Apartheid
APARTHEID OF SOUTH AFRICA
By Arfat Hussain
MGM (BA-IJ) student
Policy that
governed relations between South Africa’s white minority and non-white majority
sanctioned racial segregation, political and economic discrimination against
non-whites.
The implementation of apartheid,
often called “separate development”.
Since the 1960s, it was made possible through the Population Registration Act of 1950 which
classified all South Africans as either Bantu (all black Africans), Coloured (those
of mixed race), white. A fourth category Asian (Indian and Pakistani) was later
added.
Racial segregation, sanctioned by the law was widely practiced in South Africa before 1948, but the National
Party, which gained office that year, extended the policy and gave it the
name apartheid. The Group
Areas Act of 1950 established residential and business sections in
urban areas for each race and members of other races were barred from living,
operating businesses, or owning land in them. In practice this act and two
others (1954, 1955), which became known collectively as the Land Acts, completed a process that had
begun with similar Land Acts adopted
in 1913 and 1936; the end result was to set aside more than 80 percent of South
Africa’s land for the white minority. To help enforce the segregation of the
races and prevent blacks from encroaching on
white areas, the government strengthened the existing “pass” laws that required
nonwhites to carry documents authorizing their presence in restricted areas.
Other laws forbade most social contacts between the races, authorized
segregated public facilities established separate educational standards,
restricted each race to certain types of jobs, curtailed non-white labor
unions, and denied non-white participation (through white representatives) in
the national government.
Under
the Bantu Authorities Act of 1951 the government re-established tribal
organizations for black Africans and the Promotion of Bantu Self Government Act of 1959
created 10 African homelands, or Bantustans. The Bantu Homelands Citizenship Act of 1970 made every
black South African, irrespective of actual residence, a citizen of one of the
Bantustans, thereby excluding blacks from the South African body politic.
Four of the Bantustans were granted independence as republics, and the
remaining had varying degrees of self-government; but all remained dependent,
both politically and economically, on South Africa. The dependence of the South
African economy on non-white labor, though, made it difficult for the
government to carry out this policy of separate development. Although the
government had the power to suppress virtually all criticism of its
policies, there was always some opposition to apartheid within South Africa.
Black African groups, with the support of some whites, held demonstrations and
strikes and there were many instances of violent protest and of sabotage.
One of the first and most violent demonstrations against apartheid took place
in Sharpeville on March 21, 1960; the police response to the
protesters’ actions was to open fire, killing about 69 black Africans and
wounding many more. An attempt to enforce Afrikaans language requirements
for black African students led to the Soweto riots in 1976. Some white
politicians called for the relaxation of minor restrictions, referred to as “petty apartheid,” or for the
establishment of racial equality. Apartheid also received international censure.
South Africa was forced to withdraw from the Commonwealth in 1961 when it
became apparent that other member countries would not accept its racial
policies.
In 1985 both the United Kingdom and the United
States imposed selective economic sanctions on South Africa. In
response to these and other pressures, the South African government abolished
the “pass” laws in 1986, although blacks were still prohibited from living in
designated white areas and the police were granted broad emergency powers.
In a more fundamental shift of policy, however, the government of South African
President F.W. de Klerk in 1990–91 repealed most of the social
legislation that provided the legal basis for apartheid, including the Population Registration Act.
Systematic
racial segregation remained deeply entrenched in South African society, though,
and continued on a de facto basis. A new constitution that enfranchised blacks
and other racial groups was adopted in 1993 and took effect in 1994. All-race
national elections, also in 1994, produced a coalition
government with a black majority led by anti-apartheid
activist Nelson Mandela, the country’s first black president. These
developments marked the end of legislated apartheid, though not of its entrenched
social and economic effects.
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