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- <text id=92TT1526>
- <title>
- July 06, 1992: Enemies:Black vs. Black vs. White
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- July 06, 1992 Pills for the Mind
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOUTH AFRICA, Page 42
- ENEMIES: Black vs. Black vs. White
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Negotiations should eventually resume, but De Klerk can save his
- reforms -- and the nation -- only if the bloody cycle of black
- violence is halted
- </p>
- <p>By SCOTT MACLEOD/JOHANNESBURG
- </p>
- <p> Something ominous was forgotten over the past two years as
- President F.W. de Klerk went about burying apartheid and
- accepting praise from grateful citizens and foreign statesmen:
- even more than in the past, South Africa's 5 million whites and
- 28.5 million blacks were living in separate worlds. Whites, of
- course, continued to enjoy the comfort and security of leafy
- suburbs. At least two-thirds of them were prepared to share
- governance with blacks -- but not to surrender all their power
- or any of their wealth. Life in the matchbox townships,
- meanwhile, became a daily nightmare unimagined by whites. Not
- only were jobs a rarity because of the recession, but blacks
- were dying in a spasm of political violence that was deadlier --
- at least 8,000 killed since 1989 -- than any before De Klerk
- took office. Shut out of the country's good life, black South
- Africans are all the more impatient to acquire the power whites
- have exercised to their own advantage for so long.
- </p>
- <p> When negotiations between De Klerk's government and Nelson
- Mandela's African National Congress collapsed last week, it was
- attributable as much to a collision between these diverging
- worlds as it was to the failure of the negotiators or the
- latest massacre of blacks. That is one reason why the breakdown
- has caused so much anguish among people of all races. After
- more than two years of progress, they were suddenly asking
- themselves whether their remarkable attempt at reconciliation
- might actually fail, and with disastrous consequences. "I can
- only say," wrote Allister Sparks, the South African journalist
- and author, "that I despaired for our country."
- </p>
- <p> The immediate cause of the breakdown was the A.N.C.'s
- indignation over the particularly pitiless slaughter of 42
- people in Boipatong, near Johannesburg. Discontent has grown
- intense in A.N.C. ranks over the ceaseless violence. When
- Mandela visited Boipatong last week, he and his entourage were
- taunted by a song that included the lyrics: "While they kill
- our people, you behave like lambs."
- </p>
- <p> But there are more fundamental reasons for the decision to
- withdraw from the Convention for a Democratic South Africa
- (CODESA). The A.N.C. is deeply frustrated by both the one-sided
- power De Klerk has wielded in the negotiations and their
- failure to yield tangible change.
- </p>
- <p> To the A.N.C., the two problems go hand in hand.
- Secretary-General Cyril Rama phosa blamed De Klerk for the
- massacre, accusing the government of pursuing a strategy that
- "embraces negotiations together with systematic covert actions,
- including murder." Survivors of the atrocity accused Zulu
- migrant workers staying at a local hostel and loyal to the
- Inkatha Freedom Party of carrying out the killings -- but the
- survivors also claim that government security forces took part
- in the attack.
- </p>
- <p> Privately, A.N.C. leaders say they do not believe De Klerk
- is orchestrating a Machiavellian plot. They understand that part
- of the problem is a culture of intolerance and factional
- hostility from which their own members are hardly immune. They
- do angrily blame the President, however, for cynically doing
- little to stop the bloodshed in the hope that it will
- exacerbate divisions in the massive black electorate and hinder
- the A.N.C.'s ability to build a strong political organization
- in the townships.
- </p>
- <p> The suspicions are not altogether farfetched. De Klerk has
- been criticized repeatedly by human-rights groups for not
- reining in his security forces. Despite previous success in
- crushing illegal A.N.C. military activities, the government has
- notably failed to punish the perpetrators of township
- massacres. Says Helen Suzman, a white liberal and former Member
- of Parliament: "They have got to get cracking on the security
- forces and weed out those elements known to be against reform."
- </p>
- <p> De Klerk, moreover, has expressed ambivalence when Zulu war
- parties known as impis have paraded provocatively through
- township streets carrying spears and other so-called cultural
- weapons. Professor David Welsh of the University of Cape Town
- believes the government is guilty of "gross negligence" for
- having all but ignored repeated recommendations that could have
- prevented the Boipa tong massacre, such as maintaining police
- surveillance of migrant-worker hostels.
- </p>
- <p> While it has made similar threats before, the A.N.C. decided
- to break off negotiations this time because the Boipatong
- massacre came amid indications that De Klerk was beginning to
- drag his feet on ceding full-fledged democracy. He started to
- take a harder line immediately following the March referendum
- in which white voters overwhelmingly endorsed his reform
- program. In May, Round 2 of CODESA ended in failure largely
- because De Klerk's negotiators adamantly insisted on powerful
- checks and balances amounting to an effective white veto in a
- future political system. De Klerk seemed to be turning his back
- on black expectations.
- </p>
- <p> His remoteness was apparent when he unwisely tried to visit
- Boipatong, only to be forced out of the township by an enraged
- crowd. As he fled, policemen opened fire and killed three more
- local people. Rather than make plain his concern for the victims
- and the developing political crisis, De Klerk flew to Spain on
- a trade mission.
- </p>
- <p> All may not be lost, however. At a meeting last week of the
- A.N.C.'s executive committee, officials recommitted the
- organization to negotiations, provided that De Klerk takes
- several practical steps to curb the violence: terminating
- covert operations, closing hostels, banning the carrying of
- cultural weapons. The committee also proposed that Mandela
- quickly meet with De Klerk to discuss the crisis, which suggests
- that the A.N.C. is prepared to bargain.
- </p>
- <p> The Boipatong furor seems to have shaken De Klerk. His
- security forces moved with uncharacteristic speed in tracking
- down the suspected killers. Police commissioner Johannes van
- der Merwe said the preliminary police investigation showed that
- "certain residents" of a Zulu migrant-workers' hostel were
- involved but denied that government forces participated. De
- Klerk also agreed to allow international jurists to join a
- continuing independent inquiry into the violence. Yet the
- A.N.C. will expect a more permanent change of attitude on the
- part of the government toward halting the violence if reform is
- to have any hope.
- </p>
- <p> Many South Africans soothed their fears by repeating the
- comforting aphorism that "there is no alternative to
- negotiations." The talks will probably resume once the tensions
- caused by Boipatong cool. But a successful conclusion to the
- talks may depend as much on whether blacks and whites can break
- out of their separate worlds. In a sermon after the massacre,
- Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu, the Nobel Peace Prize
- laureate, said, "I hope, somewhere, somehow, it will sink into
- the consciousness of most of our white fellow South Africans
- that we are human beings who cry when our children die." As
- long as blacks are allowed, even encouraged, to keep killing
- one another, neither world in South Africa has a bright future.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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