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Summary Civil Resistance to Apartheid in the 1980's - IEB syllabus notes

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In-depth, fully summarized notes looking at the civil Resistance to Apartheid in the 1980's.

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CIVIL RESISTANCE IN SOUTH AFRICA – 1980’S

CRISIS OF APARTHEID IN 80’S

 Beginning of the 80’s – ANC and other opposition parties were in exile, political leaders in jail
& government seemed to have enough power and military force to maintain its control
 Mid 80’s – crisis
 Late 80’s – internal resistance & international pressures had set the scene for the collapse of
the apartheid government

TOTAL ONSLAUGHT – TOTAL STRATEGY

 After Soweto Uprising – government had to chain its strategy to prevent further resistance
and retain power
 Mixed reform with repression – under PW Botha
 “Total Onslaught” – government used propaganda to convince people that the communists
were plotting to seize RSA through military attacks, protests & international criticism
 To meet this onslaught – they adopted “total strategy” – increased military build-up,
censorship, banning of people, organisations & political rallies, detentions without trials
 1985 – national state of emergency – police and army had extra power to take action against
opposition, which government propaganda presented as a communist threat
 Increased power in townships, protests, raids to attack ANC guerrilla bases and MPLA and
Frelimo governments in Angola and Mozambique
 Limited reform in an attempt to win support from the growing black middle class
 Reform coupled with oppression
 Government hoped that – these reforms would make Africans lose interest in more radical
challenges to Apartheid
 Not dismantling of apartheid – restructuring

CONTRADICTIONS OF APARTHEID EMERGE

 Economy began to grow – need for skilled workers – policies of the government designed to
keep black workers as providers of manual labour had failed – pressure from business
leaders and black workers to reform its policies affecting labour
 Bantu Education, colour bar in industry, pass laws, homeland system – all designed to keep
black workers as providers of manual labour in the economy

BLACK LOCAL AUTHORITIES ACT – 1982

 After Soweto Uprising – government set up local Community Councils to administer the
townships – under control of white government officials
 Aim  satisfy black political demands by giving very limited powers at local level
 Community councils would be elected by local residents – responsible for collecting rent and
service payments – made them unpopular with residents

TRICAMERAL PARLIAMENT

 Introduction of a new constitution in 1983 – created a Tricameral (3 chamber) parliament
 An attempt to win support from the coloured and Indian communities – but retain white
control at the same time
 3 separate parliaments for white, Indian, coloured representatives
 House of Assembly (white), Representatives (coloured), Delegates (Indian)

,  Each house  control its own affairs in matters such as housing & education – all other
matters still controlled my House of Assembly – political power remained in hands of whites
 Africans totally excluded – government policy saw that political representation for blacks
was confined to the homelands and the Community Councils

LABOUR MOVEMENTS BECOME MORE POWERFUL

 Growth of trade unions had started in 1973, continued throughout 70’s
 Economy dependent on black labour
 Bantustan policy kept black workers in homelands and they were only allowed temporary
employment – changed – manufacturing industry needed a stable, skilled work force
 Became clear in 1980’s  manufacturing sector stopped growing
 Demand for labour increased – workers began to voice their demands for legally recognized
unions
 Business leaders – needed a reliable form of communication with worker demands
 Wiehahn Committee – government appointed committee, recommended in 1979 – black
trade unions be legally recognized – policy of job reservation also relaxed
 Union membership increased rapidly  57 000 in 1979 to 500 000+ in 1984
 FOSATU (Federation of South African Trade Unions) 1979, NUM (National Union of
Mineworkers) 1982

PASS SYSTEM BREAKS DOWN

 Demand for labour increased – more people moving from homelands to cities, despite the
pass laws
 Women joined their husbands
 Number of informal settlements grew rapidly – state tried preventing this using arrests and
forced removals & by destroying informal settlements – but it did not work
 Urbanisation increased – so did the number of people breaking the law
 Courts and prisons overloaded – pass system began to break down
 Abolished in 1986 – government’s vision of separate development had FAILED – homelands
no longer existed

RESPONSE TO BOTHA’S REFORMS

 Widespread protests were held. This new wave of mass resistance continued throughout the
1980s.
 It involved trade unions, civic organisations, community, students and church leaders.
 By the mid-1980s these had turned into a determined and sustained national uprising.
 Not what NP expected – Black Local Authorities Act (1982) and Tricameral Constitution
(1983) had far reaching effects – sparked mass protests nationwide
 Government had failed to win support of coloured, Indians and blacks
 Clear that  they were trying to reconstruct apartheid, not dismantle it
 A number of democratic organisations joined forces to urge voters not to vote  UDF
(United Democratic Front)
 In 1984 – less than 20% of coloureds and Indians didn’t vote, despite huge efforts by
government



THE UNITED DEMOCRATIC FRONT (UDF)
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