Former
South African president Nelson Mandela waving to the media as he
arrived outside 10 Downing Street, in central London, for a meeting with
the British Prime Minister, on Aug. 28, 2007.
Almost two decades have passed since the end of legalized racial segregation in South Africa, yet the abolition of apartheid remains the biggest legacy of Nelson Mandela.
Anyone
aged 18 or under will not have witnessed the public separation of
whites and blacks enshrined in law, yet that was the daily reality in a
country where races had been kept apart since colonial times.
South
Africa continued to enforce racial division, denying blacks the right
to vote, until Mandela’s release from prison in 1990 allowed him to
begin negotiations with then-president Frederik Willem de Klerk.
Apartheid ended with the arrival of multi-racial elections in 1994.
This
transformation was achieved almost entirely peacefully despite the
country’s long history of racial violence and a brutal police force.
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