Gulf News

Mandela enemy-turned-ally dies

Botha served as foreign minister for 17 years until the end of apartheid in 1994

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Former South African foreign minister Roelof “Pik” Botha, whose long career in government straddled both the apartheid era and the presidency of Nelson Mandela, has died aged 86, local media reported yesterday.

Botha served as foreign minister for 17 years until the end of apartheid in 1994, and then joined Mandela’s cabinet after the end of white-minority rule and the country’s first non-racial election in 1994.

“As you know, originally we ■ were enemies,” Botha told the BBC in 2013. “From our point of view, [Mandela] led an organisati­on which we regarded as a terrorist organisati­on and they saw themselves as freedom fighters.

“Of course all that had to change. It is not always that simple and easy to change mental attitudes, mindsets but eventually it did change. He played the role of a saviour.”

Botha later served as mines and energy minister in Mandela’s government before retiring in 1996.

Botha was described by some as a “good man working for a bad government”, despite years defending the apartheid system around the world.

President Cyril Ramaphosa said that Botha “would be remembered for his support for South Africa’s transition to democracy and for his service in the first democratic administra­tion”.

 ?? AFP ?? Roelof ‘Pik’ Botha
AFP Roelof ‘Pik’ Botha

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