonderful evocation of a time and places; Johannesburg, London, Mecca, Moscow. The last years of Timol’s life, the woman he loved, and his commitment to a non-racial and free South Africa. His last days are detailed here; the roadblock that was set up to catch him and his treatment by the security police.

Not content with finding his uncle’s murderer, Cajee has been on a quest for justice for other murdered victims of apartheid, whose killers never applied to the TRC and who were never charged, despite the information being available. Cajee investigates the possible deal that was done between the National Party and the ANC during the early 90’s, and asks how is it possible that so many murderers and torturers were not prosecuted. He is clear that now is the time to find these people and prosecute them.

It’s an unputdownable book, and one that will touch the reader deeply. The book will be published on 21 March 2020.

In order to commemorate Ahmed Timol’s life, a dedicated website www.ahmedtimol.co.za was launched in 2012 to keep memories of his contribution to the anti-apartheid movement alive, and to provide a platform for the further exploration of the unsolved case. The website contains a complete record of just about all the information about Timol’s death, and includes the partial inquest records and the historic findings of the 2017 inquest.

Menu