Pan-Africanist Congress of Azania

South African organization
Also known as: PAC, Pan-Africanist Congress
Quick Facts
Also called (1959–64):
Pan-Africanist Congress
Date:
1959 - present
Areas Of Involvement:
equality
Related People:
Robert Sobukwe

Pan-Africanist Congress of Azania (PAC), South African organization and later political party pursuing “Africanist” policies in South Africa (which they would rename Azania) for black South Africans, in contrast to the nonracial or multiracial policies of other organizations, such as the African National Congress (ANC).

The PAC has its root in the ANC. During the 1940s an Africanist group led by Anton Lembede, Potlako Leballo, A.P. Mda, and Robert Sobukwe emerged within the ANC. They wanted South Africa returned to its indigenous inhabitants (“Africa for the Africans”) and were unwilling to give equal rights to all races. The latter point was an axiom of the Freedom Charter of 1955, a document calling for nonracial social democracy in South Africa that was adopted by several antiapartheid organizations, including the ANC in the following year. The group broke away from the ANC in 1958 and in April 1959 formed the Pan-Africanist Congress under the leadership of Sobukwe.

The hard-line PAC originally advocated such methods of political pressure as strikes and boycotts. On March 21, 1960, the PAC sponsored a nationwide one-day protest against the apartheid laws requiring blacks to carry passes, during which Sobukwe and others were arrested. (From this point on, Sobukwe was either imprisoned or banned—severely restricted in travel, association, and speech—until his death in February 1978.) During one such demonstration, at Sharpeville in the Transvaal, police fired into a crowd, killing 69 Africans and wounding 180. (See Sharpeville massacre.) In further response to the demonstration, the government essentially outlawed the PAC (as well as the ANC) by banning them as of April 8, 1960.

Like the ANC, but less successfully, the PAC moved its operations underground and established an external base in Tanzania to bypass its banning in South Africa. A PAC military organization, Poqo (Xhosa: “Pure”), was formed, the aim of which was to overthrow white rule in South Africa by violence. Apart from some incidents in the early 1960s, however, it was largely ineffective, and it eventually disbanded under the pressure of the South African government’s harsh response to its activities.

Quarrels among the PAC leaders, disunity as to objectives (notably, Leballo wished to use Lesotho instead of Tanzania as a base for armed struggle against South Africa), and failure to win widespread international support led to the decline in support for the PAC within South Africa. Also having a negative impact on PAC operations was the weakened and sometimes unclear leadership that existed during its banning. Leballo claimed to be acting president in 1963, although he was constantly engaged in a power struggle with other party leaders and was eventually expelled from the organization in 1979. Vusumuzi Make then briefly led the organization until 1981, when he stepped down in favour of John Pokela, who served until his death in 1985. Some stability returned when Zephania Lekoane Mothopeng was elected president of the PAC in 1986; he would lead the organization until 1990.

During the 1980s the PAC’s militant Africanism was overshadowed by the ANC and the United Democratic Front’s more-practical nonracial politics. However, after the unbanning of both the ANC and the PAC in 1990, the aggressively antiwhite postures of the PAC’s military wing (now named the Azanian People’s Liberation Army; APLA), with its slogan of “One settler, one bullet,” became popular. The APLA perpetrated several massacres between 1991 and 1994, including killings in a pub and a church in Cape Town.

The PAC was equivocal about participating in South Africa’s first elections by universal suffrage, held in April 1994. Under the leadership of Clarence Makwetu (1990–96), the PAC (now a political party) obtained only slightly more than 1 percent of the vote, winning five seats in the country’s new National Assembly. The party was not able to improve its performance in subsequent elections and after the 2009 election had only one National Assembly seat. After Makwetu the party was led successively by Stanley Mogoba (1996–2003), Motsoko Pheko (2003–06), Letlapa Mphahlele (2006–13), and Alton Mphethi (2013– ). In 2013 two different factions in PAC emerged, both claiming the rights to the party’s name: one that continued to be led by Mphahlele and the other led by Mphethi. Mphethi’s faction was ultimately recognized by the Independent Electoral Commission for participation in the 2014 elections under the PAC name. The party won less than 1 percent of the national vote in 2014, garnering one National Assembly seat.

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African National Congress

political party, South Africa
Also known as: ANC, South African Native National Congress
Quick Facts
Date:
1912 - present
Areas Of Involvement:
nationalism

African National Congress (ANC), South African political party and Black nationalist organization. Founded in 1912 as the South African Native National Congress, it had as its main goal the maintenance of voting rights for Coloureds (persons of mixed race) and Black Africans in Cape Province. It was renamed the African National Congress in 1923. From the 1940s it spearheaded the fight to eliminate apartheid, the official South African policy of racial separation and discrimination. The ANC was banned from 1960 to 1990 by the white South African government; during these three decades it operated underground and outside South African territory. The ban was lifted in 1990, and Nelson Mandela, the president of the ANC, was elected in 1994 to head South Africa’s first multiethnic government. The party received a majority of the vote in that election and every one after until 2024, when it saw its support plummet to about 40 percent.

Early decades

In the late 1920s the ANC’s leaders split over the issue of cooperation with the Communist Party (founded in 1921), and the ensuing victory of the conservatives left the party small and disorganized through the 1930s. In the 1940s, however, the ANC revived under younger leaders who pressed for a more militant stance against segregation in South Africa. The ANC Youth League, founded in 1944, attracted such figures as Walter Sisulu, Oliver Tambo, and Mandela, who galvanized the movement and challenged the moderate leadership. Under the presidency of Albert John Luthuli, the ANC after 1952 began sponsoring nonviolent protests, strikes, boycotts, and marches against the apartheid policies that had been introduced by the National Party government that came to power in 1948.

Party membership grew rapidly. A campaign against the pass laws (Black people were required to carry passes indicating their employment status) and other government policies culminated in the Defiance Campaign of 1952. In the process ANC leaders became a target of police harassment: in 1956 many of its leaders were arrested and charged with treason (known as the Treason Trial, 1956–59).

Move toward militancy

In 1960 the Pan-Africanist Congress (PAC), which had broken away from the ANC in 1959, organized massive demonstrations against the pass laws during which police killed 69 unarmed demonstrators at Sharpeville (south of Johannesburg). At this point the National Party banned, or outlawed, both the ANC and the PAC. Denied legal avenues for political change, the ANC first turned to sabotage and then began to organize outside South Africa for guerrilla warfare. In 1961 an ANC military organization, Umkhonto we Sizwe (“Spear of the Nation”), with Mandela as its head, was formed to carry out acts of sabotage as part of its campaign against apartheid. Mandela and other ANC leaders were sentenced to life imprisonment in 1964 (the Rivonia Trial). Although the ANC’s campaign of guerrilla warfare was basically ineffective because of stringent South African internal security measures, surviving ANC cadres kept the organization alive in Tanzania and Zambia under Tambo’s leadership. The ANC began to revive inside South Africa toward the end of the 1970s, following the Soweto uprising in 1976, when the police and army killed more than 600 people, many of them children. About 1980 the banned black, green, and gold tricolor flag of the ANC began to be seen inside South Africa, and the country descended into virtual civil war during the 1980s.

Rise to power

The administration of F.W. de Klerk lifted the ban on the ANC in 1990, and its leaders were released from prison or allowed to return to South Africa and conduct peaceful political activities. Nelson Mandela, the most important of the ANC’s leaders, succeeded Oliver Tambo as president in 1991. Mandela led the ANC in negotiations (1992–93) with the government over transition to a government elected by universal suffrage. In April 1994 the party swept to power in the country’s first such election, winning more than 60 percent of the vote for seats in the new National Assembly. Mandela, who headed a government of national unity, was inaugurated as South Africa’s first Black president on May 10, 1994. After the withdrawal of the National Party from the government in 1996, the ANC entered into an alliance with its previous rival, the Inkatha Freedom Party, led by Mangosuthu Buthelezi. Mandela stepped down as ANC president in 1997, and in June 1999 his successor, Thabo Mbeki, became the second Black president of South Africa. The party celebrated its 90th anniversary in 2002 and continued its domination of South African politics.

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