FW de Klerk Foundation withdraws apartheid statement, apologises

Former President FW de Klerk.
Former President FW de Klerk.
Image: Gallo Images / Nardus Engelbrecht

The FW de Klerk Foundation has withdrawn and apologised for its statement denying that apartheid was a crime against humanity.

The withdrawal, penned directly by the former deputy president FW de Klerk, came after criticism and growing calls for the foundation to reconsider their position on apartheid.

Many, including political parties, other foundations such as the Desmond and Leah Tutu and Nelson Mandela, aired their frustration with its statement urging them to retract it.

In response to a protest by the EFF in parliament calling for De Klerk to leave the sitting for the State of the Nation Address following his television interview in which the former deputy president said apartheid was not crime against humanity, the foundation defended him saying the notion itself was a “soviet agitprop” which means a propaganda to agitate.

“I have taken note of the vehement reaction to our response to the EFF’s attack on me at the State of the Nation address on Thursday night. I agree with the Desmond and Leah Tutu Foundation that this is not the time to quibble about the degrees of unacceptability of apartheid.  It was totally unacceptable,” De Klerk said in a statement on Monday.

“The FW de Klerk Foundation has accordingly decided to withdraw its statement of 14 February unconditionally and apologises for the confusion, anger and hurt that it has caused.”

The statement by the foundation has also been removed from its website.

“By 27 April 1994, under my leadership, the whole legislative framework of apartheid had been dismantled and the way had been opened for the adoption of our present non-racial democratic Constitution.

“However, the international crime of apartheid did not disappear with the demise of apartheid in South Africa.  In 1998 it was included in the Statute of Rome, which established the International Criminal Court,” De Klerk said.

He added that the foundation remained committed to reconciliation and the achievement of values enshrined in the constitution.

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