Africa
Apartheid: The Tyranny of Racism Made Law
In white-ruled South Africa, black people are denied their basic human and political rights. Their work is exploited and their lives are segregated. In 1982 almost one million of them were forced to immigrate to Swaziland without option. That is the tyranny of apartheid, of racism made law, of a system under which a small white minority holds all economic and political power, and dictates how and where the large black majority lives, works, and dies. It is this system of institutionalized racial discrimination which defies the principles of the UN Charter and of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights that has set South Africa on a collision course with the rest of the world.
On the move again outside Limehill, a "resettlement" village in KwaZulu "homeland", Natal. Millions of black South Africans have been forcibly resettled in such villages in the ten so-called black "homelands" since 1948 - the largest forced movement of people in peacetime history. Some families have been "resettled" several times.
[This is an unprocessed archival image and not available for download. If you would like to use this image, please contact the UN Photo Library.]
On the move again outside Limehill, a "resettlement" village in KwaZulu "homeland", Natal. Millions of black South Africans have been forcibly resettled in such villages in the ten so-called black "homelands" since 1948 - the largest forced movement of people in peacetime history. Some families have been "resettled" several times.
[This is an unprocessed archival image and not available for download. If you would like to use this image, please contact the UN Photo Library.]
180963
Categories
Unique Identifier
UN7558027
Production Date
City/Location
Country
Credit
UN Photo/DB
Photographer
Download
Download content
This is an unprocessed archival image and not available for download. If you would like to use this image, please contact the UN Photo Library.
180963
Personal Subjects
-
Organization Name
-
Geographic Subject