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F. W. de Klerk

Frederik Willem de Klerk (/də ˈklɜːrk, də ˈklɛərk/, Afrikaans: [ˈfriədərək ˈvələm də ˈklɛrk]; 18 March 1936 – 11 November 2021) was a South African politician who served as state president of South Africa from 1989 to 1994 and as deputy president from 1994 to 1996. As South Africa's last head of state from the era of white-minority rule, he and his government dismantled the apartheid system and introduced universal suffrage. Ideologically a conservative and an economic liberal, he led the National Party (NP) from 1989 to 1997.

F. W. de Klerk
de Klerk in 1990
7th State President of South Africa
In office
14 August 1989 – 10 May 1994
Preceded byP. W. Botha
Succeeded byNelson Mandela (as President)
1st Deputy President of South Africa
In office
10 May 1994 – 30 June 1996
Serving with Thabo Mbeki
PresidentNelson Mandela
Preceded byAlwyn Schlebusch (as Vice State President)
Succeeded byThabo Mbeki (solely)
13th Leader of the Opposition
In office
1996–1997
PresidentNelson Mandela
Preceded byConstand Viljoen
Succeeded byMarthinus van Schalkwyk
7th President of the National Party
In office
15 August 1989 – 8 September 1997
Preceded byP. W. Botha
Succeeded byMarthinus van Schalkwyk (Leader, New National Party)
Ministerial offices
1978–1989
Minister of National Education and Planning
In office
17 September 1984 – 15 August 1989
PresidentP. W. Botha
Preceded byGerrit Viljoen (National Education)
Succeeded byGene Louw (Education and Culture)
Minister of Home Affairs
In office
1982–1985
PresidentP. W. Botha (1984–1985)
Prime MinisterP. W. Botha (1982–1984)
Preceded byChris Heunis
Succeeded byStoffel Botha
Minister of Mines and Energy
In office
1979–1982
Prime MinisterP. W. Botha
Preceded byStephanus Petrus Botha
Succeeded byPietie du Plessis
Minister of Sport and Recreation
In office
1978–1979
Prime MinisterP. W. Botha
Preceded byPiet Koornhof
Succeeded byGerrit Viljoen (National Education)
Minister of Posts and Telecommunications
In office
1978–1979
Prime Minister
Preceded byHendrik Smit
Succeeded byJohannes Petrus van der Spuy
Minister of Social Welfare and Pensions
In office
January 1978 – October 1978
Prime MinisterJohn Vorster
Preceded byJohannes Petrus van der Spuy
Succeeded bySchalk van der Merwe
Personal details
Born
Frederik Willem de Klerk

(1936-03-18)18 March 1936
Johannesburg, Transvaal, Union of South Africa
Died11 November 2021(2021-11-11) (aged 85)
Cape Town, Western Cape, Republic of South Africa
Political partyNP (1972–1997)
Other political
affiliations
NNP (1997–2005)
Spouses
(m. 1959; div. 1996)
Elita Georgiades
(m. 1999)
Children3
Parent
Alma materPotchefstroom University (BA, LLB)
ProfessionAttorney
Signature
WebsiteFoundation

Born in Johannesburg to an influential Afrikaner family, de Klerk studied at Potchefstroom University before pursuing a career in law. Joining the NP, to which he had family ties, he was elected to parliament and sat in the white-minority government of P. W. Botha, holding a succession of ministerial posts. As a minister, he supported and enforced apartheid, a system of racial segregation that privileged white South Africans. After Botha resigned in 1989, de Klerk replaced him, first as leader of the NP and then as State President. Although observers expected him to continue Botha's defence of apartheid, de Klerk decided to end the policy. He was aware that growing ethnic animosity and violence was leading South Africa into a racial civil war. Amid this violence, the state security forces committed widespread human rights abuses and encouraged violence between the Xhosa and Zulu people, although de Klerk later denied sanctioning such actions. He permitted anti-apartheid marches to take place, legalised a range of previously banned anti-apartheid political parties, and freed imprisoned anti-apartheid activists such as Nelson Mandela. He also dismantled South Africa's nuclear weapons program.

De Klerk negotiated with Mandela to fully dismantle apartheid and establish a transition to universal suffrage. In 1993, he publicly apologized for apartheid's harmful effects. He oversaw the 1994 non-racial election in which Mandela led the African National Congress (ANC) to victory; de Klerk's NP took second place. De Klerk then became Deputy President in Mandela's ANC-led coalition, the Government of National Unity. In this position, he supported the government's continued liberal economic policies but opposed the Truth and Reconciliation Commission set up to investigate past human rights abuses because he wanted total amnesty for political crimes. His working relationship with Mandela was strained, although he later spoke fondly of him. In May 1996, after the NP objected to the new constitution, de Klerk withdrew it from the coalition government; the party disbanded the following year and reformed as the New National Party. In 1997, he retired from active politics and thereafter lectured internationally.

De Klerk was a controversial figure among many sections of South African society. He received many awards, including the Nobel Peace Prize for dismantling apartheid and bringing universal suffrage to South Africa. Conversely, he received criticism from anti-apartheid activists for offering only a qualified apology for apartheid, and for ignoring the human rights abuses by state security forces. He was also condemned by pro-apartheid Afrikaners, who contended that by abandoning apartheid, he betrayed the interests of the country's Afrikaner minority.

Early life and education

Childhood: 1936–1954

F. W. de Klerk was born on 18 March 1936 in Mayfair, a suburb of Johannesburg.[1] His parents were Johannes "Jan" de Klerk and Hendrina Cornelia Coetzer – "her forefather was a Kutzer who stems from Austria."[2] He was his parents' second son, having a brother, Willem de Klerk, who was eight years his senior.[1] De Klerk's first language was Afrikaans and the earliest of his distant ancestors to arrive in what is now South Africa did so in the late 1680s.[3]

De Klerk had a secure and comfortable upbringing, and his family had played a leading role in Afrikaner society;[4] they had longstanding affiliations with South Africa's National Party.[5] His paternal great-grandfather, Jan van Rooy, had been a Senator, while his paternal grandfather, Willem, had been a clergyman who fought in the Second Boer War[3] and stood twice, unsuccessfully, as a National Party candidate.[6] His paternal aunt's husband was J. G. Strijdom, a former Prime Minister.[7] His own father, Jan de Klerk, was also a senator, served as the secretary of the National Party in Transvaal, president of the senate for seven years, acting state president, and as a member of the country's cabinet for fifteen years under three prime ministers.[8] In this environment, de Klerk was exposed to politics from childhood.[9] He and family members would be encouraged to hold family debates; his more conservative opinions would be challenged by his brother Willem, who was sympathetic to the more liberal, "enlightened" faction of the National Party.[1] Willem became a political analyst and later split from the National Party to found the liberal Democratic Party.[10]

The name "de Klerk" is derived from Le Clerc, Le Clercq and De Clercq, and is of French Huguenot origin[11] (meaning "clergyman" or "literate" in old French). De Klerk noted that he was also of Dutch descent,[12][13] with an Indian ancestor from the late-1690s or early 1700s.[14] He was also said to have been descended from the Khoi interpreter known as Krotoa or Eva.[15]

When de Klerk was twelve years old, the apartheid system was officially institutionalised by the South African government;[16] his father had been one of its originators.[17] He therefore was, according to his brother, "one of a generation that grew up with the concept of apartheid".[16] He was inculturated in the norms and values of Afrikaner society, including festivals like Kruger Day, loyalty to the Afrikaner nation, and stories of the "age of injustice" that the Afrikaner faced under the British.[4] He was brought up in the Gereformeerde Kerk, the smallest and most socially conservative of South Africa's three Dutch Reformed Churches.[18]

The de Klerk family moved around South Africa during his childhood, and he changed schools seven times over seven years.[1] He eventually became a boarder at the Hoërskool Monument (Monument High School) in Krugersdorp, where he graduated with a first-class pass in 1953.[1] He was nevertheless disappointed not to get the four distinctions he was hoping for.[1]

University and legal career

Between 1954 and 1958, de Klerk studied at Potchefstroom University, graduating with both a Bachelor of Arts and a Bachelor of Law.[19][10] He later noted that during this legal training, he "became accustomed to thinking in terms of legal principles".[20] While studying there, he became editor of the student newspaper, vice-chair of the student council, and a member of the Afrikaanse Studentebond's (a large South African youth movement) national executive council.[19] At university, he was initiated into the Broederbond, a secret society for the Afrikaner social elite.[21] As a student, he played both tennis and hockey and was known as "something of a ladies' man".[19] At the university, he began a relationship with Marike Willemse, the daughter of a professor at the University of Pretoria.[22] The couple married in 1959, when de Klerk was 23 and his wife 22.[23]

After university, de Klerk pursued a legal career, becoming an articled clerk with the firm Pelser in Klerksdorp.[19] Relocating to Pretoria, he became an articled clerk for another law firm, Mac-Robert.[24] In 1962, he set up his own law partnership in Vereeniging, Transvaal, which he built into a successful business over ten years.[24] During this period, he involved himself in a range of other activities. He was the national chair of the Junior Rapportryers for two years, and chair of the Law Society of Vaal Triangle.[24] He was also on the council of the local technikon, on the council of his church, and on a local school board.[24]

Early political career

In 1972, his alma mater offered him a chair in its law faculty, which he accepted.[25] Within a matter of days he was also approached by members of the National Party, who requested that he stand for the party at Vereeniging. De Klerk's candidature was successful and in November he was elected to the House of Assembly.[24] There, he established a reputation as a formidable debater.[24] He took on a number of roles in the party and government. He became the information officer of the Transvaal National Party, responsible for its propaganda output,[26] and helped to establish a new National Party youth movement.[26] He joined various party parliamentary study groups, including those on the Bantustans, labour, justice, and home affairs.[26] As a member of various parliamentary groups, de Klerk went on several foreign visits, to Israel, West Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States.[26] It was in the latter in 1976 that he observed what he later described as the pervasive racism of US society, later noting that he "saw more racial incidents in one month there than in South Africa in a year".[27] In South Africa, de Klerk also played a senior role in two select committees, one formulating a policy on opening hotels to non-Whites and the other formulating a new censorship law that was less strict than the one that had preceded it.[26]

In 1975, Prime Minister John Vorster predicted that de Klerk would one day become leader of South Africa.[28] Vorster planned to promote de Klerk to the position of a deputy minister in January 1976, but instead the job went to Andries Treurnicht.[28] In April 1978, de Klerk was promoted to the position of Minister of Social Welfare and Pensions.[28] In this role, he restored full autonomy to sporting control bodies which had for a time been under the jurisdiction of the government.[28] As minister of Post and Telecommunications, he finalized contracts that oversaw the electrification of that sector.[28] As Minister of Mining, he formalized a policy on coal exports and the structuring of Eskom and the Atomic Energy Corporation.[28] He then became Minister of the Interior, he oversaw the repeal of the Mixed Marriages Act.[28]

In 1981, de Klerk was awarded the Decoration for Meritorious Service for his work in the government.[29] As education minister between 1984 and 1989, he upheld the apartheid system in South Africa's schools,[21] and extended the department to cover all racial groups.[28]

For most of his career, de Klerk had a very conservative reputation,[30] and was seen as someone who would obstruct change in South Africa.[31] He had been a forceful proponent of apartheid's system of racial segregation and was perceived as an advocate of the white minority's interests.[32] While serving under P. W. Botha's government, de Klerk was never part of Botha's inner circle.[29]

State presidency

P. W. Botha resigned as leader of the National Party after an apparent stroke, and de Klerk defeated Botha's preferred successor, finance minister Barend du Plessis, in the race to succeed him. On 2 February 1989, he was elected leader of the National Party.[33] He defeated main rival Barend du Plessis to the position by a majority of eight votes, 69–61.[34] Soon after, he called for the introduction of a new South African constitution, hinting that it would need to provide greater concession to non-white racial groups.[21] After becoming party leader, de Klerk extended his foreign contacts.[35] He travelled to London, where he met with British prime minister Margaret Thatcher. Although she opposed the anti-apartheid movement's calls for economic sanctions against South Africa, at the meeting she urged de Klerk to release the imprisoned anti-apartheid activist Nelson Mandela.[36] He also expressed a desire to meet with representatives of the US government in Washington D.C., although American secretary of state James Baker informed him that the US government considered it inopportune to have de Klerk meet with President George H. W. Bush.[36]

Becoming state president

 
De Klerk in Philadelphia, 1992

Botha resigned on 14 August 1989, and de Klerk was named acting state president until 20 September, when he was elected to a full five-year term as state president.[21] After he became acting president, ANC leaders spoke out against him, believing that he would be no different from his predecessors;[21] he was widely regarded as a staunch supporter of apartheid.[37] The prominent anti-apartheid activist Desmond Tutu shared this assessment, stating: "I don't think we've got to even begin to pretend that there is any reason for thinking that we are entering a new phase. It's just musical chairs".[38] Tutu and Allan Boesak had been planning a protest march in Cape Town, which the security chiefs wanted to prevent. De Klerk nevertheless turned down their proposal to ban it, agreeing to let the march proceed and stating that "the door to a new South Africa is open, it is not necessary to batter it down".[39] The march took place and was attended by approximately 30,000 people.[40] Further protest marches followed in Grahamstown, Johannesburg, Pretoria, and Durban.[41] De Klerk later noted that his security forces could not have prevented the marchers from gathering: "The choice, therefore, was between breaking up an illegal march with all of the attendant risks of violence and negative publicity, or of allowing the march to continue, subject to conditions that could help to avoid violence and ensure good public order."[42] This decision marked a clear departure from the Botha era.[42]

As President, he authorised the continuation of secret talks in Geneva between his National Intelligence Service and two exiled ANC leaders, Thabo Mbeki and Jacob Zuma.[42] In October, he personally agreed to meet with Tutu, Boesak, and Frank Chikane in a private meeting in Pretoria.[43] That month, he also released a number of elderly anti-apartheid activists then imprisoned, including Walter Sisulu.[44] He also ordered the closure of the National Security Management System.[21] In December he visited Mandela in prison, speaking with him for three hours about the idea of transitioning away from white-minority rule.[21] The collapse of the Eastern Bloc and the dissolution of the Soviet Union meant that he no longer feared that Marxists would manipulate the ANC.[45] As he later related, the collapse of "the Marxist economic system in Eastern Europe... serves as a warning to those who insist on persisting with it in Africa. Those who seek to force this failure of a system on South Africa should engage in a total revision of their point of view. It should be clear to all that it is not the answer here either."[46]

History has placed a tremendous responsibility on the shoulders of this country's leadership, namely the responsibility of moving our country away from the current course of conflict and confrontation... The hope of millions of South Africans is fixed on us. The future of southern Africa depends on us. We dare not waver or fail.

—De Klerk's speech to Parliament, February 1990[21]

On 2 February 1990, in an address to the country's parliament, he introduced plans for sweeping reforms of the political system.[47] A number of banned political parties, including the ANC and Communist Party of South Africa, would be legalized,[48] although he emphasized that this did not constitute an endorsement of their socialist economic policies nor of violent actions carried out by their members.[49] All of those who were imprisoned solely for belonging to a banned organization would be freed,[50] including Nelson Mandela;[51] the latter was released a week later.[52] He also announced the lifting of the Separate Amenities Act of 1953, which governed the segregation of public facilities.[53] The vision set forth in de Klerk's address was for South Africa to become a Western-style liberal democracy;[54] with a market-oriented economy which valued private enterprise and restricted the government's role in economics.[55]

De Klerk later related that "that speech was mainly aimed at breaking our stalemate in Africa and the West. Internationally we were teetering on the edge of the abyss."[56] Throughout South Africa and across the world, there was astonishment at de Klerk's move.[21] Foreign press coverage was largely positive and de Klerk received messages of support from other governments.[57] Tutu said that "It's incredible... Give him credit. Give him credit, I do."[21] Some black radicals regarded it as a gimmick and that it would prove to be without substance.[58] It was also received negatively by some on the white right-wing, including in the Conservative Party, who believed that de Klerk was betraying the white population.[59][60] De Klerk believed that the sudden growth of the Conservatives and other white right-wing groups was a passing phase reflecting anxiety and insecurity.[4] These white right-wing groups were aware that they would not get what they wanted through the forthcoming negotiations, and so increasingly tried to derail the negotiations using revolutionary violence.[61] The white-dominated liberal Democratic Party, meanwhile, found itself in limbo, as de Klerk embraced much of the platform it had espoused, leaving it without a clear purpose.[62]

Further reforms followed; membership of the National Party was opened up to non-whites.[52] In June, parliament approved new legislation that repealed the Natives Land Act, 1913 and Native Trust and Land Act, 1936.[52] The Population Registration Act, which established the racial classificatory guidelines for South Africa, was rescinded.[52]

In 1990, de Klerk gave orders to end South Africa's nuclear weapons programme; the process of nuclear disarmament was essentially completed in 1991. The existence of the nuclear programme was not officially acknowledged before 1993.[63][64]

Negotiations toward universal suffrage

I believe the new political order will and must contain the following elements: a democratic constitution, universal suffrage, no domination, equality before an independent judiciary, the protection of minorities and individual rights, freedom of religion, a healthy economy based on proven economic principles and private initiative, and a dynamic programme for better education, health services, housing and social conditions for all... I am not talking of a rosy and tranquil future, but I believe the broad mainstream of South Africans will gradually build up South Africa into a society that will be worth living and working in.

—De Klerk on a post-apartheid society[65]

 
President de Klerk and Nelson Mandela shake hands at the Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum held in Davos, 1992

His presidency was dominated by the negotiation process, mainly between his NP government and the ANC, which led to the democratization of South Africa. On 17 March 1992, de Klerk held a whites-only referendum on ending apartheid, with the result being an overwhelming "yes" vote to continue negotiations to end apartheid.[66]

Nelson Mandela was distrustful of the role played by de Klerk in the negotiations, particularly as he believed that de Klerk was knowledgeable about 'third force' attempts to foment violence in the country and destabilize the negotiations.[66] De Klerk's possible role in the 'third force' came to the attention of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, but was ultimately never clarified.[67][68] De Klerk was accused by writer Anthony Sampson of complicity in the violence among the ANC, the Inkatha Freedom Party and elements of the security forces. He also accused de Klerk of permitting his ministers to build their own criminal empires.[69]

On 17 July 1992, the Boipatong massacre by the Inkatha Freedom Party occurred, killing 45 people. The massacre caused a resurgence of international pressure against South Africa over claims of police collusion, leading to a weaker position at the negotiation tables for the National Party.[70] The Goldstone Commission concluded there was no evidence of police collusion in the massacre.[71]

On 30 April 1993, de Klerk issued an apology for the actions of the apartheid government, stating that: "It was not our intention to deprive people of their rights and to cause misery, but eventually apartheid led to just that. Insofar as to what occurred we deeply regret it... Yes we are sorry".[72] Tutu urged people to accept the apology, stating that "saying sorry is not an easy thing to do... We should be magnanimous and accept it as a magnanimous act", although Tutu was privately frustrated that de Klerk's apology had been qualified and had not gone so far as to call apartheid an intrinsically evil policy.[72]

De Klerk authorized the raid on Mthatha against suspected Azanian People's Liberation Army (APLA) fighters on 8 October 1993 that killed three teenagers and two twelve year olds. The Minister of Defence said the raid had been undertaken to pre-empt attacks by the APLA on civilians and that one of the victims had brandished a weapon. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission concluded the raid was a "gross violation of human rights"[73]

On 10 December 1993, de Klerk and Mandela were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo for their work in ending apartheid.[74]

South Africa held its first universal elections in 1994 from 26 to 29 April. The ANC won the election with 62 percent, while the National Party received 20 percent. De Klerk became deputy president in the national unity government under Nelson Mandela.

Deputy presidency

De Klerk had been unhappy that changes had been made to the inauguration ceremony, rendering it multi-religious rather than reflecting the newly elected leader's particular denomination.[75] When he was being sworn in, and the chief justice said "So help me God", de Klerk did not repeat this, instead stating, in Afrikaans: "So help me the triune God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit".[76]

Mandela reappointed de Klerk's finance minister, Derek Keys, and retained Chris Stals, a former member of the Broederbond, as the head of the Central Bank.[77] De Klerk supported the coalition's economic policies, stating that it "accepted a broad framework of responsible economic policies".[78]

De Klerk's working relationship with Mandela was often strained, with the former finding it difficult adjusting to the fact that he was no longer president.[79] De Klerk also felt that Mandela deliberately humiliated him, while Mandela found de Klerk to be needlessly provocative in cabinet.[79] One dispute occurred in September 1995, after Mandela gave a Johannesburg speech criticizing the National Party. Angered, de Klerk avoided Mandela until the latter requested they meet. The two ran into each other, and they publicly argued in the streets. Mandela later expressed regret for their disagreement but did not apologize for his original comments.[79] De Klerk was also having problems from within his own party, some of whose members claimed that he was neglecting the party while in the government.[79]

Many in the National Party—including many members of its executive committee—were unhappy with the other parties' agreed upon new constitution in May 1996.[79] The party had wanted the constitution to guarantee that it would be represented in the government until 2004, although it did not do so. On 9 May, de Klerk withdrew the National Party from the coalition government.[79] The decision shocked several of his six fellow Afrikaner cabinet colleagues; Pik Botha, for example, was left without a job as a result.[80] Roelf Meyer felt betrayed by de Klerk's act, while Leon Wessels thought that de Klerk had not tried hard enough to make the coalition work.[81] De Klerk declared that he would lead the National Party in vigorous opposition to Mandela's government to ensure "a proper multi-party democracy, without which there may be a danger of South Africa lapsing into the African pattern of one-party states".[81]

Truth and Reconciliation Commission

 
The chair of the TRC, Desmond Tutu, was frustrated that de Klerk did not take responsibility for the actions of the state security services in the early 1990s.

In de Klerk's view, his greatest defeat in the negotiations with Mandela had been his inability to secure a blanket amnesty for all those working for the government or state during the apartheid period.[82] De Klerk was unhappy with the formation of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC).[82] He had hoped that the TRC would be made up of an equal number of individuals from both the old and new governments, as there had been in the Chilean human rights commission. Instead, the TRC was designed to broadly reflect the wider diversity of South African society, and contained only two members who had explicitly supported apartheid, one a member of a right-wing group that had opposed de Klerk's National Party.[83] De Klerk did not object to Tutu being selected as the TRC's chair for he regarded him as politically independent of Mandela's government, but he was upset that the white Progressive Party MP Alex Boraine had been selected as its deputy chair, later saying of Boraine: "beneath an urbane and deceptively affable exterior beat the heart of a zealot and an inquisitor."[84]

De Klerk appeared before the TRC hearing to testify for Vlakplaas commanders who were accused of having committed human rights abuses during the apartheid era. He acknowledged that security forces had resorted to "unconventional strategies" in dealing with anti-apartheid revolutionaries, but that "within my knowledge and experience, they never included the authorization of assassination, murder, torture, rape, assault or the like".[84] After further evidence of said abuses was produced by the commission, de Klerk stated that he found the revelations to be "as shocking and as abhorrent as anybody else" but insisted that he and other senior party members were not willing to accept responsibility for the "criminal actions of a handful of operatives", stating that their behavior was "not authorized [and] not intended" by his government.[84] Given the widespread and systemic nature of the abuses that had taken place, as well as statements by security officers that their actions had been sanctioned by higher ranking figures, Tutu questioned how de Klerk and other government figures could not have been aware of them.[85] Tutu had hoped that de Klerk or another senior white political figure from the apartheid era would openly accept responsibility for the human rights abuses, thereby allowing South Africa to move on; this was something that de Klerk would not do.[86]

The TRC found de Klerk guilty of being an accessory to gross violations of human rights on the basis that as State President he had been told that P. W. Botha had authorized the bombing of Khotso House but had not revealed this information to the committee.[86] De Klerk challenged the TRC on this point, and it backed down.[86] When the final TRC report was released in 2002, it made a more limited accusation: that de Klerk had failed to give full disclosure about events that took place during his presidency and that in view of his knowledge about the Khotso House bombing, his statement that none of his colleagues had authorized gross human rights abuses was "indefensible".[86] In his later autobiography, de Klerk acknowledged that the TRC did significant damage to his public image.[87]

Later life

In 1994, de Klerk was elected to the American Philosophical Society.[88]

In 1997, de Klerk was offered the Harper Fellowship at Yale Law School. He declined, citing protests at the university.[89] De Klerk did, however, speak at Central Connecticut State University the day before his fellowship would have begun.[90]

 
De Klerk with US secretary of state Hillary Clinton in 2012

In 1999, de Klerk and his wife of 38 years, Marike de Klerk, were divorced following the discovery of his affair with Elita Georgiades,[91] then the wife of Tony Georgiades, a Greek shipping tycoon who had allegedly given de Klerk and the NP financial support.[92] Soon after his divorce, de Klerk and Georgiades were married.[93] His divorce and remarriage scandalised conservative South African opinion, especially among the Calvinist Afrikaners.[94] In 1999, his autobiography, The Last Trek – A New Beginning, was published.[95] In 2002, following the murder of his former wife, the manuscript of her own autobiography, A Place Where the Sun Shines Again, was submitted to de Klerk, who urged the publishers to suppress a chapter dealing with his infidelity.[96]

In 2000, de Klerk established the pro-peace FW de Klerk Foundation of which he was the chairman. De Klerk was also chairman of the Global Leadership Foundation, headquartered in London, which he set up in 2004, an organisation which works to support democratic leadership, prevent and resolve conflict through mediation and promote good governance in the form of democratic institutions, open markets, human rights and the rule of law. It does so by making available, discreetly and in confidence, the experience of former leaders to today's national leaders. It is a not-for-profit organisation composed of former heads of government and senior governmental and international organisation officials who work closely with heads of government on governance-related issues of concern to them.

On 3 December 2001, Marike de Klerk was found stabbed and strangled to death in her Cape Town flat. De Klerk, who was on a brief visit to Stockholm, Sweden, to celebrate the 100-year anniversary of the Nobel Prize foundation, immediately returned to mourn his dead ex-wife. The atrocity was reportedly condemned strongly by South African president Thabo Mbeki and Winnie Mandela, among others, who openly spoke in favour of Marike de Klerk.[97] On 6 December 21-year-old security guard Luyanda Mboniswa was arrested for the murder. On 15 May 2003, he received two life sentences for murder, as well as three years for breaking into Marike de Klerk's apartment.[98]

In 2005, de Klerk quit the New National Party and sought a new political home after the NNP merged with the ruling ANC. That same year, while giving an interview to US journalist Richard Stengel, de Klerk was asked whether South Africa had turned out the way he envisioned it back in 1990. His response was:

There are a number of imperfections in the new South Africa where I would have hoped that things would be better, but on balance I think we have basically achieved what we set out to achieve. And if I were to draw balance sheets on where South Africa stands now, I would say that the positive outweighs the negative by far. There is a tendency by commentators across the world to focus on the few negatives which are quite negative, like how are we handling AIDS, like our role vis-à-vis Zimbabwe. But the positives – the stability in South Africa, the adherence to well-balanced economic policies, fighting inflation, doing all the right things in order to lay the basis and the foundation for sustained economic growth – are in place.[99]

In 2008, he repeated in a speech that "despite all the negatives facing South Africa, he was very positive about the country".[100]

In 2006, he underwent surgery for a malignant tumor in his colon. His condition deteriorated sharply, and he underwent a tracheotomy after developing respiratory problems.[101][102][103] He recovered and on 11 September 2006 gave a speech at Kent State University Stark Campus.[104][105]

In January 2007, de Klerk was a speaker promoting peace and democracy in the world at the "Towards a Global Forum on New Democracies" event in Taipei, Taiwan, along with other dignitaries including Poland's Lech Wałęsa and Taiwan's president Chen Shui-Bian.[106]

 
De Klerk with Israeli president Reuven Rivlin in 2015

De Klerk was an Honorary Patron of the University Philosophical Society of Trinity College Dublin, and Honorary Chairman of the Prague Society for International Cooperation.[105] He also received the gold medal for Outstanding Contribution to Public Discourse from the College Historical Society of Trinity College, Dublin, for his contribution to ending apartheid.

De Klerk was also a member of the advisory board of the Global Panel Foundation[107][verification needed] based in Berlin, Copenhagen, New York, Prague, Sydney and Toronto – founded by the Dutch entrepreneur Bas Spuybroek in 1988, with the support of Dutch billionaire Frans Lurvink and former Dutch Foreign Minister Hans van den Broek. The Global Panel Foundation is known for its behind-the-scenes work in public policy and the annual presentation of the Hanno R. Ellenbogen Citizenship Award with the Prague Society for International Cooperation.

De Klerk was a member of the advisory board of the WORLD.MINDS Foundation, based in Switzerland. WORLD.MINDS is known for establishing close personal ties between leaders in government, science and business.

After the inauguration of Jacob Zuma as South Africa's president in May 2009, de Klerk said he was optimistic that Zuma and his government can "confound the prophets of doom".[108]

In a BBC interview broadcast in April 2012, he said he lived in an all-white neighborhood. He had five servants, three coloured and two black: "We are one great big family together; we have the best of relationships." About Nelson Mandela, he said, "When Mandela goes it will be a moment when all South Africans put away their political differences, will take hands, and will together honour maybe the biggest known South African that has ever lived."[109]

Upon hearing of the death of Mandela, de Klerk said: "He was a great unifier and a very, very special man in this regard beyond everything else he did. This emphasis on reconciliation was his biggest legacy."[110] He attended the memorial service for him on 10 December 2013.

In 2015, de Klerk wrote to The Times newspaper in the UK criticizing a campaign to remove a statue of Cecil Rhodes from Oriel College, Oxford.[111] He was subsequently criticized by some activists who described it as "ironic" that the last apartheid president should be defending a statue of a man labelled by critics as the "architect of apartheid".[112] South Africa's far-left Economic Freedom Fighters called for him to be stripped of his Nobel Peace Prize.[113] In 2020, de Klerk told an interviewer that the description of apartheid as a "crime against humanity" "was and remains an agitprop project initiated by the Soviets and their ANC/SACP allies to stigmatize white South Africans by associating them with genuine crimes against humanity."[114] This generated controversy in South Africa,[114] and further calls for the removal of his Nobel Prize.[115] De Klerk's Foundation retracted his statement several days later.[114]

Illness and death

Allow me in this last message to share with you the fact that since the early 80s, my views changed completely. It was as if I had a conversion. And in my heart of hearts, I realized that apartheid was wrong. I realized that we had arrived at a place which was morally unjustifiable. My conversion, to which I refer didn't end with the admission to myself of the total unacceptability of apartheid. It motivated us in the National Party to take the initiatives we took from the time that I became leader of the National Party. And more specifically, during my presidency. We did not only admit the wrongness of apartheid, we took far-reaching measures to ensure negotiation and a new dispensation which could bring justice to all.

—F. W. de Klerk's final message[116]

On 19 March 2021, it was announced that de Klerk had been diagnosed with mesothelioma.[117] He died from complications of the disease in his sleep at his home in Cape Town on 11 November 2021, at the age of 85.[118][119][120] He was the last surviving State President of South Africa.

After his death, a video message from de Klerk was released from the FW de Klerk Foundation, apologizing "without qualification" for the harm caused from apartheid and pleading that the government and all South Africans would embrace the constitution in a balanced manner while also promoting economic growth, guarding the independence and impartiality of the courts, as well as promoting non-racialism and non-discrimination in South Africa.[121][122]

On 16 November 2021, President Cyril Ramaphosa declared a four-day mourning period for de Klerk and ordered for all of the national South African flags to fly at half-mast from 17 November to 21 November "as a mark of respect."[123] Though the de Klerk family determined that he would have a private cremation and funeral, the South African government agreed to hold a state memorial service for de Klerk "in which government leaders, leaders of political parties and representatives of civil society will participate" at a later date.[123] The state memorial service was held in Cape Town on 12 December 2021, and saw Ramaphosa deliver the keynote speech.[124]

Political positions

 
Bust of de Klerk at the Voortrekker Monument, Pretoria

De Klerk was widely regarded as a politically conservative figure in South Africa.[30] At the same time, he was flexible rather than dogmatic in his approach to political issues.[30] He often hedged his bets and sought to accommodate divergent perspectives,[34] favouring compromise over confrontation.[125] Within the National Party, he continually strove for unity, coming to be regarded—according to his brother—as "a party man, a veritable Mr National Party".[30] To stem defections from the right-wing end of the National Party, he made "ultra-conservative noises".[34] This general approach led to the perception that he was "trying to be all things to all men".[125]

De Klerk stated that within the party, he "never formed part of a political school of thought, and I deliberately kept out of the cliques and foments of the enlightened and conservative factions in the party. If the policy I propounded was ultra-conservative, then that was the policy; it was not necessarily I who was ultra-conservative. I saw my role in the party as that of an interpreter of the party's real median policy at any stage."[126] De Klerk stated that "The silver thread throughout my career was my advocacy of National Party policy in all its various formulations. I refrained from adjusting that policy or adapting it to my own liking or convictions. I analyzed it as it was formulated, to the letter."[126]

For much of his career, de Klerk believed in apartheid and its system of racial segregation.[32] According to his brother, de Klerk underwent a "political conversion" that took him from supporting apartheid to facilitating its demolition. This change was not "a dramatic event" however, but "was built... on pragmatism – it evolved as a process."[127] He did not believe that South Africa would become a "non-racial society", but rather sought to build a "non-racist society" in ethnic divisions remained; in his view "I do not believe in the existence of anything like a non-racial society in the literal sense of the word", citing the example of the United States and United Kingdom where there was no legal racial segregation but that distinct racial groups continued to exist.[128]

De Klerk accepted the principle of freedom of religion, although still believed that the state should promote Christianity.[129]

De Klerk wrote in opposition to gender-based violence, arguing that "holding perpetrators accountable, irrespective of how long ago the crime was committed, is essential to stamping out impunity and preventing future atrocities".[130]

Personality and personal life

Glad and Blanton stated that de Klerk's "political choices were undergirded by self-confidence and commitment to the common good."[131] His brother Willem stated that de Klerk's demeanour was marked by "soberness, humility and calm",[132] that he was an honest, intelligent, and open minded individual,[133] and that he had a "natural cordiality" and a "solid sense of courtesy and good manners".[134] He felt that de Klerk's "charisma" came not from an "exceptionally strong individualism" but from "his rationality, logic and balance".[135] He was, according to de Klerk, "a man of compromise rather than a political innovator or entrepreneur".[136]

Willem stated that "he keeps an ear to the ground and is sensitive to the slightest tremors", and that it was this which made him "a superb politician".[137] Willem also stated that his brother was "a team-man who consults others, takes them into his confidence, honestly shares information with his colleagues, and has a knack of making people feel importance and at peace".[134] His former wife Marike described de Klerk as being "extremely sensitive to beautiful things", exhibiting something akin to an artistic temperament.[10]

Willem also noted that "in the most profound sense", de Klerk was driven by his concern for Afrikanerdom and "the survival of his own people in their fatherland".[4] De Klerk was deeply upset that many Afrikaners did not realise that his reforms to dismantle apartheid were carried out with the intention of preserving a future for the Afrikaner people in South Africa.[138]

With Marike, de Klerk had three children: Susan, who became a teacher, Jan, who became a farmer in Western Transvaal, and Willem, who went into public relations.[139] Willem stated that de Klerk had a close relationship with his children,[23] and that he was "a loving man who hugs and cuddles".[140]

De Klerk was a heavy smoker but gave up smoking towards the end of 2005.[141] He also enjoyed a glass of whisky or wine while relaxing.[142] He enjoyed playing golf and hunting, as well as going for brisk walks.[142]

Reception and legacy

Glad and Blanton stated that de Klerk, along with Mandela, "accomplished the rare feat of bringing about systemic revolution through peaceful means."[143] His brother noted that de Klerk's role in South African history was "to dismantle more than three centuries of white supremacy", and that in doing so his was "not a role of white surrender, but a role of white conversion to a new role" in society.[144] In September 1990, Potchefstroom University awarded de Klerk an honorary doctorate.[29]

South Africa's Conservative Party came to regard him as its most hated adversary.[34]

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Bibliography

  • Allen, John (2006). Rabble-Rouser for Peace: The Authorised Biography of Desmond Tutu. London: Rider. ISBN 978-1-84604-064-1.
  • de Klerk, Willem (1991). F. W. de Klerk: The Man in his Time. Johannesburg: Jonathan Ball Publishers. ISBN 978-0-947464-36-3.
  • Glad, Betty; Blanton, Robert (1997). "F. W. de Klerk and Nelson Mandela: A Study in Cooperative Transformational Leadership". Presidential Studies Quarterly. 27 (3): 565–590. JSTOR 27551769.
  • Sampson, Anthony (2011) [1999]. Mandela: The Authorised Biography. London: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-00-743797-9.

Further reading

  • "South Africa is one of the most unequal societies in the world", article by de Klerk in Global Education Magazine, in the special edition for the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty (17 October 2012)

External links

  • Documentary on F. W. de Klerk
  • The FW de Klerk Foundation
  • Video of F. W. de Klerk's November 2005 visit to Richmond Hill High School on Google Video 5 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  • & of his visit to the College Historical Society in March 2008
  • Ubben Lecture at DePauw University (includes video, audio and photos)
  • Extensive Interview in the Huffington Post
  • The Global Panel Foundation
  • F. W. de Klerk on Nobelprize.org  
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
Political offices
Preceded by State President of South Africa
1989–1994
Succeeded byas President of South Africa
New title Deputy President of South Africa
1994–1996
Served alongside: Thabo Mbeki
Succeeded by

klerk, this, article, surname, klerk, klerk, frederik, willem, klerk, ɜːr, ɛər, afrikaans, ˈfriədərək, ˈvələm, ˈklɛrk, march, 1936, november, 2021, south, african, politician, served, state, president, south, africa, from, 1989, 1994, deputy, president, from, . In this article the surname is de Klerk not Klerk Frederik Willem de Klerk d e ˈ k l ɜːr k d e ˈ k l ɛer k Afrikaans ˈfriederek ˈvelem de ˈklɛrk 18 March 1936 11 November 2021 was a South African politician who served as state president of South Africa from 1989 to 1994 and as deputy president from 1994 to 1996 As South Africa s last head of state from the era of white minority rule he and his government dismantled the apartheid system and introduced universal suffrage Ideologically a conservative and an economic liberal he led the National Party NP from 1989 to 1997 His ExcellencyF W de KlerkOMG DMSde Klerk in 19907th State President of South AfricaIn office 14 August 1989 10 May 1994Preceded byP W BothaSucceeded byNelson Mandela as President 1st Deputy President of South AfricaIn office 10 May 1994 30 June 1996Serving with Thabo MbekiPresidentNelson MandelaPreceded byAlwyn Schlebusch as Vice State President Succeeded byThabo Mbeki solely 13th Leader of the OppositionIn office 1996 1997PresidentNelson MandelaPreceded byConstand ViljoenSucceeded byMarthinus van Schalkwyk7th President of the National PartyIn office 15 August 1989 8 September 1997Preceded byP W BothaSucceeded byMarthinus van Schalkwyk Leader New National Party Ministerial offices1978 1989Minister of National Education and PlanningIn office 17 September 1984 15 August 1989PresidentP W BothaPreceded byGerrit Viljoen National Education Succeeded byGene Louw Education and Culture Minister of Home AffairsIn office 1982 1985PresidentP W Botha 1984 1985 Prime MinisterP W Botha 1982 1984 Preceded byChris HeunisSucceeded byStoffel BothaMinister of Mines and EnergyIn office 1979 1982Prime MinisterP W BothaPreceded byStephanus Petrus BothaSucceeded byPietie du PlessisMinister of Sport and RecreationIn office 1978 1979Prime MinisterP W BothaPreceded byPiet KoornhofSucceeded byGerrit Viljoen National Education Minister of Posts and TelecommunicationsIn office 1978 1979Prime MinisterJohn Vorster P W BothaPreceded byHendrik SmitSucceeded byJohannes Petrus van der SpuyMinister of Social Welfare and PensionsIn office January 1978 October 1978Prime MinisterJohn VorsterPreceded byJohannes Petrus van der SpuySucceeded bySchalk van der MerwePersonal detailsBornFrederik Willem de Klerk 1936 03 18 18 March 1936Johannesburg Transvaal Union of South AfricaDied11 November 2021 2021 11 11 aged 85 Cape Town Western Cape Republic of South AfricaPolitical partyNP 1972 1997 Other politicalaffiliationsNNP 1997 2005 SpousesMarike Willemse m 1959 div 1996 wbr Elita Georgiades m 1999 wbr Children3ParentJan de Klerk father Alma materPotchefstroom University BA LLB ProfessionAttorneySignatureWebsiteFoundationBorn in Johannesburg to an influential Afrikaner family de Klerk studied at Potchefstroom University before pursuing a career in law Joining the NP to which he had family ties he was elected to parliament and sat in the white minority government of P W Botha holding a succession of ministerial posts As a minister he supported and enforced apartheid a system of racial segregation that privileged white South Africans After Botha resigned in 1989 de Klerk replaced him first as leader of the NP and then as State President Although observers expected him to continue Botha s defence of apartheid de Klerk decided to end the policy He was aware that growing ethnic animosity and violence was leading South Africa into a racial civil war Amid this violence the state security forces committed widespread human rights abuses and encouraged violence between the Xhosa and Zulu people although de Klerk later denied sanctioning such actions He permitted anti apartheid marches to take place legalised a range of previously banned anti apartheid political parties and freed imprisoned anti apartheid activists such as Nelson Mandela He also dismantled South Africa s nuclear weapons program De Klerk negotiated with Mandela to fully dismantle apartheid and establish a transition to universal suffrage In 1993 he publicly apologized for apartheid s harmful effects He oversaw the 1994 non racial election in which Mandela led the African National Congress ANC to victory de Klerk s NP took second place De Klerk then became Deputy President in Mandela s ANC led coalition the Government of National Unity In this position he supported the government s continued liberal economic policies but opposed the Truth and Reconciliation Commission set up to investigate past human rights abuses because he wanted total amnesty for political crimes His working relationship with Mandela was strained although he later spoke fondly of him In May 1996 after the NP objected to the new constitution de Klerk withdrew it from the coalition government the party disbanded the following year and reformed as the New National Party In 1997 he retired from active politics and thereafter lectured internationally De Klerk was a controversial figure among many sections of South African society He received many awards including the Nobel Peace Prize for dismantling apartheid and bringing universal suffrage to South Africa Conversely he received criticism from anti apartheid activists for offering only a qualified apology for apartheid and for ignoring the human rights abuses by state security forces He was also condemned by pro apartheid Afrikaners who contended that by abandoning apartheid he betrayed the interests of the country s Afrikaner minority Contents 1 Early life and education 1 1 Childhood 1936 1954 1 2 University and legal career 1 3 Early political career 2 State presidency 2 1 Becoming state president 2 2 Negotiations toward universal suffrage 3 Deputy presidency 3 1 Truth and Reconciliation Commission 4 Later life 4 1 Illness and death 5 Political positions 6 Personality and personal life 7 Reception and legacy 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life and education EditChildhood 1936 1954 Edit F W de Klerk was born on 18 March 1936 in Mayfair a suburb of Johannesburg 1 His parents were Johannes Jan de Klerk and Hendrina Cornelia Coetzer her forefather was a Kutzer who stems from Austria 2 He was his parents second son having a brother Willem de Klerk who was eight years his senior 1 De Klerk s first language was Afrikaans and the earliest of his distant ancestors to arrive in what is now South Africa did so in the late 1680s 3 De Klerk had a secure and comfortable upbringing and his family had played a leading role in Afrikaner society 4 they had longstanding affiliations with South Africa s National Party 5 His paternal great grandfather Jan van Rooy had been a Senator while his paternal grandfather Willem had been a clergyman who fought in the Second Boer War 3 and stood twice unsuccessfully as a National Party candidate 6 His paternal aunt s husband was J G Strijdom a former Prime Minister 7 His own father Jan de Klerk was also a senator served as the secretary of the National Party in Transvaal president of the senate for seven years acting state president and as a member of the country s cabinet for fifteen years under three prime ministers 8 In this environment de Klerk was exposed to politics from childhood 9 He and family members would be encouraged to hold family debates his more conservative opinions would be challenged by his brother Willem who was sympathetic to the more liberal enlightened faction of the National Party 1 Willem became a political analyst and later split from the National Party to found the liberal Democratic Party 10 The name de Klerk is derived from Le Clerc Le Clercq and De Clercq and is of French Huguenot origin 11 meaning clergyman or literate in old French De Klerk noted that he was also of Dutch descent 12 13 with an Indian ancestor from the late 1690s or early 1700s 14 He was also said to have been descended from the Khoi interpreter known as Krotoa or Eva 15 When de Klerk was twelve years old the apartheid system was officially institutionalised by the South African government 16 his father had been one of its originators 17 He therefore was according to his brother one of a generation that grew up with the concept of apartheid 16 He was inculturated in the norms and values of Afrikaner society including festivals like Kruger Day loyalty to the Afrikaner nation and stories of the age of injustice that the Afrikaner faced under the British 4 He was brought up in the Gereformeerde Kerk the smallest and most socially conservative of South Africa s three Dutch Reformed Churches 18 The de Klerk family moved around South Africa during his childhood and he changed schools seven times over seven years 1 He eventually became a boarder at the Hoerskool Monument Monument High School in Krugersdorp where he graduated with a first class pass in 1953 1 He was nevertheless disappointed not to get the four distinctions he was hoping for 1 University and legal career Edit Between 1954 and 1958 de Klerk studied at Potchefstroom University graduating with both a Bachelor of Arts and a Bachelor of Law 19 10 He later noted that during this legal training he became accustomed to thinking in terms of legal principles 20 While studying there he became editor of the student newspaper vice chair of the student council and a member of the Afrikaanse Studentebond s a large South African youth movement national executive council 19 At university he was initiated into the Broederbond a secret society for the Afrikaner social elite 21 As a student he played both tennis and hockey and was known as something of a ladies man 19 At the university he began a relationship with Marike Willemse the daughter of a professor at the University of Pretoria 22 The couple married in 1959 when de Klerk was 23 and his wife 22 23 After university de Klerk pursued a legal career becoming an articled clerk with the firm Pelser in Klerksdorp 19 Relocating to Pretoria he became an articled clerk for another law firm Mac Robert 24 In 1962 he set up his own law partnership in Vereeniging Transvaal which he built into a successful business over ten years 24 During this period he involved himself in a range of other activities He was the national chair of the Junior Rapportryers for two years and chair of the Law Society of Vaal Triangle 24 He was also on the council of the local technikon on the council of his church and on a local school board 24 Early political career Edit In 1972 his alma mater offered him a chair in its law faculty which he accepted 25 Within a matter of days he was also approached by members of the National Party who requested that he stand for the party at Vereeniging De Klerk s candidature was successful and in November he was elected to the House of Assembly 24 There he established a reputation as a formidable debater 24 He took on a number of roles in the party and government He became the information officer of the Transvaal National Party responsible for its propaganda output 26 and helped to establish a new National Party youth movement 26 He joined various party parliamentary study groups including those on the Bantustans labour justice and home affairs 26 As a member of various parliamentary groups de Klerk went on several foreign visits to Israel West Germany the United Kingdom and the United States 26 It was in the latter in 1976 that he observed what he later described as the pervasive racism of US society later noting that he saw more racial incidents in one month there than in South Africa in a year 27 In South Africa de Klerk also played a senior role in two select committees one formulating a policy on opening hotels to non Whites and the other formulating a new censorship law that was less strict than the one that had preceded it 26 In 1975 Prime Minister John Vorster predicted that de Klerk would one day become leader of South Africa 28 Vorster planned to promote de Klerk to the position of a deputy minister in January 1976 but instead the job went to Andries Treurnicht 28 In April 1978 de Klerk was promoted to the position of Minister of Social Welfare and Pensions 28 In this role he restored full autonomy to sporting control bodies which had for a time been under the jurisdiction of the government 28 As minister of Post and Telecommunications he finalized contracts that oversaw the electrification of that sector 28 As Minister of Mining he formalized a policy on coal exports and the structuring of Eskom and the Atomic Energy Corporation 28 He then became Minister of the Interior he oversaw the repeal of the Mixed Marriages Act 28 In 1981 de Klerk was awarded the Decoration for Meritorious Service for his work in the government 29 As education minister between 1984 and 1989 he upheld the apartheid system in South Africa s schools 21 and extended the department to cover all racial groups 28 For most of his career de Klerk had a very conservative reputation 30 and was seen as someone who would obstruct change in South Africa 31 He had been a forceful proponent of apartheid s system of racial segregation and was perceived as an advocate of the white minority s interests 32 While serving under P W Botha s government de Klerk was never part of Botha s inner circle 29 State presidency EditP W Botha resigned as leader of the National Party after an apparent stroke and de Klerk defeated Botha s preferred successor finance minister Barend du Plessis in the race to succeed him On 2 February 1989 he was elected leader of the National Party 33 He defeated main rival Barend du Plessis to the position by a majority of eight votes 69 61 34 Soon after he called for the introduction of a new South African constitution hinting that it would need to provide greater concession to non white racial groups 21 After becoming party leader de Klerk extended his foreign contacts 35 He travelled to London where he met with British prime minister Margaret Thatcher Although she opposed the anti apartheid movement s calls for economic sanctions against South Africa at the meeting she urged de Klerk to release the imprisoned anti apartheid activist Nelson Mandela 36 He also expressed a desire to meet with representatives of the US government in Washington D C although American secretary of state James Baker informed him that the US government considered it inopportune to have de Klerk meet with President George H W Bush 36 Becoming state president Edit De Klerk in Philadelphia 1992 Botha resigned on 14 August 1989 and de Klerk was named acting state president until 20 September when he was elected to a full five year term as state president 21 After he became acting president ANC leaders spoke out against him believing that he would be no different from his predecessors 21 he was widely regarded as a staunch supporter of apartheid 37 The prominent anti apartheid activist Desmond Tutu shared this assessment stating I don t think we ve got to even begin to pretend that there is any reason for thinking that we are entering a new phase It s just musical chairs 38 Tutu and Allan Boesak had been planning a protest march in Cape Town which the security chiefs wanted to prevent De Klerk nevertheless turned down their proposal to ban it agreeing to let the march proceed and stating that the door to a new South Africa is open it is not necessary to batter it down 39 The march took place and was attended by approximately 30 000 people 40 Further protest marches followed in Grahamstown Johannesburg Pretoria and Durban 41 De Klerk later noted that his security forces could not have prevented the marchers from gathering The choice therefore was between breaking up an illegal march with all of the attendant risks of violence and negative publicity or of allowing the march to continue subject to conditions that could help to avoid violence and ensure good public order 42 This decision marked a clear departure from the Botha era 42 As President he authorised the continuation of secret talks in Geneva between his National Intelligence Service and two exiled ANC leaders Thabo Mbeki and Jacob Zuma 42 In October he personally agreed to meet with Tutu Boesak and Frank Chikane in a private meeting in Pretoria 43 That month he also released a number of elderly anti apartheid activists then imprisoned including Walter Sisulu 44 He also ordered the closure of the National Security Management System 21 In December he visited Mandela in prison speaking with him for three hours about the idea of transitioning away from white minority rule 21 The collapse of the Eastern Bloc and the dissolution of the Soviet Union meant that he no longer feared that Marxists would manipulate the ANC 45 As he later related the collapse of the Marxist economic system in Eastern Europe serves as a warning to those who insist on persisting with it in Africa Those who seek to force this failure of a system on South Africa should engage in a total revision of their point of view It should be clear to all that it is not the answer here either 46 History has placed a tremendous responsibility on the shoulders of this country s leadership namely the responsibility of moving our country away from the current course of conflict and confrontation The hope of millions of South Africans is fixed on us The future of southern Africa depends on us We dare not waver or fail De Klerk s speech to Parliament February 1990 21 On 2 February 1990 in an address to the country s parliament he introduced plans for sweeping reforms of the political system 47 A number of banned political parties including the ANC and Communist Party of South Africa would be legalized 48 although he emphasized that this did not constitute an endorsement of their socialist economic policies nor of violent actions carried out by their members 49 All of those who were imprisoned solely for belonging to a banned organization would be freed 50 including Nelson Mandela 51 the latter was released a week later 52 He also announced the lifting of the Separate Amenities Act of 1953 which governed the segregation of public facilities 53 The vision set forth in de Klerk s address was for South Africa to become a Western style liberal democracy 54 with a market oriented economy which valued private enterprise and restricted the government s role in economics 55 De Klerk later related that that speech was mainly aimed at breaking our stalemate in Africa and the West Internationally we were teetering on the edge of the abyss 56 Throughout South Africa and across the world there was astonishment at de Klerk s move 21 Foreign press coverage was largely positive and de Klerk received messages of support from other governments 57 Tutu said that It s incredible Give him credit Give him credit I do 21 Some black radicals regarded it as a gimmick and that it would prove to be without substance 58 It was also received negatively by some on the white right wing including in the Conservative Party who believed that de Klerk was betraying the white population 59 60 De Klerk believed that the sudden growth of the Conservatives and other white right wing groups was a passing phase reflecting anxiety and insecurity 4 These white right wing groups were aware that they would not get what they wanted through the forthcoming negotiations and so increasingly tried to derail the negotiations using revolutionary violence 61 The white dominated liberal Democratic Party meanwhile found itself in limbo as de Klerk embraced much of the platform it had espoused leaving it without a clear purpose 62 Further reforms followed membership of the National Party was opened up to non whites 52 In June parliament approved new legislation that repealed the Natives Land Act 1913 and Native Trust and Land Act 1936 52 The Population Registration Act which established the racial classificatory guidelines for South Africa was rescinded 52 In 1990 de Klerk gave orders to end South Africa s nuclear weapons programme the process of nuclear disarmament was essentially completed in 1991 The existence of the nuclear programme was not officially acknowledged before 1993 63 64 Negotiations toward universal suffrage Edit I believe the new political order will and must contain the following elements a democratic constitution universal suffrage no domination equality before an independent judiciary the protection of minorities and individual rights freedom of religion a healthy economy based on proven economic principles and private initiative and a dynamic programme for better education health services housing and social conditions for all I am not talking of a rosy and tranquil future but I believe the broad mainstream of South Africans will gradually build up South Africa into a society that will be worth living and working in De Klerk on a post apartheid society 65 President de Klerk and Nelson Mandela shake hands at the Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum held in Davos 1992 His presidency was dominated by the negotiation process mainly between his NP government and the ANC which led to the democratization of South Africa On 17 March 1992 de Klerk held a whites only referendum on ending apartheid with the result being an overwhelming yes vote to continue negotiations to end apartheid 66 Nelson Mandela was distrustful of the role played by de Klerk in the negotiations particularly as he believed that de Klerk was knowledgeable about third force attempts to foment violence in the country and destabilize the negotiations 66 De Klerk s possible role in the third force came to the attention of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission but was ultimately never clarified 67 68 De Klerk was accused by writer Anthony Sampson of complicity in the violence among the ANC the Inkatha Freedom Party and elements of the security forces He also accused de Klerk of permitting his ministers to build their own criminal empires 69 On 17 July 1992 the Boipatong massacre by the Inkatha Freedom Party occurred killing 45 people The massacre caused a resurgence of international pressure against South Africa over claims of police collusion leading to a weaker position at the negotiation tables for the National Party 70 The Goldstone Commission concluded there was no evidence of police collusion in the massacre 71 On 30 April 1993 de Klerk issued an apology for the actions of the apartheid government stating that It was not our intention to deprive people of their rights and to cause misery but eventually apartheid led to just that Insofar as to what occurred we deeply regret it Yes we are sorry 72 Tutu urged people to accept the apology stating that saying sorry is not an easy thing to do We should be magnanimous and accept it as a magnanimous act although Tutu was privately frustrated that de Klerk s apology had been qualified and had not gone so far as to call apartheid an intrinsically evil policy 72 De Klerk authorized the raid on Mthatha against suspected Azanian People s Liberation Army APLA fighters on 8 October 1993 that killed three teenagers and two twelve year olds The Minister of Defence said the raid had been undertaken to pre empt attacks by the APLA on civilians and that one of the victims had brandished a weapon The Truth and Reconciliation Commission concluded the raid was a gross violation of human rights 73 On 10 December 1993 de Klerk and Mandela were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo for their work in ending apartheid 74 South Africa held its first universal elections in 1994 from 26 to 29 April The ANC won the election with 62 percent while the National Party received 20 percent De Klerk became deputy president in the national unity government under Nelson Mandela Deputy presidency EditDe Klerk had been unhappy that changes had been made to the inauguration ceremony rendering it multi religious rather than reflecting the newly elected leader s particular denomination 75 When he was being sworn in and the chief justice said So help me God de Klerk did not repeat this instead stating in Afrikaans So help me the triune God Father Son and Holy Spirit 76 Mandela reappointed de Klerk s finance minister Derek Keys and retained Chris Stals a former member of the Broederbond as the head of the Central Bank 77 De Klerk supported the coalition s economic policies stating that it accepted a broad framework of responsible economic policies 78 De Klerk s working relationship with Mandela was often strained with the former finding it difficult adjusting to the fact that he was no longer president 79 De Klerk also felt that Mandela deliberately humiliated him while Mandela found de Klerk to be needlessly provocative in cabinet 79 One dispute occurred in September 1995 after Mandela gave a Johannesburg speech criticizing the National Party Angered de Klerk avoided Mandela until the latter requested they meet The two ran into each other and they publicly argued in the streets Mandela later expressed regret for their disagreement but did not apologize for his original comments 79 De Klerk was also having problems from within his own party some of whose members claimed that he was neglecting the party while in the government 79 Many in the National Party including many members of its executive committee were unhappy with the other parties agreed upon new constitution in May 1996 79 The party had wanted the constitution to guarantee that it would be represented in the government until 2004 although it did not do so On 9 May de Klerk withdrew the National Party from the coalition government 79 The decision shocked several of his six fellow Afrikaner cabinet colleagues Pik Botha for example was left without a job as a result 80 Roelf Meyer felt betrayed by de Klerk s act while Leon Wessels thought that de Klerk had not tried hard enough to make the coalition work 81 De Klerk declared that he would lead the National Party in vigorous opposition to Mandela s government to ensure a proper multi party democracy without which there may be a danger of South Africa lapsing into the African pattern of one party states 81 Truth and Reconciliation Commission Edit The chair of the TRC Desmond Tutu was frustrated that de Klerk did not take responsibility for the actions of the state security services in the early 1990s In de Klerk s view his greatest defeat in the negotiations with Mandela had been his inability to secure a blanket amnesty for all those working for the government or state during the apartheid period 82 De Klerk was unhappy with the formation of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission TRC 82 He had hoped that the TRC would be made up of an equal number of individuals from both the old and new governments as there had been in the Chilean human rights commission Instead the TRC was designed to broadly reflect the wider diversity of South African society and contained only two members who had explicitly supported apartheid one a member of a right wing group that had opposed de Klerk s National Party 83 De Klerk did not object to Tutu being selected as the TRC s chair for he regarded him as politically independent of Mandela s government but he was upset that the white Progressive Party MP Alex Boraine had been selected as its deputy chair later saying of Boraine beneath an urbane and deceptively affable exterior beat the heart of a zealot and an inquisitor 84 De Klerk appeared before the TRC hearing to testify for Vlakplaas commanders who were accused of having committed human rights abuses during the apartheid era He acknowledged that security forces had resorted to unconventional strategies in dealing with anti apartheid revolutionaries but that within my knowledge and experience they never included the authorization of assassination murder torture rape assault or the like 84 After further evidence of said abuses was produced by the commission de Klerk stated that he found the revelations to be as shocking and as abhorrent as anybody else but insisted that he and other senior party members were not willing to accept responsibility for the criminal actions of a handful of operatives stating that their behavior was not authorized and not intended by his government 84 Given the widespread and systemic nature of the abuses that had taken place as well as statements by security officers that their actions had been sanctioned by higher ranking figures Tutu questioned how de Klerk and other government figures could not have been aware of them 85 Tutu had hoped that de Klerk or another senior white political figure from the apartheid era would openly accept responsibility for the human rights abuses thereby allowing South Africa to move on this was something that de Klerk would not do 86 The TRC found de Klerk guilty of being an accessory to gross violations of human rights on the basis that as State President he had been told that P W Botha had authorized the bombing of Khotso House but had not revealed this information to the committee 86 De Klerk challenged the TRC on this point and it backed down 86 When the final TRC report was released in 2002 it made a more limited accusation that de Klerk had failed to give full disclosure about events that took place during his presidency and that in view of his knowledge about the Khotso House bombing his statement that none of his colleagues had authorized gross human rights abuses was indefensible 86 In his later autobiography de Klerk acknowledged that the TRC did significant damage to his public image 87 Later life EditIn 1994 de Klerk was elected to the American Philosophical Society 88 In 1997 de Klerk was offered the Harper Fellowship at Yale Law School He declined citing protests at the university 89 De Klerk did however speak at Central Connecticut State University the day before his fellowship would have begun 90 De Klerk with US secretary of state Hillary Clinton in 2012 In 1999 de Klerk and his wife of 38 years Marike de Klerk were divorced following the discovery of his affair with Elita Georgiades 91 then the wife of Tony Georgiades a Greek shipping tycoon who had allegedly given de Klerk and the NP financial support 92 Soon after his divorce de Klerk and Georgiades were married 93 His divorce and remarriage scandalised conservative South African opinion especially among the Calvinist Afrikaners 94 In 1999 his autobiography The Last Trek A New Beginning was published 95 In 2002 following the murder of his former wife the manuscript of her own autobiography A Place Where the Sun Shines Again was submitted to de Klerk who urged the publishers to suppress a chapter dealing with his infidelity 96 In 2000 de Klerk established the pro peace FW de Klerk Foundation of which he was the chairman De Klerk was also chairman of the Global Leadership Foundation headquartered in London which he set up in 2004 an organisation which works to support democratic leadership prevent and resolve conflict through mediation and promote good governance in the form of democratic institutions open markets human rights and the rule of law It does so by making available discreetly and in confidence the experience of former leaders to today s national leaders It is a not for profit organisation composed of former heads of government and senior governmental and international organisation officials who work closely with heads of government on governance related issues of concern to them On 3 December 2001 Marike de Klerk was found stabbed and strangled to death in her Cape Town flat De Klerk who was on a brief visit to Stockholm Sweden to celebrate the 100 year anniversary of the Nobel Prize foundation immediately returned to mourn his dead ex wife The atrocity was reportedly condemned strongly by South African president Thabo Mbeki and Winnie Mandela among others who openly spoke in favour of Marike de Klerk 97 On 6 December 21 year old security guard Luyanda Mboniswa was arrested for the murder On 15 May 2003 he received two life sentences for murder as well as three years for breaking into Marike de Klerk s apartment 98 In 2005 de Klerk quit the New National Party and sought a new political home after the NNP merged with the ruling ANC That same year while giving an interview to US journalist Richard Stengel de Klerk was asked whether South Africa had turned out the way he envisioned it back in 1990 His response was There are a number of imperfections in the new South Africa where I would have hoped that things would be better but on balance I think we have basically achieved what we set out to achieve And if I were to draw balance sheets on where South Africa stands now I would say that the positive outweighs the negative by far There is a tendency by commentators across the world to focus on the few negatives which are quite negative like how are we handling AIDS like our role vis a vis Zimbabwe But the positives the stability in South Africa the adherence to well balanced economic policies fighting inflation doing all the right things in order to lay the basis and the foundation for sustained economic growth are in place 99 In 2008 he repeated in a speech that despite all the negatives facing South Africa he was very positive about the country 100 In 2006 he underwent surgery for a malignant tumor in his colon His condition deteriorated sharply and he underwent a tracheotomy after developing respiratory problems 101 102 103 He recovered and on 11 September 2006 gave a speech at Kent State University Stark Campus 104 105 In January 2007 de Klerk was a speaker promoting peace and democracy in the world at the Towards a Global Forum on New Democracies event in Taipei Taiwan along with other dignitaries including Poland s Lech Walesa and Taiwan s president Chen Shui Bian 106 De Klerk with Israeli president Reuven Rivlin in 2015 De Klerk was an Honorary Patron of the University Philosophical Society of Trinity College Dublin and Honorary Chairman of the Prague Society for International Cooperation 105 He also received the gold medal for Outstanding Contribution to Public Discourse from the College Historical Society of Trinity College Dublin for his contribution to ending apartheid De Klerk was also a member of the advisory board of the Global Panel Foundation 107 verification needed based in Berlin Copenhagen New York Prague Sydney and Toronto founded by the Dutch entrepreneur Bas Spuybroek in 1988 with the support of Dutch billionaire Frans Lurvink and former Dutch Foreign Minister Hans van den Broek The Global Panel Foundation is known for its behind the scenes work in public policy and the annual presentation of the Hanno R Ellenbogen Citizenship Award with the Prague Society for International Cooperation De Klerk was a member of the advisory board of the WORLD MINDS Foundation based in Switzerland WORLD MINDS is known for establishing close personal ties between leaders in government science and business After the inauguration of Jacob Zuma as South Africa s president in May 2009 de Klerk said he was optimistic that Zuma and his government can confound the prophets of doom 108 In a BBC interview broadcast in April 2012 he said he lived in an all white neighborhood He had five servants three coloured and two black We are one great big family together we have the best of relationships About Nelson Mandela he said When Mandela goes it will be a moment when all South Africans put away their political differences will take hands and will together honour maybe the biggest known South African that has ever lived 109 Upon hearing of the death of Mandela de Klerk said He was a great unifier and a very very special man in this regard beyond everything else he did This emphasis on reconciliation was his biggest legacy 110 He attended the memorial service for him on 10 December 2013 In 2015 de Klerk wrote to The Times newspaper in the UK criticizing a campaign to remove a statue of Cecil Rhodes from Oriel College Oxford 111 He was subsequently criticized by some activists who described it as ironic that the last apartheid president should be defending a statue of a man labelled by critics as the architect of apartheid 112 South Africa s far left Economic Freedom Fighters called for him to be stripped of his Nobel Peace Prize 113 In 2020 de Klerk told an interviewer that the description of apartheid as a crime against humanity was and remains an agitprop project initiated by the Soviets and their ANC SACP allies to stigmatize white South Africans by associating them with genuine crimes against humanity 114 This generated controversy in South Africa 114 and further calls for the removal of his Nobel Prize 115 De Klerk s Foundation retracted his statement several days later 114 Illness and death Edit Allow me in this last message to share with you the fact that since the early 80s my views changed completely It was as if I had a conversion And in my heart of hearts I realized that apartheid was wrong I realized that we had arrived at a place which was morally unjustifiable My conversion to which I refer didn t end with the admission to myself of the total unacceptability of apartheid It motivated us in the National Party to take the initiatives we took from the time that I became leader of the National Party And more specifically during my presidency We did not only admit the wrongness of apartheid we took far reaching measures to ensure negotiation and a new dispensation which could bring justice to all F W de Klerk s final message 116 On 19 March 2021 it was announced that de Klerk had been diagnosed with mesothelioma 117 He died from complications of the disease in his sleep at his home in Cape Town on 11 November 2021 at the age of 85 118 119 120 He was the last surviving State President of South Africa After his death a video message from de Klerk was released from the FW de Klerk Foundation apologizing without qualification for the harm caused from apartheid and pleading that the government and all South Africans would embrace the constitution in a balanced manner while also promoting economic growth guarding the independence and impartiality of the courts as well as promoting non racialism and non discrimination in South Africa 121 122 On 16 November 2021 President Cyril Ramaphosa declared a four day mourning period for de Klerk and ordered for all of the national South African flags to fly at half mast from 17 November to 21 November as a mark of respect 123 Though the de Klerk family determined that he would have a private cremation and funeral the South African government agreed to hold a state memorial service for de Klerk in which government leaders leaders of political parties and representatives of civil society will participate at a later date 123 The state memorial service was held in Cape Town on 12 December 2021 and saw Ramaphosa deliver the keynote speech 124 Political positions Edit Bust of de Klerk at the Voortrekker Monument Pretoria De Klerk was widely regarded as a politically conservative figure in South Africa 30 At the same time he was flexible rather than dogmatic in his approach to political issues 30 He often hedged his bets and sought to accommodate divergent perspectives 34 favouring compromise over confrontation 125 Within the National Party he continually strove for unity coming to be regarded according to his brother as a party man a veritable Mr National Party 30 To stem defections from the right wing end of the National Party he made ultra conservative noises 34 This general approach led to the perception that he was trying to be all things to all men 125 De Klerk stated that within the party he never formed part of a political school of thought and I deliberately kept out of the cliques and foments of the enlightened and conservative factions in the party If the policy I propounded was ultra conservative then that was the policy it was not necessarily I who was ultra conservative I saw my role in the party as that of an interpreter of the party s real median policy at any stage 126 De Klerk stated that The silver thread throughout my career was my advocacy of National Party policy in all its various formulations I refrained from adjusting that policy or adapting it to my own liking or convictions I analyzed it as it was formulated to the letter 126 For much of his career de Klerk believed in apartheid and its system of racial segregation 32 According to his brother de Klerk underwent a political conversion that took him from supporting apartheid to facilitating its demolition This change was not a dramatic event however but was built on pragmatism it evolved as a process 127 He did not believe that South Africa would become a non racial society but rather sought to build a non racist society in ethnic divisions remained in his view I do not believe in the existence of anything like a non racial society in the literal sense of the word citing the example of the United States and United Kingdom where there was no legal racial segregation but that distinct racial groups continued to exist 128 De Klerk accepted the principle of freedom of religion although still believed that the state should promote Christianity 129 De Klerk wrote in opposition to gender based violence arguing that holding perpetrators accountable irrespective of how long ago the crime was committed is essential to stamping out impunity and preventing future atrocities 130 Personality and personal life EditGlad and Blanton stated that de Klerk s political choices were undergirded by self confidence and commitment to the common good 131 His brother Willem stated that de Klerk s demeanour was marked by soberness humility and calm 132 that he was an honest intelligent and open minded individual 133 and that he had a natural cordiality and a solid sense of courtesy and good manners 134 He felt that de Klerk s charisma came not from an exceptionally strong individualism but from his rationality logic and balance 135 He was according to de Klerk a man of compromise rather than a political innovator or entrepreneur 136 Willem stated that he keeps an ear to the ground and is sensitive to the slightest tremors and that it was this which made him a superb politician 137 Willem also stated that his brother was a team man who consults others takes them into his confidence honestly shares information with his colleagues and has a knack of making people feel importance and at peace 134 His former wife Marike described de Klerk as being extremely sensitive to beautiful things exhibiting something akin to an artistic temperament 10 Willem also noted that in the most profound sense de Klerk was driven by his concern for Afrikanerdom and the survival of his own people in their fatherland 4 De Klerk was deeply upset that many Afrikaners did not realise that his reforms to dismantle apartheid were carried out with the intention of preserving a future for the Afrikaner people in South Africa 138 With Marike de Klerk had three children Susan who became a teacher Jan who became a farmer in Western Transvaal and Willem who went into public relations 139 Willem stated that de Klerk had a close relationship with his children 23 and that he was a loving man who hugs and cuddles 140 De Klerk was a heavy smoker but gave up smoking towards the end of 2005 141 He also enjoyed a glass of whisky or wine while relaxing 142 He enjoyed playing golf and hunting as well as going for brisk walks 142 Reception and legacy EditGlad and Blanton stated that de Klerk along with Mandela accomplished the rare feat of bringing about systemic revolution through peaceful means 143 His brother noted that de Klerk s role in South African history was to dismantle more than three centuries of white supremacy and that in doing so his was not a role of white surrender but a role of white conversion to a new role in society 144 In September 1990 Potchefstroom University awarded de Klerk an honorary doctorate 29 South Africa s Conservative Party came to regard him as its most hated adversary 34 References Edit a b c d e f de Klerk 1991 p 149 A Kamsteeg E Van Dijk F W de Klerk man of the moment 1990 a b The Last Trek A New Beginning Washington Journal C SPAN 11 June 1999 Archived from the original on 7 September 2018 Retrieved 7 September 2018 Yes I m an African born and bred My forebears arrived in South Africa in 1688 My later forebears fought the first modern anti colonial war on the continent of Africa against Great Britain I m an African through and through and the fact that I m white does not detract from my total commitment to my country and through my country to our continent a b c d de Klerk 1991 p 81 Glad amp Blanton 1997 pp 566 567 de Klerk 1991 p 139 de Klerk 1991 p 140 Glad amp Blanton 1997 p 579 de Klerk 1991 pp 139 140 de Klerk 1991 p 140 a b c Glad amp Blanton 1997 p 579 Lugan Bernard 1996 Ces Francais qui ont fait l Afrique du Sud The French People Who Made South Africa Bartillat ISBN 978 2 84100 086 9 Sapa dpa 9 July 2010 Diplomatic FW to cheer for Dutch Sunday Times Johannesburg Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 11 December 2013 Frederik en Marike de Klerk vinden hun wortels in Zeeland Trouw 13 November 1995 Archived from the original on 19 September 2011 Retrieved 13 February 2011 Morris Michael 8 February 1999 South Africa FW de Klerk Reveals Colourful Ancestry Archived from the original on 28 November 2017 via AllAfrica Sharon Marshall What s in a South African name Southafrica info Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 11 December 2013 a b de Klerk 1991 p 61 de Klerk 1991 p 142 de Klerk 1991 p 147 Glad amp Blanton 1997 p 579 a b c d de Klerk 1991 p 150 de Klerk 1991 p 26 a b c d e f g h i j Glad amp Blanton 1997 p 567 de Klerk 1991 pp 144 150 a b de Klerk 1991 p 144 a b c d e f de Klerk 1991 p 151 de Klerk 1991 p 151 Glad amp Blanton 1997 p 579 a b c d e de Klerk 1991 p 152 Glad amp Blanton 1997 p 580 a b c d e f g h de Klerk 1991 p 153 a b c de Klerk 1991 p 154 a b c d de Klerk 1991 p 17 de Klerk 1991 p 20 a b de Klerk 1991 pp 18 19 de Klerk 1991 p 15 Glad amp Blanton 1997 p 567 a b c d de Klerk 1991 p 18 Allen 2006 pp 299 300 a b Allen 2006 p 300 de Klerk 1991 p 16 Allen 2006 p 310 Allen 2006 pp 309 310 Allen 2006 p 311 Allen 2006 pp 311 312 a b c Allen 2006 p 312 Allen 2006 pp 312 313 Glad amp Blanton 1997 p 567 Allen 2006 p 312 de Klerk 1991 p 27 de Klerk 1991 p 35 de Klerk 1991 pp 2 3 Glad amp Blanton 1997 p 567 de Klerk 1991 p 42 Glad amp Blanton 1997 p 567 Allen 2006 p 313 de Klerk 1991 p 43 de Klerk 1991 p 42 de Klerk 1991 p 45 Glad amp Blanton 1997 p 567 Allen 2006 p 313 a b c d Glad amp Blanton 1997 p 568 de Klerk 1991 p 48 Glad amp Blanton 1997 p 567 de Klerk 1991 p 47 de Klerk 1991 p 48 de Klerk 1991 p 5 de Klerk 1991 pp 31 32 de Klerk 1991 p 33 de Klerk 1991 pp 32 33 South Africa Mixed reaction to de Klerk reforms United Press International Archived from the original on 12 November 2021 Retrieved 12 November 2021 de Klerk 1991 p 86 de Klerk 1991 p 89 Von Wielligh N amp von Wielligh Steyn L 2015 The Bomb South Africa s Nuclear Weapons Programme Pretoria Litera Country Overviews South Africa Nuclear Chronology NTI Archived from the original on 4 July 2008 Retrieved 29 June 2009 de Klerk 1991 pp 158 159 a b Blair David 6 December 2013 Nelson Mandela s fraught relationship with FW de Klerk Archived from the original on 10 March 2016 South Africa s Truth Panel Accuses de Klerk of Lies and Cover Up The New York Times 18 January 1997 Archived from the original on 29 December 2017 Truth Commission Special Report VlakplaasEpisode 43 Section 6 Time 25 33 Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Sampson Anthony John Battersby 2011 Mandela The authorised biography HarperPress pp 439 440 442 444 478 485 511 ISBN 978 0 00 743797 9 Pfister Roger 2003 Gateway to International Victory The Diplomacy of the African National Congress in Africa 1960 1994 The Journal of Modern African Studies 41 1 51 73 doi 10 1017 S0022278X02004147 JSTOR 3876189 S2CID 145351783 Waddington Peter Waddington report on Boipatong Archived from the original on 16 August 2020 Retrieved 12 September 2021 a b Allen 2006 p 343 Raids South African History Online Archived from the original on 19 July 2020 Retrieved 4 March 2020 Frederik Willem de Klerk Fast Facts CNN 2 March 2021 Archived from the original on 12 September 2021 Retrieved 12 September 2021 Allen 2006 p 338 Allen 2006 p 339 Sampson 2011 pp 514 515 Sampson 2011 p 514 a b c d e f Sampson 2011 p 534 Sampson 2011 pp 534 535 a b Sampson 2011 p 535 a b Allen 2006 p 362 Allen 2006 pp 362 363 a b c Allen 2006 p 363 Allen 2006 pp 363 364 a b c d Allen 2006 p 364 Allen 2006 p 365 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 14 February 2022 Gold Emily 28 March 1997 Ethical controversy forces de Klerk to decline honor Archived 30 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine Yale Herald 23 Retrieved 29 May 2012 Carlson Meredith Dee Jane E 24 April 1997 MY HANDS ARE CLEAN DE KLERK SAYS AT CENTRAL Hartford Courant Archived from the original on 13 November 2021 Retrieved 13 November 2021 Ex wife of de Klerk Murdered S African Police People s Daily 6 December 2001 Archived from the original on 8 February 2007 Retrieved 18 April 2006 Crawford Browne Terry A question of priorities Peace News Issue 2442 Archived from the original on 6 May 2006 Retrieved 18 April 2006 Reber Pat 29 January 1998 de Klerk Acknowledges Affair AP News Retrieved 13 November 2021 FW de Klerk South Africa s last white president BBC News 11 November 2021 Retrieved 13 November 2022 De Klerk F W 1999 The last trek a new beginning the autobiography New York St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 22310 2 OCLC 41537779 FW baulked at Marike s book News24 3 October 2010 Archived from the original on 14 December 2013 Retrieved 11 December 2013 Butcher Tim 6 December 2001 De Klerk s ex wife is found knifed and strangled The Daily Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Archived from the original on 24 April 2020 Retrieved 16 January 2020 De Klerk killer gets life BBC 15 May 2003 Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 2 November 2015 HBO History Makers Series Frederik Willem de Klerk Archived from the original on 22 June 2011 News Politics de Klerk sanguine about SA Independent Online South Africa Archived from the original on 30 April 2009 Retrieved 29 June 2009 FW undergoes tumour surgery 3 June 2006 Archived from the original on 28 June 2006 Retrieved 9 June 2006 FW de Klerk stable 9 June 2006 Archived from the original on 17 February 2007 Retrieved 9 June 2006 FW to have tracheotomy 13 June 2006 Archived from the original on 19 February 2007 Retrieved 13 June 2006 FW de Klerk Foundation Website Speeches 11 September 2006 Archived from the original on 22 August 2006 Retrieved 11 September 2006 a b De Klerk told Mandela Timing of release not negotiable CNN CNN Archived from the original on 22 April 2009 Retrieved 12 November 2021 Ministry of Foreign Affairs Republic of China Press Release H E Young Sam Kim Former President of the Republic of Korea and his delegation arrived in Taiwan Mofa gov tw 25 January 2007 Archived from the original on 10 September 2009 Retrieved 29 June 2009 Home Global Panel Foundation Archived from the original on 10 May 2017 Retrieved 12 November 2021 News Election 2009 Zuma will confound the prophets of doom Independent Online South Africa Archived from the original on 16 May 2009 Retrieved 29 June 2009 Interview by Stephen Sackur on Hardtalk broadcast on BBC World Service 18 amp 19 April 2012 Eyewitness News De Klerk Mandela united SA Ewn co za 6 December 2013 Archived from the original on 8 December 2013 Retrieved 6 December 2013 FW De Klerk criticises Rhodes statue removal campaign BBC News 26 December 2015 Archived from the original on 28 December 2015 RMF activists slam De Klerk IOL Sesant Siyabonga EFF calls for De Klerk to be stripped of Nobel Peace accolade Eyewitness News Archived from the original on 30 December 2015 Retrieved 28 December 2015 a b c Ex South African president de Klerk withdraws apartheid comments after backlash Deutsche Welle 17 February 2020 Archived from the original on 18 February 2020 Retrieved 2 May 2020 Swart Mia Apartheid was never prosecuted S Africa s unfinished business Al Jazeera Archived from the original on 7 February 2021 Retrieved 2 February 2021 Text of de Klerk s video message to South Africa Reuters 11 November 2021 Archived from the original on 12 November 2021 Retrieved 12 November 2021 Rondganger Lee 19 March 2021 FW de Klerk diagnosed with cancer undergoes treatment Independent Online Archived from the original on 11 November 2021 Retrieved 11 November 2021 FW de Klerk South Africa s former president dies at 85 BBC News 11 November 2021 Archived from the original on 11 November 2021 Retrieved 11 November 2021 Lacey Marc 11 November 2021 F W de Klerk Last President of Apartheid South Africa Dies at 85 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 11 November 2021 Retrieved 11 November 2021 Frankel Glenn 11 November 2021 F W de Klerk South African Nobel Prize winner for opening government dies at 85 The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Archived from the original on 11 November 2021 Retrieved 11 November 2021 FW de Klerk s final message FW de Klerk Foundation 12 November 2021 Archived from the original on 13 November 2021 Retrieved 13 November 2021 via YouTube Gerber Jan 11 November 2021 FW de Klerk apologises without qualification for apartheid in last message to people of SA News24 Archived from the original on 11 November 2021 Retrieved 12 November 2021 a b McCain Nichole 16 November 2021 Ramaphosa declares national mourning period for FW de Klerk News 24 Retrieved 16 November 2021 Kretzmann Steve 12 December 2021 Ramaphosa stresses need for forgiveness and unity at state memorial service for FW de Klerk Daily Maverick Retrieved 20 July 2022 a b de Klerk 1991 p 21 a b de Klerk 1991 p 24 de Klerk 1991 p 22 de Klerk 1991 p 64 de Klerk 1991 p 148 De Klerk F W 10 March 2021 To protect women from violence today we must secure justice for victims in the past The Guardian Archived from the original on 22 March 2021 Retrieved 22 March 2021 Glad amp Blanton 1997 p 583 de Klerk 1991 p 1 de Klerk 1991 p 23 a b de Klerk 1991 p 74 de Klerk 1991 p 138 de Klerk 1991 pp 128 129 de Klerk 1991 pp 22 23 de Klerk 1991 pp 81 82 de Klerk 1991 p 143 de Klerk 1991 p 141 Political veterans on the mend Independent Online South Africa Archived from the original on 12 November 2021 Retrieved 19 March 2021 a b de Klerk 1991 p 155 Glad amp Blanton 1997 p 565 de Klerk 1991 p 57 Bibliography Edit Allen John 2006 Rabble Rouser for Peace The Authorised Biography of Desmond Tutu London Rider ISBN 978 1 84604 064 1 de Klerk Willem 1991 F W de Klerk The Man in his Time Johannesburg Jonathan Ball Publishers ISBN 978 0 947464 36 3 Glad Betty Blanton Robert 1997 F W de Klerk and Nelson Mandela A Study in Cooperative Transformational Leadership Presidential Studies Quarterly 27 3 565 590 JSTOR 27551769 Sampson Anthony 2011 1999 Mandela The Authorised Biography London HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 00 743797 9 Further reading Edit South Africa is one of the most unequal societies in the world article by de Klerk in Global Education Magazine in the special edition for the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty 17 October 2012 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frederik Willem de Klerk Wikiquote has quotations related to F W de Klerk Documentary on F W de Klerk The FW de Klerk Foundation Video of F W de Klerk s November 2005 visit to Richmond Hill High School on Google Video Archived 5 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Photos amp Recordings of his visit to the College Historical Society in March 2008 Ubben Lecture at DePauw University includes video audio and photos Extensive Interview in the Huffington Post The Global Panel Foundation F W de Klerk on Nobelprize org Appearances on C SPANPolitical officesPreceded byP W Botha State President of South Africa1989 1994 Succeeded byNelson Mandelaas President of South AfricaNew title Deputy President of South Africa1994 1996 Served alongside Thabo Mbeki Succeeded byThabo Mbeki Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title F W de Klerk amp oldid 1145188905, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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