NUM press cutting service

Item

Title
NUM press cutting service
Creator
Date
1987
Description
The African National Congress, 75 years old tomorrow, is no longer being written off in South Africa as “the world's least successful terrorist organisation.” The black nationalist movement, which turned to violence after it was banned in 1960, is nowhere near a classic guerilla' victory in its fight for majority rule. But after three years of unprecedented black revolt in South Africa's townships, it has won recognition from the Government as its main enemy and a major security threat. Political analysts say this has in turn helped the outlawed ANC boost its overt political support in the townships — an increasingly important goal since it accepted how South African conditions impede conventional guerilla warfare. South African Government sources used to pour scorn on the ANC's guerilla operations and it justified crackdowns on dissent by speaking in general terms of an international, communist-backed' "total onslaught" against its rule.
Subject
Format
pdf
Language
English
Type
text
Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/10962/168592
Archive
Cory Library for Humanitites Research
Provenance
The item is held at the Cory Library for Humanities Research, Rhodes University, on behalf of the Labour Research Service
Extent
27 pages
Rights
National Union of Mineworkers (NUM)
Rights Holder
National Union of Mineworkers (NUM)
Use/re-use
The materials are made available explicitly for research and educational purposes. Any use of these materials must be cleared with the Labour Research Service.
Item sets
General Materials

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