Tag Cloud
Fear
Government
Potable Water
China
Coalition of Immokalee Workers
Decision making
Untouchables
Torture
Oppression
freedom from persecution
Social Movements
Fair Treatment
Non-violence
Citizenship
education
Reform Degradation
Womens Rights
Censorship
Property
Religious Freedom
Independence
Microcredit
Peaceful Assembly
Rights
Legal Protection
Forced Labor
Free Movement
Fair Trade
Forgiveness
Personal Security
Quality of LIfe
Family Farmer
Human Rights
Demilitarization
Racial profiling
laogai
freedom from discrimination
Environmentalist
Social activism
Factors of production
Advocacy
Freedom from Violence
Power
Sex slavery
Peace
Workers Rights
Racism
Labor
Freedom of Expression
Cycle of Violence
Standard of living
Political systems
Extrajudicial Killings
Transparency
Migrant Labor
Labor Reform
Indigenous Rights
Economic systems
Factory Farm
Free Expression
Racism
Frederik Willem de Klerk
Equality and Compromise in South Africa
Equality Segregation Racism Indigenous Rights
>>More
In South Africa, from 1948 until 1994, there was a system of legal racial segregation known as apartheid. Under apartheid, laws stripped black people and other minorities of their rights and dignity. However, in 1994, through the efforts of a reform-minded President Frederik De Klerk and the ANC leader Nelson Mandela they brought an end to apartheid.
De Klerk‘s political career began in 1969, when he was elected to the House of Assembly, one of the houses of Parliament. He quickly moved up in the National Party where he was appointed head of several ministerial divisions including: mines and energy affairs, internal affairs, national education and planning. During this time in his career, de Klerk earned a reputation for supporting segregated universities and was not known to advocate reform.
In February 1989 he was elected head of the National Party. Only seven months later, after president P.W. Botha stepped down due to a stroke, de Klerk became South Africa’s new President. As President, de Klerk committed himself to the reform of the apartheid system. He entered into talks with representatives from four official racial groups (white, black, colored and Indian) to negotiate a post-apartheid constitution. De Klerk ordered the release of political prisoners including anti-apartheid activist and future South African President Nelson Mandela and lifted the ban on political groups such as the African National Congress and Pan-Africanist Congress of Azania.
In 1991 de Klerk’s efforts culminated in the government’s repeal of the apartheid legislation, which was strongly supported by white voters. De Klerk, Nelson Mandela and several other representatives drafted a new constitution which led to multi-racial national elections resulting in the victory of the ANC and Mandela. In 1993, de Klerk received the Nobel Peace Prize along with Nelson Mandela for their contributions to the establishment of nonracial democracy in South Africa and ending apartheid.






