In 1994, Mandela became South Africa's first Afro-descendant president.
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Published at: 26/04/2024 09:06 AM
Thirty years ago, Nelson Mandela
's African National Council (ACN), also known as Mandiba, won
the first multiracial elections in South Africa on April 27, 1994, with 62.6% making him
the
country's first Afro-descendant president, after winning the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993.
“Never. It will never ever happen again that this beautiful land will once again
experience the oppression of one another”, were the
words of Mandela when he took office on May 10
, 1994.
Mandiba, who defeated
the National Party (20%)
and the Inkatha (10%) with the ACN, took over the leadership of South Africa at the age of 72, after being imprisoned on Long Island for almost three decades for his
fight against Apartheid, a system of racial discrimination.
His government management highlights achievements in the development of housing, education and
the economy with the aim of improving the
quality of life of the majority of South Africans.
Mandela remained at the head of the country until 1999. On December
5, 2013, he died, after having been convalescing in recent months from pneumonia,
a respiratory disease that he contracted in
apartheid prisons, where he fought against racial discrimination in
his country and came to be known as the most important Afro-descendant leader in South Africa.
Mazo News Team