Who knew that 37 years ago an SAA Boeing was hijacked in the skies and forced to land in Malawi in an incredible drama that saw the hijacker demand an audience with mining magnate Harry Oppenheimer?

Fouad Kamil at work in his art studio.
It was South Africa’s very first hijacking and the hijacker, a Lebanese diamond agent who now lives in Brazil, gave Grubstreet an interview this week after he spotted a post I did about Eddie Botha’s two-part story about Fouad Kamil aka Flash Fred. Read the earlier post here and click here to read the two-part Dispatch story by Botha.
Now in his 80s and living as a writer and painter in the coastal city of Vitoria, north of Rio de Janeiro, Kamil told Grubstreet that he regretted the 1972 hijacking because “it was wrong to involve innocent people in my struggle for justice”.
He also said his mind was “full of resentment and contempt”. Since the hijacking, Kamil battled with Anglo American to claim money he believes he is still owed for recovering stolen diamonds for Anglo.
He claimed to Grubstreet that he only resorted to hijacking the plane because, he said, the mining company had kidnapped his secretary. “…her people blamed me. AA was threatening to kidnap my wife and son. They harassed and hunted me. My struggle was a fight for survival,” Kamil said via email.

"Anglo American survivng on the blindfolded and the weak" by Fouad Kamil.
In a 1992 letter from Oppenheimer to Kamil, he denied having any knowledge of Kamil’s grievances and claimed that they were based on misconception. Click here to read the letter at the Dispatch’s website. Later Oppenheimer gave Kamil $115 000 in the hope of “establishing normal relations” with Kamil.
Kamil, who is updating his 2003 autobiography, “The Diamond Curse”, to include allegations of dodgy diamond dealings and political meddling by Anglo in Sierra Leone, also had this to say on my blog when I asked him to expand on why he regretted the hijacking:
The following part of my autobiography, The Diamond Curse, may answer your question. Though confident of the success of the plan, I could not sleep. I could not dismiss the thought that I was about to take part in an action that in the past I had always condemned. I was not sure how to conduct negotiations in such circumstances. I searched for the possibility of another solution, even to the point of giving up the hijacking altogether. Needing to protect my family and survive, I could see no alternative. With every bridge burned behind me and every other path blocked, I had to go on.

"Lost" by Fouad Kamil.
He also said he remained frustrated that the media has been wowed by the sensational aspects of his life rather than pursuing other information he has passed onto them.
I confess it’s hard not to be wowed by Kamil’s adventurous life — a diamond agent in Africa in the 1960s and 70s, the hijack drama, the peculiar encounter with Malawian dictator Hastings Banda before his release and then his dealings with Oppenheimer are the stuff of classic crime fiction – except that it’s apparently fact. Read the Grubstreet email interview with the remarkable Kamil here and decide for yourself.
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