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allAfrica.com: South Africa: What Steve Biko Means for SA Today (Page 1 of 5)
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For many people and communities involved in liberation struggle and social justice for all people around the world, Bro. Steven Biko stands out as one of our brightest lights and perhaps one of our greatest losses. In 1997 five former members of the South African security forces admitted to killing Bro. Biko bringing to closure not only the circumstances involved in his death at the hands of the minority colonialist government and their Indigenous collaborators, but evidence to the lie that the SA government did not murder and torture its political dissidents.
Steven Biko is all of us who believe in human freedom. - The Angryindian
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allAfrica.com: South Africa: What Steve Biko Means for SA Today (Page 1 of 5) South Africa has been commemorating the 30th anniversary of the killing of black consciousness leader, Steve Biko, by apartheid security police.Since his death Biko has become an international icon of black self-pride and of the African sense of humanity which the South Africans call, in their two main language groupings, "ubuntu" or "botho". In recent days, much has been written about Biko's intellectual heritage and what his life means to the liberated South Africa of today.
However, few South Africans can speak with the authority of the activist, lawyer, priest and academic, Nyameko Barney Pityana, now the principal and vice-chancellor of the University of South Africa. Pityana was one of the band of students who, with Biko, founded the principal institutions of the black consciousness movement in South Africa from the late 1960s. He delivered this address on September 12, the day on which, three decades earlier, Biko had died alone on the floor of a Pretoria prison cell.
Stephen Bantu Biko was an ordinary young man of his time. Nothing could have distinguished him, his family circumstances and environment from any other young man growing up in a small township in a small Eastern Cape town.
Not even his death, in some respects was extraordinary. After all, it was not unusual for political activists to die in detention. He was in fact the 42nd person to die while detained by the South African Security Police, the Special Branch.
September 13, 2007 at 11:25 am by angryindian, 2122 views, 2 comments





Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (2)
at 12:10 on September 13th, 2007
Biko's death leaves us all cold: the perfect microcosm of the bully-state that was Apartheid. One doesn't have to look too hard to see this sort of thing all over the world: the skin colors are different in some cases, but the cruelty remains. Thanks for posting this, angryindian.
at 02:06 on September 14th, 2007
angryindian, I like this story. It's good stuff.
One of the mo0re important people is this struggle for justice Thanks for this Angry indian.
There is another article here that you may wish to publish. I prefer to stick to what I know best, central Asia.
UN decision ‘not surprising’
http://www.worldnewsaustralia.com.au/region.php?id=139920®ion=7
It seems to be a problem relating to the fact that most of the worlds resources are now in indigenous lands.
Even New Zealand voted against this. The source given here is a bit thin, you should be able to find a better one