The last copies … a special edition of South is sold in Cape Town. Minutes later the paper was banned.
The Weekly Mail is in possession of the names of the three men and a ‘British woman.
Monday is Sharpeville day and will be mourned by a variety of organisations ranging from ”Charterist” to black consciousness groups.
In Sharpeville, almost 1 000 people prayed for a last-minute miracle at a church service in the local Dutch Reformed Church at noon yesterday.
The New Nation newspaper faces an uncertain future following the Rand Supreme Court ruling this week.
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/ 5 February 1988
In January Cosatu and the UDF warned of fears that Inkatha was about to launch ”Operation Doom” or ”Operation Cleanup” against UDF and Cosatu members.
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/ 22 January 1988
It took Adel Bekker years to find the evidence: a R10 note and a portrait of Charles I.
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/ 22 January 1988
Goniwe, Mxenge, De’Ath … a spate of controversial inquests begins next week.
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/ 22 January 1988
Die Stem, the only Rightwing newspaper to be threatened under the government’s new media regulations, has closed down.
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/ 15 January 1988
The Herald of Harare, which usually reflects government thinking, blamed South Africa for the car bomb.