KwaZulu

This article is about the former bantustan in South Africa. For other uses, see Zululand (disambiguation).
KwaZulu
Bantustan
1981–1994
Flag Coat of arms
Motto
"Sonqoba Simunye"
(Zulu: Together we shall surmount)
Location of KwaZulu (red) within South Africa (yellow).
Capital Nongoma (to 1980)
Ulundi (19801994)
Languages Zulu
Political structure Bantustan
Chief Minister Mangosuthu Buthelezi
History
   Self-government 1981
   Re-integrated into South Africa 27 April 1994
Area
   1980[1] 32,130 km² (12,405 sq mi)
Population
   1980[1] est. 3,400,000 
     Density 105.8 /km²  (274.1 /sq mi)
   1991[2] est. 5,524,774 
Currency South African rand
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Republic of South Africa
Republic of South Africa

KwaZulu was a bantustan in South Africa, intended by the apartheid government as a semi-independent homeland for the Zulu people. The capital was moved from Nongoma to Ulundi in 1980.

It was led until its abolition in 1994 by Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi of the Zulu tribe and head of the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP). It was merged with the surrounding South African province of Natal to form the new province of KwaZulu-Natal.

The name kwaZulu translates roughly as Place of Zulus, or more formally Zululand.

In March 1996, two years after South Africa's transition to majority rule, the trial of The State v. Peter Msane & Others was held due to the accusation against thirteen retired white generals, including Magnus Malan (who served as defence minister at the height of emergency rule in the mid-1980s) and seven Zulus, partisans of Buthelezi's Inkatha Freedom Party of complicity in a massacre of thirteen people, ten years earlier, in a rural village in the KwaZulu homeland known as KwaMakhutha.[3] The trial was an attempt by Nelson Mandela's new government to bring to justice those at the top of apartheid's security forces, who were alleged to have purposefully fanned violence among blacks by arming and training one faction – Inkatha – as a proxy force, in the tradition of divide and rule.[3]

Districts in 1991

Districts of the province and population at the 1991 census.[2]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Sally Frankental; Owen Sichone (2005-01-01). South Africa's Diverse Peoples: A Reference Sourcebook. ABC-CLIO. p. 187. ISBN 978-1-57607-674-3. Retrieved 2013-09-18.
  2. 1 2 "Census > 1991 > RSA > Variable Description > Person file > District code". Statistics South Africa - Nesstar WebView. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
  3. 1 2 Berkeley, Bill (2001). The Graves are Not Yet Full.
  4. "Dictionary of Southern African Place Names (Public Domain)". Human Science Research Council. p. 319.

Coordinates: 28°19′00″S 31°25′00″E / 28.3167°S 31.4167°E / -28.3167; 31.4167

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