From the DW:
“South Africa: apartheid victims demand reparations”
(These protesters are demanding
reparations for their suffering under apartheid)
Thirty years after the end of
apartheid, dozens of South Africans have set up a protest camp outside the
Constitutional Court. They are demanding reparations for human rights abuses
suffered under white minority rule. The voices of some 50 elderly protesters
are heard echoing in song across the grounds of South Africa's Constitutional
Court in Johannesburg, the commercial heart of South Africa. They are demanding
justice and reparations for abuses suffered under apartheid — 30 years after
the country became a democracy.
They are all members of the
Khulumani Support Group and the Galela Campaign — two groups fighting for
financial redress for the victims of white minority rule under apartheid. The
protesters say that since they weren't identified as victims of human rights
abuses during apartheid by South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission
(TRC), led by the late Archbishop Desmond Tutu 28 years ago, they haven't
benefited from any reparations paid out by the government to date. While the
group have protested in front of the court intermittently for years, their
permanent camp outside the Constitional Court only started in November 2023.
'We were the revolutionaries' One
of the protestors is Thabo Shabangu. He was shot in the back by police officers
in 1990 during a demonstration against the oppression of the majority black
population by the white regime — just as the country was warming up to the idea
of equality and democracy. The 61-year-old told DW that he has never received
any compensation for his injuries. He feels abandoned, he says: "I am so
very, very disappointed. We are the revolutionaries, we are the people that
formed this democracy, we are the first democracy people. It is us that fought
for the reparations that today we are not eating the fruit of." Shabangu
wants reparations for the suffering he experienced during the struggle against
apartheid, as well as greater medical and social support. Like around a
third of all South Africans, he is unemployed, and money is scarce. "We
thought the TRC would bring us justice," he says about South Africa's
democracy project. Those protesting with him outside the Constitutional Court
say despite their role in the fight for South Africa to become a democracy
three decades ago, they won't vote in South Africa's upcoming 2024 elections in
May if reparations aren't paid: "No reparations — no vote," says
Shabangu.
Amnesty for perpetrators Formal
hearings before the Truth and Reconciliation Commission began in April 1996 and
ended in October 1998, with then President Nelson Mandela personally appointing
Tutu to chair the commission. Its aim was to promote reconciliation and
forgiveness, rather than retribution, between perpetrators and victims of
apartheid. During this period, the commission focused on evidence of
killings, abductions and torture of people, as well as other human rights
abuses. Victims and perpetrators often sat opposite each other in
community halls and churches across the country. Perpetrators who gave a
full account of what had happened were granted amnesty — a painful compromise
for many victims. But the promise of impunity brought to light the truth
about the fate of many people who had disappeared without a trace, those who
had been abducted, killed and buried somewhere.
Minimum compensation for
victims Thus, just two years after the African National Congress (ANC) came
to power in the first democratic elections in 1994, the atrocities of the past
were in the public spotlight.
To no one's surprise, the vast majority of
those who had suffered at the hands of the apartheid state were found to be
black South Africans, although some cases also involved white victims as well
as others. In 2003, when the truth commission eventually published its delayed
recommendations for repatriations, it recognized 21,000 victims and recommended
paying them a monthly allowance administered by a special presidential fund.
This list was later cut down to 17,000 people eligible for reparations. However,
then President Thabo Mbeki arranged for a one-off payment of 30,000 rand (worth
$3,890 or €3,600 at the time) instead. As well as the one-off payments, the
fund was also supposed to be used to support victims' housing, education and
healthcare but in June 2023, it still had around $100 million in unused assets.
The protestors outside the Constitutional Court say that is should be opened up
for new payments.
Calls to revisit victims' list
However, there is still the issue of who is and who isn't officially
recognized as a victim of apartheid. Calls for the Department of Justice and
Constitutional Development to reopen the investigation into who qualifies are
mounting. The national director of the Khulumani, Marjorie Dobson, says
the group has tens of thousands of members who were unable to make a claim when
the TRC was holding its hearings in the 1990s. For one, the government
failed to give sufficient notice of how victims could make their declarations
to the truth commission, she tells DW. But many victims also lacked money to
travel to attend hearings. "We have documented this all for the
Department of Justice because we think it's completely unjustified to just
close the doors when all this work has been documented and the flaws are
actually on the side of the state," Dobson says. Danisile Mabanga,
whose family was forcibly displaced during apartheid, is among those still
hoping to receive compensation. "We knew about the commission, but we
didn't manage to go there," she tells DW. "Times were hard and we
were scared." Justice Minister Ronald Lamola meanwhile says he sees no
reason for the people to stay protesting at the court: "They should go
home," he told DW in an interview. "There is nothing that we can do.
The parliament has the [victims'] list, it's closed. And it would be an
irregularity to for us open the list."
^ I fully support giving
Reparations to those who suffered under Apartheid. 46 years of Official
Government Discrimination and all the violence attached to that doesn’t just go
away even though it has been 30 years since Apartheid ended. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/south-africas-apartheid-era-victims-demand-reparations/a-68959332
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