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 South Africa
South Africa's Independence is Tarnished by Apartheid
Jan Christiaan Smuts brought the nation into World War II on the Allied
side against Nationalist opposition, and South Africa became a charter
member of the United Nations in 1945, but he refused to sign the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights. Apartheid—racial
separation—dominated domestic politics as the Nationalists gained
power and imposed greater restrictions on Bantus (black Africans), Asians,
and Coloreds (in South Africa the term meant any nonwhite person). Black
voters were removed from the voter rolls in 1936. Over the next
half-century, the nonwhite population of South Africa was forced out of
designated white areas. The Group Areas Acts of 1950 and 1986 forced about
1.5 million Africans to move from cities to rural townships, where they
lived in abject poverty under repressive laws.
South Africa declared itself a republic in 1961 and severed its ties
with the Commonwealth, which strongly objected to the country's racist
policies. The white supremacist National Party, which had first come to
power in 1948, would continue its rule for the next three decades.
In 1960, 70 black protesters were killed during a peaceful
demonstration in Sharpesville. The African National Congress (ANC), the
principal antiapartheid organization, was banned that year, and in 1964
its leader, Nelson Mandela, was sentenced to life imprisonment. Black
protests against apartheid grew stronger and more violent. In 1976, an
uprising in the black township of Soweto spread to other black townships
and left 600 dead. Beginning in the 1960s, international opposition to
apartheid intensified. The UN imposed sanctions, and many countries
divested their South African holdings.
Apartheid's grip on South Africa began to give way when F. W. de Klerk
replaced P. W. Botha as president in 1989. De Klerk removed the
ban on the ANC and released its leader, Nelson Mandela, after 27 years of
imprisonment. The Inkatha Freedom Party, a black opposition group led by
Mangosuthu Buthelezi, which was seen as collaborating with the apartheid
system, frequently clashed with the ANC during this period.
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