TRC Episode 25, Part 04

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  • čas přidán 19. 04. 2011
  • These were all human rights violations stories we've listened to so far. That is what the Truth Commission has been concentrating on in its first six months. The Truth Commission has now entered a new phase, a phase where the perpetrators rather than the victims will get prominence. If one looks back at six months of testimony by victims a few clear trends emerge. The first is that the brutalities of apartheid were not confined to cities and big townships. It reached into every village and location. De Aar, Toyandu, Brandfort, Colesburg, Mtubatuba, Aliwal-North, Indwe, Potchefstroom, New Castle. Another trend is the insistence that truth is a precondition to forgiveness. And very few victims asked for financial compensation. They asked for the remains of their relatives, for heroes' acres or walls of remembrance, for hearing aids, for medical assistance or education bursaries. In the 1960s and 70s there were a lot of deaths in police detention. In the 80s and early 90s activists were simply killed where they lived and worked. Another clear trend: the vast majority of reported murders, disappearances, and torture cases happened during the dark decade of the eighties, especially after the states of emergency. One figure dominated this period, the architect of total onslaught, Pieter Willem Botha. Botha also dominated much of the testimony at the Truth Commission this week, at the former Defence Force submission in Cape Town and at the amnesty hearings in Johannesburg. One of the repeated obsessions with the former rulers and their security operators is that the Truth Commission does not understand the contexts of their war against the liberation movements. In August former state president FW de Klerk and Freedom Front leader Constand Viljoen spent much time during their submissions to the Truth Commission explaining their war psychosis caused by the dangers of communist and black revolutionary onslaught.

Komentáře • 36

  • @corazoncubano5372
    @corazoncubano5372 Před 8 lety +12

    After living under the sickness of apartheid for so so long it going to take a few generations before S. Africa will be alright. I do believe that things will improve in the future but its going to take a while.

    • @ritamedina-molina8550
      @ritamedina-molina8550 Před rokem

      It will never happen they are too corrupt

    • @marcellekravitz2411
      @marcellekravitz2411 Před 26 dny

      O fo dimwitt stop wearing dresses maybe ur brain will get fesh air amd u can give us a truthful smart comment

  • @ritamedina-molina8550
    @ritamedina-molina8550 Před rokem +2

    Please leave this man in peace now..focus on the corrupt anc cadres.

  • @willemstrydom4074
    @willemstrydom4074 Před 9 lety +2

    What a classic, Alex Boraine giving everyone hell just to write a book 20 years later on whats gone wrong in SA.

  • @cheyenneasiafoxe292
    @cheyenneasiafoxe292 Před měsícem

    Botha was responsible!

  • @charlesmorland750
    @charlesmorland750 Před 2 lety

    FORGIVENESS BUT NEVER FORGET - LEST WE FORGET!!!

  • @5bongz
    @5bongz Před 11 lety +2

    Via keepvid.com

  • @jorgealvidrez9641
    @jorgealvidrez9641 Před rokem

    9:04 Magnus Malan describing and defending the death squad CCB and explains how they killed ANC members from killing civilians and stopped functioning because of someone “stepping out of line.”

  • @andreasmikoleiczik6120
    @andreasmikoleiczik6120 Před 7 lety +3

    I grew up in the British Virgin Islands which is in the Caribbean and the shit ass apartheid government mentality of S Africa made it all the way to the peaceful island I grew up on. One of my fathers friend who was a white guy had to flee S Africa because he was in love with a black lady and was on some wanted list by the government.He was a nice guy and also an interesting person to talk to. There was also a white family that made their way to the British Virgin Islands around 1976 and their daughter was very nasty to us people who were non white. From my understanding she was disciplined by her family. It took her 3 years to be civil with her other class mates. From my understanding her attitudes were learned from going to whatever all white school she attended ins South Africa. This was from 1977 to 1980.

    • @plofkraak6536
      @plofkraak6536 Před 5 lety +1

      What a joke!
      The propaganda still lives on.
      Ignorance rules in the minds of people who are unwilling to investigate.

    • @sivungumbela4500
      @sivungumbela4500 Před rokem

      Yes white SA'ns are very racist..they have since taught their children not to show open racism but racism still burns very fiery in their hearts

  • @cheyenneasiafoxe292
    @cheyenneasiafoxe292 Před 2 lety

    I find it impossible to believe that those SADF generals claim NO responsibility for the atrocity or deaths of so many ANC operatives! Sad! Gutless! and terrible!

  • @josephortizgarcia
    @josephortizgarcia Před 12 lety +1

    ...war against the liberation movement?! This is insane.

  • @ritamedina-molina8550

    Just to listen to this makes me sick.

  • @josephortizgarcia
    @josephortizgarcia Před 12 lety +2

    @josephortizgarcia ...and PLEASE don't call this position racist. I will laugh, I will!

  • @josephortizgarcia
    @josephortizgarcia Před 12 lety +2

    These are devils.