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<text id=94TT0586>
<link 94XP0551>
<link 94TO0160>
<title>
May 09, 1994: South Africa:Time to Take Charge
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
May 09, 1994 Nelson Mandela
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER STORIES, Page 27
Time to Take Charge
</hdr>
<body>
<p> At long last, the black majority moves from repression into
the halls of government
</p>
<p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Peter Hawthorne/Cape Town, Scott MacLeod/Johannesburg
and Andrew Purvis/Durban
</p>
<p> White-haired, bearded Cronje Tshaka is older than the 82-year-old
African National Congress. Now he has outlived apartheid. Clutching
his identity book in one hand and his cane in the other, Tshaka,
95, waited patiently in line to vote last week--like all South
Africa's black citizens, for the first time in his life. He
shook off offers of help, walking unsteadily but unaided into
the polling station in Guguletu, one of the toughest and grimiest
of the black townships around Cape Town. Minutes later he emerged,
a broad grin lighting his face. "I never thought I would see
this day," he said.
</p>
<p> Those very words echoed in millions of minds across South Africa
last week. In a series of astonishing episodes, beginning with
all-race voting from the Limpopo to the Cape of Good Hope, the
old South Africa of segregation and oppression dissolved itself
and re-emerged as a tentatively hopeful, newly democratic nation.
On Wednesday morning at 12:01, the old order formally ended
as cheering crowds in the nine new provincial capitals hailed
the lowering of apartheid's blue-white-and-orange flag and the
raising of a banner with six colors symbolizing the people,
their blood, their land, the gold under the ground, the sky--and white for peace.
</p>
<p> At the same moment, the country became whole again. The 10 black
homelands, including four that had pretended to independence,
designed by apartheid architects as places of exile for surplus
people with black skin, were abolished. The armed services became
the South African National Defense Force, and will begin to
absorb former enemies from guerrilla armies like the A.N.C.'s
Spear of the Nation. Things were changing so fast, a South African
Broadcasting Corp. interviewer lost track of who was President,
Nelson Mandela, who will be sworn in next week, or F.W. de Klerk,
the incumbent. He turned from talking with De Klerk to sign
off, saying, "Well, there's State...former State Pres...well, State President de Klerk, Mr. de Klerk...not former
yet."
</p>
<p> Perhaps predictably, a group of bloody-minded white rightists
had tried--and failed--to disrupt the process of change.
They had launched a campaign of small bombings against railways,
power lines and A.N.C. offices in the conservative farm region
west of Johannesburg. Then last week they detonated powerful
car bombs in downtown Johannesburg, in neighboring Germiston
and at the international airport, killing a total of 21 people
and injuring more than 150. By the end of the week the police
had rounded up 34 suspects, all members of the neo-Nazi Afrikaner
Resistance Movement.
</p>
<p> Voters, especially blacks eager to embrace the day of their
liberation, were not deterred. The election, astonishingly peaceful,
succeeded beyond all preparations. Lines of determined voters
stretched a mile and more at polling places. Many polls opened
hours late or ran out of ballots or the invisible ink used to
mark the hands of those who had already made their choice. The
ballots, printed weeks ago, did not include the last entry in
the race, the Inkatha Freedom Party, and had to be updated with
paste-on stickers; to ensure fairness, Zulu Chief Mangosuthu
Buthelezi demanded a fourth day of voting. While exasperated
thousands waited, election workers gave puzzled first timers
impromptu lessons in how to mark a ballot. Mandela said some
of the ballot shortages looked like outright "sabotage," and
he too called for another day of polling. At last the election
officials requested and got an extension of the voting, originally
scheduled to end Thursday, into Friday in several parts of the
country.
</p>
<p> Neither the terrorists' bombs nor the confusing logistical snarls
had a significant effect on the voters' turnout or their enthusiasm.
The night before she went to vote, Gladys Mswele, 60, a farmer
in the hilly country north of Durban, did not sleep well. "I
was thinking about this all night," she said, as she rose before
dawn to walk the two miles to the main road, where she patiently
waited for transport to her polling place. "This is our day."
Seven hours later, she made her X next to the party of her choice.
Voting, she said, as she rested after the long journey home,
"is hard labor. But we have done our duty." On Saturday A.N.C.
Secretary-General Cyril Ramaphosa confidently predicted a 60%
landslide for his party.
</p>
<p> The surprise was not that the election was carried out well
but that it happened at all. Here was a white government, still
with a monopoly grip on political power, handing over control
of the country to the black majority it had held in servitude
for 300 years. It was an event without historical precedent
in the days of sweeping decolonization in Africa three decades
ago, or even in 1980 when the former British colony of Rhodesia
became Zimbabwe, because 5 million former rulers are not leaving.
</p>
<p> South Africa's whites had methodically segregated blacks, paid
them a pittance, ignored their housing and barely pretended
to educate them. Blacks were not second-class citizens but third
or fourth class. Suddenly last week, by agreement, the whites
stepped back and passed the government to that eager but ill-prepared
majority. "I feel a sense of achievement," said De Klerk, the
Afrikaner who made himself into the country's last white President.
"My plan has been put into operation."
</p>
<p> Now the victors must govern the country they have won. It is
up to Mandela and his comrades to set the course. They must
finish the task of dismantling the apartheid structures, reforming
bureaucracies and constructing a unified, multiracial South
Africa. "We are starting a new era," said Mandela, after casting
his vote outside Durban, "of hope, of reconciliation, of nation
building."
</p>
<p> It will not be easy, for a variety of reasons.
</p>
<p> BLACK EXPECTATIONS. Millions of blacks, mostly poor and illiterate,
went to the polls and, with a few strokes on a piece of paper,
took control of their own future. It is their plan that matters
now. The A.N.C. will be judged primarily on its handling of
the national economy, because if that collapses, political and
social reforms have little chance of growing. The A.N.C. will
succeed only if it can, in the current township phrase, deliver
the goods. If Mandela and his colleagues fail to show they are
making progress, the long-suffering black majority may turn
against them and follow other, more radical leaders who promise
more.
</p>
<p> Among whites the term "black expectations" raises the specter
of vastly increased taxes or even seizure of their comfortable
homes and swimming pools. But for most blacks--at least in
the short term--expectations begin at a far more basic level,
with services that would be simply assumed in an industrialized
country. But apartheid has left them with almost nothing: the
great majority live in such desperate poverty, in dusty, refuse-strewn
townships or gritty rural backwaters, that their dreams are
of clean water, paved streets, garbage collection, sewers.
</p>
<p> A bit further in the future are their freshly renewed hopes
for steady jobs, well-lit houses, modern schools, neighborhood
clinics. Few delude themselves that a mansion and a Mercedes
are at hand, but almost all expect--even demand--some visible
improvement in their everyday life. "There is a transfer of
power taking place to the toiling masses of this country," says
Voice Mabe, a trade-union worker in Soweto. "From the end of
April, there will be drastic changes."
</p>
<p> Some of South Africa's whites fear that their black fellow citizens
will visit on them the same codified cruelty they inflicted
on the blacks. "Those who have followed our policy generally,"
Mandela insisted, "will dismiss those rumors without hesitation."
No doubt some of the 30 million blacks would savor a taste of
revenge, but for now they are a small minority.
</p>
<p> ON-THE-JOB TRAINING. Now that the voters have spoken, the A.N.C.
will dominate the five-year life of the new government of national
unity. It will share the Cabinet at least with the National
Party; De Klerk is expected to be a Deputy President.
</p>
<p> But the A.N.C. was a liberation movement for more than 80 years
and fought its battle for equality with boycotts, protest marches
and occasional sabotage; it has been a registered political
party only since February. It will have to learn the arts of
constitutional governance, legislation, political compromise,
as it goes along.
</p>
<p> Once his ballot was in the box on a schoolhouse porch in Inanda,
a township soaked with the blood of battles between the A.N.C.
and Inkatha, Mandela very quickly stepped into his new role
as leader of the nation--all the nation. "Our message," he
said, "is that the basic needs of the masses of the people must
be addressed. These are our priorities." At the same time, he
had words of reassurance for whites. "We are concerned about
giving confidence and security to those who are worried that
by these changes they are going to be in a disadvantaged position,"
he said. Perhaps aware he was sounding very lawyerly, he then
quoted from his speech at his trial 30 years ago: "I cherish
the idea of a new South Africa where all South Africans are
equal, where all South Africans work together to bring about
security, peace and democracy in our country."
</p>
<p> South Africa offers him plenty of room to make highly visible
improvement. The problems are so enormous they cannot be eliminated
in the short term, but almost any tangible effort will help.
Most of the country's black citizens are without electricity
or running water at home. Eight million live not in houses but
in the squalor of squatter shacks. About 18 million black families
earn less than $220 a month. Half the black population is illiterate
and half its work force has no job. Development experts say
the national economy must grow at 3.5% a year to make even a
dent in joblessness; the growth rate this year is expected to
hover between 2% and 3%.
</p>
<p> WHO PAYS THE BILL? Though the A.N.C. has cast off most of its
earlier Marxist affection for planned economies, it does have
a five-year plan to address what Mandela refers to as "the basic
needs of the masses." It is a 147-page document called "The
R.D.P: The Reconstruction and Development Program," a blueprint
for reorganizing and democratizing the society. At its heart
is an $11 billion economic-development program that promises
to provide employment and job training for 2.5 million people
in public-works projects. It aims at putting up a million new
houses, providing a million others with running water and flush
toilets, and bringing electricity to 2.5 million more homes.
The plan provides for free and compulsory schooling for children
and adult education for millions of blacks who learned almost
nothing under inferior "Bantu education." It also calls for
diverting public-health funds to provide and improve clinics
in the poorest areas.
</p>
<p> Trevor Manuel, the A.N.C.'s economic chief, asks the key question,
"How much is all this going to cost?" White businessmen are
likely to add, "And do you propose to pay for it by soaking
the rich with big tax increases?" Manuel replies that the development
program is relatively modest and can be financed at projected
levels with a portion of the present government's budget. Further,
he argues, some of it can be paid for by cracking down on corruption,
cutting defense spending and collecting taxes more efficiently.
"The kind of South Africa we can build," he says with a smile,
"is one where parents in Australia and New Zealand would have
to hold their children back from emigrating here."
</p>
<p> Many white liberals believe the idea is not entirely farfetched.
They point out that the A.N.C. will be taking office but not
taking complete power. It will be restrained from extreme measures,
even if it wanted to take them, by other social forces like
the white-dominated business sector, the civil service, the
police and army, and the nine new provincial governments. The
country's democratization, says Hermann Giliomee, a leading
Afrikaner academic, is "a bold and brave experiment with a real
chance of success." A.N.C. spokesman Carl Niehaus points to
purely pragmatic limits on policy: "In order to keep the country
afloat, to get economic growth, to avoid further flight of capital
and skills from the country, you have to play it that way."
</p>
<p> To its credit, the A.N.C. is cautious about adding to the nation's
debt burden. Thabo Mbeki, who will probably be First Deputy
President and heir apparent to Mandela, said in an interview
with TIME last week that the incoming government has two immediate
goals. First, it intends to write a budget that will reassure
the international financial community that the A.N.C. is not
going to borrow heavily. Second, it hopes to round up early
commitments of aid money from friendly governments. "It will
be very good if we can generate a billion dollars from around
the world," Mbeki said, "that can go into projects that will
produce relatively quick results." He hopes Mandela can soon
announce "that we have commitments to enable us to build 50,000
houses within a short period without additional government borrowing
or raising taxes."
</p>
<p> PROMISES, PROMISES. In a televised debate before last week's
election, De Klerk declared, "The A.N.C. and the National Party
promise the same thing. The real test is who has a plan to achieve
it." As leader of the parliamentary opposition, De Klerk is
preparing to argue that the A.N.C.'s calculations do not add
up. His National Party analysts say the development plan is
more likely to cost $19.7 billion rather than $11 billion in
its first year alone. He also says the popular idea of skimming
billions off the defense budget is not likely to work if the
A.N.C. persists in its plan to add 12,000 of its guerrilla troops
to the armed forces and intends to provide tight security.
</p>
<p> Under the interim constitution, any of the 19 parties on the
ballot that receives at least 5% of the vote is entitled to
a seat in the new Cabinet. In any case, as one of his confidence-building
measures, Mandela intends to keep present Minister of Finance
Derek Keys and Central Bank director Chris Stals in his government
of national unity. Keys is an optimist about the transition.
"From an economic point of view," he says, "I think it is going
to work very well." Even so, Keys is worried that the A.N.C.
development plan was put together as a wish list without figuring
carefully what each government department can actually spend.
</p>
<p> Keys says there is no disagreement about first principles: "Jobs.
If we can't run an economy capable of creating jobs, then we
will be thrown out. And so will every other government that
suffers from that defect." But differences have already cropped
up on how job growth is to be achieved. The A.N.C., says Keys,
is unable "to perceive what a growing economy could really do."
Its leaders tend to "feel they have to take away things from
certain sectors in order to give things to other sectors." He
insists that if the economy is going to grow at a high rate,
it must "offer something to everybody." In spite of such discussions,
Keys is encouraged, he says, that the A.N.C. does not seem to
be coming in bent on filling ideological prescriptions in economic
policy.
</p>
<p> FAULT LINES. Once Mandela's Cabinet is announced, the unity
government is likely to show significant lines of stress. It
will probably include Communist Party chairman Joe Slovo--an interesting prospect for white officials who long used the
fear of communist encirclement to justify apartheid policies.
No fewer than 16 of the top 50 names on the A.N.C. parliamentary
election list are members of the Communist Party. While they
have forsworn Stalinism, Slovo still argues that "only under
socialism could you have a combination of political and economic
democracy."
</p>
<p> Another brewing problem is the possibility that Mandela's estranged
wife Winnie might get a minor Cabinet post. Though she was convicted
in the kidnapping of a township youth who was later murdered,
she scored an upset last year in winning election as head of
the A.N.C. Women's League. This year the party put her high
on its list for a parliamentary seat.
</p>
<p> LACK OF DISCIPLINE. This sort of thing highlights a critical
weakness in the A.N.C. leadership: accountability. The party's
own bylaws bar convicted criminals from holding office. Nevertheless,
Winnie Mandela was allowed to take a prominent role. Oddly,
Mandela defended the inconsistency by arguing that it was somehow
only democratic to let her pursue her political career in spite
of the rules. "Democratic culture in the A.N.C. is deeply entrenched,"
he said. "What the people decide, we accept." Mandela and his
colleagues have also gone easy on several A.N.C. officials implicated
in killing and torturing prisoners in the organization's detention
camps in other African countries.
</p>
<p> Mandela may simply find it impossible to discipline the wife
who suffered so much during his 27 years in prison. Or he might
prefer to have her in his government where he can keep an eye
on her, since she has staked out a separate role as leader of
the most militant and potentially violent of the township proletariat--especially the gun-toting youth gangs. While the A.N.C.'s
top echelon is mostly moderate, almost 50% of its 1 million
rank-and-file members are in the militant camp. If reforms begin
to slip and there is no tangible progress in a year or so, Mandela
may find his fiercest challenger is his fiery, camouflage-clad
wife. "Winnie," says Tom Lodge, an authority on South African
political movements, "is an instinctive populist. She will tell
the masses what they want to hear."
</p>
<p> THE THREAT OF VIOLENCE. One worry that unites all South Africans
is fear of crime. The pre-election bombings failed to shatter
the elections partly because violence is already out of control
in black shantytowns and white suburbs alike, where burglaries,
carjackings and robberies are everyday events. The incidents
often have nothing to do with politics, and they scare everyone.
Mandela may be planning something like a law-and-order crackdown:
he was an advocate of the state of emergency that was imposed
in Natal province last month, and he has been talking more and
more about enacting strict gun-control regulations. Right-wing
whites and township gangs can be expected to resist them.
</p>
<p> At the final A.N.C. election rally in Soweto, when a burst of
celebratory gunfire ripped the air, Mandela turned stony faced.
"It is clear," he said sharply, "that criminality is deep seated
even amongst members of the A.N.C." If he found out who was
carrying the arms, he said, he would suspend them from membership
"because one of our commitments is to ensure gun control." His
close colleague Mbeki also says violence must be curbed. One
reason is to safeguard "the first impression this new South
Africa makes, particularly on the investor community inside
and outside the country."
</p>
<p> Mandela intends to purge the officers and covert units inside
the white-led national police force who have directed assassinations
against A.N.C. members and supporters and have supplied Inkatha
fighters with weapons. "You've got to find the criminals," Mbeki
says. "The threat to democracy does not end with the effort
to disrupt the elections. Some of them will take up guns and
place bombs." At least one police officer and one reservist
were among the 33 whites arrested last week as suspects in terrorist
bombings.
</p>
<p> As he steps toward the executive offices in Pretoria's imposing
Union Buildings, Mandela is preaching what amounts to a sermon
of reassurance and inclusion. He stresses over and over that
all the minorities--5 million whites, 3.5 million coloreds
and 1 million Asians--will be valued for their contributions
and have nothing to fear from his government. He says not only
that whites should stay, but also that those who left in recent
years should come back and help rebuild. "They have knowledge,
skills and expertise," he says. "We are going to need them.
We are going to rely on them."
</p>
<p> Mandela's long walk to freedom has ended in a jubilant, triumphant
election week and the liberation he has worked 50 years to achieve.
But his second struggle is just beginning. He now shoulders
the mantle of the state, and while he will be praised for the
things it achieves, he will be held responsible for everything
it does not do for the people who expect the most. His plans
may yet fail and his hopes collapse. But with his message of
reconciliation and the euphoric support of the great majority
of his countrymen last week, he was clearly the most presidential
man in South Africa.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>