Fakta Sydafrika

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Ca 40.000 fKr San-folket slår sig ner i Sydafrika.
Ca 300 e Kr Bantu-folken anländer till KwaZulu-området.
1487 Bartolomeu Dias seglar runt Kaphalvön (eller Stormarnas udde, som man då kallade Godahoppsudden).
Ca 1500 Sotho-folken slår sig ner i Lesotho.
1652 Holländarna bosätter sig i Taffelviken (Kapstaden).
1688 Franska hugenotter anländer till Kapområdet.
Ca 1690 Boer sätter sig i rörelse mot inlandet.
1780 Holländarna strider med xhosa vid Great Fish River.
1795 Britterna erövrar Kapstaden.
1809 De första passlagarna för svarta, den sk Hottentott Code i vilken brittema bestämde att khoi och san måste vara registrerade som arbetare på en vit gård annars kunde de arresteras och sättas i tvångsarbete. Hottentottlagen upphävdes 1828.
1815 Shaka för zulufolket till makten, vilket resulterar i att difaqane börjar.
1820 De första brittiska emigranterna anländer med Chapman till Algoabukten i nuvarande Östra Kapprovinsen.
1835 Boerna, "Voortrekker eller föregångarna ", drar norrut i det som kallas "Det stora uttåget, the Great Trek". Boerna grundar Oranjefristaten.
1838 Boerna besegrar zuluerna islaget vid Blood River.
1852 Boerrepubliken Transvaal grundas.
1858 Britterna besegrar xhosa efter katastrofen med storslakten av boskap.
1860 De första indierna anländer till Durban i Natal, som kontraktsarbetare i sockerindustrin. År 1886 uppgår den indiska befolkningen i Natal tilI129.828.
1868 Britterna annekterar Basotholand (Lesotho ).
1869 Diamanter hittas inte långt från Kimberley vid Oranjefloden.
1871 Guld upptäcks i dåvarande Östra Transvaal.
1877 British annekterar boerrepubliken Transvaal.
1881 Boerna besegrar britterna och Transvaal blir Sydafrikanska republiken.
1886 Guld hittas i Witwatersrand.
1893 Mohandas Gandhi anländer till Natal.
1897 Zululand annekteras av britterna.
1899-1902 Boerkriget. Boerna gör uppror mot britterna. Resultatet blir en sammanslagning av boerrepublikerna Oranjefristaten och Transvaal och de brittiska kolonierna Kapprovinsen och Natal.
1910 Sydafrikanska unionen bildas och Sydafrika blir en del i Brittiska samväldet. Lesotho och Swaziland blir brittiska protektorat.
1912 South African Native National Council bildas, som senare blir ANC.
1913

Natives Land Act begränsar de svartas ägande av mark till 7.5 procent av landets yta.

1928 Kommunistpartiet börjar propagera för full demokrati.
1946 Asiatic Land Tenure Act genomförs som innebär minskad rörelsefrihet för indierna. Lagen innebär inskränkningar både i rätten att bosätta sig var som helst, att bedriva handel och att köpa egendom.
1948 National Party kommer i regeringsställning och partiet behåller sin ställning fram till 1994. 1955 ANC antar "Freedom Charter", kravet på lika rätt för alla raser, på Folkets kongress i Kliptown, Soweto.
1959 Parlamentet antar en lag (Promotion of Bantu Self Government Act som ska bidra till bantufolkens självbestämmande. Lagen bidrog till att skapa åtta separata etniska områden, bantustater.
1960 Sharpeville massakern. Den 21 mars skjuter polisen ihjäl 69 kvinnor och barn samt sårar 400 som demonstrerar mot passlagarna. ANC och PAC förbjuds och dess ledare sätts i fångelse. Händelserna i Sharpville ( en förstad som är belägen drygt 50 km söder om Jo'burg) blev väckarklockan i många europeiska länder och fick bl a svenskarna att engagera sig i solidaritetsrörelsen
1961 Sydafrika måste lämna Brittiska samväldet pga sin apartheidpolitik och blir Sydafrikanska republiken. Befrielserörelserna ANC och PAC förbjuds
1963 Nelson Mandela och andra svarta ledare fängslas på livstid.
1966 Premiärminister HF Verwoerd mördas. Lesotho blir oberoende av Strobritannien.
1968 Swaziland blir oberoende av Strobritannien.
1975 Sydafrika invaderar Angola.
1976 De första hemländerna bildas. Sowetoupproret sprider sig i hela landet; totalt 575 dödade och 2.389 sårade.
1977 Steve Biko mördas.
1979 Svarta tillåts bilda fackföreningar under vissa villkor.
1982 Swazilands kung Sobhuza II, dör och är då den kung i världen som suttit längst vid makten.
1984 Trekammarparlamentet införs: en kammare för vita, en för färgade och en for asiater .
1985 Undantagstillstånd utfärdas, mord och tortyr är allmänt förekommande från officiellt håll det svarta motståndet hårdnar.
1990 Den 2 februari tillkännager F W de Klerk i parlamentet att förbud mot ANC, PAC, det sydafrkanska kommunistpartiet upphävs. Bara någon vecka senare friges Nelson Mandela och demokratisamtal inleds.
1991 Apartheid avskaffas, arbetet med en ny författning börjar. Politiskt våld trappas upp.
1992 ANC blir tillåtet som parti.
1993 Apartheid upphör. Ett övergångsråd inrättas för att styra landet! allmänna val hålls. Mandela och de Klerk får Nobels fredspris.
1994 Allmänna demokratiska val. Mandela väljs till president.
1995 Sannings- och försoningskommissionen inleder sitt arbete för att lägga övergreppen under apartheid bakom sig. Kommissionen har som syfte att kartlägga övergreppen, lämna kompensation till offren samt bevilja amnesti för dem som begått övergreppen
1996 Den nya konstitutionen antas. Nationalistpartiet lämnar samlingsregeringen.
1997 Robben Island öppnas som museum och blir tillgängligt för allmänheten.


Sydafrika är en republik i södra Sfrika dess areal är på ca 1 221 038 km² och hade ca 37,7 miljoner invånare 1991. Sydafrika gränsar i norr till Nambia, Botswana och Zimbawe, i öster till Moçambique och Swaziland samt omsluter Lesotho. Huvudstaden heter Pretoria och ahde 1991 ca 1 miljon invånare.
Flaggan infördes vid statsombildningen 1994. Den utgör en kombination av två flaggor, dels f.d. beorrepubliken Transvaals, en röd-vit-blå hoisontel trikolor med ett fränt tvärfält längs stången (den fanns i litet format infälld i det vita mittfältet på den tidigare flaggan), dels frihetsrörelsen ANC:s flagga från 1912 i den horisontella färgsättningen svart-grönt-gult. Grönt, här tolkat som frihetens färg, är gemensamt och går igen i mittfälltet, utformat som ett liggande Y, symboliserade att apartheidsystemet upphört och att två skilda vägar nu löpt samman i en. Bottenkompositionen röt-vitt-blått motsvarar f.ö. Nederländernas flagga och erinrar därmed om att det var invandrare från Nederländerna som på 1650-talet började kolonisera landet.

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Natur
Land and Resources
The topography of South Africa consists primarily of a great plateau, which occupies about two-thirds of the country. The plateau reaches its greatest heights along the southeastern edge, which is marked by the Drakensberg Mountains, a range that is part of the Great Escarpment, which separates the plateau from coastal areas. The escarpment includes Champagne Castle (3375 m/11,072 ft), the highest elevation in the country. Within the plateau three regions may be distinguished: the Highveld, the Bushveld, and the Middle Veld. The Highveld, which covers most of the plateau, is mostly higher than 1524 m (5000 ft) above sea level and is characterized by level or gently undulating terrain. The northern limit of the Highveld is marked by a rock ridge, called the Witwatersrand, which includes the city of Johannesburg. North of the Witwatersrand is the Bushveld or Transvaal Basin. This section, much of which is broken into basins by rock ridges, slopes downward from east to west toward the Limpopo River. The Bushveld averages some 1220 m (some 4000 ft) in height. The western section of the plateau, known as the Middle Veld, also slopes downward in a westerly direction. The average elevation of the Middle Veld is about 915 m (about 3000 ft).

Between the edge of the plateau and the eastern and southern coastline the land descends seaward in a series of abrupt grades, or steps. Along the eastern coast are two steps. The interior step is a belt of hilly country, called the Eastern Uplands. The exterior step is a low-lying plain, called the Eastern Lowveld. On the south, the steps, proceeding from the interior to the coast, are a plateau called the Great Karroo, or Central Karroo; a lower plateau called the Little Karroo, or Southern Karroo; and a low-lying plain. The Swartberg, a mountain range, lies between the Great Karroo and the Little Karroo. Between the latter area and the coastal plain is another mountain range, the Langeberg. On the southern coast, just south of Cape Town, is an isolated peak, Table Mountain (about 1080 m/about 3550 ft). On the southwestern coast the edge of the plateau is marked by a range of folded mountains, irregular in character and direction, which descends abruptly into a coastal plain. South Africa also includes a part of the Kalahari Desert in the northwest and a section of the Namib Desert in the west.

Terrängformer och berggrund
Hela norra och mellersta delen av Sydafrika är en platåregion. Den är högst i öster, ca 2 400m ö.h., lägst i väster i de södra delarna av Kalahari, 600-900m ö.h. Den mellersta delen, liksom Karrooplatån i söder, ligger omkring 1 200m ö.h. Karrooplatån är uppbyggd av lavor och sedimentära bergarter bildade för ca 200-300 miljoner år sedan. Berggrunden består i övrigt av tjocka lager sedimentära bergarter ovanpå urberget, vilketär blottat längst i norr. En andra landformsregion är de höga brandter som begränsar platåområdet utåt och har en stark sönderdelad och bergig terräng. I Drakensberg i öster är höjden ca 2 000 m ö.h., och här ligger Sydafrikas högsta topp Injasuti, 3 408 m ö.h., på gränsen till Lesotho. Söder om Oranjefloden ligger de lägre Stromberg, Nuveweldberg och Roggeveld. En tredje landformsregion är den smala kustslätt som når högst 170 m ö.h. och en bredd av 100 km utmed Indiska oceanen. Kustlinjen är rak och jämn. De största floderna är Oranjefloden och gränsfloden mot Zimbawe, Limpopo. Jordtäcket är mestadels sandigt, men i öster där nederbörden är riklig finns podsol och laterit.
Rivers
The chief rivers of South Africa are the Orange, Vaal, and Limpopo. The Orange River is the longest river in the country. It originates in Lesotho, flows in a northwestern direction, and empties into the Atlantic Ocean after a course of some 2090 km (some 1300 mi). The westernmost section of the Orange River forms the boundary between South Africa and Namibia. The Vaal River originates in the northeastern section of the country, near Swaziland. It flows in a southwestern direction to a point in the central portion of the country, where it joins the Orange River. The Limpopo River originates in the northeastern region and flows northwest to the Botswana border and then east along the borders of Botswana and Zimbabwe before entering Mozambique and continuing to the Indian Ocean.

In general, the rivers of the country are irregular in flow. Many are dry during much of the year. Consequently, the rivers are of little use for navigation or hydroelectric power but are of some use for irrigation.
Geology

Underlying the whole plateau of South Africa is a great complex of ancient crystalline rocks. In the course of time these rocks were worn down to form an almost level surface and were covered in most places by thick layers of sandstone and shale. These layers are nearly horizontal except in the southwest, where extensive folding has formed irregular hills and mountains. In the Witwatersrand and in the Middle Veld the underlying bedrock is exposed.
Soils

The grasslands of the central South African plateau have dark to black soils, or chernozems, which are similar to those of the North American prairies. In the western areas, which receive less rain, the chernozem soils give way to poorer, chestnut-colored soils. In the south the soils are thin and often red. The soils in the northeast are reddish and yellowish. Soil erosion is a big problem in much of the country.
Minerals

South Africa is very rich in mineral resources. Gold, coal, and diamonds are the chief minerals. Gold is mined primarily in the Witwatersrand, the site of the richest gold field in the world, which was discovered in 1886. The gold in the Witwatersrand occurs in minute specks, invisible to the naked eye, in pebble beds called bankets, which are mined to depths below 3048 m (10,000 ft). Uranium also is extracted commercially in the Witwatersrand. Vast and easily worked coal seams occur in the northeast between Lesotho and Swaziland. Diamonds are another important source of mineral wealth. Most of the diamonds come from diamond fields near Kimberley, which were discovered in 1870. Surface workings were soon exhausted, but the diamonds were traced to their source rock and mined by large-scale methods. Other minerals found in South Africa include copper, nickel, platinum, asbestos, chromite, fluorite, phosphates, vanadium, tin, titanium, and manganese and iron ores.

Terrängformer och berggrund Klimat Växtliv Djurliv Naturskydd
Klimat
Sydafrika ligger nästan helt i den varmtempererade klimatzonen och har sommartemperaturer (december-februari) mellan 21°C och 24°C. De västra delarna har dock 24-29°C och Oranjeflodens dalgång 32°C. Vintertemperaturen (juni-augusti) är ca 10°C dock betydligt högre på östkusten, där den varma Agulhasströmmen går söderut och värmer luften. Frost förekommer i de högsta områdena. Den ringa nederbörden ger stäppklimat o mellersta delen och ökenklimat i väster. Endast i öster faller mer än 1 000mm regn per år. Sydvästra hörnet av Sydafrika har medelhavsklimat med regn på vintern.
Climate
In general nearly all of South Africa enjoys a mild, temperate climate. Except for the extreme southwest, most of the country is under the influence of the easterly trade winds, which blow from over the Indian Ocean. Laden with moisture, these winds bring about 890 mm (about 35 in) of precipitation yearly to the Eastern Lowveld and the Eastern Uplands as far west as the Drakensberg. The High Veld receives about 380 to 760 mm (about 15 to 30 in) of precipitation annually, the amount diminishing rapidly toward the west. On the western coast rainfall is often as low as 51 mm (2 in) annually. The rainfall deposited by the trade winds occurs mainly between October and April. In the drier regions of the plateau the amount of rainfall and the beginning of the rainy season vary greatly from year to year. The extreme southwest is under the influence of western winds originating over the Atlantic Ocean. This region annually receives about 560 mm (about 22 in) of rainfall, most of which occurs between June and September.

The average daily temperature in January in Durban, which is on a low-lying part of the northeastern coast, is about 24° C (about 75° F). The corresponding temperature in Johannesburg, in the north central area, is about 19° C (about 66° F). Johannesburg, although closer to the equator than Durban, has a cooler summer largely because of its great elevation (some 1670 m/5470 ft above sea level). The average daily January temperature in Cape Town, on the southern coast, is about 20.6° C (about 69° F); the Cape Town area is under the influence of cool winds from the South Atlantic. The range of winter temperatures follows the same regional pattern. The average daily July temperature is about 17° C (about 62° F) in Durban, about 9° C (about 49° F) in Johannesburg, and about 12.2° C (about 54° F) in Cape Town. Snow is rare throughout the country, although winter frosts occur in the higher areas of the plateau.

Terrängformer och berggrund Klimat Växtliv Djurliv Naturskydd
Växtliv
Suydafrika hyser en av världens artrikaste floror. Speciellt i Västra Kapprovinsen fins en oerhörd växtrikedom med 210 endemiska släkten. Tempererade skogar förekommer mellan de längs kusten löpandes bergskedjorna samt vid foten av bergen i Traansval och Natal. Skogarna är städsegröna och hyser få barrträdsarter. Vegetationen karakteriseras i Kapprovinserna mest av lågvuxen buskskog, s.k. fynbos, och halvöken. Gräsmarker är vitt utbredda i områden med sommarregn, så som Natal, Transvaal och Oranjefristaten. Främst i öster förekommer även savanner med aloer, akacior och euforbior. Fynbosvegetationen visar stor mångfald med anmärkningsvärt stor andel endemiska arter, av vilka många har mycket liten utbredning. Här finns även ett flertal endemiska familjer. Denna vegetation är anpassad till regelbundet återkommande bränder. Arter av proteaväxter och ljungväxter samt olika lökväxter är vanliga, men gräsarterna är få. Halvöknarna i Karroo och Norra Kapprovinsen hyser en lång rad växter med köttiga stammar och blad; till dessa hör bl.a. stenblad. Efter regnen kläds markerna av olika ettåriga örter, bl.a. många korgblommiga växter.
Plants
The natural vegetation of South Africa varies from region to region according to the amount of rainfall. In the Eastern Lowveld, where rainfall is heaviest, are rain forests with many palms. Along the southern coast of this region are forests, composed chiefly of yellowwood, stinkwood, ironwood, and cedar. In the Eastern Uplands the land supports a luxuriant growth of grass and some trees. Most of the plateau is covered with grassland, which on the High Veld resembles a prairie and is often completely treeless. The grassland of the Bushveld, however, is more like a savanna, having scattered trees and bushes. On the Middle Veld, where rainfall is slight, the grassland is very poor. The vegetation consists almost entirely of coarse desert grasses, which grow in tufts and become green only after rain. The Great Karroo and the Little Karroo are covered with dry scrub.
Terrängformer och berggrund Klimat Växtliv Djurliv Naturskydd
Djurliv
Faunan är rik, med många savann-, halvöken-, och ökenarter. Av däggdjur finns nästan 100 arter, förutom fladdermöss och små gnagare (totalt 247 arter). Det finns drygt 30 arter rovdjur, bl.a. lejon, karakal, honhungsgrävling, brun hyena, jordvarg, örnonhund och många arter maguster. Av drygt 30 arter hovdjur är brokbock, vitsvansgnu och råbocksantilop endemiska. Två arter hovdjur har dött ut i sen tid, nämligen blåbock och kvagga. Tre arter apor finns i Sydafrika grön markatta, vitstrupig markatta och chacmababian. Många däggdjursarter lever numera kvar endast i nationalparkerna. ca 700 arter fåglar häckar i Sydafrika bl.a. många arter rovfåglar, frankoliner, busktörnskator och glansstrarar. Sockerfåglar förekommer nästan bara i Sydafrika. Vid kusterna uppträder tidvis många arter havsfåglar. Sydafrikansk pingvin häckar vid kusten i söder och kapskarv har stora guanoproducerande kolonier på kustnära öar. Det finns 95 arter groddjur och ca 300 arter kräldjur; bland vanliga ormarter kan nämnas boomslang, puffadder, sydafrikansk äggsnok och vargsnokar. Det var vid Sydafrikas sydöstra kust som man 1938 påträffade den första tofsstjärtfisken.
Animals
Numerous large mammals, including lion, elephant, zebra, leopard, monkey, baboon, hippopotamus, and antelope, are indigenous to South Africa. For the most part, such animals are found only on game reserves. One of the most notable national game reserves is Kruger National Park in the northeast along the border with Mozambique. Founded in 1926, it occupies about 19,490 sq km (about 7525 sq mi). Nearly every species of wildlife indigenous to the country is found in the park. Other notable national game reserves include Kalahari Gemsbok National Park, in the northwest; Addo Elephant National Park, near Port Elizabeth; and Mountain Zebra (Bergkwagga) National Park, near Cradock. Bird life is abundant and includes, among the larger birds, ostrich, francolin, quail, guinea fowl, and grouse. Snakes are fairly common throughout the country. Large numbers of fish inhabit coastal waters.
Terrängformer och berggrund Klimat Växtliv Djurliv Naturskydd
Naturskydd
1990 Hade Sydafrika 13 nationalparker. De två största är Kruger National Park (19 485 km²) och Kalahari Gemsbok National Park (9 591 km²). Det fanns 160 naturresrvat större än 1 km².
Befolkning och etnografi Språk Religion Utbildning Sociala förhållanden Näringsliv Kommunikationer Massmedier Statsskick och politik Rättsväsen Försvar Kultur Förhistoria Historia
 
Befolkning och etnografi

Sydafrikas befolkning kan språkligt och kulturellt indelas i européer (afrikaanstalande och engelsktalande), asiater (huvudsakligen indier), afrikaner, främst bantutalande folk (ngunigruppen och sothogruppen) men även khoisanfolk (san och khoikhoi) samt blandsamhällen med starkt inslag av khoikhoi, vilka av sydafrikaner kallas färgade. De folkslag som fanns på det nuvarande Sydafrikas territorium när eropéer (holländare) inledde bosättning där på 1600-talet var khoisanfolk och bauntufolk. Khoikhoi bebodde Kapområdet, där de bedrev boskapsskötsel (fettsvansfår) och levde i samhällen med 200-300 invånare inom ramen för lösa federationer av klaner. I dag har sydafrikanska khoikhoi delvis utrotats, delvis absorberats av andra grupper, med vilka de har bildat en blandkategori av färgade. Khoikhoi anses ha sina rötter in sanbefolkningen, som ända till slutet av 1980-talet återfanns som kringströvande jägare och samlare i s.k. band om 40-60 personer i Kalahariöknen. San, då totalt 50 000 personer, är i dag (1995) troligtvis färre, och det är tveksamt om några hela band ännu håller samman. Bauntufolken däremot ökar sin befolkning med ca 3% om året och beräknas i dag omfatta ca 20 milj. Bland bauntu urskiljs två huvudgrupper, nämligen ngunifolken (zulu, xhosa, mpondo, nebelele, swazi m.fl.) och sothogruppen (sotho, venda, pedi, lovedu m.fl.). Bauntufolken, som i olika vågor trängde söderut fr.o.m. det första årtusendet av vår tidräkning, kom ursprungligen från centrala och östra Afrika och införde storboskapskötsel, enklare jordbruksteknik (handhacka) samt en sofistekerad social och polotisk organisation, som var byggd delvis på patrilinjära klaner, delvis på ett militärt betonat åldersklassystem. Vissa av bantufolken i Sydafrika utvecklade detta system till en effektiv militär organisation och bildade kungariken med ett invecklat hovceremoniel och en kunglig anfäderskult som var avsedd att garantera fruktbarheten inom kungariket. Den militära politiska organisationen har framförallt karakteriserat ngunifolken, med zulu som främsta exempel på effektivt krigarfolk. Ngunifolken, vilkas bosättningsmönster kännetecknas av utåt skarpt markerade, runda "kraaler" (boskapsinhägnader), lägger mer vikt vid boskapskötsel än de mer jordbruksinriktade och historiskt sett mer fredliga sothofolken. Under 1900-talet har den socipolitiska strukturen förändrats, bl.a. p.g.a. ökat beroende av männens lönearbete i städer och gruvor. Sydafrikanska bauntufolk har i stor utsträckning anammat kristendomen formellt, samtidigt som de utvecklagt en mångfald synkretiska kyrkor som med starkt inslag av traditionella symboler, andebesättelse och många drag som har beröring med traditionell anfäderskult.
1991 hade Sydafrika en befolkningstäthet på 31 inv. per km², med stora befolknigkoncentrationer krig Johannesburg och Pretoria somt vid de östra och södra kustområdena. Dedan 1980-talet har Sydafrika genomgått en snabb urbanisering med tilltagande förslumning. 1991 uppskattades 57% av befolkningen bo i städer. Ca 90% av landets vita , färgade och asiatiska befolkning bodde i städer medan afrikanernas andel av stadsbefolkningen endast var 43%. Inflyttningen till landets storstadsregioner är mycket karaftig; 1990 hade Pretoria-Witwaterstrand (inkl Johannesburg)-Vereeniging 7,5 milj. inv. Durban-Pinetown-Pietermarizburg 3,4 milj. inv. och Kapstadens storstadsregion 2.5 milj. inv.
Inför 1994 års val uppskattades

Population
South Africa has a multiracial and multiethnic population. Of the almost 39 million inhabitants in 1991, 75.2 percent of the population were black Africans, 13.6 percent were whites, 8.6 percent were known as Coloureds, and 2.6 percent were Asians. The blacks belong to nine ethnic groups: Zulu, Xhosa, Tswana, Venda, Sotho, Ndebele, Tsonga, Swazi, and Pedi. The Zulu are the largest of these groups, making up about 20 percent of the total population. Whites are descended for the most part from British, Dutch, German, and French Huguenot (Protestant) settlers. The people of Dutch ancestry, who often have German and French heritage as well, are known as Afrikaners or Boers and form about 60 percent of the white population. The Coloured population, which lives chiefly in the Cape provinces, is of mixed racial origin, mainly black and Afrikaner. The Asians are mainly of Indian ancestry and are most numerous in the province of KwaZulu/Natal. A small number of people of Malay origin are also included in the Asian population. They reside mostly in the Cape provinces.

From 1948 until the early 1990s the government of South Africa practiced a policy of strict racial segregation known as apartheid. This policy was designed to guarantee political and social domination by the country's white minority over the nonwhite population. Since the first white settlement was founded in South Africa in 1652, racial segregation was part of the country's social and economic pattern. The causes for this segregation were varied, including the ideas about race and culture that Europeans brought with them. In the 20th century, racial segregation became an explicitly formulated program in South Africa. The Native Lands Act of 1913, which demarcated rural areas for European and non-European residence and ownership, was one of the first steps taken to establish racial segregation. This act and subsequent legislation in 1936 restricted blacks—who at that time, as now, made up 75 percent of the population—to ownership of only 13 percent of the land. By 1960 the extremely limited political rights that nonwhites had before 1948 were eliminated. Beginning in the 1970s the government established ten black homelands, which were to be the primary residence of black ethnic groups; four of these homelands were declared independent, although virtually no country other than South Africa recognized them. During the late 1980s and early 1990s the government was forced to dismantle the legal basis of apartheid, but inequality remained a fact of life in South Africa.
Political Divisions

Until 1994 South Africa was divided into four provinces (Cape Province, Natal, Orange Free State, and Transvaal) and ten black homelands. Under the country's interim constitution, which took effect at the time of the country's first multiracial elections in April 1994, South Africa is divided into nine provinces. These provinces are: Pretoria Witwatersrand Vereeniging (PWV), capital Johannesburg; Northern Transvaal, capital Pietersburg; Eastern Transvaal, capital Nelspruit; North West, capital Mmabatho; Orange Free State, capital Bloemfontein; KwaZulu/Natal; Eastern Cape, capital King Williams Town; Northern Cape, capital Kimberley; and Western Cape, capital Cape Town. Some of the provincial capitals are under debate and may change. The black homelands, including those that were declared independent—Transkei, Bophuthatswana, Venda, and Ciskei—were dissolved and reincorporated into South Africa when the interim constitution took effect.
Principal Cities
The largest cities in South Africa, with their populations (1985 census), include Johannesburg (greater city, 1,609,408), the metropolis of the gold fields; Cape Town (1,911,521), the legislative capital; Durban (982,075), an important seaport; Pretoria (822,925); the administrative capital; Port Elizabeth (651,993), industrial city and major port; Bloemfontein (232,984), a trading center for cattle and sheep; Germiston (city proper, 116,718), site of the largest gold refinery in the world; and Springs (68,235), a manufacturing center. About 60 percent of the population of South Africa is classified as urban. More than 25 percent of the total population lives within the Pretoria Witwatersrand Vereeniging (PWV) metropolitan area, which is within a 70-km (43-mi) radius of Johannesburg. The three metropolitan areas of PWV, Cape Town, and Durban account for 38 percent of the country's urban population.

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Språk
Language
The official languages of South Africa are Afrikaans and English. The former, a variant of the Dutch language, is the first language of almost all Afrikaners and many Coloured people. English is used as the primary language by many whites and also is spoken by some Asians and blacks. Most blacks, however, primarily use a Bantu language such as Xhosa, Sesotho, or Zulu. In addition to English, many Asians also speak a language of India.
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Religion
Religion
About four-fifths of the people of South Africa are Christians, mainly Protestant. Most Afrikaners belong to the Dutch Reformed church, and most South African whites who speak English as their first language belong to the Anglican, Congregational, Methodist, or Roman Catholic churches. Blacks also are members of these denominations; in addition, many of them adhere to so-called independent churches, which combine elements of Christianity and traditional African religions. Many blacks also follow traditional beliefs. Most of the people of Asian extraction are Hindus or Muslims. South Africa also has a Jewish community of some 120,000 people.
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Utbildning

Education
The legacy of apartheid in South Africa manifests itself most clearly in education. Although government spending on black education has increased significantly since the mid-1980s, expenditures for white pupils are still about four times higher than those for black pupils. The teacher to student ratio for blacks is 1 to 60 in urban areas and 1 to 90 in rural areas. By comparison, the teacher to student ratio for whites averages 1 to 30 or even lower. As a result of these conditions, only 41 percent of all black students passed the secondary school final qualification exam (a requirement for university entrance) in 1991. The same year, 96 percent of all white students, 95 percent of all Indians, and 83 percent of all Coloureds passed the exam. Also, the black literacy rate is less than 50 percent, while the white literacy rate is 100 percent. Each year in the late 1980s South Africa's primary and secondary schools enrolled about 5,037,300 blacks, 1,032,100 whites, 847,900 Coloureds, and 246,700 Asians. Special schools enrolled some 14,100 whites, 5100 blacks, 6400 Coloureds, and 5800 Asians.

Students enrolled in universities and in teacher-training and technical schools included about 254,100 whites, 120,000 blacks, 35,000 Coloureds, and 29,200 Asians. Institutions attended mainly by whites are the University of Cape Town (1829); the University of Natal (1910), in Durban and Pietermaritzburg; the University of the Orange Free State (1855), in Bloemfontein; the University of Pretoria (1908); Rhodes University (1904), in Grahamstown; the University of Stellenbosch (1918); and the University of the Witwatersrand (1922), in Johannesburg. Blacks attend the University of Fort Hare (1916), in Alice; the University of the North (1959), near Pietersburg; the University of Zululand (1960), near Empangeni; the Medical University of Southern Africa (1976), at Medunsa; the University of Transkei (1977), at Umtata; and the University of Bophuthatswana (1979), at Mafikeng. The University of the Western Cape (1960), in Bellville, is attended mostly by Coloureds. Asians are served by the University of Durban-Westville (1961). As apartheid is being dismantled, an increasing number of nonwhite students have begun to attend educational institutions that once were attended exclusively by whites, particularly in the major metropolitan areas. Most of the blacks that attend these schools are relatively wealthy.

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Sociala förhållanden

Way of Life
The apartheid system left a profound imprint on South African society. Whites enjoy a standard of living and a way of life comparable to those in the most developed countries in the world. However, this is not the case for nonwhites, specifically blacks. Although blacks make up 75 percent of South Africa's population, they earn only 28 percent of the country's total income. By contrast, whites, who make up only 13 percent of the population, earn 61 percent of the income. The income figures for Asians and Coloureds are 4 and 7 percent respectively, which corresponds more closely with their proportions of the total population. The income gap between blacks and whites, one of the widest in the world, is reflected in many other ways. The average household income of a white family is 12 times that of a black family. More than half of all blacks live below the poverty line, and black unemployment hovers around 45 percent. One-fourth of all blacks live in shacks or have no housing, and 40 percent do not have access to clean water. Only one-third of black homes have electricity. Life expectancy is 73 years for whites and 57 years for blacks. Infant mortality is 13 per 1000 live births for whites, compared to 57 per 1000 for blacks. In rural areas the gap in living standards is even larger. White farmers own more than 87 percent of the land and produce more than 90 percent of South Africa's agricultural output.

Due to the legacy of residential segregation laws, whites generally live in the center of major urban areas, relatively close to the central business district, while blacks live in outlying townships. As a result, most blacks who work in city centers face a long commute from home to work. The average commute is 37 km (23 mi), and a two- to four-hour commute is not uncommon. Commuting is also generally more expensive and dangerous for blacks than whites. Safety standards are inadequate on public transportation used by blacks, and assaults occur with greater frequency than on transportation used by whites.

Since 1975 the number of wealthy blacks in South Africa has increased, and this group enjoys a lifestyle similar to that of wealthy whites. However, during this same period the incomes for the poorest 40 percent of all blacks also decreased significantly, reflecting an increasing income gap within the black population.
Social Problems
Violence is the most serious social problem in South Africa, and most of it can be traced to the legacy of apartheid. Political violence, or what is often called "black on black violence," has been directly linked to the apartheid government that was in power until April 1994. The findings of the independent Goldstone Commission in early 1994 confirmed that forces within the government, the so-called "third force," had played a major role in encouraging and directing the violence in order to halt South Africa's move to democracy. These activities included support to the Inkatha Freedom party of Zulu Chief Mangosuthu Gatsha Buthelezi. Other violence has its roots in the sweeping inequalities in South African society. The enormous housing shortage for blacks also creates the conditions for violence; in black urban areas it is not uncommon for as many as 17 blacks to be living in three or four rooms. Women—especially black women—are disproportionately the victims of such violence. An estimated 60 percent of all South African women are beaten by their husbands. Black youth also tend to suffer disproportionately from South Africa's social situation, which in turn aggravates the problem of violence. These problems tend to be even worse in rural areas.

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Näringsliv
Economy

Until World War I (1914-1918) the South African economy was based principally on mining (especially of diamonds and gold) and agriculture. Since then, however, and particularly since World War II ended in 1945, manufacturing has developed rapidly, and now is a leading sector of the country's economy. The estimated national budget for the early 1990s included revenue of about $20.2 billion and expenditure of about $25.6 billion.
Currency and Banking

The rand, divided into 100 cents, is the basic unit of currency of South Africa (3.31 rand equal U.S.$1; 1994). The South African Reserve Bank (1920) is the sole bank of issue. In addition, the country has numerous commercial, savings, and investment banks. The Johannesburg Stock Exchange is an important institution.
Labor

Major labor organizations in South Africa include the Congress of South African Trade Unions; the National Council of Trade Unions, the South African Confederation of Labour, and the Federation of South African Trade Unions. In the late 1970s, blacks were given more opportunities to form unions, and some white unions accepted nonwhites as members. Many blacks work on a temporary basis in the factories and mines; some of these workers come from nearby countries. Unemployment among blacks was about 45 percent in the early 1990s.
Jordbruk
Agriculture
Limited rainfall and infertile soil restrict the areas in South Africa suitable for crop raising. As a result, about 85 percent of the farmland is devoted to raising livestock, particularly sheep, goats, cattle, hogs, and poultry. Nonetheless, the country produces almost all the crops needed for food. Whites generally operate large, modern farms, whereas most nonwhites have small farms and use traditional, often only marginally productive methods. South Africa's estimated annual agricultural output in the early 1990s included sugarcane, 18.7 million metric tons; maize, 9.4 million; wheat, 1.8 million; grapes, 1.4 million; potatoes, 1.3 million; citrus fruit, 650,000; sorghum, 400,000; and apples, 450,000. Livestock included an estimated 29.8 million sheep, 11.8 million cattle, 5.8 million goats, 1.5 million pigs, and 37 million chickens.
Jordbruk Skogsbruk Fiske Mineral Energi Industri Utrikeshandel
Skogsbruk

Forestry and Fishing
Timber production in South Africa comes largely from stands of pine, eucalyptus, and wattle planted under the forestation program of the government. Bark from the wattle tree, used in tanning, is an important export. The annual timber harvest in the late 1980s was 27 million cu m (953 million cu ft).

Coastal fishing, for both domestic and foreign markets, is an important industry. Much of the catch is processed into fish meal. In the early 1990s the annual fish catch was about 536,400 metric tons. Among the fish caught were hake, anchovy, pilchard, herring, and mackerel.

Jordbruk Skogsbruk Fiske Mineral Energi Industri Utrikeshandel
Fiske
Trotts att landet har ett av världens rikaste fiskevatten är fiskenäringen föga utvecklad; från mitten av 1980-taltet har ca 500 000 ton fångats per år. Ca 90% av fångsten tas i de närringsrika vattnen kring Kapstaden och längst atlantkusten, där sardin, sill, kummel och sjötunga har störst kommersiella värde. De utnytjas för inhemsk konsumtion, i form av fiskmjöl eller som matfisk. Här fiskas också hummer, varav ca 75% går på export.
Jordbruk Skogsbruk Fiske Mineral Energi Industri Utrikeshandel
Mineral
Mining
The mining industry has been a leading segment of the South African economy since the late 19th century, when large-scale gold and diamond production began. In the early 1990s leading products of South Africa's mines included gold, coal, platinum, iron ore, diamonds, chromium, manganese, vanadium, vermiculite, antimony, limestone, asbestos, fluorspar, uranium, copper, lead, and zinc. The country has no known major deposits of petroleum, but large amounts of oil and gas are produced synthetically from coal.
Jordbruk Skogsbruk Fiske Mineral Energi Industri Utrikeshandel
Energi
Energy
Almost all of South Africa's electricity is produced in thermal facilities, most of which burn coal. In the late 1980s the country had an installed electricity-generating capacity of about 25.47 million kilowatts, and annual production was approximately 152 billion kilowatt-hours.
Jordbruk Skogsbruk Fiske Mineral Energi Industri Utrikeshandel
Industri
Manufacturing
Prior to World War II manufacturing was of less importance than mining or agriculture. During and after World War II a substantial expansion of manufacturing took place, and in the early 1990s this sector of the economy contributed an estimated 25 percent of the gross domestic product. Most of the capital for this expansion was from private sources, both domestic and foreign, but the government also played a key role. Leading manufactures of South Africa include chemical products, petroleum and coal products, tobacco products, processed food and beverages, transportation equipment, iron and steel, metal products, machinery, paper, and textiles. Cape Town, Johannesburg, Durban, and Port Elizabeth are leading manufacturing centers.
Jordbruk Skogsbruk Fiske Mineral Energi Industri Utrikeshandel
Utrikeshandel
Foreign Trade
In the early 1990s South Africa's yearly exports earned more than its imports cost, largely because of the great revenue from foreign sales of gold. Annual exports were valued at $23.1 billion and imports at $16.9 billion. Gold accounts for about 30 percent of the annual value of exports, which also include metals and metal products, foodstuffs, diamonds and other precious stones, iron and steel, and chemicals. Major imports are machinery and electrical equipment, transportation equipment, chemicals, and foodstuffs. South Africa's main trading partners include Japan, Great Britain, the United States, Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Canada, and the Netherlands.
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Kommunikationer

Transportation
The railroad system, which links all main centers, is almost entirely owned by the state and is controlled by a government agency, the South African Transport Services Board. In the early 1990s this agency operated about 24,000 km (about 14,900 mi) of railroad track. The country also was served by some 185,000 km (some 115,000 mi) of roads, about 30 percent of which were paved. About 3.4 million passenger cars were in use. The major airline is South African Airways, and the country also is served by several smaller carriers as well as foreign airlines. The busiest airport is at Johannesburg. The country's main seaports are Cape Town, Mossel Bay, Port Elizabeth, East London, Durban, Saldanha, and Richards Bay. Inland waterways are not commercially important.

 

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Massmedier
Communications
Postal, telegraph, and telephone services are operated by the government. Radio broadcasting is provided by the state-controlled South African Broadcasting Corporation, which produces many local programs in black African languages. Television broadcasting began in 1976. The country has more than 20 daily newspapers (most published in English); these include Die Burger (Afrikaans), of Cape Town; The Star (English), of Johannesburg; and The Sowetan (English) in the black townships.
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Statsskick och politik
Government
In February 1990 South Africa's white minority government lifted the ban on anti-apartheid political organizations and freed African National Congress (ANC) leader Nelson Mandela and other political prisoners. The government and the liberation movement, led by the ANC, then entered into negotiations to dismantle apartheid and open the road to political democracy in South Africa. In 1993 the two sides agreed to hold the first multiracial elections in South Africa's history in April 1994. A Transitional Executive Council was formed to supervise the elections, which would put in place new national and provincial governments. After difficult negotiations, an interim constitution was approved to serve as the country's law until a permanent one could be written and adopted by the new parliament. The negotiators agreed that the new government would be one of “national unity,” in which minority parties would be represented. However, the minority parties would not be able to exercise veto power over the decisions of the majority governing party.
Legislature

South Africa's new parliament is composed of two chambers—a 400-member National Assembly and a 90-member Senate. Seats in the National Assembly were awarded on the basis of the percentage of the vote received by political parties in the April 1994 elections. Each party gained four seats for each percentage of the vote it won. Members of the Senate were elected by the provincial assemblies. Each of the nine assemblies chose ten senators. The key task of the new parliament is to write and adopt a new constitution, which must win the support of at least 67 percent of the parliamentarians to take effect. Parliament members will hold office until 1999, when new elections will take place under the new constitution.
Executive
Nelson Mandela was elected president of South Africa at the first session of the new parliament. Any party that won 80 or more seats in the elections earned the right to appoint a deputy president. Thabo Mbeki of the ANC was selected first deputy president, and former president F. W. de Klerk of the National party was named second deputy president. Under the terms of the interim constitution, the president has ultimate authority in governing the country, but he must consult the deputy presidents before making decisions. Cabinet posts were allocated on the basis of the number of seats political parties hold in the parliament. The ANC was given 18 posts; the National party, 6; and the Inkatha Freedom party, 3.
Provincial and Local Government

Representation in the nine provincial assemblies is also based on the percentage of the vote won by political parties in the elections. The number of votes cast in each province determined the number of seats in each assembly. Thus, more densely populated provinces have larger assemblies than do those with fewer residents. Each province is headed by a premier, who is elected by the assembly. The premier presides over an executive council of ten members. The provincial legislatures have significant powers and responsibilities, including the writing of provincial constitutions. However, they are ultimately under the authority of the parliament and the national constitution. Elections at the end of 1994 will decide the composition of city and town councils.

Political Parties
The major political parties of South Africa are the ANC, founded in 1912; the National party, founded in 1914; the Inkatha Freedom party, founded in 1975; the Pan Africanist Congress, founded in 1959; the South African Communist party, founded in 1921; the Conservative party, founded in 1982; and the Democratic party, founded in 1989. The ANC, the oldest liberation movement in Africa, won a clear majority in South Africa's first free and democratic elections in April 1994. After the ban upon it was lifted in February 1990 it grew rapidly and made major gains in attracting nonblacks to its membership. It counted on the support of the South African Communist party in the 1994 elections. The National party was the second place winner in the elections. It was the ruling party from 1948 to 1994 and was responsible for instituting the apartheid system. During the 1994 elections the National party sought to portray itself as a party of reform and a friend of non-European voters. The Inkatha Freedom party of Chief Mangosuthu Gatsha Buthelezi, which threatened to boycott the elections until a week before they were held, is the major opponent of the ANC in KwaZulu/Natal Province.

 
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Rättsväsen
Judiciary
A new supreme court, the Constitutional Court, was created under the interim constitution. The Constitutional Court consists of a president and ten judges, all of whom were selected by the Cabinet from a list compiled by an independent nominating commission. The Constitutional Court determines the constitutionality of all laws.
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Försvar

Defense and Police
South Africa's military and police institutions have undergone major restructuring with the dismantling of apartheid. The new National Defense Force consists of the former South African Defense Force (SADF) and the defense forces of the former Transkei, Bophuthatswana, Venda, and Ciskei (TBVC) homelands. It also includes members of former military formations, such as Umkhonto we Sizwe (“Spear of the Nation”), the armed wing of the ANC. As of 1994 the SADF comprised 95,000 full-time personnel, a 120,000-member Citizen Force, and 130,000 largely rural commandos. The police forces are now organized under the South African Police Service, which includes the former South African Police (SAP) and other police forces, such as those of the TBVC homelands. There were 115,000 serving officers in the SAP in 1994. While there are regional police commissioners, the South African Police Service is subject to the control and direction of the national government.
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Kultur
Culture
The historical segregation of racial and ethnic groups in South Africa has resulted in distinct cultural developments. Within the white population English culture has reemerged as the dominant influence, especially with the erosion of the Afrikaner-created apartheid system and the end of the international isolation it caused. The historical distinction between the more religioius and nationalistic Afrikaners and the more cosmopolitan English speakers is diminishing, especially among young people. Among blacks urban and rural cultures continue to differ. Urban black culture is multiethnic and increasingly draws on international influences, such as those of African-Americans. These influences have increased since the end of international sanctions against South Africa, which restricted artists from other countries from performing in South Africa. In the major urban areas the end of apartheid has brought about more interracial cultural activities. In rural areas black cultural activities tend to emphasize the traditions of particular ethnic groups. Traditional Afrikaner culture is also strongest in rural areas. In recent years a new sense of self-pride has developed in the Coloured community and has found expression in writing, theater, and music. Generational differences within both the white and black populations also play a role in cultural expressions.


Libraries and Museums
Nearly all the cities of South Africa have public libraries, the largest of which is the Johannesburg Public Library, with more than 1.5 million volumes. Other important libraries include the South African Library, in Cape Town; the State Library, in Pretoria; and libraries attached to institutions of higher education.

Notable museums include the National Museum, in Bloemfontein, which contains archaeological, paleontological, and anthropological collections; the Africana Museum, in Johannesburg, which has historical and ethnological collections pertaining to South Africa; and, in Cape Town, the Michaelis Collection, the South African National Gallery, and the South African Cultural History Museum.
Literature

South Africa has three main literary traditions in the English, Afrikaans, and Bantu languages. A specifically South African literature in English had its beginning with the publication in 1883 of The Story of an African Farm by Olive Schreiner. Later writers in English who dealt with the South African land and peoples, and in particular with the country's political problems, include the novelists Laurens van der Post and Alan Paton; the short story writer and novelist Nadine Gordimer, winner of the 1991 Nobel Prize in literature; and the playwright Athol Fugard. Poetry is represented by such names as Roy Campbell, F. T. Prince, and Roy McNab.

Afrikaans has proved particularly fruitful as a medium of poetry. It reached its mature expression in the 1930s with such poets as N. P. van Wyk Louw, Uys Krige, and Elisabeth Eybers. Also of note are the poet, dramatist, and critic D. J. Opperman and the poet Breyten Breytenbach, an outspoken foe of the oppressive policies of the former white minority government. Among Afrikaaner novelists are Étienne Leroux, André Philippe Brink, and J. M. Coetzee, another opponent of the former system of apartheid.

Black South Africans have a long and rich oral tradition. With the coming of white settlers traditional themes were given written expression, and in recent years a number of black writers have made significant contributions to South African literature in the major languages of Sesotho, Xhosa, and Zulu as well as in Afrikaans and English. Among the leading 20th-century nonwhite writers are Thomas Mofolo, B. W. Vilakazi, J. R. Jolobe, Bloke Modisane, Alex La Guma, and Ezekiel Mphahlele.

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Litteratur, engelsksspråkig

 

Litteratur, engelsksspråkig Litteratur arikaansspråkig Drama och teater på engelska Drama och teater på afirkaans Film Konst Musik
Litteratur, afrikaansspårkig
 
Litteratur, engelsksspråkig Litteratur arikaansspråkig Drama och teater på engelska Drama och teater på afirkaans Film Konst Musik
Drama och teater på engelska
 
Litteratur, engelsksspråkig Litteratur arikaansspråkig Drama och teater på engelska Drama och teater på afirkaans Film Konst Musik
Drama och teater på afrikaans
 
Litteratur, engelsksspråkig Litteratur arikaansspråkig Drama och teater på engelska Drama och teater på afirkaans Film Konst Musik
Film
 
Litteratur, engelsksspråkig Litteratur arikaansspråkig Drama och teater på engelska Drama och teater på afirkaans Film Konst Musik
Konst
 
Litteratur, engelsksspråkig Litteratur arikaansspråkig Drama och teater på engelska Drama och teater på afirkaans Film Konst Musik
Musik
 
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Förhistoria
 
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Historia
History

1652 kom de första Holländarna till an area adjacent to the Cape of Good Hope occupied by Khoikhoi (Hottentot) clans. Pressure on these cattle-herding people increased as more Dutch and French Huguenots arrived, and by the 18th century most Khoikhoi had lost their lands to these European settlers. Cape Town became a major port as a way station for East Indies trade. The colonists, mostly farmers and cattle herders, became known as Boers, and soon developed their own distinctive culture and language (Afrikaans). In the 1770s they encountered the advance element of the Bantu, who were ending 2000 years of migration. Nguni Bantu clans settled in the area between the Drakensberg Mountains and the sea, while Sotho clans occupied the interior north of Cape Colony. In the early 19th century competition for land led to a murderous conflict between the Bantu clans, known as the mfecane. Hundreds of thousands died during the wars, entire clans disappeared, and centralization resulted in the creation of many Bantu nations (including Swazi, Zulu, Xhosa, and Sotho).
Invandrigar och erövringar (fram till 1800)
 
Invandring och erövringar Den stora expansionen Apartheidpolitikens framväxt och fall
Den stora expansionen (1800-1900)

Early British Settlement
British forces twice occupied the Cape region, in 1795 and 1806; in 1814, toward the end of the Napoleonic Wars, Great Britain purchased the Cape Colony from the Dutch for £6 million. After 1820 thousands of British colonists arrived in South Africa, and they demanded that English law be imposed. English became the official language in 1822, the Khoikhoi were given protection, and slavery was abolished in 1833. These measures were bitterly resented by the Boers, and resulted in the Great Trek, in which thousands of Boers moved northward, settling across the Orange River, the Vaal River, and in Natal. They drove the Ndebele tribe across the Limpopo River and defeated the Zulu before establishing a series of settlements in the area. The British soon occupied the coastal region of Natal and established a crown colony there in 1843. Most Afrikaners then left Natal and headed west and north, where they established the Orange Free State and the Transvaal republics. The British along the eastern Cape frontier encroached on Xhosa lands, causing several bloody wars. The governor of the Cape Colony, Sir Harry Smith, gained control over the Orange River territory in 1848. His policy of expansion was repudiated by the British government, however, which recognized by conventions with the Boers the independence of the Transvaal territories in 1852 and the Orange Free State in 1854. By the late 1850s the territories beyond the Vaal had coalesced into the South African Republic. Although attempts to unite the republic and the Orange Free State were fruitless, the two Boer republics maintained a close relationship in succeeding years.

Representative government was granted to the British colony of Natal in 1856. In 1872 the Cape Colony received responsible self-government, which meant the government was independent except in foreign and economic affairs. After the discovery of diamonds in 1867 in Griqualand West, which was claimed by the South African Republic, Britain renewed its expansionist policy into Boer territory, declaring Basutoland (now Lesotho) a protectorate in 1868 and reimposing British rule over the South African Republic in 1877. Two years later a war ended the Zulu threat in Natal. When Afrikaners successfully took up arms against British occupation in 1881, the South African Republic was allowed semi-independence. In 1883 Boer leader Paul Kruger was elected president of the republic.


The Boer War

Discovery of vast gold deposits in the southern Transvaal in 1886 coincided with German occupation of South-West Africa (now Namibia). The mining industry was financed by the British, and thousands of English miners—called Uitlanders (“foreigners”) by the Boers—entered the Transvaal. Britain thwarted President Kruger's plans to extend his control to Bechuanaland (now Botswana), annexed the region, and effectively blocked the South African Republic from joining with German territory to the west. Kruger refused to grant civil equality to Uitlanders and taxed foreign companies heavily. After compromise discussions failed, British financier Cecil Rhodes, prime minister of the Cape Colony, in 1895 encouraged the Uitlanders to revolt, supported by a small invasion force under the command of Sir Leander Starr Jameson. The raid was a failure, and although Rhodes was absolved of any involvement in it, he was forced to resign as prime minister.

Relations between the Cape Colony and the two Afrikaner republics worsened after British statesman Alfred Milner became Cape governor in 1897. In October 1899 Kruger declared war; the Boer War pitted the might of the British Empire against the Afrikaners who, after some initial success, saw British forces occupy all major urban centers by mid-1900. The Afrikaners, however, continued to wage a costly guerrilla war until May 1902. Under the terms of the Treaty of Vereeniging (May 31, 1902), the Transvaal and the Orange Free State became British crown colonies. In 1906 and 1907 they were given constitutions as self-governing colonies. By the South Africa Act of 1910 the British Parliament established the dominion of the Union of South Africa, with the four colonies as its provinces. The South African party won the first elections, and the former Boer army commander, Louis Botha, became prime minister. In reaction to the policies of the Botha government, especially the appropriation of African land, black African leaders organized in 1912 what eventually became the African National Congress (ANC).

Invandring och erövringar Den stora expansionen Apartheidpolitikens framväxt och fall
Apartheidpolitikens framväxt och fall (1910-94)


The Two World Wars
At the outset of World War I in 1914, Botha pledged Britain full support, and in 1915 he crushed an insurrection by extremist Afrikaner elements. Botha himself led the South African forces that conquered German South-West Africa. (In 1920 this territory became a League of Nations mandate under South African supervision.)

Botha died in 1919; he was succeeded as prime minister by another pro-British military leader, Jan Christiaan Smuts. The Nationalist party had been founded in 1914, by James Barry Hertzog to further the cause of Afrikaner nationalism and white supremacy. Hertzog unseated Smuts in 1924, at a time of rising black militancy. He remained prime minister until 1939. During the economic depression of the 1930s a coalition was formed; Hertzog and Smuts became dual leaders of the United party. Britain's declaration of war against Germany in 1939 split the coalition. Hertzog, who tried to keep South Africa neutral, was replaced as prime minister by Smuts, and the Union declared war on Germany on September 6, 1939. Because of pro-German sentiment among Boers, however, it was not expedient to pass a draft law. All members of the Union's armed forces were volunteers, and their only combat action was in North Africa.

Apartheid Instituted
Discrimination against nonwhites was inherent in South African society from the earliest days. A clause in the Act of Union of 1910 provided that the native policies of the provinces would be retained and could be changed only by a two-thirds majority vote of parliament. In Cape Colony the Coloured and a few black Africans could vote, a right not available in the other three provinces. The Indian leader Mohandas K. Gandhi, in a 21-year period before World War I, led the struggle to assure civil rights for Indian residents. Despite some government concessions, including abolition of the poll tax, the Indian population still had second-class status after the war.

South African blacks had an even lower status in the white-dominated state. Urban blacks lived in segregated areas and could not hold office or vote. They had no viable labor unions, and technical and administrative positions were closed to them. Even so, the National party, which had been formed in 1914, accused Prime Minister Smuts of allowing whites to be swallowed in a black sea. In the 1948 elections the National party, led by Daniel F. Malan, won a narrow victory and began to implement its harsh concept of apartheid, which was designed to separate the races economically, politically, geographically, and socially. Strikes and protests for economic and political rights by non-Europeans in the aftermath of World War II—inspired in part by the anti-colonial movement in Asia and Africa—had emboldened racist forces to take steps to head off any new militancy. The government's position was strengthened when the National party merged with the smaller Afrikaner party in 1954. Malan, with growing support in parliament, introduced several laws designed to relegate all nonwhites to permanent inferior status. A severe anti-Communist law (equating communism with political, economic, or social changes brought about by unconventional means) was passed in 1950, marriage between whites and blacks was made a crime, and education for blacks was defined differently than for whites. Most drastic was the Group Areas Act of 1950 which, augmented by later legislation, provided that specific areas be reserved for each of the four main racial groups, that is, the Europeans (whites), Bantu (blacks), Coloureds (mixed race), and Asians. These laws and the homelands concept, which denied blacks the right to live in cities without special permission, were the foundations of apartheid. All blacks were assigned to specific tribal areas and had to carry passes when they entered restricted (white) areas. The goal was to create so-called homelands for all blacks. In response to these harsh policies, the ANC decided to pursue a more militant stance through mass civil disobedience. Nelson Mandela emerged as a central leader at this time.

In 1951 the Separate Representation of Voters Act was passed by a simple majority. It provided for the removal from the white register of the names of Coloured voters in the Cape of Good Hope Province, reversing a policy that had been in effect since 1852. The bill was declared unconstitutional by the nation's supreme court in March 1952 because it had been passed by less than the two-thirds majority required to amend voting laws. Legislation to give Parliament power to overrule the supreme court was passed in May, but it was also declared unconstitutional.

Malan retired in November 1954 and was succeeded by another National party leader, Johannes G. Strijdom, who soon removed legal obstacles to further implementation of apartheid. To assure support for the program, six more supreme court judges were appointed to hear constitutional questions, a step that received parliamentary approval in May 1955; Nationalist control of the senate was effected by increasing membership from 77 to 89 in the November elections. The Separate Representation of Voters Act was repassed in February 1956 and became law. The Cape Coloured were disfranchised, and the courts' power in constitutional areas was curbed.


Struggle with the UN

The Union of South Africa had rebuffed attempts by the United Nations to assert its authority in South-West Africa after World War II. A special UN commission conducting an inquiry into racial discrimination in South Africa repeatedly requested Premier Malan's permission to transfer its hearings from Geneva to Union territory and was repeatedly ignored. As apartheid took hold in South African society more than 2000 of its citizens from all racial and ethnic backgrounds gathered in 1955 to write the Freedom Charter. This charter, which offered a vision of a nonracial, unified, and democratic South Africa, was adopted by the ANC as its basic statement.

The UN General Assembly adopted a resolution in February 1957 calling for UN trusteeship over South-West Africa. In October it sanctioned the creation of a “good offices” committee to negotiate with the Union on the disposition of South-West Africa. After a visit by UN officials to South-West Africa in May 1962 (the first permitted by South Africa), the investigating commission called for UN action to guarantee the political rights of the territory's residents.

In June 1964 the UN Security Council condemned apartheid and ordered a study to be made of sanctions against South Africa. The UN General Assembly voted in October 1966 to terminate South Africa's mandate over South-West Africa, which was renamed Namibia, and established a council to assume responsibility for the territory. South Africa rejected all UN actions and proceeded to integrate the territory into its own economy. In June 1971 the International Court of Justice ruled that South Africa's presence in Namibia was illegal. The situation became critical when guerrillas from the South-West Africa People's Organization (SWAPO) began crossing the border from Angola to attack targets in Namibia. South Africa responded by building up defenses, attacking Angola, and aiding the rebels who were fighting the Cuban-supported Angolan government. The war continued into the 1980s, when political and economic pressure forced South Africa to take a more conciliatory attitude. U.S.-sponsored peace talks in December 1988 eventually resulted in independence for Namibia.


Strengthening Apartheid
Shortly after the 1958 elections for the House of Assembly, in which the Nationalists increased their seats from 94 to 103, Strijdom died. He was replaced by Hendrik Verwoerd, another uncompromising supporter of apartheid. Black opposition to apartheid, although nonviolent, led to numerous incidents and many deaths, especially at Sharpeville in March 1960. After this, the government declared a state of emergency. Thousands of blacks were arrested, and their political parties—the ANC and the recently organized Pan-Africanist Congress (PAC)—were banned.

On October 5 an all-white referendum in the Union decided that South Africa should become a republic. In general elections held on October 18 Verwoerd's National party retained power. On May 31, 1961, the country officially became the Republic of South Africa. It also withdrew from the Commonwealth of Nations.

In 1962 the government, determined to maintain segregation, passed the so-called sabotage act, which outlawed most forms of political opposition. The ANC and the PAC decided that change through nonviolent methods was no longer possible, and the groups began to organize armed resistance to the regime. In 1964 Mandela was convicted of sabotage and treason and sentenced to life imprisonment. In the March 1966 elections the National party increased its majority, but in September Verwoerd was assassinated. His successor, Balthazar J. Vorster, continued the policy of apartheid.

As part of its strategy to divide the majority population, the government took steps in the 1960s to establish ten “self-governing” Bantustans, or black homelands. One black African group would predominate in each of the homelands, which were Bophuthatswana, Ciskei, Gazankulu, KaNgwane, KwaNdebele, KwaZulu, Lebowa, Qwaqwa, Transkei, and Venda. Although they were called self-governing, the homelands were in fact entirely dependent on the national government. Also, only 13 percent of the land was set aside for the homelands, which was incapable of sustaining 75 percent of the country's population. Thus, most blacks continued to live in “white areas.” The vast majority of those who lived on the homelands commuted to the white areas to work. The homelands policy eventually culminated in the granting of “independence” to Transkei, Bophuthatswana, Ciskei, and Venda between 1976 and 1981. The international community, however, denied recognition to these “independent” homelands. The most populous of the other homelands was KwaZulu; its head, Chief Mangosuthu Gatsha Buthelezi, opted to work within the apartheid structure by presiding over a “self-governing” homeland. Through his Inkatha Freedom party, formed in 1975, he promoted Zulu nationalism.

In 1975 the nearby Portuguese possessions of Angola and Mozambique became independent under revolutionary leaders, and the United States began to put pressure on South Africa to change its policies. Vorster agreed to relax his government's support of the white-minority regime in Rhodesia, but the apartheid policy was not altered. In June 1976 major clashes with the police occurred when some 10,000 schoolchildren at Soweto, near Johannesburg, protested the enforced use of Afrikaans, in addition to English, in their schools. Although the requirement was dropped, the protest had unleashed deeper grievances among the black population, and Soweto experienced rioting, arson, and killings that later spread to other areas and to the Coloured population. Continuing in 1977, the unrest prompted more repressive police measures that culminated in September, when Stephen Biko, founder of the Black Consciousness Movement, died after mistreatment while in police custody.


Reform and Resistance
Prime Minister Vorster resigned in 1978. His successor, Pieter Willem Botha, continued the black homelands policy but moved toward constitutional reforms that strengthened the presidency and, for the first time, allowed Coloureds and Indians to sit in parliament. The new constitution, which took effect in 1984, still denied blacks any part in the political process except through the homelands. This exclusion led to increased opposition, urged on by the ANC in alliance with the United Democratic Front, in the black townships. The government responded by declaring a state of emergency and imposing press controls in July 1985. Battles between blacks and police in the ensuing years resulted in hundreds of deaths. Even more died in warfare between the Inkatha Freedom party, and adherents of the ANC, especially in Natal.

In the mid-1980s the United States and the European Community (now the European Union) imposed sanctions against South Africa. Subsequent diplomatic pressure, in part the result of the international anti-apartheid campaign, forced Botha to begin a slow dismantling of apartheid. Botha also was influenced by increasing opposition from within South Africa and by the defeat of South African troops in Angola in 1988 by Cuban and Angola forces. The decision to bring an end to apartheid caused many whites to defect to more conservative parties. In failing health, Botha resigned in 1989. Frederik W. de Klerk, his successor, continued the policy of eliminating apartheid. Calling for a negotiated settlement of South Africa's racial and political problems, in February 1990 de Klerk ended a 30-year ban on the ANC and released its leader, Nelson Mandela, from prison. The negotiation process proved to be long and difficult. De Klerk's Nationalist party was unwilling at first to completely transfer rule to the country's black majority, and tried vigorously to institute minority veto power over majority decisions. The ANC then staged general strikes and other nonviolent protests to try to force the Nationalists to change their position on this issue. Eventually, as a result of compromises on both sides, an agreement was reached on November 13, 1993. This agreement pledged to institute a nonracial, nonsexist, unified, and democratic South Africa based on the principle of “one person, one vote.” The first free elections in South Africa's history were held from April 26 to 29, 1994. The ANC scored a clear victory, and Mandela was inaugurated as the country's first black president on May 10, 1994. In June South Africa rejoined the Commonwealth of Nations.

Natur Befolkning och etnografi Språk Religion Utbildning Sociala förhållanden Näringsliv Kommunikationer Massmedier Statsskick och politik Rättsväsen Försvar Kultur Förhistoria

South Africa, southernmost country in Africa, South Africa has a diverse and dramatic landscape. Most of the interior is covered by high plateaus, which are separated from the country's long coastline by chains of tall mountains. South Africa is rich in minerals such as gold and diamonds, and its industrial base grew up around the mining industry. Black Africans comprise three quarters of South Africa's population, and whites, Coloureds (people of mixed race), and Asians (mainly Indians) make up the remainder. Among the black population there are numerous ethnic groups and 11 official languages. Until recently, whites dominated the nonwhite majority population under the political system of racial segregation known as apartheid. Apartheid ended in the early 1990s, but South Africa is still recovering from the racial inequalities in political power, opportunity, and lifestyle. The end of apartheid led to the lifting of trade sanctions against South Africa imposed by the international community. It also led to a total reorganization of the government, which since 1994 has been a nonracial democracy based on majority rule. South Africa is divided into nine provinces. These provinces are Gauteng, Northern Province, Mpumalanga, North-West Province, Free State, Eastern Cape, Northern Cape, Western Cape, and KwaZulu-Natal. The country has three capitals: Cape Town is the legislative capital; Pretoria, the executive capital; and Bloemfontein, the judicial capital.

LAND AND RESOURCES
South Africa stretches for some 1,500 km from east to west and 1,000 km from north to south. It has an area of 1,219,090 sq km . A ridge called the Great Escarpment forms a boundary between the interior plateaus and the coastal regions.

Natural Regions The interior plateaus occupy about two-thirds of South Africa, reaching their greatest height in the southeastern Drakensberg Mountains, part of the Great Escarpment. Champagne Castle, a peak of the Drakensberg, is the highest point in the country at 3,375 m . The plateau region consists of three main areas: the High Veld, the Middle Veld, and the Bush Veld. The High Veld, the largest of the three areas, is the southern continuation of the great African plateau that stretches north to the Sahara Desert. In South Africa it ranges in elevation from about 1,200 to 1,800 m and is characterized by level or gently sloping terrain. Land use varies from cattle grazing in the west to mixed farming (both crops and livestock) in the center to growing grain, especially maize (corn), in the east. The northern boundary of the High Veld is marked by the gold-bearing reef of the Witwatersrand, which became the industrial heartland of South Africa in the 20th century. West of the High Veld is the Middle Veld, which lies mainly at an elevation of 600 to 1,200 m . The Middle Veld is part of the larger Kalahari Basin that extends north to Botswana and Namibia and contains the southernmost portion of the Kalahari Desert. Surface water is rare in the Middle Veld because the soils, which consist largely of unconsolidated sand, quickly absorb rainfall. Plant life in this arid place is limited to drought-resistant grasses, bushes, and shrubs. Much of the area is used for sheep grazing. North of the High Veld is the Bush Veld (also called the Transvaal Basin). This region averages less than 1,200 m in elevation. It is broken into basins by rock ridges, and slopes downward from the Transvaal Drakensberg in the east to the Limpopo River in the west. The Bush Veld receives more rain than the High Veld or Middle Veld and includes large areas of intensive cultivation as well as mixed-farming and cattle-grazing districts. Between the edge of the high central plateau region and the eastern and southern coastline the land descends in a series of abrupt steps. In the east an interior belt of hill country gives way to a low-lying plain known as the Eastern Low Veld. In the south two plateaus, the Great, or Central, Karoo and the Little, or Southern, Karoo, are situated above the coastal plain. The plateau of the Great Karoo is separated from the lower Little Karoo by the Swartberg mountain range. A second range, the Langeberg, separates the Little Karoo from the coastal plain. Both the plateaus and the coastal plain are areas of mixed farming. The southwestern edge of the central plateau region is marked by irregular ranges of folded mountains which descend abruptly to a narrow coastal plain, broken by the isolated peak of Table Mountain. The lower parts of this southwestern region are the centers of wine and fruit industries. BRivers and Lakes The chief rivers are the Orange, Vaal, and Limpopo. The Orange is the longest, stretching about 2,100 km . It rises in Lesotho, where it is called the Senqu, and flows northwestward to the Atlantic, forming the boundary with Namibia along the river's westernmost section. The Vaal rises in the northeast, near Swaziland, and flows southwestward to its confluence with the Orange. The Limpopo rises further north, flowing northeastward to the Botswana border and then eastward along the Botswana and Zimbabwe borders until it enters Mozambique, where it empties into the Indian Ocean. Many shorter rivers flow south to the Indian Ocean, including the Sondags, Great Fish, and Kei in the Eastern Cape, and the Tugela in KwaZulu-Natal. Most of South Africa's rivers are irregular in flow and are dry during much of the year. Consequently, they are of little use for navigation or hydroelectric power, but of some use for irrigation and water supply. The Orange River Project, begun in 1962, transfers water from the Orange River to the Great Fish and Sondags river basins. In the late 1970s, water began to be pumped from the Tugela to the Vaal to meet the growing needs of the Witwatersrand industrial region. This is supplemented by the major Lesotho Highlands Water Project, begun in 1986, which diverts water from the Senqu and other rivers. With the exception of Fundudzi Lake, which was formed by a huge landslide in the northeastern Soutpansberg Range, South Africa's only notable lakes are artificial, including those created by the Vaal Dam and Gariep Dam on the Orange River. CCoastline South Africa's 2,800 km of coastline has few bays or coves and only one good natural harbor, at Saldanha Bay in the southwest, which is used mainly for the export of iron ore. Other ports are essentially artificial, including Durban, East London, Port Elizabeth, and Richard's Bay. The most distinctive promontory on the coast is Cape Peninsula in southwestern South Africa, which ends at the Cape of Good Hope. DGeology and Soils Underlying the plateaus is a great complex of crystalline rocks. These rocks were worn down over millions of years to form an almost level surface and are covered in places by thick layers of sandstone and shale. The layers are nearly horizontal except in the southwest, where extensive folding has formed irregular hills and mountains. In the Witwatersrand and the Middle Veld the underlying bedrock is exposed. The major soil zones are conditioned largely by climatic factors. In the semiarid north and west, soils are alkaline and poorly developed. In southern Western Cape Province, rain falls mostly in the winter months, and soils there form slowly and are generally thin and immature. The moderate temperatures and summer rainfall of the High Veld and eastern coastal areas create conditions for more productive organic decomposition, leading to dark, fertile soils, or chernozems, similar to those of the North American prairies. Further north and northeast, where temperatures are high and summer rainfall is relatively heavy, soils are reddish, contain aluminum and iron compounds, and are less fertile. EPlant and Animal Life South Africa has remarkably diverse plant life for a country of its size, comprising about 22,000 different species, many of them native. Grasslands cover most of the plateau areas, resembling a prairie on the nearly treeless High Veld. The Bush Veld is characterized by savanna vegetation, consisting of mixed grassland with trees and bushes such as the baobab tree in Northern Province and the mopani tree in the central Bush Veld. On the Great Karoo and Little Karoo, the grasslands are sparse. Vegetation consists of coarse desert grasses that grow in tufts and become green only after rain. The semidesert Northern Cape is transformed after spring rains with blooming wildflowers in the Namaqualand region. Areas on the Cape Peninsula, and about 70,000 sq km of southern Western Cape Province, contain the distinctive Fynbos biome, an ecological community. Although relatively small in area, this region constitutes one of the six recognized floral kingdoms of the world. It includes 8,500 plant species, of which more than 6,000 are indigenous. This biome is home to the protea, an evergreen shrub for which South Africa is renowned. The only significant forests in South Africa lie along the coasts of Western Cape and Eastern Cape provinces, although there are patches of protected rain forest in the Eastern Low Veld. Hardwood species such as yellowwood, ironwood, and lemonwood trees are found in these areas, but softwoods are scarce; coniferous pines from Europe and North America have been planted to provide timber and wood pulp. Numerous large mammals, including lions, elephants, zebras, leopards, monkeys, baboons, hippopotamuses, rhinoceroses, and antelope, are indigenous to South Africa. For the most part such animals are found only on game reserves. Much of Kruger National Park, the oldest game reserve, was a protected area as early as 1898. It covers an area of 19,485 sq km along the Mozambique border. Kruger National Park includes nearly every species of indigenous wildlife and is particularly noted for the small black rhino population built up by the National Parks Board. Other notable reserves include Kalahari Gemsbok National Park in the northwest; Addo Elephant National Park, near Port Elizabeth; and Mountain Zebra National Park, near Cradock. Bird life is abundant and includes the larger birds: ostrich, francolin (a type of partridge), quail, guinea fowl, and grouse. Snakes are common in most of the country. FNatural Resources Only 12 percent of South Africa's land area is cultivated and only 7 percent is forested, but the country is rich in mineral resources. South Africa is the world's largest producer of gold, with almost all of it coming from the Witwatersrand. Gold is mined to depths below 3,000 m , making production expensive. Uranium is also extracted commercially in the Witwatersrand. Vast, easily worked coal seams occur between Lesotho and Swaziland, and South Africa has become a leading coal exporter. The Bush Veld Igneous Complex, a highly mineralized area of 50,000 sq km located mainly in Northern Province and Mpumalanga, contains a high proportion of the world reserves of several important minerals. It contains 69 percent of world reserves of chrome ore, 45 percent of vanadium, and about 90 percent of andalusite, as well as platinum, nickel, and fluorspar. Diamonds are another important source of South Africa's mineral wealth. Most of South Africa's diamond fields are located in the Kimberley area of Northern Cape; this province also has the largest known manganese deposits in the world. GClimate South Africa enjoys a generally warm, temperate climate. Most of the country experiences light rainfall and long hours of sunshine. Rainfall is typically unpredictable. Prolonged droughts often end with severe floods. Only 31 percent of the country, including the Eastern Low Veld and the Drakensberg, has an annual rainfall of more than 600 mm ; 48 percent receives from 200 mm to 600 mm , including much of the High Veld, where rainfall diminishes rapidly from east to west; 21 percent, in the west, is arid, with less than 200 mm . Rain falls primarily in summer between October and April. In the drier regions of the plateaus the amount of rainfall and the beginning of the rainy season vary greatly from year to year. The extreme southwest has a Mediterranean climate with westerly winds from the Atlantic bringing winter rainfall mostly between June and September. Since most of South Africa is at a high elevation, temperatures tend to be lower than those of other regions at similar latitudes. There is a striking difference between temperatures on the east and west coasts. The east coast is influenced by the warm Agulhas Current and the west coast by the cold Benguela Current. This results in a temperature difference of 6 Celsius degrees in the mean annual temperatures of Durban on the east coast and Port Nolloth on the west coast, which are at similar latitudes. Average temperature ranges in January are 21° to 27° C in Durban, 14° to 26° C in Johannesburg, and 16° to 26° C in Cape Town. In July the temperature ranges are 11° to 22° C in Durban, 4° to 17° C in Johannesburg, and 7° to 17° C in Cape Town. Snow is rare except in the higher parts of the Drakensberg, but winter frosts occur on the higher parts of the plateau. HEnvironmental Issues South Africa has a mixed environmental heritage. Its national parks, reserves, and botanical gardens are among the best managed conservation areas in the world, but there are serious environmental problems too. Many problems originated from political and socioeconomic policies associated with the apartheid period that ended in 1994. Overpopulation in the former bantustans, or black homelands, led to intensive settlement, livestock grazing, and fuelwood cutting on limited areas of land, which in turn led to soil erosion, land degradation, deforestation, and bush encroachment (proliferation of bush vegetation of little value for grazing). These problems are prevalent in the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal. Half of South Africa's population does not have access to clean water and many urban residents do not have access to adequate sewage disposal and waste removal. Such problems are particularly acute on the fringes of cities in informal settlements, or shantytowns, where water courses are often used as dumping grounds. Air pollution is significant, due to the use of open fires for cooking and heating. Carbon dioxide emissions are another major cause of air pollution; most of it is produced by the energy industry, especially coal-fired power stations, which provide most of South Africa's electricity. Pollution is severe in Mpumalanga Province, where the stable character of the atmosphere prevents pollution from dispersing.

PEOPLE The land now known as South Africa was originally populated by San hunter-gatherers. About 2000 years ago people in some of these communities, the Khoikhoi, began raising livestock when they acquired animals from Bantu-speaking peoples moving southward across the Limpopo. These Bantu peoples today account for three quarters of the total population. White settlement began in 1652 with the arrival of the Dutch, who gradually spread into the interior as farmers. They lived isolated lives, developed their own language, called Afrikaans, and increasingly segregated themselves from indigenous Bantu peoples, whom they encountered in the interior. French Huguenot and German settlers were later absorbed into this group, known as Afrikaners. British settlers arrived beginning in the early 1800s, and Indians came in the late 19th and early 20th century. The majority of Indians were brought as indentured laborers to work on the sugar plantations of Natal. A substantial Portuguese minority developed in the late 20th century. The offspring of whites and slaves imported by the Dutch from Southeast Asia and other parts of Africa, and later the offspring of whites and Bantu peoples, created a sizable Coloured, or mixed-race, population. According to the 1991 census, the population of South Africa was 30,986,918, an increase of 11 percent over the 1985 figure. These figures exclude the four nominally independent bantustans of Transkei, Venda, Bophuthatswana, and Ciskei, which would together add about 7.5 million to the population figure. The four bantustans were reincorporated into South Africa in 1994 along with the six other bantustans. The estimated total population of South Africa in 1998 was 42,834,520. Rates of population growth slowed in the 1980s and 1990s; in 1998 it was 1.4 percent a year.. The overall population density (1998 estimate) is 35 persons per sq km (91 per sq mi), but this varies widely across the country. Rural population densities are highest in the former bantustans and much lower in historically white-populated areas of commercial farming, especially in semiarid western areas. Some 50 percent of the population is urban, including most of the whites, Asians, and Coloured people. The largest cities in South Africa (1991) include Cape Town (854,616), the legislative capital; Durban (715,669), the country's leading port; Johannesburg (712,507 ), the commercial capital and metropolis of the goldfields; Pretoria (525,583), the administrative capital; and Port Elizabeth (303,353), an industrial city and major port. Although it is not a city, Soweto, a township outside Johannesburg, is one of the largest communities in South Africa. The 1991 census counted 596,632 residents in Soweto, but estimates have placed the population at as many as 2 million. AEthnic Groups South Africa has a multiracial and multiethnic population. Blacks constitute 76 percent of the population. The main black ethnic groups, with their percentages of the total population, are Zulu (22.4), Xhosa (17.5), North Sotho (9.8), Tswana (7.2), South Sotho (6.9), Tsonga (4.2), Venda (1.7), and Ndebele (1.5). Whites account for 13 percent of the population; more than half are Afrikaners, nearly two-fifths English-speakers (mostly of British descent), and nearly 10 percent Portuguese. Coloured people account for 9 percent of the population, and Asians (mainly Indians) 2 percent. The white, Asian, and Coloured populations are highly urbanized. The largest concentrations of Asians and Coloured people are found in KwaZulu-Natal and the three Cape provinces, but lesser numbers of both groups live in Gauteng. English-speaking whites and Afrikaners live in all cities, but Johannesburg, Durban, Cape Town, and Pietermaritzburg have more English-speakers whereas Afrikaners are predominant in Pretoria, Bloemfontein, and many of the industrial and mining towns on the Witwatersrand. More than half of the blacks are urbanized, mostly living in formal, low-income townships or informal, rapidly growing settlements. Some 18 million blacks live in rural communities in the ten former bantustans. Substantial numbers of that population, however, who migrated to the borders of former bantustans to find work in white urban centers, now form part of the functional urban areas of cities like Pretoria, Durban, and East London. The black population of Johannesburg and the of rest of Gauteng Province is ethnically mixed, but in other cities one group tends to be dominant: Zulu in Durban and Pietermaritzburg, Sotho in Bloemfontein, and Xhosa in Port Elizabeth, East London, and Cape Town. The liberation struggle during the years of white minority rule cemented blacks, Asians, and Coloured people together. With the end of apartheid, however, most Asians and Coloured people, conscious of their minority position, turned to vote for the ruling National Party along with most whites. Africans gave overwhelming support to the African National Congress (ANC) except in KwaZulu-Natal, where the ethnically based Inkatha Freedom Party won more than half the Zulu votes. Given past oppression, the relative harmony of post-apartheid society is generally hailed as remarkable. The violent incidents immediately following 1994 were not between blacks and whites but between the Zulu who supported the ANC and those who supported Inkatha. During 1996 the situation in KwaZulu-Natal became more peaceful. BLanguage Until apartheid ended in 1994 only Afrikaans and English were official languages, although they represent the home languages of only 15 percent and 9 percent of the total population, respectively. Afrikaans is spoken not only by Afrikaners but also by 83 percent of Coloured people. English is the primary language of many whites, but also is spoken by 95 percent of Asians. The 1994 constitution added nine African languages to the list of recognized, official languages: Zulu, Xhosa, Sesotho sa Leboa (Northern Sotho or Pedi), Tswana, Sesotho (Southern Sotho), Tsonga, Venda, Ndebele, and siSwati. Some of these African languages are mutually understood and many blacks can speak two or more of them, in addition to English and Afrikaans. Together these 11 languages are the primary languages of 98 percent of South Africans. Many Indians also speak Hindi, Tamil, Telegu, Gujarati, and Urdu. In practice English, and to a lesser extent Afrikaans, retain a dominant position, with English as the main medium of instruction in schools and most universities. Afrikaners attach great value to their language, however, and struggle to keep it as a medium of instruction and to resist any threat to undermine its status. CReligion Of the four-fifths of South Africans who profess religious faith, 77 percent are Christians. The remaining 3 percent are Hindus (1.74 percent), Muslims (1.09 percent), and Jews (0.41 percent). Hindus are mainly Indian, and Muslims either Indian or Coloured. There has been some growth of Islam among Coloured people in recent years. The Christian churches include over 4,000 African independent churches that collectively claim over 8.5 million adherents. African independent churches originally broke off from various mission churches, but have since developed their own momentum. The majority are now Zionist or Apostolic churches, with some independent branches of the Pentecostal movement. The Zion Christian Church is by far the largest of these churches; biannual gatherings at Zion City, its headquarters in Moria near Pietersburg in Northern Province, usually attract about 1 million members. In rural KwaZulu-Natal there are hundreds of separate churches, and at least 900 churches flourish in Soweto. Most Afrikaners belong to one of the three Dutch Reformed churches whose 4.5 million members also include about half of the Coloured people and a small number of blacks. The Nederduitse Gereformeerde Kerk (Afrikaans for "Dutch Reformed Church") is the largest of the Dutch Reformed churches with 4 million members including the Coloured and African membership. It was a racially segregated church that supported the state during the apartheid years, but then recanted and moved closer to other churches. Other denominations include Roman Catholics (2.91 million), Methodists (2.25 million), Anglicans (1.46 million), Lutherans (0.96 million), and Presbyterians (0.56 million). The larger churches in this group were prominent in the struggle against apartheid, at least at the leadership level. A number of charismatic churches (an interdenominational Christian movement) have also been established in recent years, including the Rhema Church in Randburg, Gauteng Province. Most people who claim no religious affiliation are African traditionalists. Their religion has a strong cultural base and rituals vary according to ethnic group. They generally recognize a supreme being, but ancestors are much more important, and they believe in manipulation of the power of spirits. Traditionalists have had some contact with Christianity and many are in a transitional position, incorporating aspects of both religions into their beliefs and worship. DEducation Under apartheid the education system was racially structured with separate national departments for whites, Coloureds, Asians, and blacks outside of the bantustans. Ten separate education departments were established within the bantustans. Although government spending on black education increased greatly in the late 1980s, at the end of the apartheid era in 1994 per capita expenditures for white pupils were still four times higher than expenditures for blacks; spending on education for Asians and Coloured people was closer to spending for whites. Many black teachers were poorly qualified, and there were more than twice as many pupils per teacher for blacks as for whites outside the bantustans. Black schools had fewer classrooms than white schools, shortages of textbooks were common, and few schools had science laboratories of any kind. As a result, only about 40 percent of black candidates passed matriculation (the qualification for completing secondary school, a minimum requirement for entrance to a university) in the early 1990s. This compared with pass rates of about 85 percent for Coloured students and 95 percent for whites and Asians. At least 1.5 million school-age blacks were not in school in the early 1990s, and only about 1 percent of those who started school eventually passed matriculation examinations. The challenge of restructuring education in post-apartheid society is immense. The new government created a unified education system with no racial distinctions, but merging 14 education departments into one has been a major task. Currently, only three out of five children with Standard 5 education (seven years of school) are actually literate. The government's goal is ten years of compulsory, state-provided education for all, but this will take time to achieve. Progress was made in 1995, when for the first time, all six-year-olds were enrolled in grade one. The targeted 40 to 1 pupil-teacher ratio entails bussing blacks to schools in predominantly white areas. The number of private schools, attended largely by whites, increased dramatically in the mid-1990s as public schools were integrated. The government's budget for 1996 allocated 23.9 percent of total expenditures to education, but massive inequalities in teacher qualifications, buildings, sports facilities, and equipment are hard to eradicate. This applies not only to racial inequalities but also to contrasts between township schools with relatively good resources and schools in shantytowns and rural areas. Overall, it is estimated that at least 2,000 new schools must be built, 65,000 new classrooms equipped, 60,000 teachers educated and trained, and 50 million textbooks printed. South Africa has a well-developed higher education system, which was also racially segregated until after apartheid. In 1995 there were 385,000 students attending 21 universities and 190,000 students attending technikons (technical or vocational institutes). About 37 percent of each group was white. Numbers of blacks in historically white universities grew rapidly after 1994, even in Afrikaans-language universities. Most black students, however, attend historically black universities, including the ten township campuses of Vista University that opened in the early 1980s. Some blacks take correspondence courses through the University of South Africa in Pretoria (founded in 1873). Other historically black universities include the University of Fort Hare (1916) in Alice, the University of the North (1959) near Pietersburg, the University of North-West (1979, formerly called the University of Bophuthatswana) in Mmabatho, and the University of Zululand (1960) near Empangeni. The University of the Western Cape (1960) in Bellville was historically Coloured, and Durban-Westville (1961) in Durban was historically Indian. Traditionally white universities include the English-speaking University of Cape Town (founded as the South African College in 1829, and established as a full university in 1918) in Cape Town, the University of the Witwatersrand (1922) in Johannesburg, the University of Natal (1910) in Durban and Pietermaritzburg, and Rhodes University (1904) in Grahamstown. Afrikaans-speaking universities include the University of the Orange Free State (1855) in Bloemfontein, the University of Pretoria (founded as Transvaal University College in 1908; became University of Pretoria in 1930) in Pretoria, the University of Stellenbosch (1918) in Stellenbosch, and the Rand Afrikaans University (1966) in Johannesburg. The University of Port Elizabeth (1964) in Port Elizabeth uses both English and Afrikaans. EWay of Life The apartheid system left a profound imprint on South African society. Most whites enjoy a standard of living and way of life comparable to people in the world's most developed countries. Distinctive features of this lifestyle include an emphasis on sports and open-air living, which reflect South Africa's pleasant climate. Sports play a major role in schools. Rugby is particularly popular among Afrikaners, and South Africa hosted and won the rugby world championship in 1995. Cricket is popular among Afrikaners, English speakers, and increasingly among other groups as opportunities and facilities gradually improve. Swimming and water sports, tennis, and golf are all popular in the white community. Affluent whites typically live in detached single-story homes with large gardens, often with swimming pools and sometimes tennis courts. The braaivleis (barbecue) is a popular way of entertaining. Food is essentially English, with a few distinctive Afrikaans dishes and some North American influences. The white South African lifestyle traditionally depended on servants to take care of the home, look after children, and tend the garden; many servants lived in small rooms on the employers' property. This became less common after the end of apartheid as white incomes decreased, proportionately, and servants' wages increased. Wealthy Asians, Coloured people, and a small but growing minority of blacks have lifestyles similar to whites. For the great majority of South Africans, however, life is vastly different. Housing in the townships consists of mostly single-story dwellings, but houses are much closer together than in predominantly white suburbs. Barracklike hostels house single black men and migrant workers. An increasing number of urban blacks live in shantytowns around major cities with minimal facilities and long distances to travel to work and shops. Recreational facilities are minimal in both townships and rural areas, but people play soccer wherever there is open ground. There are many churches, even in informal settlements, and they play an important role in social life. Township shebeens (unofficial drinking houses) take the place of pubs. Incomes restrict most blacks to a staple diet of mealies, or maize, which is made into a porridge, cheaper cuts of meat, some fruit, and vegetables. People commonly drink tea; and beer, which is often home-brewed, especially in rural areas, is the main alcoholic drink. Women are still more disadvantaged in South African society than in Europe or North America. The post-apartheid government is anxious to promote gender equality, but traditional attitudes are slow to change. Women from all ethnic and racial groups are involved in the labor market, although this often reflects economic necessity rather than preference. FSocial Issues The apartheid heritage has left a strong connection between race and socioeconomic class. Under apartheid, from 1948 to 1994, a person's race influenced occupation, place of residence, education, choice of partner, freedom of movement, and use of facilities and amenities. This legacy will take decades to erase. In 1993 blacks made up 76 percent of the population but earned only 29 percent of the country's total income. Whites, who constituted only 13 percent of the population, accounted for 58 percent of total income. For Coloured people the shares were 8 percent of the population and about 7 percent of the income; for Asians, 3 percent of the population and 5 percent of the income. During most of the 20th century, race was the central issue in South African politics, but since the end of apartheid attention has focused on other problems in South African society as well. The most prominent of these issues are unemployment, lack of housing, poverty, and crime. Women, especially black women, are disproportionately the victims of violent crime. These social issues are closely related to one another, and to some degree they are also the legacy of apartheid. They are among the main concerns of the government's Reconstruction and Development Programme. IVARTS The historical segregation of racial and ethnic groups in South Africa has resulted in distinct cultural developments. White South Africans, especially English speakers, have drawn much of their culture from Europe. For Afrikaners culture has a wider meaning that overlaps with the political concerns of Afrikaner nationalism and employment issues. Traditional Afrikaans culture is strongest in rural areas. Asians have distinct cultures derived mainly from the Indian subcontinent. In recent years a new sense of pride has developed in the Coloured community and found expression in writing, theater, and music. Urban black culture is multiethnic and draws on international influences, such as those of African Americans. In rural areas distinct cultural activities of various ethnic groups, including songs, poems, and oral history, remain important. The end of apartheid meant the end of international sanctions against South Africa. Since 1994 South African art and culture has attracted unprecedented international interest. In 1995 the biggest international art exhibition ever held in the country took place in Johannesburg. The National Arts Festival, held annually in Grahamstown, claims to be the most important of its kind in the world after the Edinburgh International Festival in Scotland. ALiterature South African literature has three main literary traditions in English, Afrikaans, and Bantu languages. Black writers have contributed to South African literature in all of its linguistic traditions, including Sesotho, Xhosa, and Zulu, as well as English and Afrikaans. After the arrival of white settlers, traditional African themes were written in English by blacks who attended mission schools and training colleges in the late 19th century. Between World War I (1914-1918) and World War II (1939-1945), this literature shifted away from a romanticized portrayal of the world toward the depiction of political oppression. Resistance literature blossomed after the Sharpeville Massacre in 1960 and the Soweto uprising in 1976 with themes of black consciousness evident in the poetry and prose of such writers as Mothobi Mutloatse and Miriam Tlali. Black South Africans have a long and rich oral tradition still important today. Modern writers such as Guybon Sinxo (Xhosa), B. W. Vilakazi (Zulu), Oliver Kgadime Matsepe (Northern Sotho), and Thomas Mofolo (Southern Sotho) have been heavily influenced by the oral traditions of their cultures. Other leading 20th-century black and Coloured writers include J. R. Jolobe, Alex La Guma, Bloke Modisane, Es'kia Mphahlele, and Adam Small. A specifically South African literature in English, written by white South Africans, emerged with the 1883 publication of The Story of an African Farm by Olive Schreiner, a novel about a young girl growing up in southern Africa. In the 20th century Sir Laurens Van der Post and Peter Lanham have written novels about the cultural heritage of the peoples of South Africa. Others have focused specifically on South Africa's social and political problems. These include novelists Alan Paton and Nadine Gordimer (winner of the 1991 Nobel Prize in literature), and playwright Athol Fugard. Afrikaner novelists, notably Andre Brink and J. M. Coetzee, have also contributed books in English that deal with these issues. Early Afrikaans writing focused on the political and linguistic struggles of Afrikaners, who are also known as Boers. This continued after the Boer War (1899-1902). Much Afrikaans writing in the 1930s was introspective and autobiographical, but in the 1940s the focus turned to World War II and a new social consciousness. Afrikaans has proved most fruitful as a medium for poetry, reaching mature expression in the 1930s through such poets as N. P. van Wyk Louw, Uys Krige, and Elisabeth Eybers. Other important writers of Afrikaans include poet, dramatist, and critic D. J. Opperman; novelist Etienne Leroux; and poet Breyten Breytenbach, an outspoken opponent of apartheid. BArt and Architecture South Africa has more than 3,000 sites of rock art dating from the Stone Age that depict animals and other subjects. The Ndebele people are known for the bold and brightly colored patterns with which they paint their traditional rural homes. Early paintings by European travelers like Thomas Baines have considerable documentary value today. South Africa's first professional artists, including Hugo Naude and Jan Volschenck, depicted landscapes and were strongly influenced by the artistic traditions of Britain and the Netherlands. Subsequently, artists like H. Stratford Caldecott and especially J. Hendrik Pierneef found ways of translating the distinctive character of the South African environment. Much modern art by black South Africans originated in the townships around Johannesburg as early as the 1950s. Reflecting black South Africans' struggles under the apartheid system, this art became known as township art. South African artists also experiment with most foreign styles. Landscapes remain an important theme, and recently some artists have also begun to concentrate on environmental issues. Architecturally, South Africa is best known for the distinctive Cape Dutch buildings found mainly in the Western Cape and considered among the world's most beautiful domestic architecture. Distinctive features include thick, whitewashed walls, curved gables, and a long, raised stoep, or verandah. Early rectangular buildings were frequently extended into L-shaped structures, followed later by more ambitious designs, including the distinctive H-plan of some larger country houses. After the British occupation in 1806, the Cape Dutch style was slowly superseded by British influences, including Georgian architecture and, for public buildings and churches, neoclassical and Gothic Revival styles. The Victorian period of the mid- and late 1800s was marked by a great diversity of styles and influences. In Pietermaritzburg several fine buildings featured the bricks produced there. During the second half of the 20th century the influence of American architect Louis Kahn tended to predominate. CMusic and Dance South African music is characterized by its fusion of diverse musical forms from South Africa and overseas. By the 1950s unique musical styles had emerged, developed by black musicians in many South African townships. Township jazz, songs, dance, and popular music reflect a combination of traditional music, especially of the Zulu and Sotho peoples, with African American rhythm and blues, jazz, and blues. Some musicians who play in this hybrid style have won international acclaim, including Hugh Masekela, Mahlathini Nezintombi Zomgqashiyo, and Ladysmith Black Mambazo. Ladysmith Black Mambazo performs iscathamiya, a Zulu-influenced choral style that is sung a cappella, or without instrumental accompaniment. The group became prominent through their collaboration with American singer and songwriter Paul Simon. Also of note are the accordion jive music of Nelcy Sedibe, which developed as township street music and was influenced by American swing, and the modern, electric versions of Zulu traditional music performed by Moses Mchunu. Classical composers have begun to experiment with traditional African musical instruments as well. The Soweto String Quartet has emerged as a important example of this approach. The development of dance in recent years is linked to the development of protest musicals in the theater. Styles of dancing on the stage include the toyi-toyi, a militant marching dance adapted from South African protest marches, as well as traditional Zulu dances. There are three professional ballet companies in South Africa and several independent groups. DTheater and Film South African theater won international acclaim in the 1980s. A distinctive theater form emerged from the tense sociopolitical climate of the 1970s and 1980s. New and alternative theater groups were established, and a playwriting tradition developed, influenced by the Black Consciousness Movement. This theater form uses popular theater as a vehicle of protest and social commentary, mixing African and Western elements in productions of intense energy and vitality. This tradition is perhaps best exemplified by the work of Athol Fugard and by the world-famous Market Theatre in Johannesburg. Currently acclaimed actors include John Kani and Winston Ntshona, who starred in The Island (written by Fugard, Kani, and Ntshona in 1973), and Ramolao Makhene and Daphne Hlomuka, who starred in Sophiatown (written by the Junction Avenue Theatre Company in 1988). A national film industry has been slow to develop in South Africa. This is in part due to past apartheid policies and ineffective state subsidies for film. Darryl Roodt's A Place of Weeping (1986) was the first film criticizing apartheid ever shown on the South African film circuit and effectively marked the beginning of an alternative film industry in South Africa. In 1995 Roodt also directed Cry the Beloved Country, based on a novel by Alan Paton. In 1995 the government created a fund for training and developing emerging talent in the local film industry, and a new film subsidy scheme. The Cape Film and Video Foundation, founded in 1993, actively promotes the Cape provinces as locations for international filmmaking. ELibraries and Museums Nearly all South African towns and cities have libraries, the largest of which is the Johannesburg Public Library, with more than 1.6 million volumes. Other important libraries include the South African Library in Cape Town, the State Library in Pretoria, and university libraries including those of the University of South Africa, the University of the Witwatersrand, the University of Cape Town, the University of Stellenbosch, and the University of Pretoria. South Africa has a large number of museums located in all major and many lesser cities and towns. The most notable include the National Museum in Bloemfontein, which contains archaeology, paleontology, and anthropology collections; MuseumAfrica in Johannesburg, which has collections relating to South African history, including displays representing the lives of South Africans under apartheid; and in Cape Town, the Michaelis Collection, the South African National Gallery, the South African Museum, and the South African Cultural History Museum.

ECONOMY South Africa is changing economically from a producer of raw materials to an industrial nation that produces both raw materials and commercial products. The nation's manufacturing, commerce, and services have been built extensively on the foundations of mining and farming. The economy remained primarily agricultural for much of the 19th century until the discovery of diamonds at Kimberley in 1867 and gold on the Witwatersrand in the 1880s. Mining quickly became dominant, but was overtaken by manufacturing during World War II. South Africa's gross domestic product (GDP) was $129.1 billion in 1997. The GDP per capita in South Africa is $3,180 per year, which ranks South Africa alongside other middle-income countries such as Chile, Mexico, Hungary, Thailand, and Malaysia. The modern industrial and commercial economy gives a minority of the population, including most whites, a standard of living equivalent to that in Western Europe; but for many who are wholly or partially excluded from the economy, incomes and lifestyles are characteristic of developing countries. There are marked variations in economic production among different geographic areas in South Africa. About 40 percent of GDP is produced in Gauteng Province alone, while minimal commercial activity and poor infrastructure characterize the former bantustans. Such inequalities present a problem for South Africa in trade negotiations. The country subscribed to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) reached in 1993 and proposed that it be awarded developing-country status. This was not accepted, but the United States backed a proposal that South Africa be treated as an "economy in transition," a status similar to that of the former Communist countries of Eastern Europe. In negotiations with the European Union (EU), South Africa has been treated as a developing country for the purpose of trade preferences in EU markets, but it has been denied participation in the Lomé Convention agreements between the EU and 70 African, Caribbean, and Pacific states because South Africa's export capacity and the size of its economy threaten those states. During the apartheid period the South African government championed the capitalist system, although its own economic policies were in many respects interventionist, and its racial policies compromised fundamental elements of capitalism such as the free movement of labor. International sanctions imposed because of the government's apartheid policies were increasingly damaging in the late 1980s but ended in the early 1990s as the apartheid era came to a close. The majority party in government, the African National Congress (ANC), came to power in alliance with trade unions and the Communist Party, leading to fears that it would pursue socialist policies. In practice its economic policies have been geared to maximizing economic growth and attracting foreign investment. A restructuring of state assets involving full or partial privatization is currently planned. In 1995 inflation fell to less than 8 percent, the lowest level in 20 years. ALabor South Africa has an economically active population of 15.8 million (1997 estimate), of whom 62 percent are male and 38 percent female. While the labor force is growing rapidly, few of these people can expect to find jobs. In the late 1960s the economy generated 740 jobs for every 1,000 new entrants, but by the early 1990s this figure had declined to less than 80 jobs. The current level of unemployment is measured at 33 percent of the labor force; it continues to rise because the population growth outstrips the capacity of the economy to create new jobs. Unemployment is much higher among the black population than other groups, and lowest among whites and Asians. Blacks account for much of the informal sector. This sector includes many unregulated small businesses as well as individuals providing a variety of services, such as car washing, street vending, and gardening. Due to the inadequate education and training opportunities available to blacks, the South African labor force has a high proportion of lower-skilled workers. According to averages for 1990 through 1992, about 77 percent of formal employment in South Africa is in the private sector: 21 percent in manufacturing; 14 percent in trade; 13 percent in agriculture; 10 percent in mining; and the rest in finance, construction, transportation, and electricity. The remaining portion of the labor force works in the public sector, including public business enterprises. More than 20 percent of the formal workforce belongs to trade unions. This development has occurred largely since 1979, when legislation barring black employees from access to the labor system was amended. The initial rise in union membership occurred mainly in the black trade unions. Membership began to level off in 1992, but has recently risen again with the enactment of legislation affecting unionization in agriculture and the public sector. In both sectors new unions have been launched. The main trade unions are affiliated with specific trade union federations or groupings. The largest is the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU), launched in 1985, which has 15 affiliates and 1.2 million members, most of whom are black. COSATU is formally allied to the governing African National Congress. The National Council of Trade Unions (NACTU) is the second largest group, with 23 affiliates and 335,000 members. NACTU denies any political affiliation, but believes that workers' interests are being ignored. The Federation of South African Labour Unions (FEDSAL) has 16 affiliates and 250,000 members, drawn mainly from staff associations and in-house unions. The Federation of Independent Trade Unions was launched in 1991 along nonpolitical lines. Membership in the traditionally all-white South African Confederation of Labour is declining, estimated in 1995 at only 50,000. A new federation, the United South African Trade Unions, was launched in 1995 to give a home to millions of workers in unaffiliated unions. Major problems for the union movement are the increasing numbers of unemployed people, who represent a much larger constituency than the union movement, and the growing informal sector. Major concerns among the industrial unions are training and education, human resource development, the removal of all discriminatory practices and the implementation of affirmative action, basic adult education, centralized collective bargaining, the debate over a national minimum wage, and the right to strike. BServices and Tourism In total, service industries contributed 57 percent of GDP in 1997. The largest categories are wholesale and retail trade, real estate and business services, catering and accommodation, government, finance, and insurance. Transport, utilities, construction, and community and personal services make up most of the remainder. The financial sector is highly developed and on par with industrialized nations. Tourism is widely viewed as a rich, potential source of jobs and foreign exchange, and as an eventual alternative to the gold industry, which is in long-term decline. Attractions include the scenic beauty of the Cape wine region, the Drakensberg and the mountains of Mpumalanga, national parks and game reserves, beaches, and the climate. During the apartheid years this potential could not be realized because of the country's negative international image and perceived political instability. Since 1994 the industry has expanded dramatically, with the number of overseas visitors increased by 52 percent in 1995 alone. In 1997, 5.5 million tourists visited South Africa, spending an estimated $1.9 billion. The possibility for further expansion exists. Major international hotel groups have entered the market, and growing competition among airlines has reduced fares. The fall in the value of the rand, South Africa's currency, in 1996 also made South Africa increasingly attractive as a tourist destination. The United Kingdom remains South Africa's biggest source of overseas tourists with about one-quarter of the total, followed by Germany and the United States. CManufacturing Since the mineral discoveries of the late 19th century, the South African economy has gradually changed from an agricultural to an industrialized economy. After exceptional growth in the 1960s, the performance of the manufacturing sector weakened in the 1970s and actually registered a marginal decline of 0.5 percent between 1980 and 1993. Manufacturing contributed 24 percent of GDP in 1996. The largest industries in terms of output are, in order of importance, chemicals, food processing, transport equipment, and iron and steel. All metal and engineering industries, taken together, account for one-third of industrial production. Much of South Africa's industry is concentrated on the Witwatersrand, although Durban, Port Elizabeth, and Cape Town are also major industrial cities. Export-driven manufacturing is considered the key to sustainable growth. Much South African manufacturing has been sheltered behind protective tariffs and is not internationally competitive. The end of international sanctions and the decline of the rand after 1994 helped exporters, and levels of protection are now being reduced substantially. Ambitious plans exist for an industrial renaissance based on channels of roads, railways, pipelines, and power cables that will draw industry closer to the country's natural resources and strengthen its links to the outside world. DMining The contribution of mining to GDP declined from 12.5 percent in 1987 to 8.7 percent in 1994, but the mining industry employs over 600,000 people and continues to dominate exports. Gold, platinum, uranium, and armaments (included in a joint "unclassified" category in official statistics) accounted for about 36 percent of exports in 1994; base metals for about 13 percent; diamonds and other precious stones for about 11 percent; and mineral products for about 9 percent. South Africa remains the world's largest gold producer, but the industry faces long-term decline because of its high production costs and falling gold prices. These costs are primarily the result of the great depth of the South African mines. Other major minerals, in order of the value of total output, are coal, platinum-group metals, iron ore, copper, nickel, and manganese. In the case of most minerals other than gold, South Africa has hardly scratched the surface of its huge deposits. The South African mining industry is one of the most technologically advanced in the world, and South Africans are the world's foremost deep-level miners, exporting their expertise to many countries. Historically, the mining industry was built on the foundations of cheap black labor, but wages have improved substantially since the early 1970s. In 1970 about two-thirds of the labor force consisted of migrants from neighboring countries, but rising wages have enabled the internalization of the labor force, which is now two-thirds South African. EAgriculture, Forestry, and Fishing The relative contribution of agriculture, forestry, and fishing to GDP has steadily declined and was 5 percent in 1997, but these industries employ more than 1 million people and support many more in the subsistence sector. About one-third of agricultural production is exported. Only 12 percent of South Africa's land area is cultivated, and most of the rest is suitable only for pastoral farming. The principal field crops are maize (corn), wheat, sugarcane, and hay. The major horticultural crops are fruit, including citrus fruit and grapes (for winemaking), and vegetables, including potatoes. Dressed poultry and eggs head the list of livestock products, followed by slaughtered cattle and calves, and fresh milk. Maize, which accounts for 16 percent of total agricultural output, is the staple food of most black South Africans. A significant proportion of poultry and cattle production is also subsistence in nature. Under apartheid blacks were restricted to the ten bantustans, which made up only 13 percent of the country's total area. Farming in these areas is primarily for subsistence, and traditional land tenure systems vest land in the chiefs or headmen, who allocate small plots to individual farmers. Marketing crops is largely local because of poor infrastructure. Commercial agriculture remains overwhelmingly in white hands, using the labor of about 1.2 million black farm workers. The government has launched a land reform program that promises restitution or compensation to those displaced from their land since 1913, when the Natives Land Act restricting black ownership was passed; the program also pledges the redistribution of 30 percent of the land by 1999, but the government is unlikely to meet this target. Although South Africa has little native forest, it has developed one of the largest forestry industries in the world based on pine, eucalyptus, and wattle plantations. Commercial forests cover 1.2 million hectares (3 million acres), or 1 percent of the land area, mainly in KwaZulu-Natal and Mpumalanga provinces. Almost one-third of the plantations are owned by the government. The timber and wood products industry employs more than 200,000 people and provides 90 percent of South Africa's timber requirements and all the country's pulp and paper needs. The commercial fishing industry employs about 28,000 people. Over 90 percent of the output comes from waters off the west coast, which are productive because of the cold Benguela Current. Demersal fish, or fish that stay close to the bottom of the ocean, account for half the total, with hake being the most common catch; pelagic fish, especially anchovies and pilchards, account for about a quarter of the total; fish caught by line include snoek, cob, silverfish, and yellowtail. Rock lobsters are also caught, mainly for export. In terms of volume, multispecies shoal fishing by purse seine (a surface net that encircles and entraps entire shoals of fish) is the most important method used, followed by bottom and mid-water trawling of demersal fish. FEnergy Coal provides about 75 percent of primary energy needs. Most electricity is generated in coal-fired power stations located on or near the main coal fields in Gauteng, Free State, and northern KwaZulu-Natal. Coal is also the basic raw material for synthetic fuel plants at Sasolburg in Free State and Secunda in Mpumalanga. There are two hydroelectric power stations, two pumped storage schemes (excess water is pumped uphill into reservoirs for use during periods of high demand), and two gas-turbine stations. South Africa's one nuclear power station at Koeberg in Western Cape serves the part of the country most remote from the coal fields. Eskom, the Electricity Supply Commission, distributes electricity through a national power grid. South Africa supplies more than half the electricity generated in the whole of Africa, but only about half the households in the country have electricity. Electrification programs are under way in many townships, and the government plans to put electricity in 2.5 million rural homes by 2015 using solar energy. GTransportation South Africa has by far the most developed transport infrastructure in Africa. The rail system, which links all major centers, is almost entirely administered by the state-owned Transnet through its railway division Spoornet. Passenger services are slow by Western European standards, but the provision of luxury and semiluxury trains is an attraction. Car ownership is almost universal among whites and rising rapidly in the rest of the population, although less so in rural areas. Commuting for blacks is largely by public transport, including buses, kombi (minibus) taxis and, in the larger cities such as Cape Town, Durban, and Johannesburg, commuter railways. South African Airways provides an extensive network of air services between all major cities in South Africa, between Johannesburg and a variety of destinations in Africa, and between South Africa and major cities in Europe, the Americas, East Asia, and Australia. Domestic routes have opened to competition in recent years with Airlink, SA Express, and Comair providing the main services. In addition, smaller airlines operate about 200 routes linking smaller towns to the major centers. Johannesburg has the country's major international airport, but Cape Town has a small number of direct overseas flights. The ports of Durban, Port Elizabeth, and Cape Town provide large container terminals. Durban is the busiest port for general cargo. East London is the only river port in South Africa. Saldanha Bay, northwest of Cape Town, is the largest port on the west coast of Africa. It was developed primarily for the export of iron ore from Northern Cape. Richard's Bay, one of the best artificial harbors in the world, was developed primarily to handle bulk cargoes, including coal. HCommunications South Africa has a sophisticated communications network, although it is not equally accessible to all people. Radio ownership is, however, almost universal. The South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) provides 23 radio services for national and regional audiences and specific language groups. Some 14 million listeners tune in daily to these services. There are also two independent radio stations. The SABC offers three television channels in 11 languages. There are 118 licensed television sets for every 1,000 people in South Africa, and the daily audience is about 11 million, about one-quarter of the population. The majority of African households do not have television, although it is widely watched in bars. The SABC was subject to close government control under apartheid, but now reflects a wider spectrum of political views. The government is much less intrusive in the media than during the apartheid years. The emphasis is on the rights of the individual rather than the protection of community norms and standards. There are 17 daily and 12 weekly newspapers. Their political allegiances are less narrowly defined than in the apartheid era, with even the more conservative papers giving at least critical support to the country's first majority government. Most of the papers are published in English. Only three Sunday papers-the Sunday Times, Rapport (published in Afrikaans), and the Sunday Independent are truly national in circulation. All three are published in Johannesburg. The Sunday Tribune, published in Durban, and the City Press, published in Johannesburg, are also important. Regional dailies are published in all major cities. In Johannesburg those with the largest circulation include the Sowetan, targeted at black readers, along with The Star and The Citizen. Die Burger, an Afrikaans paper, and two English papers, The Argus and the Cape Times, are published in Cape Town. The Daily News is published in Durban. Smaller influential papers include the daily Business Day, the weekly Financial Mail, and the relatively left-wing weekly, Mail and Guardian, all published in Johannesburg. South Africa has two-fifths of the telephone lines in Africa, with 107 lines for every 1,000 inhabitants. Telkom Ltd., a telecommunications company, is South Africa's second largest industrial company, currently state-owned. Electronic mail and the Internet are widely used in business circles, and Telkom has entered the market as an Internet service provider. IForeign Trade In 1995 total exports were worth $27.9 billion and imports $30.1 billion. Gold typically accounts for a quarter of total exports, other minerals an additional 30 percent, manufactured goods about 37 percent, and agriculture and fisheries the remainder. The major non-gold exports were iron and steel, coal, chemicals, pulp and paper, and food products. South Africa is a net exporter of farm products, especially maize, sugar, fruit, vegetables, and wine, but the country experiences substantial variations in production because of recurring drought. Imports consist mainly of machinery and equipment, motor vehicle parts, chemicals, crude oil, clothing, and textiles. Germany and the United States were the leading suppliers of imported goods, followed by Japan, the United Kingdom, and Italy. Chief purchasers of South Africa's exports are Germany, the United States, Japan, the United Kingdom, and Italy. Trade with the rest of Africa grew even in the final years of apartheid and has increased considerably since 1994, with South African exports to Africa reaching about $3.5 billion in 1996. Other countries in Africa are the primary destinations for South Africa's small but growing manufacturing export base. Two-thirds of South Africa's exports to Africa are to countries of the Southern African Customs Union (Botswana, Lesotho, Swaziland, and Namibia). In 1994, after restoring normal relations with other African countries, South Africa joined the Southern African Development Community. JCurrency and Banking The rand, divided into 100 cents, is the basic unit of currency (4.61 rand equal U.S.$1; 1997 average). The South African Reserve Bank in Pretoria, founded in 1920, is responsible for formulating and implementing monetary policy, overseeing the banking system, and issuing the currency. A state-controlled Land Bank serves the agricultural sector. There are numerous commercial, savings, and investment banks, and electronic banking services are well developed. There is an organized money and capital market that includes the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (founded in 1887) and related brokerage activities.

GOVERNMENT The 20th century has produced several fundamental governmental changes in South Africa. In 1910 the Union of South Africa was formed as a largely autonomous dominion of Britain. Under the 1910 constitution, the British monarch was the nominal head of state, but authority over most matters was vested in a single-chamber parliament, headed by a prime minister. By the 1931 Statute of Westminster, South Africa and other dominions within the British Commonwealth were proclaimed fully autonomous, gaining equality status with Britain. In 1961 South Africa became a republic and left the Commonwealth. The 1961 constitution created the office of president as head of state. A new constitution in 1984 established a tricameral (three-house) parliament with white, Coloured, and Asian houses, but excluded the black majority altogether. Lengthy constitutional negotiations in the early 1990s led to the implementation of an interim constitution in April 1994. These negotiations also resulted in agreement on a number of principles that would be binding during the negotiations for a final constitution. The final constitution was passed by parliament in May 1996 but was subsequently rejected by the Constitutional Court because certain provisions did not comply with the 1994 principles. A revised version was finally accepted in December 1996 for implementation in stages between 1997 and 1999. The new constitution was scheduled to be fully implemented following legislative elections in June 1999. The interim constitution was designed to encourage the sharing of power between major parties with cabinet representation proportionate to their electoral strength. This was effectively a compromise intended to provide continuity in government and reassure minorities, especially whites. The constitution also gave considerable powers to the nine new provinces, a provision strongly sought by the National Party and by the Inkatha Freedom Party in KwaZulu-Natal. The African National Congress successfully resisted a fully federal constitution, however, securing the inclusion of broad clauses that allowed the central government to override the provinces. The new constitution is similar in most respects to the interim constitution. The most critical difference is that minority parties will no longer be guaranteed representation in the cabinet or in provincial executive councils. The constitution includes a Bill of Rights, which is regarded as one of the most liberal in the world. AExecutive The president is elected by the majority party in parliament to a five-year term. Under the interim constitution, any party that won 80 or more seats in the 1994 elections earned the right to appoint an executive deputy president. The president appointed a cabinet of ministers from members of the National Assembly (one of the two houses of parliament), allocating the posts proportionately to parties with more than 5 percent of the seats. Under the new constitution, the president appoints both the sole deputy president and all members of the cabinet, without regard to party representation in the National Assembly. BLegislature The parliament consists of two houses: the National Assembly and the National Council of Provinces. The National Assembly has 400 members, popularly elected to five-year terms under a system of proportional representation. The National Council of Provinces has 90 members, 10 from each province. These members, which are appointed by the provincial legislatures, also serve five-year terms. The National Council of Provinces replaced the Senate, a body that was created under the interim constitution and disbanded following the partial implementation of the new constitution in 1997. CJudiciary South African courts are independent, subject only to the constitution and the law. The highest courts in the country are the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, situated in Bloemfontein, and the Constitutional Court, located in Johannesburg. The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court is composed of a chief justice and as many judges as the president may determine (in the new constitution, the number will be determined by act of parliament). The Constitutional Court is composed of a president and ten justices, six of whom are appointed by the president on the advice of the Judicial Service Commission. The other four justices are appointed from among the judges of the Supreme Court by the president in consultation with the chief justice. The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court deals with final appeals on all nonconstitutional matters. Its decisions are binding on the ten provincial and three local divisions of the Supreme Court under the interim constitution, and on the High Courts under the new constitution. Their decisions are in turn binding on the magistrate's courts. Black South Africans may choose to bring civil claims based on indigenous law and custom to a local chief's court, with subsequent right of appeal in a magistrate's court. DProvincial and Local Government Until 1994 South Africa was divided into four provinces (Cape Province, Natal, Orange Free State, and Transvaal) and ten bantustans, including four that had been declared independent (Transkei, Venda, Bophuthatswana, and Ciskei). The bantustans were dissolved and reincorporated into South Africa when the interim constitution took effect and the country was divided into the nine current provinces. Provincial assemblies are elected by proportional representation and vary in size from 30 to 100 members (30 to 80 in the new constitution) according to population. Each province has a premier, elected by the provincial assembly, who presides over an executive council of no more than 10 members. Matters of exclusive provincial control under the new constitution include various planning, cultural, sporting, and recreational matters. A much longer list of more important business, including agriculture, education, housing, police (in part), tourism, regional planning, urban and rural development, and welfare services, are areas of joint national and provincial control. At the local level, South Africa's first fully elected, nonracial councils came into being in 1995 and (in a few areas) 1996. These are regarded as transitional councils that will be replaced by municipal councils in 1999 under the new constitution. The final form and categories of the municipal councils have yet to be decided. Currently, there is a single tier of local government over most of the country, but a two-tier system in metropolitan areas such as Cape Town and Johannesburg. The responsibilities of these councils and the division of responsibility between tiers in metropolitan areas are gradually emerging in each area. The new constitution allows a province to assign any of its legislative powers to a municipal council in that province. EPolitical Parties After South Africa's 1994 general election, the parties represented in the National Assembly were the African National Congress (ANC), National Party (NP), Inkatha Freedom Party, Freedom Front, Democratic Party (DP), Pan-Africanist Congress (PAC), and African Christian Democratic Party. The ANC won an overwhelming majority of the seats in the National Assembly. In June 1999 elections, the ANC again won the largest share (nearly two-thirds) of seats in the National Assembly. Other political parties that won representation in the government were the DP, Inkatha Freedom Party, New National Party (formerly the National Party, or NP), United Democratic Movement, African Christian Democratic Party, PAC, Freedom Front, and Federal Alliance. The ANC, founded in 1912, spearheaded the liberation struggle against apartheid. It was based within the country until it was banned in 1960 and forced to operate from outside South Africa. As a broad coalition of interests and a liberation movement, its membership overlapped substantially with the South African Communist Party (SACP). The ANC entered the 1994 elections in alliance with the SACP and the main trade union federation, COSATU. In the 1994 election the ANC won the support of most black constituents, except in KwaZulu-Natal, and about one-third of Asian and Coloured votes, but few white votes. Its policies are nonracial and seek to redress the injustices of the apartheid years. Its leader from 1991 until 1997, Nelson Mandela, placed great emphasis on reconciliation and surpassed the requirements of the interim constitution in seeking to make the government as widely representative as possible. Thabo Mbeki, who succeeded Mandela as ANC leader in 1997, led the party to victory in the 1999 elections. The party won 266 legislative seats, up from 252 seats in 1994. The NP, founded in 1914, introduced apartheid after its election victory in 1948 and governed the country continuously until 1994. For most of this time it was largely an Afrikaner party, but attracted many white English-speaking people as well beginning in the mid-1970s. In the 1994 election campaign the NP portrayed itself as the "new" National Party with some success, winning about 60 percent of Asian and Coloured votes and 4 percent of black votes. It nevertheless seeks to protect the interests of whites. The NP participated in a coalition government with the ANC until 1996, when it withdrew to become an opposition party after passage of the new constitution. Its representatives agreed to support the final constitution only after the ANC made it clear that compromises already struck on other issues would be jeopardized if they did not. In 1998 the party changed its name to the New National Party. Support for the party waned by the 1999 election, in which it won only 28 legislative seats, about one-third the number it held previously. The Inkatha Freedom Party, founded in 1975, is an ethnically based party commanding the support of most Zulu in KwaZulu-Natal. It is more conservative on most issues than the ANC and seeks to maximize provincial power. Inkatha won 34 seats in the 1999 election. The PAC broke away from the ANC in 1959 to pursue a more militant approach to the struggle against apartheid. Earlier leaders included some major nationalist figures, but the party has lost importance today. The SACP, founded in 1921, was a hard-line Communist party taking its cue from the Soviet Union for much of its existence, but its position shifted dramatically away from that model after 1989. It entered the 1994 election under the umbrella of the ANC. The DP, founded in 1989, is the successor to the relatively liberal white traditions of the earlier Progressive Party. It played an important mediating role in the negotiations leading to agreement on the interim constitution. Support for the DP increased markedly prior to the 1999 elections, in which it captured 38 seats in the legislature, making it the largest opposition party. FHealth and Social Services The right to adequate health care has been enshrined in the interim constitution, but provision represents a major challenge. Private health facilities can meet the demands of those who can afford to pay, although the cost of hospitalization, treatment, and medical aid subscriptions is soaring. For the majority who cannot afford to pay, current government plans emphasize primary health care that provides a comprehensive package of health care services. Payment for treatment in provincial hospitals is based on a patient's financial means. A proposed national health insurance program is being developed for the first time. Since 1994 free health treatment has been available to children under six years old and some mothers before and after birth. The country's infant mortality rate was categorized by the United Nations (UN) in 1991 as twice the rate expected for a country with South Africa's level of income. In 1998 the rate was 52 deaths per 1,000 live births, but this figure conceals great differences between racial groups because the white figure is less than one-fifth the national average. Tuberculosis (TB) is currently the most prevalent disease in South Africa, followed by malaria and measles. Much of the black and Coloured population suffers high incidences of TB, measles, and other infectious and contagious diseases such as gastroenteritis and respiratory infections. Malaria is endemic in the low-altitude areas of Northern Province, Mpumalanga, and eastern KwaZulu-Natal. For whites the main causes of death are stroke, heart disease, and cancer. Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) threatens to become a problem of epidemic proportions. At the end of 1996 an estimated 2.4 million South Africans had the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that causes AIDS, and the government estimates that there will be 4.8 million to 6.4 million cases of HIV infection by the year 2005. Social welfare services are provided by government agencies and the private sector, sometimes working in cooperation. Private sector initiatives like Operation Hunger and child welfare societies make a major contribution. The government proposes to create a more integrated welfare system that will harness state and private sector resources more effectively. It is committed to affirmative action to address inherited racial inequalities. Children are a particular focus, with programs under way to resolve the plight of homeless street children and legislate against child abuse and child labor. Social grants and allowances, including retirement pensions, cost the state around $4 billion from 1995 to 1996, and were paid out to 3 million recipients. Although the levels of such payments are low, those receiving pensions often support dependents who are unemployed and have no other means of support. GDefense South Africa's armed forces answer to the elected parliament and executive civilian authorities. For a brief period in the 1980s, under President P. W. Botha, Defense Force leaders were allowed considerable influence in government, but this is no longer the case. The new South African National Defense Force (SANDF) in 1997 included an air force of 10,900 and a navy of 5,500 personnel. The army experienced major restructuring after the end of apartheid. Seven separate military forces were integrated into one. The former South African Defense Force, the defense force of each of the four nominally independent bantustans, and the military wings of the ANC and PAC all participate in the army. Together these add up to 58,600 personnel. The integration process has caused some problems, in part because it is difficult for ex-guerrillas to attain high rank in the new defense force. Most of them, from the military wings of the ANC and PAC, have only informal training. Conscription was abolished in 1994. The permanent core of the SANDF will be supplemented by a new part-time force drawn from current members of the citizen force and commando structures. HInternational Organizations With the end of South Africa's international isolation in 1994, the country resumed participation in many international organizations from which it was excluded in the final years of apartheid. The most important organization is the United Nations, in which South Africa reclaimed its seat in June 1994. In the same month the country became the 51st member of the Commonwealth of Nations after an absence of 33 years. In 1995 South Africa played a pivotal role in the unanimous decision of the 175 countries of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty to renew the pact permanently.

HISTORY The early history of South Africa dates nearly 3 million years to Australopithicus africanus, one of the earliest human ancestors. Archaeological evidence indicates that people resembling the San (bush people) and the Khoikhoi inhabited southern Africa thousands of years ago. The San were traditionally hunters and gatherers while the Khoikhoi were nomadic and herded cattle. Centuries before whites settled in South Africa, Bantu-speaking groups migrated from west central Africa and settled in a fertile region between the Drakensberg Mountains and the Indian Ocean. These early Bantu people are thought to be the ancestors of the modern Nguni, a people comprising the Zulu, Xhosa, Swazi, and other groups. AArrival of Europeans and the Mfecane In 1652 Dutch East India Company official Jan van Riebeeck arrived at the Cape of Good Hope with orders to establish a fort and provision station for company ships on long journeys around Africa to Asia. Below Table Mountain, Cape Town eventually grew out of the first settlements around the Dutch fort. The original inhabitants Riebeeck encountered were the San and the Khoikhoi. At first, company officials bartered with them for cattle and set up gardens to grow fresh produce. By 1657 it became evident that the company's farming efforts were inadequate, so a small number of company employees were released from their contracts and given land to work as independent farmers supplying the company's needs. Khoikhoi livestock also proved insufficient for the needs of ships that stopped at the Cape, so the independent farmers, called free burghers, began raising livestock as well. By the 1660s pressure on the Khoikhoi and the San increased as more of their land was taken by European farmers. The Dutch East India Company encouraged Dutch, German, and French Huguenot immigration between 1680 and 1707 to what later became known as the Cape Colony. The colonists, mostly farmers and cattle herders, became known as Boers (Dutch for "farmers") or Afrikaners. They developed their own distinctive culture and language (Afrikaans) and practiced their own form of Calvinism, a Protestant religion. During the second half of the 17th century slaves were imported from Asia and other parts of Africa. By the early decades of the 18th century, after two short wars, the Khoikhoi had lost most of their lands to the European settlers; large numbers of them had died as a result of newly introduced diseases such as smallpox, and many of those who remained were placed in positions of servitude. In the same period the San were forced north by the colonists and many were eliminated for cattle raiding. Sexual relations between members of these ethnic groups resulted in the emergence of a distinct group that became known as the Cape Coloureds. In the 1770s the European settlers encountered Bantu-speaking peoples, who were ending several thousand years of migration. Nguni Bantu groups settled along the eastern coast of what is now South Africa while Sotho groups occupied the interior north of Cape Colony. In the early 19th century competition for land led to a period of conflict and forced migration among Bantu-speaking peoples known as the mfecane (Zulu for "crushing"). It is estimated that hundreds of thousands died during the wars, entire groups disappeared, and centralization resulted in the creation or strengthening of several Bantu states, including the Zulu, Swazi, and Sotho kingdoms. The mfecane fundamentally altered the political and social configuration of the entire region. It was set in motion by one of the great military geniuses of the 19th century, Shaka, who ruled the Zulu kingdom. He introduced a type of spear with a long blade called an assegai, organized a regimental system based on age groups, and introduced new strategies of warfare. The kingdoms, or states, that emerged from the mfecane came into direct conflict with white expansion in the 19th century. A1Early British Settlement British forces twice occupied the Cape region, in 1795 and in 1806; in 1814 Britain was granted the Cape Colony in a treaty drawn up at the Congress of Vienna, at which European powers negotiated the end of the Napoleonic Wars (1799-1815). After 1820 thousands of British colonists arrived in South Africa and demanded that English law be imposed. English became the official language in 1822, Khokhoi workers were given protection under new labor laws in 1828, and slavery was abolished in 1833. These measures were bitterly resented by Afrikaners and resulted in the Great Trek, in which thousands of Afrikaners migrated northward, some settling in Natal and others continuing east across the Orange River and north across the Vaal River. From 1835 to the early 1840s, between 12,000 and 15,000 Afrikaner families, accompanied by slaves and servants, left the Cape Colony because changes introduced by the British were intolerable. A2Cape Frontier Wars As settlers moved across the country they encountered resistance from the Bantu-speaking people, and in particular from the well-armed Xhosa, who had been moving slowly south and southwest for hundreds of years and were also in search of land. The Afrikaners and the Xhosa clashed along the Great Fish River, and in 1781 the first of nine frontier wars took place. For nearly 100 years, the Xhosa fought the Cape Colony settlers, first the Afrikaners and later the British. The British also encroached on Xhosa lands, precipitating several of these bloody wars. In the Fourth Frontier War, which lasted from 1811 to 1812, the British forced the Xhosa back across the Great Fish River and set up forts along this boundary. In 1818 differences between two Xhosa leaders, Ndlambe and Ngqika, ended in Ngqika's defeat, but the British continued to recognize Ngqika as the paramount chief. He appealed to the British for help against Ndlambe, who retaliated by attacking Grahamstown in 1819 during the Fifth Frontier War. The Xhosa prophet Nxele emerged at this time and promised "to turn bullets into water." He led the Xhosa armies in several attacks, including the one on Grahamstown in 1819, and was subsequently captured and imprisoned on Robben Island. After this war the British made a futile attempt to declare the area between the Great Fish River and the Keiskamma River neutral territory. More fighting took place, however, until eventually all Xhosa territories were incorporated into the Cape Colony. BThe Establishment of the Afrikaner Republics In Natal the Afrikaners who had migrated during the Great Trek were confronted with the Zulu kingdom. On December 16, 1838, an important battle between the Afrikaners and the Zulu, the Battle of Blood River, led to the defeat of the Zulu and the establishment of the Republic of Natalia by 1840. The battle remains of symbolic importance to many Afrikaners because their ancestors were said to have made a covenant with God for victory. After the British declared the coastal region of Natal a crown colony in 1843 and annexed it to the Cape Colony in 1845, most of the Afrikaners left and headed west and north where they joined other Voortrekkers (Afrikaans for "pioneers"). They settled inland, north of the Orange River, and further north in the Transvaal region (north of the Vaal River). The governor of the Cape Colony, Sir Harry Smith, gained control of the region between the Orange and Vaal rivers in 1848, and the territory was renamed the Orange River Sovereignty. Smith's move was overturned by the British government, however. The British government recognized the independence of the Transvaal territories in 1852 at the Sand River Convention, and recognized the former Orange River Sovereignty as the Orange Free State in 1854 at the Bloemfontein Convention. By the late 1850s the Transvaal territories beyond the Vaal River had coalesced into the South African Republic. Although attempts to unite the two Afrikaner republics were unsuccessful, they maintained a close relationship in the following years. They shared policies that separated blacks and whites and allowed no equality between the races. The Afrikaners in the Orange Free State encountered the Basotho king Moshoeshoe, who was ruling a loose group of chieftaincies from the mountain of Thaba Bosiu (in present-day west central Lesotho). From the 1830s when Afrikaners and British began settling the surrounding territory, Moshoeshoe demonstrated great skill in protecting his land and subjects by playing one group of white settlers against the other. After the Orange Free State was established in 1854, the Afrikaners and the Basotho fought extensively over the boundaries of their territories. Although the Basotho had also fought with the British in the late 1840s and early 1850s, Moshoeshoe asked the British to incorporate Basotho lands into a protectorate to prevent further attacks by Afrikaners. The protectorate of Basutoland was created in 1868. This area ultimately became the independent nation of Lesotho. In 1856 Natal was split from the Cape Colony and reestablished as a separate colony, with representative government. In 1872 the Cape Colony received self-government from Britain, which meant the government was independent except in foreign and economic affairs. After the discovery of diamonds in 1867 in Griqualand West, an area claimed by the South African Republic, Britain renewed its expansionist policy into Afrikaner territory, annexing Griqualand West in 1871 and the nearly bankrupt, politically unstable South African Republic in 1877. The British were unresponsive to Afrikaner needs and there were fundamental differences over taxes. The Transvaal Afrikaners decided to fight for independence. The British were defeated at the battle of Majuba in February 1881, which led to the British decision to restore self-government. In 1883 Afrikaner leader Paul Kruger was elected president of the republic. B1The British in Natal Before 1879 the Tugela River was the boundary between Zululand and Natal. Cetshwayo, who became the Zulu king in the 1870s, assembled an army estimated at 60,000 and refused to disband it when the British insisted that he do so. British troops invaded but were not prepared for the terrain, and a large number of them were killed. In July 1879, however, the British won a battle in the Zulu capital of Ulundi. This defeat permanently neutralized the Zulu military. B2The Boer War In 1885 Britain annexed Bechuanaland (now Botswana), thwarting President Kruger's plan to expand Afrikaner territory to the west. Vast gold deposits were discovered in the southern Transvaal in 1886. The mining industry was financed by the British and thousands of English miners, called Uitlanders (foreigners) by the Afrikaners, entered the Transvaal. Kruger refused to grant civil equality to Uitlanders and taxed them and foreign companies heavily. After negotiations failed, British financier Cecil Rhodes, prime minister of the Cape Colony, encouraged the Uitlanders to revolt in 1895. They were supported by a small invading force under the command of Leander Starr Jameson. The raid was a failure and although Rhodes was absolved of any involvement, he was forced to resign as prime minister. Relations between the Cape Colony and the two Afrikaner republics worsened after British statesman Alfred Milner became governor of the Cape Colony in 1897. In October 1899 Kruger declared war. The Boer War, which lasted for two and a half years, pitted the might of the British Empire against the Afrikaners. After some initial success, the British forces occupied all major urban centers by mid-1900. British forces, which have been estimated at 500,000, far outnumbered a force of about 90,000 in the Afrikaner armies. The Afrikaners, however, continued to wage a costly guerrilla war until 1902. Toward the end of the war the British used a "scorched-earth policy" in which Afrikaner farms were destroyed and thousands of women and children were held in concentration camps. More than 20,000 Afrikaners were said to have died in the camps. In addition, more than 14,000 blacks from the region died in concentration camps during the war. Under the terms of the Treaty of Vereeniging, signed on May 31, 1902, the Transvaal territories and the Orange River Colony (as the Orange Free State became known in 1900) became British crown colonies. In 1906 and 1907 they were given constitutions as self-governing colonies. CA Segregated Nation With the South Africa Act of 1910 the British parliament established the dominion of the Union of South Africa with the four colonies as its provinces. A clause in the act provided that the policies of the provinces toward blacks would be retained and could be changed only by a two-thirds majority vote of parliament. In Cape Province (formerly the Cape Colony), Coloureds and a few blacks could vote, a right not available to them in the other three provinces. Discrimination against nonwhites was inherent in South African society from the earliest days. Before World War I, Indian leader Mohandas K. Gandhi led the struggle to assure civil rights for Indian residents. Despite some government concessions, including abolition of the poll tax, the Indian population retained second-class status after the war. South African blacks had an even lower status in the white-dominated state. Urban blacks lived in segregated areas and could not hold office. They had no viable unions, and technical and administrative positions were closed to them. Politics were focused on differences between English-speaking South Africans and Afrikaners as well as racial differences. Party politics gathered momentum after elections were held in 1910, and the first parliament was formed. The South African Party (SAP) was formed by members of the coalition who won the 1910 election. A former Afrikaner commander, Louis Botha, became prime minister. General Botha and the SAP tried to bridge the differences between the two major white groups, but Afrikaners, particularly those in the Transvaal and Orange River Colony, rejected these efforts. One of the first moves of the new parliament was to pass the Natives Land Act of 1913 which prevented blacks, except those living in Cape Province, from buying land outside so-called reserves. The land allotted to these reserves made up 7 percent of the total land of the country. Because of the limited amount of land available to blacks, the act also ensured that the migratory labor system would continue and cheap black labor would be available in the mines and industries. C1Politics During the Two World Wars In 1914 General J. B. M. Hertzog founded the National Party (NP), which emphasized Afrikaner language and culture. It used as one of its slogans "South Africa First," in contrast to the SAP, which appeared more strongly tied to the interests of the British Empire. Botha's commitment to Britain in World War I increased Afrikaner resentment, and in the 1915 election the NP received relatively strong support. Botha himself led the South African forces that conquered German South-West Africa in 1915. This former German colony eventually became a League of Nations mandate under South African supervision in 1920. While the SAP won the largest number of votes, it only controlled 54 seats in the parliament while the NP controlled 27. Botha was therefore forced to enter a coalition with the smaller Unionist Party in order to govern. After Botha died in 1919, he was succeeded by General Jan Christiaan Smuts. Official politics in South Africa from the 1920s continued to be dominated by the conflicting positions of the two white groups. Hertzog and the NP insisted that reconciliation between Afrikaners and British be based on full equality between the two groups. His party therefore demanded that the Afrikaans language be given equal status with English, that the country have a separate flag, not the British Union Jack, and that South Africa have the right to secede from the British Empire. In 1918 a secret organization known as the Broederbond (Afrikaans for "association of brothers") was established to advance the Afrikaner cause and interests. This organization became a powerful vehicle for the preservation of Afrikaner language, culture, and traditions. Above all, its aim was to find ways for Afrikaners to attain positions of power throughout the society. The Broederbond was exclusively for Afrikaners who were over 25 years old, male, Protestant, and specially invited to join. In 1921 leaders of the country's gold-mining industry decided to replace white labor with black labor in an effort to cut costs. This move led to a major uprising in March 1922 called the Rand Revolt. Prime Minister Smuts declared martial law and used the military to contain the revolt. The revolt resulted in 200 dead. The real impact of the Rand Revolt came in 1924 when Hertzog's NP, with the help of white labor, unseated Smuts at a time of rising black militancy. The result was the protection of white workers and the exclusion of blacks from managerial positions. During the economic depression of the 1930s a coalition was formed, and Hertzog and Smuts became dual leaders of the new United Party. Britain's declaration of war against Germany in 1939, however, split the coalition. Hertzog, who tried to keep South Africa neutral, was replaced as prime minister by Smuts, and the Union declared war on Germany on September 6, 1939, thereby entering World War II. Because of pro-German sentiment among Afrikaners, however, the Union did not quickly pass a draft law. All members of the Union's armed forces were volunteers and their only combat action occurred in East and North Africa and Italy. C2Apartheid Instituted In 1948 the all-white NP came to power with Daniel F. Malan as prime minister. Segregation and inequality between races had existed as a matter of custom and practice in South Africa, but after 1948 they were enshrined in law. The NP won the general election that year in a coalition with the smaller Afrikaner Party. The United Party, led by General Smuts, became the official opposition. The United Party mainly had an urban base with substantial support from English-speaking South Africans, while the NP's support was drawn almost entirely from Afrikaans-speaking South Africans. At the heart of the NP's legislative agenda was apartheid (Afrikaans for "separateness"), a doctrine of white supremacy promoted as a program of separate development. Once in power, the NP extended and legalized white economic exploitation, political domination, and social privilege. These tenets were reinforced with a harsh and intrusive security system, separate and unequal education, job discrimination, and residential segregation. Such fundamental rights as protection against search without a warrant and the right to a trial were violated. A severe anti-Communist law was passed in 1950. It equated Communism with any struggle for political, economic, or social change, and served as an excuse to arrest many of the government's opponents. The Group Areas Act was also passed in 1950. It specified that separate areas be reserved for each of the four main racial groups: whites, blacks, Coloureds, and Asians. Stringent pass laws that restricted and controlled black access to white areas were implemented across the nation in 1952. Blacks without passes who remained in urban areas for more than 72 hours were subject to imprisonment. Millions were arrested for such violations. Marriage between whites and blacks was outlawed. Beginning in the 1950s the government divided the black population into ethnic groups and assigned each group to a so-called homeland, also referred to as a bantustan. Ten of these territories were eventually established; Bophuthatswana, Ciskei, Gazankulu, KaNgwane, KwaNdebele, KwaZulu, Lebowa, Qwaqwa, Transkei, and Venda. The Development Land and Trust Act of 1936 had augmented the amount of land blacks could own from 7 percent to 13 percent, and these areas became the basis for the bantustans. Prime Minister Malan retired in 1954 and was succeeded by another NP leader, Johannes G. Strijdom, who removed legal obstacles to the further implementation of apartheid. To assure support for the program, the Supreme Court was filled with six judges sympathetic to apartheid who would hear constitutional questions, a step that received parliamentary approval in 1955. NP control of the Senate was effected by their increased membership from 77 to 89 in elections that same year. Shortly after the 1958 elections for the House of Assembly, in which the NP members increased their seats from 94 to 103, Strijdom died. Strijdom's replacement was Hendrik F. Verwoerd, an uncompromising supporter of apartheid who implemented the concept of separate development of the races through the bantustan, or homeland, policy. In 1959 the government passed the Promotion of Bantu Self-Government Act, an unsuccessful attempt to diffuse international criticism of apartheid by offering blacks the right to participate in a political process within the bantustans. The act, which ended black representation in the national parliament, defined blacks as citizens of bantustans, although they retained their South African citizenship. The economic advantage of the policy from the government's point of view was that it would relieve the government of welfare obligations to millions of blacks without losing the benefits of an abundant supply of cheap black labor. The policy was vehemently opposed by blacks who saw it as a further erosion of their rights because it forced them to accept citizenship in remote, underdeveloped bantustans. By the end of the 1970s all of the bantustans had become nominally self-governing. Although called self-governing, they were in fact entirely dependent on the national government and incapable of sustaining 75 percent of the country's population. Thus, most blacks continued to live in white areas. The vast majority of those who lived in the bantustans commuted to white areas as part of an enormous migrant labor force. DResistance to Apartheid In 1912 the South African Native National Congress was founded by a group of black urban and traditional leaders who opposed the policies of the first Union of South Africa government, especially laws that appropriated African land. In 1923 the organization was renamed the African National Congress (ANC). At first its main agenda was to protect voting rights for blacks in the Cape Province. For nearly 50 years it pursued a policy of peaceful protests and petitions. During the 1950s, while the South African government passed and implemented oppressive apartheid laws, black South Africans responded by intensifying their political opposition. The ANC dramatically increased its membership under the leadership of Albert Luthuli and Nelson Mandela became one of the organization's principal organizers. Although the membership of the ANC was largely black, it was a multiracial organization with white and Asian members, some of whom assumed leadership positions. After decades of receiving no response to demands for justice and equality, the ANC launched the Defiance Against Unjust Laws Campaign in 1952, in cooperation with the South African Indian Congress, an Asian antiapartheid political organization. The campaign was a nonviolent one in which apartheid laws were deliberately broken. After several months of civil disobedience and 8,000 arrests, rioting broke out in a number of cities, which resulted in considerable property damage and 40 deaths. Black protest and white repression continued. In 1956 three black women were killed when thousands of them confronted the police because of their inclusion under amended pass laws, which had previously applied only to black men. Despite the ANC's increasing militancy, its aims were still reformist, seeking to change the existing system, rather than revolutionary. In 1955 the ANC brought together nearly 3,000 delegates of all races in Kliptown in the Transvaal to adopt the Freedom Charter. This remarkable document, which affirms that South Africa belongs to all its people, remains to this day the clearest statement of the guiding principles of the ANC. It emphasizes that no government can justly claim authority unless it is based on the will of the people and the people in South Africa had been robbed of their birthrights to land, liberty, and peace by a form of government founded on injustice and inequality. It stated that, "Every man and woman shall have the right to vote for and stand as candidates for all bodies which make laws." In 1958 Robert Sobukwe left the ANC; he founded the Pan-Africanist Congress (PAC) in April 1959. The PAC insisted on a militant strategy based exclusively on black support in contrast to the ANC's multiracial approach. Black attitudes toward the liberation process changed dramatically after the Sharpeville Massacre on March 21, 1960. White police opened fire on a mass demonstration organized by the PAC, killing 69 blacks and wounding more than 180. The Sharpeville Massacre led to violence and protests throughout the country. The government declared a state of emergency and arrested many members of the PAC and the ANC. In April 1960 the PAC and ANC were banned. In 1961, in response to the government's actions, the ANC organized Umkhonto we Sizwe (Zulu for "Spear of the Nation") to conduct an armed struggle against the regime. On December 16, 1961, when Afrikaners were commemorating the Battle of Blood River, Umkhonto's first act of sabotage took place. From its inception, however, the underground organization refused to engage in terrorism against civilians and only attacked symbolic targets, police stations, military offices, and other government buildings. The PAC's military wing, in contrast, attacked white civilians. On a trip to several other African countries in 1962, Nelson Mandela arranged for ANC recruits to undergo military training abroad. The South African government, concerned with the potential of Umkhonto to cause increased unrest, passed new legislation that gave the police broad powers of arrest without warrant. In July 1963 police raided Umkhonto's secret headquarters in the Johannesburg suburb of Rivonia and arrested most of its leadership. Mandela, who was already in prison at the time, was put on trial with the other Umkhonto leaders, all of whom were sentenced to life imprisonment. With the imprisonment of the nationalist leadership and the earlier banning of the ANC and PAC, South Africa entered a decade of enforced calm. The government held a referendum in October 1960 to decide whether South Africa should become a republic and on May 31, 1961, the country officially became the Republic of South Africa. In addition, it chose to withdraw from the Commonwealth of Nations before it was forced to leave because of apartheid policies. The government continued to implement repressive legislation. A 1963 act provided for detention of up to 90 days without trial for the purpose of interrogating anyone even suspected of having committed or intending to commit sabotage or any offense under the Suppression of Communism Act or the Unlawful Organizations Act. The Terrorism Act, passed in 1967, provided for the indefinite detention without trial of suspected terrorists or persons in possession of information about terrorist activities. Prime Minister Verwoerd was assassinated in September 1966 and John Vorster, who had been minister of justice, police, and prisons, was chosen to succeed him. One of the important challenges facing South Africa during Vorster's tenure as prime minister was the increasing hostility of states surrounding South Africa. Angola and Mozambique achieved independence in 1975, and their new governments were opposed to the South African government's policies of apartheid. Liberation struggles were underway in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) and Namibia in the mid-1970s, causing an atmosphere of unrest. In the late 1960s Stephen Biko and other black students founded the Black Consciousness Movement (BCM), which was loosely based on the Black Power movement in the United States. In South Africa it emphasized black leadership and non-cooperation with the government or with bantustan leaders, who were considered collaborators with the government. The BCM was involved in establishing the South African Students' Organization (SASO) for black students. In 1969 SASO split from the National Union of South African Students (NUSAS), a white-led but nonracial liberal organization, and from the University Christian Movement. Biko, the president of SASO, believed blacks had to provide their own leadership in the liberation process. SASO and the Black Peoples Convention (BPC), a coalition of black organizations, held rallies in September 1974 to mark the independence of Mozambique, despite a government ban on such meetings. Many were arrested, including several of the leaders, who were then prosecuted and sentenced. The BCM had a formative influence on students and young South Africans, who played a crucial role in the liberation process. In September 1977 Stephen Biko died after being mistreated while in police custody. The 1970s witnessed the emergence of a Zulu-based ethnic organization called Inkatha, which became the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP). The IFP was led by Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi and rejected early by the ANC because the ANC opposed its exclusive ethnic character and close cooperation with the existing white power structure. These differences turned into violent confrontations in the late 1980s and early 1990s. In 1991 investigations revealed that the South African government had given covert training and financial support to Inkatha in an effort to foster division among black organizations in the country. The 1970s were also marked by a new and revitalized phase of black trade unionism even though government restrictions continued to limit unions' political effectiveness. The dependence of the South African economy on black workers created a powerful political and economic force, and from the 1970s onward this growing power was demonstrated by a series of illegal boycotts and strikes. The growth of militant worker and youth organizations in this period was a clear indication that banning the nationalist movements had not ended black resistance. It was not until 1981 that black trade unions could be officially registered and black workers were given the right to strike. The power of the black trade union movement continued to grow and played a central role in ending apartheid and in the transition to black majority rule. D1Struggle with the United Nations Beginning in 1952 the General Assembly of the United Nations took up the issue of South Africa's racial policies annually. The tone of early UN resolutions and declarations was civil, even conciliatory, reflecting the hope that South Africa might be convinced to reform. The General Assembly at first simply called upon South Africa to recognize its obligations to end racial discrimination under the UN Charter. The assembly subsequently "regretted" South Africa's refusal to end apartheid. After the Sharpeville Massacre in 1960, a UN Security Council resolution blamed South Africa for the shootings, and the UN General Assembly's first successful sanctions vote against South Africa occurred two years later. South Africa's unwavering policy of whites-only representation on sports teams resulted in their expulsion from the Olympic Games and a dozen other international sports federations in the 1960s. After World War II the UN made several attempts to control South Africa's administration of South-West Africa. The UN General Assembly voted in October 1966 to terminate South Africa's mandate over South-West Africa, which was renamed Namibia, and established a council to assume responsibility for the territory. South Africa rejected all UN actions and proceeded to integrate the territory into its own economy. In June 1971 the International Court of Justice ruled that South Africa's presence in Namibia was illegal. The situation became critical when the Angola-based South-West Africa People's Organization (SWAPO) stepped up its campaign of guerrilla attacks on targets in Namibia. South Africa responded by building up defenses, attacking Angola, and aiding the rebels who were fighting the Cuban-supported Angolan government. The war continued for almost 20 years until peace talks, sponsored by the United States, resulted in independence for Namibia in 1990. In 1974 South Africa was suspended from the UN General Assembly, and by the 1980s General Assembly resolutions referred to apartheid as a crime against humanity. This was a reflection of growing international opposition to apartheid. D2Deepening Crises A major confrontation between protesters and South African police occurred in the black township of Soweto, near Johannesburg, on June 16, 1976. Thousands of black high school students demonstrated against a government ruling that required certain high school subjects to be taught in Afrikaans, which was seen as the language of oppression. At least 575 people were killed, and rioting and confrontations between police and students spread throughout the country. This led to a new phase in the liberation process in which black youth became deeply involved. Many left the country to join the liberation movements while others continued to work with the underground resistance movement. By the 1980s the psychological, financial, and human costs of maintaining order were increasing as the cycle of repression, black violence, and white counterviolence accelerated. In May 1983, in an effort at limited reforms, Prime Minister P. W. Botha introduced a constitutional amendment that created a tricameral parliament with three racially separate chambers: one for whites, one for Asians, and one for Coloureds. The amendment was approved the same year by a referendum open to white voters only. Elections to the Coloured and Asian legislative bodies were held in August 1984. But 77 percent of the eligible Coloured voters and 80 percent of the Asian voters boycotted the elections because the new plan continued to exclude blacks. The structure of the new tricameral parliament gave the appearance of power-sharing, but white control of the presidency and the predetermined numerical superiority of the white chamber ensured that real power would remain in white hands. Most important, the new arrangement continued to exclude South Africa's black majority, who were not allowed to vote or stand as candidates for election. Reaction to the constitutional amendment was the exact opposite of what the white government intended. Beginning in September 1984 there were violent confrontations throughout the country and the government declared successive states of emergency. A crisis of unprecedented magnitude and duration was precipitated by the constitutional changes and other grievances such as chronic black unemployment, inadequate housing, rent increases, inferior black schools, and an ever-increasing crime rate, especially in the black townships. The government's plan to restore law and order through a policy of modest reform with continuing repression failed. Between 1984 and 1986 prohibitions against interracial marriages and racially mixed political parties were repealed and rights to conduct business and own property in designated urban areas were extended to blacks. At the same time, over 2,000 blacks were killed and as many as 24,000 arrested and detained in confrontations with security forces. The government's limited reforms were rejected by blacks, who wanted apartheid abolished, as well as by conservative whites who felt that the reforms had already gone too far. International financial institutions began to regard South Africa as unsafe for investment. This, combined with increasing demands for international sanctions, led more than 200 U.S. companies to pull out of South Africa during the 1980s. The rand was devalued, and foreign investment virtually dried up. White South African emigration increased dramatically. Throughout 1987 and 1988, President P. W. Botha approved some limited changes while rejecting others. Although he refused to hold talks with the ANC, a group of white South African business leaders, academics, and politicians saw the need to begin such a dialogue and met with exiled leaders of the ANC in Senegal. Some whites recognized that the country's deteriorating economy and increasing international isolation could not be reversed without far-reaching changes. ENegotiations and Change F. W. de Klerk succeeded P. W. Botha in 1989 as head of the National Party and later that year as president of South Africa. Soon after taking office, de Klerk permitted large multiracial crowds in Cape Town and Johannesburg to march against apartheid. He met with Archbishop Desmond M. Tutu and other black leaders, ordered the release of many black political prisoners, and lifted the ban on antiapartheid organizations such as the ANC. With the release of Nelson Mandela from prison in 1990, serious negotiations began over the transition to a post-apartheid South Africa. The negotiation process proved long and difficult. De Klerk's NP was unwilling at first to consider transferring power to the country's black majority and tried vigorously to institute minority veto power over majority decisions. The ANC then staged general strikes and other nonviolent protests to try forcing the NP to change their position on the issue. The Convention for a Democratic South Africa (CODESA), which opened in December 1991, finally led to a compromise between the NP and the ANC. Eventually, as a result of compromises on both sides, an agreement was reached on November 13, 1993, which pledged to institute a nonracial, nonsexist, unified, and democratic South Africa based on the principle of "one person, one vote." A Transitional Executive Council was formed to supervise national elections and install new national and provincial governments. South Africa's first truly nonracial democratic election was held on April 27, 1994, and declared "substantially free and fair" by the Independent Electoral Commission. Nearly 20 million votes were cast and the ANC received an impressive 63 percent, just short of the two-thirds majority that would have given it the power to write the new constitution on its own without negotiating with other parties. The NP won a surprising 20 percent of the votes because of substantial support from Coloured and Asian voters who feared ANC domination. Only two other parties were able to win the 5 percent minimum for a cabinet seat in the coalition government: Buthelezi's Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) and the Freedom Front, a coalition of white extremist groups. The ANC won substantial majorities in seven of the nine newly established provinces, the exceptions being in the Western Cape region where the NP defeated the ANC, in part because of the support of Coloured voters, and in KwaZulu-Natal where the IFP won a decisive victory over the ANC. The PAC and the liberal Democratic Party had limited appeal for the electorate and made poor showings. Nelson Mandela was elected president of a coalition government by the National Assembly, and he chose Thabo Mbeki as one of two deputy presidents. Former president F. W. de Klerk was chosen by the NP as the other deputy president. In June South Africa rejoined the Commonwealth of Nations. FMandela's Presidency Although all apartheid legislation was repealed, South Africa remained a country of extreme contradictions. Mandela's government faced the challenge of restructuring the economy and redistributing economic benefits, providing housing and health care, and improving employment possibilities and educational opportunities. F1The Truth and Reconciliation Commission Another challenge Mandela's government faced was how to handle the widespread allegations of human-rights violations and other atrocities committed by the former government during apartheid. In a move toward uncovering past events without further polarizing the society, the government created the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. On April 15, 1996, this 17-member commission began conducting hearings, presided by Archbishop Desmond Tutu. The purpose of the commission was to collect and investigate victims' accounts from the period of 1960 through 1994, to consider amnesty for those who confess their participation in atrocities, and to make recommendations for reparations. The commission was established in the hope that it would foster healing and prevent such crimes from happening again. Many people in South Africa, however, wanted punishment for those responsible for the crimes, and the commission's compromises involving amnesty and confession have been a source of controversy. Exposures of atrocities point to the highest levels of the apartheid regime. A former chief of the South African police force admitted that he had ordered acts of terror with the knowledge and approval of then President P. W. Botha and the cabinet. Activities of the ANC as well as the apartheid regime came under the scrutiny of the commission. In 1998 the commission released its final report, which condemned actions of all the major political organizations during the apartheid period. F2Political Developments The South African parliament approved a new constitution in May 1996. The right-wing Freedom Front, which seeks to establish an Afrikaner homeland, abstained from the vote in parliament. The representatives of the IFP did not participate in the session at all. IFP representatives refused to participate mainly because the party advocates more autonomy for the provinces than the ANC is willing to allow. The new constitution excludes any discrimination based on race, gender, age, or sexual orientation, and abolishes the death penalty. One day after adoption of the new constitution the NP decided to split from the coalition government. The NP contended that the new constitution did not provide shared power at the executive level or any form of joint decision-making. The NP also hoped that by leaving the government it would be able to establish itself as a viable opposition party. In September 1996 the Constitutional Court declined to certify the new constitution because it failed to meet the terms of the interim constitution regarding the role of provincial government. The court ruled that the new constitution gave the nine provinces substantially fewer powers than the interim constitution required. By the end of the year, members of the Constitutional Assembly redrafted the constitution to meet the court's requirements, and the final version was approved by parliament in December. The new constitution was to be implemented in stages between 1997 and legislative elections in 1999. In late 1997 President Mandela retired as party leader of the ANC, and was replaced by executive deputy president Thabo Mbeki. Mandela, who announced in 1996 that he would not seek another term as president, groomed Mbeki to succeed him. In June 1999 legislative elections the ANC won almost two-thirds of the seats in the legislature and selected Mbeki as South Africa's next president.

Contributed By: N. Brian Winchester Patrick O'Meara Anthony Lemon "South Africa," Microsoft® Encarta® Encyclopedia 2000. © 1993-1999 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.


 

Denna sida ändrades senast den 13 april, 2002