15 years after aparthied; South Africa at crossroad

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<font size="5"><center>

Fifteen years after apartheid,
South Africa at a crossroad</font size>
<font size="4">

In the 15 years since Nelson Mandela won the first democratic
elections here, finally closing the book on four decades of
white apartheid rule, a lot has gone right with South
Africa. Yet days before a new election, a deep
malaise has taken hold, a creeping fear that
the next decade and a half won't be
as good as the first was. </font size></center>



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McClatchy Newspapers
By Shashank Bengali
Sunday, April 19, 2009


JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — It's easy to look around this proud, polyglot city and think that the favorite slogan of the new South Africa — a "Rainbow Nation" of races striving together for prosperity — is becoming a reality.

Blacks and whites mingle in buzzing bars and restaurants, in state-of-the-art business parks and shopping malls and in tree-lined suburbs that recall Southern California more than southern Africa. A blossoming black middle class fills the boardrooms and back offices of a diverse economy that's the engine and envy of the continent.

In the 15 years since Nelson Mandela won the first democratic elections here, finally closing the book on four decades of white apartheid rule, a lot has gone right with South Africa. Yet days before a new election, a deep malaise has taken hold, a creeping fear that the next decade and a half won't be as good as the first was.

<font size="3">For months, the news pages have been dominated by stories about political corruption, intimidation and back-room dealing at the highest levels of the African National Congress, the party that led the fight against apartheid and has controlled the government ever since. The man who figures to become president after the April 22 elections, Jacob Zuma, had a long-running bribery case against him suddenly dropped this month on legal technicalities that many suspect were the result of political pressure.

In low-income black townships, residents complain that while the leaders of the liberation struggle are getting rich running the new South Africa, they're still spinning their wheels in the old one — a place of deprivation where electricity, clean water, affordable homes and decent schools remain out of reach.

Among the still-prosperous white minority, worries about crime and corruption are driving many young, educated people overseas, leaving the country short of doctors engineers and other skilled professionals.</font size>

Since capturing the world's imagination in 1994, this country has seen itself as exceptional, an African oasis. Now, for the first time, polls show that a plurality of people thinks the country is headed in the wrong direction.

"People thought this was not Africa," said Simanga Khumalo, a professor of religion who grew up in the black township of Soweto in the 1970s, when it was a cauldron of anti-apartheid resistance.

"People looked at our economy and businesses, and we look like an advanced society. But this is Africa. We are no different. Our leaders also love power."

In many ways, class barriers have replaced the old racial divisions. Despite robust economic growth under former President Thabo Mbeki, unemployment has risen to 38 percent from 32 percent in 1994. The number of jobless has doubled. Despite one of the largest welfare systems in the world, more than half of blacks live below the poverty line, compared with about 10 percent of the rest of the country.

In Alexandra township, just outside Johannesburg, Joyce Mlambo can recall the euphoria of 1994, when she stood in line for hours to vote ANC and danced with her neighbors late into the night after the results were announced. Mlambo, now 50, expected that a black-led government would elevate her from the one-room shack where she raised seven children.

Today, she still earns $2 a day at her termite-eaten fruit stall and survives on welfare payments.

"Initially, I was really happy. We all were happy," Mlambo said, wiping her rough hands on her secondhand T-shirt. "Nothing is happening for us here. I feel betrayed."

When she rides the bus into Johannesburg, through a row of ritzy suburbs, she sees a class of people who look like her from the neck up, but who wear smart clothes, shiny shoes and expensive-looking watches.

"I don't relate to those people," Mlambo grunted.

The "black diamonds" — the fast-growing black middle class — comprises 6 percent of the country but more than a quarter of its buying power. Grants and government loans have helped many launch new businesses, while affirmative action has dramatically diversified once lily-white corporate ranks.

A loan helped Ndumi Medupe, armed only with a business plan, start a consulting firm in 2007. Now she has 20 employees, offices in a tree-lined business park and clients spread across a range of government departments.

Medupe grew up in a small eastern village and went to college on loans. Now she and her husband live in a gated home in a quiet suburb. Their two children, 13 and 5, "live in a different world."

But she only has to look at the children's private schools, where three-quarters of their classmates are white, to be reminded that not everyone is thriving in the new South Africa.

"From our point of view, the Rainbow Nation exists," Medupe said, invoking, as people here often do, the term coined by Nobel Prize-winning Archbishop Desmond Tutu to describe the dream of an integrated South Africa.

"For someone at the bottom of the ladder . . . things haven't changed much from the apartheid years."

Still, polls predict a comfortable ANC victory in a field that includes several smaller parties, although it likely will fall short of the 70 percent it won in 2004. Speaking last month at a business breakfast, Zuma acknowledged the inequities but said the country remained "fiercely protective" of the party.

"Support for the ANC among South Africans is as big and as enthusiastic as ever," he said.

For those who fear for South Africa, Zuma is the great bogeyman. The 67-year-old head of the ANC has polarized the nation like no politician before him.

Supporters think the former liberation fighter is a strong leader in the mold of a Zulu tribal patriarch (which he is, reportedly keeping four wives) and the corruption case against him, which dated to a multibillion-dollar arms deal in the 1990s, was plotted by his political enemies.

To critics, he's an unschooled rabble-rouser with troubling views on women's rights, the rule of law and AIDS. In 2006, during a trial in which he was acquitted of raping a woman he knew to be HIV-positive, he cast himself in the role of a traditional Zulu male, for whom it was required to have sex with a woman if she came before him wearing a skirt.

A former ANC parliamentarian, Andrew Feinstein, who resigned in 2001 over the party's failure to probe the arms deal, thinks the dismissal of the Zuma bribery case has irreversibly damaged South Africa's democratic credentials and could scare off foreign investors.

"All of these things make me very alarmed about the rule of law in the country," Feinstein said. "If the nature of South African democracy is that big bosses can get away with anything, people feel there is no real equality before the law."

There's more and more hand-wringing among South African whites.

In rural areas, farmers are troubled by high crime rates and a lack of government support. In cities, resentment at affirmative-action policies and the attraction of better-paying jobs abroad have lured thousands of professionals in their late 20s and early 30s to places such as Australia and Great Britain.

The fears run so high that one of the best-selling local books last year was called "Don't Panic!" — a plea to South Africans to stay and help build their nation. It began as an e-mail to employees from Alan Knott-Craig, head of an Internet firm that circulated to South Africans around the globe and eventually became a book.

In an interview, Knott-Craig said that crime and political instability are constant concerns. But the global economic slowdown has forced many young South Africans to rethink moving abroad, and he noted that Zuma has pledged to reduce crime, which affects South Africans of all races.

"There's a lot of uncertainty. Jacob Zuma has quite a bad reputation," he said. But, ever the optimist, he quickly added: "I personally feel we'll be pleasantly surprised.

"Anyone with a brain must be very happy with our political situation. Our presidents leave office peacefully — they don't stay for 20 years, or change the constitution or get the army to protect them. It's a true democracy. The big thing we have lacked since Mandela is true leadership."


http://www.mcclatchydc.com/226/story/66232.html
 
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640-WORLD-NEWS-SOWETO-8-MCT.slideshow_main.prod_affiliate.91.jpg

On a hillside in Soweto, South Africa, neat rows of red roofs characterize a new middle-class
neighborhood in the former black township. Since a 1976 student uprising in Soweto against
white apartheid rule, the former black township has seen a renaissance under South Africa's
new black-led government. (Shashank Bengali/MCT)


828-WORLD-NEWS-SOWETO-7-MCT.slideshow_main.prod_affiliate.91.jpg

Children play in the streets of Soweto, South Africa. The former black township outside Johan-
nesburg that has undergone a middle-class rebirth. (Shashank Bengali/MCT)


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Thoko Modise, who marched in the 1976 student uprising in Soweto, South Africa, armed with
stones and a metal trash-can lid, sits in the dining room of Wandie's, her family-owned
restaurant in Soweto. (Shashank Bengali/MCT)


401-WORLD-NEWS-SOWETO-1-MCT.slideshow_main.prod_affiliate.91.jpg

The massive Maponya Mall in Soweto, South Africa opened in 2007. It is a symbol of a renais-
sance in the former black township since white rule in South Africa ended in 1994. (Shashank
Bengali/MCT)


914-WORLD-NEWS-SOWETO-2-MCT.slideshow_main.prod_affiliate.91.jpg

Shadrack Motau, 63, a lifelong resident of Soweto marvels at the changes in the former black
township. "People are driving beautiful cars," he says. "People are starting businesses of all
kinds." (Shashank Bengali/MCT)



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Thabang Molelefi, 33, opened Roots, the first health spa in Soweto in 2002. Her now thriving
business is an example of growing black entrepreneurship in Soweto. (Shashank Bengali/MCT)


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Ingrid Moloi, left, poses with members of a youth soccer team she manages in the Alexandra
township of Johannesburg, South Africa. An HIV-positive community activist, Moloi's life has
been prolonged by antiretroviral drugs that are only now coming into wide use in South Africa.
(Shashank Bengali/MCT)


869-WORLD-NEWS-SAFRICA-AIDS-1-M.slideshow_main.prod_affiliate.91.jpg

Vuyani Ngxalaba, 16, and his sister Rosinah, stand outside their two-room home in the
Alexandra township of Johannesburg, South Africa. After their mother passed away due to
complications from HIV, Rosinah struggled to tell her shy, soccer-crazed brother that
he was also infected with the virus. (Shashank Bengali/MCT)


567-WORLD-NEWS-SAFRICA-AIDS-2-M.slideshow_main.prod_affiliate.91.jpg

Vuyani Ngxalaba, 16, and his sister Rosinah, share a quiet moment at home in the bustling
Alexandra township of Johannesburg, South Africa. It was here in 2007 that Rosinah first
told her brother that he was infected with the AIDS virus. (Shashank Bengali/MCT)


665-WORLD-NEWS-SAFRICA-6-MCT.slideshow_main.prod_affiliate.91.jpg

Penny Mubaiwa, 36, started an upscale line of women's shoes in a wealthy suburb of
Johannesburg, South Africa. Sourcing her designs from as far away as Paris and Hong Kong,
Mubaiwa is an example of a growing black entrepreneurial class created by South Africa's
post-apartheid government. (Shashank Bengali/MCT)



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Feels Betrayed</font size>

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Joyce Mlambo, who makes just $2 a day running a small fruit stall in Alexandra township
outside Johannesburg, South Africa, says she feels "betrayed" by politicians who've become
wealthy in the 15 years since apartheid ended. "Nothing is happening for us here," Mlambo
says. (Shashank Bengali/MCT)


168-WORLD-NEWS-SAFRICA-1-MCT.slideshow_main.prod_affiliate.91.jpg

Women work by a grimy, trash-strewn riverbank in the former black township of Alexandra,
outside Johannesburg, South Africa. Fifteen years since the end of white apartheid rule,
South Africa is the economic power of the continent but many of its citizens still live in poverty.
(Shashank Bengali/MCT)
 
S. Africa - "Poor Whites, Rich Blacks" (May 2009)

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The end of the Apartheid regime saw black South Africans gain from democracy and climb the social ladder. On the other hand white South Africans are learning that now the tables have turned, life isnt so easy." journeymanpictures
 
Re: S. Africa - "Poor Whites, Rich Blacks" (May 2009)

poor whites? :hmm:


for every "rich" black person there are like 100 rich white people. in fact, the forbes billionaire list is about 95% white. so get this shit outta here.
:hmm:
 
Re: S. Africa - "Poor Whites, Rich Blacks" (May 2009)

poor whites? :hmm:


for every "rich" black person there are like 100 rich white people. in fact, the forbes billionaire list is about 95% white. so get this shit outta here.
:hmm:

WRONG!

...for every "rich" black person there are like 100,000 rich white people.
 
Re: S. Africa - "Poor Whites, Rich Blacks" (May 2009)

poor whites? :hmm:


for every "rich" black person there are like 100 rich white people. in fact, the forbes billionaire list is about 95% white. so get this shit outta here.
:hmm:

Co-sign. That video is very misleading. Those poor whites are living like that because they want to. Whites still have an upper hand by their share numbers.
 
Re: S. Africa - "Poor Whites, Rich Blacks" (May 2009)

Co-sign. That video is very misleading. Those poor whites are living like that because they want to. Whites still have an upper hand by their share numbers.

Lazy uneducated and unwilling to apply themselves when the golden cushion gets taken away from them, I agree this is misleading, because blacks in SA are still living in crime infested slums.
 
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Fifteen years after apartheid,
South Africa at a crossroad</font size>
<font size="4">

In the 15 years since Nelson Mandela won the first democratic
elections here, finally closing the book on four decades of
white apartheid rule, a lot has gone right with South
Africa. Yet days before a new election, a deep
malaise has taken hold, a creeping fear that
the next decade and a half won't be
as good as the first was. </font size></center>


<IFRAME SRC="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-22839548" WIDTH=780 HEIGHT=1500>
<A HREF="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-22839548">link</A>

</IFRAME>
 

South Africa's Nelson Mandela dies in Johannesburg


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The announcement of Mandela's death was made by President Jacob Zuma



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5 December 2013


South Africa's first black president and anti-apartheid icon Nelson Mandela has died at the age of 95.

Mr Mandela led South Africa's transition from white-minority rule in the 1990s, after 27 years in prison for his political activities.

He had been receiving intensive medical care at home for a lung infection after spending three months in hospital.

Announcing the news on South African national TV, President Jacob Zuma said Mr Mandela was at peace.

"Our nation has lost its greatest son," Mr Zuma said.

"Although we knew that this day would come, nothing can diminish our sense of a profound and enduring loss."

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South Africans have gathered outside the home of Nelson Mandela in Johannesburg,
singing and chanting slogans to celebrate his life​

Mr Zuma said Mr Mandela - who is known affectionately by his clan name, Madiba - had died shortly before 21:00 local time (19:00 GMT). He said he would receive a full state funeral, and flags would be flown at half-mast.

Crowds have gathered outside the house where Mr Mandela died, some flying South African flags and wearing the shirts of the governing African National Congress, which Mr Mandela once led.

The Nobel Peace Prize laureate was one of the world's most revered statesmen after preaching reconciliation despite being imprisoned for 27 years.

He had rarely been seen in public since officially retiring in 2004. He made his last public appearance in 2010, at the football World Cup in South Africa.

His fellow campaigner against apartheid, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, said he was "not only an amazing gift to humankind, he made South Africans and Africans feel good about being who we are. He made us walk tall. God be praised."

BBC correspondents say Mr Mandela's body will be moved to a mortuary in the capital, Pretoria, and the funeral is likely to take place next Saturday.

'Bid him farewell'

Mr Zuma said in his statement that "what made Nelson Mandela great was precisely what made him human. We saw in him what we seek in ourselves.

"Fellow South Africans, Nelson Mandela brought us together and it is together that we will bid him farewell."

Tributes have come in from around the world. UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said he was "a giant for justice and a down-to-earth human inspiration".

"Many around the world were greatly influenced by his selfless struggle for human dignity, equality and freedom. He touched our lives in deeply personal ways."

US President Barack Obama said Mr Mandela achieved more than could be expected of any man.

"He no longer belongs to us - he belongs to the ages," he said, adding that Mr Mandela "took history in his hands and bent the arc of the moral universe towards justice".

Mr Obama, the first black president of the United States, said he was one of the millions who drew inspiration from Mr Mandela's life. He has ordered that the White House flag be flown at half-mast

FW de Klerk, who as South Africa's last white president ordered Mr Mandela's release, called him a "unifier" and said he had "a remarkable lack of bitterness".

He told the BBC Mr Mandela's greatest legacy "is that we are basically at peace with each other notwithstanding our great diversity, that we will be taking hands once again now around his death and around our common sadness and mourning".

The Elders - a group of global leaders set up by Mr Mandela to pursue peace and human rights - said they "join millions of people around the world who were inspired by his courage and touched by his compassion".

The group's chair, Kofi Annan, said the world had lost "a clear moral compass".

"While I mourn the loss of one of Africa's most distinguished leaders, Madiba's legacy beckons us to follow his example to strive for human rights, reconciliation and justice for all."

UK Prime Minister David Cameron said "a great light has gone out in the world".

Earlier this year, Mr Mandela spent nearly three months in hospital with a recurring lung infection.

He was moved to his home in the Houghton suburb of Johannesburg in September, where he continued to receive intensive care.



SOURCE


 
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1918 Born in the Eastern Cape

1943 Joined African National Congress

1956 Charged with high treason, but charges dropped after a four-year trial

1962 Arrested, convicted of incitement and leaving country without a passport, sentenced to five years in prison

1964 Charged with sabotage, sentenced to life

1965 Imprisoned
1966 Imprisoned
1967 Imprisoned
1968 Imprisoned
1969 Imprisoned
1970 Imprisoned
1971 Imprisoned
1972 Imprisoned
1973 Imprisoned
1974 Imprisoned
1975 Imprisoned
1976 Imprisoned
1977 Imprisoned
1978 Imprisoned
1979 Imprisoned
1980 Imprisoned
1981 Imprisoned
1982 Imprisoned
1983 Imprisoned
1984 Imprisoned
1985 Imprisoned
1985 Imprisoned
1986 Imprisoned
1987 Imprisoned
1988 Imprisoned
1989 Imprisoned​

1990 Freed from prison

1993 Wins Nobel Peace Prize

1994 Elected first black president

1999 Steps down as leader

2001 Diagnosed with prostate cancer

2004 Retires from public life

2005 Announces his son has died of an HIV/Aids-related illness

SOURCE

 
Good sixteen minute synopsis about the origins of the South African apartheid system and Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela's livelong leadership in the battle to extricate Black people from the unwavering white south-african, white supremacists and their white supremacist international allies; England under Thatcher, U.S. under Reagan, and Israel who all called Mandela a terrorist.

<iframe src='http://player.theplatform.com/p/2E2eJC/EmbeddedOffSite?guid=n_maddow_1mand1_131205' height='500' width='635' scrolling='no' border='no' ></iframe>
 
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South Africa marks 20th anniversary of democracy

South Africa marks 20th anniversary of democracy
By CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA
April 27, 2014 8:58 AM

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — South Africans on Sunday celebrated 20 years of democracy with song, prayer and praise for those who guided their country into a more peaceful, tolerant era, although some noted that economic inequality and other problems have undermined the nation's promise since the first all-race elections ended white rule on April 27, 1994.

The focus of the Freedom Day commemorations was in Pretoria at the Union Buildings, the century-old government offices where President Jacob Zuma and dignitaries, including foreign diplomats, gathered to reflect on the long struggle against apartheid and ensuing efforts to build a better country.

The anniversary precedes elections on May 7 that are likely to see the ruling African National Congress return to power with a smaller majority, reflecting discontent with the movement that opposed white domination before its candidate, Nelson Mandela, became South Africa's first black president.

In a speech, Zuma said South Africa had a good story to tell, referring to its stable electoral system, its constitutional commitment to human rights as well as advancements in health care, welfare grants and water and electricity in the past 20 years. Close to 3 million houses have been built since 1994, women play a far more prominent role in public life, and crime has declined, even it remains an issue of "serious concern," he said.

"We must not deny or downplay these achievements, regardless of our political differences or contestation at any given time, including the election period," said Zuma, who has been criticized because more than $20 million in state funds were spent on upgrading his private rural home. The scandal comes amid a troubling inequality between rich and poor that the government says is partly a legacy of old racial divisions, noting that the income of the average white household is six times that of a black household.

Election candidate Julius Malema, the expelled head of the ruling party's youth league and now leader of an upstart party that wants to redistribute wealth, has told supporters that events surrounding Freedom Day, which is a national holiday, are a sham because many poor South Africans still lack basic services.

"For as long as you don't have your dignity back, you have nothing to celebrate," Malema said this week, according to local media.

The mood was festive at the Pretoria ceremony, where balloons were on display and many people waved small South African flags. Women ululated and the crowd sang the national anthem, which incorporates several of South Africa's official languages in a show of unity. Some spectators wore African National Congress T-shirts, and danced the so-called "Freedom Dance," which features a raised fist associated with Mandela's show of defiance when he was freed in 1990 after 27 years in jail during apartheid.

There was a military gun salute and a fly-over by air force planes.

Messages of congratulations to South Africa for the 20th anniversary of democracy came from around the world.

"My family and I have enjoyed a special and significant relationship with South Africa over the years," Queen Elizabeth II of Britain said in a statement. "The links between our two countries have deepened and matured since South Africa's transition in 1994, and long may that continue."

Many of the messages delivered in South Africa on Sunday reflected the rough-and-tumble of an election season, rather than the lofty rhetoric surrounding the advent of democracy. The South African Press Association quoted prepared remarks from a speech by Bantu Holomisa, head of the opposition United Democratic Movement and a former member of the African National Congress.

"We cannot allow the country to slide further down this slippery slope of corruption, maladministration and ineptitude," Holomisa said.

On Thursday, Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe spoke in London about the 20th anniversary of democracy, noting the challenges that lie ahead as South Africa struggles to overcome unemployment, poverty and inequality. He said: "This celebration does not represent the end of the journey, but the beginning."

http://news.yahoo.com/south-africa-marks-20th-anniversary-democracy-125800888.html
 
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