Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Back

"Anti-Apartheid Movement Newspaper 25th Anniversary Supplement" [NMLH.2024.48.6]



[click anywhere to close]
Catalogue Number
NMLH.2024.48.6

Object Name
newspaper

Title
'Anti-Apartheid News. 25th Anniversary Supplement. Souther Africa - Action Now! A Profile of the Anti-Apartheid Movement 1959-1984'

Place
UK, South Africa, Namibia

People
Anti-Apartheid Movement (AAM), African National Congress (ANC)

Events
Apartheid Regime (South Africa)

Description
A yellowing newspaper from the Anti-Apartheid News. It has been stamped with '25th Anniversary Suppliment' over the newspaper's usual title. There is a small Black child holding a flag that says 25. The headline is 'Southern Africa - Action Now! A profile of the Anti-Apartheid Movement 1959-1984' above a collage of photographs from UK protests against Apartheid.


The Anti-Apartheid Movement (AAM) was a British organisation involved in the international movement to oppose the South African apartheid system which was introduced in 1948. Under apartheid only white people could rule, and a strict system of segregation privileged white South Africans and kept Black South Africans as second class citizens who were kept poor and with limited access to social resources and employment opportunities, as well as banning interracial marriages.


AAM began in 1959 following an appeal by Black South African organisers for international consumer boycotts of goods grown in apartheid South Africa to try and pressure the South African government with economic consequences for apartheid. They also co-ordinated the Free Nelson Mandela Campaign with the exiled leaders of the African National Congress (ANC) South African political party. Mandela was freed in 1990, and apartheid ended in 1994 which led to multi-racial general elections that left Mandela as the new president of South Africa.

Multimedia
We use cookies on our website to provide you with a better experience. See our privacy policy for further information. OK