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- <text id=91TT1594>
- <title>
- July 22, 1991: South Africa:A Black-and-White Future
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 22, 1991 The Colorado
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 40
- SOUTH AFRICA
- A Black-and-White Future
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Apartheid would have fallen anyway, but sanctions helped speed
- the process. So Bush decided it was time to lift them as an
- incentive for more progress.
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by Peter Hawthorne/Cape Town,
- Bruce W. Nelan/New York and Christopher Ogden/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Apartheid always was an unworkable as well as immoral
- system whose breakdown was inevitable. But the trade and
- financial sanctions imposed by the U.S., the European Community,
- the Commonwealth and other groups of nations hammered home to
- South African whites, as probably nothing else could have, the
- fact that their country had become a global outlaw, judged unfit
- for membership in the world community of nations. Their dismay
- at that knowledge accelerated the process of dismantling
- apartheid at least a bit, and perhaps with somewhat less
- violence than would have been the case without sanctions. Now
- that the process seems irreversible, sanctions have done their
- job and can mostly be lifted.
- </p>
- <p> Though dissenters are both numerous and vehement, the
- consensus of analysts, South African and foreign, is that enough
- progress has been made to speed the embargo on its way to
- oblivion, as President George Bush did last week. As a positive
- incentive to keep reform going, he rescinded the bans on most
- trade with South Africa and on new investment in the country,
- enacted in 1986 over Ronald Reagan's veto.
- </p>
- <p> As Vice President, Bush opposed the sanctions--though he
- conceded last week that they had had some effect--and made no
- secret of his determination to scrap them as soon as he legally
- could. When he finally did so, he maintained that he did not
- have much choice, since South Africa had fulfilled all the
- conditions required by Congress. There is room for argument
- about at least one of those conditions: the release of all
- political prisoners. The African National Congress (A.N.C.) says
- some 850 remain in jail, while the government in Pretoria
- insists only criminals remain.
- </p>
- <p> Others have also been rushing to reopen the door of the
- global community to South Africa ever since last spring, when
- President F.W. de Klerk asked parliament to repeal the last
- major apartheid laws; lawmakers did so before the end of June.
- The 12-nation E.C. voted in April to remove its ban on imports
- of certain products, though Denmark has been holding up
- implementation, and London will try to talk Commonwealth
- countries into doing the same at their annual conference in
- October. The International Olympic Committee last week decided
- to let South African athletes compete in future games, ending
- a 21-year ban that was especially devastating to the sports-mad
- country. For its part, Pretoria signed the nuclear non
- proliferation treaty, a significant move since it is thought to
- have developed the ability to make atom bombs.
- </p>
- <p> Some American blacks and liberals nonetheless denounced
- Bush's action as premature, an opinion also voiced by A.N.C.
- leader Nelson Mandela. The opponents contend, correctly, that
- South Africa is still far from multiracial democracy.
- Substantive negotiations on a new constitution that would permit
- blacks to vote and share in governing the country have not even
- begun. The critics argue that without the continued pressure of
- international sanctions, full equality will never come.
- </p>
- <p> On the other hand, a fair number of sanctions do remain.
- In the U.S., federal restrictions imposed before 1986 are still
- in force, including the virtual American veto against loans to
- Pretoria by such bodies as the International Monetary Fund. No
- fewer than 133 laws restricting or penalizing companies that do
- business with South Africa are still on the books in 26 states,
- 22 counties and 85 cities.
- </p>
- <p> How effective is such pressure? It certainly gives the
- world community a peaceful way to express its opprobrium. But
- it seems obvious that apartheid was a doomed policy from the
- start. South Africa built a huge, sophisticated economy but did
- not have enough whites to run it. Business needed skilled black
- technicians and middle managers, and it could not get them while
- government policy confined blacks to hardscrabble shantytowns
- and limited their education. Moreover, repression of the black
- majority could eventually be maintained only at the price of
- more violence than most whites would tolerate. As long ago as
- 1979, President P.W. Botha proclaimed that South Africa must
- "adapt or die," and such major apartheid legislation as the
- "pass" laws, which forced blacks to carry identity documents,
- began to fall even before the main wave of sanctions. Botha,
- however, could never face up to the necessity for truly radical
- change; his successor, De Klerk, has done so.
- </p>
- <p> The trade restrictions seem to have had little economic
- impact. The U.S. and other nations continued to import vital raw
- materials, such as chromium and platinum, for which South Africa
- is the major world source. The products that the West would not
- buy, chiefly coal and fruit, found new markets in Asia, the
- Middle East and, of all places, black Africa. Nearly every
- African country south of the Sahara trades with Pretoria.
- </p>
- <p> But limitations on loans and investments did hurt. About
- half the American companies that once operated in South Africa
- have pulled out, and the value of their holdings has shrunk
- from $2.5 billion to $1 billion. South Africa currently suffers
- a net capital outflow of about $2 billion a year; money needed
- to build up the country's industry has to be sent abroad
- instead to repay foreign loans. Partly in consequence, the once
- booming economy has stagnated. By some estimates, output of
- goods and services over the past 10 years has grown on average
- only around 1% a year (with an actual decline in 1990), vs.
- perhaps 4% that might have been registered without sanctions.
- Predictions that the sanctions would hurt black workers most
- have come true. Black unemployment is estimated at 40% to 45%,
- vs. a 10% jobless rate for whites. Another prediction made by
- opponents of sanctions, however, has proved quite wrong. It had
- been widely forecast that the embargo would provoke a laager
- (circling the wagons) mentality among whites, a nose-thumbing
- determination to defy world opinion. That happened in Rhodesia
- in the late 1960s, but exactly the opposite seems to have
- occurred in South Africa: the shock of finding themselves moral
- outcasts stung many of the nation's whites so deeply that they
- went along with a faster and more thorough dismantling of
- apartheid than they might have countenanced otherwise. "It was
- the feeling that the country had become a global pariah rather
- than the economic pressures, however substantial, which seems
- to have given De Klerk the green light for reforms," says a
- British official. Laurence Besserman, a Cape Town
- importer-exporter, puts it in more personal terms: "Even when
- dealing with old and loyal friends abroad, I always had a sort
- of Phantom of the Opera feeling. Now we can all come out of the
- shadows."
- </p>
- <p> The very factor that made sanctions a modest success
- against South Africa, though, may make that success
- unrepeatable. Sanctions have been instituted 115 times since
- World War I, but usually without much effect. Gary Hufbauer,
- professor of international finance at Georgetown University,
- calculates that only 30% of the restrictions imposed during the
- past decade have had even a marginal effect in changing a target
- nation's policies.
- </p>
- <p> Generally, either nations have been unwilling to impose
- sanctions severe enough to cripple the economy of an offending
- country, or the restrictions have been widely evaded. The moral
- obloquy that proved so galling to white South Africans means
- nothing to dictators such as Saddam Hussein of Iraq and Deng
- Xiaoping of China, who are determined to maintain their power
- and to hell with world opinion. Some analysts suspect that even
- in South Africa, sanctions that devastated rather than only
- damaged the economy might have produced a laager backlash. For
- once, the U.S. and other nations imposed sanctions just strict
- enough to have the desired effect--but there is no guarantee
- they will get the calculation right next time.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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