1994 in South Africa

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1994 in South Africa
1991 1992 1993 « 1994 » 1995 1996 1997
1994 in South African sport

List of years in South Africa

Incumbents

Events

February
March
  • 1 – African National Congress president Nelson Mandela and Inkatha Freedom Party leader Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi meet in Durban.
  • 5 – Weapons are stolen from the South African Air Force's 10 Air Depot at Voortrekkerhoogte.
  • 7 March
    • President Lucas Mangope of Bophuthatswana declares that the homelands will not be registering for the April elections. Unrest breaks out and the Bophuthatswana Defence Force is called in.
    • The Transitional Executive Council's law and order subcouncil recommends that Section 29 of the Internal Security Act and Section 206 of the Criminal Procedure Act be repealed immediately.
  • 8 March
    • The closing date for submission of designs of South Africa's new national flag.
    • The Transitional Executive Council threatens strong action against the Bophuthatswana government.
  • 9 March
    • The Nokia 2110 cellphone is launched in South Africa at a price of R4,199.
    • Three people are killed and about 40 injured when police opens fire on demonstrators in Mmabatho, Bophuthatswana.
    • Bophuthatswana President Lucas Mangope rejects the Independent Electoral Commission chairman Judge Johann Kriegler's plea for free political activity in the homeland.
    • The staff of the Bophuthatswana Broadcasting Corporation is fired and the two television stations and three radio stations are closed down.
    • The Inkatha Freedom Party and Freedom Front fail to submit their candidates' lists to the Independent Electoral Commission's offices in Johannesburg by the 4.30pm deadline.
  • 10 March
    • President Lucas Mangope flees Mmabatho to Sun City.
    • The Inkatha Freedom Party's central committee meets in Ulundi and decide against participation in the April election.
  • 11 March
    • Three wounded Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (AWB) members are murdered by a Bophuthatswana Defence Force soldier.
    • South African Defence Force troops move into Bophuthatswana to protect the South African embassy.
    • The Freedom Front submits its list of candidates but the Inkatha Freedom Party fails to meet the Independent Electoral Commission's new cut-off.
  • 12 – Dr. Tjaart van der Walt is appointed as Bophuthatswana's new administrator.
  • 15 March
    • Nelson Mandela and Professor Itumeleng Mosala, president of the Azanian People's Organisation, address separate rallies in Mmabatho.
    • South Africa's new national flag, designed by State Heraldist Fred Brownell, is unveiled.
  • 16 – State President FW de Klerk announces that the government had made a number of contingency plans to prevent the right wing from attempting to take over authority over towns as part of their resistance against the new constitution.
  • 16 – The Ciskei's government agrees to pay pension benefits to public servants who threatened "Bophuthatswana-style action" if their demands were not met.
  • 18 – Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini suggests that the Zululand region is on the point of a unilateral declaration of independence.
  • 21 March
    • The Inkatha Freedom Party rejects an initiative by President De Klerk to bring it into the election and starts planning a campaign of opposition to the Interim Constitution and April's election.
    • Prisoners begin countrywide protests for the right to vote.
    • Twenty-one prisoners are killed in a cell fire at the Queenstown Prison.
    • About 2,000 prisoners break out of their cells and toyi-toyi in the courtyards at Pietermaritzburg Prison.
    • 3,000 prisoners go on hunger strike, including 614 at East London, 29 at Krugersdorp, 148 at Port Shepstone, 16 at Pollsmoor (Cape Town) and 210 at Brandvlei.
    • A bomb explodes at the offices of the National Party in the right-wing town of Ventersdorp.
  • 22 – Ciskei military leader Brigadier Oupa Gqozo resigns.
  • 24 – State President FW de Klerk states that South African Defence Force troops could be deployed in KwaZulu-Natal.
  • 26 March
    • Right-wingers march in Pretoria in a show of strength and the Afrikaner Volkstaat and Conservative Party leader Ferdi Hartzenberg addresses the marchers at Church Square.
    • KwaZulu Chief Minister Mangosuthu Buthelezi meets State President FW de Klerk for talks about contingency planning for strife-torn KwaZulu-Natal.
    • The home of African National Congress regional premier candidate Jacob Zuma is torched by a mob in Nxamalala, near Nkandla, in northern KwaZulu-Natal.
  • 27 March
  • 28 March
    • More than 30 people are killed and hundreds injured in battles in the Johannesburg area as tens of thousands of Zulus converge on the city centre to demonstrate their support for King Goodwill Zwelithini.
    • The Shell House massacre occurs when security guards at Shell House, the African National Congress HQ in Jeppe Street, Johannesburg, opens fire on demonstrators.
    • More than 200 people are arrested in Phuthaditjhaba, QwaQwa after a march by thousands of public servants on the homeland's parliament deteriorated into violence and South African Defence Force troops are sent in.
  • 29 March
    • Mangosuthu Buthelezi states that the Inkatha Freedom Party will fight the African National Congress "to the finish" unless the elections are postponed.
    • The Transitional Executive Council recommends emergency measures in KwaZulu-Natal.
April
  • 1 – A state of emergency is declared in KwaZulu-Natal.
  • 6 – A joint committee consisting of the Independent Electoral Commission, KwaZulu and the South African Government concludes that elections would be impossible in KwaZulu under present conditions.
  • 8 – A meeting between the African National Congress president Nelson Mandela, King Goodwill Zwelithini, State President FW de Klerk and Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi, chief minister of KwaZulu takes place at a secret venue.
  • 14 April
    • International mediation fails to break the constitutional deadlock between the African National Congress and Inkatha Freedom Party.
    • Television debate between FW de Klerk and Nelson Mandela, with no clear winner.
    • Lesotho's Deputy Prime Minister, Selometsi Baholo, is shot dead by dissident soldiers during an apparent kidnapping attempt.
  • 15 – Five days of intensive meetings between Mangosuthu Buthelezi, FW de Klerk and Nelson Mandela start with the Kenyan roving ambassador Professor Washington Okumu brokering the negotiations.
  • 18 – The Star's photographer, Ken Oosterbroek, is among several people killed during a firefight between hostel dwellers and National Peacekeeping Force troops in Thokoza.
  • 19 – Inkatha Freedom Party agrees to contest the first nonracial elections, to be held in a week's time.
  • 20 – Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika is officially recognised alongside the Die Stem van Suid-Afrika as the National Anthems
  • 24 – Nine people are killed and 92 injured in central Johannesburg when a 90 kg car bomb explodes just before 10am on the corner of Bree and Von Wielligh Streets outside the African National Congress regional and national headquarters.
  • 25 – A bomb explodes at a taxi rank near the Randfontein station, with no injuries.
  • 26–29 – The first democratic elections take place and the African National Congress wins.
  • 27 – South Africa adopts its present multi-coloured flag as its national flag.
  • South Africa establishes a Consulate-General in Mumbai, India.
  • India establishes a High Commission in Pretoria and opens a second Consulate-General in Durban.
May
June
  • 23 – The General Assembly of the United Nations Organisations recalls resolution 48/258 A and invites South Africa back into the organisation.
August
  • 22 – South Africa and India sign a trade agreement.
November
December
Unknown date

Births

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Deaths

Railways

Locomotives

  • December – Spoornet takes delivery of the last of ten locally manufactured Class 14E1 dual voltage electric mainline locomotives.[1][2]

Sports

Athletics

  • 5 March – Daniel Radebe wins his first national title in the men's marathon, clocking 2:15:06 in East London.

References

  1. South African Railways Index and Diagrams Electric and Diesel Locomotives, 610mm and 1065mm Gauges, Ref LXD 14/1/100/20, 28 January 1975, as amended
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