home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- THE WEEK, Page 26WORLDTalks, at a Price
-
-
- A deal freeing terrorists brings the A.N.C. back to the table
- South Africa.
-
-
- Robert McBride, 29, killed three white women with a car bomb
- outside a Durban pub. Barend Strydom, 27, gunned down seven
- blacks in downtown Pretoria. Once condemned to death, McBride
- and Strydom walked free last week when President F.W. de Klerk
- released 150 prisoners in a deal to entice Nelson Mandela's
- African National Congress back to the negotiating table. Most of
- the convicts had been serving time for violent acts in the anti
- apartheid cause, but Strydom's release was an obvious sop to
- whites: as leader of the ultra-right White Wolves, he had become
- a hero for some militant Afrikaners. Nonetheless, many blacks
- and whites were appalled.
-
- But De Klerk's gamble paid off, up to a point. Citing the
- prisoner releases and other "substantial" moves by De Klerk to
- curb violence, the A.N.C. voted unanimously to resume
- negotiations with the government and scale back its "mass
- action" campaign of marches and strikes. Unfortunately, this new
- coziness prompted a sometime De Klerk ally, Mangosuthu
- Buthelezi, leader of the Inkatha Freedom Party and the KwaZulu
- homeland, to angrily announce his own boycott of the talks and
- warn of possibly more violence to come.
-
- Buthelezi's objections raised doubts about whether
- multiparty talks could resume by the end of the year as De Klerk
- and Mandela hoped. The peace process has managed, however, to
- survive despite the Sept. 7 killing of 29 A.N.C. protesters who
- marched on the "independent" homeland of Ciskei. In findings
- released last week, Justice Richard Goldstone criticized A.N.C.
- officials for exposing their followers to danger but reserved
- his strongest condemnation for Ciskei authorities, saying "their
- indiscriminate shooting at innocent demonstrators was morally
- indefensible."
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-