Khulumani files suit in New York court –

The Khulumani Support Group filed the suit in its name as well as that of 85 of its 33 000 members, in the New York Eastern District Court on Monday, the organisation said at a media conference on Tuesday.

Abstracts from article:

  1. “A major complaint for apartheid reparations was filed last night in the New York Eastern Court on behalf of state-sanctioned torture, murder, rape, arbitrary detention and inhumane treatment,” Khulumani said in the Central Methodist Church in central Johannesburg. The lawsuit did not state how much was being sought by the plaintiffs from the defendants in damages.

  2. The companies and banks named in the lawsuit are: Citigroup, JP Morgan Chase, Exxon Mobil, Caltex Petroleum, Fluor Corporation, Ford, General Motors and IBM in the United States; German-based Commerzbank, Deutsche Bank, Dresdner Bank, DaimlerChrysler, and Rheinmetall; Credit Suisse and UBS in Switzerland; Barclays Bank; British Petroleum, Rio Tinto and Fujitsu ICL in the United Kingdom; Total-Fina-Elf from France and Royal Dutch Shell from the Netherlands.

  3. “This is not an attack on Switzerland or the people of Switzerland, or Germany or any other country,” Jubilee South Africa (Jubilee) spokesperson Neville Gabriel told the audience. “This is against specific banks and corporations united in their intent by propping up a crime against humanity.”

  4. Michael Hausfeld, the attorney handling the case, was also approaching the matter differently. Hausfeld, like Fagan, had shot to prominence suing companies and banks on behalf of victims and descendants of the Nazi holocaust in the 1940s. “Background checks on Hausfeld indicated good credentials,” a Jubilee briefing document added.

  5. Khulumani secretary general Ntombi Mosikare, speaking as both one of the 85 and as an apartheid victim, said money could not bring “our loved ones back but it can address many of the problems we have”. Another of the 85, Thandi Shezi, bemoaned the South African government’s disregard of the promises of reparations it had made to apartheid victims. She said many also felt “betrayed and humiliated by government’s suggestion that their struggle is a quest for money”.

  6. Khulumani was set up in 1995 to provide a platform for victims to engage the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. It now wanted the companies being sued to repair the damage apartheid caused by investing in and developing disadvantaged communities. Khulumani had also proposed compensation payments to individuals as well as the cancelation of “odious debt” dating from the apartheid era.

  • Source: Full article “NGO sues firms for ‘propping up apartheid'” appeared on the Independant Online iol.co.za website