ANC, SWAPO AND ZANU-PF HUMAN RIGHTS RECORD UNDER SCRUTINY AT CAMBRIDGE
Seminar at the 20th anniversary of Mandela's release
On the eve of the 20th anniversary of Nelson Mandela's release from prison, the Centre of Governance and Human Rights at Cambridge University hosted a roundtable discussion at King's College on Wednesday 10 February with leading academics on Southern Africa - Professors Stephen Ellis, Saul Dubow and Jocelyn Alexander - and with Paul Trewhela, the author of Inside Quatro: Uncovering the Exile History of the ANC and SWAPO (Jacana, 2009). The seminar was chaired by the BBC World Service's Africa Editor, Martin Plaut.
Participants set out to examine the human rights record of liberation movements in the region as a whole, with a particular focus on Inside Quatro.
Titled 'Truth be Told? Debating the Human Rights Records of Southern Africa's Exile Liberation Movements', the seminar was held in the Keynes Lecture Theatre beside a bust of the Cambridge economist John Maynard Keynes, and attracted an audience of about a hundred people. A recording of the seminar made by the university, lasting two hours, can be heard here:
Hosted by the Cambridge Centre of Governance and Human Rights (http://www.polis.cam.ac.uk/cghr) together with the Centre of African Studies (http://www.african.cam.ac.uk ) and the Centre of International Studies (http://www.polis.cam.ac.uk/cis/ ), it was attended by academics such as Dr Hugh Macmillan (Oxford), who published the Memorandum written by Chris Hani and six colleagues in 1969 concerning failures in the leadership of Umkhonto we Sizwe in the Wankie campaign, and Dr Sue Onslow (London School of Economics), editor of the newly published Cold War in Southern Africa: White Power, Black Liberation (Routledge, 2009).