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How South Africa has changed 30 years after apartheid
The Economist· 8 hours agoNelson Mandela voted for the first time in his life on April 27th 1994 in Inanda, a poor area on the...
Why South Africans are fed up after 30 years of democracy
The Economist· 8 hours agoAlmost 30 years ago, on May 10th 1994, Nelson Mandela was inaugurated as South Africa’s first black...
Today in History: May 2, Mandela claims victory in first democratic South Africa elections
The Mining Journal· 14 hours agoNelson Mandela addresses supporters during victory celebrations in Johannesburg as he and the...
Nelson Mandela mural to be unveiled at freedom celebration
BBC via Yahoo News· 6 days agoParisian-born, Bristol-based singer MĀDŁY will perform at the Freedom Day celebration [MĀDŁY] A...
30 years since the end of apartheid, is South Africa still an emblem of democracy? : Consider This...
NPR· 4 days agoThree decades ago, South Africa held its first democratic election, closing the door on the ...
30 Years after apartheid: Reflecting on South Africa's ongoing fight for democracy
MSNBC via Yahoo News· 4 days agoAli Velshi, a child of South African Indians, vividly recalls the day anti-apartheid leader Nelson ...
Mandela’s world: A photographic retrospective of apartheid South Africa
Al Jazeera· 6 days agoYears before his death in 2020, Schadeberg shared some of his iconic images - and the stories behind...
Mandela's daughter thanks college for sculpture
BBC via AOL· 6 days agoNelson Mandela’s daughter has thanked a sculptor who tracked down her father and created a bust of him. Makaziwe "Maki" Mandela-Amuah sent a “message of ...
After Apartheid
New York Times· 6 days agoThirty years after apartheid ended, South Africa will vote again. For the first time, Black South Africans were among those casting ballots. Hopes ran...
30 years of democracy in South Africa
WAMC Northeast Public Radio· 4 days agoThis weekend marks 30 years since Nelson Mandela was elected president of South Africa, officially ending the country's era of apartheid. NPR's Scott Detrow talks with journalist Redi Thlabi.