Background
Gunn was born the youngest of five children in the Cape Town suburb of Kenilworth. Her father was a doctor and her mother a nurse In 1966 and 1967, Gunn accompanied her mother to various poor communities in Cape Town.
Gunn was born the youngest of five children in the Cape Town suburb of Kenilworth. Her father was a doctor and her mother a nurse In 1966 and 1967, Gunn accompanied her mother to various poor communities in Cape Town.
She attended a convent school from age 5 to 18.
Disillusioned by apartheid, she left nursing in 1976 and enrolled at the University of Cape Town (UCT) for a degree in social work. Foreign her honours degree, Gunn was placed in Hout Bay to do community work. She was recruited in the African National Congress"s political underground activities where she helped develop militant strategies.
Gunn was then assigned to co-ordinate the work of the Advice Offices in the Western Cape.
While Gunn was still working with the Advice Offices, the first clothing workers’ union strike took place. Gunn mobilised the Advice Offices to support the strike, while simultaneously receiving military training.
In 1984, Gunn was recruited into the MK by Leon Meyer. As a result of her anti-apartheid activity, she was arrested by the security police in 1985 and detained at Pollsmoor Prison for more than three months.
Gunn"s release was secured when Dullah Omar represented her in her trial, but she was placed under surveillance and was continuously harassed by security police.
She was subsequently exiled to Botswana. In 1988, Gunn returned to South Africa. She and her then-husband, Aneez Salie, assisted in the establishment of the Ashley Kriel unit and carried out an unspecified number of sabotage attacks of symbolic institutions in the Western Cape.
In August that same year, Khotso house, the headquarters of the South African Council of Churches, was bombed and 21 people were injured.
In a ploy to arrest her, a pregnant Gunn was accused of the bombings in a statement issued by then Minister of Law and Order Adriaan Vlok on 10 January 1989. Gunn was held in cells that had appalling conditions, resulting in her lodging a complaint with the police.
Recordings of her son"s weeping were used during Gunn"s interrogation as a means of forcing her to confess. She was later taken to the Caledon Women"s Prison where she was detained for 68 days.
Here she was arrested by large numbers of security policemen.
Gunn was tortured for 64 days. Two years later, when it was discovered that the security forces were responsible for the bombing, Gunn laid defamation charges in a civil case against Ministers Vlok, Rina Venter and Kobie Coetsee. Gunn later testified of her own experiences to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (Teaching Resource Center), while Vlok, former Police Commissioner Johan van der Merwe and 17 others were granted amnesty for the bombing.
Gunn continues to work in advancing human rights.
She is currently the Executive Director of Human Rights Media Centre (HRMC) in Kenilworth, Cape Town and a board member on the Khulumani Support Group.
Here she joined the African National Congress (African National Congress) in 1980.