Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: FRIDAY, February 1, 1991 TAG: 9102010780 SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL PAGE: A/1 EDITION: EVENING SOURCE: Associated Press DATELINE: CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA LENGTH: Medium
Thousands of demonstrators marched outside parliament and in cities across the country to demand the immediate abolition of apartheid, closure of parliament, and formation of a multiracial government. Others stayed away from work in protest.
De Klerk's speech, coming one year after he stunned the world by promising to end apartheid, represented another major step toward his promise of sharing power with this country's black majority.
However, scrapping the last of the apartheid laws will not in itself resolve the country's black-white political conflict. De Klerk has said a new power-sharing constitution must be negotiated with black opposition groups before the white-minority government gives up power. Today, he rejected calls for a multiracial interim government.
African National Congress leader Walter Sisulu, speaking to an opposition rally in Cape Town, said de Klerk's reforms fell far short of what most South Africans want. "We don't have the vote. This is what our people want today," he said.
However, De Klerk, speaking to the opening session of parliament, said his proposals augur the quick end of sanctioned racial discrimination:
"The repeal of these last remaining discriminatory laws will bring us to the end of an era, an era in which it was sought to deal with the reality of a diversity of peoples . . . by means of discriminatory coercion.
De Klerk said the government will propose scrapping the last three pillars of apartheid. He said it will call for ending outright the Group Areas Act and the land acts, while modifying the Population Registration Act in advance of its abolition.
The Group Areas Act segregates residential areas along racial lines, and the land acts similarly regulate land ownership rights. The population act forces South Africans to register in separate racial groups for political, educational and other purposes.
De Klerk's National Party controls parliament, and repeal of the remaining apartheid laws during this parliamentary session appears certain.
However, de Klerk's speech prompted a walkout by outraged lawmakers of the pro-apartheid Conservative Party.
by CNB