MAPS OF HISTORY

MAPS OF HISTORY · ON THIS DAY · April 10 · 1993

ON THIS DAY · 10 APRIL 1993

The Hani assassination

Map: The Hani assassination
10 APRIL 1993 · THE DECOLONIZATION OF AFRICA, 1945–1994

10 Apr 1993 — A white extremist murders Chris Hani, the popular Communist and MK leader, hoping to ignite a race war. Mandela — not the state president — calms the country on television. The transition holds by a thread.

THE MOMENT IN CONTEXT

Freeing Mandela was the easy part; the four years to 1994 were the hard one, and they came within a hair of failure. Watch the last charcoal country on the map: it does not flip cleanly to red, it is fought over. The negotiations — CODESA, the Convention for a Democratic South Africa (the marker) — were a chess match between a regime trying to entrench white vetoes and a movement demanding simple majority rule, conducted against a backdrop of appalling violence. Some of it was the “third force”: elements of the security state covertly arming and stoking township killing to derail the talks and prove Black rule meant chaos. Boipatong, 1992 — 45 residents massacred with apparent police complicity (the memorial) — nearly ended the process. So did the assassination in April 1993 of Chris Hani, the most popular leader after Mandela, by a white extremist hoping to ignite race war (the marker). The country stood on the brink; it was Mandela, not the president, who went on television to hold it back.

From Chapter 11 — The Four Years That Decided It of The Decolonization of Africa, 1945–1994 (APR 1994).

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THE ATLAS THAT SHOWS IT

The Decolonization of Africa, 1945–1994
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