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What does the arms trade have to do with Dulcie September's murder? At the time of her death, Dulcie September was 52 years old, and had devoted her entire life to fighting apartheid. A short while after her six-year imprisonment for organising with the National Liberation Front in October 1963, she departed for Europe and joined the exiled ANC which was by that point already banned by the apartheid government. Until recently, her name existed in deep obscurity, but thanks to recent efforts by the investigative research outfit Open Secrets (which produces a podcast with Sound Africa called “They Killed Dulcie”), as well as the publication of Evelyn Groenink’s book Incorruptible (which is also about the murders of Chris Hani and Anton Lubowski), the story of her murder is starting to break through. A new documentary, Murder in Paris, makes a notable contribution to ending the erasure of Dulcie September. Directed by Enver Samuel, whose most recent films include Indians Can’t Fly in 2015 (about the death in detention of anti-apartheid activist Ahmed Timol), as well as Someone To Blame in 2017 (about the eventual inquest into Timol’s death), the film adds to a body of work that seeks to relook at unresolved and buried apartheid traumas. In this clip from last week's episode of AIAC Talk, we are joined by Enver Samuel and Evelyn Groenink to discuss the film.