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- <text id=94TT0586>
- <link 94XP0551>
- <link 94TO0160>
- <title>
- May 09, 1994: South Africa:Time to Take Charge
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 09, 1994 Nelson Mandela
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 27
- Time to Take Charge
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> At long last, the black majority moves from repression into
- the halls of government
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Peter Hawthorne/Cape Town, Scott MacLeod/Johannesburg
- and Andrew Purvis/Durban
- </p>
- <p> White-haired, bearded Cronje Tshaka is older than the 82-year-old
- African National Congress. Now he has outlived apartheid. Clutching
- his identity book in one hand and his cane in the other, Tshaka,
- 95, waited patiently in line to vote last week--like all South
- Africa's black citizens, for the first time in his life. He
- shook off offers of help, walking unsteadily but unaided into
- the polling station in Guguletu, one of the toughest and grimiest
- of the black townships around Cape Town. Minutes later he emerged,
- a broad grin lighting his face. "I never thought I would see
- this day," he said.
- </p>
- <p> Those very words echoed in millions of minds across South Africa
- last week. In a series of astonishing episodes, beginning with
- all-race voting from the Limpopo to the Cape of Good Hope, the
- old South Africa of segregation and oppression dissolved itself
- and re-emerged as a tentatively hopeful, newly democratic nation.
- On Wednesday morning at 12:01, the old order formally ended
- as cheering crowds in the nine new provincial capitals hailed
- the lowering of apartheid's blue-white-and-orange flag and the
- raising of a banner with six colors symbolizing the people,
- their blood, their land, the gold under the ground, the sky--and white for peace.
- </p>
- <p> At the same moment, the country became whole again. The 10 black
- homelands, including four that had pretended to independence,
- designed by apartheid architects as places of exile for surplus
- people with black skin, were abolished. The armed services became
- the South African National Defense Force, and will begin to
- absorb former enemies from guerrilla armies like the A.N.C.'s
- Spear of the Nation. Things were changing so fast, a South African
- Broadcasting Corp. interviewer lost track of who was President,
- Nelson Mandela, who will be sworn in next week, or F.W. de Klerk,
- the incumbent. He turned from talking with De Klerk to sign
- off, saying, "Well, there's State...former State Pres...well, State President de Klerk, Mr. de Klerk...not former
- yet."
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps predictably, a group of bloody-minded white rightists
- had tried--and failed--to disrupt the process of change.
- They had launched a campaign of small bombings against railways,
- power lines and A.N.C. offices in the conservative farm region
- west of Johannesburg. Then last week they detonated powerful
- car bombs in downtown Johannesburg, in neighboring Germiston
- and at the international airport, killing a total of 21 people
- and injuring more than 150. By the end of the week the police
- had rounded up 34 suspects, all members of the neo-Nazi Afrikaner
- Resistance Movement.
- </p>
- <p> Voters, especially blacks eager to embrace the day of their
- liberation, were not deterred. The election, astonishingly peaceful,
- succeeded beyond all preparations. Lines of determined voters
- stretched a mile and more at polling places. Many polls opened
- hours late or ran out of ballots or the invisible ink used to
- mark the hands of those who had already made their choice. The
- ballots, printed weeks ago, did not include the last entry in
- the race, the Inkatha Freedom Party, and had to be updated with
- paste-on stickers; to ensure fairness, Zulu Chief Mangosuthu
- Buthelezi demanded a fourth day of voting. While exasperated
- thousands waited, election workers gave puzzled first timers
- impromptu lessons in how to mark a ballot. Mandela said some
- of the ballot shortages looked like outright "sabotage," and
- he too called for another day of polling. At last the election
- officials requested and got an extension of the voting, originally
- scheduled to end Thursday, into Friday in several parts of the
- country.
- </p>
- <p> Neither the terrorists' bombs nor the confusing logistical snarls
- had a significant effect on the voters' turnout or their enthusiasm.
- The night before she went to vote, Gladys Mswele, 60, a farmer
- in the hilly country north of Durban, did not sleep well. "I
- was thinking about this all night," she said, as she rose before
- dawn to walk the two miles to the main road, where she patiently
- waited for transport to her polling place. "This is our day."
- Seven hours later, she made her X next to the party of her choice.
- Voting, she said, as she rested after the long journey home,
- "is hard labor. But we have done our duty." On Saturday A.N.C.
- Secretary-General Cyril Ramaphosa confidently predicted a 60%
- landslide for his party.
- </p>
- <p> The surprise was not that the election was carried out well
- but that it happened at all. Here was a white government, still
- with a monopoly grip on political power, handing over control
- of the country to the black majority it had held in servitude
- for 300 years. It was an event without historical precedent
- in the days of sweeping decolonization in Africa three decades
- ago, or even in 1980 when the former British colony of Rhodesia
- became Zimbabwe, because 5 million former rulers are not leaving.
- </p>
- <p> South Africa's whites had methodically segregated blacks, paid
- them a pittance, ignored their housing and barely pretended
- to educate them. Blacks were not second-class citizens but third
- or fourth class. Suddenly last week, by agreement, the whites
- stepped back and passed the government to that eager but ill-prepared
- majority. "I feel a sense of achievement," said De Klerk, the
- Afrikaner who made himself into the country's last white President.
- "My plan has been put into operation."
- </p>
- <p> Now the victors must govern the country they have won. It is
- up to Mandela and his comrades to set the course. They must
- finish the task of dismantling the apartheid structures, reforming
- bureaucracies and constructing a unified, multiracial South
- Africa. "We are starting a new era," said Mandela, after casting
- his vote outside Durban, "of hope, of reconciliation, of nation
- building."
- </p>
- <p> It will not be easy, for a variety of reasons.
- </p>
- <p> BLACK EXPECTATIONS. Millions of blacks, mostly poor and illiterate,
- went to the polls and, with a few strokes on a piece of paper,
- took control of their own future. It is their plan that matters
- now. The A.N.C. will be judged primarily on its handling of
- the national economy, because if that collapses, political and
- social reforms have little chance of growing. The A.N.C. will
- succeed only if it can, in the current township phrase, deliver
- the goods. If Mandela and his colleagues fail to show they are
- making progress, the long-suffering black majority may turn
- against them and follow other, more radical leaders who promise
- more.
- </p>
- <p> Among whites the term "black expectations" raises the specter
- of vastly increased taxes or even seizure of their comfortable
- homes and swimming pools. But for most blacks--at least in
- the short term--expectations begin at a far more basic level,
- with services that would be simply assumed in an industrialized
- country. But apartheid has left them with almost nothing: the
- great majority live in such desperate poverty, in dusty, refuse-strewn
- townships or gritty rural backwaters, that their dreams are
- of clean water, paved streets, garbage collection, sewers.
- </p>
- <p> A bit further in the future are their freshly renewed hopes
- for steady jobs, well-lit houses, modern schools, neighborhood
- clinics. Few delude themselves that a mansion and a Mercedes
- are at hand, but almost all expect--even demand--some visible
- improvement in their everyday life. "There is a transfer of
- power taking place to the toiling masses of this country," says
- Voice Mabe, a trade-union worker in Soweto. "From the end of
- April, there will be drastic changes."
- </p>
- <p> Some of South Africa's whites fear that their black fellow citizens
- will visit on them the same codified cruelty they inflicted
- on the blacks. "Those who have followed our policy generally,"
- Mandela insisted, "will dismiss those rumors without hesitation."
- No doubt some of the 30 million blacks would savor a taste of
- revenge, but for now they are a small minority.
- </p>
- <p> ON-THE-JOB TRAINING. Now that the voters have spoken, the A.N.C.
- will dominate the five-year life of the new government of national
- unity. It will share the Cabinet at least with the National
- Party; De Klerk is expected to be a Deputy President.
- </p>
- <p> But the A.N.C. was a liberation movement for more than 80 years
- and fought its battle for equality with boycotts, protest marches
- and occasional sabotage; it has been a registered political
- party only since February. It will have to learn the arts of
- constitutional governance, legislation, political compromise,
- as it goes along.
- </p>
- <p> Once his ballot was in the box on a schoolhouse porch in Inanda,
- a township soaked with the blood of battles between the A.N.C.
- and Inkatha, Mandela very quickly stepped into his new role
- as leader of the nation--all the nation. "Our message," he
- said, "is that the basic needs of the masses of the people must
- be addressed. These are our priorities." At the same time, he
- had words of reassurance for whites. "We are concerned about
- giving confidence and security to those who are worried that
- by these changes they are going to be in a disadvantaged position,"
- he said. Perhaps aware he was sounding very lawyerly, he then
- quoted from his speech at his trial 30 years ago: "I cherish
- the idea of a new South Africa where all South Africans are
- equal, where all South Africans work together to bring about
- security, peace and democracy in our country."
- </p>
- <p> South Africa offers him plenty of room to make highly visible
- improvement. The problems are so enormous they cannot be eliminated
- in the short term, but almost any tangible effort will help.
- Most of the country's black citizens are without electricity
- or running water at home. Eight million live not in houses but
- in the squalor of squatter shacks. About 18 million black families
- earn less than $220 a month. Half the black population is illiterate
- and half its work force has no job. Development experts say
- the national economy must grow at 3.5% a year to make even a
- dent in joblessness; the growth rate this year is expected to
- hover between 2% and 3%.
- </p>
- <p> WHO PAYS THE BILL? Though the A.N.C. has cast off most of its
- earlier Marxist affection for planned economies, it does have
- a five-year plan to address what Mandela refers to as "the basic
- needs of the masses." It is a 147-page document called "The
- R.D.P: The Reconstruction and Development Program," a blueprint
- for reorganizing and democratizing the society. At its heart
- is an $11 billion economic-development program that promises
- to provide employment and job training for 2.5 million people
- in public-works projects. It aims at putting up a million new
- houses, providing a million others with running water and flush
- toilets, and bringing electricity to 2.5 million more homes.
- The plan provides for free and compulsory schooling for children
- and adult education for millions of blacks who learned almost
- nothing under inferior "Bantu education." It also calls for
- diverting public-health funds to provide and improve clinics
- in the poorest areas.
- </p>
- <p> Trevor Manuel, the A.N.C.'s economic chief, asks the key question,
- "How much is all this going to cost?" White businessmen are
- likely to add, "And do you propose to pay for it by soaking
- the rich with big tax increases?" Manuel replies that the development
- program is relatively modest and can be financed at projected
- levels with a portion of the present government's budget. Further,
- he argues, some of it can be paid for by cracking down on corruption,
- cutting defense spending and collecting taxes more efficiently.
- "The kind of South Africa we can build," he says with a smile,
- "is one where parents in Australia and New Zealand would have
- to hold their children back from emigrating here."
- </p>
- <p> Many white liberals believe the idea is not entirely farfetched.
- They point out that the A.N.C. will be taking office but not
- taking complete power. It will be restrained from extreme measures,
- even if it wanted to take them, by other social forces like
- the white-dominated business sector, the civil service, the
- police and army, and the nine new provincial governments. The
- country's democratization, says Hermann Giliomee, a leading
- Afrikaner academic, is "a bold and brave experiment with a real
- chance of success." A.N.C. spokesman Carl Niehaus points to
- purely pragmatic limits on policy: "In order to keep the country
- afloat, to get economic growth, to avoid further flight of capital
- and skills from the country, you have to play it that way."
- </p>
- <p> To its credit, the A.N.C. is cautious about adding to the nation's
- debt burden. Thabo Mbeki, who will probably be First Deputy
- President and heir apparent to Mandela, said in an interview
- with TIME last week that the incoming government has two immediate
- goals. First, it intends to write a budget that will reassure
- the international financial community that the A.N.C. is not
- going to borrow heavily. Second, it hopes to round up early
- commitments of aid money from friendly governments. "It will
- be very good if we can generate a billion dollars from around
- the world," Mbeki said, "that can go into projects that will
- produce relatively quick results." He hopes Mandela can soon
- announce "that we have commitments to enable us to build 50,000
- houses within a short period without additional government borrowing
- or raising taxes."
- </p>
- <p> PROMISES, PROMISES. In a televised debate before last week's
- election, De Klerk declared, "The A.N.C. and the National Party
- promise the same thing. The real test is who has a plan to achieve
- it." As leader of the parliamentary opposition, De Klerk is
- preparing to argue that the A.N.C.'s calculations do not add
- up. His National Party analysts say the development plan is
- more likely to cost $19.7 billion rather than $11 billion in
- its first year alone. He also says the popular idea of skimming
- billions off the defense budget is not likely to work if the
- A.N.C. persists in its plan to add 12,000 of its guerrilla troops
- to the armed forces and intends to provide tight security.
- </p>
- <p> Under the interim constitution, any of the 19 parties on the
- ballot that receives at least 5% of the vote is entitled to
- a seat in the new Cabinet. In any case, as one of his confidence-building
- measures, Mandela intends to keep present Minister of Finance
- Derek Keys and Central Bank director Chris Stals in his government
- of national unity. Keys is an optimist about the transition.
- "From an economic point of view," he says, "I think it is going
- to work very well." Even so, Keys is worried that the A.N.C.
- development plan was put together as a wish list without figuring
- carefully what each government department can actually spend.
- </p>
- <p> Keys says there is no disagreement about first principles: "Jobs.
- If we can't run an economy capable of creating jobs, then we
- will be thrown out. And so will every other government that
- suffers from that defect." But differences have already cropped
- up on how job growth is to be achieved. The A.N.C., says Keys,
- is unable "to perceive what a growing economy could really do."
- Its leaders tend to "feel they have to take away things from
- certain sectors in order to give things to other sectors." He
- insists that if the economy is going to grow at a high rate,
- it must "offer something to everybody." In spite of such discussions,
- Keys is encouraged, he says, that the A.N.C. does not seem to
- be coming in bent on filling ideological prescriptions in economic
- policy.
- </p>
- <p> FAULT LINES. Once Mandela's Cabinet is announced, the unity
- government is likely to show significant lines of stress. It
- will probably include Communist Party chairman Joe Slovo--an interesting prospect for white officials who long used the
- fear of communist encirclement to justify apartheid policies.
- No fewer than 16 of the top 50 names on the A.N.C. parliamentary
- election list are members of the Communist Party. While they
- have forsworn Stalinism, Slovo still argues that "only under
- socialism could you have a combination of political and economic
- democracy."
- </p>
- <p> Another brewing problem is the possibility that Mandela's estranged
- wife Winnie might get a minor Cabinet post. Though she was convicted
- in the kidnapping of a township youth who was later murdered,
- she scored an upset last year in winning election as head of
- the A.N.C. Women's League. This year the party put her high
- on its list for a parliamentary seat.
- </p>
- <p> LACK OF DISCIPLINE. This sort of thing highlights a critical
- weakness in the A.N.C. leadership: accountability. The party's
- own bylaws bar convicted criminals from holding office. Nevertheless,
- Winnie Mandela was allowed to take a prominent role. Oddly,
- Mandela defended the inconsistency by arguing that it was somehow
- only democratic to let her pursue her political career in spite
- of the rules. "Democratic culture in the A.N.C. is deeply entrenched,"
- he said. "What the people decide, we accept." Mandela and his
- colleagues have also gone easy on several A.N.C. officials implicated
- in killing and torturing prisoners in the organization's detention
- camps in other African countries.
- </p>
- <p> Mandela may simply find it impossible to discipline the wife
- who suffered so much during his 27 years in prison. Or he might
- prefer to have her in his government where he can keep an eye
- on her, since she has staked out a separate role as leader of
- the most militant and potentially violent of the township proletariat--especially the gun-toting youth gangs. While the A.N.C.'s
- top echelon is mostly moderate, almost 50% of its 1 million
- rank-and-file members are in the militant camp. If reforms begin
- to slip and there is no tangible progress in a year or so, Mandela
- may find his fiercest challenger is his fiery, camouflage-clad
- wife. "Winnie," says Tom Lodge, an authority on South African
- political movements, "is an instinctive populist. She will tell
- the masses what they want to hear."
- </p>
- <p> THE THREAT OF VIOLENCE. One worry that unites all South Africans
- is fear of crime. The pre-election bombings failed to shatter
- the elections partly because violence is already out of control
- in black shantytowns and white suburbs alike, where burglaries,
- carjackings and robberies are everyday events. The incidents
- often have nothing to do with politics, and they scare everyone.
- Mandela may be planning something like a law-and-order crackdown:
- he was an advocate of the state of emergency that was imposed
- in Natal province last month, and he has been talking more and
- more about enacting strict gun-control regulations. Right-wing
- whites and township gangs can be expected to resist them.
- </p>
- <p> At the final A.N.C. election rally in Soweto, when a burst of
- celebratory gunfire ripped the air, Mandela turned stony faced.
- "It is clear," he said sharply, "that criminality is deep seated
- even amongst members of the A.N.C." If he found out who was
- carrying the arms, he said, he would suspend them from membership
- "because one of our commitments is to ensure gun control." His
- close colleague Mbeki also says violence must be curbed. One
- reason is to safeguard "the first impression this new South
- Africa makes, particularly on the investor community inside
- and outside the country."
- </p>
- <p> Mandela intends to purge the officers and covert units inside
- the white-led national police force who have directed assassinations
- against A.N.C. members and supporters and have supplied Inkatha
- fighters with weapons. "You've got to find the criminals," Mbeki
- says. "The threat to democracy does not end with the effort
- to disrupt the elections. Some of them will take up guns and
- place bombs." At least one police officer and one reservist
- were among the 33 whites arrested last week as suspects in terrorist
- bombings.
- </p>
- <p> As he steps toward the executive offices in Pretoria's imposing
- Union Buildings, Mandela is preaching what amounts to a sermon
- of reassurance and inclusion. He stresses over and over that
- all the minorities--5 million whites, 3.5 million coloreds
- and 1 million Asians--will be valued for their contributions
- and have nothing to fear from his government. He says not only
- that whites should stay, but also that those who left in recent
- years should come back and help rebuild. "They have knowledge,
- skills and expertise," he says. "We are going to need them.
- We are going to rely on them."
- </p>
- <p> Mandela's long walk to freedom has ended in a jubilant, triumphant
- election week and the liberation he has worked 50 years to achieve.
- But his second struggle is just beginning. He now shoulders
- the mantle of the state, and while he will be praised for the
- things it achieves, he will be held responsible for everything
- it does not do for the people who expect the most. His plans
- may yet fail and his hopes collapse. But with his message of
- reconciliation and the euphoric support of the great majority
- of his countrymen last week, he was clearly the most presidential
- man in South Africa.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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