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Sharpeville massacre

The Sharpeville massacre occurred on 21 March 1960 at the police station in the township of Sharpeville in the then Transvaal Province of the then Union of South Africa (today part of Gauteng). After demonstrating against pass laws, a crowd of about 7,000 protesters went to the police station. Sources disagree as to the behaviour of the crowd: some state that the crowd was peaceful, while others state that the crowd had been hurling stones at the police and that the mood had turned "ugly". The South African Police (SAP) opened fire on the crowd when the crowd started advancing toward the fence around the police station; tear-gas had proved ineffectual. There were 249 victims in total, including 29 children, with 69 people killed and 180 injured. Some were shot in the back as they fled.[1]

Sharpeville massacre
The row of graves of the 69 people killed by police at the Sharpeville Police Station on 21 March 1960.
LocationSharpeville, Transvaal Province, South Africa
Date21 March 1960; 63 years ago (1960-03-21)
Deaths69
Injured180
Assailants South African Police

The massacre was photographed by photographer Ian Berry, who initially thought the police were firing blanks.[2] In present-day South Africa, 21 March is celebrated as a public holiday in honour of human rights and to commemorate the Sharpeville massacre.

Life in Sharpeville before the massacre

Sharpeville was first built in 1943 to replace Topville, a nearby township that suffered overcrowding where illnesses like pneumonia were widespread. Due to the illness, removals from Topville began in 1958. Approximately 10,000 Africans were forcibly removed to Sharpeville. Sharpeville had a high rate of unemployment as well as high crime rates. There were also youth problems because many children joined gangs and were affiliated with crimes instead of schools. Furthermore, a new police station was created, from which the police were energetic to check passes, deporting illegal residents, and raiding illegal shebeens.[3]

Preceding events

 
Demonstrators discarding their passbooks to protest apartheid, 1960

South African governments since the eighteenth century had enacted measures to restrict the flow of African South Africans into cities. Pass laws intended to control and direct their movement and employment were updated in the 1950s. Under the country's National Party government, African residents in urban districts were subject to influx control measures. Individuals over sixteen were required to carry passbooks, which contained an identity card, employment and influx authorisation from a labour bureau, name of employer and address, and details of personal history.[4] Leading up to the Sharpeville massacre, the National Party administration under the leadership of Dr. Hendrik Verwoerd used these laws to enforce greater racial segregation[5] and, in 1959–1960, extended them to include women.[6]: pp.14, 528  From the 1960s, the pass laws were the primary instrument used by the state to detain and harass its political opponents.[6]: p.163 

The African National Congress (ANC) prepared to initiate a campaign of protests against pass laws. These protests were to begin on 31 March 1960, but the rival Pan-Africanist Congress (PAC), led by Robert Sobukwe, decided to pre-empt the ANC by launching its own campaign ten days earlier, on 21 March, because they believed that the ANC could not win the campaign.[7][8]

Massacre

On 21 March, 1960, a group of between 5,000 and 10,000 people converged on the local police station, offering themselves up for arrest for not carrying their passbooks.[9] The Sharpeville police were not completely unprepared for the demonstration, as they had already driven smaller groups of more militant activists away the previous night.[10]

PAC actively organized to increase turnout to the demonstration, distributing pamphlets and appearing in person to urge people not to go to work on the day of the protest. Many of the civilians present attended voluntarily to support the protest, but there is evidence that the PAC also used coercive means to draw the crowd there, including the cutting of telephone lines into Sharpeville, and preventing bus drivers from driving their routes.[6]: p.534 

By 10:00, a large crowd had gathered, and the atmosphere was initially peaceful and festive. Fewer than 20 police officers were present in the station at the start of the protest. Later the crowd grew to about 20,000,[5] and the mood was described as "ugly",[5] prompting about 130 police reinforcements, supported by four Saracen armoured personnel carriers, to be rushed in. The police were armed with firearms, including Sten submachine guns and Lee–Enfield rifles. There was no evidence that anyone in the gathering was armed with anything other than stones.[5]

F-86 Sabre jets and Harvard Trainers approached to within 30 metres (98 ft) of the ground, flying low over the crowd in an attempt to scatter it. The protesters responded by hurling stones (striking three policemen) and rushing the police barricades. Police officers attempted to use tear gas to repel these advances, but it proved ineffectual, and the police fell back on the use of their batons.[10] At about 13:00 the police tried to arrest a protester, and the crowd surged forward.[5] The police began shooting shortly thereafter.[5]

Death and injury toll

The official figure is that 69 people were killed, including 8 women and 10 children, and 180 injured, including 31 women and 19 children. The police shot many in the back as they turned to flee, causing some to be paralyzed.[1]

Victims were buried en masse in a ceremony performed by clergy. Philip Finkie Molefe, responsible for establishing the first Assemblies of God church in the Vaal, was among the clergy that conducted the service.[11]

Pretext for firing

Police reports in 1960 claimed that young and inexperienced police officers panicked and opened fire spontaneously, setting off a chain reaction that lasted about forty seconds. It is likely that the police were quick to fire as two months before the massacre, nine constables had been assaulted and killed, some disembowelled, during a raid at Cato Manor.[10] Few of the policemen present had received public order training. Some of them had been on duty for over twenty-four hours without respite.[10] Some insight into the mindset of those on the police force was provided by Lieutenant Colonel Pienaar, the commanding officer of the police reinforcements at Sharpeville, who said in his statement that "the native mentality does not allow them to gather for a peaceful demonstration. For them to gather means violence."[1] He also denied giving any order to fire and stated that he would not have done so.

Other evidence given to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission "the evidence of Commission deponents reveals a degree of deliberation in the decision to open fire at Sharpeville and indicates that the shooting was more than the result of inexperienced and frightened police officers losing their nerve."[6]: p.538 

Response

 
Painting depicting victims of the massacre

The uproar among South Africa's black population was immediate, and the following week saw demonstrations, protest marches, strikes, and riots around the country. On 30 March 1960, the government declared a state of emergency, detaining more than 18,000 people, including prominent anti-apartheid activists who were known as members of the Congress Alliance including Nelson Mandela and some still enmeshed in the Treason Trial.[12]

Many White South Africans were also horrified by the massacre. The poet Duncan Livingstone, a Scottish immigrant from the Isle of Mull who lived in Pretoria, wrote in response to the Massacre the Scottish Gaelic poem Bean Dubh a' Caoidh a Fir a Chaidh a Marbhadh leis a' Phoileas ("A Black Woman Mourns her Husband Killed by the Police").[13]

A storm of international protest followed the Sharpeville shootings, including sympathetic demonstrations in many countries[14][15] and condemnation by the United Nations. On 1 April 1960, the United Nations Security Council passed Resolution 134. Sharpeville marked a turning point in South Africa's history; the country found itself increasingly isolated in the international community. The event also played a role in South Africa's departure from the Commonwealth of Nations in 1961.[16]

The Sharpeville massacre contributed to the banning of the PAC and ANC as illegal organisations. The massacre was one of the catalysts for a shift from passive resistance to armed resistance by these organisations. The foundation of Poqo, the military wing of the PAC, and Umkhonto we Sizwe, the military wing of the ANC, followed shortly afterwards.[17]

Not all reactions were negative: embroiled in its opposition to the Civil Rights Movement, the Mississippi House of Representatives voted a resolution supporting the South African government "for its steadfast policy of segregation and the [staunch] adherence to their traditions in the face of overwhelming external agitation."[18][19]

Commemoration

Since 1994, 21 March has been commemorated as Human Rights Day in South Africa.[20]

Sharpeville was the site selected by President Nelson Mandela for the signing into law of the Constitution of South Africa on 10 December 1996.[21]

In 1998, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) found that the police actions constituted "gross human rights violations in that excessive force was unnecessarily used to stop a gathering of unarmed people."[6]: p.537 

On 21 March 2002, the 42nd anniversary of the massacre, a memorial was opened by former President Nelson Mandela as part of the Sharpeville Human Rights Precinct.[22]

International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination

UNESCO marks 21 March as the yearly International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, in memory of the massacre.

References in art and literature

The Afrikaner poet Ingrid Jonker mentioned the Sharpeville Massacre in her verse.

The event was an inspiration for painter Oliver Lee Jackson in his Sharpeville Series from the 1970s.[23]

Ingrid de Kok was a child living on a mining compound near Johannesburg where her father worked at the time of the Sharpeville massacre. In her moving poem “ Our Sharpeville” she reflects on the atrocity through the eyes of a child.

Max Roach's 1960 Album We Insist! Freedom Now Suite includes the composition Tears for Johannesburg in response to the massacre.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Reeves, Rt. Reverend Ambrose. . sahistory.org.za. Archived from the original on 24 June 2013. Retrieved 15 July 2007.
  2. ^ Macdonald, Fiona. "The photos that changed history – Ian Berry; Sharpeville Massacre". www.bbc.com. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  3. ^ "Zambian Commemorates Sharpeville Massacre". Black View. 1 (5): 1–10. 2013. JSTOR 43799086.
  4. ^ Kaplan, Irving. Area Handbook for the Republic of South Africa. p. 603.
  5. ^ a b c d e f "The Sharpeville Massacre". Time Magazine. 4 April 1960. Retrieved 15 December 2006.
  6. ^ a b c d e Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Report, Volume 3, Chapter 6 (PDF). 28 October 1998. pp. 531–537. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  7. ^ Boddy-Evans, Alistair. . about.com. Archived from the original on 17 February 2009. Retrieved 15 December 2006.
  8. ^ [1] 28 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ Remember Sharpeville at South African History
  10. ^ a b c d Thomas McGhee, Charles C.; N/A, N/A, eds. (1989). The plot against South Africa (2nd ed.). Pretoria: Varama Publishers. ISBN 0-620-14537-4.
  11. ^ Tlou, Gift (4 August 2020). "Influential religious leader with 70-years in ministry to be laid to rest". The Star.
  12. ^ Humphrey, Tyler; Fourie, Bernardus G.; Duncan, Patrick (1960). "Sharpeville and After". Africa Today. 7 (3): 5–8. JSTOR 4184088.
  13. ^ Ronald Black (1999), An Tuil: Anthology of 20th Century Scottish Gaelic Verse, pages 74-79, 728.
  14. ^ "Outside South Africa there were widespread reactions to Sharpeville in many countries which in many cases led to positive action against South Africa".—Reeves, Ambrose. . United Nations Unit on Apartheid. Archived from the original on 1 April 2007. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  15. ^ E.g., "[I]mmediately following the Sharpeville massacre in South Africa, over 1000 students demonstrated in Sydney against the apartheid system".—Barcan, Alan (24 June 2007). "Student activists at Sydney University 1960‐1967: a problem of interpretation". History of Education Review. 36 (1): 61–79. doi:10.1108/08198691200700005. hdl:1959.13/34876.
  16. ^ Dubow, Saul (December 2011). "Macmillan, Verwoerd and the 1960 'Wind of Change' Speech" (PDF). The Historical Journal. 54 (4): 1087–1114. doi:10.1017/S0018246X11000409. JSTOR 41349633. S2CID 145148670.
  17. ^ Joseph, Raymond (April 2018). "Naming history's forgotten fighters: South Africa's government is setting out to forget some of the alliance who fought against apartheid. Some of them remain in prison". Index on Censorship. 47 (1): 57–59. doi:10.1177/0306422018770119. ISSN 0306-4220.
  18. ^ . Chicago Tribune. 15 April 1960. Archived from the original on 20 July 2017. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
  19. ^ "South Africa Praised". The Citizens' Council. Vol. 5, no. 7. April 1960. p. 1. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
  20. ^ "Public Holidays Act, Act No 36 of 1994" (PDF). Info.gov.za. 18 September 2012. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  21. ^ "Mandela signs SA Constitution into law". South African History Online. 10 December 1996. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
  22. ^ "Sharpeville Memorial, Theunis Kruger Street, Dicksonville, Sharpville – ABLEWiki". Able.wiki.up.ac.za. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  23. ^ Vaughn, Kenya (13 December 2021). "Inspired by Africa". St. Louis American. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
  24. ^ ‘Calls for inquiry into Israel’s Gaza killings,’ The Guardian 18 May 2018

Coordinates: 26°41′18″S 27°52′19″E / 26.68833°S 27.87194°E / -26.68833; 27.87194

sharpeville, massacre, occurred, march, 1960, police, station, township, sharpeville, then, transvaal, province, then, union, south, africa, today, part, gauteng, after, demonstrating, against, pass, laws, crowd, about, protesters, went, police, station, sourc. The Sharpeville massacre occurred on 21 March 1960 at the police station in the township of Sharpeville in the then Transvaal Province of the then Union of South Africa today part of Gauteng After demonstrating against pass laws a crowd of about 7 000 protesters went to the police station Sources disagree as to the behaviour of the crowd some state that the crowd was peaceful while others state that the crowd had been hurling stones at the police and that the mood had turned ugly The South African Police SAP opened fire on the crowd when the crowd started advancing toward the fence around the police station tear gas had proved ineffectual There were 249 victims in total including 29 children with 69 people killed and 180 injured Some were shot in the back as they fled 1 Sharpeville massacreThe row of graves of the 69 people killed by police at the Sharpeville Police Station on 21 March 1960 LocationSharpeville Transvaal Province South AfricaDate21 March 1960 63 years ago 1960 03 21 Deaths69Injured180AssailantsSouth African PoliceThe massacre was photographed by photographer Ian Berry who initially thought the police were firing blanks 2 In present day South Africa 21 March is celebrated as a public holiday in honour of human rights and to commemorate the Sharpeville massacre Contents 1 Life in Sharpeville before the massacre 2 Preceding events 3 Massacre 3 1 Death and injury toll 3 2 Pretext for firing 4 Response 5 Commemoration 6 International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination 7 References in art and literature 8 See also 9 ReferencesLife in Sharpeville before the massacre EditSharpeville was first built in 1943 to replace Topville a nearby township that suffered overcrowding where illnesses like pneumonia were widespread Due to the illness removals from Topville began in 1958 Approximately 10 000 Africans were forcibly removed to Sharpeville Sharpeville had a high rate of unemployment as well as high crime rates There were also youth problems because many children joined gangs and were affiliated with crimes instead of schools Furthermore a new police station was created from which the police were energetic to check passes deporting illegal residents and raiding illegal shebeens 3 Preceding events Edit Demonstrators discarding their passbooks to protest apartheid 1960 South African governments since the eighteenth century had enacted measures to restrict the flow of African South Africans into cities Pass laws intended to control and direct their movement and employment were updated in the 1950s Under the country s National Party government African residents in urban districts were subject to influx control measures Individuals over sixteen were required to carry passbooks which contained an identity card employment and influx authorisation from a labour bureau name of employer and address and details of personal history 4 Leading up to the Sharpeville massacre the National Party administration under the leadership of Dr Hendrik Verwoerd used these laws to enforce greater racial segregation 5 and in 1959 1960 extended them to include women 6 pp 14 528 From the 1960s the pass laws were the primary instrument used by the state to detain and harass its political opponents 6 p 163 The African National Congress ANC prepared to initiate a campaign of protests against pass laws These protests were to begin on 31 March 1960 but the rival Pan Africanist Congress PAC led by Robert Sobukwe decided to pre empt the ANC by launching its own campaign ten days earlier on 21 March because they believed that the ANC could not win the campaign 7 8 Massacre EditOn 21 March 1960 a group of between 5 000 and 10 000 people converged on the local police station offering themselves up for arrest for not carrying their passbooks 9 The Sharpeville police were not completely unprepared for the demonstration as they had already driven smaller groups of more militant activists away the previous night 10 PAC actively organized to increase turnout to the demonstration distributing pamphlets and appearing in person to urge people not to go to work on the day of the protest Many of the civilians present attended voluntarily to support the protest but there is evidence that the PAC also used coercive means to draw the crowd there including the cutting of telephone lines into Sharpeville and preventing bus drivers from driving their routes 6 p 534 By 10 00 a large crowd had gathered and the atmosphere was initially peaceful and festive Fewer than 20 police officers were present in the station at the start of the protest Later the crowd grew to about 20 000 5 and the mood was described as ugly 5 prompting about 130 police reinforcements supported by four Saracen armoured personnel carriers to be rushed in The police were armed with firearms including Sten submachine guns and Lee Enfield rifles There was no evidence that anyone in the gathering was armed with anything other than stones 5 F 86 Sabre jets and Harvard Trainers approached to within 30 metres 98 ft of the ground flying low over the crowd in an attempt to scatter it The protesters responded by hurling stones striking three policemen and rushing the police barricades Police officers attempted to use tear gas to repel these advances but it proved ineffectual and the police fell back on the use of their batons 10 At about 13 00 the police tried to arrest a protester and the crowd surged forward 5 The police began shooting shortly thereafter 5 Death and injury toll Edit The official figure is that 69 people were killed including 8 women and 10 children and 180 injured including 31 women and 19 children The police shot many in the back as they turned to flee causing some to be paralyzed 1 Victims were buried en masse in a ceremony performed by clergy Philip Finkie Molefe responsible for establishing the first Assemblies of God church in the Vaal was among the clergy that conducted the service 11 Pretext for firing Edit Police reports in 1960 claimed that young and inexperienced police officers panicked and opened fire spontaneously setting off a chain reaction that lasted about forty seconds It is likely that the police were quick to fire as two months before the massacre nine constables had been assaulted and killed some disembowelled during a raid at Cato Manor 10 Few of the policemen present had received public order training Some of them had been on duty for over twenty four hours without respite 10 Some insight into the mindset of those on the police force was provided by Lieutenant Colonel Pienaar the commanding officer of the police reinforcements at Sharpeville who said in his statement that the native mentality does not allow them to gather for a peaceful demonstration For them to gather means violence 1 He also denied giving any order to fire and stated that he would not have done so Other evidence given to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission the evidence of Commission deponents reveals a degree of deliberation in the decision to open fire at Sharpeville and indicates that the shooting was more than the result of inexperienced and frightened police officers losing their nerve 6 p 538 Response Edit Painting depicting victims of the massacre The uproar among South Africa s black population was immediate and the following week saw demonstrations protest marches strikes and riots around the country On 30 March 1960 the government declared a state of emergency detaining more than 18 000 people including prominent anti apartheid activists who were known as members of the Congress Alliance including Nelson Mandela and some still enmeshed in the Treason Trial 12 Many White South Africans were also horrified by the massacre The poet Duncan Livingstone a Scottish immigrant from the Isle of Mull who lived in Pretoria wrote in response to the Massacre the Scottish Gaelic poem Bean Dubh a Caoidh a Fir a Chaidh a Marbhadh leis a Phoileas A Black Woman Mourns her Husband Killed by the Police 13 A storm of international protest followed the Sharpeville shootings including sympathetic demonstrations in many countries 14 15 and condemnation by the United Nations On 1 April 1960 the United Nations Security Council passed Resolution 134 Sharpeville marked a turning point in South Africa s history the country found itself increasingly isolated in the international community The event also played a role in South Africa s departure from the Commonwealth of Nations in 1961 16 The Sharpeville massacre contributed to the banning of the PAC and ANC as illegal organisations The massacre was one of the catalysts for a shift from passive resistance to armed resistance by these organisations The foundation of Poqo the military wing of the PAC and Umkhonto we Sizwe the military wing of the ANC followed shortly afterwards 17 Not all reactions were negative embroiled in its opposition to the Civil Rights Movement the Mississippi House of Representatives voted a resolution supporting the South African government for its steadfast policy of segregation and the staunch adherence to their traditions in the face of overwhelming external agitation 18 19 Commemoration EditSince 1994 21 March has been commemorated as Human Rights Day in South Africa 20 Sharpeville was the site selected by President Nelson Mandela for the signing into law of the Constitution of South Africa on 10 December 1996 21 In 1998 the Truth and Reconciliation Commission TRC found that the police actions constituted gross human rights violations in that excessive force was unnecessarily used to stop a gathering of unarmed people 6 p 537 On 21 March 2002 the 42nd anniversary of the massacre a memorial was opened by former President Nelson Mandela as part of the Sharpeville Human Rights Precinct 22 International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination EditUNESCO marks 21 March as the yearly International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination in memory of the massacre References in art and literature EditThe Afrikaner poet Ingrid Jonker mentioned the Sharpeville Massacre in her verse The event was an inspiration for painter Oliver Lee Jackson in his Sharpeville Series from the 1970s 23 Ingrid de Kok was a child living on a mining compound near Johannesburg where her father worked at the time of the Sharpeville massacre In her moving poem Our Sharpeville she reflects on the atrocity through the eyes of a child Max Roach s 1960 Album We Insist Freedom Now Suite includes the composition Tears for Johannesburg in response to the massacre See also Edit South Africa portal 1960s portalList of massacres in South Africa 1922 Turin massacre a similar event in Italy citation needed Polish 1970 protests a similar event in Poland citation needed 2018 2019 Gaza border protests a similar toll over months at the Gaza Israeli border 24 Bodo League massacre a similar event in South Korea Thammasat University massacre a similar event in Thailand citation needed February 28 incident a similar event in Taiwan citation needed Wanpaoshan Incident a similar event in Eastern Asia citation needed Marikana massacre August 2012 police shooting of approximately 34 striking miners widely compared to Sharpeville citation needed Sharpeville Six six people convicted from a demonstration in Sharpeville in 1984 which drew international attention citation needed United Nations Security Council Resolution 610 United Nations Security Council Resolution 615 Year of Africa Bulhoek massacreReferences Edit a b c Reeves Rt Reverend Ambrose The Sharpeville Massacre A watershed in South Africa sahistory org za Archived from the original on 24 June 2013 Retrieved 15 July 2007 Macdonald Fiona The photos that changed history Ian Berry Sharpeville Massacre www bbc com Retrieved 12 December 2018 Zambian Commemorates Sharpeville Massacre Black View 1 5 1 10 2013 JSTOR 43799086 Kaplan Irving Area Handbook for the Republic of South Africa p 603 a b c d e f The Sharpeville Massacre Time Magazine 4 April 1960 Retrieved 15 December 2006 a b c d e Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Report Volume 3 Chapter 6 PDF 28 October 1998 pp 531 537 Retrieved 30 October 2014 Boddy Evans Alistair Sharpeville Massacre The Origin of South Africa s Human Rights Day about com Archived from the original on 17 February 2009 Retrieved 15 December 2006 1 Archived 28 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine Remember Sharpeville at South African History a b c d Thomas McGhee Charles C N A N A eds 1989 The plot against South Africa 2nd ed Pretoria Varama Publishers ISBN 0 620 14537 4 Tlou Gift 4 August 2020 Influential religious leader with 70 years in ministry to be laid to rest The Star Humphrey Tyler Fourie Bernardus G Duncan Patrick 1960 Sharpeville and After Africa Today 7 3 5 8 JSTOR 4184088 Ronald Black 1999 An Tuil Anthology of 20th Century Scottish Gaelic Verse pages 74 79 728 Outside South Africa there were widespread reactions to Sharpeville in many countries which in many cases led to positive action against South Africa Reeves Ambrose The Sharpeville Massacre A watershed in South Africa United Nations Unit on Apartheid Archived from the original on 1 April 2007 Retrieved 3 January 2022 E g I mmediately following the Sharpeville massacre in South Africa over 1000 students demonstrated in Sydney against the apartheid system Barcan Alan 24 June 2007 Student activists at Sydney University 1960 1967 a problem of interpretation History of Education Review 36 1 61 79 doi 10 1108 08198691200700005 hdl 1959 13 34876 Dubow Saul December 2011 Macmillan Verwoerd and the 1960 Wind of Change Speech PDF The Historical Journal 54 4 1087 1114 doi 10 1017 S0018246X11000409 JSTOR 41349633 S2CID 145148670 Joseph Raymond April 2018 Naming history s forgotten fighters South Africa s government is setting out to forget some of the alliance who fought against apartheid Some of them remain in prison Index on Censorship 47 1 57 59 doi 10 1177 0306422018770119 ISSN 0306 4220 What they commend in Mississippi Chicago Tribune 15 April 1960 Archived from the original on 20 July 2017 Retrieved 14 August 2017 South Africa Praised The Citizens Council Vol 5 no 7 April 1960 p 1 Retrieved 14 August 2017 Public Holidays Act Act No 36 of 1994 PDF Info gov za 18 September 2012 Retrieved 17 April 2014 Mandela signs SA Constitution into law South African History Online 10 December 1996 Retrieved 3 May 2019 Sharpeville Memorial Theunis Kruger Street Dicksonville Sharpville ABLEWiki Able wiki up ac za Retrieved 17 April 2014 Vaughn Kenya 13 December 2021 Inspired by Africa St Louis American Retrieved 5 February 2022 Calls for inquiry into Israel s Gaza killings The Guardian 18 May 2018 Coordinates 26 41 18 S 27 52 19 E 26 68833 S 27 87194 E 26 68833 27 87194 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sharpeville massacre amp oldid 1145818100, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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