Dare Not Linger

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Dare Not Linger Page 51

by Nelson Mandela


  Sigcau, King Xolilizwe

  Sigxashe, Sizakele

  Sipolilo campaign

  Siqungati

  Sisulu (née Thethiwe), Nontsikelelo (Ntsiki) Albertina

  Sisulu, Walter Ulyate Max (clan names, Xhamela and Tyhopho)

  age

  approval of cabinet positions

  banned

  Conference for a Democratic Future

  imprisonment

  influence

  Lusaka conference

  Mandela’s view of

  on Mandela

  relationship with Mandela

  release from prison

  succession question

  view of Bantustans

  Skweyiya, Zola

  Slovo, Joe

  Smit, ‘Basie’

  Sobukwe, Robert Mangaliso

  Sokupa, Silumko

  songs

  call-and-response chants

  for Mandela

  liberation

  Nasrec conference

  national anthems

  new

  on cruel cops

  on heroes and martyrs

  refrains

  revolutionary

  ‘Sekunjalo’

  traditional

  Sophocles

  South African Broadcasting Corporation

  South African Communist Party (SACP)

  activists

  banned

  cabinet briefing

  leadership

  Tripartite Alliance

  unbanned

  veterans

  South African Council of Churches (SACC)

  South African Defence Force (SADF)

  Botha’s relationship with

  briefing on TRC

  generals form AVF

  leadership

  Mandela’s address

  massacre of Namibian refugees

  meetings with MK

  merge into SANDF

  re-education of members

  support for UNITA

  South African Indian Congress (SAIC)

  South African National Defence Force (SANDF)

  briefing on arrest of Malan

  Command Council

  formation

  integration and rationalisation

  languages

  leadership

  military intervention in Lesotho

  MK difficulties

  replacement of Chief

  report fabricated

  Strategic Defence Procurement Package

  South African National Editors’ Forum (SANEF)

  South African Native National Congress (SANNC)

  South African Police, South African Police Service (SAP, SAPS)

  amnesty applications

  briefing on TRC

  budget

  Code of Conduct

  Detective component

  Independent Complaints Directorate (ICD)

  leadership

  Mandela’s addresses

  Mandela’s praise for

  National Commissioner appointments

  National Crime Information Management Centre

  National Crime Prevention Strategy (NCPS)

  reconstruction

  renamed

  security detail for Mandela

  support for Inkatha

  transformation

  Vlakplaas Unit

  South African Reserve Bank

  South African Revenue Service

  South African Rugby Football Union (SARFU)

  South African Secret Service (SASS)

  South African Times

  South African United Front (SAUF)

  South West Africa People’s Organisation (SWAPO)

  South West African National Union (SWANU)

  Southern African Development Community (SADC)

  Consultative Conference’s Investment Forum

  formation

  Lesotho intervention

  Mandela’s position

  Organ

  policy framework

  South Africa’s role

  summit (1996)

  summit (1997)

  summit (1998)

  Zone of Peace and Cooperation

  The Sowetan

  Soweto Uprising

  Sparks, Allister

  Springboks

  The Star

  State of Emergency (1960)

  detainees

  exile to escape arrest

  lifting

  State Security Council (SSC)

  Stengel, Richard

  Steyn, Pierre

  Stofile, Arnold

  Stofile, Makhenkesi

  Streeter, Chris

  Suharto, President

  Sunday Independent

  Sunday Times

  Suppression of Communism Act, No. 44, 1950

  Suttner, Raymond

  Swart, Jack

  Swart, Johan

  Tambo, Adelaide

  Tambo, Oliver Reginald (OR)

  ANC career

  ANC presidency

  consensus policy

  Constitutional Committee

  death

  illness

  influence

  leadership

  musical performances

  relationship with Hani

  relationship with Mandela

  return from exile

  SAUF

  strategies

  tributes to

  Taruc, Luis

  Taunyane, Leepile

  Taylor, Elizabeth

  Taylor, Paul

  Terre’Blanche, Eugene

  AWB

  influence

  view of Mandela

  violence

  volkstaat issue

  Thema, Selope

  Thulare, Queen Mankopodi

  Thulare, Rhyne

  Touré, Sékou

  Transitional Executive Council (TEC)

  established

  IMF loan

  Kriegler’s report

  members

  sub-councils

  Treason Trial

  acquittal of all accused

  defence team

  defendants

  Mandela accused

  Trew, Tony

  Tripartite Alliance

  The Trojan Horse Massacre

  Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC)

  amnesty applications

  established

  hearings

  legal representatives

  Mandela’s support

  objectives

  participation issues

  radio coverage

  report

  responses to

  status

  terms of reference

  Tutu’s role

  Tshivhase, Khosi

  Tshwete, Steve Vukile

  Tutu, Archbishop Desmond

  briefing on Malan arrest

  Mandela’s election as president

  Mandela’s release

  retirement

  TRC role

  view of ‘gravy train’

  Umkhonto weSizwe (MK)

  agreement to stop training in South Africa

  allegations about

  casualty rate

  establishment

  Hani’s role

  imprisonment of members

  incorporated into SANDF

  leadership

  Lusaka conference

  Luthuli Detachment

  Mandela’s role

  Mandela’s tribute to

  meetings with SADF

  mutiny

  Rivonia Trial

  security detail for Mandela

  Sipolilo campaign

  Wankie campaign

  Union Buildings

  Mandela’s inauguration

  marches on

  presidential office

  United Democratic Front (UDF)

  achievements

  Inkatha relations

  KwaMakhutha massacre

  leadership

  Mandela’
s communications with

  origins

  support for CONTRALESA

  United Democratic Movement (UDM)

  United Nations

  ANC appeal

  Anti-Apartheid Committee

  Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD)

  Congo-Zaire talks

  Gaddafi’s relationship

  Kosovo issues

  Mandela at fifty-third General Assembly (1998)

  Mandela’s address (1993)

  Mandela’s address (1995)

  Mandela’s meeting with Special Representative

  Mandela’s speech (1994)

  Nansen Medal

  relationship with South Africa

  resolutions against apartheid

  South African debt

  South African role

  suspension of South Africa

  UWUSA (United Workers Union of South Africa)

  Uys, Pieter-Dirk

  van der Merwe, Fanie

  van der Merwe, Johan

  van der Walt, Tjaart

  Vena, Mzwandile

  Verwoerd, Betsie

  Verwoerd, Dr Hendrik Frensch

  Victor Verster Prison

  Mandela at

  Mandela’s release

  Viljoen, Constand

  Afrikaner Volksfront (AVF)plans

  amnesty issues

  Botha’s invitation

  Freedom Front

  joining negotiations

  Mandela’s meeting with

  Mandela’s view of

  relationship with Mandela’s presidency

  response to ANC election victory

  view of Mandela

  Visser, Kobus

  Vlakplaas Unit

  volkstaat

  Volkstaat Council

  Vrye Weekblad

  Waluś, Janusz

  Wankie Campaign

  Weekly Mail

  Wessels, Leon

  White Paper on National Defence for the Republic of South Africa

  White Paper on Reconstruction and Development

  Wicomb, Zoë

  Williams, Abe

  Winfrey, Oprah

  World Bank

  World Council of Churches

  World Economic Forum

  World Trade Organisation

  Worsthorne, Peregrine

  Xaba, Jabulani

  Xhamela see Sisulu, Walter

  Yaker, Layashi

  Yeltsin, Boris

  Yutar, Percy

  Zimbabwe People’s Revolutionary Army

  Zion Christian Church (ZCC)

  Zone of Peace and Cooperation

  Zulu, Bishop Alpheus

  Zulu, Prince Gideon

  Zulu, Sifiso

  Zuma, Jacob Gedleyihlekisa

  ANC deputy president

  cabinet selection approval

  ex-wife

  Mandela’s view of

  Robben Island alumnus

  succession question

  talks with right-wing generals

  work with traditional leaders

  Zwelithini, King Goodwill see kaBhekuzulu

  ALSO BY NELSON MANDELA

  Long Walk to Freedom

  Conversations with Myself

  A NOTE ABOUT THE AUTHORS

  Nelson Mandela was born in the Transkei, South Africa, on July 18, 1918. He joined the African National Congress in 1944 and was engaged in resistance against the ruling National Party’s apartheid policies for many years before being arrested in August 1962. Mandela was incarcerated for more than twenty-seven years, during which time his status as a potent symbol of resistance to apartheid grew steadily. Released from prison in 1990, Mandela won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993 and was inaugurated as the first democratically elected president of South Africa in 1994. He is the author of the international bestseller Long Walk to Freedom. He died on December 5, 2013, at age ninety-five. You can sign up for email updates here.

  Mandla Langa was born in 1950 in Durban, South Africa. After being arrested in 1976, he went into exile and has lived in Botswana, Mozambique, and Angola—where he did his Umkhonto weSizwe (the armed wing of the African National Congress) military training—as well as in Hungary, Zambia, and the United Kingdom, where he was the African National Congress’s cultural representative. A writer and journalist, he was the first South African to be awarded the Arts Council of Great Britain bursary for creative writing, and he has been a columnist for the Sunday Independent and The New Nation. In 2007 he was the recipient of the presidential Order of Ikhamanga in Silver for his literary and journalistic contribution to democracy in South Africa. He is also the author of several acclaimed novels, including The Lost Colours of the Chameleon, which won the 2009 Commonwealth Writers’ Prize for Best Book in the African region. You can sign up for email updates here.

  Graça Machel was born in Gaza, Mozambique, in 1945. She was a member of the Mozambique Liberation Front (FRELIMO), which fought for and won independence from Portugal in 1975. A teacher, a human rights activist, an international advocate for women’s and children’s rights, and a politician, she was—from 1975 until his death in 1986—married to Samora Machel, the first president of Mozambique. She married Nelson Mandela on his eightieth birthday, in July 1998. Among numerous awards for her humanitarian work, she was a recipient of the United Nations Nansen Medal in 1995, and in 2007 she was made an honorary Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire. You can sign up for email updates here.

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  CONTENTS

  Title Page

  Copyright Notice

  Epigraph

  Prologue by Graça Machel

  A Note to the Reader

  Preface

  One: The Challenge of Freedom

  Two: Negotiating Democracy

  Three: A Free and Fair Election

  Four: Getting into the Union Buildings

  Five: National Unity

  Six: The Presidency and the Constitution

  Seven: Parliament

  Eight: Traditional Leadership and Democracy

  Nine: Transformation of the State

  Ten: Reconciliation

  Eleven: Social and Economic Transformation

  Twelve: Negotiating the Media

  Thirteen: On the African and World Stages

  Epilogue

  Photographs

  Supplementary Information

  Appendix A: Abbreviations for Organisations

  Appendix B: People, Places and Events

  Appendix C: Timeline: 1990–99

  Appendix D: Map of South Africa, c. 1996

  Notes

  Acknowledgements

  Index

  Also by Nelson Mandela

  A Note About the Authors

  Permissions Acknowledgements

  Copyright

  PERMISSIONS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  Grateful acknowledgement is made for permission to reprint the following material:

  Extract from the poem ‘Haste’, taken from Sacred Hope by Agostinho Neto, copyright © 1974 Tanzania Publishing House. Translation by Marga Holness.

  Extract from the poem ‘Justice’, taken from Scottsboro Limited: Four Poems and a Play in Verse by Langston Hughes, copyright © 1932 Golden Stair Press. Reproduced by permission of David Higham Associates.

  Extract from the poem ‘Die Kind’ by Ingrid Jonker.

  Front endpaper: Nelson Mandela Foundation, photograph by Ardon Bar-Hama

  Nelson Mandela Foundation, photograph by Ardon Bar-Hama

&n
bsp; Chris Ledochowski

  Louise Gubb courtesy Nelson Mandela Foundation

  AFP/Getty Images

  Frans Esterhuyse

  Tom Stoddart Archive/Getty Images

  Denis Farrell/AP

  David Brauchli/AP

  Peter Turnley/Getty Images

  Paul Weinberg/South Photographs/Africa Media Online

  Nanda Soobben/Africa Media Online

  Lewis Horwitz courtesy Nelson Mandela Foundation

  Alexander Joe/AFP/Getty Images

  Foto24/Gallo Images/Getty Images

  unknown courtesy Nelson Mandela Foundation

  Nelson Mandela Foundation, photograph by Ardon Bar-Hama

  Paul Weinberg/South Photographs/Africa Media Online

  Oryx Media Archive/Gallo Images/Getty Images

  Oryx Media Archive/Gallo Images/Getty Images

  Obed Zilwa/AP

  Mike Hutchings/Reuters

  Nelson Mandela Foundation, photograph by Ardon Bar-Hama

  Walter Dhladhla/Getty Images

  Henner Frankenfeld/Picturenet Africa

  Adil Bradlow/Africa Media Online

  David Goldblatt/South Photographs/Africa Media Online

  Guy Tillim/AFP/Getty Images

  Clinton Presidential Library

  Yoav Lemmer/Getty Images

  Nelson Mandela Foundation, photograph by Ardon Bar-Hama

  Pool BASSIGNAC/BUU/HIRES/Getty Images

  Eric Miller courtesy Nelson Mandela Foundation

  Julian Parker/Getty Images

  Julian Parker/Getty Images

  Amr Nabil/Getty Images

  Str Old/Reuters

  Media24/Gallo Images/Getty Images

  Nelson Mandela Foundation, photograph by Ardon Bar-Hama

  Juda Ngwenya

  Paul Grendon/Alamy

  Ross Kinnaird/EMPICS/Getty Images

  Oryx Media Archive/Gallo Images/Getty Images

  Walter Dhladhla/Getty Images

  Adil Bradlow/Africa Media Online

  Louise Gubb/[email protected]

  Louise Gubb/[email protected]

  Benny Gool

  Eric Miller courtesy Nelson Mandela Foundation

  Eric Miller courtesy Nelson Mandela Foundation

  Zapiro

  back endpaper: Nelson Mandela Foundation, photograph by Ardon Bar-Hama.

  Front endpaper image: From chapter six of Mandela’s memoir on his presidential years, he reflects on being brought before the Constitutional Court. A staunch advocate of the democracy’s new laws under its Constitution, he writes: ‘In the new South Africa there is nobody, not even the President, who is above the law, that the rule of law generally and, in particular, the independence of the judiciary should be respected.’ (See here)

  Back endpaper image: From an early draft of Mandela’s memoir of his presidential years, he describes the world’s reaction to South Africa’s first democratic elections in April 1994: ‘The world, aware of the formidable challenges facing the first democratically elected government, hailed us as a miracle nation and threw open its previously closed doors to all South Africans, irrespective of their ethnicity and background.’

 

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