home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
/
TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
/
1990
/
91
/
apr_jun
/
0527000.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-02-27
|
8KB
|
169 lines
<text>
<title>
(May 27, 1991) South Africa:Lay Down the Spears!
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
May 27, 1991 Orlando
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 30
SOUTH AFRICA
Lay Down The Spears!
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Despite De Klerk's progress in chipping away apartheid, violence
among blacks threatens further reform
</p>
<p>By George J. Church--Reported by Peter Hawthorne/Cape Town, with
other bureaus
</p>
<p> Spears, clubs and battle-axes might seem to be totally
outmoded weapons in an age of laser-guided bombs. But in South
Africa they retain some power--in one sense, more power than
Winnie Mandela. Contrary to many expectations, it is the
carrying of those supposedly "ceremonial" weapons by Zulus, not
the possible jailing of Winnie Mandela, that has emerged as the
chief obstacle to continuation of black-white negotiations on
the nation's future.
</p>
<p> Winnie's followers in the African National Congress, who
call her Mother of the Nation, did shout outrage at her
conviction last week by a white judge (South Africa does not
have jury trials). Mandela and two codefendants had been accused
of kidnapping four young black men from a Methodist minister's
home in Soweto in December 1988 and beating them in a back room
of the Mandela house. Judge Michael Stegman found Winnie to be
only an accessory to the assault but decided that she had
planned the kidnapping. Denouncing her as a "calm, composed,
deliberate and unblushing liar," he sentenced her to six years
in prison.
</p>
<p> Winnie Mandela, however, is free on minimal bail--roughly $70--and pursuing an appeal that could take many
months to be decided. Even if she loses, there is some
speculation that State President F.W. de Klerk will pardon her
rather than jail the wife of his main partner in negotiations
to shape a multiracial regime. That partner, A.N.C. deputy
president Nelson Mandela, took a mild line. He expressed
confidence that his wife's name would eventually be entirely
cleared and said he would continue talking to De Klerk.
</p>
<p> But negotiations were at the breaking point anyway because
of those spears and battle-axes. To the A.N.C., at least, they
have come to symbolize the black-vs.-black violence that has
been tearing the nation's townships apart. Fighting between
supporters of the predominantly Zulu Inkatha Freedom Party and
A.N.C. backers has claimed more than 200 lives just this month
and at least 1,000 so far in 1991. Archbishop Desmond Tutu
voices grief that a weekend body count of 15 dead has come to
be considered hearteningly low.
</p>
<p> A.N.C. leaders charge that white police have failed to
prevent or actually fomented Zulu attacks on A.N.C. supporters,
allegedly because the ruling Nationalist Party favors Inkatha
as a presumably more pliable partner in a postapartheid
government. So the supposedly more militant (indeed
communist-allied) A.N.C. has been driven into the ironic
position of demanding that the white government protect it from
its fellow blacks--starting with a ban on the Zulus'
"cultural" weapons. Zulus say tribal tradition requires them to
carry the spears, clubs and battle-axes in public, but the
A.N.C. charges that they are being used to kill its supporters.
</p>
<p> The A.N.C. gave the government until last Wednesday to
outlaw the weapons. But De Klerk would not go beyond a meek
compromise offer, allowing the weapons to be carried only on
genuinely ceremonial occasions. Rather than let yet another
deadline--the third it has set in the past three weeks--slide by, the A.N.C announced on Saturday that it would suspend
talks with De Klerk on a new constitution until he made
"progress" in meeting its demands. The A.N.C. will probably also
boycott an all-party peace conference called by the government
for this week, but De Klerk insisted he would go ahead
regardless.
</p>
<p> Though the situation may seem to verge on farce (Suppose
De Klerk gave a peace conference, and nobody came?), it is
deadly serious. Continued negotiations would be unlikely to
accomplish much anyway until after early July, when the A.N.C.
holds its first congress inside South Africa in 30 years and De
Klerk finds out whom he will be dealing with next. (Mandela is
virtually certain to be re-elected, but other aging leaders who
have operated for decades in exile may be replaced by younger
blacks who have grown up in the segregated townships.)
Nonetheless, Archbishop Tutu warned last week that a suspension
of the negotiations now would almost certainly lead to still
greater violence, which in turn would make it more difficult
than ever to set up a new regime.
</p>
<p> For all the violence, however, rapid progress is still
being made toward breaking down apartheid. The gradual easing
of restrictions that began in 1982 has accelerated considerably
since De Klerk took office in 1989. His government has done away
with the segregation of facilities, such as public parks and
government hospitals--the last statutory vestiges of so-called
petty apartheid--lifted the ban on the African National
Congress and freed many political prisoners, most prominently
Nelson Mandela. Now De Klerk is about to pull down what are
generally regarded as the last remaining legal pillars of
apartheid: the laws that forbid blacks to live in white areas
or own land outside their tribal homelands and require that
every South African be classified by race at birth. All are
scheduled to be repealed by the white parliament before it
concludes its term at the end of June.
</p>
<p> That, of course, does not mean apartheid will then cease
to exist. The legal structure built up over more than 40 years
cannot be demolished quite that quickly, and provincial and
local governments have ways of maintaining segregation even when
it is no longer required by federal law, for example, turning
swimming pools over to private operators or charging fees for
the use of libraries that whites can afford and most blacks
cannot.
</p>
<p> Overshadowing everything else by far is the problem of
framing a new constitution that would finally empower blacks to
vote, hold office and share in governing the nation. Major
differences remain, but De Klerk's government and Mandela's
A.N.C. have already agreed on some important ideas. The
document, for example, must contain a bill of rights and set up
a two-chamber legislature with some form of proportional
representation. De Klerk reportedly told British Prime Minister
John Major on a visit to London early in May that a constitution
could be in effect and elections held in two to five years.
</p>
<p> Some U.S. experts fear that De Klerk is endangering this
time-table by "backsliding," seeking tactical advantage by
playing black leaders such as Mandela and Zulu Chief Mangosuthu
Buthelezi off against each other. But Mandela voices faith in
De Klerk's sincerity, and De Klerk reportedly told Major that
he recognizes that the future of South Africa can be settled
only between his government and the A.N.C.
</p>
<p> According to British sources, De Klerk also confided to
Major that he expected some whites to emigrate to Canada,
Australia or New Zealand rather than live in a state with a
newly empowered black majority. Simultaneously, though, he has
speculated publicly about winning an eventual multiracial
election by putting together a coalition of the National Party,
Inkatha and perhaps some other moderate-to-conservative black
groups that could reap a substantial share of the black vote,
and an overwhelming majority of whites.
</p>
<p> Despite his moves to eliminate apartheid, De Klerk seems
to have retained most of his white support. His main
opposition, the right-wing Conservative Party, has nothing to
offer except a return to "grand apartheid" that most whites
recognize to be impossible. Both South African and foreign
experts agree that the dismantling of apartheid has gone too far
to be reversed. But the big question remains: Can the now
inevitable transition to a multiracial state be achieved
smoothly by negotiation or only haltingly after more harrowing
violence?
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>