RIP FW De Klerk
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jbswagger

Original Poster:

957 posts

224 months

Thursday 11th November 2021
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Last white president of South Africa FW De Klerk has died aged 85.

Edited by jbswagger on Thursday 11th November 11:35

Jockman

18,353 posts

183 months

Thursday 11th November 2021
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Yeah. He got a mixed press but along with Gorbachev remains one of the most influential people of my late 1980s university days up in Newcastle. This at a time when the Soviet Union was collapsing, the Berlin Wall was being flattened and China was taking a novel route to discussion with its students in Tiananmen Square.

RIP.

TonyRPH

13,472 posts

191 months

Friday 12th November 2021
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FW De Klerk and Pik Botha (foreign minister at the time I think?) were instrumental in the dismantling of apartheid.

It must have taken a lot of courage to do that.

RIP.

robm3

4,930 posts

250 months

Monday 15th November 2021
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TonyRPH said:
FW De Klerk and Pik Botha (foreign minister at the time I think?) were instrumental in the dismantling of apartheid.

It must have taken a lot of courage to do that.

RIP.
Agreed...

Didn't really work either, if you've been to SA recently. Violent, poorly managed and completely regressing as a first world country...

Some sort of half and half solution/longer transition was needed. God knows how that would have been workable or achieved I guess.

Amazing strength on De Klerk though.

Misanthrope

613 posts

68 months

Monday 15th November 2021
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Jockman said:
Yeah. He got a mixed press but along with Gorbachev remains one of the most influential people of my late 1980s university days up in Newcastle. This at a time when the Soviet Union was collapsing, the Berlin Wall was being flattened and China was taking a novel route to discussion with its students in Tiananmen Square.

RIP.
Funny how you should compare him to Gorbachev. They both did "the right thing (TM)" and they both left their countries completely fked.

Biker 1

8,393 posts

142 months

Monday 15th November 2021
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Will they put up a statue of him in London adjacent to Mandella??

TwigtheWonderkid

47,955 posts

173 months

Monday 15th November 2021
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robm3 said:
Violent, poorly managed and completely regressing as a first world country...
Imagine living in a country like that whistle

mgreenwood

120 posts

208 months

Monday 15th November 2021
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I met him and his wife once and heard him give a lecture - very interesting man and he spoke of an admiration and friendship with Mandela that clearly lasted beyond them both being out of the main limelight

2Btoo

3,751 posts

226 months

Monday 15th November 2021
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TwigtheWonderkid said:
robm3 said:
Violent, poorly managed and completely regressing as a first world country...
Imagine living in a country like that whistle
Exactly what I thought too. whistle

C G

839 posts

213 months

Monday 15th November 2021
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robm3 said:
Agreed...

Didn't really work either, if you've been to SA recently. Violent, poorly managed and completely regressing as a first world country...

Some sort of half and half solution/longer transition was needed. God knows how that would have been workable or achieved I guess.

Amazing strength on De Klerk though.
It was never a first world country in the first place though, was it?

TwigtheWonderkid

47,955 posts

173 months

Monday 15th November 2021
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2Btoo said:
TwigtheWonderkid said:
robm3 said:
Violent, poorly managed and completely regressing as a first world country...
Imagine living in a country like that whistle
Exactly what I thought too. whistle
Yup. I don't even know who is running SA now, but I'll take him over Boris.

TonyRPH

13,472 posts

191 months

Monday 15th November 2021
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TwigtheWonderkid said:
Yup. I don't even know who is running SA now, but I'll take him over Boris.
Which just goes to show how very little you know of SA.

The government there currently ranks as one of the most corrupt in the world.

There is corruption in the police force.

The main (and only) electricity provider (Escom) is unable to supply enough electricity and there is regular 'load shedding' (widespread power cuts for several hours at a time) - this is also due to widespread corruption within Escom and lack of investment as a result.

Yep, can only be better than the UK eh?


Iamnotkloot

1,846 posts

170 months

Monday 15th November 2021
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TonyRPH said:
TwigtheWonderkid said:
Yup. I don't even know who is running SA now, but I'll take him over Boris.
Which just goes to show how very little you know of SA.

The government there currently ranks as one of the most corrupt in the world.

There is corruption in the police force.

The main (and only) electricity provider (Escom) is unable to supply enough electricity and there is regular 'load shedding' (widespread power cuts for several hours at a time) - this is also due to widespread corruption within Escom and lack of investment as a result.

Yep, can only be better than the UK eh?
Quite. Some members on here do like to spout a load of ill-informed cobblers now and again.

TwigtheWonderkid

47,955 posts

173 months

Monday 15th November 2021
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TonyRPH said:
TwigtheWonderkid said:
Yup. I don't even know who is running SA now, but I'll take him over Boris.
Which just goes to show how very little you know of SA.

The government there currently ranks as one of the most corrupt in the world.

There is corruption in the police force.

The main (and only) electricity provider (Escom) is unable to supply enough electricity and there is regular 'load shedding' (widespread power cuts for several hours at a time) - this is also due to widespread corruption within Escom and lack of investment as a result.

Yep, can only be better than the UK eh?
I never said it was better than the UK, I said I'd taker their leader over ours. Just read up on him, Ramaphosa, and whilst not perfect, he seems a better option than our PM.

TonyRPH

13,472 posts

191 months

Monday 15th November 2021
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TwigtheWonderkid said:
I never said it was better than the UK, I said I'd taker their leader over ours. Just read up on him, Ramaphosa, and whilst not perfect, he seems a better option than our PM.
I know all about Cyril Ramaphosa - I lived in SA back in the days when he was considered an ANC terrorist lol.

He's certainly a lot better than Jacob Zuma - but better than any of our UK politicians?

No.


Misanthrope

613 posts

68 months

Monday 15th November 2021
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The main difference between this country and somewhere like SA is in how "in your face" the corruption is, although even that seems to be gradually changing here as well. It's like the 'elite' care less and less about how corrupt they look. After all, what's anyone going to do about it? Write a strongly worded letter to the Times, which the editor can use for toilet paper.

The other difference is that, for now, we still have a reasonably reliable electricity supply. But give it time, I'm sure the green changes will soon put a dent in that.

Penelope Stopit

11,209 posts

132 months

Tuesday 16th November 2021
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For those unaware of its existence


Countdown

47,362 posts

219 months

Tuesday 16th November 2021
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TonyRPH said:
I know all about Cyril Ramaphosa - I lived in SA back in the days when he was considered an ANC terrorist lol.

He's certainly a lot better than Jacob Zuma - but better than any of our UK politicians?

No.
He was "considered a terrorist" by those intent on maintaining Apartheid. For those people who thought Apartheid was abhorrent and should be abolished he was/is probably a hero.

I'm not sure FWD dismantled Apartheid because he thought it was wrong, i think it was more the fact that he recognised it was unsustainable.

TonyRPH

13,472 posts

191 months

Tuesday 16th November 2021
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Countdown said:
He was "considered a terrorist" by those intent on maintaining Apartheid. For those people who thought Apartheid was abhorrent and should be abolished he was/is probably a hero.
I would agree with that - however he was an member of the ANC, an organisation that condoned acts of terror so Apartheid or not - he was still a terrorist (for a while at least).

Countdown said:
I'm not sure FWD dismantled Apartheid because he thought it was wrong, i think it was more the fact that he recognised it was unsustainable.
I suspect he dismantled Apartheid for both reasons (unsustainable and perhaps some element of his own beliefs) - but no matter which reason you apply, it would have still taken a great deal of courage for him to have done so.