DRINKING WITH GHOSTS: THE
AFTERMATH OF APARTHEID’S DIRTY WAR
By Michael Schmidt and published by BestRed
“A critical, independent and
investigative press is the lifeblood of any democracy” – Nelson Mandela, 1994.
In this current climate, Michael Schmidt’s Drinking with Ghosts: The Aftermath of
Apartheid’s Dirty War (BestRed) is a remarkable example of
rigorously-researched and brave investigative journalism. The Executive
Director of the Institute for the Advancement of Journalism in South Africa,
Schmidt has a respected track record as a journalist for publications including
the Sunday Times and ThisDay. The book draws on his extensive experience in the
field. Drinking with Ghosts unpacks
and reflects on the actions, both covert and overt, carried out by the state
and its operatives during the apartheid years in Southern Africa. Its specific
focus is on the Dirty War as exemplified by hidden nuclear weapons, clandestine
forays into neighbouring states, mass poisoning and disposal of military
opponents, shady arms deals and bloody massacres.
As Schmidt says: “We need to revisit the Dirty War in Southern Africa, not only because we need to relocate it in its proper historical context, but because its defining ethic of a descent into terror by both sides left such a deep and damaging imprint on the regional psyche, despite our attempts to cloak it in a ‘Pact of Forgetting’, that to a very real extent terrorism built our democracy – which is why we tend to revert to such debased behaviour in times of crisis, as in the Marikana Massacre of 34 miners by police in 2012.”
The book is divided into five parts.
Unhale Radiance: The African Atomic Bomb looks at South Africa’s relationship to nuclear arms, from
its denial of their existence during the 1980s through to the curious
connection between nuclear weapons dealers and South Africa in current times.
A Funny Smell: Biochem War and the Death
Squads revisits the role the apartheid state
played in the elimination of political enemies, particularly through
individuals such as “Dr Death” - WouterBasson – and Dirk Coetzee, the notorious
Vlakplaas death squad commander.
The Long Shadow: Exporting War … and
Peace explores the role South Africa played in
the Bush War in Angola from 1966 to 1989, as well as the country’s subsequent
role as “regional arbiter for evil … or perhaps even for good” as Schmidt puts
it.
Forensic Meditations: Massacre and Memory takes a hard and often painful look at massacres in South
Africa and further afield, such as Rwanda, as well as political assignations,
xenophobic murders and “dirty tricks” killings.
Epitaph: Breaking our Pact of Forgetting looks at “paper holocausts” and how to access the archives
of apartheid memory, ending with a comparison of liberation movements and state
responses in countries such as Argentina and Uruguay.
The book is bookended by a Forward and a last reflective
Coda structured around the death of PW Botha.
Part of what makes the book so immensely readable is its
stylistic sense of immediacy, so that even sections that date back ten, or
twenty, or thirty years ago read as though they are happening right now. This,
plus Schmidt’s absolutely impeccable eye for detail, from descriptions of
dangerous characters to complicated military stats, make Drinking with Ghosts: The Aftermath of Apartheid’s Dirty War
(BestRed) an irresistible read.
Extremely relevant to journalists in the investigative
field (as an outstanding guide, as well as a great read), and also easily
accessible and engrossing to those with an interest in South Africa’s
socio-political history and present, Schmidt has produced an important book
that not only uncovers a lot of dirty linen, but places it within a fascinating
context.
Ends///
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