South African Freedom Day: All you need to know

politics2024-05-21 07:06:1628

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — South Africans celebrate their “Freedom Day” every April 27, when they remember their country’s pivotal first democratic election in 1994 that announced the official end of the racial segregation and oppression of apartheid.

Saturday is the 30th anniversary of that momentous vote, when millions of Black South Africans, young and old, decided their own futures for the first time, a fundamental right they had been denied by a white minority government.

The first all-race election saw the previously banned African National Congress party win overwhelmingly and made its leader, Nelson Mandela, the country’s first Black president four years after he was released from prison.

Here’s what you need to know about that iconic moment and a South Africa that’s changing again 30 years on:

Address of this article:http://guinea.shellye-mcdaniel.com/article-15c499563.html

Popular

Elon Musk gets approval from FDA to implant his Neuralink brain chip into a second patient

Mediaworks data breach: Hackers email victims, demanding $820

Police, iwi and gangs hold hui after rugby club van shot at

Literacy, numeracy tests as NCEA requirement 'detrimental' to learners

Devout Christian doctor, 68, who punched dementia

'They cruise, we lose'

Cathay Pacific asks staff to take three weeks unpaid leave as coronavirus hits bottom line

Man accused of Ellerslie murder named

LINKS