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- <text id=93TT1491>
- <title>
- Apr. 19, 1993: A Martyr for the Young Lions
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Apr. 19, 1993 Los Angeles
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOUTH AFRICA, Page 48
- A Martyr for the Young Lions
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The murder of an A.N.C. hero edges South Africa's volatile black
- youths closer to war
- </p>
- <p>By SCOTT MACLEOD/JOHANNESBURG
- </p>
- <p> The threat of death was nothing new to Chris Hani. As the
- exiled military commander of the African National Congress
- during the 1980s, he survived three attempts on his life. After
- President F.W. de Klerk lifted the ban on the A.N.C. in 1990 and
- Hani returned home from Zambia as a member of the group's
- ruling executive committee to negotiate with Pretoria's white
- rulers, he looked forward to living eventually in a fair and
- free society. Last week, however, as he arrived at his home in
- Boksburg from a morning of grocery shopping with his daughter,
- Hani, 50, was gunned down in his driveway.
- </p>
- <p> According to Nomakwezi Hani, two white men approached her
- father as he got out of the car to open the garage door. Five
- shots rang out--two to the head--and Hani slumped to the
- asphalt, still clutching the morning paper he had just bought.
- Later, as a pool of blood formed in the driveway, someone came
- and draped the A.N.C.'s black, green and gold tricolor over the
- corpse.
- </p>
- <p> Hani's murder comes at a delicate moment in South Africa's
- ever painful attempt to remake itself into a multi racial
- democracy. In a Zulu village near Port Shepstone in southern
- Natal province, 10 young A.N.C. members were slaughtered last
- week in a savage hand-grenade, shotgun and machete attack,
- despite a peace pact between A.N.C. and Inkatha Freedom Party
- representatives just a week before. Elsewhere, police and
- military forces were on alert for possible Easter-weekend
- attacks on whites by the Azanian People's Liberation Army, the
- military wing of the black-power group the Pan-Africanist
- Congress. Political violence over the past three years has
- claimed more than 10,000 lives. But until Hani, no major
- political leader had been assassinated since Prime Minister
- Hendrik Verwoerd, the architect of apartheid, was stabbed in the
- chest by a messenger in Cape Town's parliament building in 1966.
- </p>
- <p> Police said they arrested Januzu Jakub Wallus, a
- 40-year-old Polish-born South African, reportedly traced through
- the red car that had sped away after Hani's murder. Wallus was
- in possession of two guns. An initial assertion by Deputy Law
- and Order Minister Gert Myburgh that the killing looked like an
- individual act rather than a conspiracy was rejected by A.N.C.
- leaders, who demanded that they, as well as international
- observers, be permitted to participate in the investigation.
- </p>
- <p> Hani's death moved even hardened veterans of the
- antiapartheid movement to tears. Nelson Mandela's estranged wife
- Winnie, one of Hani's closest colleagues, broke into sobs as she
- visited the crime scene. Joe Slovo, who handed control of South
- Africa's Communist Party to Hani in 1991 after being stricken
- with cancer, told a radio station in a trembling voice that he
- was "shocked and shaken" and needed "time to collect my
- thoughts."
- </p>
- <p> In sending his condolences, President De Klerk appealed to
- black leaders to keep their followers under control. In a rare
- nationally televised address, Nelson Mandela replied with an
- exhortation of his own: "This killing must stop. We must not
- permit ourselves to be provoked. Let us respond with dignity."
- </p>
- <p> There is no assurance that Mandela's call will be heeded.
- To the Young Lions, the militant youths who once battled the
- security forces for control of the black townships, Hani was a
- force more powerful and popular than Mandela. He had been
- counted upon to "sell" a compromise settlement to his millions
- of young followers. His death, said a supporter ominously, "will
- cause a lot of discontent."
- </p>
- <p> Most whites regarded Hani as little more than a terrorist.
- "Live by the sword, die by the sword," taunted an unidentified
- man calling a Johannesburg radio talk show after Hani's death
- was announced. Privately, many of Hani's A.N.C. colleagues
- suggest that a hidden hand within the state's security apparatus
- was behind the assassination. Hani had repeatedly accused the
- security forces of harboring hit squads and vowed that a future
- A.N.C. government would carry out total reform of the army and
- police. Not all Hani's enemies were white, however. He was also
- resented by former A.N.C. guerrillas who claimed that during the
- 1980s, dissidents were executed and tortured in exile camps
- under his leadership.
- </p>
- <p> Although Hani echoed the radical rhetoric of the Young
- Lions, the long racial struggle had transformed him into a
- powerful voice for negotiated change. As he had risen above his
- country's separate-and-unequal education system to become a
- classics scholar, Hani had moved from his militant past to
- become a political pragmatist. "It will be unrealistic not to
- accept compromises in the negotiations," he said in an interview
- with TIME last November. "We have not defeated the other side."
- </p>
- <p> It was Hani's nature to savor the paradoxes of being black
- in a white-ruled land. After he returned from exile in 1990,
- along with other A.N.C. comrades, he chose not to move to the
- townships where he was worshipped, renting instead in Boksburg,
- a suburb known for its conservative, racist whites. As it turned
- out, he got along well with his new neighbors. Though his death
- may set back the cause of peace temporarily, it is such spirit
- that will ultimately save South Africa from itself.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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