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A nation haunted by its past (S.Africa - I)
By K.V. Krishnaswamy
JOHANNESBURG, MAY 8. Two of the tributaries of the mighty Amazon,
themselves nearly as gigantic, flow side by side for nearly five
kilometers off the exotic coastal town of Manaus in Brazil before
joining the main river. One of the two is called the Negro,
deriving its name from the colour of its water which turns a deep
black and extremely dense because of the decaying foliage
upstream. The difference in density results in a curious
phenomenon: the waters of the two tributaries never mix and flow
alongside each other till they flow into the Amazon.
This bizarre phenomenon kept coming back to mind during a short
visit to South Africa, a nation deeply divided by a common
destiny, with two streams of people running parallel who never
seem destined to arrive at a meeting point. The contrast is not
strikingly apparent in cities like Cape Town or Durban but in the
countryside - besides in Johannesburg, the primal apartheid
centre - it is too obnoxiously pervasive to be missed. The
experience left but one impression: the slowness of the post-
apartheid democratic process to remove racial inequalities may
begin to sow the seeds of instability.
In restaurants and resorts, housing complexes, shopping malls and
wherever else visitors have to do business with the local
population, one could spot the difference in living styles, much
like in key Western European cities that have begun more and more
to depend on immigrant labour to oil the machine of opulence. The
only difference here, a fundamental difference, of course, is
that, unlike the Turks in Germany, the Asians in Britain or the
north Africans in France, those on the wrong side of the scale of
life in South Africa are the majority population, the natives and
not those refugees of poverty crowding Europe.
Seven years after the great revolution that brought down the
repressive white minority regime of apartheid, hope appears to
remain a deferred dream for the majority population in South
Africa. Believe it instantly if someone tells you that South
Africa is an uneven mix of the first world and third world, the
former peopled predominantly by the whites and the latter
exclusively by the natives. Natives constitute nearly three
quarters of the approximately 37 million population of South
Africa, 15 per cent are whites and the rest are of Indian origin
and the coloured.
Clearly, urban centres like Cape Town, Durban and Pretoria can
match any European city for their infrastructural and other
facilities and their lifestyle. The first world is very much
alive in these cities. It is here that you meet the new black
middle class that is said to be emerging and on which the hope of
a democratic, peaceful evolution of South Africa rests.
It was during the long drives across Western and Eastern Cape and
in KwaZulu-Natal that one had glimpses of poverty and
deprivation. These were certainly not uncharacteristic of a third
world nation. But the startling detail was that this cruel
poverty seemed to be afflicting only the black population. The
squalor of their residential areas, no more called townships
because of the racial overtones of the past, and the absence of
basic amenities stand out in contrast to the facilities that the
whites have built for themselves across the country.
Often, one saw black school children laden with books and bags,
tired labourers and the aged and the infirm standing in the road
margins under the noon sun, seeking lifts from vehicles speeding
by. The lack of confidence and of hope that their thumbs up signs
will meet with some positive response was fully reflected in
their despondent faces.
In fact, the most striking impression of travel in the country
was the absence of public transport. You met even a stray cyclist
but hardly any buses for the common man. Everything in free South
Africa seemed still focussed on the needs of the rich, the white:
the miles and miles of highways, the inns on the wayside and the
enchanting resorts by the vast expanses of beaches. The high
quality of the facilities available on the tourist trail in even
small towns like Knysna and George made one wonder where South
Africa's third world was lying hidden.
But that countryside is stirring, though it appears that
apartheid's legacy is taking time to wipe out. The longer the
delay, the greater the threat to the stability of the country,
and consequently, of the continent. The dilemmas facing the
country were fully reflected in Johannesburg, which presented a
bewildering picture.
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