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Apartheid

Apartheid (/əˈpɑːrt(h)t/, especially South African English/əˈpɑːrt(h)t/, Afrikaans: [aˈpartɦɛit]; transl. "separateness", lit.'aparthood') was a system of institutionalised racial segregation that existed in South Africa and South West Africa (now Namibia) from 1948 to the early 1990s.[note 1] Apartheid was characterised by an authoritarian political culture based on baasskap (lit. 'boss-hood' or 'boss-ship'), which ensured that South Africa was dominated politically, socially, and economically through minoritarianism by the nation's dominant minority white population.[4] According to this system of social stratification, white citizens had the highest status, followed by Indians and Coloureds, then black Africans.[4] The economic legacy and social effects of apartheid continue to the present day, particularly inequality.[5][6][7]

"Reserved for the sole use of members of the white race group" sign in English, Afrikaans, Zulu, at a beach in Durban, 1989

Broadly speaking, apartheid was delineated into petty apartheid, which entailed the segregation of public facilities and social events, and grand apartheid, which dictated housing and employment opportunities by race.[8] The first apartheid law was the Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act, 1949, followed closely by the Immorality Amendment Act of 1950, which made it illegal for most South African citizens to marry or pursue sexual relationships across racial lines.[9] The Population Registration Act, 1950 classified all South Africans into one of four racial groups based on appearance, known ancestry, socioeconomic status, and cultural lifestyle: "Black", "White", "Coloured", and "Indian", the last two of which included several sub-classifications.[10] Places of residence were determined by racial classification.[9] Between 1960 and 1983, 3.5 million black Africans were removed from their homes and forced into segregated neighbourhoods as a result of apartheid legislation, in some of the largest mass evictions in modern history.[11] Most of these targeted removals were intended to restrict the black population to ten designated "tribal homelands", also known as bantustans, four of which became nominally independent states.[9] The government announced that relocated persons would lose their South African citizenship as they were absorbed into the bantustans.[8]

Apartheid sparked significant international and domestic opposition, resulting in some of the most influential global social movements of the 20th century.[12] It was the target of frequent condemnation in the United Nations and brought about extensive international sanctions during apartheid including arms embargoes and economic sanctions on South Africa.[13] During the 1970s and 1980s, internal resistance to apartheid became increasingly militant, prompting brutal crackdowns by the National Party ruling government and protracted sectarian violence that left thousands dead or in detention.[14] Some reforms of the apartheid system were undertaken, including allowing for Indian and Coloured political representation in parliament, but these measures failed to appease most activist groups.[15]

Between 1987 and 1993, the National Party entered into bilateral negotiations with the African National Congress (ANC), the leading anti-apartheid political movement, for ending segregation and introducing majority rule.[15][16] In 1990, prominent ANC figures such as Nelson Mandela were released from prison.[17] Apartheid legislation was repealed on 17 June 1991,[2] leading to multiracial elections in April 1994.[18]

Precursors

Apartheid is an Afrikaans[19] word meaning "separateness", or "the state of being apart", literally "apart-hood" (from the Afrikaans suffix -heid).[20][21] Its first recorded use was in 1929.[9]

Racial discrimination and inequality against blacks in South Africa dates to the beginning of large-scale European colonization of South Africa with the Dutch East India Company's establishment of a trading post in the Cape of Good Hope in 1652, which eventually expanded into the Dutch Cape Colony. The company began the Khoikhoi–Dutch Wars in which it displaced the local Khoikhoi people, replaced them with farms worked by white settlers, and imported black slaves from across the Dutch Empire.[22] In the days of slavery, slaves required passes to travel away from their masters.

In 1797, the Landdrost and Heemraden, local officials, of Swellendam and Graaff-Reinet extended pass laws beyond slaves and ordained that all Khoikhoi (designated as Hottentots) moving about the country for any purpose should carry passes.[23] This was confirmed by the British Colonial government in 1809 by the Hottentot Proclamation, which decreed that if a Khoikhoi were to move they would need a pass from their master or a local official.[23] Ordinance No. 49 of 1828 decreed that prospective black immigrants were to be granted passes for the sole purpose of seeking work.[23] These passes were to be issued for Coloureds and Khoikhoi but not for other Africans, who were still forced to carry passes.

During the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, the British Empire captured and annexed the Dutch Cape Colony.[24] Under the 1806 Cape Articles of Capitulation the new British colonial rulers were required to respect previous legislation enacted under Roman-Dutch law,[25] and this led to a separation of the law in South Africa from English Common Law and a high degree of legislative autonomy. The governors and assemblies that governed the legal process in the various colonies of South Africa were launched on a different and independent legislative path from the rest of the British Empire.

The United Kingdom's Slavery Abolition Act 1833 abolished slavery throughout the British Empire and overrode the Cape Articles of Capitulation. To comply with the act, the South African legislation was expanded to include Ordinance 1 in 1835, which effectively changed the status of slaves to indentured labourers. This was followed by Ordinance 3 in 1848, which introduced an indenture system for Xhosa that was little different from slavery.

The various South African colonies passed legislation throughout the rest of the 19th century to limit the freedom of unskilled workers, to increase the restrictions on indentured workers and to regulate the relations between the races. The discoveries of diamonds and gold in South Africa also raised racial inequality between whites and blacks.[26]

In the Cape Colony, which previously had a liberal and multi-racial constitution and a system of Cape Qualified Franchise open to men of all races, the Franchise and Ballot Act of 1892 raised the property franchise qualification and added an educational element, disenfranchising a disproportionate number of the Cape's non-white voters,[27] and the Glen Grey Act of 1894 instigated by the government of Prime Minister Cecil Rhodes limited the amount of land Africans could hold. Similarly, in Natal, the Natal Legislative Assembly Bill of 1894 deprived Indians of the right to vote.[28] In 1896 the South African Republic brought in two pass laws requiring Africans to carry a badge. Only those employed by a master were permitted to remain on the Rand, and those entering a "labour district" needed a special pass.[29] During the Second Boer War the British Empire used racial exploitation of blacks as a cause for its war against the Boer republics. However, the peace negotiations for the Treaty of Vereeniging demanded "the just predominance of the white race" in South Africa as a precondition for the Boer republics unifying with the British Empire.[30]

In 1905 the General Pass Regulations Act denied blacks the vote and limited them to fixed areas,[31] and in 1906 the Asiatic Registration Act of the Transvaal Colony required all Indians to register and carry passes.[32] Beginning in 1906 the South African Native Affairs Commission under Godfrey Lagden began implementing a more openly segregationist policy towards nonwhites.[33] The latter was repealed by the British government but re-enacted in 1908. In 1910, the Union of South Africa was created as a self-governing dominion, which continued the legislative program: the South Africa Act (1910) enfranchised white people, giving them complete political control over all other racial groups while removing the right of black people to sit in parliament;[34] the Native Land Act (1913) prevented blacks, except those in the Cape, from buying land outside "reserves";[34] the Natives in Urban Areas Bill (1918) was designed to force black people into "locations";[35] the Urban Areas Act (1923) introduced residential segregation and provided cheap labour for industry led by white people; the Colour Bar Act (1926) prevented black mine workers from practicing skilled trades; the Native Administration Act (1927) made the British Crown rather than paramount chiefs the supreme head over all African affairs;[36][better source needed] the Native Land and Trust Act (1936) complemented the 1913 Native Land Act and, in the same year, the Representation of Natives Act removed previous black voters from the Cape voters' roll and allowed them to elect three whites to Parliament.[37][better source needed]

The United Party government of Jan Smuts began to move away from the rigid enforcement of segregationist laws during World War II, but faced growing opposition from Afrikaner nationalists who wanted stricter segregation.[38][39] Post-war, one of the first pieces of segregating legislation enacted by Smuts' government was the Asiatic Land Tenure Bill (1946), which banned land sales to Indians and Indian descendent South Africans.[40] The same year, the government established the Fagan Commission. Amid fears integration would eventually lead to racial assimilation, the Opposition Herenigde Nasionale Party (HNP) established the Sauer Commission to investigate the effects of the United Party's policies. The commission concluded that integration would bring about a "loss of personality" for all racial groups. The HNP incorporated the commission's findings into its campaign platform for the 1948 South African general election, which it won.[citation needed]

Institution

Election of 1948

 
Daniel François Malan, the first apartheid-era prime minister (1948–1954)

South Africa had allowed social custom and law to govern the consideration of multiracial affairs and of the allocation, in racial terms, of access to economic, social, and political status.[41] Most white South Africans, regardless of their own differences, accepted the prevailing pattern.[citation needed] Nevertheless, by 1948 it remained apparent that there were gaps in the social structure, whether legislated or otherwise, concerning the rights and opportunities of nonwhites. The rapid economic development of World War II attracted black migrant workers in large numbers to chief industrial centres, where they compensated for the wartime shortage of white labour. However, this escalated rate of black urbanisation went unrecognised by the South African government, which failed to accommodate the influx with parallel expansion in housing or social services.[41] Overcrowding, increasing crime rates, and disillusionment resulted; urban blacks came to support a new generation of leaders influenced by the principles of self-determination and popular freedoms enshrined in such statements as the Atlantic Charter. Black political organizations and leaders such as Alfred Xuma, James Mpanza, the African National Congress, and the Council of Non-European Trade Unions began demanding political rights, land reform, and the right to unionise.[42]

Whites reacted negatively to the changes, allowing the Herenigde Nasionale Party (or simply the National Party) to convince a large segment of the voting bloc that the impotence of the United Party in curtailing the evolving position of nonwhites indicated that the organisation had fallen under the influence of Western liberals.[41] Many Afrikaners resented what they perceived as disempowerment by an underpaid black workforce and the superior economic power and prosperity of white English speakers.[43] Smuts, as a strong advocate of the United Nations, lost domestic support when South Africa was criticised for its colour bar and the continued mandate of South West Africa by other UN member states.[44]

Afrikaner nationalists proclaimed that they offered the voters a new policy to ensure continued white domination.[45] This policy was initially expounded from a theory drafted by Hendrik Verwoerd and was presented to the National Party by the Sauer Commission.[41] It called for a systematic effort to organise the relations, rights, and privileges of the races as officially defined through a series of parliamentary acts and administrative decrees. Segregation had thus far been pursued only in major matters, such as separate schools, and local society rather than law had been depended upon to enforce most separation; it should now be extended to everything.[41] The commission's goal was to completely remove blacks from areas designated for whites, including cities, with the exception of temporary migrant labor. Blacks would then be encouraged to create their own political units in land reserved for them.[46] The party gave this policy a name – apartheid. Apartheid was to be the basic ideological and practical foundation of Afrikaner politics for the next quarter of a century.[45]

The National Party's election platform stressed that apartheid would preserve a market for white employment in which nonwhites could not compete. On the issues of black urbanisation, the regulation of nonwhite labour, influx control, social security, farm tariffs and nonwhite taxation, the United Party's policy remained contradictory and confused.[44] Its traditional bases of support not only took mutually exclusive positions, but found themselves increasingly at odds with each other. Smuts' reluctance to consider South African foreign policy against the mounting tensions of the Cold War also stirred up discontent, while the nationalists promised to purge the state and public service of communist sympathisers.[44]

First to desert the United Party were Afrikaner farmers, who wished to see a change in influx control due to problems with squatters, as well as higher prices for their maize and other produce in the face of the mineowners' demand for cheap food policies. Always identified with the affluent and capitalist, the party also failed to appeal to its working class constituents.[44]

Populist rhetoric allowed the National Party to sweep eight constituencies in the mining and industrial centres of the Witwatersrand and five more in Pretoria. Barring the predominantly English-speaking landowner electorate of the Natal, the United Party was defeated in almost every rural district. Its urban losses in the nation's most populous province, the Transvaal, proved equally devastating.[44] As the voting system was disproportionately weighted in favour of rural constituencies and the Transvaal in particular, the 1948 election catapulted the Herenigde Nasionale Party from a small minority party to a commanding position with an eight-vote parliamentary lead.[47][48] Daniel François Malan became the first nationalist prime minister, with the aim of implementing the apartheid philosophy and silencing liberal opposition.[41]

When the National Party came to power in 1948, there were factional differences in the party about the implementation of systemic racial segregation. The "baasskap" (white domination or supremacist) faction, which was the dominant faction in the NP, and state institutions, favoured systematic segregation, but also favoured the participation of black Africans in the economy with black labour controlled to advance the economic gains of Afrikaners. A second faction were the "purists", who believed in "vertical segregation", in which blacks and whites would be entirely separated, with blacks living in native reserves, with separate political and economic structures, which, they believed, would entail severe short-term pain, but would also lead to independence of white South Africa from black labour in the long term. A third faction, which included Hendrik Verwoerd, sympathised with the purists, but allowed for the use of black labour, while implementing the purist goal of vertical separation.[49] Verwoerd would refer to this policy as a policy of "good neighbourliness" as a means of justifying such segregation.[50]

Legislation

 
Hendrik Verwoerd, minister of native affairs (1950–1958) and prime minister (1958–1966), earned the nickname 'Architect of Apartheid' from his large role in creating legislation.

NP leaders argued that South Africa did not comprise a single nation, but was made up of four distinct racial groups: white, black, Coloured and Indian. Such groups were split into 13 nations or racial federations. White people encompassed the English and Afrikaans language groups; the black populace was divided into ten such groups.

The state passed laws that paved the way for "grand apartheid", which was centred on separating races on a large scale, by compelling people to live in separate places defined by race. This strategy was in part adopted from "left-over" British rule that separated different racial groups after they took control of the Boer republics in the Anglo-Boer war. This created the black-only "townships" or "locations", where blacks were relocated to their own towns. As the NP government's minister of native affairs from 1950, Hendrik Verwoerd had a significant role in crafting such laws, which led to him being regarded as the 'Architect of Apartheid'.[51][50][52] In addition, "petty apartheid" laws were passed. The principal apartheid laws were as follows.[53]

The first grand apartheid law was the Population Registration Act of 1950, which formalised racial classification and introduced an identity card for all persons over the age of 18, specifying their racial group.[54] Official teams or boards were established to come to a conclusion on those people whose race was unclear.[55] This caused difficulty, especially for Coloured people, separating their families when members were allocated different races.[56]

The second pillar of grand apartheid was the Group Areas Act of 1950.[57] Until then, most settlements had people of different races living side by side. This Act put an end to diverse areas and determined where one lived according to race. Each race was allotted its own area, which was used in later years as a basis of forced removal.[58] The Prevention of Illegal Squatting Act of 1951 allowed the government to demolish black shanty town slums and forced white employers to pay for the construction of housing for those black workers who were permitted to reside in cities otherwise reserved for whites.[59] The Native Laws Amendment Act, 1952 centralised and tightened pass laws so that blacks could not stay in urban areas longer than 72 hours without a permit.[60]

The Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act of 1949 prohibited marriage between persons of different races, and the Immorality Act of 1950 made sexual relations with a person of a different race a criminal offence.

Under the Reservation of Separate Amenities Act of 1953, municipal grounds could be reserved for a particular race, creating, among other things, separate beaches, buses, hospitals, schools and universities. Signboards such as "whites only" applied to public areas, even including park benches.[61] Black South Africans were provided with services greatly inferior to those of whites, and, to a lesser extent, to those of Indian and Coloured people.[62]

Further laws had the aim of suppressing resistance, especially armed resistance, to apartheid. The Suppression of Communism Act of 1950 banned the Communist Party of South Africa and any party subscribing to Communism. The act defined Communism and its aims so sweepingly that anyone who opposed government policy risked being labelled as a Communist. Since the law specifically stated that Communism aimed to disrupt racial harmony, it was frequently used to gag opposition to apartheid. Disorderly gatherings were banned, as were certain organisations that were deemed threatening to the government. It also empowered the Ministry of Justice to impose banning orders.[63]

After the Defiance Campaign, the government used the act for the mass arrests and banning of leaders of dissent groups such as the African National Congress (ANC), the South African Indian Congress (SAIC), and the South African Congress of Trade Unions (SACTU). After the release of the Freedom Charter, 156 leaders of these groups were charged in the 1956 Treason Trial. It established censorship of film, literature, and the media under the Customs and Excise Act 1955 and the Official Secrets Act 1956. The same year, the Native Administration Act 1956 allowed the government to banish blacks.[63]

The Bantu Authorities Act of 1951 created separate government structures for blacks and whites and was the first piece of legislation to support the government's plan of separate development in the bantustans. The Bantu Education Act, 1953 established a separate education system for blacks emphasizing African culture and vocational training under the Ministry of Native Affairs and defunded most mission schools.[64] The Promotion of Black Self-Government Act of 1959 entrenched the NP policy of nominally independent "homelands" for blacks. So-called "self–governing Bantu units" were proposed, which would have devolved administrative powers, with the promise later of autonomy and self-government. It also abolished the seats of white representatives of black South Africans and removed from the rolls the few blacks still qualified to vote. The Bantu Investment Corporation Act of 1959 set up a mechanism to transfer capital to the homelands to create employment there. Legislation of 1967 allowed the government to stop industrial development in "white" cities and redirect such development to the "homelands". The Black Homeland Citizenship Act of 1970 marked a new phase in the Bantustan strategy. It changed the status of blacks to citizens of one of the ten autonomous territories. The aim was to ensure a demographic majority of white people within South Africa by having all ten Bantustans achieve full independence.

Interracial contact in sport was frowned upon, but there were no segregatory sports laws.

The government tightened pass laws compelling blacks to carry identity documents, to prevent the immigration of blacks from other countries. To reside in a city, blacks had to be in employment there. Until 1956 women were for the most part excluded from these pass requirements, as attempts to introduce pass laws for women were met with fierce resistance.[65]

Disenfranchisement of Coloured voters

 
Cape Coloured children in Bonteheuwel
 
Annual per capita personal income by race group in South Africa relative to white levels.

In 1950, D. F. Malan announced the NP's intention to create a Coloured Affairs Department.[66] J.G. Strijdom, Malan's successor as Prime Minister, moved to strip voting rights from black and Coloured residents of the Cape Province. The previous government had introduced the Separate Representation of Voters Bill into Parliament in 1951, turning it to be an Act on 18 June 1951; however, four voters, G Harris, W D Franklin, W D Collins and Edgar Deane, challenged its validity in court with support from the United Party.[67] The Cape Supreme Court upheld the act, but reversed by the Appeal Court, finding the act invalid because a two-thirds majority in a joint sitting of both Houses of Parliament was needed to change the entrenched clauses of the Constitution.[68] The government then introduced the High Court of Parliament Bill (1952), which gave Parliament the power to overrule decisions of the court.[69] The Cape Supreme Court and the Appeal Court declared this invalid too.[70]

In 1955 the Strijdom government increased the number of judges in the Appeal Court from five to 11, and appointed pro-Nationalist judges to fill the new places.[71] In the same year they introduced the Senate Act, which increased the Senate from 49 seats to 89.[72] Adjustments were made such that the NP controlled 77 of these seats.[73] The parliament met in a joint sitting and passed the Separate Representation of Voters Act in 1956, which transferred Coloured voters from the common voters' roll in the Cape to a new Coloured voters' roll.[74] Immediately after the vote, the Senate was restored to its original size. The Senate Act was contested in the Supreme Court, but the recently enlarged Appeal Court, packed with government-supporting judges, upheld the act, and also the Act to remove Coloured voters.[75]

The 1956 law allowed Coloureds to elect four people to Parliament, but a 1969 law abolished those seats and stripped Coloureds of their right to vote. Since Indians had never been allowed to vote, this resulted in whites being the sole enfranchised group.

A 2016 study in The Journal of Politics suggests that disenfranchisement in South Africa had a significant negative effect on basic service delivery to the disenfranchised.[76]

Division among whites

Before South Africa became a republic in 1961, politics among white South Africans was typified by the division between the mainly Afrikaner pro-republic conservative and the largely English anti-republican liberal sentiments,[77] with the legacy of the Boer War still a factor for some people. Once South Africa became a republic, Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd called for improved relations and greater accord between people of British descent and the Afrikaners.[78] He claimed that the only difference was between those in favour of apartheid and those against it. The ethnic division would no longer be between Afrikaans and English speakers, but between blacks and whites.[citation needed]

Most Afrikaners supported the notion of unanimity of white people to ensure their safety. White voters of British descent were divided. Many had opposed a republic, leading to a majority "no" vote in Natal.[79] Later, some of them recognised the perceived need for white unity, convinced by the growing trend of decolonisation elsewhere in Africa, which concerned them. British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's "Wind of Change" speech left the British faction feeling that the United Kingdom had abandoned them.[80] The more conservative English speakers supported Verwoerd;[81] others were troubled by the severing of ties with the UK and remained loyal to the Crown.[82] They were displeased by having to choose between British and South African nationalities. Although Verwoerd tried to bond these different blocs, the subsequent voting illustrated only a minor swell of support,[83] indicating that a great many English speakers remained apathetic and that Verwoerd had not succeeded in uniting the white population.

Homeland system

 
Map of the 20 bantustans in South Africa and South West Africa.

Under the homeland system, the government attempted to divide South Africa and South West Africa into a number of separate states, each of which was supposed to develop into a separate nation-state for a different ethnic group.[84]

Territorial separation was hardly a new institution. There were, for example, the "reserves" created under the British government in the nineteenth century. Under apartheid, 13 percent of the land was reserved for black homelands, a small amount relative to its total population, and generally in economically unproductive areas of the country. The Tomlinson Commission of 1954 justified apartheid and the homeland system, but stated that additional land ought to be given to the homelands, a recommendation that was not carried out.[85]

When Verwoerd became Prime Minister in 1958, the policy of "separate development" came into being, with the homeland structure as one of its cornerstones. Verwoerd came to believe in the granting of independence to these homelands. The government justified its plans on the ostensible basis that "(the) government's policy is, therefore, not a policy of discrimination on the grounds of race or colour, but a policy of differentiation on the ground of nationhood, of different nations, granting to each self-determination within the borders of their homelands – hence this policy of separate development".[86] Under the homelands system, blacks would no longer be citizens of South Africa, becoming citizens of the independent homelands who worked in South Africa as foreign migrant labourers on temporary work permits. In 1958 the Promotion of Black Self-Government Act was passed, and border industries and the Bantu Investment Corporation were established to promote economic development and the provision of employment in or near the homelands. Many black South Africans who had never resided in their identified homeland were forcibly removed from the cities to the homelands.

The vision of a South Africa divided into multiple ethnostates appealed to the reform-minded Afrikaner intelligentsia, and it provided a more coherent philosophical and moral framework for the National Party's policies, while also providing a veneer of intellectual respectability to the controversial policy of so-called baasskap.[87][88][89]

 
Rural area in Ciskei, one of the four nominally independent homelands.

In total, 20 homelands were allocated to ethnic groups, ten in South Africa proper and ten in South West Africa. Of these 20 homelands, 19 were classified as black, while one, Basterland, was set aside for a sub-group of Coloureds known as Basters, who are closely related to Afrikaners. Four of the homelands were declared independent by the South African government: Transkei in 1976, Bophuthatswana in 1977, Venda in 1979, and Ciskei in 1981 (known as the TBVC states). Once a homeland was granted its nominal independence, its designated citizens had their South African citizenship revoked and replaced with citizenship in their homeland. These people were then issued passports instead of passbooks. Citizens of the nominally autonomous homelands also had their South African citizenship circumscribed, meaning they were no longer legally considered South African.[90] The South African government attempted to draw an equivalence between their view of black citizens of the homelands and the problems which other countries faced through entry of illegal immigrants.

International recognition of the Bantustans

Bantustans within the borders of South Africa and South West Africa were classified by degree of nominal self-rule: 6 were "non-self-governing", 10 were "self-governing", and 4 were "independent". In theory, self-governing Bantustans had control over many aspects of their internal functioning but were not yet sovereign nations. Independent Bantustans (Transkei, Bophutatswana, Venda and Ciskei; also known as the TBVC states) were intended to be fully sovereign. In reality, they had no significant economic infrastructure and with few exceptions encompassed swaths of disconnected territory. This meant all the Bantustans were little more than puppet states controlled by South Africa.

Throughout the existence of the independent Bantustans, South Africa remained the only country to recognise their independence. Nevertheless, internal organisations of many countries, as well as the South African government, lobbied for their recognition. For example, upon the foundation of Transkei, the Swiss-South African Association encouraged the Swiss government to recognise the new state. In 1976, leading up to a United States House of Representatives resolution urging the President to not recognise Transkei, the South African government intensely lobbied lawmakers to oppose the bill.[91] Each TBVC state extended recognition to the other independent Bantustans while South Africa showed its commitment to the notion of TBVC sovereignty by building embassies in the TBVC capitals.

Forced removals

During the 1960s, 1970s and early 1980s, the government implemented a policy of "resettlement", to force people to move to their designated "group areas". Millions of people were forced to relocate. These removals included people relocated due to slum clearance programmes, labour tenants on white-owned farms, the inhabitants of the so-called "black spots" (black-owned land surrounded by white farms), the families of workers living in townships close to the homelands, and "surplus people" from urban areas, including thousands of people from the Western Cape (which was declared a "Coloured Labour Preference Area")[92] who were moved to the Transkei and Ciskei homelands. The best-publicised forced removals of the 1950s occurred in Johannesburg, when 60,000 people were moved to the new township of Soweto (an abbreviation for South Western Townships).[93][94]

Until 1955, Sophiatown had been one of the few urban areas where black people were allowed to own land, and was slowly developing into a multiracial slum. As industry in Johannesburg grew, Sophiatown became the home of a rapidly expanding black workforce, as it was convenient and close to town. It had the only swimming pool for black children in Johannesburg.[95] As one of the oldest black settlements in Johannesburg, it held an almost symbolic importance for the 50,000 black people it contained. Despite a vigorous ANC protest campaign and worldwide publicity, the removal of Sophiatown began on 9 February 1955 under the Western Areas Removal Scheme. In the early hours, heavily armed police forced residents out of their homes and loaded their belongings onto government trucks. The residents were taken to a large tract of land 19 kilometres (12 mi) from the city centre, known as Meadowlands, which the government had purchased in 1953. Meadowlands became part of a new planned black city called Soweto. Sophiatown was destroyed by bulldozers, and a new white suburb named Triomf (Triumph) was built in its place. This pattern of forced removal and destruction was to repeat itself over the next few years, and was not limited to black South Africans alone. Forced removals from areas like Cato Manor (Mkhumbane) in Durban, and District Six in Cape Town, where 55,000 Coloured and Indian people were forced to move to new townships on the Cape Flats, were carried out under the Group Areas Act of 1950. Nearly 600,000 Coloured, Indian and Chinese people were moved under the Group Areas Act. Some 40,000 whites were also forced to move when land was transferred from "white South Africa" into the black homelands.[96] In South-West Africa, the apartheid plan that instituted Bantustans was as a result of the so-called Odendaal Plan, a set of proposals from the Odendaal Commission of 1962–1964.[97]

Society during apartheid

The NP passed a string of legislation that became known as petty apartheid. The first of these was the Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act 55 of 1949, prohibiting marriage between whites and people of other races. The Immorality Amendment Act 21 of 1950 (as amended in 1957 by Act 23) forbade "unlawful racial intercourse" and "any immoral or indecent act" between a white and a black, Indian or Coloured person.

Black people were not allowed to run businesses or professional practices in areas designated as "white South Africa" unless they had a permit – such being granted only exceptionally. They were required to move to the black "homelands" and set up businesses and practices there. Trains, hospitals and ambulances were segregated.[98] Because of the smaller numbers of white patients and the fact that white doctors preferred to work in white hospitals, conditions in white hospitals were much better than those in often overcrowded and understaffed, significantly underfunded black hospitals.[99] Residential areas were segregated and blacks were allowed to live in white areas only if employed as a servant and even then only in servants' quarters. Black people were excluded from working in white areas, unless they had a pass, nicknamed the dompas, also spelt dompass or dom pass. The most likely origin of this name is from the Afrikaans "verdomde pas" (meaning accursed pass),[100] although some commentators ascribe it to the Afrikaans words meaning "dumb pass". Only black people with "Section 10" rights (those who had migrated to the cities before World War II) were excluded from this provision. A pass was issued only to a black person with approved work. Spouses and children had to be left behind in black homelands. A pass was issued for one magisterial district (usually one town) confining the holder to that area only. Being without a valid pass made a person subject to arrest and trial for being an illegal migrant. This was often followed by deportation to the person's homeland and prosecution of the employer for employing an illegal migrant. Police vans patrolled white areas to round up blacks without passes. Black people were not allowed to employ whites in white South Africa.[101]

Although trade unions for black and Coloured workers had existed since the early 20th century, it was not until the 1980s reforms that a mass black trade union movement developed. Trade unions under apartheid were racially segregated, with 54 unions being white only, 38 for Indian and Coloured and 19 for black people. The Industrial Conciliation Act (1956) legislated against the creation of multi-racial trade unions and attempted to split existing multi-racial unions into separate branches or organisations along racial lines.[102]

Each black homeland controlled its own education, health and police systems. Blacks were not allowed to buy hard liquor. They were able to buy only state-produced poor quality beer (although this law was relaxed later). Public beaches, swimming pools, some pedestrian bridges, drive-in cinema parking spaces, graveyards, parks, and public toilets were segregated. Cinemas and theatres in white areas were not allowed to admit blacks. There were practically no cinemas in black areas. Most restaurants and hotels in white areas were not allowed to admit blacks except as staff. Blacks were prohibited from attending white churches under the Churches Native Laws Amendment Act of 1957, but this was never rigidly enforced, and churches were one of the few places races could mix without the interference of the law. Blacks earning 360 rand a year or more had to pay taxes while the white threshold was more than twice as high, at 750 rand a year. On the other hand, the taxation rate for whites was considerably higher than that for blacks.[citation needed]

Blacks could not acquire land in white areas. In the homelands, much of the land belonged to a "tribe", where the local chieftain would decide how the land had to be used. This resulted in whites owning almost all the industrial and agricultural lands and much of the prized residential land. Most blacks were stripped of their South African citizenship when the "homelands" became "independent", and they were no longer able to apply for South African passports. Eligibility requirements for a passport had been difficult for blacks to meet, the government contending that a passport was a privilege, not a right, and the government did not grant many passports to blacks. Apartheid pervaded culture as well as the law, and was entrenched by most of the mainstream media.

Coloured classification

The population was classified into four groups: African, White, Indian and Coloured (capitalised to denote their legal definitions in South African law). The Coloured group included people regarded as being of mixed descent, including of Bantu, Khoisan, European and Malay ancestry. Many were descended from people brought to South Africa from other parts of the world, such as India, Sri Lanka, Madagascar and China as slaves and indentured workers.[103]

The Population Registration Act, (Act 30 of 1950), defined South Africans as belonging to one of three races: White, Black or Coloured. People of Indian ancestry were considered Coloured under this act. Appearance, social acceptance and descent were used to determine the qualification of an individual into one of the three categories. A white person was described by the act as one whose parents were both white and possessed the "habits, speech, education, deportment and demeanour" of a white person. Blacks were defined by the act as belonging to an African race or tribe. Lastly, Coloureds were those who could not be classified as black or white.[104]

The apartheid bureaucracy devised complex (and often arbitrary) criteria at the time that the Population Registration Act was implemented to determine who was Coloured. Minor officials would administer tests to determine if someone should be categorised either Coloured or White, or if another person should be categorised either Coloured or Black. The tests included the pencil test, in which a pencil was shoved into the subjects' curly hair and the subjects made to shake their head. If the pencil stuck they were deemed to be Black; if dislodged they were pronounced Coloured. Other tests involved examining the shapes of jaw lines and buttocks and pinching people to see what language they would say "Ouch" in.[105] As a result of these tests, different members of the same family found themselves in different race groups. Further tests determined membership of the various sub-racial groups of the Coloureds.

Discriminated against by apartheid, Coloureds were as a matter of state policy forced to live in separate townships, as defined in the Group Areas Act (1950),[106] in some cases leaving homes their families had occupied for generations, and received an inferior education, though better than that provided to Africans. They played an important role in the anti-apartheid movement: for example the African Political Organization established in 1902 had an exclusively Coloured membership.

Voting rights were denied to Coloureds in the same way that they were denied to Blacks from 1950 to 1983. However, in 1977 the NP caucus approved proposals to bring Coloureds and Indians into central government. In 1982, final constitutional proposals produced a referendum among Whites, and the Tricameral Parliament was approved. The Constitution was reformed the following year to allow the Coloured and Indian minorities participation in separate Houses in a Tricameral Parliament, and Botha became the first Executive State President. The idea was that the Coloured minority could be granted voting rights, but the Black majority were to become citizens of independent homelands.[104][106] These separate arrangements continued until the abolition of apartheid. The Tricameral reforms led to the formation of the (anti-apartheid) United Democratic Front as a vehicle to try to prevent the co-option of Coloureds and Indians into an alliance with Whites. The battles between the UDF and the NP government from 1983 to 1989 were to become the most intense period of struggle between left-wing and right-wing South Africans.

Education

Education was segregated by the 1953 Bantu Education Act, which crafted a separate system of education for black South African students and was designed to prepare black people for lives as a labouring class.[107] In 1959 separate universities were created for black, Coloured and Indian people. Existing universities were not permitted to enroll new black students. The Afrikaans Medium Decree of 1974 required the use of Afrikaans and English on an equal basis in high schools outside the homelands.[108]

In the 1970s, the state spent ten times more per child on the education of white children than on black children within the Bantu Education system (the education system in black schools within white South Africa). Higher education was provided in separate universities and colleges after 1959. Eight black universities were created in the homelands. Fort Hare University in the Ciskei (now Eastern Cape) was to register only Xhosa-speaking students. Sotho, Tswana, Pedi and Venda speakers were placed at the newly founded University College of the North at Turfloop, while the University College of Zululand was launched to serve Zulu students. Coloureds and Indians were to have their own establishments in the Cape and Natal respectively.[109]

Each black homeland controlled its own education, health and police systems.

By 1948, before formal Apartheid, 10 universities existed in South Africa: four were Afrikaans, four for English, one for Blacks and a Correspondence University open to all ethnic groups. By 1981, under apartheid government, 11 new universities were built: seven for Blacks, one for Coloureds, one for Indians, one for Afrikaans and one dual-language medium Afrikaans and English.

Women under apartheid

Colonialism and apartheid had a major effect on Black and Coloured women, since they suffered both racial and gender discrimination.[110][111] Judith Nolde argues that in general, South African women were "deprive[d] [...] of their human rights as individuals" under the apartheid system.[112] Jobs were often hard to find. Many Black and Coloured women worked as agricultural or domestic workers, but wages were extremely low, if existent.[113] Children developed diseases caused by malnutrition and sanitation problems, and mortality rates were therefore high. The controlled movement of black and Coloured workers within the country through the Natives Urban Areas Act of 1923 and the pass laws separated family members from one another, because men could prove their employment in urban centres while most women were merely dependents; consequently, they risked being deported to rural areas.[114] Even in rural areas there were legal hurdles for women to own land, and outside the cities jobs were scarce.[115]

Sport under apartheid

By the 1930s, association football mirrored the balkanised society of South Africa; football was divided into numerous institutions based on race: the (White) South African Football Association, the South African Indian Football Association (SAIFA), the South African African Football Association (SAAFA) and its rival the South African Bantu Football Association, and the South African Coloured Football Association (SACFA). Lack of funds to provide proper equipment would be noticeable in regards to black amateur football matches; this revealed the unequal lives black South Africans were subject to, in contrast to Whites, who were much better off financially.[116] Apartheid's social engineering made it more difficult to compete across racial lines. Thus, in an effort to centralise finances, the federations merged in 1951, creating the South African Soccer Federation (SASF), which brought Black, Indian, and Coloured national associations into one body that opposed apartheid. This was generally opposed more and more by the growing apartheid government, and – with urban segregation being reinforced with ongoing racist policies – it was harder to play football along these racial lines. In 1956, the Pretoria regime – the administrative capital of South Africa – passed the first apartheid sports policy; by doing so, it emphasised the White-led government's opposition to inter-racialism.

While football was plagued by racism, it also played a role in protesting apartheid and its policies. With the international bans from FIFA and other major sporting events, South Africa would be in the spotlight internationally. In a 1977 survey, white South Africans ranked the lack of international sport as one of the three most damaging consequences of apartheid.[117] By the mid-1950s, Black South Africans would also use media to challenge the "racialisation" of sports in South Africa; anti-apartheid forces had begun to pinpoint sport as the "weakness" of white national morale. Black journalists for the Johannesburg Drum magazine were the first to give the issue public exposure, with an intrepid special issue in 1955 that asked, "Why shouldn't our blacks be allowed in the SA team?"[117] As time progressed, international standing with South Africa would continue to be strained. In the 1980s, as the oppressive system was slowly collapsing the ANC and National Party started negotiations on the end of apartheid, football associations also discussed the formation of a single, non-racial controlling body. This unity process accelerated in the late 1980s and led to the creation, in December 1991, of an incorporated South African Football Association. On 3 July 1992, FIFA finally welcomed South Africa back into international football.

Sport has long been an important part of life in South Africa, and the boycotting of games by international teams had a profound effect on the white population, perhaps more so than the trade embargoes did. After the re-acceptance of South Africa's sports teams by the international community, sport played a major unifying role between the country's diverse ethnic groups. Mandela's open support of the predominantly white rugby fraternity during the 1995 Rugby World Cup was considered instrumental in bringing together South African sports fans of all races.[118]

Professional boxing

Activities in the sport of professional boxing were also affected, as there were 44 recorded professional boxing fights for national titles as deemed "for Whites only" between 1955 and 1979,[119] and 397 fights as deemed "for non-Whites" between 1901 and 1978.[120]

The first fight for a national "White" title was held on April 9, 1955, between Flyweights Jerry Jooste and Tiny Corbett at the City Hall in Johannesburg; it was won by Jooste by a twelve rounds points decision.[121] The last one was between national "White" Light-Heavyweight champion Gerrie Bodenstein and challenger Mervin Smit on February 5, 1979, at the Joekies Ice Rink in Welkom, Free State. it was won by the champion by a fifth-round technical knockout.[122]

The first "non Whites" South African national championship bout on record apparently (the date appears as "uncertain" on the records) took place on May 1, 1901, between Andrew Jephtha and Johnny Arendse for the vacant Lightweight belt, Jephtha winning by knockout in round nineteen of a twenty rounds-scheduled match, in Cape Town.[123]

The last "non White" title bout took place on December 18, 1978, between Sipho Mange and Chris Kid Dlamini; Mange-Dlamini was the culminating fight of a boxing program that included several other "non White" championship contests. Mange won the vacant non-White Super Bantamweight title by outpointing Dlamini over twelve rounds at the Goodwood Showgrounds in Cape Town.[120]

Asians during apartheid

Defining its Asian population, a minority that did not appear to belong to any of the initial three designated non-white groups, was a constant dilemma for the apartheid government.

The classification of "honorary white" (a term which would be ambiguously used throughout apartheid) was granted to immigrants from Japan, South Korea and Taiwan – countries with which South Africa maintained diplomatic and economic relations[124] – and to their descendants.

Indian South Africans during apartheid were classified many ranges of categories from "Asian" to "black"[clarification needed] to "Coloured"[clarification needed] and even the mono-ethnic category of "Indian", but never as white, having been considered "nonwhite" throughout South Africa's history. The group faced severe discrimination during the apartheid regime and were subject to numerous racialist policies.

In 2005, a retrospect study was done by Josephine C. Naidoo and Devi Moodley Rajab, where they interviewed a series of Indian South Africans about their experience living through apartheid; their study highlighted education, the workplace, and general day to day living. One participant who was a doctor said that it was considered the norm for Non-White and White doctors to mingle while working at the hospital but when there was any down time or breaks, they were to go back to their segregated quarters. Not only was there severe segregation for doctors, non-white, more specifically Indians, were paid three to four times less than their white counterparts. Many described being treated as a "third class citizen" due to the humiliation of the standard of treatment for non-white employees across many professions. Many Indians described a sense of justified superiority from whites due to the apartheid laws that, in the minds of White South Africans, legitimised those feelings. Another finding of this study was the psychological damage done to Indians living in South Africa during apartheid. One of the biggest long-term effects on Indians was the distrust of white South Africans. There was a strong degree of alienation that left a strong psychological feeling of inferiority.[125]

Chinese South Africans – who were descendants of migrant workers who came to work in the gold mines around Johannesburg in the late 19th century – were initially either classified as "Coloured" or "Other Asian" and were subject to numerous forms of discrimination and restriction.[126] It was not until 1984 that South African Chinese, increased to about 10,000, were given the same official rights as the Japanese, to be treated as whites in terms of the Group Areas Act, although they still faced discrimination and did not receive all the benefits/rights of their newly obtained honorary white status such as voting.[citation needed][127]

Indonesians arrived at the Cape of Good Hope as slaves until the abolishment of slavery during the 19th century. They were predominantly Muslim, were allowed religious freedom and formed their own ethnic group/community known as Cape Malays. They were classified as part of the Coloured racial group.[128] This was the same for South Africans of Malaysian descent who were also classified as part of the Coloured race and thus considered "not-white".[103] South Africans of Filipino descent were classified as "black" due to historical outlook on Filipinos by White South Africans, and many of them lived in Bantustans.[103]

The Lebanese population were somewhat of an anomaly during the apartheid era. Lebanese immigration to South Africa was chiefly Christian, and the group was originally classified as non-white; however, a court case in 1913 ruled that because Lebanese and Syrians originated from the Canaan region (the birthplace of Christianity and Judaism), they could not be discriminated against by race laws which targeted non-believers, and thus, were classified as white. The Lebanese community maintained their white status after the Population Registration Act came into effect; however, further immigration from the Middle East was restricted.[129]

Conservatism

Alongside apartheid, the National Party implemented a programme of social conservatism. Pornography,[130] gambling[131] and works from Marx, Lenin and other socialist thinkers[132] were banned. Cinemas, shops selling alcohol and most other businesses were forbidden from opening on Sundays.[133] Abortion,[134] homosexuality[135] and sex education were also restricted; abortion was legal only in cases of rape or if the mother's life was threatened.[134]

Television was not introduced until 1976 because the government viewed English programming as a threat to the Afrikaans language.[136] Television was run on apartheid lines – TV1 broadcast in Afrikaans and English (geared to a White audience), TV2 in Zulu and Xhosa, TV3 in Sotho, Tswana and Pedi (both geared to a Black audience), and TV4 mostly showed programmes for an urban Black audience.

Internal resistance

 
Painting of the Sharpeville massacre which occurred on 21 March 1960

Apartheid sparked significant internal resistance.[13] The government responded to a series of popular uprisings and protests with police brutality, which in turn increased local support for the armed resistance struggle.[137] Internal resistance to the apartheid system in South Africa came from several sectors of society and saw the creation of organisations dedicated variously to peaceful protests, passive resistance and armed insurrection.

In 1949, the youth wing of the African National Congress (ANC) took control of the organisation and started advocating a radical black nationalist programme. The new young leaders proposed that white authority could only be overthrown through mass campaigns. In 1950 that philosophy saw the launch of the Programme of Action, a series of strikes, boycotts and civil disobedience actions that led to occasional violent clashes with the authorities.

In 1959, a group of disenchanted ANC members formed the Pan Africanist Congress (PAC), which organised a demonstration against pass books on 21 March 1960. One of those protests was held in the township of Sharpeville, where 69 people were killed by police in the Sharpeville massacre.

In the wake of Sharpeville, the government declared a state of emergency. More than 18,000 people were arrested, including leaders of the ANC and PAC, and both organisations were banned. The resistance went underground, with some leaders in exile abroad and others engaged in campaigns of domestic sabotage and terrorism.

In May 1961, before the declaration of South Africa as a Republic, an assembly representing the banned ANC called for negotiations between the members of the different ethnic groupings, threatening demonstrations and strikes during the inauguration of the Republic if their calls were ignored.

When the government overlooked them, the strikers (among the main organisers was a 42-year-old, Thembu-origin Nelson Mandela) carried out their threats. The government countered swiftly by giving police the authority to arrest people for up to twelve days and detaining many strike leaders amid numerous cases of police brutality.[138] Defeated, the protesters called off their strike. The ANC then chose to launch an armed struggle through a newly formed military wing, Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK), which would perform acts of sabotage on tactical state structures. Its first sabotage plans were carried out on 16 December 1961, the anniversary of the Battle of Blood River.

In the 1970s, the Black Consciousness Movement (BCM) was created by tertiary students influenced by the Black Power movement in the US. BCM endorsed black pride and African customs and did much to alter the feelings of inadequacy instilled among black people by the apartheid system. The leader of the movement, Steve Biko, was taken into custody on 18 August 1977 and was beaten to death in detention.

In 1976, secondary students in Soweto took to the streets in the Soweto uprising to protest against the imposition of Afrikaans as the only language of instruction. On 16 June, police opened fire on students protesting peacefully. According to official reports 23 people were killed, but the number of people who died is usually given as 176, with estimates of up to 700.[139][140][141] In the following years several student organisations were formed to protest against apartheid, and these organisations were central to urban school boycotts in 1980 and 1983 and rural boycotts in 1985 and 1986.

 
List of attacks attributed to MK and compiled by the Committee for South African War Resistance (COSAWR) between 1980 and 1983.

In parallel with student protests, labour unions started protest action in 1973 and 1974. After 1976 unions and workers are considered to have played an important role in the struggle against apartheid, filling the gap left by the banning of political parties. In 1979 black trade unions were legalised and could engage in collective bargaining, although strikes were still illegal. Economist Thomas Sowell wrote that basic supply and demand led to violations of Apartheid "on a massive scale" throughout the nation, simply because there were not enough white South African business owners to meet the demand for various goods and services. Large portions of the garment industry and construction of new homes, for example, were effectively owned and operated by blacks, who either worked surreptitiously or who circumvented the law with a white person as a nominal, figurehead manager.[142]

In 1983, anti-apartheid leaders determined to resist the tricameral parliament assembled to form the United Democratic Front (UDF) in order to coordinate anti-apartheid activism inside South Africa. The first presidents of the UDF were Archie Gumede, Oscar Mpetha and Albertina Sisulu; patrons were Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Dr Allan Boesak, Helen Joseph, and Nelson Mandela. Basing its platform on abolishing apartheid and creating a nonracial democratic South Africa, the UDF provided a legal way for domestic human rights groups and individuals of all races to organise demonstrations and campaign against apartheid inside the country. Churches and church groups also emerged as pivotal points of resistance. Church leaders were not immune to prosecution, and certain faith-based organisations were banned, but the clergy generally had more freedom to criticise the government than militant groups did. The UDF, coupled with the protection of the church, accordingly permitted a major role for Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who served both as a prominent domestic voice and international spokesperson denouncing apartheid and urging the creation of a shared nonracial state.[143]

Although the majority of whites supported apartheid, some 20 percent did not. Parliamentary opposition was galvanised by Helen Suzman, Colin Eglin and Harry Schwarz, who formed the Progressive Federal Party. Extra-parliamentary resistance was largely centred in the South African Communist Party and women's organisation the Black Sash. Women were also notable in their involvement in trade union organisations and banned political parties. The public intellectuals too, such as Nadine Gordimer the eminent author and winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature (1991), vehemently opposed the Apartheid regime and accordingly bolstered the movement against it.

International relations during apartheid

Commonwealth

South Africa's policies were subject to international scrutiny in 1960, when British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan criticised them during his Wind of Change speech in Cape Town. Weeks later, tensions came to a head in the Sharpeville massacre, resulting in more international condemnation. Soon afterwards, Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd announced a referendum on whether the country should become a republic. Verwoerd lowered the voting age for Whites to eighteen years of age and included Whites in South West Africa on the roll. The referendum on 5 October that year asked Whites; "Are you in favour of a Republic for the Union?", and 52 percent voted "Yes".[144]

As a consequence of this change of status, South Africa needed to reapply for continued membership of the Commonwealth, with which it had privileged trade links. India had become a republic within the Commonwealth in 1950, but it became clear that African and South and Southeast Asian member states would oppose South Africa due to its apartheid policies. As a result, South Africa withdrew from the Commonwealth on 31 May 1961, the day that the Republic came into existence.

United Nations

We stand here today to salute the United Nations Organisation and its Member States, both singly and collectively, for joining forces with the masses of our people in a common struggle that has brought about our emancipation and pushed back the frontiers of racism.

— Nelson Mandela, address to the United Nations as South African President, 3 October 1994[145]

The apartheid system as an issue was first formally brought to the United Nations attention, in order to advocate for the Indians residing in South Africa. On June 22 of 1946, the Indian government requested that the discriminatory treatment of Indians living in South Africa be included on the agenda of the first General Assembly session.[146] In 1952, apartheid was again discussed in the aftermath of the Defiance Campaign, and the UN set up a task team to keep watch on the progress of apartheid and the racial state of affairs in South Africa. Although South Africa's racial policies were a cause for concern, most countries in the UN concurred that this was a domestic affair, which fell outside the UN's jurisdiction.[147]

In April 1960, the UN's conservative stance on apartheid changed following the Sharpeville massacre, and the Security Council for the first time agreed on concerted action against the apartheid regime. Resolution 134 called upon the nation of South Africa to abandon its policies implementing racial discrimination. The newly founded United Nations Special Committee Against Apartheid, scripted and passed Resolution 181 on August 7, 1963, which called upon all states to cease the sale and shipment of all ammunition and military vehicles to South Africa. This clause was finally declared mandatory on 4 November 1977, depriving South Africa of military aid. From 1964 onwards, the US and the UK discontinued their arms trade with South Africa. The Security Council also condemned the Soweto massacre in Resolution 392. In 1977, the voluntary UN arms embargo became mandatory with the passing of Resolution 418. In addition to isolating South Africa militarily, the United Nations General Assembly, encouraged the boycotting of oil sales to South Africa.[146] Other actions taken by the United Nations General Assembly include the request for all nations and organisations, "to suspend cultural, educational, sporting and other exchanges with the racist regime and with organisations or institutions in South Africa which practice apartheid".[146] Illustrating that over a long period of time, the United Nations was working towards isolating the state of South Africa, by putting pressure on the Apartheid regime.

After much debate, by the late-1980s, the United States, the United Kingdom, and 23 other nations had passed laws placing various trade sanctions on South Africa. A disinvestment from South Africa movement in many countries was similarly widespread, with individual cities and provinces around the world implementing various laws and local regulations forbidding registered corporations under their jurisdiction from doing business with South African firms, factories, or banks.[148]

Catholic Church

Pope John Paul II was an outspoken opponent of apartheid. In 1985, while visiting the Netherlands, he gave an impassioned speech at the International Court of Justice condemning apartheid, proclaiming that "no system of apartheid or separate development will ever be acceptable as a model for the relations between peoples or races."[149] In September 1988, he made a pilgrimage to countries bordering South Africa, while demonstratively avoiding South Africa itself. During his visit to Zimbabwe, he called for economic sanctions against the South African government.[150]

Organisation for African Unity

The Organisation of African Unity (OAU) was created in 1963. Its primary objectives were to eradicate colonialism and improve social, political and economic situations in Africa. It censured apartheid and demanded sanctions against South Africa. African states agreed to aid the liberation movements in their fight against apartheid.[151] In 1969, fourteen nations from Central and East Africa gathered in Lusaka, Zambia, and formulated the Lusaka Manifesto, which was signed on 13 April by all of the countries in attendance except Malawi.[152] This manifesto was later taken on by both the OAU and the United Nations.[151]

The Lusaka Manifesto summarised the political situations of self-governing African countries, condemning racism and inequity, and calling for Black majority rule in all African nations.[153] It did not rebuff South Africa entirely, though, adopting an appeasing manner towards the apartheid government, and even recognizing its autonomy. Although African leaders supported the emancipation of Black South Africans, they preferred this to be attained through peaceful means.[154]

South Africa's negative response to the Lusaka Manifesto and rejection of a change to its policies brought about another OAU announcement in October 1971. The Mogadishu Declaration stated that South Africa's rebuffing of negotiations meant that its Black people could only be freed through military means, and that no African state should converse with the apartheid government.[155]

Outward-looking policy

In 1966, B. J. Vorster became Prime Minister. He was not prepared to dismantle apartheid, but he did try to redress South Africa's isolation and to revitalise the country's global reputation, even those with Black majority rule in Africa. This he called his "Outward-Looking" policy.[156][157][158]

Vorster's willingness to talk to African leaders stood in contrast to Verwoerd's refusal to engage with leaders such as Abubakar Tafawa Balewa of Nigeria in 1962 and Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia in 1964. In 1966, he met the heads of the neighbouring states of Lesotho, Swaziland and Botswana. In 1967, he offered technological and financial aid to any African state prepared to receive it, asserting that no political strings were attached, aware that many African states needed financial aid despite their opposition to South Africa's racial policies. Many were also tied to South Africa economically because of their migrant labour population working down the South African mines. Botswana, Lesotho and Swaziland remained outspoken critics of apartheid, but were dependent on South African economic assistance.

Malawi was the first non-neighbouring country to accept South African aid. In 1967, the two states set out their political and economic relations. In 1969, Malawi was the only country at the assembly which did not sign the Lusaka Manifesto condemning South Africa's apartheid policy. In 1970, Malawian president Hastings Banda made his first and most successful official stopover in South Africa.

Associations with Mozambique followed suit and were sustained after that country won its sovereignty in 1975. Angola was also granted South African loans. Other countries which formed relationships with South Africa were Liberia, Ivory Coast, Madagascar, Mauritius, Gabon, Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo) and the Central African Republic. Although these states condemned apartheid (more than ever after South Africa's denunciation of the Lusaka Manifesto), South Africa's economic and military dominance meant that they remained dependent on South Africa to varying degrees[clarification needed].

Sports and culture

Beginning

South Africa's isolation in sport began in the mid-1950s and increased throughout the 1960s. Apartheid forbade multiracial sport, which meant that overseas teams, by virtue of them having players of different races, could not play in South Africa. In 1956, the International Table Tennis Federation severed its ties with the all-White South African Table Tennis Union, preferring the non-racial South African Table Tennis Board. The apartheid government responded by confiscating the passports of the Board's players so that they were unable to attend international games.

Isolation

Verwoerd years

In 1959, the non-racial South African Sports Association (SASA) was formed to secure the rights of all players on the global field. After meeting with no success in its endeavours to attain credit by collaborating with White establishments, SASA approached the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in 1962, calling for South Africa's expulsion from the Olympic Games. The IOC sent South Africa a caution to the effect that, if there were no changes, they would be barred from competing at the 1964 Olympic Games in Tokyo. The changes were initiated, and in January 1963, the South African Non-Racial Olympic Committee (SANROC) was set up. The Anti-Apartheid Movement persisted in its campaign for South Africa's exclusion, and the IOC acceded in barring the country from the 1964 Olympic Games. South Africa selected a multi-racial team for the next Olympic Games, and the IOC opted for incorporation in the 1968 Mexico City Olympic Games. Because of protests from AAMs and African nations, however, the IOC was forced to retract the invitation.

Foreign complaints about South Africa's bigoted sports brought more isolation. Racially selected New Zealand sports teams toured South Africa, until the 1970 All Blacks rugby tour allowed Maori to enter the country under the status of "honorary Whites". Huge and widespread protests occurred in New Zealand in 1981 against the Springbok tour – the government spent $8,000,000 protecting games using the army and police force. A planned All Black tour to South Africa in 1985 remobilised the New Zealand protesters and it was cancelled. A "rebel tour" – not government sanctioned – went ahead in 1986, but after that sporting ties were cut, and New Zealand made a decision not to convey an authorised rugby team to South Africa until the end of apartheid.[159]

Vorster years

On 6 September 1966, Verwoerd was fatally stabbed at Parliament House by parliamentary messenger Dimitri Tsafendas. John Vorster took office shortly after, and announced that South Africa would no longer dictate to the international community what their teams should look like. Although this reopened the gate for international sporting meets, it did not signal the end of South Africa's racist sporting policies. In 1968, Vorster went against his policy by refusing to permit Basil D'Oliveira, a Coloured South African-born cricketer, to join the English cricket team on its tour to South Africa. Vorster said that the side had been chosen only to prove a point, and not on merit. D'Oliveira was eventually included in the team as the first substitute, but the tour was cancelled. Protests against certain tours brought about the cancellation of a number of other visits, including that of an England rugby team touring South Africa in 1969–70.

The first of the "White Bans" occurred in 1971 when the Chairman of the Australian Cricketing Association – Sir Don Bradman – flew to South Africa to meet Vorster. Vorster had expected Bradman to allow the tour of the Australian cricket team to go ahead, but things became heated after Bradman asked why Black sportsmen were not allowed to play cricket. Vorster stated that Blacks were intellectually inferior and had no finesse for the game. Bradman – thinking this ignorant and repugnant – asked Vorster if he had heard of a man named Garry Sobers. On his return to Australia, Bradman released a short statement: "We will not play them until they choose a team on a non-racist basis."[160] Bradman's views were in stark contrast to those of Australian tennis great Margaret Court, who had won the grand slam the previous year and commented about apartheid that "South Africans have this thing better organised than any other country, particularly America" and that she would "go back there any time."[161]

In South Africa, Vorster vented his anger publicly against Bradman, while the African National Congress rejoiced. This was the first time a predominantly White nation had taken the side of multiracial sport, producing an unsettling resonance that more "White" boycotts were coming.[162] Almost twenty years later, on his release from prison, Nelson Mandela asked a visiting Australian statesman if Donald Bradman, his childhood hero, was still alive (Bradman lived until 2001).

In 1971, Vorster altered his policies even further by distinguishing multiracial from multinational sport. Multiracial sport, between teams with players of different races, remained outlawed; multinational sport, however, was now acceptable: international sides would not be subject to South Africa's racial stipulations.

In 1978, Nigeria boycotted the Commonwealth Games because New Zealand's sporting contacts with the South African government were not considered to be in accordance with the 1977 Gleneagles Agreement. Nigeria also led the 32-nation boycott of the 1986 Commonwealth Games because of UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's ambivalent attitude towards sporting links with South Africa, significantly affecting the quality and profitability of the Games and thus thrusting apartheid into the international spotlight.[163]

Cultural boycott

In the 1960s, the Anti-Apartheid Movements began to campaign for cultural boycotts of apartheid South Africa. Artists were requested not to present or let their works be hosted in South Africa. In 1963, 45 British writers put their signatures to an affirmation approving of the boycott, and, in 1964, American actor Marlon Brando called for a similar affirmation for films. In 1965, the Writers' Guild of Great Britain called for a proscription on the sending of films to South Africa. Over sixty American artists signed a statement against apartheid and against professional links with the state. The presentation of some South African plays in the United Kingdom and the United States was also vetoed.[by whom?][citation needed] After the arrival of television in South Africa in 1975, the British Actors Union, Equity, boycotted the service, and no British programme concerning its associates could be sold to South Africa. Similarly, when home video grew popular in the 1980s, the Australian arm of CBS/Fox Video (now 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment) placed stickers on their VHS and Betamax cassettes which labeled exporting such cassettes to South Africa as "an infringement of copyright".[164] Sporting and cultural boycotts did not have the same effect as economic sanctions,[citation needed] but they did much to lift consciousness amongst normal South Africans of the global condemnation of apartheid.

Western influence

 
London bus in 1989 carrying the "Boycott Apartheid" message.

While international opposition to apartheid grew, the Nordic countries – and Sweden in particular – provided both moral and financial support for the ANC.[165] On 21 February 1986 – a week before he was assassinated – Sweden's Prime Minister Olof Palme made the keynote address to the Swedish People's Parliament Against Apartheid held in Stockholm.[166] In addressing the hundreds of anti-apartheid sympathisers as well as leaders and officials from the ANC and the Anti-Apartheid Movement such as Oliver Tambo, Palme declared: "Apartheid cannot be reformed; it has to be eliminated."[167]

Other Western countries adopted a more ambivalent position. In Switzerland, the Swiss-South African Association lobbied on behalf of the South African government. The Nixon administration implemented a policy known as the Tar Baby Option, pursuant to which the US maintained close relations with the Apartheid South African government.[168] The Reagan administration evaded international sanctions and provided diplomatic support in international forums for the South African government. The United States also increased trade with the Apartheid regime, while describing the ANC as "a terrorist organisation."[169] Like the Reagan administration, the government of Margaret Thatcher termed this policy "constructive engagement" with the apartheid government, vetoing the imposition of UN economic sanctions. U.S. government justification for supporting the Apartheid regime were publicly given as a belief in "free trade" and the perception of the anti-communist South African government as a bastion against Marxist forces in Southern Africa, for example, by the military intervention of South Africa in the Angolan Civil War in support of right-wing insurgents fighting to topple the government. The U.K. government also declared the ANC a terrorist organisation,[170] and in 1987 Thatcher's spokesman, Bernard Ingham, famously said that anyone who believed that the ANC would ever form the government of South Africa was "living in cloud cuckoo land".[171] The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), a conservative lobbying organisation, actively campaigned against divesting from South Africa throughout the 1980s.[172]

By the late-1980s, with no sign of a political resolution in South Africa, Western patience began to run out. By 1989, a bipartisan Republican/Democratic initiative in the US favoured economic sanctions (realised as the Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid Act of 1986), the release of Nelson Mandela and a negotiated settlement involving the ANC. Thatcher too began to take a similar line, but insisted on the suspension of the ANC's armed struggle.[173]

The UK's significant economic involvement in South Africa may have provided some leverage with the South African government, with both the UK and the US applying pressure and pushing for negotiations. However, neither the UK nor the US was willing to apply economic pressure upon their multinational interests in South Africa, such as the mining company Anglo American. Although a high-profile compensation claim against these companies was thrown out of court in 2004,[174] the US Supreme Court in May 2008 upheld an appeal court ruling allowing another lawsuit that seeks damages of more than US$400 billion from major international companies which are accused of aiding South Africa's apartheid system.[175]

Effect of the Cold War

"Total Onslaught"

 
Apartheid-era propaganda leaflet issued to South African military personnel in the 1980s. The pamphlet decries "Russian colonialism and oppression" in English, Afrikaans and Portuguese.

During the 1950s, South African military strategy was decisively shaped by fears of communist espionage and a conventional Soviet threat to the strategic Cape trade route between the south Atlantic and Indian Oceans.[176] The apartheid government supported the US-led North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), as well as its policy of regional containment against Soviet-backed regimes and insurgencies worldwide.[177] By the late-1960s, the rise of Soviet client states on the African continent, as well as Soviet aid for militant anti-apartheid movements, was considered one of the primary external threats to the apartheid system.[178] South African officials frequently accused domestic opposition groups of being communist proxies.[179] For its part, the Soviet Union viewed South Africa as a bastion of neocolonialism and a regional Western ally, which helped fuel its support for various anti-apartheid causes.[180]

From 1973 onwards, much of South Africa's white population increasingly looked upon their country as a bastion of the free world besieged militarily, politically, and culturally by Communism and radical black nationalism.[181] The apartheid government perceived itself as being locked in a proxy struggle with the Warsaw Pact and by implication, armed wings of black nationalist forces such as Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK) and the People's Liberation Army of Namibia (PLAN), which often received Soviet arms and training.[180] This was described as "Total Onslaught".[181][182]

Israeli arms sales

Soviet support for militant anti-apartheid movements worked in the government's favour, as its claim to be reacting in opposition to aggressive communist expansion gained greater plausibility, and helped it justify its own domestic militarisation methods, known as "Total Strategy".[181] Total Strategy involved building up a formidable conventional military and counter-intelligence capability.[181] It was formulated on counter-revolutionary tactics as espoused by noted French tactician André Beaufre.[182] Considerable effort was devoted towards circumventing international arms sanctions, and the government even went so far as to develop nuclear weapons,[183] allegedly with covert assistance from Israel.[184] In 2010, The Guardian released South African government documents that revealed an Israeli offer to sell the apartheid regime nuclear weapons.[185][186] Israel denied these allegations and claimed that the documents were minutes from a meeting which did not indicate any concrete offer for a sale of nuclear weapons. Shimon Peres said that The Guardian's article was based on "selective interpretation ... and not on concrete facts."[187]

As a result of "Total Strategy", South African society became increasingly militarised. Many domestic civil organisations were modelled upon military structures, and military virtues such as discipline, patriotism, and loyalty were highly regarded.[188] In 1968, national service for White South African men lasted nine months at minimum, and they could be called up for reserve duty into their late-middle age if necessary.[189] The length of national service was gradually extended to 12 months in 1972 and 24 months in 1978.[189] At state schools, white male students were organised into paramilitary formations and drilled as cadets or as participants in a civil defence or "Youth Preparedness" curriculum.[188] Compulsory military education and in some cases, paramilitary training was introduced for all older white male students at state schools in three South African provinces.[188] These programmes presided over the construction of bomb shelters at schools and drills aimed at simulating mock insurgent raids.[188]

From the late 1970s to the late 1980s, defence budgets in South Africa were raised exponentially.[182] In 1975, Israeli defense minister Shimon Peres signed a security pact with South African defence minister P.W. Botha that led to $200 million in arms deals. In 1988, Israeli arm sales to South Africa totaled over $1.4 billion.[190] Covert operations focused on espionage and domestic counter-subversion became common, the number of special forces units swelled, and the South African Defence Force (SADF) had amassed enough sophisticated conventional weaponry to pose a serious threat to the "front-line states", a regional alliance of neighbouring countries opposed to apartheid.[182]

Foreign military operations

 
South African paratroops on a raid in Angola, 1980s

Total Strategy was advanced in the context of MK, PLAN, and Azanian People's Liberation Army (APLA) guerrilla raids into South Africa or against South African targets in South West Africa; frequent South African reprisal attacks on these movements' external bases in Angola, Zambia, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, and Botswana, often involving collateral damage to foreign infrastructure and civilian populations; and periodic complaints brought before the international community about South African violations of its neighbours' sovereignty.[191]

The apartheid government made judicious use of extraterritorial operations to eliminate its military and political opponents, arguing that neighbouring states, including their civilian populations, which hosted, tolerated on their soil, or otherwise sheltered anti-apartheid insurgent groups could not evade responsibility for provoking retaliatory strikes.[191] While it did focus on militarising the borders and sealing up its domestic territory against insurgent raids, it also relied heavily on an aggressive preemptive and counter-strike strategy, which fulfilled a preventive and deterrent purpose.[192] The reprisals which occurred beyond South Africa's borders involved not only hostile states, but neutral and sympathetic governments as well, often forcing them to react against their will and interests.[193]

External South African military operations were aimed at eliminating the training facilities, safehouses, infrastructure, equipment, and manpower of the insurgents.[192] However, their secondary objective was to dissuade neighbouring states from offering sanctuary to MK, PLAN, APLA, and similar organisations.[192] This was accomplished by deterring the supportive foreign population from cooperating with infiltration and thus undermining the insurgents' external sanctuary areas.[194] It would also send a clear message to the host government that collaborating with insurgent forces involved potentially high costs.[194]

The scale and intensity of foreign operations varied, and ranged from small special forces units carrying out raids on locations across the border which served as bases for insurgent infiltration to major conventional offensives involving armour, artillery, and aircraft.[192] Actions such as Operation Protea in 1981 and Operation Askari in 1983 involved both full scale conventional warfare and a counter-insurgency reprisal operation.[195][196] The insurgent bases were usually situated near military installations of the host government, so that SADF retaliatory strikes hit those facilities as well and attracted international attention and condemnation of what was perceived as aggression against the armed forces of another sovereign state.[197] This would inevitably result in major engagements, in which the SADF's expeditionary units would have to contend with the firepower of the host government's forces.[197] Intensive conventional warfare of this nature carried the risk of severe casualties among white soldiers, which had to be kept to a minimum for political reasons.[192] There were also high economic and diplomatic costs associated with openly deploying large numbers of South African troops into another country.[192] Furthermore, military involvement on that scale had the potential to evolve into wider conflict situations, in which South Africa became entangled.[192] For example, South Africa's activities in Angola, initially limited to containing PLAN, later escalated to direct involvement in the Angolan Civil War.[192]

As it became clearer that full-scale conventional operations could not effectively fulfill the requirements of a regional counter-insurgency effort, South Africa turned to a number of alternative methods. Retributive artillery bombardments were the least sophisticated means of reprisal against insurgent attacks. Between 1978 and 1979 the SADF directed artillery fire against locations in Angola and Zambia from which insurgent rockets were suspected to have been launched.[198][199] This precipitated several artillery duels with the Zambian Army.[199] Special forces raids were launched to harass PLAN and MK by liquidating prominent members of those movements, destroying their offices and safehouses, and seizing valuable records stored at these sites.[200] One example was the Gaborone Raid, carried out in 1985, during which a South African special forces team crossed the border into Botswana and demolished four suspected MK safe houses, severely damaging another four.[200] Other types of special forces operations included the sabotage of economic infrastructure.[201] The SADF sabotaged infrastructure being used for the insurgents' war effort; for example, port facilities in southern Angola's Moçâmedes District, where Soviet arms were frequently offloaded for PLAN, as well as the railway line which facilitated their transport to PLAN headquarters in Lubango, were common targets.[202] Sabotage was also used as a pressure tactic when South Africa was negotiating with a host government to cease providing sanctuary to insurgent forces, as in the case of Operation Argon.[203] Successful sabotage actions of high-profile economic targets undermined a country's ability to negotiate from a position of strength, and made it likelier to accede to South African demands rather than risk the expense of further destruction and war.[203]

Also noteworthy were South African transnational espionage efforts, which included covert assassinations, kidnappings, and attempts to disrupt the overseas influence of anti-apartheid organisations. South African military intelligence agents were known to have abducted and killed anti-apartheid activists and others suspected of having ties to MK in London and Brussels.[204][205]

State security

During the 1980s the government, led by P.W. Botha, became increasingly preoccupied with security. It set up a powerful state security apparatus to "protect" the state against an anticipated upsurge in political violence that the reforms were expected to trigger. The 1980s became a period of considerable political unrest, with the government becoming increasingly dominated by Botha's circle of generals and police chiefs (known as securocrats), who managed the various States of Emergencies.[206]

Botha's years in power were marked also by numerous military interventions in the states bordering South Africa, as well as an extensive military and political campaign to eliminate SWAPO in Namibia. Within South Africa, meanwhile, vigorous police action and strict enforcement of security legislation resulted in hundreds of arrests and bans, and an effective end to the African National Congress' sabotage campaign.

The government punished political offenders brutally. 40,000 people annually were subjected to whipping as a form of punishment.[207] The vast majority had committed political offences and were lashed ten times for their crime.[208] If convicted of treason, a person could be hanged, and the government executed numerous political offenders in this way.[209]

As the 1980s progressed, more and more anti-apartheid organisations were formed and affiliated with the UDF. Led by the Reverend Allan Boesak and Albertina Sisulu, the UDF called for the government to abandon its reforms and instead abolish the apartheid system and eliminate the homelands completely.

State of emergency

Serious political violence was a prominent feature from 1985 to 1989, as Black townships became the focus of the struggle between anti-apartheid organisations and the Botha government. Throughout the 1980s, township people resisted apartheid by acting against the local issues that faced their particular communities. The focus of much of this resistance was against the local authorities and their leaders, who were seen to be supporting the government. By 1985, it had become the ANC's aim to make Black townships "ungovernable" (a term later replaced by "people's power") by means of rent boycotts and other militant action. Numerous township councils were overthrown or collapsed, to be replaced by unofficial popular organisations, often led by militant youth. People's courts were set up, and residents accused of being government agents were dealt extreme and occasionally lethal punishments. Black town councillors and policemen, and sometimes their families, were attacked with petrol bombs, beaten, and murdered by necklacing, where a burning tyre was placed around the victim's neck, after they were restrained by wrapping their wrists with barbed wire. This signature act of torture and murder was embraced by the ANC and its leaders.[citation needed]

On 20 July 1985, Botha declared a State of Emergency in 36 magisterial districts. Areas affected were the Eastern Cape, and the PWV region ("Pretoria, Witwatersrand, Vereeniging").[210] Three months later, the Western Cape was included. An increasing number of organisations were banned or listed (restricted in some way); many individuals had restrictions such as house arrest imposed on them. During this state of emergency, about 2,436 people were detained under the Internal Security Act.[211] This act gave police and the military sweeping powers. The government could implement curfews controlling the movement of people. The president could rule by decree without referring to the constitution or to parliament. It became a criminal offence to threaten someone verbally or possess documents that the government perceived to be threatening, to advise anyone to stay away from work or to oppose the government, and to disclose the name of anyone arrested under the State of Emergency until the government released that name, with up to ten years' imprisonment for these offences. Detention without trial became a common feature of the government's reaction to growing civil unrest and by 1988, 30,000 people had been detained.[212] The media was censored, thousands were arrested and many were interrogated and tortured.[213]

On 12 June 1986, four days before the tenth anniversary of the Soweto uprising, the state of emergency was extended to cover the whole country. The government amended the Public Security Act, including the right to declare "unrest" areas, allowing extraordinary measures to crush protests in these areas. Severe censorship of the press became a dominant tactic in the government's strategy and television cameras were banned from entering such areas. The state broadcaster, the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC), provided propaganda in support of the government. Media opposition to the system increased, supported by the growth of a pro-ANC underground press within South Africa.

In 1987, the State of Emergency was extended for another two years. Meanwhile, about 200,000 members of the National Union of Mineworkers commenced the longest strike (three weeks) in South African history. The year 1988 saw the banning of the activities of the UDF and other anti-apartheid organisations.

Much of the violence in the late-1980s and early-1990s was directed at the government, but a substantial amount was between the residents themselves. Many died in violence between members of Inkatha and the UDF-ANC faction. It was later proven that the government manipulated the situation by supporting one side or the other whenever it suited them. Government agents assassinated opponents within South Africa and abroad; they undertook cross-border army and air-force attacks on suspected ANC and PAC bases. The ANC and the PAC in return detonated bombs at restaurants, shopping centres and government buildings such as magistrates courts. Between 1960 and 1994, according to statistics from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, the Inkatha Freedom Party was responsible for 4,500 deaths, South African security forces were responsible for 2,700 deaths and the ANC was responsible for 1,300 deaths.[214]

The state of emergency continued until 1990 when it was lifted by State President F. W. de Klerk.

Final years of apartheid

Factors

Institutional racism

Apartheid developed from the racism of colonial factions and due to South Africa's "unique industrialisation".[215] The policies of industrialisation led to the segregation of and classing of people, which was "specifically developed to nurture early industry such as mining".[215] Cheap labour was the basis of the economy and this was taken from what the state classed as peasant groups and the migrants.[216] Furthermore, Philip Bonner highlights the "contradictory economic effects" as the economy did not have a manufacturing sector, therefore promoting short term profitability but limiting labour productivity and the size of local markets. This also led to its collapse as "Clarkes emphasises the economy could not provide and compete with foreign rivals as they failed to master cheap labour and complex chemistry".[217]

Economic contradictions

The contradictions[clarification needed] in the traditionally capitalist economy of the apartheid state led to considerable debate about racial policy, and division and conflicts in the central state.[218] To a large extent, the political ideology of apartheid had emerged from the colonisation of Africa by European powers which institutionalised racial discrimination and exercised a paternal philosophy of "civilising inferior natives."[218] Some scholars have argued that this can be reflected in Afrikaner Calvinism, with its parallel traditions of racialism;[219] for example, as early as 1933; the executive council of the Broederbond formulated a recommendation for mass segregation.[219]

Western influence

 
Anti-apartheid protest at South Africa House in London, 1989

External Western influence, arising from European experiences in colonisation, may be seen as a factor which greatly influenced political attitudes and ideology. Late twentieth-century South Africa was cited as an "unreconstructed example of western civilisation twisted by racism".[220]

In the 1960s, South Africa experienced economic growth second only to that of Japan.[221] Trade with Western countries grew, and investment from the United States, France, and the United Kingdom poured in.

In 1974, resistance to apartheid was encouraged by Portuguese withdrawal from Mozambique and Angola, after the 1974 Carnation Revolution. South African troops withdrew from Angola early in 1976, failing to prevent the MPLA from gaining power there, and Black students in South Africa celebrated.

The Mahlabatini Declaration of Faith, signed by Mangosuthu Buthelezi and Harry Schwarz in 1974, enshrined the principles of peaceful transition of power and equality for all. Its purpose was to provide a blueprint for South Africa by consent and racial peace in a multi-racial society, stressing opportunity for all, consultation, the federal concept, and a Bill of Rights. It caused a split in the United Party that ultimately realigned oppositional politics in South Africa with the formation of the Progressive Federal Party in 1977. The Declaration was the first of several such joint agreements by acknowledged Black and White political leaders in South Africa.

In 1978, the National Party Defence Minister, Pieter Willem Botha, became Prime Minister. His white minority regime worried about Soviet aid to revolutionaries in South Africa at the same time that South African economic growth had slowed. The South African Government noted that it was spending too much money to maintain segregated homelands created for Blacks, and the homelands were proving to be uneconomical.[222]

Nor was maintaining Blacks as third-class citizens working well. Black labour remained vital to the economy, and illegal Black labour unions were flourishing. Many Blacks remained too poor to contribute significantly to the economy through their purchasing power – although they composed more than 70% of the population. Botha's regime feared that an antidote was needed to prevent the Blacks' being attracted to Communism.[223]

In July 1979, the Nigerian Government alleged that the Shell-BP Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC) was selling Nigerian oil to South Africa, though there was little evidence or commercial logic for such sales.[224] The alleged sanctions-breaking was used to justify the seizure of some of BP's assets in Nigeria including their stake in SPDC, although it appears the real reasons were economic nationalism and domestic politics ahead of the Nigerian elections.[225] Many South Africans attended schools in Nigeria,[226] and Nelson Mandela acknowledged the role of Nigeria in the struggle against apartheid on several occasions.[227]

In the 1980s, anti-apartheid movements in the United States and Europe were gaining support for boycotts against South Africa, for the withdrawal of US companies from South Africa, and for release of imprisoned Nelson Mandela. South Africa was sinking to the bottom of the international community. Investment in South Africa was ending and an active policy of disinvestment had begun.

Tricameral parliament

In the early-1980s, Botha's National Party government started to recognise the inevitability of the need to reform the apartheid system.[228] Early reforms were driven by a combination of internal violence, international condemnation, changes within the National Party's constituency, and changing demographics – whites constituted only 16% of the total population, in comparison to 20% fifty years earlier.[229]

In 1983, a new constitution was passed implementing what was called the Tricameral Parliament, giving Coloureds and Indians voting rights and parliamentary representation in separate houses – the House of Assembly (178 members) for Whites, the House of Representatives (85 members) for Coloureds and the House of Delegates (45 members) for Indians.[230] Each House handled laws pertaining to its racial group's "own affairs", including health, education and other community issues.[231] All laws relating to "general affairs" (matters such as defence, industry, taxation and Black affairs) were handled by a Cabinet made up of representatives from all three houses. However, the White chamber had a large majority on this Cabinet, ensuring that effective control of the country remained in the hands of the White minority.[232][233] Blacks, although making up the majority of the population, were excluded from representation; they remained nominal citizens of their homelands.[234] The first Tricameral elections were largely boycotted by Coloured and Indian voters, amid widespread rioting.[235]

Reforms and contact with the ANC under Botha

Concerned over the popularity of Mandela, Botha denounced him as an arch-Marxist committed to violent revolution, but to appease Black opinion and nurture Mandela as a benevolent leader of Blacks,[222] the government transferred him from the maximum security Robben Island to the lower security Pollsmoor Prison just outside Cape Town; where prison life was more comfortable for him. The government allowed Mandela more visitors, including visits and interviews by foreigners, to let the world know that he was being treated well.[222]

Black homelands were declared nation-states and pass laws were abolished. Black labour unions were legitimised, the government recognised the right of Blacks to live in urban areas permanently and gave Blacks property rights there. Interest was expressed in rescinding the law against interracial marriage and also rescinding the law against sexual relations between different races, which was under ridicule abroad. The spending for Black schools increased, to one-seventh of what was spent per white child, up from on one-sixteenth in 1968. At the same time, attention was given to strengthening the effectiveness of the police apparatus.

In January 1985, Botha addressed the government's House of Assembly and stated that the government was willing to release Mandela on condition that Mandela pledge opposition to acts of violence to further political objectives. Mandela's reply was read in public by his daughter Zinzi – his first words distributed publicly since his sentence to prison 21 years earlier. Mandela described violence as the responsibility of the apartheid regime and said that with democracy there would be no need for violence. The crowd listening to the reading of his speech erupted in cheers and chants. This response helped to further elevate Mandela's status in the eyes of those, both internationally and domestically, who opposed apartheid.

Between 1986 and 1988, some petty apartheid laws were repealed, along with the pass laws.[236] Botha told White South Africans to "adapt or die"[237] and twice he wavered on the eve of what were billed as "rubicon" announcements of substantial reforms, although on both occasions he backed away from substantial changes. Ironically, these reforms served only to trigger intensified political violence through the remainder of the 1980s as more communities and political groups across the country joined the resistance movement. Botha's government stopped short of substantial reforms, such as lifting the ban on the ANC, PAC and SACP and other liberation organisations, releasing political prisoners, or repealing the foundation laws of grand apartheid. The government's stance was that they would not contemplate negotiating until those organisations "renounced violence".

By 1987, South Africa's economy was growing at one of the lowest rates in the world, and the ban on South African participation in international sporting events was frustrating many whites in South Africa. Examples of African states with Black leaders and White minorities existed in Kenya and Zimbabwe. Whispers of South Africa one day having a Black President sent more hardline whites into supporting right-wing political parties. Mandela was moved to a four-bedroom house of his own, with a swimming pool and shaded by fir trees, on a prison farm just outside of Cape Town. He had an unpublicised meeting with Botha. Botha impressed Mandela by walking forward, extending his hand and pouring Mandela's tea. The two had a friendly discussion, with Mandela comparing the African National Congress' rebellion with that of the Afrikaner rebellion and talking about everyone being brothers.

A number of clandestine meetings were held between the ANC-in-exile and various sectors of the internal struggle, such as women and educationalists. More overtly, a group of White intellectuals met the ANC in Senegal for talks known as the Dakar Conference.[238]

Presidency of F. W. de Klerk

 
de Klerk and Mandela in Davos, 1992

Early in 1989, Botha had a stroke; he was prevailed upon to resign in February 1989.[239] He was succeeded as president later that year by F. W. de Klerk. Despite his initial reputation as a conservative, de Klerk moved decisively towards negotiations to end the political stalemate in the country. Prior to his term in office, F. W. de Klerk had already experienced political success as a result of the power base he had built in the Transvaal. During this time, F. W. de Klerk served as chairman to the provincial National Party, which was in favour of the Apartheid regime. The transition of de Klerk's ideology regarding apartheid is seen clearly in his opening address to parliament on 2 February 1990. F. W. de Klerk announced that he would repeal discriminatory laws and lift the 30-year ban on leading anti-apartheid groups such as the African National Congress, the Pan Africanist Congress, the South African Communist Party (SACP) and the United Democratic Front. The Land Act was brought to an end. F. W. de Klerk also made his first public commitment to release Nelson Mandela, to return to press freedom and to suspend the death penalty. Media restrictions were lifted and political prisoners not guilty of common law crimes were released.

On 11 February 1990, Nelson Mandela was released from Victor Verster Prison after more than 27 years behind bars.

Having been instructed by the UN Security Council to end its long-standing involvement in South West Africa/Namibia, and in the face of military stalemate in Southern Angola, and an escalation in the size and cost of the combat with the Cubans, the Angolans, and SWAPO forces and the growing cost of the border war, South Africa negotiated a change of control; Namibia became independent on 21 March 1990.

Negotiations

Apartheid was dismantled in a series of negotiations from 1990 to 1991, culminating in a transitional period which resulted in the country's 1994 general election, the first in South Africa held with universal suffrage.

In 1990, negotiations were earnestly begun, with two meetings between the government and the ANC. The purpose of the negotiations was to pave the way for talks towards a peaceful transition towards majority rule. These meetings were successful in laying down the preconditions for negotiations, despite the considerable tensions still abounding within the country. Apartheid legislation was abolished in 1991.[2]

At the first meeting, the NP and ANC discussed the conditions for negotiations to begin. The meeting was held at Groote Schuur, the President's official residence. They released the Groote Schuur Minute, which said that before negotiations commenced political prisoners would be freed and all exiles allowed to return.

There were fears that the change of power would be violent. To avoid this, it was essential that a peaceful resolution between all parties be reached. In December 1991, the Convention for a Democratic South Africa (CODESA) began negotiations on the formation of a multiracial transitional government and a new constitution extending political rights to all groups. CODESA adopted a Declaration of Intent and committed itself to an "undivided South Africa".

Reforms and negotiations to end apartheid led to a backlash among the right-wing White opposition, leading to the Conservative Party winning a number of by-elections against NP candidates. De Klerk responded by calling a Whites-only referendum in March 1992 to decide whether negotiations should continue. 68% voted in favour, and the victory instilled in de Klerk and the government a lot more confidence, giving the NP a stronger position in negotiations.

When negotiations resumed in May 1992, under the tag of CODESA II, stronger demands were made. The ANC and the government could not reach a compromise on how power should be shared during the transition to democracy. The NP wanted to retain a strong position in a transitional government, and the power to change decisions made by parliament.

Persistent violence added to the tension during the negotiations. This was due mostly to the intense rivalry between the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) and the ANC and the eruption of some traditional tribal and local rivalries between the Zulu and Xhosa historical tribal affinities, especially in the Southern Natal provinces. Although Mandela and Buthelezi met to settle their differences, they could not stem the violence. One of the worst cases of ANC-IFP violence was the Boipatong massacre of 17 June 1992, when 200 IFP militants attacked the Gauteng township of Boipatong, killing 45. Witnesses said that the men had arrived in police vehicles, supporting claims that elements within the police and army contributed to the ongoing violence. Subsequent judicial inquiries found the evidence of the witnesses to be unreliable or discredited, and that there was no evidence of National Party or police involvement in the massacre. When de Klerk visited the scene of the incident he was initially warmly welcomed, but he was suddenly confronted by a crowd of protesters brandishing stones and placards. The motorcade sped from the scene as police tried to hold back the crowd. Shots were fired by the police, and the PAC stated that three of its supporters had been gunned down.[240] Nonetheless, the Boipatong massacre offered the ANC a pretext to engage in brinkmanship. Mandela argued that de Klerk, as head of state, was responsible for bringing an end to the bloodshed. He also accused the South African police of inciting the ANC-IFP violence. This formed the basis for ANC's withdrawal from the negotiations, and the CODESA forum broke down completely at this stage.

The Bisho massacre on 7 September 1992 brought matters to a head. The Ciskei Defence Force killed 29 people and injured 200 when they opened fire on ANC marchers demanding the reincorporation of the Ciskei homeland into South Africa. In the aftermath, Mandela and de Klerk agreed to meet to find ways to end the spiralling violence. This led to a resumption of negotiations.

Right-wing violence also added to the hostilities of this period. The assassination of Chris Hani on 10 April 1993 threatened to plunge the country into chaos. Hani, the popular General Secretary of the South African Communist Party (SACP), was assassinated in 1993 in Dawn Park in Johannesburg by Janusz Waluś, an anti-Communist Polish refugee who had close links to the White nationalist Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (AWB). Hani enjoyed widespread support beyond his constituency in the SACP and ANC and had been recognised as a potential successor to Mandela; his death brought forth protests throughout the country and across the international community, but ultimately proved a turning point, after which the main parties pushed for a settlement with increased determination.[241] On 25 June 1993, the AWB used an armoured vehicle to crash through the doors of the Kempton Park World Trade Centre where talks were still going ahead under the Negotiating Council, though this did not derail the process.

In addition to the continuing "black-on-black" violence, there were a number of attacks on white civilians by the PAC's military wing, the Azanian People's Liberation Army (APLA). The PAC was hoping to strengthen their standing by attracting the support of the angry, impatient youth. In the St James Church massacre on 25 July 1993, members of the APLA opened fire in a church in Cape Town, killing 11 members of the congregation and wounding 58.

In 1993, de Klerk and Mandela were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize "for their work for the peaceful termination of the apartheid regime, and for laying the foundations for a new democratic South Africa".[242]

Violence persisted right up to the 1994 general election. Lucas Mangope, leader of the Bophuthatswana homeland, declared that it would not take part in the elections. It had been decided that, once the temporary constitution had come into effect, the homelands would be incorporated into South Africa, but Mangope did not want this to happen. There were strong protests against his decision, leading to a coup d'état in Bophuthatswana carried out by the SDF on 10 March that deposed Mangope. AWB militants attempted to intervene in hopes of maintaining Mangope in power. Fighting alongside black paramilitaries loyal to Mangope they were unsuccessful, with 3 AWB militants being killed during this intervention, and harrowing images of the bloodshed shown on national television and in newspapers across the world.

Two days before the election, a car bomb exploded in Johannesburg, killing nine people.[243][244] The day before the elections, another one went off, injuring 13. At midnight on 26–27 April 1994 the previous "orange white blue" flag adopted in 1928 was lowered, and the old (now co-official) national anthem Die Stem ("The Call") was sung, followed by the raising of the new Y shaped flag and singing of the other co-official anthem, Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika ("God Bless Africa").

Since 2019, publicly displaying the 1928–1994 flag in South Africa is banned and it is classified as hate speech.[245]

1994 election

 
The new multicoloured flag of South Africa adopted in 1994 to mark the end of Apartheid

The election was held on 27 April 1994 and went off peacefully throughout the country as 20,000,000 South Africans cast their votes. There was some difficulty in organising the voting in rural areas, but people waited patiently for many hours to vote amidst a palpable feeling of goodwill. An extra day was added to give everyone the chance. International observers agreed that the elections were free and fair.[246] The European Union's report on the election compiled at the end of May 1994, published two years after the election, criticised the Independent Electoral Commission's lack of preparedness for the polls, the shortages of voting materials at many voting stations, and the absence of effective safeguards against fraud in the counting process. In particular, it expressed disquiet that "no international observers had been allowed to be present at the crucial stage of the count when party representatives negotiated over disputed ballots." This meant that both the electorate and the world were "simply left to guess at the way the final result was achieved."[247]

The ANC won 62.65% of the vote,[248][249] less than the 66.7 percent that would have allowed it to rewrite the constitution. 252 of the 400 seats went to members of the African National Congress. The NP captured most of the White and Coloured votes and became the official opposition party. As well as deciding the national government, the election decided the provincial governments, and the ANC won in seven of the nine provinces, with the NP winning in the Western Cape and the IFP in KwaZulu-Natal. On 10 May 1994, Mandela was sworn in as the new President of South Africa. The Government of National Unity was established, its cabinet made up of 12 ANC representatives, six from the NP, and three from the IFP. Thabo Mbeki and de Klerk were made deputy presidents.

The anniversary of the elections, 27 April, is celebrated as a public holiday known as Freedom Day.

Contrition

The following individuals, who had previously supported apartheid, made public apologies:

  • F. W. de Klerk: "I apologise in my capacity as leader of the NP to the millions who suffered wrenching disruption of forced removals; who suffered the shame of being arrested for pass law offences; who over the decades suffered the indignities and humiliation of racial discrimination."[250] In a video released after his death in 2021, he apologised one last time for apartheid, both on a personal level and in his capacity as former president.[251]
  • Marthinus van Schalkwyk: "The National Party brought development to a section of South Africa, but also brought suffering through a system grounded on injustice", in a statement shortly after the National Party voted to disband.[252][253]
  • Adriaan Vlok washed the feet of apartheid victim Frank Chikane in an act of apology for the wrongs of the Apartheid regime.[254]
  • Leon Wessels: "I am now more convinced than ever that apartheid was a terrible mistake that blighted our land. South Africans did not listen to the laughing and the crying of each other. I am sorry that I had been so hard of hearing for so long".[255]

International legal, political, and social uses of the term

The South African experience has given rise to the term "apartheid" being used in a number of contexts other than the South African system of racial segregation. For example: The "crime of apartheid" is defined in international law, including in the 2007 law that created the International Criminal Court (ICC), which names it as a crime against humanity. Even before the creation of the ICC, the International Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid of the United Nations, which came into force in 1976, enshrined into law the "crime of apartheid."[256]

The term apartheid has been adopted by Palestinian rights advocates and by leading Israeli and other human rights organizations, referring to occupation in the West Bank, legal treatment of illegal settlements and the West Bank barrier.[257][258][259][260] Within the pre-1967 Israeli borders, Palestinian rights advocates have raised concern over discriminatory housing planning against Palestinian citizens of Israel, likening it to racial segregation.[261]

Social apartheid is segregation on the basis of class or economic status. For example, social apartheid in Brazil refers to the various aspects of economic inequality in Brazil. Social apartheid may fall into various categories. Economic and social discrimination because of gender is sometimes referred to as gender apartheid. Separation of people according to their religion, whether pursuant to official laws or pursuant to social expectations, is sometimes referred to as religious apartheid. Communities in northern Ireland for example, are often housed based on religion in a situation which has been described as "self imposed apartheid".[262] The treatment of non-Muslims and women by the Saudi rulers has also been called apartheid.

The concept in occupational therapy that individuals, groups and communities can be deprived of meaningful and purposeful activity through segregation due to social, political, economic factors and for social status reasons, such as race, disability, age, gender, sexuality, religious preference, political preference, or creed, or due to war conditions, is sometimes known as occupational apartheid.

A 2007 book by Harriet A. Washington on the history of medical experimentation on African Americans is entitled Medical Apartheid.

The disproportionate management and control of the world's economy and resources by countries and companies of the Global North has been referred to as global apartheid. A related phenomenon is technological apartheid, a term used to describe the denial of modern technologies to Third World or developing nations. The last two examples use the term "apartheid" less literally since they are centered on relations between countries, not on disparate treatment of social populations within a country or political jurisdiction.

See also

Notes and references

Annotations

  1. ^ The Population Registration Act, 1950, the basis for most apartheid legislation, was formally abolished in 1991,[1][2] although the country's first non-racial government was not established until multiracial elections held under a universal franchise in 1994.[3]

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Bibliography

  • Naidoo, Josephine C.; Rajab, Devi Moodley (1 September 2005). "The Dynamics of Oppression". Psychology and Developing Societies. 17 (2): 139–159. doi:10.1177/097133360501700204. S2CID 145782935.

Further reading

  • Bernstein, Hilda. For their Triumphs and for their Tears: Women in Apartheid South Africa. International Defence and Aid Fund for Southern Africa. London, 1985.
  • Boswell, Barbara (2017). "Overcoming the 'daily bludgeoning by apartheid': Black South African women writers, agency, and space". African Identities. 15 (4): 414–427. doi:10.1080/14725843.2017.1319754. S2CID 151467416.
  • Davenport, T. R. H. South Africa. A Modern History. MacMillan, 1977.
  • Davies, Rob, Dan O'Meara and Sipho Dlamini. The Struggle For South Africa: A reference guide to movements, organisations and institution. Volume Two. London: Zed Books, 1984
  • De Klerk, F. W. The last Trek. A New Beginning. MacMillan, 1998.
  • Du Pre, R. H. Separate but Unequal – The 'Coloured' People of South Africa – A Political History.. Jonathan Ball, 1994.
  • Eiselen, W. W. N. The Meaning of Apartheid, Race Relations, 15 (3), 1948.
  • Federal Research Division. South Africa – a country study. Library of Congress, 1996.
  • Giliomee, Herman The Afrikaners. Hurst & Co., 2003.
  • Goodman, Peter S. (24 October 2017). "End of Apartheid in South Africa? Not in Economic Terms". The New York Times. from the original on 15 March 2018. Retrieved 20 March 2018. Political liberation has yet to translate into material gains for blacks. As one woman said, 'I've gone from a shack to a shack.'
  • Hexham, Irving, The Irony of Apartheid: The Struggle for National Independence of Afrikaner Calvinism against British Imperialism. Edwin Mellen, 1981.
  • Keable, Ken London Recruits: The Secret War Against Apartheid. Pontypool, UK: Merlin Press. 2012.
  • Lapchick, Richard and Urdang, Stephanie. Oppression and Resistance. The Struggle of Women in Southern Africa. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. 1982.
  • Louw, P. Eric. The Rise, Fall and Legacy of Apartheid. Praeger, 2004.
  • Makdisi, Saree (2018). "Apartheid / Apartheid / [ ]". Critical Inquiry. 44 (2): 304–330. doi:10.1086/695377. S2CID 224798450.
  • Meredith, Martin. In the name of apartheid: South Africa in the postwar period. 1st US ed. New York: Harper & Row, 1988.
  • Meredith, Martin. The State of Africa. The Free Press, 2005.
  • Merrett, Christopher (2005). "Sport and Apartheid". History Compass. 3: **. doi:10.1111/j.1478-0542.2005.00165.x.
  • Morris, Michael. Apartheid: An illustrated history. Jonathan Ball Publishers. Johannesburg and Cape Town, 2012.
  • Newbury, Darren. Defiant Images: Photography and Apartheid South Africa, University of South Africa (UNISA) Press, 2009.
  • Noah, Trevor. Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood, Random House 2016, ISBN 978-0399588174.
  • Suze, Anthony (2010). "The untold story of Robben Island: Sports and the anti-Apartheid movement". Sport in Society. 13: 36–42. doi:10.1080/17430430903377706. S2CID 144871273.
  • Terreblanche, S. A History of Inequality in South Africa, 1652–2002. University of Natal Press, 2003.
  • Visser, Pippa. In search of history. Oxford University Press Southern Africa, 2003.
  • Williams, Michael. Book: Crocodile Burning. 1994
  • Memorandum van die Volksraad, 2016

External links

  • Apartheid: 20th Century Slavery 1971 United Nations Report on Apartheid.
  • Byrnes, Mark (10 December 2010). "Life in Apartheid-Era South Africa". Bloomberg.com. – Includes many photos
  • Understanding Apartheid Learner's Book 8 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine – Series of PDFs published by the Apartheid Museum
  • Volk, faith and fatherland: The security threat posed by the white right, by Martin Schönteich and Henri Boshoff, 2003
  • Freedom Charter 1955 – About the Freedom Charter (SA History online)
  • – Cape Town's District Six Museum, which examines forced removals
  • The International Centre for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) provides resources on the legacy of apartheid and transitional justice in South Africa post-apartheid.
  • "Struggles for Freedom: Southern Africa". JSTOR. Collection of primary source historical materials about apartheid South Africa
  • Apartheid archives subject guide – London University

apartheid, this, article, about, apartheid, south, africa, other, uses, disambiguation, ɑːr, especially, south, african, english, ɑːr, afrikaans, aˈpartɦɛit, transl, separateness, aparthood, system, institutionalised, racial, segregation, that, existed, south,. This article is about apartheid in South Africa For other uses see Apartheid disambiguation Apartheid e ˈ p ɑːr t h aɪ t especially South African English e ˈ p ɑːr t h eɪ t Afrikaans aˈpartɦɛit transl separateness lit aparthood was a system of institutionalised racial segregation that existed in South Africa and South West Africa now Namibia from 1948 to the early 1990s note 1 Apartheid was characterised by an authoritarian political culture based on baasskap lit boss hood or boss ship which ensured that South Africa was dominated politically socially and economically through minoritarianism by the nation s dominant minority white population 4 According to this system of social stratification white citizens had the highest status followed by Indians and Coloureds then black Africans 4 The economic legacy and social effects of apartheid continue to the present day particularly inequality 5 6 7 Reserved for the sole use of members of the white race group sign in English Afrikaans Zulu at a beach in Durban 1989 Broadly speaking apartheid was delineated into petty apartheid which entailed the segregation of public facilities and social events and grand apartheid which dictated housing and employment opportunities by race 8 The first apartheid law was the Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act 1949 followed closely by the Immorality Amendment Act of 1950 which made it illegal for most South African citizens to marry or pursue sexual relationships across racial lines 9 The Population Registration Act 1950 classified all South Africans into one of four racial groups based on appearance known ancestry socioeconomic status and cultural lifestyle Black White Coloured and Indian the last two of which included several sub classifications 10 Places of residence were determined by racial classification 9 Between 1960 and 1983 3 5 million black Africans were removed from their homes and forced into segregated neighbourhoods as a result of apartheid legislation in some of the largest mass evictions in modern history 11 Most of these targeted removals were intended to restrict the black population to ten designated tribal homelands also known as bantustans four of which became nominally independent states 9 The government announced that relocated persons would lose their South African citizenship as they were absorbed into the bantustans 8 Apartheid sparked significant international and domestic opposition resulting in some of the most influential global social movements of the 20th century 12 It was the target of frequent condemnation in the United Nations and brought about extensive international sanctions during apartheid including arms embargoes and economic sanctions on South Africa 13 During the 1970s and 1980s internal resistance to apartheid became increasingly militant prompting brutal crackdowns by the National Party ruling government and protracted sectarian violence that left thousands dead or in detention 14 Some reforms of the apartheid system were undertaken including allowing for Indian and Coloured political representation in parliament but these measures failed to appease most activist groups 15 Between 1987 and 1993 the National Party entered into bilateral negotiations with the African National Congress ANC the leading anti apartheid political movement for ending segregation and introducing majority rule 15 16 In 1990 prominent ANC figures such as Nelson Mandela were released from prison 17 Apartheid legislation was repealed on 17 June 1991 2 leading to multiracial elections in April 1994 18 Contents 1 Precursors 2 Institution 2 1 Election of 1948 2 2 Legislation 2 3 Disenfranchisement of Coloured voters 2 4 Division among whites 3 Homeland system 3 1 International recognition of the Bantustans 3 2 Forced removals 4 Society during apartheid 4 1 Coloured classification 4 2 Education 4 3 Women under apartheid 4 4 Sport under apartheid 4 4 1 Professional boxing 4 5 Asians during apartheid 4 6 Conservatism 5 Internal resistance 6 International relations during apartheid 6 1 Commonwealth 6 2 United Nations 6 3 Catholic Church 6 4 Organisation for African Unity 6 5 Outward looking policy 6 6 Sports and culture 6 6 1 Beginning 6 6 2 Isolation 6 6 3 Verwoerd years 6 6 4 Vorster years 6 6 5 Cultural boycott 6 7 Western influence 6 8 Effect of the Cold War 6 8 1 Total Onslaught 6 8 2 Israeli arms sales 6 8 3 Foreign military operations 7 State security 7 1 State of emergency 8 Final years of apartheid 8 1 Factors 8 1 1 Institutional racism 8 1 2 Economic contradictions 8 1 3 Western influence 8 2 Tricameral parliament 8 3 Reforms and contact with the ANC under Botha 8 4 Presidency of F W de Klerk 8 5 Negotiations 8 6 1994 election 9 Contrition 10 International legal political and social uses of the term 11 See also 12 Notes and references 12 1 Annotations 12 2 References 13 Bibliography 14 Further reading 15 External linksPrecursors EditMain articles History of South Africa 1815 1910 and History of South Africa 1910 1948 Apartheid is an Afrikaans 19 word meaning separateness or the state of being apart literally apart hood from the Afrikaans suffix heid 20 21 Its first recorded use was in 1929 9 Racial discrimination and inequality against blacks in South Africa dates to the beginning of large scale European colonization of South Africa with the Dutch East India Company s establishment of a trading post in the Cape of Good Hope in 1652 which eventually expanded into the Dutch Cape Colony The company began the Khoikhoi Dutch Wars in which it displaced the local Khoikhoi people replaced them with farms worked by white settlers and imported black slaves from across the Dutch Empire 22 In the days of slavery slaves required passes to travel away from their masters In 1797 the Landdrost and Heemraden local officials of Swellendam and Graaff Reinet extended pass laws beyond slaves and ordained that all Khoikhoi designated as Hottentots moving about the country for any purpose should carry passes 23 This was confirmed by the British Colonial government in 1809 by the Hottentot Proclamation which decreed that if a Khoikhoi were to move they would need a pass from their master or a local official 23 Ordinance No 49 of 1828 decreed that prospective black immigrants were to be granted passes for the sole purpose of seeking work 23 These passes were to be issued for Coloureds and Khoikhoi but not for other Africans who were still forced to carry passes During the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars the British Empire captured and annexed the Dutch Cape Colony 24 Under the 1806 Cape Articles of Capitulation the new British colonial rulers were required to respect previous legislation enacted under Roman Dutch law 25 and this led to a separation of the law in South Africa from English Common Law and a high degree of legislative autonomy The governors and assemblies that governed the legal process in the various colonies of South Africa were launched on a different and independent legislative path from the rest of the British Empire The United Kingdom s Slavery Abolition Act 1833 abolished slavery throughout the British Empire and overrode the Cape Articles of Capitulation To comply with the act the South African legislation was expanded to include Ordinance 1 in 1835 which effectively changed the status of slaves to indentured labourers This was followed by Ordinance 3 in 1848 which introduced an indenture system for Xhosa that was little different from slavery The various South African colonies passed legislation throughout the rest of the 19th century to limit the freedom of unskilled workers to increase the restrictions on indentured workers and to regulate the relations between the races The discoveries of diamonds and gold in South Africa also raised racial inequality between whites and blacks 26 In the Cape Colony which previously had a liberal and multi racial constitution and a system of Cape Qualified Franchise open to men of all races the Franchise and Ballot Act of 1892 raised the property franchise qualification and added an educational element disenfranchising a disproportionate number of the Cape s non white voters 27 and the Glen Grey Act of 1894 instigated by the government of Prime Minister Cecil Rhodes limited the amount of land Africans could hold Similarly in Natal the Natal Legislative Assembly Bill of 1894 deprived Indians of the right to vote 28 In 1896 the South African Republic brought in two pass laws requiring Africans to carry a badge Only those employed by a master were permitted to remain on the Rand and those entering a labour district needed a special pass 29 During the Second Boer War the British Empire used racial exploitation of blacks as a cause for its war against the Boer republics However the peace negotiations for the Treaty of Vereeniging demanded the just predominance of the white race in South Africa as a precondition for the Boer republics unifying with the British Empire 30 In 1905 the General Pass Regulations Act denied blacks the vote and limited them to fixed areas 31 and in 1906 the Asiatic Registration Act of the Transvaal Colony required all Indians to register and carry passes 32 Beginning in 1906 the South African Native Affairs Commission under Godfrey Lagden began implementing a more openly segregationist policy towards nonwhites 33 The latter was repealed by the British government but re enacted in 1908 In 1910 the Union of South Africa was created as a self governing dominion which continued the legislative program the South Africa Act 1910 enfranchised white people giving them complete political control over all other racial groups while removing the right of black people to sit in parliament 34 the Native Land Act 1913 prevented blacks except those in the Cape from buying land outside reserves 34 the Natives in Urban Areas Bill 1918 was designed to force black people into locations 35 the Urban Areas Act 1923 introduced residential segregation and provided cheap labour for industry led by white people the Colour Bar Act 1926 prevented black mine workers from practicing skilled trades the Native Administration Act 1927 made the British Crown rather than paramount chiefs the supreme head over all African affairs 36 better source needed the Native Land and Trust Act 1936 complemented the 1913 Native Land Act and in the same year the Representation of Natives Act removed previous black voters from the Cape voters roll and allowed them to elect three whites to Parliament 37 better source needed The United Party government of Jan Smuts began to move away from the rigid enforcement of segregationist laws during World War II but faced growing opposition from Afrikaner nationalists who wanted stricter segregation 38 39 Post war one of the first pieces of segregating legislation enacted by Smuts government was the Asiatic Land Tenure Bill 1946 which banned land sales to Indians and Indian descendent South Africans 40 The same year the government established the Fagan Commission Amid fears integration would eventually lead to racial assimilation the Opposition Herenigde Nasionale Party HNP established the Sauer Commission to investigate the effects of the United Party s policies The commission concluded that integration would bring about a loss of personality for all racial groups The HNP incorporated the commission s findings into its campaign platform for the 1948 South African general election which it won citation needed Institution EditElection of 1948 Edit Main article South African general election 1948 Daniel Francois Malan the first apartheid era prime minister 1948 1954 South Africa had allowed social custom and law to govern the consideration of multiracial affairs and of the allocation in racial terms of access to economic social and political status 41 Most white South Africans regardless of their own differences accepted the prevailing pattern citation needed Nevertheless by 1948 it remained apparent that there were gaps in the social structure whether legislated or otherwise concerning the rights and opportunities of nonwhites The rapid economic development of World War II attracted black migrant workers in large numbers to chief industrial centres where they compensated for the wartime shortage of white labour However this escalated rate of black urbanisation went unrecognised by the South African government which failed to accommodate the influx with parallel expansion in housing or social services 41 Overcrowding increasing crime rates and disillusionment resulted urban blacks came to support a new generation of leaders influenced by the principles of self determination and popular freedoms enshrined in such statements as the Atlantic Charter Black political organizations and leaders such as Alfred Xuma James Mpanza the African National Congress and the Council of Non European Trade Unions began demanding political rights land reform and the right to unionise 42 Whites reacted negatively to the changes allowing the Herenigde Nasionale Party or simply the National Party to convince a large segment of the voting bloc that the impotence of the United Party in curtailing the evolving position of nonwhites indicated that the organisation had fallen under the influence of Western liberals 41 Many Afrikaners resented what they perceived as disempowerment by an underpaid black workforce and the superior economic power and prosperity of white English speakers 43 Smuts as a strong advocate of the United Nations lost domestic support when South Africa was criticised for its colour bar and the continued mandate of South West Africa by other UN member states 44 Afrikaner nationalists proclaimed that they offered the voters a new policy to ensure continued white domination 45 This policy was initially expounded from a theory drafted by Hendrik Verwoerd and was presented to the National Party by the Sauer Commission 41 It called for a systematic effort to organise the relations rights and privileges of the races as officially defined through a series of parliamentary acts and administrative decrees Segregation had thus far been pursued only in major matters such as separate schools and local society rather than law had been depended upon to enforce most separation it should now be extended to everything 41 The commission s goal was to completely remove blacks from areas designated for whites including cities with the exception of temporary migrant labor Blacks would then be encouraged to create their own political units in land reserved for them 46 The party gave this policy a name apartheid Apartheid was to be the basic ideological and practical foundation of Afrikaner politics for the next quarter of a century 45 The National Party s election platform stressed that apartheid would preserve a market for white employment in which nonwhites could not compete On the issues of black urbanisation the regulation of nonwhite labour influx control social security farm tariffs and nonwhite taxation the United Party s policy remained contradictory and confused 44 Its traditional bases of support not only took mutually exclusive positions but found themselves increasingly at odds with each other Smuts reluctance to consider South African foreign policy against the mounting tensions of the Cold War also stirred up discontent while the nationalists promised to purge the state and public service of communist sympathisers 44 First to desert the United Party were Afrikaner farmers who wished to see a change in influx control due to problems with squatters as well as higher prices for their maize and other produce in the face of the mineowners demand for cheap food policies Always identified with the affluent and capitalist the party also failed to appeal to its working class constituents 44 Populist rhetoric allowed the National Party to sweep eight constituencies in the mining and industrial centres of the Witwatersrand and five more in Pretoria Barring the predominantly English speaking landowner electorate of the Natal the United Party was defeated in almost every rural district Its urban losses in the nation s most populous province the Transvaal proved equally devastating 44 As the voting system was disproportionately weighted in favour of rural constituencies and the Transvaal in particular the 1948 election catapulted the Herenigde Nasionale Party from a small minority party to a commanding position with an eight vote parliamentary lead 47 48 Daniel Francois Malan became the first nationalist prime minister with the aim of implementing the apartheid philosophy and silencing liberal opposition 41 When the National Party came to power in 1948 there were factional differences in the party about the implementation of systemic racial segregation The baasskap white domination or supremacist faction which was the dominant faction in the NP and state institutions favoured systematic segregation but also favoured the participation of black Africans in the economy with black labour controlled to advance the economic gains of Afrikaners A second faction were the purists who believed in vertical segregation in which blacks and whites would be entirely separated with blacks living in native reserves with separate political and economic structures which they believed would entail severe short term pain but would also lead to independence of white South Africa from black labour in the long term A third faction which included Hendrik Verwoerd sympathised with the purists but allowed for the use of black labour while implementing the purist goal of vertical separation 49 Verwoerd would refer to this policy as a policy of good neighbourliness as a means of justifying such segregation 50 Legislation Edit Main article Apartheid legislation Hendrik Verwoerd minister of native affairs 1950 1958 and prime minister 1958 1966 earned the nickname Architect of Apartheid from his large role in creating legislation NP leaders argued that South Africa did not comprise a single nation but was made up of four distinct racial groups white black Coloured and Indian Such groups were split into 13 nations or racial federations White people encompassed the English and Afrikaans language groups the black populace was divided into ten such groups The state passed laws that paved the way for grand apartheid which was centred on separating races on a large scale by compelling people to live in separate places defined by race This strategy was in part adopted from left over British rule that separated different racial groups after they took control of the Boer republics in the Anglo Boer war This created the black only townships or locations where blacks were relocated to their own towns As the NP government s minister of native affairs from 1950 Hendrik Verwoerd had a significant role in crafting such laws which led to him being regarded as the Architect of Apartheid 51 50 52 In addition petty apartheid laws were passed The principal apartheid laws were as follows 53 The first grand apartheid law was the Population Registration Act of 1950 which formalised racial classification and introduced an identity card for all persons over the age of 18 specifying their racial group 54 Official teams or boards were established to come to a conclusion on those people whose race was unclear 55 This caused difficulty especially for Coloured people separating their families when members were allocated different races 56 The second pillar of grand apartheid was the Group Areas Act of 1950 57 Until then most settlements had people of different races living side by side This Act put an end to diverse areas and determined where one lived according to race Each race was allotted its own area which was used in later years as a basis of forced removal 58 The Prevention of Illegal Squatting Act of 1951 allowed the government to demolish black shanty town slums and forced white employers to pay for the construction of housing for those black workers who were permitted to reside in cities otherwise reserved for whites 59 The Native Laws Amendment Act 1952 centralised and tightened pass laws so that blacks could not stay in urban areas longer than 72 hours without a permit 60 The Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act of 1949 prohibited marriage between persons of different races and the Immorality Act of 1950 made sexual relations with a person of a different race a criminal offence Under the Reservation of Separate Amenities Act of 1953 municipal grounds could be reserved for a particular race creating among other things separate beaches buses hospitals schools and universities Signboards such as whites only applied to public areas even including park benches 61 Black South Africans were provided with services greatly inferior to those of whites and to a lesser extent to those of Indian and Coloured people 62 Further laws had the aim of suppressing resistance especially armed resistance to apartheid The Suppression of Communism Act of 1950 banned the Communist Party of South Africa and any party subscribing to Communism The act defined Communism and its aims so sweepingly that anyone who opposed government policy risked being labelled as a Communist Since the law specifically stated that Communism aimed to disrupt racial harmony it was frequently used to gag opposition to apartheid Disorderly gatherings were banned as were certain organisations that were deemed threatening to the government It also empowered the Ministry of Justice to impose banning orders 63 After the Defiance Campaign the government used the act for the mass arrests and banning of leaders of dissent groups such as the African National Congress ANC the South African Indian Congress SAIC and the South African Congress of Trade Unions SACTU After the release of the Freedom Charter 156 leaders of these groups were charged in the 1956 Treason Trial It established censorship of film literature and the media under the Customs and Excise Act 1955 and the Official Secrets Act 1956 The same year the Native Administration Act 1956 allowed the government to banish blacks 63 The Bantu Authorities Act of 1951 created separate government structures for blacks and whites and was the first piece of legislation to support the government s plan of separate development in the bantustans The Bantu Education Act 1953 established a separate education system for blacks emphasizing African culture and vocational training under the Ministry of Native Affairs and defunded most mission schools 64 The Promotion of Black Self Government Act of 1959 entrenched the NP policy of nominally independent homelands for blacks So called self governing Bantu units were proposed which would have devolved administrative powers with the promise later of autonomy and self government It also abolished the seats of white representatives of black South Africans and removed from the rolls the few blacks still qualified to vote The Bantu Investment Corporation Act of 1959 set up a mechanism to transfer capital to the homelands to create employment there Legislation of 1967 allowed the government to stop industrial development in white cities and redirect such development to the homelands The Black Homeland Citizenship Act of 1970 marked a new phase in the Bantustan strategy It changed the status of blacks to citizens of one of the ten autonomous territories The aim was to ensure a demographic majority of white people within South Africa by having all ten Bantustans achieve full independence Interracial contact in sport was frowned upon but there were no segregatory sports laws The government tightened pass laws compelling blacks to carry identity documents to prevent the immigration of blacks from other countries To reside in a city blacks had to be in employment there Until 1956 women were for the most part excluded from these pass requirements as attempts to introduce pass laws for women were met with fierce resistance 65 Disenfranchisement of Coloured voters Edit Main article Coloured vote constitutional crisis Cape Coloured children in Bonteheuwel Annual per capita personal income by race group in South Africa relative to white levels In 1950 D F Malan announced the NP s intention to create a Coloured Affairs Department 66 J G Strijdom Malan s successor as Prime Minister moved to strip voting rights from black and Coloured residents of the Cape Province The previous government had introduced the Separate Representation of Voters Bill into Parliament in 1951 turning it to be an Act on 18 June 1951 however four voters G Harris W D Franklin W D Collins and Edgar Deane challenged its validity in court with support from the United Party 67 The Cape Supreme Court upheld the act but reversed by the Appeal Court finding the act invalid because a two thirds majority in a joint sitting of both Houses of Parliament was needed to change the entrenched clauses of the Constitution 68 The government then introduced the High Court of Parliament Bill 1952 which gave Parliament the power to overrule decisions of the court 69 The Cape Supreme Court and the Appeal Court declared this invalid too 70 In 1955 the Strijdom government increased the number of judges in the Appeal Court from five to 11 and appointed pro Nationalist judges to fill the new places 71 In the same year they introduced the Senate Act which increased the Senate from 49 seats to 89 72 Adjustments were made such that the NP controlled 77 of these seats 73 The parliament met in a joint sitting and passed the Separate Representation of Voters Act in 1956 which transferred Coloured voters from the common voters roll in the Cape to a new Coloured voters roll 74 Immediately after the vote the Senate was restored to its original size The Senate Act was contested in the Supreme Court but the recently enlarged Appeal Court packed with government supporting judges upheld the act and also the Act to remove Coloured voters 75 The 1956 law allowed Coloureds to elect four people to Parliament but a 1969 law abolished those seats and stripped Coloureds of their right to vote Since Indians had never been allowed to vote this resulted in whites being the sole enfranchised group A 2016 study in The Journal of Politics suggests that disenfranchisement in South Africa had a significant negative effect on basic service delivery to the disenfranchised 76 Division among whites Edit Before South Africa became a republic in 1961 politics among white South Africans was typified by the division between the mainly Afrikaner pro republic conservative and the largely English anti republican liberal sentiments 77 with the legacy of the Boer War still a factor for some people Once South Africa became a republic Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd called for improved relations and greater accord between people of British descent and the Afrikaners 78 He claimed that the only difference was between those in favour of apartheid and those against it The ethnic division would no longer be between Afrikaans and English speakers but between blacks and whites citation needed Most Afrikaners supported the notion of unanimity of white people to ensure their safety White voters of British descent were divided Many had opposed a republic leading to a majority no vote in Natal 79 Later some of them recognised the perceived need for white unity convinced by the growing trend of decolonisation elsewhere in Africa which concerned them British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan s Wind of Change speech left the British faction feeling that the United Kingdom had abandoned them 80 The more conservative English speakers supported Verwoerd 81 others were troubled by the severing of ties with the UK and remained loyal to the Crown 82 They were displeased by having to choose between British and South African nationalities Although Verwoerd tried to bond these different blocs the subsequent voting illustrated only a minor swell of support 83 indicating that a great many English speakers remained apathetic and that Verwoerd had not succeeded in uniting the white population Homeland system EditMain article Bantustan Map of the 20 bantustans in South Africa and South West Africa Under the homeland system the government attempted to divide South Africa and South West Africa into a number of separate states each of which was supposed to develop into a separate nation state for a different ethnic group 84 Territorial separation was hardly a new institution There were for example the reserves created under the British government in the nineteenth century Under apartheid 13 percent of the land was reserved for black homelands a small amount relative to its total population and generally in economically unproductive areas of the country The Tomlinson Commission of 1954 justified apartheid and the homeland system but stated that additional land ought to be given to the homelands a recommendation that was not carried out 85 When Verwoerd became Prime Minister in 1958 the policy of separate development came into being with the homeland structure as one of its cornerstones Verwoerd came to believe in the granting of independence to these homelands The government justified its plans on the ostensible basis that the government s policy is therefore not a policy of discrimination on the grounds of race or colour but a policy of differentiation on the ground of nationhood of different nations granting to each self determination within the borders of their homelands hence this policy of separate development 86 Under the homelands system blacks would no longer be citizens of South Africa becoming citizens of the independent homelands who worked in South Africa as foreign migrant labourers on temporary work permits In 1958 the Promotion of Black Self Government Act was passed and border industries and the Bantu Investment Corporation were established to promote economic development and the provision of employment in or near the homelands Many black South Africans who had never resided in their identified homeland were forcibly removed from the cities to the homelands The vision of a South Africa divided into multiple ethnostates appealed to the reform minded Afrikaner intelligentsia and it provided a more coherent philosophical and moral framework for the National Party s policies while also providing a veneer of intellectual respectability to the controversial policy of so called baasskap 87 88 89 Rural area in Ciskei one of the four nominally independent homelands In total 20 homelands were allocated to ethnic groups ten in South Africa proper and ten in South West Africa Of these 20 homelands 19 were classified as black while one Basterland was set aside for a sub group of Coloureds known as Basters who are closely related to Afrikaners Four of the homelands were declared independent by the South African government Transkei in 1976 Bophuthatswana in 1977 Venda in 1979 and Ciskei in 1981 known as the TBVC states Once a homeland was granted its nominal independence its designated citizens had their South African citizenship revoked and replaced with citizenship in their homeland These people were then issued passports instead of passbooks Citizens of the nominally autonomous homelands also had their South African citizenship circumscribed meaning they were no longer legally considered South African 90 The South African government attempted to draw an equivalence between their view of black citizens of the homelands and the problems which other countries faced through entry of illegal immigrants International recognition of the Bantustans Edit Bantustans within the borders of South Africa and South West Africa were classified by degree of nominal self rule 6 were non self governing 10 were self governing and 4 were independent In theory self governing Bantustans had control over many aspects of their internal functioning but were not yet sovereign nations Independent Bantustans Transkei Bophutatswana Venda and Ciskei also known as the TBVC states were intended to be fully sovereign In reality they had no significant economic infrastructure and with few exceptions encompassed swaths of disconnected territory This meant all the Bantustans were little more than puppet states controlled by South Africa Throughout the existence of the independent Bantustans South Africa remained the only country to recognise their independence Nevertheless internal organisations of many countries as well as the South African government lobbied for their recognition For example upon the foundation of Transkei the Swiss South African Association encouraged the Swiss government to recognise the new state In 1976 leading up to a United States House of Representatives resolution urging the President to not recognise Transkei the South African government intensely lobbied lawmakers to oppose the bill 91 Each TBVC state extended recognition to the other independent Bantustans while South Africa showed its commitment to the notion of TBVC sovereignty by building embassies in the TBVC capitals Forced removals Edit See also Group Areas Act and Abolition of Racially Based Land Measures Act 1991 During the 1960s 1970s and early 1980s the government implemented a policy of resettlement to force people to move to their designated group areas Millions of people were forced to relocate These removals included people relocated due to slum clearance programmes labour tenants on white owned farms the inhabitants of the so called black spots black owned land surrounded by white farms the families of workers living in townships close to the homelands and surplus people from urban areas including thousands of people from the Western Cape which was declared a Coloured Labour Preference Area 92 who were moved to the Transkei and Ciskei homelands The best publicised forced removals of the 1950s occurred in Johannesburg when 60 000 people were moved to the new township of Soweto an abbreviation for South Western Townships 93 94 Until 1955 Sophiatown had been one of the few urban areas where black people were allowed to own land and was slowly developing into a multiracial slum As industry in Johannesburg grew Sophiatown became the home of a rapidly expanding black workforce as it was convenient and close to town It had the only swimming pool for black children in Johannesburg 95 As one of the oldest black settlements in Johannesburg it held an almost symbolic importance for the 50 000 black people it contained Despite a vigorous ANC protest campaign and worldwide publicity the removal of Sophiatown began on 9 February 1955 under the Western Areas Removal Scheme In the early hours heavily armed police forced residents out of their homes and loaded their belongings onto government trucks The residents were taken to a large tract of land 19 kilometres 12 mi from the city centre known as Meadowlands which the government had purchased in 1953 Meadowlands became part of a new planned black city called Soweto Sophiatown was destroyed by bulldozers and a new white suburb named Triomf Triumph was built in its place This pattern of forced removal and destruction was to repeat itself over the next few years and was not limited to black South Africans alone Forced removals from areas like Cato Manor Mkhumbane in Durban and District Six in Cape Town where 55 000 Coloured and Indian people were forced to move to new townships on the Cape Flats were carried out under the Group Areas Act of 1950 Nearly 600 000 Coloured Indian and Chinese people were moved under the Group Areas Act Some 40 000 whites were also forced to move when land was transferred from white South Africa into the black homelands 96 In South West Africa the apartheid plan that instituted Bantustans was as a result of the so called Odendaal Plan a set of proposals from the Odendaal Commission of 1962 1964 97 Society during apartheid EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Apartheid news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The NP passed a string of legislation that became known as petty apartheid The first of these was the Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act 55 of 1949 prohibiting marriage between whites and people of other races The Immorality Amendment Act 21 of 1950 as amended in 1957 by Act 23 forbade unlawful racial intercourse and any immoral or indecent act between a white and a black Indian or Coloured person Black people were not allowed to run businesses or professional practices in areas designated as white South Africa unless they had a permit such being granted only exceptionally They were required to move to the black homelands and set up businesses and practices there Trains hospitals and ambulances were segregated 98 Because of the smaller numbers of white patients and the fact that white doctors preferred to work in white hospitals conditions in white hospitals were much better than those in often overcrowded and understaffed significantly underfunded black hospitals 99 Residential areas were segregated and blacks were allowed to live in white areas only if employed as a servant and even then only in servants quarters Black people were excluded from working in white areas unless they had a pass nicknamed the dompas also spelt dompass or dom pass The most likely origin of this name is from the Afrikaans verdomde pas meaning accursed pass 100 although some commentators ascribe it to the Afrikaans words meaning dumb pass Only black people with Section 10 rights those who had migrated to the cities before World War II were excluded from this provision A pass was issued only to a black person with approved work Spouses and children had to be left behind in black homelands A pass was issued for one magisterial district usually one town confining the holder to that area only Being without a valid pass made a person subject to arrest and trial for being an illegal migrant This was often followed by deportation to the person s homeland and prosecution of the employer for employing an illegal migrant Police vans patrolled white areas to round up blacks without passes Black people were not allowed to employ whites in white South Africa 101 Although trade unions for black and Coloured workers had existed since the early 20th century it was not until the 1980s reforms that a mass black trade union movement developed Trade unions under apartheid were racially segregated with 54 unions being white only 38 for Indian and Coloured and 19 for black people The Industrial Conciliation Act 1956 legislated against the creation of multi racial trade unions and attempted to split existing multi racial unions into separate branches or organisations along racial lines 102 Each black homeland controlled its own education health and police systems Blacks were not allowed to buy hard liquor They were able to buy only state produced poor quality beer although this law was relaxed later Public beaches swimming pools some pedestrian bridges drive in cinema parking spaces graveyards parks and public toilets were segregated Cinemas and theatres in white areas were not allowed to admit blacks There were practically no cinemas in black areas Most restaurants and hotels in white areas were not allowed to admit blacks except as staff Blacks were prohibited from attending white churches under the Churches Native Laws Amendment Act of 1957 but this was never rigidly enforced and churches were one of the few places races could mix without the interference of the law Blacks earning 360 rand a year or more had to pay taxes while the white threshold was more than twice as high at 750 rand a year On the other hand the taxation rate for whites was considerably higher than that for blacks citation needed Blacks could not acquire land in white areas In the homelands much of the land belonged to a tribe where the local chieftain would decide how the land had to be used This resulted in whites owning almost all the industrial and agricultural lands and much of the prized residential land Most blacks were stripped of their South African citizenship when the homelands became independent and they were no longer able to apply for South African passports Eligibility requirements for a passport had been difficult for blacks to meet the government contending that a passport was a privilege not a right and the government did not grant many passports to blacks Apartheid pervaded culture as well as the law and was entrenched by most of the mainstream media Coloured classification Edit Main article Coloureds The population was classified into four groups African White Indian and Coloured capitalised to denote their legal definitions in South African law The Coloured group included people regarded as being of mixed descent including of Bantu Khoisan European and Malay ancestry Many were descended from people brought to South Africa from other parts of the world such as India Sri Lanka Madagascar and China as slaves and indentured workers 103 The Population Registration Act Act 30 of 1950 defined South Africans as belonging to one of three races White Black or Coloured People of Indian ancestry were considered Coloured under this act Appearance social acceptance and descent were used to determine the qualification of an individual into one of the three categories A white person was described by the act as one whose parents were both white and possessed the habits speech education deportment and demeanour of a white person Blacks were defined by the act as belonging to an African race or tribe Lastly Coloureds were those who could not be classified as black or white 104 The apartheid bureaucracy devised complex and often arbitrary criteria at the time that the Population Registration Act was implemented to determine who was Coloured Minor officials would administer tests to determine if someone should be categorised either Coloured or White or if another person should be categorised either Coloured or Black The tests included the pencil test in which a pencil was shoved into the subjects curly hair and the subjects made to shake their head If the pencil stuck they were deemed to be Black if dislodged they were pronounced Coloured Other tests involved examining the shapes of jaw lines and buttocks and pinching people to see what language they would say Ouch in 105 As a result of these tests different members of the same family found themselves in different race groups Further tests determined membership of the various sub racial groups of the Coloureds Discriminated against by apartheid Coloureds were as a matter of state policy forced to live in separate townships as defined in the Group Areas Act 1950 106 in some cases leaving homes their families had occupied for generations and received an inferior education though better than that provided to Africans They played an important role in the anti apartheid movement for example the African Political Organization established in 1902 had an exclusively Coloured membership Voting rights were denied to Coloureds in the same way that they were denied to Blacks from 1950 to 1983 However in 1977 the NP caucus approved proposals to bring Coloureds and Indians into central government In 1982 final constitutional proposals produced a referendum among Whites and the Tricameral Parliament was approved The Constitution was reformed the following year to allow the Coloured and Indian minorities participation in separate Houses in a Tricameral Parliament and Botha became the first Executive State President The idea was that the Coloured minority could be granted voting rights but the Black majority were to become citizens of independent homelands 104 106 These separate arrangements continued until the abolition of apartheid The Tricameral reforms led to the formation of the anti apartheid United Democratic Front as a vehicle to try to prevent the co option of Coloureds and Indians into an alliance with Whites The battles between the UDF and the NP government from 1983 to 1989 were to become the most intense period of struggle between left wing and right wing South Africans Education Edit Education was segregated by the 1953 Bantu Education Act which crafted a separate system of education for black South African students and was designed to prepare black people for lives as a labouring class 107 In 1959 separate universities were created for black Coloured and Indian people Existing universities were not permitted to enroll new black students The Afrikaans Medium Decree of 1974 required the use of Afrikaans and English on an equal basis in high schools outside the homelands 108 In the 1970s the state spent ten times more per child on the education of white children than on black children within the Bantu Education system the education system in black schools within white South Africa Higher education was provided in separate universities and colleges after 1959 Eight black universities were created in the homelands Fort Hare University in the Ciskei now Eastern Cape was to register only Xhosa speaking students Sotho Tswana Pedi and Venda speakers were placed at the newly founded University College of the North at Turfloop while the University College of Zululand was launched to serve Zulu students Coloureds and Indians were to have their own establishments in the Cape and Natal respectively 109 Each black homeland controlled its own education health and police systems By 1948 before formal Apartheid 10 universities existed in South Africa four were Afrikaans four for English one for Blacks and a Correspondence University open to all ethnic groups By 1981 under apartheid government 11 new universities were built seven for Blacks one for Coloureds one for Indians one for Afrikaans and one dual language medium Afrikaans and English Women under apartheid Edit Colonialism and apartheid had a major effect on Black and Coloured women since they suffered both racial and gender discrimination 110 111 Judith Nolde argues that in general South African women were deprive d of their human rights as individuals under the apartheid system 112 Jobs were often hard to find Many Black and Coloured women worked as agricultural or domestic workers but wages were extremely low if existent 113 Children developed diseases caused by malnutrition and sanitation problems and mortality rates were therefore high The controlled movement of black and Coloured workers within the country through the Natives Urban Areas Act of 1923 and the pass laws separated family members from one another because men could prove their employment in urban centres while most women were merely dependents consequently they risked being deported to rural areas 114 Even in rural areas there were legal hurdles for women to own land and outside the cities jobs were scarce 115 Sport under apartheid Edit See also Rugby union and apartheid By the 1930s association football mirrored the balkanised society of South Africa football was divided into numerous institutions based on race the White South African Football Association the South African Indian Football Association SAIFA the South African African Football Association SAAFA and its rival the South African Bantu Football Association and the South African Coloured Football Association SACFA Lack of funds to provide proper equipment would be noticeable in regards to black amateur football matches this revealed the unequal lives black South Africans were subject to in contrast to Whites who were much better off financially 116 Apartheid s social engineering made it more difficult to compete across racial lines Thus in an effort to centralise finances the federations merged in 1951 creating the South African Soccer Federation SASF which brought Black Indian and Coloured national associations into one body that opposed apartheid This was generally opposed more and more by the growing apartheid government and with urban segregation being reinforced with ongoing racist policies it was harder to play football along these racial lines In 1956 the Pretoria regime the administrative capital of South Africa passed the first apartheid sports policy by doing so it emphasised the White led government s opposition to inter racialism While football was plagued by racism it also played a role in protesting apartheid and its policies With the international bans from FIFA and other major sporting events South Africa would be in the spotlight internationally In a 1977 survey white South Africans ranked the lack of international sport as one of the three most damaging consequences of apartheid 117 By the mid 1950s Black South Africans would also use media to challenge the racialisation of sports in South Africa anti apartheid forces had begun to pinpoint sport as the weakness of white national morale Black journalists for the Johannesburg Drum magazine were the first to give the issue public exposure with an intrepid special issue in 1955 that asked Why shouldn t our blacks be allowed in the SA team 117 As time progressed international standing with South Africa would continue to be strained In the 1980s as the oppressive system was slowly collapsing the ANC and National Party started negotiations on the end of apartheid football associations also discussed the formation of a single non racial controlling body This unity process accelerated in the late 1980s and led to the creation in December 1991 of an incorporated South African Football Association On 3 July 1992 FIFA finally welcomed South Africa back into international football Sport has long been an important part of life in South Africa and the boycotting of games by international teams had a profound effect on the white population perhaps more so than the trade embargoes did After the re acceptance of South Africa s sports teams by the international community sport played a major unifying role between the country s diverse ethnic groups Mandela s open support of the predominantly white rugby fraternity during the 1995 Rugby World Cup was considered instrumental in bringing together South African sports fans of all races 118 Professional boxing Edit Activities in the sport of professional boxing were also affected as there were 44 recorded professional boxing fights for national titles as deemed for Whites only between 1955 and 1979 119 and 397 fights as deemed for non Whites between 1901 and 1978 120 The first fight for a national White title was held on April 9 1955 between Flyweights Jerry Jooste and Tiny Corbett at the City Hall in Johannesburg it was won by Jooste by a twelve rounds points decision 121 The last one was between national White Light Heavyweight champion Gerrie Bodenstein and challenger Mervin Smit on February 5 1979 at the Joekies Ice Rink in Welkom Free State it was won by the champion by a fifth round technical knockout 122 The first non Whites South African national championship bout on record apparently the date appears as uncertain on the records took place on May 1 1901 between Andrew Jephtha and Johnny Arendse for the vacant Lightweight belt Jephtha winning by knockout in round nineteen of a twenty rounds scheduled match in Cape Town 123 The last non White title bout took place on December 18 1978 between Sipho Mange and Chris Kid Dlamini Mange Dlamini was the culminating fight of a boxing program that included several other non White championship contests Mange won the vacant non White Super Bantamweight title by outpointing Dlamini over twelve rounds at the Goodwood Showgrounds in Cape Town 120 Asians during apartheid Edit Further information Indian South Africans Chinese South Africans and Honorary whites Defining its Asian population a minority that did not appear to belong to any of the initial three designated non white groups was a constant dilemma for the apartheid government The classification of honorary white a term which would be ambiguously used throughout apartheid was granted to immigrants from Japan South Korea and Taiwan countries with which South Africa maintained diplomatic and economic relations 124 and to their descendants Indian South Africans during apartheid were classified many ranges of categories from Asian to black clarification needed to Coloured clarification needed and even the mono ethnic category of Indian but never as white having been considered nonwhite throughout South Africa s history The group faced severe discrimination during the apartheid regime and were subject to numerous racialist policies In 2005 a retrospect study was done by Josephine C Naidoo and Devi Moodley Rajab where they interviewed a series of Indian South Africans about their experience living through apartheid their study highlighted education the workplace and general day to day living One participant who was a doctor said that it was considered the norm for Non White and White doctors to mingle while working at the hospital but when there was any down time or breaks they were to go back to their segregated quarters Not only was there severe segregation for doctors non white more specifically Indians were paid three to four times less than their white counterparts Many described being treated as a third class citizen due to the humiliation of the standard of treatment for non white employees across many professions Many Indians described a sense of justified superiority from whites due to the apartheid laws that in the minds of White South Africans legitimised those feelings Another finding of this study was the psychological damage done to Indians living in South Africa during apartheid One of the biggest long term effects on Indians was the distrust of white South Africans There was a strong degree of alienation that left a strong psychological feeling of inferiority 125 Chinese South Africans who were descendants of migrant workers who came to work in the gold mines around Johannesburg in the late 19th century were initially either classified as Coloured or Other Asian and were subject to numerous forms of discrimination and restriction 126 It was not until 1984 that South African Chinese increased to about 10 000 were given the same official rights as the Japanese to be treated as whites in terms of the Group Areas Act although they still faced discrimination and did not receive all the benefits rights of their newly obtained honorary white status such as voting citation needed 127 Indonesians arrived at the Cape of Good Hope as slaves until the abolishment of slavery during the 19th century They were predominantly Muslim were allowed religious freedom and formed their own ethnic group community known as Cape Malays They were classified as part of the Coloured racial group 128 This was the same for South Africans of Malaysian descent who were also classified as part of the Coloured race and thus considered not white 103 South Africans of Filipino descent were classified as black due to historical outlook on Filipinos by White South Africans and many of them lived in Bantustans 103 The Lebanese population were somewhat of an anomaly during the apartheid era Lebanese immigration to South Africa was chiefly Christian and the group was originally classified as non white however a court case in 1913 ruled that because Lebanese and Syrians originated from the Canaan region the birthplace of Christianity and Judaism they could not be discriminated against by race laws which targeted non believers and thus were classified as white The Lebanese community maintained their white status after the Population Registration Act came into effect however further immigration from the Middle East was restricted 129 Conservatism Edit Alongside apartheid the National Party implemented a programme of social conservatism Pornography 130 gambling 131 and works from Marx Lenin and other socialist thinkers 132 were banned Cinemas shops selling alcohol and most other businesses were forbidden from opening on Sundays 133 Abortion 134 homosexuality 135 and sex education were also restricted abortion was legal only in cases of rape or if the mother s life was threatened 134 Television was not introduced until 1976 because the government viewed English programming as a threat to the Afrikaans language 136 Television was run on apartheid lines TV1 broadcast in Afrikaans and English geared to a White audience TV2 in Zulu and Xhosa TV3 in Sotho Tswana and Pedi both geared to a Black audience and TV4 mostly showed programmes for an urban Black audience Internal resistance EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Apartheid news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Internal resistance to apartheid Painting of the Sharpeville massacre which occurred on 21 March 1960 Apartheid sparked significant internal resistance 13 The government responded to a series of popular uprisings and protests with police brutality which in turn increased local support for the armed resistance struggle 137 Internal resistance to the apartheid system in South Africa came from several sectors of society and saw the creation of organisations dedicated variously to peaceful protests passive resistance and armed insurrection In 1949 the youth wing of the African National Congress ANC took control of the organisation and started advocating a radical black nationalist programme The new young leaders proposed that white authority could only be overthrown through mass campaigns In 1950 that philosophy saw the launch of the Programme of Action a series of strikes boycotts and civil disobedience actions that led to occasional violent clashes with the authorities In 1959 a group of disenchanted ANC members formed the Pan Africanist Congress PAC which organised a demonstration against pass books on 21 March 1960 One of those protests was held in the township of Sharpeville where 69 people were killed by police in the Sharpeville massacre In the wake of Sharpeville the government declared a state of emergency More than 18 000 people were arrested including leaders of the ANC and PAC and both organisations were banned The resistance went underground with some leaders in exile abroad and others engaged in campaigns of domestic sabotage and terrorism In May 1961 before the declaration of South Africa as a Republic an assembly representing the banned ANC called for negotiations between the members of the different ethnic groupings threatening demonstrations and strikes during the inauguration of the Republic if their calls were ignored When the government overlooked them the strikers among the main organisers was a 42 year old Thembu origin Nelson Mandela carried out their threats The government countered swiftly by giving police the authority to arrest people for up to twelve days and detaining many strike leaders amid numerous cases of police brutality 138 Defeated the protesters called off their strike The ANC then chose to launch an armed struggle through a newly formed military wing Umkhonto we Sizwe MK which would perform acts of sabotage on tactical state structures Its first sabotage plans were carried out on 16 December 1961 the anniversary of the Battle of Blood River In the 1970s the Black Consciousness Movement BCM was created by tertiary students influenced by the Black Power movement in the US BCM endorsed black pride and African customs and did much to alter the feelings of inadequacy instilled among black people by the apartheid system The leader of the movement Steve Biko was taken into custody on 18 August 1977 and was beaten to death in detention In 1976 secondary students in Soweto took to the streets in the Soweto uprising to protest against the imposition of Afrikaans as the only language of instruction On 16 June police opened fire on students protesting peacefully According to official reports 23 people were killed but the number of people who died is usually given as 176 with estimates of up to 700 139 140 141 In the following years several student organisations were formed to protest against apartheid and these organisations were central to urban school boycotts in 1980 and 1983 and rural boycotts in 1985 and 1986 List of attacks attributed to MK and compiled by the Committee for South African War Resistance COSAWR between 1980 and 1983 In parallel with student protests labour unions started protest action in 1973 and 1974 After 1976 unions and workers are considered to have played an important role in the struggle against apartheid filling the gap left by the banning of political parties In 1979 black trade unions were legalised and could engage in collective bargaining although strikes were still illegal Economist Thomas Sowell wrote that basic supply and demand led to violations of Apartheid on a massive scale throughout the nation simply because there were not enough white South African business owners to meet the demand for various goods and services Large portions of the garment industry and construction of new homes for example were effectively owned and operated by blacks who either worked surreptitiously or who circumvented the law with a white person as a nominal figurehead manager 142 In 1983 anti apartheid leaders determined to resist the tricameral parliament assembled to form the United Democratic Front UDF in order to coordinate anti apartheid activism inside South Africa The first presidents of the UDF were Archie Gumede Oscar Mpetha and Albertina Sisulu patrons were Archbishop Desmond Tutu Dr Allan Boesak Helen Joseph and Nelson Mandela Basing its platform on abolishing apartheid and creating a nonracial democratic South Africa the UDF provided a legal way for domestic human rights groups and individuals of all races to organise demonstrations and campaign against apartheid inside the country Churches and church groups also emerged as pivotal points of resistance Church leaders were not immune to prosecution and certain faith based organisations were banned but the clergy generally had more freedom to criticise the government than militant groups did The UDF coupled with the protection of the church accordingly permitted a major role for Archbishop Desmond Tutu who served both as a prominent domestic voice and international spokesperson denouncing apartheid and urging the creation of a shared nonracial state 143 Although the majority of whites supported apartheid some 20 percent did not Parliamentary opposition was galvanised by Helen Suzman Colin Eglin and Harry Schwarz who formed the Progressive Federal Party Extra parliamentary resistance was largely centred in the South African Communist Party and women s organisation the Black Sash Women were also notable in their involvement in trade union organisations and banned political parties The public intellectuals too such as Nadine Gordimer the eminent author and winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature 1991 vehemently opposed the Apartheid regime and accordingly bolstered the movement against it International relations during apartheid EditMain article Foreign relations of South Africa during apartheid Commonwealth Edit South Africa s policies were subject to international scrutiny in 1960 when British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan criticised them during his Wind of Change speech in Cape Town Weeks later tensions came to a head in the Sharpeville massacre resulting in more international condemnation Soon afterwards Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd announced a referendum on whether the country should become a republic Verwoerd lowered the voting age for Whites to eighteen years of age and included Whites in South West Africa on the roll The referendum on 5 October that year asked Whites Are you in favour of a Republic for the Union and 52 percent voted Yes 144 As a consequence of this change of status South Africa needed to reapply for continued membership of the Commonwealth with which it had privileged trade links India had become a republic within the Commonwealth in 1950 but it became clear that African and South and Southeast Asian member states would oppose South Africa due to its apartheid policies As a result South Africa withdrew from the Commonwealth on 31 May 1961 the day that the Republic came into existence United Nations Edit We stand here today to salute the United Nations Organisation and its Member States both singly and collectively for joining forces with the masses of our people in a common struggle that has brought about our emancipation and pushed back the frontiers of racism Nelson Mandela address to the United Nations as South African President 3 October 1994 145 The apartheid system as an issue was first formally brought to the United Nations attention in order to advocate for the Indians residing in South Africa On June 22 of 1946 the Indian government requested that the discriminatory treatment of Indians living in South Africa be included on the agenda of the first General Assembly session 146 In 1952 apartheid was again discussed in the aftermath of the Defiance Campaign and the UN set up a task team to keep watch on the progress of apartheid and the racial state of affairs in South Africa Although South Africa s racial policies were a cause for concern most countries in the UN concurred that this was a domestic affair which fell outside the UN s jurisdiction 147 In April 1960 the UN s conservative stance on apartheid changed following the Sharpeville massacre and the Security Council for the first time agreed on concerted action against the apartheid regime Resolution 134 called upon the nation of South Africa to abandon its policies implementing racial discrimination The newly founded United Nations Special Committee Against Apartheid scripted and passed Resolution 181 on August 7 1963 which called upon all states to cease the sale and shipment of all ammunition and military vehicles to South Africa This clause was finally declared mandatory on 4 November 1977 depriving South Africa of military aid From 1964 onwards the US and the UK discontinued their arms trade with South Africa The Security Council also condemned the Soweto massacre in Resolution 392 In 1977 the voluntary UN arms embargo became mandatory with the passing of Resolution 418 In addition to isolating South Africa militarily the United Nations General Assembly encouraged the boycotting of oil sales to South Africa 146 Other actions taken by the United Nations General Assembly include the request for all nations and organisations to suspend cultural educational sporting and other exchanges with the racist regime and with organisations or institutions in South Africa which practice apartheid 146 Illustrating that over a long period of time the United Nations was working towards isolating the state of South Africa by putting pressure on the Apartheid regime After much debate by the late 1980s the United States the United Kingdom and 23 other nations had passed laws placing various trade sanctions on South Africa A disinvestment from South Africa movement in many countries was similarly widespread with individual cities and provinces around the world implementing various laws and local regulations forbidding registered corporations under their jurisdiction from doing business with South African firms factories or banks 148 Catholic Church Edit Pope John Paul II was an outspoken opponent of apartheid In 1985 while visiting the Netherlands he gave an impassioned speech at the International Court of Justice condemning apartheid proclaiming that no system of apartheid or separate development will ever be acceptable as a model for the relations between peoples or races 149 In September 1988 he made a pilgrimage to countries bordering South Africa while demonstratively avoiding South Africa itself During his visit to Zimbabwe he called for economic sanctions against the South African government 150 Organisation for African Unity Edit See also Lusaka Manifesto The Organisation of African Unity OAU was created in 1963 Its primary objectives were to eradicate colonialism and improve social political and economic situations in Africa It censured apartheid and demanded sanctions against South Africa African states agreed to aid the liberation movements in their fight against apartheid 151 In 1969 fourteen nations from Central and East Africa gathered in Lusaka Zambia and formulated the Lusaka Manifesto which was signed on 13 April by all of the countries in attendance except Malawi 152 This manifesto was later taken on by both the OAU and the United Nations 151 The Lusaka Manifesto summarised the political situations of self governing African countries condemning racism and inequity and calling for Black majority rule in all African nations 153 It did not rebuff South Africa entirely though adopting an appeasing manner towards the apartheid government and even recognizing its autonomy Although African leaders supported the emancipation of Black South Africans they preferred this to be attained through peaceful means 154 South Africa s negative response to the Lusaka Manifesto and rejection of a change to its policies brought about another OAU announcement in October 1971 The Mogadishu Declaration stated that South Africa s rebuffing of negotiations meant that its Black people could only be freed through military means and that no African state should converse with the apartheid government 155 Outward looking policy Edit In 1966 B J Vorster became Prime Minister He was not prepared to dismantle apartheid but he did try to redress South Africa s isolation and to revitalise the country s global reputation even those with Black majority rule in Africa This he called his Outward Looking policy 156 157 158 Vorster s willingness to talk to African leaders stood in contrast to Verwoerd s refusal to engage with leaders such as Abubakar Tafawa Balewa of Nigeria in 1962 and Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia in 1964 In 1966 he met the heads of the neighbouring states of Lesotho Swaziland and Botswana In 1967 he offered technological and financial aid to any African state prepared to receive it asserting that no political strings were attached aware that many African states needed financial aid despite their opposition to South Africa s racial policies Many were also tied to South Africa economically because of their migrant labour population working down the South African mines Botswana Lesotho and Swaziland remained outspoken critics of apartheid but were dependent on South African economic assistance Malawi was the first non neighbouring country to accept South African aid In 1967 the two states set out their political and economic relations In 1969 Malawi was the only country at the assembly which did not sign the Lusaka Manifesto condemning South Africa s apartheid policy In 1970 Malawian president Hastings Banda made his first and most successful official stopover in South Africa Associations with Mozambique followed suit and were sustained after that country won its sovereignty in 1975 Angola was also granted South African loans Other countries which formed relationships with South Africa were Liberia Ivory Coast Madagascar Mauritius Gabon Zaire now the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Central African Republic Although these states condemned apartheid more than ever after South Africa s denunciation of the Lusaka Manifesto South Africa s economic and military dominance meant that they remained dependent on South Africa to varying degrees clarification needed Sports and culture Edit Main articles Sporting boycott of South Africa and Rugby union and apartheid Beginning Edit South Africa s isolation in sport began in the mid 1950s and increased throughout the 1960s Apartheid forbade multiracial sport which meant that overseas teams by virtue of them having players of different races could not play in South Africa In 1956 the International Table Tennis Federation severed its ties with the all White South African Table Tennis Union preferring the non racial South African Table Tennis Board The apartheid government responded by confiscating the passports of the Board s players so that they were unable to attend international games Isolation Edit Verwoerd years Edit In 1959 the non racial South African Sports Association SASA was formed to secure the rights of all players on the global field After meeting with no success in its endeavours to attain credit by collaborating with White establishments SASA approached the International Olympic Committee IOC in 1962 calling for South Africa s expulsion from the Olympic Games The IOC sent South Africa a caution to the effect that if there were no changes they would be barred from competing at the 1964 Olympic Games in Tokyo The changes were initiated and in January 1963 the South African Non Racial Olympic Committee SANROC was set up The Anti Apartheid Movement persisted in its campaign for South Africa s exclusion and the IOC acceded in barring the country from the 1964 Olympic Games South Africa selected a multi racial team for the next Olympic Games and the IOC opted for incorporation in the 1968 Mexico City Olympic Games Because of protests from AAMs and African nations however the IOC was forced to retract the invitation Foreign complaints about South Africa s bigoted sports brought more isolation Racially selected New Zealand sports teams toured South Africa until the 1970 All Blacks rugby tour allowed Maori to enter the country under the status of honorary Whites Huge and widespread protests occurred in New Zealand in 1981 against the Springbok tour the government spent 8 000 000 protecting games using the army and police force A planned All Black tour to South Africa in 1985 remobilised the New Zealand protesters and it was cancelled A rebel tour not government sanctioned went ahead in 1986 but after that sporting ties were cut and New Zealand made a decision not to convey an authorised rugby team to South Africa until the end of apartheid 159 Vorster years Edit On 6 September 1966 Verwoerd was fatally stabbed at Parliament House by parliamentary messenger Dimitri Tsafendas John Vorster took office shortly after and announced that South Africa would no longer dictate to the international community what their teams should look like Although this reopened the gate for international sporting meets it did not signal the end of South Africa s racist sporting policies In 1968 Vorster went against his policy by refusing to permit Basil D Oliveira a Coloured South African born cricketer to join the English cricket team on its tour to South Africa Vorster said that the side had been chosen only to prove a point and not on merit D Oliveira was eventually included in the team as the first substitute but the tour was cancelled Protests against certain tours brought about the cancellation of a number of other visits including that of an England rugby team touring South Africa in 1969 70 The first of the White Bans occurred in 1971 when the Chairman of the Australian Cricketing Association Sir Don Bradman flew to South Africa to meet Vorster Vorster had expected Bradman to allow the tour of the Australian cricket team to go ahead but things became heated after Bradman asked why Black sportsmen were not allowed to play cricket Vorster stated that Blacks were intellectually inferior and had no finesse for the game Bradman thinking this ignorant and repugnant asked Vorster if he had heard of a man named Garry Sobers On his return to Australia Bradman released a short statement We will not play them until they choose a team on a non racist basis 160 Bradman s views were in stark contrast to those of Australian tennis great Margaret Court who had won the grand slam the previous year and commented about apartheid that South Africans have this thing better organised than any other country particularly America and that she would go back there any time 161 In South Africa Vorster vented his anger publicly against Bradman while the African National Congress rejoiced This was the first time a predominantly White nation had taken the side of multiracial sport producing an unsettling resonance that more White boycotts were coming 162 Almost twenty years later on his release from prison Nelson Mandela asked a visiting Australian statesman if Donald Bradman his childhood hero was still alive Bradman lived until 2001 In 1971 Vorster altered his policies even further by distinguishing multiracial from multinational sport Multiracial sport between teams with players of different races remained outlawed multinational sport however was now acceptable international sides would not be subject to South Africa s racial stipulations In 1978 Nigeria boycotted the Commonwealth Games because New Zealand s sporting contacts with the South African government were not considered to be in accordance with the 1977 Gleneagles Agreement Nigeria also led the 32 nation boycott of the 1986 Commonwealth Games because of UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher s ambivalent attitude towards sporting links with South Africa significantly affecting the quality and profitability of the Games and thus thrusting apartheid into the international spotlight 163 Cultural boycott Edit In the 1960s the Anti Apartheid Movements began to campaign for cultural boycotts of apartheid South Africa Artists were requested not to present or let their works be hosted in South Africa In 1963 45 British writers put their signatures to an affirmation approving of the boycott and in 1964 American actor Marlon Brando called for a similar affirmation for films In 1965 the Writers Guild of Great Britain called for a proscription on the sending of films to South Africa Over sixty American artists signed a statement against apartheid and against professional links with the state The presentation of some South African plays in the United Kingdom and the United States was also vetoed by whom citation needed After the arrival of television in South Africa in 1975 the British Actors Union Equity boycotted the service and no British programme concerning its associates could be sold to South Africa Similarly when home video grew popular in the 1980s the Australian arm of CBS Fox Video now 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment placed stickers on their VHS and Betamax cassettes which labeled exporting such cassettes to South Africa as an infringement of copyright 164 Sporting and cultural boycotts did not have the same effect as economic sanctions citation needed but they did much to lift consciousness amongst normal South Africans of the global condemnation of apartheid Western influence Edit See also International sanctions during apartheid London bus in 1989 carrying the Boycott Apartheid message While international opposition to apartheid grew the Nordic countries and Sweden in particular provided both moral and financial support for the ANC 165 On 21 February 1986 a week before he was assassinated Sweden s Prime Minister Olof Palme made the keynote address to the Swedish People s Parliament Against Apartheid held in Stockholm 166 In addressing the hundreds of anti apartheid sympathisers as well as leaders and officials from the ANC and the Anti Apartheid Movement such as Oliver Tambo Palme declared Apartheid cannot be reformed it has to be eliminated 167 Other Western countries adopted a more ambivalent position In Switzerland the Swiss South African Association lobbied on behalf of the South African government The Nixon administration implemented a policy known as the Tar Baby Option pursuant to which the US maintained close relations with the Apartheid South African government 168 The Reagan administration evaded international sanctions and provided diplomatic support in international forums for the South African government The United States also increased trade with the Apartheid regime while describing the ANC as a terrorist organisation 169 Like the Reagan administration the government of Margaret Thatcher termed this policy constructive engagement with the apartheid government vetoing the imposition of UN economic sanctions U S government justification for supporting the Apartheid regime were publicly given as a belief in free trade and the perception of the anti communist South African government as a bastion against Marxist forces in Southern Africa for example by the military intervention of South Africa in the Angolan Civil War in support of right wing insurgents fighting to topple the government The U K government also declared the ANC a terrorist organisation 170 and in 1987 Thatcher s spokesman Bernard Ingham famously said that anyone who believed that the ANC would ever form the government of South Africa was living in cloud cuckoo land 171 The American Legislative Exchange Council ALEC a conservative lobbying organisation actively campaigned against divesting from South Africa throughout the 1980s 172 By the late 1980s with no sign of a political resolution in South Africa Western patience began to run out By 1989 a bipartisan Republican Democratic initiative in the US favoured economic sanctions realised as the Comprehensive Anti Apartheid Act of 1986 the release of Nelson Mandela and a negotiated settlement involving the ANC Thatcher too began to take a similar line but insisted on the suspension of the ANC s armed struggle 173 The UK s significant economic involvement in South Africa may have provided some leverage with the South African government with both the UK and the US applying pressure and pushing for negotiations However neither the UK nor the US was willing to apply economic pressure upon their multinational interests in South Africa such as the mining company Anglo American Although a high profile compensation claim against these companies was thrown out of court in 2004 174 the US Supreme Court in May 2008 upheld an appeal court ruling allowing another lawsuit that seeks damages of more than US 400 billion from major international companies which are accused of aiding South Africa s apartheid system 175 Effect of the Cold War Edit Total Onslaught Edit Apartheid era propaganda leaflet issued to South African military personnel in the 1980s The pamphlet decries Russian colonialism and oppression in English Afrikaans and Portuguese During the 1950s South African military strategy was decisively shaped by fears of communist espionage and a conventional Soviet threat to the strategic Cape trade route between the south Atlantic and Indian Oceans 176 The apartheid government supported the US led North Atlantic Treaty Organization NATO as well as its policy of regional containment against Soviet backed regimes and insurgencies worldwide 177 By the late 1960s the rise of Soviet client states on the African continent as well as Soviet aid for militant anti apartheid movements was considered one of the primary external threats to the apartheid system 178 South African officials frequently accused domestic opposition groups of being communist proxies 179 For its part the Soviet Union viewed South Africa as a bastion of neocolonialism and a regional Western ally which helped fuel its support for various anti apartheid causes 180 From 1973 onwards much of South Africa s white population increasingly looked upon their country as a bastion of the free world besieged militarily politically and culturally by Communism and radical black nationalism 181 The apartheid government perceived itself as being locked in a proxy struggle with the Warsaw Pact and by implication armed wings of black nationalist forces such as Umkhonto we Sizwe MK and the People s Liberation Army of Namibia PLAN which often received Soviet arms and training 180 This was described as Total Onslaught 181 182 Israeli arms sales Edit Soviet support for militant anti apartheid movements worked in the government s favour as its claim to be reacting in opposition to aggressive communist expansion gained greater plausibility and helped it justify its own domestic militarisation methods known as Total Strategy 181 Total Strategy involved building up a formidable conventional military and counter intelligence capability 181 It was formulated on counter revolutionary tactics as espoused by noted French tactician Andre Beaufre 182 Considerable effort was devoted towards circumventing international arms sanctions and the government even went so far as to develop nuclear weapons 183 allegedly with covert assistance from Israel 184 In 2010 The Guardian released South African government documents that revealed an Israeli offer to sell the apartheid regime nuclear weapons 185 186 Israel denied these allegations and claimed that the documents were minutes from a meeting which did not indicate any concrete offer for a sale of nuclear weapons Shimon Peres said that The Guardian s article was based on selective interpretation and not on concrete facts 187 As a result of Total Strategy South African society became increasingly militarised Many domestic civil organisations were modelled upon military structures and military virtues such as discipline patriotism and loyalty were highly regarded 188 In 1968 national service for White South African men lasted nine months at minimum and they could be called up for reserve duty into their late middle age if necessary 189 The length of national service was gradually extended to 12 months in 1972 and 24 months in 1978 189 At state schools white male students were organised into paramilitary formations and drilled as cadets or as participants in a civil defence or Youth Preparedness curriculum 188 Compulsory military education and in some cases paramilitary training was introduced for all older white male students at state schools in three South African provinces 188 These programmes presided over the construction of bomb shelters at schools and drills aimed at simulating mock insurgent raids 188 From the late 1970s to the late 1980s defence budgets in South Africa were raised exponentially 182 In 1975 Israeli defense minister Shimon Peres signed a security pact with South African defence minister P W Botha that led to 200 million in arms deals In 1988 Israeli arm sales to South Africa totaled over 1 4 billion 190 Covert operations focused on espionage and domestic counter subversion became common the number of special forces units swelled and the South African Defence Force SADF had amassed enough sophisticated conventional weaponry to pose a serious threat to the front line states a regional alliance of neighbouring countries opposed to apartheid 182 Foreign military operations Edit See also South African Border War Raid on Gaborone Operation Skerwe and Operation Beanbag South African paratroops on a raid in Angola 1980s Total Strategy was advanced in the context of MK PLAN and Azanian People s Liberation Army APLA guerrilla raids into South Africa or against South African targets in South West Africa frequent South African reprisal attacks on these movements external bases in Angola Zambia Mozambique Zimbabwe and Botswana often involving collateral damage to foreign infrastructure and civilian populations and periodic complaints brought before the international community about South African violations of its neighbours sovereignty 191 The apartheid government made judicious use of extraterritorial operations to eliminate its military and political opponents arguing that neighbouring states including their civilian populations which hosted tolerated on their soil or otherwise sheltered anti apartheid insurgent groups could not evade responsibility for provoking retaliatory strikes 191 While it did focus on militarising the borders and sealing up its domestic territory against insurgent raids it also relied heavily on an aggressive preemptive and counter strike strategy which fulfilled a preventive and deterrent purpose 192 The reprisals which occurred beyond South Africa s borders involved not only hostile states but neutral and sympathetic governments as well often forcing them to react against their will and interests 193 External South African military operations were aimed at eliminating the training facilities safehouses infrastructure equipment and manpower of the insurgents 192 However their secondary objective was to dissuade neighbouring states from offering sanctuary to MK PLAN APLA and similar organisations 192 This was accomplished by deterring the supportive foreign population from cooperating with infiltration and thus undermining the insurgents external sanctuary areas 194 It would also send a clear message to the host government that collaborating with insurgent forces involved potentially high costs 194 The scale and intensity of foreign operations varied and ranged from small special forces units carrying out raids on locations across the border which served as bases for insurgent infiltration to major conventional offensives involving armour artillery and aircraft 192 Actions such as Operation Protea in 1981 and Operation Askari in 1983 involved both full scale conventional warfare and a counter insurgency reprisal operation 195 196 The insurgent bases were usually situated near military installations of the host government so that SADF retaliatory strikes hit those facilities as well and attracted international attention and condemnation of what was perceived as aggression against the armed forces of another sovereign state 197 This would inevitably result in major engagements in which the SADF s expeditionary units would have to contend with the firepower of the host government s forces 197 Intensive conventional warfare of this nature carried the risk of severe casualties among white soldiers which had to be kept to a minimum for political reasons 192 There were also high economic and diplomatic costs associated with openly deploying large numbers of South African troops into another country 192 Furthermore military involvement on that scale had the potential to evolve into wider conflict situations in which South Africa became entangled 192 For example South Africa s activities in Angola initially limited to containing PLAN later escalated to direct involvement in the Angolan Civil War 192 As it became clearer that full scale conventional operations could not effectively fulfill the requirements of a regional counter insurgency effort South Africa turned to a number of alternative methods Retributive artillery bombardments were the least sophisticated means of reprisal against insurgent attacks Between 1978 and 1979 the SADF directed artillery fire against locations in Angola and Zambia from which insurgent rockets were suspected to have been launched 198 199 This precipitated several artillery duels with the Zambian Army 199 Special forces raids were launched to harass PLAN and MK by liquidating prominent members of those movements destroying their offices and safehouses and seizing valuable records stored at these sites 200 One example was the Gaborone Raid carried out in 1985 during which a South African special forces team crossed the border into Botswana and demolished four suspected MK safe houses severely damaging another four 200 Other types of special forces operations included the sabotage of economic infrastructure 201 The SADF sabotaged infrastructure being used for the insurgents war effort for example port facilities in southern Angola s Mocamedes District where Soviet arms were frequently offloaded for PLAN as well as the railway line which facilitated their transport to PLAN headquarters in Lubango were common targets 202 Sabotage was also used as a pressure tactic when South Africa was negotiating with a host government to cease providing sanctuary to insurgent forces as in the case of Operation Argon 203 Successful sabotage actions of high profile economic targets undermined a country s ability to negotiate from a position of strength and made it likelier to accede to South African demands rather than risk the expense of further destruction and war 203 Also noteworthy were South African transnational espionage efforts which included covert assassinations kidnappings and attempts to disrupt the overseas influence of anti apartheid organisations South African military intelligence agents were known to have abducted and killed anti apartheid activists and others suspected of having ties to MK in London and Brussels 204 205 State security EditDuring the 1980s the government led by P W Botha became increasingly preoccupied with security It set up a powerful state security apparatus to protect the state against an anticipated upsurge in political violence that the reforms were expected to trigger The 1980s became a period of considerable political unrest with the government becoming increasingly dominated by Botha s circle of generals and police chiefs known as securocrats who managed the various States of Emergencies 206 Botha s years in power were marked also by numerous military interventions in the states bordering South Africa as well as an extensive military and political campaign to eliminate SWAPO in Namibia Within South Africa meanwhile vigorous police action and strict enforcement of security legislation resulted in hundreds of arrests and bans and an effective end to the African National Congress sabotage campaign The government punished political offenders brutally 40 000 people annually were subjected to whipping as a form of punishment 207 The vast majority had committed political offences and were lashed ten times for their crime 208 If convicted of treason a person could be hanged and the government executed numerous political offenders in this way 209 As the 1980s progressed more and more anti apartheid organisations were formed and affiliated with the UDF Led by the Reverend Allan Boesak and Albertina Sisulu the UDF called for the government to abandon its reforms and instead abolish the apartheid system and eliminate the homelands completely State of emergency Edit Serious political violence was a prominent feature from 1985 to 1989 as Black townships became the focus of the struggle between anti apartheid organisations and the Botha government Throughout the 1980s township people resisted apartheid by acting against the local issues that faced their particular communities The focus of much of this resistance was against the local authorities and their leaders who were seen to be supporting the government By 1985 it had become the ANC s aim to make Black townships ungovernable a term later replaced by people s power by means of rent boycotts and other militant action Numerous township councils were overthrown or collapsed to be replaced by unofficial popular organisations often led by militant youth People s courts were set up and residents accused of being government agents were dealt extreme and occasionally lethal punishments Black town councillors and policemen and sometimes their families were attacked with petrol bombs beaten and murdered by necklacing where a burning tyre was placed around the victim s neck after they were restrained by wrapping their wrists with barbed wire This signature act of torture and murder was embraced by the ANC and its leaders citation needed On 20 July 1985 Botha declared a State of Emergency in 36 magisterial districts Areas affected were the Eastern Cape and the PWV region Pretoria Witwatersrand Vereeniging 210 Three months later the Western Cape was included An increasing number of organisations were banned or listed restricted in some way many individuals had restrictions such as house arrest imposed on them During this state of emergency about 2 436 people were detained under the Internal Security Act 211 This act gave police and the military sweeping powers The government could implement curfews controlling the movement of people The president could rule by decree without referring to the constitution or to parliament It became a criminal offence to threaten someone verbally or possess documents that the government perceived to be threatening to advise anyone to stay away from work or to oppose the government and to disclose the name of anyone arrested under the State of Emergency until the government released that name with up to ten years imprisonment for these offences Detention without trial became a common feature of the government s reaction to growing civil unrest and by 1988 30 000 people had been detained 212 The media was censored thousands were arrested and many were interrogated and tortured 213 On 12 June 1986 four days before the tenth anniversary of the Soweto uprising the state of emergency was extended to cover the whole country The government amended the Public Security Act including the right to declare unrest areas allowing extraordinary measures to crush protests in these areas Severe censorship of the press became a dominant tactic in the government s strategy and television cameras were banned from entering such areas The state broadcaster the South African Broadcasting Corporation SABC provided propaganda in support of the government Media opposition to the system increased supported by the growth of a pro ANC underground press within South Africa In 1987 the State of Emergency was extended for another two years Meanwhile about 200 000 members of the National Union of Mineworkers commenced the longest strike three weeks in South African history The year 1988 saw the banning of the activities of the UDF and other anti apartheid organisations Much of the violence in the late 1980s and early 1990s was directed at the government but a substantial amount was between the residents themselves Many died in violence between members of Inkatha and the UDF ANC faction It was later proven that the government manipulated the situation by supporting one side or the other whenever it suited them Government agents assassinated opponents within South Africa and abroad they undertook cross border army and air force attacks on suspected ANC and PAC bases The ANC and the PAC in return detonated bombs at restaurants shopping centres and government buildings such as magistrates courts Between 1960 and 1994 according to statistics from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission the Inkatha Freedom Party was responsible for 4 500 deaths South African security forces were responsible for 2 700 deaths and the ANC was responsible for 1 300 deaths 214 The state of emergency continued until 1990 when it was lifted by State President F W de Klerk Final years of apartheid EditMain article Negotiations to end apartheid in South Africa Factors Edit Institutional racism Edit Apartheid developed from the racism of colonial factions and due to South Africa s unique industrialisation 215 The policies of industrialisation led to the segregation of and classing of people which was specifically developed to nurture early industry such as mining 215 Cheap labour was the basis of the economy and this was taken from what the state classed as peasant groups and the migrants 216 Furthermore Philip Bonner highlights the contradictory economic effects as the economy did not have a manufacturing sector therefore promoting short term profitability but limiting labour productivity and the size of local markets This also led to its collapse as Clarkes emphasises the economy could not provide and compete with foreign rivals as they failed to master cheap labour and complex chemistry 217 Economic contradictions Edit The contradictions clarification needed in the traditionally capitalist economy of the apartheid state led to considerable debate about racial policy and division and conflicts in the central state 218 To a large extent the political ideology of apartheid had emerged from the colonisation of Africa by European powers which institutionalised racial discrimination and exercised a paternal philosophy of civilising inferior natives 218 Some scholars have argued that this can be reflected in Afrikaner Calvinism with its parallel traditions of racialism 219 for example as early as 1933 the executive council of the Broederbond formulated a recommendation for mass segregation 219 Western influence Edit Anti apartheid protest at South Africa House in London 1989 External Western influence arising from European experiences in colonisation may be seen as a factor which greatly influenced political attitudes and ideology Late twentieth century South Africa was cited as an unreconstructed example of western civilisation twisted by racism 220 In the 1960s South Africa experienced economic growth second only to that of Japan 221 Trade with Western countries grew and investment from the United States France and the United Kingdom poured in In 1974 resistance to apartheid was encouraged by Portuguese withdrawal from Mozambique and Angola after the 1974 Carnation Revolution South African troops withdrew from Angola early in 1976 failing to prevent the MPLA from gaining power there and Black students in South Africa celebrated The Mahlabatini Declaration of Faith signed by Mangosuthu Buthelezi and Harry Schwarz in 1974 enshrined the principles of peaceful transition of power and equality for all Its purpose was to provide a blueprint for South Africa by consent and racial peace in a multi racial society stressing opportunity for all consultation the federal concept and a Bill of Rights It caused a split in the United Party that ultimately realigned oppositional politics in South Africa with the formation of the Progressive Federal Party in 1977 The Declaration was the first of several such joint agreements by acknowledged Black and White political leaders in South Africa In 1978 the National Party Defence Minister Pieter Willem Botha became Prime Minister His white minority regime worried about Soviet aid to revolutionaries in South Africa at the same time that South African economic growth had slowed The South African Government noted that it was spending too much money to maintain segregated homelands created for Blacks and the homelands were proving to be uneconomical 222 Nor was maintaining Blacks as third class citizens working well Black labour remained vital to the economy and illegal Black labour unions were flourishing Many Blacks remained too poor to contribute significantly to the economy through their purchasing power although they composed more than 70 of the population Botha s regime feared that an antidote was needed to prevent the Blacks being attracted to Communism 223 In July 1979 the Nigerian Government alleged that the Shell BP Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited SPDC was selling Nigerian oil to South Africa though there was little evidence or commercial logic for such sales 224 The alleged sanctions breaking was used to justify the seizure of some of BP s assets in Nigeria including their stake in SPDC although it appears the real reasons were economic nationalism and domestic politics ahead of the Nigerian elections 225 Many South Africans attended schools in Nigeria 226 and Nelson Mandela acknowledged the role of Nigeria in the struggle against apartheid on several occasions 227 In the 1980s anti apartheid movements in the United States and Europe were gaining support for boycotts against South Africa for the withdrawal of US companies from South Africa and for release of imprisoned Nelson Mandela South Africa was sinking to the bottom of the international community Investment in South Africa was ending and an active policy of disinvestment had begun Tricameral parliament Edit Main article Tricameral Parliament In the early 1980s Botha s National Party government started to recognise the inevitability of the need to reform the apartheid system 228 Early reforms were driven by a combination of internal violence international condemnation changes within the National Party s constituency and changing demographics whites constituted only 16 of the total population in comparison to 20 fifty years earlier 229 In 1983 a new constitution was passed implementing what was called the Tricameral Parliament giving Coloureds and Indians voting rights and parliamentary representation in separate houses the House of Assembly 178 members for Whites the House of Representatives 85 members for Coloureds and the House of Delegates 45 members for Indians 230 Each House handled laws pertaining to its racial group s own affairs including health education and other community issues 231 All laws relating to general affairs matters such as defence industry taxation and Black affairs were handled by a Cabinet made up of representatives from all three houses However the White chamber had a large majority on this Cabinet ensuring that effective control of the country remained in the hands of the White minority 232 233 Blacks although making up the majority of the population were excluded from representation they remained nominal citizens of their homelands 234 The first Tricameral elections were largely boycotted by Coloured and Indian voters amid widespread rioting 235 Reforms and contact with the ANC under Botha Edit Concerned over the popularity of Mandela Botha denounced him as an arch Marxist committed to violent revolution but to appease Black opinion and nurture Mandela as a benevolent leader of Blacks 222 the government transferred him from the maximum security Robben Island to the lower security Pollsmoor Prison just outside Cape Town where prison life was more comfortable for him The government allowed Mandela more visitors including visits and interviews by foreigners to let the world know that he was being treated well 222 Black homelands were declared nation states and pass laws were abolished Black labour unions were legitimised the government recognised the right of Blacks to live in urban areas permanently and gave Blacks property rights there Interest was expressed in rescinding the law against interracial marriage and also rescinding the law against sexual relations between different races which was under ridicule abroad The spending for Black schools increased to one seventh of what was spent per white child up from on one sixteenth in 1968 At the same time attention was given to strengthening the effectiveness of the police apparatus In January 1985 Botha addressed the government s House of Assembly and stated that the government was willing to release Mandela on condition that Mandela pledge opposition to acts of violence to further political objectives Mandela s reply was read in public by his daughter Zinzi his first words distributed publicly since his sentence to prison 21 years earlier Mandela described violence as the responsibility of the apartheid regime and said that with democracy there would be no need for violence The crowd listening to the reading of his speech erupted in cheers and chants This response helped to further elevate Mandela s status in the eyes of those both internationally and domestically who opposed apartheid Between 1986 and 1988 some petty apartheid laws were repealed along with the pass laws 236 Botha told White South Africans to adapt or die 237 and twice he wavered on the eve of what were billed as rubicon announcements of substantial reforms although on both occasions he backed away from substantial changes Ironically these reforms served only to trigger intensified political violence through the remainder of the 1980s as more communities and political groups across the country joined the resistance movement Botha s government stopped short of substantial reforms such as lifting the ban on the ANC PAC and SACP and other liberation organisations releasing political prisoners or repealing the foundation laws of grand apartheid The government s stance was that they would not contemplate negotiating until those organisations renounced violence By 1987 South Africa s economy was growing at one of the lowest rates in the world and the ban on South African participation in international sporting events was frustrating many whites in South Africa Examples of African states with Black leaders and White minorities existed in Kenya and Zimbabwe Whispers of South Africa one day having a Black President sent more hardline whites into supporting right wing political parties Mandela was moved to a four bedroom house of his own with a swimming pool and shaded by fir trees on a prison farm just outside of Cape Town He had an unpublicised meeting with Botha Botha impressed Mandela by walking forward extending his hand and pouring Mandela s tea The two had a friendly discussion with Mandela comparing the African National Congress rebellion with that of the Afrikaner rebellion and talking about everyone being brothers A number of clandestine meetings were held between the ANC in exile and various sectors of the internal struggle such as women and educationalists More overtly a group of White intellectuals met the ANC in Senegal for talks known as the Dakar Conference 238 Presidency of F W de Klerk Edit de Klerk and Mandela in Davos 1992 Early in 1989 Botha had a stroke he was prevailed upon to resign in February 1989 239 He was succeeded as president later that year by F W de Klerk Despite his initial reputation as a conservative de Klerk moved decisively towards negotiations to end the political stalemate in the country Prior to his term in office F W de Klerk had already experienced political success as a result of the power base he had built in the Transvaal During this time F W de Klerk served as chairman to the provincial National Party which was in favour of the Apartheid regime The transition of de Klerk s ideology regarding apartheid is seen clearly in his opening address to parliament on 2 February 1990 F W de Klerk announced that he would repeal discriminatory laws and lift the 30 year ban on leading anti apartheid groups such as the African National Congress the Pan Africanist Congress the South African Communist Party SACP and the United Democratic Front The Land Act was brought to an end F W de Klerk also made his first public commitment to release Nelson Mandela to return to press freedom and to suspend the death penalty Media restrictions were lifted and political prisoners not guilty of common law crimes were released On 11 February 1990 Nelson Mandela was released from Victor Verster Prison after more than 27 years behind bars Having been instructed by the UN Security Council to end its long standing involvement in South West Africa Namibia and in the face of military stalemate in Southern Angola and an escalation in the size and cost of the combat with the Cubans the Angolans and SWAPO forces and the growing cost of the border war South Africa negotiated a change of control Namibia became independent on 21 March 1990 Negotiations Edit Main article Negotiations to end apartheid in South Africa Apartheid was dismantled in a series of negotiations from 1990 to 1991 culminating in a transitional period which resulted in the country s 1994 general election the first in South Africa held with universal suffrage In 1990 negotiations were earnestly begun with two meetings between the government and the ANC The purpose of the negotiations was to pave the way for talks towards a peaceful transition towards majority rule These meetings were successful in laying down the preconditions for negotiations despite the considerable tensions still abounding within the country Apartheid legislation was abolished in 1991 2 At the first meeting the NP and ANC discussed the conditions for negotiations to begin The meeting was held at Groote Schuur the President s official residence They released the Groote Schuur Minute which said that before negotiations commenced political prisoners would be freed and all exiles allowed to return There were fears that the change of power would be violent To avoid this it was essential that a peaceful resolution between all parties be reached In December 1991 the Convention for a Democratic South Africa CODESA began negotiations on the formation of a multiracial transitional government and a new constitution extending political rights to all groups CODESA adopted a Declaration of Intent and committed itself to an undivided South Africa Reforms and negotiations to end apartheid led to a backlash among the right wing White opposition leading to the Conservative Party winning a number of by elections against NP candidates De Klerk responded by calling a Whites only referendum in March 1992 to decide whether negotiations should continue 68 voted in favour and the victory instilled in de Klerk and the government a lot more confidence giving the NP a stronger position in negotiations When negotiations resumed in May 1992 under the tag of CODESA II stronger demands were made The ANC and the government could not reach a compromise on how power should be shared during the transition to democracy The NP wanted to retain a strong position in a transitional government and the power to change decisions made by parliament Persistent violence added to the tension during the negotiations This was due mostly to the intense rivalry between the Inkatha Freedom Party IFP and the ANC and the eruption of some traditional tribal and local rivalries between the Zulu and Xhosa historical tribal affinities especially in the Southern Natal provinces Although Mandela and Buthelezi met to settle their differences they could not stem the violence One of the worst cases of ANC IFP violence was the Boipatong massacre of 17 June 1992 when 200 IFP militants attacked the Gauteng township of Boipatong killing 45 Witnesses said that the men had arrived in police vehicles supporting claims that elements within the police and army contributed to the ongoing violence Subsequent judicial inquiries found the evidence of the witnesses to be unreliable or discredited and that there was no evidence of National Party or police involvement in the massacre When de Klerk visited the scene of the incident he was initially warmly welcomed but he was suddenly confronted by a crowd of protesters brandishing stones and placards The motorcade sped from the scene as police tried to hold back the crowd Shots were fired by the police and the PAC stated that three of its supporters had been gunned down 240 Nonetheless the Boipatong massacre offered the ANC a pretext to engage in brinkmanship Mandela argued that de Klerk as head of state was responsible for bringing an end to the bloodshed He also accused the South African police of inciting the ANC IFP violence This formed the basis for ANC s withdrawal from the negotiations and the CODESA forum broke down completely at this stage The Bisho massacre on 7 September 1992 brought matters to a head The Ciskei Defence Force killed 29 people and injured 200 when they opened fire on ANC marchers demanding the reincorporation of the Ciskei homeland into South Africa In the aftermath Mandela and de Klerk agreed to meet to find ways to end the spiralling violence This led to a resumption of negotiations Right wing violence also added to the hostilities of this period The assassination of Chris Hani on 10 April 1993 threatened to plunge the country into chaos Hani the popular General Secretary of the South African Communist Party SACP was assassinated in 1993 in Dawn Park in Johannesburg by Janusz Walus an anti Communist Polish refugee who had close links to the White nationalist Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging AWB Hani enjoyed widespread support beyond his constituency in the SACP and ANC and had been recognised as a potential successor to Mandela his death brought forth protests throughout the country and across the international community but ultimately proved a turning point after which the main parties pushed for a settlement with increased determination 241 On 25 June 1993 the AWB used an armoured vehicle to crash through the doors of the Kempton Park World Trade Centre where talks were still going ahead under the Negotiating Council though this did not derail the process In addition to the continuing black on black violence there were a number of attacks on white civilians by the PAC s military wing the Azanian People s Liberation Army APLA The PAC was hoping to strengthen their standing by attracting the support of the angry impatient youth In the St James Church massacre on 25 July 1993 members of the APLA opened fire in a church in Cape Town killing 11 members of the congregation and wounding 58 In 1993 de Klerk and Mandela were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for their work for the peaceful termination of the apartheid regime and for laying the foundations for a new democratic South Africa 242 Violence persisted right up to the 1994 general election Lucas Mangope leader of the Bophuthatswana homeland declared that it would not take part in the elections It had been decided that once the temporary constitution had come into effect the homelands would be incorporated into South Africa but Mangope did not want this to happen There were strong protests against his decision leading to a coup d etat in Bophuthatswana carried out by the SDF on 10 March that deposed Mangope AWB militants attempted to intervene in hopes of maintaining Mangope in power Fighting alongside black paramilitaries loyal to Mangope they were unsuccessful with 3 AWB militants being killed during this intervention and harrowing images of the bloodshed shown on national television and in newspapers across the world Two days before the election a car bomb exploded in Johannesburg killing nine people 243 244 The day before the elections another one went off injuring 13 At midnight on 26 27 April 1994 the previous orange white blue flag adopted in 1928 was lowered and the old now co official national anthem Die Stem The Call was sung followed by the raising of the new Y shaped flag and singing of the other co official anthem Nkosi Sikelel iAfrika God Bless Africa Since 2019 publicly displaying the 1928 1994 flag in South Africa is banned and it is classified as hate speech 245 1994 election Edit The new multicoloured flag of South Africa adopted in 1994 to mark the end of Apartheid Main article 1994 South African general election The election was held on 27 April 1994 and went off peacefully throughout the country as 20 000 000 South Africans cast their votes There was some difficulty in organising the voting in rural areas but people waited patiently for many hours to vote amidst a palpable feeling of goodwill An extra day was added to give everyone the chance International observers agreed that the elections were free and fair 246 The European Union s report on the election compiled at the end of May 1994 published two years after the election criticised the Independent Electoral Commission s lack of preparedness for the polls the shortages of voting materials at many voting stations and the absence of effective safeguards against fraud in the counting process In particular it expressed disquiet that no international observers had been allowed to be present at the crucial stage of the count when party representatives negotiated over disputed ballots This meant that both the electorate and the world were simply left to guess at the way the final result was achieved 247 The ANC won 62 65 of the vote 248 249 less than the 66 7 percent that would have allowed it to rewrite the constitution 252 of the 400 seats went to members of the African National Congress The NP captured most of the White and Coloured votes and became the official opposition party As well as deciding the national government the election decided the provincial governments and the ANC won in seven of the nine provinces with the NP winning in the Western Cape and the IFP in KwaZulu Natal On 10 May 1994 Mandela was sworn in as the new President of South Africa The Government of National Unity was established its cabinet made up of 12 ANC representatives six from the NP and three from the IFP Thabo Mbeki and de Klerk were made deputy presidents The anniversary of the elections 27 April is celebrated as a public holiday known as Freedom Day Contrition EditThe following individuals who had previously supported apartheid made public apologies F W de Klerk I apologise in my capacity as leader of the NP to the millions who suffered wrenching disruption of forced removals who suffered the shame of being arrested for pass law offences who over the decades suffered the indignities and humiliation of racial discrimination 250 In a video released after his death in 2021 he apologised one last time for apartheid both on a personal level and in his capacity as former president 251 Marthinus van Schalkwyk The National Party brought development to a section of South Africa but also brought suffering through a system grounded on injustice in a statement shortly after the National Party voted to disband 252 253 Adriaan Vlok washed the feet of apartheid victim Frank Chikane in an act of apology for the wrongs of the Apartheid regime 254 Leon Wessels I am now more convinced than ever that apartheid was a terrible mistake that blighted our land South Africans did not listen to the laughing and the crying of each other I am sorry that I had been so hard of hearing for so long 255 International legal political and social uses of the term EditThe South African experience has given rise to the term apartheid being used in a number of contexts other than the South African system of racial segregation For example The crime of apartheid is defined in international law including in the 2007 law that created the International Criminal Court ICC which names it as a crime against humanity Even before the creation of the ICC the International Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid of the United Nations which came into force in 1976 enshrined into law the crime of apartheid 256 The term apartheid has been adopted by Palestinian rights advocates and by leading Israeli and other human rights organizations referring to occupation in the West Bank legal treatment of illegal settlements and the West Bank barrier 257 258 259 260 Within the pre 1967 Israeli borders Palestinian rights advocates have raised concern over discriminatory housing planning against Palestinian citizens of Israel likening it to racial segregation 261 Social apartheid is segregation on the basis of class or economic status For example social apartheid in Brazil refers to the various aspects of economic inequality in Brazil Social apartheid may fall into various categories Economic and social discrimination because of gender is sometimes referred to as gender apartheid Separation of people according to their religion whether pursuant to official laws or pursuant to social expectations is sometimes referred to as religious apartheid Communities in northern Ireland for example are often housed based on religion in a situation which has been described as self imposed apartheid 262 The treatment of non Muslims and women by the Saudi rulers has also been called apartheid The concept in occupational therapy that individuals groups and communities can be deprived of meaningful and purposeful activity through segregation due to social political economic factors and for social status reasons such as race disability age gender sexuality religious preference political preference or creed or due to war conditions is sometimes known as occupational apartheid A 2007 book by Harriet A Washington on the history of medical experimentation on African Americans is entitled Medical Apartheid The disproportionate management and control of the world s economy and resources by countries and companies of the Global North has been referred to as global apartheid A related phenomenon is technological apartheid a term used to describe the denial of modern technologies to Third World or developing nations The last two examples use the term apartheid less literally since they are centered on relations between countries not on disparate treatment of social populations within a country or political jurisdiction See also EditAfrophobia Apartheid in international law Apartheid legislation in South Africa Apartheid in art and literature Divide and rule Discrimination based on skin colour Foreign relations of South Africa during apartheid Index of racism related articles Israel and apartheid Legacies of apartheid Music in the movement against apartheid Racial discrimination Racial hierarchy Racism by country Portals South Africa 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990sNotes and references EditAnnotations Edit The Population Registration Act 1950 the basis for most apartheid legislation was formally abolished in 1991 1 2 although the country s first non racial government was not established until multiracial elections held under a universal franchise in 1994 3 References Edit Repeal of Population Registration Act C Span 17 June 1991 Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 7 June 2018 a b c Myre Greg 18 June 1991 South Africa ends racial classifications Cape Girardeau Southeast Missourian Associated Press Archived from the original on 8 June 2020 Retrieved 1 March 2018 Bartusis Mark 2012 Gomez Edmund Premdas Ralph eds Affirmative Action Ethnicity and Conflict New York Routledge Books pp 126 132 ISBN 978 0415627689 a b Mayne Alan 1999 From Politics Past to Politics Future An Integrated Analysis of Current and Emergent Paradigms Westport Connecticut Praeger p 52 ISBN 978 0 275 96151 0 Leander 15 June 2015 Despite the 1994 political victory against apartheid its economic legacy persists by Haydn Cornish Jenkins South African History Online Archived from the original on 2 May 2018 Retrieved 2 May 2018 Apartheid legacy haunts SA economy SABC News Breaking news special reports world business sport coverage of all South African current events Africa s news leader www sabcnews com 27 April 2018 Archived from the original on 19 November 2018 Retrieved 2 May 2018 Ramaphosa s tough job on fixing Apartheid legacy 6 April 2018 Archived from the original on 23 June 2018 a b Crompton Samuel Willard 2007 Desmond Tutu Fighting Apartheid New York Chelsea House Publishers pp 34 35 ISBN 978 0791092217 a b c d Walton F Carl Udayakumar S P Muck William McIlwain Charlton Kramer Eric Jensen Robert Ibrahim Vivian Caliendo Stephen Maynard Asher Nhia 2011 The Routledge Companion to Race and Ethnicity New York Routledge Books pp 103 105 ISBN 978 0415777070 Baldwin Ragaven Laurel London Lesley du Gruchy Jeanelle 1999 An ambulance of the wrong colour health professionals human rights and ethics in South Africa Juta and Company Limited p 18 South Africa Overcoming Apartheid African Studies Center of Michigan State University Archived from the original on 14 December 2013 Retrieved 26 December 2013 Lodge Tim 2011 Sharpeville An Apartheid Massacre and Its Consequences Oxford Oxford University Press pp 234 235 ISBN 978 0192801852 a b Lodge Tom 1983 Black Politics in South Africa Since 1945 New York Longman Pandey Satish Chandra 2006 International Terrorism and the Contemporary World New Delhi Sarup amp Sons Publishers pp 197 199 ISBN 978 8176256384 a b Thomas Scott 1995 The Diplomacy of Liberation The Foreign Relations of the ANC Since 1960 London Tauris Academic Studies pp 202 210 ISBN 978 1850439936 De Klerk dismantles apartheid in South Africa BBC News 2 February 1990 Archived from the original on 15 February 2009 Retrieved 21 February 2009 Alex Duval Smith 31 January 2010 Why FW de Klerk let Nelson Mandela out of prison The Guardian Archived from the original on 17 March 2016 Retrieved 25 March 2016 Mitchell Thomas 2008 Native vs Settler Ethnic Conflict in Israel Palestine Northern Ireland and South Africa Westport Greenwood Publishing Group p 8 ISBN 978 0313313578 Dictionary com entry for apartheid Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 11 August 2012 Shore Megan Religion and Conflict Resolution Christianity and South Africa s Truth and Reconciliation Commission Ashgate Publishing 2009 p 36 Nancy L Clarkson amp William H Worger South Africa The Rise and Fall of Routledge 2013 Chapter 3 The Basis of Apartheid Clark Nancy Worger William 17 June 2016 South Africa The Rise and Fall of Apartheid 3 ed New York Routledge pp 11 12 doi 10 4324 9781315621562 ISBN 978 1 315 62156 2 a b c A Du Toit H B Giliomee 1983 Afrikaner political thought analysis and documents University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 04319 0 Clark amp Worger 2016 p 12 R W Lee Introduction to Roman Dutch Law Oxford Clarendon Press Retrieved 27 March 2011 Clark amp Worger 2016 p 14 Gish Steven 2000 Alfred B Xuma African American South African New York University Press p 8 Hoiberg Dale Ramchandani Indu 2000 Students Britannica India Volumes 1 5 Popular Prakashan p 142 Kiloh Margaret Sibeko Archie 2000 A Fighting Union Randburg Ravan Press p 1 ISBN 0869755277 Clark amp Worger 2016 p 16 17 Apartheid South Africa an insider s view of the origin and effects of separate development John Allen 2005 Apartheid South Africa an insider s view of the origin and effects of separate development New York iUniverse Inc p 267 ISBN 9780595355518 better source needed Nojeim Michael J 2004 Gandhi and King the power of nonviolent resistance Greenwood Publishing Group p 127 Clark amp Worger 2016 p 17 a b Leach Graham 1986 South Africa no easy path to peace Routledge p 68 Tankard Keith 9 May 2004 Chapter 9 The Natives Urban Areas Act Archived 20 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine Rhodes University knowledge4africa com Baroness Young Minister of State Foreign and Commonwealth Office 4 July 1986 South Africa House of Lords Debate vol 477 cc1159 250 Archived 26 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Hansard The Representation of Natives Act sahistory org Archived 13 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine Ambrosio Thomas 2002 Ethnic identity groups and U S foreign policy Greenwood Publishing Group pp 56 57 Clark amp Worger 2016 p 26 Reddy E S n d Indian passive resistance in South Africa 1946 1948 sahistory org za SA History Archived from the original on 23 February 2015 Retrieved 23 February 2015 a b c d e f Kaplan Irving Area Handbook for the Republic of South Africa PDF pp 1 86 Archived PDF from the original on 28 April 2015 Retrieved 25 March 2016 Clark amp Worger 2016 p 37 38 P Brits Modern South Africa Afrikaner power the politics of race and resistance 1902 to the 1970s Pretoria University of South Africa Press 2007 p37 a b c d e O Meara Dan Forty Lost Years The National Party and the Politics of the South African State 1948 1994 Athens Ohio University Press 1996 a b M Meredith In the Name of Apartheid London Hamish Hamilton 1988 ISBN 978 0 06 430163 3 Clark amp Worger 2016 p 41 42 Apartheid FAQ about com Archived from the original on 13 May 2013 Retrieved 25 March 2016 The 1948 election and the National Party Victory South African History Online Archived from the original on 16 August 2008 Retrieved 13 July 2008 T Kuperus 7 April 1999 State Civil Society and Apartheid in South Africa An Examination of Dutch Reformed Church State Relations Palgrave Macmillan UK pp 83 ISBN 978 0 230 37373 0 Archived from the original on 5 January 2020 Retrieved 29 April 2018 a b Cole Catherine M 2010 Performing South Africa s Truth Commission Stages of Transition Indiana University Press p 31 ISBN 9780253353900 Archived from the original on 24 June 2021 Retrieved 20 June 2021 Kenney Henry 2016 Verwoerd Architect of Apartheid Jonathan Ball Publishers ISBN 9781868427161 Archived from the original on 2 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14725843 2017 1319754 S2CID 151467416 Davenport T R H South Africa A Modern History MacMillan 1977 Davies Rob Dan O Meara and Sipho Dlamini The Struggle For South Africa A reference guide to movements organisations and institution Volume Two London Zed Books 1984 De Klerk F W The last Trek A New Beginning MacMillan 1998 Du Pre R H Separate but Unequal The Coloured People of South Africa A Political History Jonathan Ball 1994 Eiselen W W N The Meaning of Apartheid Race Relations 15 3 1948 Federal Research Division South Africa a country study Library of Congress 1996 Giliomee Herman The Afrikaners Hurst amp Co 2003 Goodman Peter S 24 October 2017 End of Apartheid in South Africa Not in Economic Terms The New York Times Archived from the original on 15 March 2018 Retrieved 20 March 2018 Political liberation has yet to translate into material gains for blacks As one woman said I ve gone from a shack to a shack Hexham Irving The Irony of Apartheid The Struggle for National Independence of Afrikaner Calvinism against British Imperialism Edwin Mellen 1981 Keable Ken London Recruits The Secret War Against Apartheid Pontypool UK Merlin Press 2012 Lapchick Richard and Urdang Stephanie Oppression and Resistance The Struggle of Women in Southern Africa Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press 1982 Louw P Eric The Rise Fall and Legacy of Apartheid Praeger 2004 Makdisi Saree 2018 Apartheid Apartheid Critical Inquiry 44 2 304 330 doi 10 1086 695377 S2CID 224798450 Meredith Martin In the name of apartheid South Africa in the postwar period 1st US ed New York Harper amp Row 1988 Meredith Martin The State of Africa The Free Press 2005 Merrett Christopher 2005 Sport and Apartheid History Compass 3 doi 10 1111 j 1478 0542 2005 00165 x Morris Michael Apartheid An illustrated history Jonathan Ball Publishers Johannesburg and Cape Town 2012 Newbury Darren Defiant Images Photography and Apartheid South Africa University of South Africa UNISA Press 2009 Noah Trevor Born a Crime Stories from a South African Childhood Random House 2016 ISBN 978 0399588174 Suze Anthony 2010 The untold story of Robben Island Sports and the anti Apartheid movement Sport in Society 13 36 42 doi 10 1080 17430430903377706 S2CID 144871273 Terreblanche S A History of Inequality in South Africa 1652 2002 University of Natal Press 2003 Visser Pippa In search of history Oxford University Press Southern Africa 2003 Williams Michael Book Crocodile Burning 1994 Memorandum van die Volksraad 2016External links EditApartheid at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Data from Wikidata Apartheid 20th Century Slavery 1971 United Nations Report on Apartheid Byrnes Mark 10 December 2010 Life in Apartheid Era South Africa Bloomberg com Includes many photos Understanding Apartheid Learner s Book Archived 8 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Series of PDFs published by the Apartheid Museum The evolution of the white right Volk faith and fatherland The security threat posed by the white right by Martin Schonteich and Henri Boshoff 2003 Freedom Charter 1955 About the Freedom Charter SA History online District 6 Museum Cape Town s District Six Museum which examines forced removals The International Centre for Transitional Justice ICTJ provides resources on the legacy of apartheid and transitional justice in South Africa post apartheid Struggles for Freedom Southern Africa JSTOR Collection of primary source historical materials about apartheid South Africa Apartheid archives subject guide London University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Apartheid amp oldid 1130943166, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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