CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY ENDED IN 1992

The day apartheid died: South Africa's first free elections – archive, 1994  | South Africa | The Guardian

On March 17, 1992, white South Africans vote overwhelmingly
in
a referendum to end minority rule, by a margin of 68.7
percent to 31.2 percent. Thus ended the turbulent period
called
apartheid, a racial segregation policy that separated
the minority white population by designating areas and
activities prohibited to Black people.

“Today we have closed the book on apartheid,” President F.W.
de Klerk
said on the day after the vote.

Two years after the vote to end apartheid, in 1994, South Africa
held its first free and nonracial election, and
Nelson Mandela 
(above) an activist who had spent 27 years in prison for his
opposition to apartheid—became the first Black president of
the county.

The Beginning of the End | QU South Africa

World politics explainer: the end of Apartheid
Frederik de Klerk (left) with Nelson Mandela, 1992.

The day apartheid died: South Africa's first free elections – archive, 1994  | South Africa | The Guardian

White South Africans voted to end apartheid 40 years ago – San Diego  Union-Tribune

South Africa - Postapartheid South Africa | Britannica
Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela (18 July 1918 – 5 December 2013)

posted by Bob Karm in African American,ANNIVERSARY,Apartheid,HISTORY,POLITICAL,President,Segregation and have No Comments

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