Sunday, April 28, 2024


South Africa marks 30 years since apartheid amid growing discontent


Polls predict ANC likely to lose parliamentary majority, due to high unemployment and wealth inequality


Associated Press in Pretoria
Sat 27 Apr 2024 

South Africa marked 30 years since the end of apartheid and the birth of its democracy with a ceremony in the capital that included a 21-gun salute and the waving of the country’s multicoloured flag.

Any sense of celebration on the momentous anniversary was however set against a growing discontent with the current government.


As head of state, president Cyril Ramaphosa presided over the gathering in a huge white tent in the gardens of the government buildings in Pretoria.

He also spoke as the leader of the African National Congress party, which was widely credited with liberating South Africa’s black majority from the racist system of oppression that made the country a pariah for nearly half a century.


The ANC has been in power ever since the first democratic, all-race election of 27 April 1994, the vote that officially ended apartheid.

But this Freedom Day holiday fell against a poignant backdrop: analysts and polls predict that the waning popularity of the party once led by Nelson Mandela is likely to see it lose its parliamentary majority for the first time, as a new generation of South Africans make their voices heard next month in what may be the most important election since 1994.

“Few days in the life of our nation can compare to that day, when freedom was born,” Ramaphosa said in a speech centred on the nostalgia of 1994, when black people were allowed to vote for the first time, the once-banned ANC swept to power, and Mandela became the country’s first black president. “South Africa changed for ever. It signalled a new chapter in the history of our nation, a moment that resonated across Africa and across the world.

“On that day, the dignity of all the people of South Africa was restored.”

The president, who stood in front of a banner emblazoned with the word “Freedom”, also recognised the main problems South Africa still has three decades later with vast poverty and inequality, issues that will be central yet again when millions vote on 29 May. Ramaphosa conceded there had been “setbacks”.


The 1994 election changed South Africa from a country where black and other people of colour were denied most basic freedoms, not just the right to vote. Laws controlled where they lived, where they were allowed to go on any given day and what jobs they could have. After apartheid fell, a constitution was adopted guaranteeing the rights of all South Africans no matter their race, religion, gender or sexuality.

But that has not significantly improved the lives of millions, with South Africa’s black majority, which makes up more than 80% of the population of 62 million, still overwhelmingly affected by severe poverty.

The official unemployment rate of 32% is the highest in the world, and the rate for young people between the ages of 15 and 24 is higher than 60%. More than 16 million South Africans – 25% of the country – rely on monthly welfare grants for survival.

South Africa is still the most unequal country in the world in terms of wealth distribution, according to the World Bank, with race a key factor.

While the damage of apartheid remains difficult to undo, the ANC is increasingly being blamed for South Africa’s current problems.

In the week leading up to the anniversary, countless South Africans were asked what 30 years of freedom from apartheid meant to them. The dominant response was that while 1994 was a historic moment, it is now overshadowed by the joblessness, violent crime, corruption and near-collapse of basic services such as electricity and water that plagues South Africa in 2024.

It is also poignant that many South Africans who never experienced apartheid and are referred to as “Born Frees” are now old enough to vote.

Outside the tent where Ramaphosa spoke in front of mostly dignitaries and politicians, a group of young black South Africans born after 1994 and who support a new political party called Rise Mzansi wore T-shirts with the words “2024 is our 1994” on them. Their message was that they were looking beyond the ANC and for another change for their future in next month’s election.

“They don’t know what happened before 1994,” said Seth Mazibuko, an older supporter of Rise Mzansi and a well-known anti-apartheid activist in the 1970s.

“Let us agree that we messed up,” Mazibuko said of the past 30 years, which have left the youngsters standing behind him directly affected by the second-worst youth unemployment rate in the world behind Djibouti.

He added: “There’s a new chance in elections next month.”

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