The memorandum says two operatives of far rightist Lyndon LaRouche attacked a press conference on November 15, 1984 sponsored by the Washington Office on Africa and the Africa Faith and Justice Network, and the press conference was called to release a statement signed by seventeen Catholic bishops on South Africa's apartheid system and the African famine. The memorandum says that that LaRouche would disrupt a press conference criticizing apartheid is not surprising given his admitted ties to the South African government; that Dennis King documented these connections in a 1979 series in New York's Our Town; and that King wrote that members of LaRouche's U.S. Labor Party (USLP) made overtures...
The memorandum says two operatives of far rightist Lyndon LaRouche attacked a press conference on November 15, 1984 sponsored by the Washington Office on Africa and the Africa Faith and Justice Network, and the press conference was called to release a statement signed by seventeen Catholic bishops on South Africa's apartheid system and the African famine. The memorandum says that that LaRouche would disrupt a press conference criticizing apartheid is not surprising given his admitted ties to the South African government; that Dennis King documented these connections in a 1979 series in New York's Our Town; and that King wrote that members of LaRouche's U.S. Labor Party (USLP) made overtures to South African government officials in the U.S. in an attempt to win friends.