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Sunday, December 15, 2013

South Africa apologizes for fake signer, vows reforms

JOHANNESBURG  — A South African Cabinet minister is apologizing for the sign language interpreter at Nelson Mandela's memorial who outraged deaf people worldwide by making signs they said amounted to gibberish.
In the highest-ranking apology yet from the government, Arts and Culture Minister Paul Mashatile said Friday reforms must be implemented to ensure such an incident won't happen again.
Mashatile is sticking to the government's refusal to say who was responsible for hiring the sign interpreter for Tuesday's memorial.
Interpreter Thamsanqa Jantjie says he has been violent in the past and hallucinated during the memorial service as he was gesturing incoherently just 3 feet away from U.S. President Barack Obama and other leaders.
A deputy minister, Hendrietta Bogopane-Zulu, first apologized for the incident Thursday. Mandela died Dec. 5 at age 95.
The South African government said Friday it was investigating the hiring of a signer for the deaf at Nelson Mandela's memorial, as reports emerged alleging he had once faced a murder charge.

He became a focus of media attention after organisations for the deaf accused him of being an imposter and signing gibberish throughout the memorial service.The signer, Thamsanqa Jantjie, had stood just feet from US President Barack Obama and other world leaders at Tuesday's event at the Soweto World Cup stadium.
Jantjie has insisted to the media that he is a qualified signer and claims he had suffered a schizophrenic attack that left him confused and hallucinating on stage.
The private South African TV channel eNCA alleged in a report Friday that he had faced violent criminal charges in the past, including murder and kidnapping.
Government spokeswoman Phumla Williams said the government was investigating whether a security lapse had taken place in hiring Jantjie and whether he was the professional signer he claims to be.
The eNCA report claimed Jantjie had faced a string of criminal charges between 1994 and 2003. While most were withdrawn "allegedly because he was mentally unfit to stand trial," murder and attempted murder charges were referred to a high court, eNCA said.
The TV channel said it was unclear how the cases were resolved because the relevant judicial files were "empty."
Police told AFP they were aware of the media report, but could not confirm or deny such charges had been filed against Jantjie.
The national prosecution authority offered a similar response.
Contacted by telephone on Friday, Jantjie refused to discuss the incident, saying he was too busy drafting an explanation to the government.
"Yesterday I explained to all the media...(and) today I am busy with the government that wants my side of the story," he said.

But nothing was done and Jantjie was hired to interpret at possibly the most important international event of the century – last week’s memorial service in Soweto of the late President Nelson Mandela.

It was only after deaf people around the world expressed outrage at the meaningless nonsensical gestures being used by Jantjie to interpret speeches by – among others, US President Barack Obama and President Jacob Zuma himself – that the penny seems to have dropped.

Jantjie claimed he had also been employed by the ANC at the 100 Year celebrations in Mangaung, an ANC 101 Event, another ANC birthday event and the Siyanqoba Rally.

An embarrassed government has launched an investigation into how Jantjie was able to obtain a security clearance after it was revealed that, in addition to being a liar and a fraud, he was a man with a record of criminal charges against him.

It was reported that he faced a rape charge in 1994, house-breaking in 1997, malicious damage to property in 1998, and murder, attempted murder and kidnapping in 2003, raising fears that the hiring of Jantjie was a major security breach.

The murder charges were not pursued and the case file is reported to be empty.

Sunday Sun can also disclose today Jantjie admits he is actually “operations manager” of SA Interpreters, the company said to be responsible for hiring him, which also employs his wife, Siziwe.

He gave Sunday Sun the names of two people in the company. They are Buhle Makhoba and Mandla Sindana. Attempts to contact these two by cellphone were unsuccessful.

Jantjie’s business card gives an address for SA Interpreters as Barry Hertzog Avenue in Joburg. But building there belongs to a company called 360 Degrees which has no connection with Jantjie.

The business card has the slogan “Interpreting for Social Cohesion” but Sunday Sun has established the company doesn’t exist.

When asked about the bogus address, Jantjie told us: “I have never been to the company’s offices, as we always held our meetings at the ANC headquarters.”

We have seen an invoice for R6 000 which was sent to the ANC in June. But the true extent of the ANC’s involvement in the hiring of Janjie is not known. The only admission came from party spokesman Jackson Mthembu this week that Jantjie had interpreted at a party function before.

But Henrietta Bogopane-Zulu, deputy minister of people with disabilities told our sister newspaper Daily Sun: “We can’t be told that we’re embarrassed. A mistake happened but we are trying to improve.”

Wilma Newhoudt-Druchen from the Deaf Federation of SA told City Press newspaper that DeafSA had submitted a report about Jantjie to the ANC after a complaint in mid-2012 about the man’s interpretation of a speech made by President Zuma.
There was no response.

“When a deaf person complains, nobody listens,” she said.

Jantjie this week blamed his performance on a schizophrenic attack and said he saw angels flying at the stadium. He admitted these attacks sometimes had violent symptoms. But psychiatrist Dr Franco Colin was quoted as saying that Jantjie’s description of his symptoms on the platform were inconsistent with an acute psychotic episode.

“Schizophrenics very rarely see things, and if they do they don’t see angels but rather horrific images relating to paranoia.”

This raised questions of how reliable Jantjie’s own version of his illness, and the extent of it, actually is.

Asked to explain one of Jantjie’s meaningless signs, a skilled deaf sign interpreter told Sunday Sun he said things like chop tomatoes, chicken, rice and “all sorts of crazy ideas”

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