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- <text id=92TT0660>
- <title>
- Mar. 30, 1992: South Africa:Yes!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Mar. 30, 1992 Country's Big Boom
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 34
- SOUTH AFRICA
- Yes!
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Voters in what should be the last whites-only election support
- sharing power with the black majority. Can De Klerk and Mandela
- make it happen?
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN -- Reported by Peter Hawthorne/Cape Town and
- Scott MacLeod/Johannesburg
- </p>
- <p> A victory of such magnitude on an issue so fundamental
- could easily push a political leader toward hyperbole. But
- President F.W. de Klerk was not exaggerating a bit when he said
- in Cape Town after last week's referendum, "Today we have closed
- the book on apartheid."
- </p>
- <p> Many more books will have to be written before the
- country's problems are solved. But white South Africans --
- including a majority of the Afrikaans-speaking descendants of
- the original Dutch settlers -- voted resoundingly for continuing
- negotiations with their black compatriots on a new constitution.
- At least 85% of the registered voters turned out, and 68.6% of
- them said yes to the talks, aimed at creating a new political
- system in which the black majority will participate fully.
- </p>
- <p> Even De Klerk and his government were surprised at the
- 2-to-1 mandate for reform. A population widely perceived as the
- most stubbornly racist in the world was effectively agreeing to
- give up its monopoly on power and share it with a black
- majority that whites have traditionally feared, persecuted and
- patronized. "Good and sensible people must be breathing sighs
- of relief," was the verdict of Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu.
- Others agreed. "South Africa is a different country today,"
- blared Business Day, Johannesburg's financial daily. Approved
- the Sowetan, the largest black daily: "Whites did the right
- thing."
- </p>
- <p> In spite of the triumph of reform at the ballot box, De
- Klerk's main negotiating partner, Nelson Mandela, president of
- the African National Congress (A.N.C.), could not share the
- euphoria. The country's 30 million black citizens still suffer
- profound inequalities in housing, education, medical care and
- other basic necessities. As Mandela watched whites streaming to
- the polls, he said, "I still cannot vote in my own country." But
- when it was over, he smiled and said at last, "I am very
- pleased."
- </p>
- <p> White South Africans voted their fears, their hopes and
- their wallets. Business leaders joined De Klerk's de facto
- alliance with the liberal Democratic Party, chipping in for a
- massive advertising campaign that predicted renewed
- international sanctions and economic disaster in the event of
- a no vote. One ad, recalling the cancellation of landing rights
- abroad for South African Airways, depicted a deserted runway
- with the caption, "Without reform, South Africa isn't going
- anywhere."
- </p>
- <p> Another ad showed an empty cricket ground and advised,
- "Without reform, South Africa hasn't got a sporting chance."
- That was a particularly telling shot. One of the sanctions that
- most pained and angered South Africans over many years was the
- ban on their participation in international sports, especially
- cricket and rugby. In the days leading up to the referendum, a
- rehabilitated South African national cricket team had won a
- place in the semifinals of the World Cup. Sport-centered South
- Africans knew that the team, on its first overseas tour in 22
- years, would have to pull out if the referendum failed. More
- than a few votes were strongly influenced by the thought.
- </p>
- <p> The naysayers to the referendum, led by the right-wing
- Conservative Party, had little to offer but a return to
- apartheid. Arguing that the government's course would lead to
- political and cultural annihilation for the country's 5 million
- whites, party leader Andries Treurnicht forged an alliance that
- included the neo-Nazi Afrikaner Resistance Movement, a link that
- may have damaged the Conservative cause. Former President P.W.
- Botha, now 76 and retired, also urged a no vote. "I cannot," he
- said, "support a reform process that leads to the suicide of my
- people." But even the largely Afrikaner voting district of
- George, which includes Botha's former parliamentary
- constituency, went for reform 65% to 35%.
- </p>
- <p> In the end, most whites decided, for their own reasons,
- that they had to back the government, though clearly many have
- yet to confront the fact that a transfer of power is likely to
- be accompanied by a redistribution of wealth within the
- country. "Change," said golf pro Gary Player, "is the price of
- survival."
- </p>
- <p> A jubilant De Klerk, welcoming the result on his 56th
- birthday, called it "the real birthday of the real new South
- African nation." His position is now immensely strengthened.
- Until last week he had been trying to enforce his reforms from
- the top down. But he had lost three parliamentary by-elections
- in the past nine months to pro-apartheid Conservatives, and he
- could claim no clear popular mandate to negotiate whites out of
- their exclusive grip on power.
- </p>
- <p> Now he can. The 2.8 million people who voted could not
- have been under any illusion about the choices before them.
- Like Mandela, De Klerk saw the paradox in the all-white vote.
- "There is an element of justice," he said, "that we who started
- this long chapter in our history" had been called upon to end
- it.
- </p>
- <p> More than half of the country's 3 million Afrikaners
- backed reform, though support from English speakers, who tend
- generally to be more liberal, was the basis of De Klerk's
- unexpectedly sweeping success. Of 15 regions, only the Afrikaner
- bastion of Pietersburg, in the drought-stricken farmland of
- Northern Transvaal, registered a no, 57% to 43%. Even the
- blue-collar mining towns around Johannesburg said yes, though
- by a narrow margin.
- </p>
- <p> While it was a famous victory, the euphoria was
- short-lived, giving way to the familiar problems of recession,
- urban crime and political warfare in the townships, where more
- than 300 blacks were killed in power struggles during the three
- weeks leading up to the referendum. Confrontation also resumed
- on the political front. Three days after the vote, Mandela
- vowed to halt the government's plan to put a 10% tax on basic
- foods and threatened to engineer a series of strikes and
- protests "even if we destroy the economy." The government has
- no right to impose such taxes, he said. "They must get our
- express approval."
- </p>
- <p> If strikes by black workers could bring down the economy,
- they probably would have done so years ago. Still, the economy
- is in serious trouble, battered by sanctions, recession and
- capital flight. The growth rate has averaged barely 1% a year
- during the past 10 years. Taking population increases into
- account, that has actually meant a 1.3% annual loss in per
- capita domestic output. By the end of last year, 4.7 million
- adults, or 47% of the work force, mostly black, were unemployed,
- and the inflation rate stood at 16%.
- </p>
- <p> Though most countries have lifted their economic
- sanctions, South Africa desperately needs new investment. The
- A.N.C. says the country would need a 9% annual growth rate to
- absorb all those entering the labor market. But financial
- analysts in Johannesburg say growth of even 4% a year would
- demand about $7 billion a year in investment from abroad. It is
- slow in coming because of apprehension about the political
- future and how soon it will arrive. De Klerk wants to get to the
- future as soon as possible. "We should not waste any time," he
- says. "The uncertainty that bothers so many will only go away
- if you put a negotiated solution on the table."
- </p>
- <p> Measurable steps toward that solution began in December,
- when 19 political groups representing all races created a forum
- called the Convention for a Democratic South Africa (CODESA).
- It set up five working groups, and one of them reached agreement
- on "basic principles" involved in establishing an interim
- government. When CODESA's second plenary session is held next
- month, A.N.C. officials say, agreement on an interim government
- could be reached. "It will," says Mandela, "supervise the
- transition from an apartheid to a democratic state."
- </p>
- <p> Just how the interim authority will be created is still
- not clear. According to one scenario gaining currency,
- Parliament could amend the present constitution to transfer
- power from the all-white Cabinet to a government of national
- unity. De Klerk, however, has said he must retain control of the
- government until agreement is reached on the text of a new
- constitution.
- </p>
- <p> To write the constitution, the A.N.C. is calling for a
- "constituent assembly," while De Klerk speaks of "a transitional
- parliament." If negotiations succeed, the two concepts could
- turn out to be roughly the same. The A.N.C. is hoping to come
- up with a constitution a year from now, while De Klerk says the
- parties have until 1994, when the next national election must
- be held under the present constitution.
- </p>
- <p> Despite continuing public arguments, the two sides have
- agreed on some of the points De Klerk describes as his "bottom
- line," including devolution of significant governmental power
- to provincial and local levels. He predicts that "some tough
- negotiations lie ahead." The biggest gap is between the A.N.C.'s
- unyielding demand for majority rule and De Klerk's concept of
- "power sharing." To him, that must mean constitutional
- provisions for including minority -- that is, white -- parties
- in the executive branch and providing them with an effective
- veto over vital legislation.
- </p>
- <p> De Klerk, wary of the A.N.C.'s long-standing association
- with Communism, also wants a constitutional provision for a
- "market-oriented economic system." The A.N.C. opposes the
- provision but denies it is wedded to a plan for blanket
- nationalization of South Africa's biggest corporations. "There
- is nothing in the thinking of the A.N.C. that says we must
- nationalize," says Thabo Mbeki, one of the group's chief
- negotiators.
- </p>
- <p> The President has said several times that he regarded the
- referendum as the country's last exercise in all-white voting.
- Even so, he has suggested that if the A.N.C. does not go along
- with his bottom-line items, he would have to submit the outcome
- of the negotiations to whites for another possible veto. "We
- will continue negotiating," he said, "until we are satisfied
- that a new constitution will be able to accommodate the needs
- arising from the complexity of our society."
- </p>
- <p> De Klerk called the referendum last week for two reasons.
- The first was to obtain a clear mandate for reform, and he got
- it. The second was to demonstrate the intellectual bankruptcy
- of the right wing. On that he was also successful, largely
- discrediting the Conservatives, but they and those who are even
- more extreme have not yet rolled over. Party leader Treur nicht
- insists that "the struggle for our freedom and survival
- continues" and says he will refuse renewed invitations to join
- the CODESA talks.
- </p>
- <p> De Klerk's advisers are concerned that some of the 876,000
- who voted no may turn to terrorism and cause both physical and
- political damage. But De Klerk pledges to take a stand against
- ultraright forces and not to allow them to derail his plans for
- reform. "I expect a small radical core group will not just lie
- down and accept it," he says, "and will be thinking of doing
- some wild things. But that is what the law is for, and we will
- apply the law."
- </p>
- <p> He now knows the majority of Afri kaners want him to
- succeed, to restore the country to peace and prosperity and end
- its pariah status. "Afrikaners have become Africans," says
- Frederik van Zyl Slabbert, former leader of the liberal
- opposition in Parliament. "They cannot continue standing apart.
- De Klerk has said, Forget it. We tried that and it didn't work."
- </p>
- <p> Sampie Terreblanche, a professor of economics at
- Stellenbosch University, was long one of the ruling National
- Party's policy planners. He rebelled against P.W. Botha's
- autocratic rule and helped move the party toward moderation.
- "There was always this attitude that the world can go to hell,''
- he says. "Now Afrikaners have become aware of the outside
- world." De Klerk and Mandela are hoping that all white South
- Africans have finally, permanently come out of the laager and
- into the world.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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