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- From: nyxfer%panix.com@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu (N.Y. Transfer)
- Subject: NEWS: ANC Blood on deKlerk's Hands/WW
- Message-ID: <1992Sep14.214534.27134@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Date: Mon, 14 Sep 1992 21:45:34 GMT
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- Via The NY Transfer News Service ~ All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
- ANC blood on De Klerk's hands:
- South African puppet troops machine-gun marchers
-
- By Leslie Feinberg
-
- African National Congress leaders are demanding that South
- African President F.W. de Klerk oust the puppet government of
- Ciskei. At least 24 Black marchers were massacred and almost 200
- wounded on Sept. 7 when the Ciskei military--armed and backed by
- Pretoria--raked a march of 50,000 ANC supporters with machine-gun
- fire.
-
- The South African government has rejected the ANC demand,
- claiming that Ciskei is independent. Ciskei is one of 10 Black
- "homelands" established by the racist South African regime in the
- 1960s. While the Pretoria regime claims Ciskei is an independent
- nation, no other country in the world recognizes it.
-
- This event immediately recalls the many killings of ANC
- supporters in recent years, some by members of Inkatha, that have
- been labeled "Black on Black" violence by the bourgeois press but
- were proven to be organized by terrorist detachments of the
- apartheid police and army. In some of these incidents, members of
- the police themselves have finally come forward and confessed.
-
- De Klerk responsible
-
- In response to the massacre, protesters skirmished with police
- outside the Ciskei "consulates" in Johannesburg and Cape Town.
- The ANC has warned that the mass murders could spark an outburst
- of popular rage.
-
- The ANC issued a statement after the massacre promising to
- continue its struggle to "attain free political activity in the
- Ciskei" and other so-called homelands.
-
- "We are blaming de Klerk for this," stressed Cyril Ramaphosa,
- secretary general of the African National Congress, "and we do it
- without hesitation." Ramaphosa was one of the protesters forced
- to dive for cover when troops opened fire on the unarmed
- demonstrators.
-
- De Klerk blames ANC
-
- Rather than trying to distance themselves from the bloodbath,
- President de Klerk and Minister of "Law and Order" Hernus Kriel
- attacked the ANC for having led the peaceful march. They then
- sent troops to bolster the Ciskei's puppet military force.
-
- Foreign Minister Pik Botha accused the ANC of trying to seize
- power. He said the central government would refuse to engage in
- negotiations until the ANC abandons mass action and "communist
- plans."
-
- The liberation movement in South Africa has tried every peaceful
- means to force the racist regime out of power. It entered into
- negotiations aimed at preparing for a transition to majority
- rule. Then it staged a month of peaceful mass actions culminating
- in a nationwide general strike on Aug. 3 and 4 that was so
- effective city centers became ghost towns. All this showed that
- the vast majority of South Africans consider the ANC their true
- representatives.
-
- But the citadel of the wealthy--from the owners of the gold and
- diamond mines to the Wall Street ruling class that backs them all
- the way--has unleashed state terror to block any peaceful
- transfer of power to a multi-racial, popular provisional
- government.
-
- Just a few months ago, the Pretoria government was negotiating
- with the ANC. It hoped to convince world public opinion that it
- was no longer the regime that perpetrated the infamous
- Sharpeville massacre of 1960.
-
- But after 39 Black South Africans were slaughtered in the Black
- township of Boipatong near Johannesburg, the National Executive
- Committee of the ANC broke off the negotiations in June.
-
- The NEC stated at that time, "We cannot tolerate a situation
- where the regime's control of state power allows it the space to
- deny and cover up its role in fostering and fomenting violence."
-
- In July the ANC monthly publication Mayibuye exposed government
- plots called Operation Thunderstorm and Operation Springbok, a
- two-pronged violent strategy to prevent the ANC from heading any
- South African government.
-
- This latest massacre has led to no impassioned outcries in the
- imperialist media of the type leveled against Iraq or Yugoslavia.
- Neither George Bush nor Bill Clinton has commented on it yet,
- even though talk is cheap.
-
-
- (Copyright Workers World Service: Permission to reprint granted
- if source is cited. For more info contact Workers World,46 W. 21
- St., New York, NY 10010; "workers@igc.apc.org".)
-
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