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- <text id=89TT1914>
- <title>
- July 24, 1989: South Africa:An Unlikely Tea For Two
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- July 24, 1989 Fateful Voyage:The Exxon Valdez
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 29
- SOUTH AFRICA
- An Unlikely Tea for Two
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By meeting with Botha, Mandela gives his blessing to direct
- talks between his supporters and the government
- </p>
- <p> A mere hour's drive separates the prison farm where Nelson
- Mandela is being held and State President P.W. Botha's
- white-pillared residence in Cape Town. But the political
- distance between those two men has always seemed unbridgeable.
- They have personified the country's racial stalemate: Mandela,
- who turns 71 this week, insisted that he would make no deals
- with the white government while he remained a prisoner; Botha,
- 73, vowed that he would never free the symbolic leader of the
- nation's black majority unless Mandela forswore the use of
- violence.
- </p>
- <p> To the astonishment of black and white South Africans, the
- government disclosed last week that the chasm may not be as
- impossibly wide as once thought. In his 27th year of
- imprisonment, serving a life sentence for sabotage, Mandela
- accepted an invitation from Botha to meet face to face for the
- first time. The two adversaries spent 45 minutes on July 5
- talking "in a pleasant spirit" and sipping tea. It was not a
- negotiation, said Justice Minister Kobie Coetsee, who also
- participated, but the two foes confirmed "their support for
- peaceful development in South Africa." By agreeing to that,
- Mandela seemed to qualify for admission to negotiations with the
- government under a new formulation from the ruling National
- Party welcoming all "people who have a commitment to peace" to
- join in efforts to draft a new constitution that would provide
- a national political role for blacks.
- </p>
- <p> White right wingers called Botha a "traitor" for sitting
- down with a man they consider a terrorist. White liberals felt
- confirmed in their belief that Mandela and his organization, the
- outlawed African National Congress, hold the key to successful
- negotiations between blacks and whites. But Mandela had not
- informed the A.N.C., his family or anyone else about the
- meeting, and black activists were shocked and confused when they
- learned of it. For years they have refused to consider or
- tolerate any contact with the government, demanding that it
- first release Mandela, legalize the A.N.C. and end the state of
- emergency.
- </p>
- <p> One of the most prominent antiapartheid leaders, the Rev.
- Frank Chikane, along with Mandela's wife Winnie, quickly called
- a press conference to dismiss the talks in Cape Town as a
- "nonevent," an act of "political mischief" staged by Mandela's
- jailers. In Lusaka, Joe Modise, commander of Spear of the
- Nation, the guerrilla wing of the A.N.C. that Mandela helped
- create in 1961, insisted that "only the armed struggle will
- bring the Boers to negotiations."
- </p>
- <p> Mandela, who has a television and radio in his
- three-bedroom house at Victor Verster Prison, heard the angry
- reaction of his supporters. In a statement released last
- Wednesday, he repeated his conviction that a government
- "dialogue with the mass democratic movement, and in particular
- with the African National Congress, is the only way of ending
- violence and bringing peace." His intention, he told his
- followers, was "to contribute to the creation of the climate"
- that would lead to such negotiations. Black leaders immediately
- began downplaying their resentment, and Chikane retreated. "I
- welcome Mr. Mandela's commitment" to creating such a climate,
- he said.
- </p>
- <p> Though Mandela holds no official position in the A.N.C., he
- has proved that even in prison he is the leader to reckon with.
- Nor should there be much surprise at this: he has always been
- more realistic and flexible than A.N.C. leaders in exile or
- such internal antiapartheid coalitions as the United Democratic
- Front and the Congress of South African Trade Unions. In
- interviews granted to occasional VIP visitors to his cell, he
- conceded that white fears of domination must be taken into
- account in designing a black majority government -- something
- A.N.C. policy rejects. He has also maintained warm relations
- with Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi, head of the Zulu-based Inkatha
- organization, which is fighting a bloody war against A.N.C. and
- U.D.F. supporters. His wish, Mandela recently wrote Buthelezi,
- is to unify all the black movements.
- </p>
- <p> After recovering from tuberculosis last year, Mandela
- apparently concluded that he had to try to get negotiations
- going before his time ran out, and agreed to meet Botha. He
- talked secretly over several months with at least four Cabinet
- ministers, and would have seen Botha much earlier if the
- President had not suffered a stroke last January. Botha, the man
- who told his white countrymen in 1979 that they had to "adapt
- or die," seemed determined to begin the process before he
- retires next September. By arranging the meeting, says Cape Town
- University Professor David Welsh, Botha acknowledged both
- Mandela and the A.N.C. as significant "players" in the search
- for a political settlement.
- </p>
- <p> For all the confusion it caused, the Mandela-Botha meeting
- answers some long-standing questions. There can be no doubt now
- that the government's improved treatment of Mandela, which
- began when he was hospitalized a year ago, will lead to his
- eventual release. It could come just after the Sept. 6
- parliamentary elections, so that Botha can claim credit for the
- step before handing over the presidency to the new National
- Party leader, F.W. de Klerk. Similarly, it seems inevitable that
- the A.N.C., which the government still classifies as a terrorist
- organization, will be included in future negotiations. It is a
- testament to his leadership abilities that Mandela has already
- led his reluctant followers into talks about talks.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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