![]() ![]() Hani's name was the third name on the list at the top was Nelson Mandela's. ![]() At the trial, Kemp said he had made a list of addresses including Hani's and gave it to Gaye Derby-Lewis, but said he did not know it would be used for a murder. Clive Derby-Lewis and the assassin, Janusz Walus, were found guilty and sentenced to death (both death sentences were later commuted to life imprisonment), while Gaye Derby-Lewis was acquitted. Kemp gave evidence against Clive Derby-Lewis and his wife, Gaye Derby-Lewis, saying they admitted their involvement during a lunch the three had together two days after Hani's death. Kemp had been one of the right-wing activists arrested after the murder but was released without charge. In 1993, Kemp was a key prosecution witness in the trial after the assassination of the South African Communist Party leader Chris Hani. In the early 1990s he worked for the National Intelligence Service, according to British newspapers. Kemp also wrote for The Citizen newspaper, as well as The Patriot, a far-right newspaper. ![]() įrom 1989 to 1992, Kemp worked for Die Patriot, the newspaper of the white supremacist South African Conservative Party. Kemp was conscripted and served as a sergeant in the South African Police in Johannesburg from 1987 to 1988. He attended the University of Cape Town in the early 1980s. His father is British and his mother is Dutch. Kemp was born in 1963 in Southern Rhodesia, and spent his early years in South Africa. ![]()
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