Frederik Willem de Klerk (18 March 1936 – 11 November 2021) was a South African politician and Nobel Peace Prize laureate who served as state president from 1989 to 1994 and as deputy president from 1994 to 1996. As South Africa's last head of state from the era of white-minority rule, he and his government dismantled the apartheid system and introduced universal suffrage. Ideologically a conservative and an economic liberal, he led the National Party (NP) from 1989 to 1997.
Born in Johannesburg to an influential Afrikaner
family, de Klerk studied at Potchefstroom University before pursuing a career
in law. Joining the NP, to which he had family ties, he was elected to
parliament and sat in the white-minority government of P. W. Botha, holding a
succession of ministerial posts. As a minister, he supported and enforced
apartheid, a system of racial segregation that privileged white South Africans.
After Botha resigned in 1989, de Klerk
replaced him, first as leader of the NP and then as State President. Although
observers expected him to continue Botha's defense of apartheid, de Klerk
decided to end the policy. He was aware that growing ethnic animosity and
violence was leading South Africa into a racial civil war. Amid this violence,
the state security forces committed widespread human rights abuses and
encouraged violence between the Xhosa and Zulu people, although de Klerk later
denied sanctioning such actions. He permitted anti-apartheid marches to take
place, legalized a range of previously banned anti-apartheid political parties,
and freed imprisoned anti-apartheid activists, including Nelson Mandela. He also dismantled South Africa's nuclear weapons
program.
De Klerk negotiated with Mandela to
fully dismantle apartheid and establish a transition to universal suffrage. In
1993, he publicly apologized for apartheid's harmful effects. He oversaw the 1994
non-racial election in which Mandela led the African National Congress (ANC) to
victory; de Klerk's NP took second place. De Klerk then became Deputy President
in Mandela's ANC-led coalition, the Government of National Unity. In this position, he supported the
government's liberal economic policies but opposed the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission set up to investigate past human rights abuses because he wanted
total amnesty for political crimes. His working relationship with Mandela was
strained, although he later spoke fondly of him. In May 1996, after the NP
objected to the new constitution, de Klerk withdrew it from the coalition
government; the party disbanded the following year and reformed as the New
National Party. In 1997, he retired from
active politics and thereafter lectured internationally.
De Klerk was a controversial figure
among all sections of South African society, all for different reasons. He
received many awards, including the Nobel Peace Prize, earning wide praise for
dismantling apartheid and bringing universal suffrage to South Africa.
Conversely, he was criticized by anti-apartheid activists for offering only a
qualified apology for apartheid and for ignoring the human rights abuses by
state security forces.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F._W._de_Klerk
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