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The Footprints of Apartheid

Monday, February 5, 2018

Slavery shackled South Africa for 200 years. The rights of the country’s black population were restricted, even to the simple right as going into city centers. Conditions worsened when the apartheid policy was imposed in 1948, with an increasing number of blacks detained and sent to exile.

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Apartheid was abolished in 1990, but its consequences are still present in various parts of South Africa, with part of the country’s black population living in persistent poverty. In November 2017, Tempo journalist Stefanus teguh Pramono explored the footprints of apartheid in several neighborhoods in Johannesburg and Cape Town, including Robben Island, where Nelson Mandela was kept prisoner. Also held on the island was Prince Chakraningrat IV

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