Radicalisation of resistance and the consolidation of National Party 1960-68 Flashcards Preview

History A-Level Pearson Edexcel - USA 1917-1980, South Africa 1948-1994, British Empire 1763-1914 > Radicalisation of resistance and the consolidation of National Party 1960-68 > Flashcards

Flashcards in Radicalisation of resistance and the consolidation of National Party 1960-68 Deck (113)
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1
Q

How many were killed and injured in Sharpeville and when?

A

69 dead, 187 injured in 21 March 1960

2
Q

When was Verwoerd leader till and what was the policy that he supported strongest?

A

1966, and separate development in the Bantustans

3
Q

What was the result of breaking a pass law?

A

Fine between £5-£8 or 5-8 weeks in prison

4
Q

What percentage of Africans lived on less than £20 a month?

A

80%

5
Q

How many pass incidents were there a day in the 1960s?

A

1,000

6
Q

What were the main 3 complaints of Africans in the 1960s?

A

Pass laws, municipal rents and prohibition of liquor sales

7
Q

How did the PAC protest compared to the ANC?

A

The PAC were less about leaders and more about the population struggling together towards freedom

8
Q

How did the PAC act towards the ANC?

A

They copied, and tried to outdo them, such as doing Sharpeville 10 days before a planned ANC protest

9
Q

What had happened in 1956 to show Sharpeville’s anti-apartheid stance?

A

15 were killed in bus boycotts

10
Q

What occurred in 1958 to politicise the Sharpeville community?

A

10,000 forced to move there under Group Areas Act, so lack of housing and higher rents

11
Q

Which ethnic group in Sharpeville raised the political tension?

A

Lesotho Africans who had next to no rights

12
Q

What was founded in 1959 to raise the political activism in Sharpeville?

A

A well organized branch of the PAC with leader Nyakane Tsolo

13
Q

What was the trigger for the shootings at Sharpeville?

A

Colonel Pienaar’s reinforcements, inexperienced and scared since the killing of 9 policemen in Cato Manor a few weeks before as well as police arrested Nyakane Tsolo, only leader able to control crowd

14
Q

What did the police do post-Sharpeville to aid their case?

A

Place stones in the grounds of the police station and created two mounds of weapons to show to media

15
Q

Why were the Sharpeville shootings seen so vividly and what was the international response?

A

There were many photos of the events, and the UN Security Council passed a resolution denouncing the events - later supported by UK and US

16
Q

What does the events at Cape Town in 1960 show about the PAC at this time?

A

They were still committed to peace, with the Langa March receiving the support of around 40,000

17
Q

What was the government response to Sharpeville?

A

State of emergency, and many increased police powers with a crackdown arresting many, including Mandela and Luthuli

18
Q

What piece of legislation was passed after Sharpeville?

A

Unlawful Organisations Act aimed at the PAC and ANC, banning them in 1960

19
Q

Which piece of legislation was most useful to the police during crackdowns?

A

Public Safety Act of 1953 whereby the police could work without warrants

20
Q

What shows the waning power of Britain in SA before the republic was created?

A

1955 Simonstown Naval Base was handed to SA

21
Q

What gave the National Party the political ability to cal a referendum?

A

Their 66% of seats in parliament after the 1958 election

22
Q

How was the National Party split in 1960?

A

Between hardline Transvaal inhabitants like Verwoerd and nationalist Cape Town inhabitants

23
Q

How did hardline Transvaal influences grow by 1960?

A

The Broderbund were led by a new leader as such, who also controlled the SA Broadcasting Association

24
Q

How did the SA Broadcasting Association aid the NP?

A

They only allowed TV in 1976 to limit foreign influence

25
Q

Why was Macmillan somewhat for decolonisation?

A

It would mean that those nations would be happier to trade and work with Britain

26
Q

When was the Wind of Change speech?

A

1960, after Verwoerd had called the referendum

27
Q

What was Verwoerd reaction to Macmillan’s calls for decolonisation and more black rights?

A

A further pursuit of the policy in the Bantustans of self-government

28
Q

When did SA become RSA?

A

May 1961

29
Q

What changes were made to government and currency as a result of the RSA forming?

A

State President became head of state and rand replaced pound

30
Q

What were the majority of changes like in the move to RSA?

A

Aesthetic, such as the removing of Royal from state-owned entities

31
Q

Why did SA have to leave the Commonwealth?

A

As well as Asian and African nations’ qualms, Verwoerd said that African embassies would not be allowed into Pretoria due to overcrowding

32
Q

How was Britain and it’s colonies used by dissidents?

A

They often fled there, for example the AAM set up in London in 1960

33
Q

How was SA politically safe from international pressure in the 1960s?

A

Parts of the Tory Party were against the wind of change speech, and SA positioned itself well as a bulwark against communism after the Cuban Missile Crisis

34
Q

How was SA economically safe from international pressure during the 1960s?

A

Much foreign investment was pumped into SA from Britain at this time, and the gold and uranium from SA was of vital use to other nations

35
Q

When were the first British sanctions laid on SA?

A

1964 Wilson’s arms embargo as put forward by the UN a year before

36
Q

When were the Treason Trial members acquitted?

A

March 1961

37
Q

Why did the ANC see violence as a possible route to success?

A

It has worked in China, Cuba and Algeria

38
Q

When was the armed struggle taken up by the ANC?

A

June 1961

39
Q

Who in the ANC had reservations about the armed struggle?

A

Luthuli and some members of the SA Indian Congress

40
Q

Who led the MK?

A

Mandela for the ANC side, and Joe Slovo for the CP

41
Q

Who helped the MK internationally?

A

Soviet Union, and China and East Germany for training and Ethiopia (not so communist)

42
Q

How did the MK begin it’s violence?

A

Sabotage of communication links

43
Q

Who worked for Poqo?

A

Underground migrant workers, first in Cape Town

44
Q

What did Poqo attempt to do?

A

Work like the Mau Mau in Kenya and focus on pro-African SA political education

45
Q

How did Poqo work with the PAC?

A

While the same Africanist views were supported, the PAC had little control over the random violence of Poqo

46
Q

Which 2 Poqo actions show it’s violence?

A

Paarl march in 1962 killed 2 whites hacked to death with axes and home-made weapons by mob of 250, and Mbashe Bridge killings of a white family

47
Q

How many Poqo and Mk members were hung in the 1960s?

A

62 of Poqo and 7 of MK

48
Q

Why was the MK and Poqo weak during the 1960s?

A

No base in or out of SA, little funding or training

49
Q

When was the Rivonia Trial?

A

1963-64

50
Q

How did Mandela and the ANC help their case in the Rivonia Trial?

A

Mandela made an impassioned speech, and they hired Afrikaner lawyer Bram Fischer

51
Q

Who led the MK post-Rivonia?

A

Joe Modise with Joe Slovo helping in exile

52
Q

How did Tambo aid the ANC cause?

A

Got UN recognition of ANC and PAC as SA political entities, gained funds from USSR and Sweden, raised profile of ANC internationally

53
Q

Which group was a key part of the AAM and why?

A

Anglican Church members such as Reeves who had seen the plight of Africans from their schools, and who saw this as against the word of God

54
Q

Who internationally yet not South African helped the AAM?

A

E.S. Reddy, an Indian who worked against apartheid in the UN alongside African and Asian nations

55
Q

When was SA removed from FIFA and the Olympics

A

1963 and 1964

56
Q

When was the D’Oliveira incident and what was the result of it?

A

1968, where Vorster banned the team from travelling to SA after D’Oliveira was selected

57
Q

Who was Vorster before becoming Prime Minister?

A

Minister of Justice, seen as vital during ANC and PAC crackdowns of 1963

58
Q

How fast did the SA economy grow during the 1960s and what was this like compared to other nations?

A

Over 5% a year, better than some richer countries but not as strong as some Asian and South American countries

59
Q

What were the issues with the SA economy in the 1960s?

A

Reliance on mining and agriculture, low productivity, lack of skilled workers

60
Q

How many black workers were in white collar jobs in 1951 and 1975?

A

75,000 up to 420,000

61
Q

What could apartheid be described as in some workplaces?

A

A floating colour bar, it changed based on need

62
Q

What example shows government funding of black housing?

A

12,000 4-room family dwellings built in Mdantsane near East London by 1970

63
Q

Which piece of legislation aided the black construction worker?

A

Native Building Workers Act of 1951 which allowed for skilled blacks to work on African houses, particularly in townships and betterment villages

64
Q

How much did per capita income increase for blacks during the 1960s?

A

23%

65
Q

How many Africans were in the cities in 1960 and 1970 and why?

A

1.5 million to over 6 million, as the Bantustans were not invested in well enough

66
Q

Why were European immigrants encouraged to come to SA?

A

English-speakers began to vote for the NP, and by 1968 whites were only 17% of the population

67
Q

What was the 1960s like for white SA?

A

Strong prosperity, 50% wage increase, 4th in per capita car ownership, leisure and freedom

68
Q

Which groups of Africans grew during the 1960s socially?

A

Stokvels, women’s groups and churches which grouped together Africans in the townships - growth of black identity

69
Q

Which book in 1965 shows black economic strength?

A

An African Bourgeoisie by Leo Kuper, a study of Zulu people showing them not to be tribal but adapting

70
Q

How did the role of women change in the 1960s?

A

They became more empowered in jobs such as domestic servant, selling beer or small business running - still higher education was blocked off

71
Q

How did Drum magazine raise women’s issues?

A

The sexy pictures on the front pages broke new boundaries, and Mary Serfontein’s commentary on SA life became very well known and liberal

72
Q

When and where was the first self-governing homeland set up?

A

Transkei in 1963

73
Q

What was the politics of the Transkei like?

A

Kaiser Matanzima led to Transkei National Independence Party who were able to lose the election of 1963 yet appoint minister ex-officio to retain power

74
Q

How did the creation of homelands help Transkei?

A

There was increased funding of infrastructure, as well as trading stations moving into black hands via homeland agencies - growth of middle class with African businesses

75
Q

What was internationally set up in 1963 against apartheid?

A

Organisation of African Unity which had a SA liberation fund and Liberation Committee with military training camps for ANC members in exile

76
Q

How did Vorster work diplomatically?

A

He offered a hand of friendship to other African nations in terms of trade and economic advice, many of which were reliant on a strong SA economy, such as Malawi

77
Q

Which industries invested in SA and why?

A

Japanese car manufacturers, Barclays, VW, Coca-Cola, due to cheap labour and consumer market and lack of communism

78
Q

What was passed in 1967 to increase police powers?

A

Terrorism Act, indefinite detention for suspects

79
Q

What was set up in 1968 to increase police powers?

A

A new central police headquarters, with 2 floors for the security branch - torture was used, 8 lost their lives

80
Q

Reaction to women’s pass protests

A

1956 Native Administration Act - easier to remove Africans to reserves

81
Q

Number who gathered at Sharpeville and percentage shot in the back

A

20,000 and 70%

82
Q

State of emergency in relation to Sharpeville

A

30th of March 1960, 9 days after Sharpeville, 10,000 arrested

83
Q

NP response to Sharpeville in terms of enquiry

A

Wessels Commission of Inquiry, claimed police were indecisive but acted in self-defense all the same

84
Q

Reaction to Sharpeville abroad

A

UN condemnation of apartheid, 10,000 protest in London, caused ANC and PAC to radicalise as response was effective

85
Q

Action of Vorster as Justice Minister from 1961

A

Police Reserve Unit set up to develop into Security Police, as well as quasi-legal bodies for dirty tricks, turned to BOSS (Bureau for State Security) in 1969

86
Q

1962 law to aid police

A

Sabotage Act, implied guilt and death penalty, torture with electric chair allowed

87
Q

1963 law to aid police

A

General Law Amendment Act - 90 day detention without charges or lawyer, with Sobukwe can be extended forever such as Sobukwe Clause from 1969, as well as new radio communication set up

88
Q

1964 law to aid police

A

Bantu Laws Amendment Act - Minister of Bantu Affairs could deport immediately any African from cities to homelands for any reason, creation of city quotas and unemployed deportations

89
Q

Example of international African reason why to continue apartheid

A

In 1960 there was a bloodbath in former Belgian Congo, more stable in SA

90
Q

Sporting protest of 1960

A

NZ biggest protests ever as Maori were not allowed to be part of tour to SA

91
Q

When did Luthuli receive his Nobel Peace Prize?

A

December 1961

92
Q

End of peaceful protests for ANC

A

29-31 May 1961 - poor turnout due to lack of PAC aid, and strong NP crackdown, caused need for change to armed struggle

93
Q

Start of MK action

A

16 December 1961, Digane Day (loss at Blood River in 1838) with bombings of government buildings in Port Elizabeth and Durban, next 18 months there were 200 attacks

94
Q

White support of armed struggle

A

African Resistance Movement, breakaway from Liberal Party, most arrest by 1964, John Harris executed in 1965 for bombing Johannesburg railway station

95
Q

How did the Rivonia Trial become so one sided?

A

250 pieces of evidence showing plan for violence including Operation Mayibuye (guerilla war) was found in Liliesleaf Farm - Mandela already arrested since 1962

96
Q

How did the Rivonia Trial carry out?

A

Mandela made a 4 hour impassioned speech more to convert others than to save themselves, sent to Robben Island with NP hope they’d be forgotten

97
Q

International response to Rivonia

A

UN called for defendants to be released, dockworkers refused to handle SA goods, Congressmen MPs and Brezhnev called for clemency, 50 MPs protested in London

98
Q

What did the ANC do in 1967?

A

Ally with ZAPU of Rhodesia, little success, some good experience in Wankie campaign, not sustainable

99
Q

Where were the 1969 changes of Tambo made?

A

Morogoro Conference in Tanzania

100
Q

Different leaderships of ANC

A

National Executive of ANC was only blacks, while Revolutionary Council for MK was multi-racial

101
Q

How did Poqo end?

A

List of all members found by NP in 1963, with 2000 arrested finishing organisation, Leballo resigned in 1969

102
Q

What happened after Sharpeville to damage the economy?

A

Exodus of white professionals fearing civil war, and some de-investment

103
Q

Percentage of management posts taken by Afrikaners rather than British in 1948 and 1960

A

43% and 68%

104
Q

Why was investment a good idea in the 1960s?

A

Investors saw 15-20% return on investments

105
Q

White population in 1960 and 1970 and cause

A

3.1m up to 3.8m mainly down to immigration

106
Q

Example of British investment

A

Banks such as Barclays that controlled 60% of bank deposits

107
Q

3 weaknesses of SA economy

A

Requirement of foreign investment, need for import of heavy machinery for mining, entire reliance on foreign oil

108
Q

1980 report on wealth of bottom 40%

A

6% of wealth held by them

109
Q

When was Ghana and Guinea decolonised and how did this impact on NP policy?

A

1957 and 1958, Bantustans were seen as an apartheid version of decolonization

110
Q

How was Matanzima able to ban groups?

A

Nearly constant state of emergency and Proclamation R400

111
Q

What was independence like in the Bantustans?

A

Merely a reservoir for cheap labour in SA, Bantustans were many sections rather than one tribe (3 in Transkei) as well as no other nation recognition of their independence and chiefs assassinated like Mabuza of Tembo tribe by Poqo in 1962

112
Q

Defence budget of 1961 and 1966

A

R44m and then R260m

113
Q

What was set up to control arms production?

A

1964 Armaments Production Board with R33m