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- <text id=94TT0392>
- <title>
- Apr. 11, 1994: Breaking Point In Zululand
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 11, 1994 Risky Business on Wall Street
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOUTH AFRICA, Page 48
- Breaking Point In Zululand
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>With free elections threatened by civil war, the government
- declares a state of emergency and sends troops into Natal
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Scott MacLeod/Durban
- </p>
- <p> As a hazy sun set over the green hills of blood-soaked Natal
- Province last week, Jabulani Shibe tried to do his part to broker
- the differences between the African National Congress and its
- bitter foes in the Inkatha Freedom Party. Shibe, 27, a laborer,
- joined eight of his neighbors in KwaMashu, a black township
- near Durban, and visited an Inkatha hostel. Suddenly, a group
- of Inkatha men drew guns and bundled Shibe and his companions
- into a minibus. They drove through the darkness to a nearby
- railroad station, where an armed and angry mob of Inkatha supporters
- was waiting. One by one the peacemakers were ordered out and
- shot. Five were killed. Said a sobbing Shibe later: "They shot
- me but I ran."
- </p>
- <p> The Inkatha men told Shibe that he was shot in revenge for the
- bloodshed in downtown Johannesburg, where a day earlier thousands
- of Zulus clashed with A.N.C. security guards and police in running
- gun battles through the city's steel and glass canyons. The
- violence, said Inkatha leader Mangosuthu Buthelezi ominously,
- marked the beginning of "a final struggle to the finish between
- the A.N.C. and the Zulu nation."
- </p>
- <p> Such public bellicosity was too much for President F.W. de Klerk,
- who had been under A.N.C. pressure for weeks to crack down on
- Buthelezi and Inkatha. De Klerk could hesitate no longer. He
- declared a state of emergency in Natal Province, which includes
- the KwaZulu homeland where Buthelezi is chief minister. It will
- now be up to South Africa's army and police to control the incessant
- political violence in the region and make sure that voting in
- the country's first all-race elections can take place there
- on April 26, 27 and 28, despite Inkatha's fierce opposition.
- Not an easy task. In a fresh outbreak of violence, 13 people
- were killed Friday night in several separate attacks in Natal.
- Two of the victims were children attending a church service.
- </p>
- <p> Most South Africans were hoping against history that the elections
- designed to transform their country would go smoothly. But just
- as the centuries of white domination come to an end, the prospect
- of a civil war that might blow up the process has shaken the
- country's 40 million citizens. De Klerk, opting to fight for
- peace if necessary, ordered in the troops. The choice--between
- rebellion and acquiescence--is now up to Inkatha.
- </p>
- <p> Warfare was the rule last week. Early Monday morning thousands
- of Zulus, carrying spears, axes, clubs, pistols and a few AK-47
- rifles, surged into Johannesburg's main business district. At
- Shell House, the 21-story office building housing A.N.C. headquarters,
- security men fired a fusillade at the demonstrators, turning
- the pavement into a jumble of bleeding bodies and hawkers' overturned
- stands. A few blocks away, rooftop snipers opened fire, killing
- several more marchers and sending thousands of demonstrators
- and office workers fleeing in panic. When the casualties were
- counted, 53 people were dead and more than 400 injured.
- </p>
- <p> The bloodshed in central Johannesburg forced national political
- leaders to focus on Natal, where most of the killing has been
- going on in recent months. Battles between Inkatha and the A.N.C.
- began 10 years ago when young township activists rose up against
- the South African and homeland governments. In the apartheid-engineered
- homeland of KwaZulu, where 4.5 million of Natal's 6.5 million
- people live, the fight pits mostly urbanized A.N.C. supporters
- against more traditional, rural Inkatha members.
- </p>
- <p> Though there is a degree of tribal rivalry between the Zulus
- of Inkatha and the largely Xhosa leadership of the A.N.C., the
- combatants on both sides in Natal are Zulus. During 1993 more
- than 2,000 of them died in the fighting. Last month the toll
- was at least 290. But the conflict has also spread outside Natal,
- to urban centers in other provinces where thousands of Zulu
- migrant workers live in single-sex hostels.
- </p>
- <p> Naturally, the two main black political factions blame each
- other for the violence. Inkatha's purpose in marching on Johannesburg,
- said the A.N.C., "is quite clear: to make it impossible to hold
- free and fair elections." No, responded Buthelezi, the fire
- fight proved that A.N.C. leaders "fear the Zulus and wish to
- destroy Zulu unity."
- </p>
- <p> After a three-hour cabinet meeting in Pretoria, De Klerk announced
- the state of emergency in Natal. "We are in control," he said.
- "There is no need for panic. The elections will take place on
- the scheduled dates." The emergency regulations to be applied
- in the Indian Ocean province will give police and the army broad
- authority to act against anyone who is promoting violence. The
- security forces will decide which rallies to permit or ban,
- and will be empowered to detain suspects and seize weapons.
- About 300 army troops are already on duty in the province and
- more are being sent, along with reinforcements for the South
- African police. De Klerk stressed that Buthelezi was not being
- replaced--yet. "This is not aimed at the KwaZulu government,"
- he said. At the same time, De Klerk warned that Pretoria could
- intervene in KwaZulu if it tried to block free elections.
- </p>
- <p> Intensely proud of the Zulu nation's military traditions, Buthelezi
- reacted angrily. "It looks like an invasion," he fumed. The
- Inkatha Freedom Party was being pushed "into the ((election))
- process through the barrel of a gun," he charged. De Klerk's
- decision was "humiliating," Buthelezi said, especially since
- it came just a week before he and Zulu King Goodwill Zwelethini
- were to meet with De Klerk and Mandela. That meeting, reportedly
- to discuss granting official recognition to the Zulu monarchy,
- may be the last chance to resolve the crisis before the election.
- </p>
- <p> The long conflict between Inkatha and the A.N.C. has many roots.
- At its core is a power struggle between the Congress, an organization
- Buthelezi sees as Marxist and dangerously revolutionary, and
- Inkatha, which the A.N.C. depicts as a right-wing, ethnic party
- led by an autocrat. Buthelezi is the only significant political
- figure in South Africa, right or left, who has refused to take
- part in this month's elections. He is holding out, he says,
- for a federal system that will keep an A.N.C. central government
- from dominating the Zulus. If he cannot win provincial autonomy,
- he demands a sovereign Zulu kingdom under the rule of King Goodwill,
- his nephew.
- </p>
- <p> Open conflict with the South African security forces would be
- self-defeating, but Buthelezi could unleash a newly organized
- Zulu "self-defense unit" of 5,000 men, and there are thousands
- of loyal Zulu irregulars who could complicate the elections
- with dead-of-night raids, assassinations and sabotage. If Buthelezi
- were to launch such subversion, De Klerk would be likely to
- fulfill his promise to sweep out the KwaZulu establishment,
- starting with its chief minister.
- </p>
- <p> With the declaration of emergency, De Klerk has put Buthelezi
- on the road to political oblivion. The Zulu leader cannot win
- if he openly defies the security forces, and his refusal to
- contest the elections hands the A.N.C. a victory, even in Natal,
- and a bigger majority nationally. When the new constitution
- goes into effect at the end of this month there will be no KwaZulu
- and no chief minister. Buthelezi may well end up with many angry
- supporters, but as a man without a country.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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