The pamphlet includes the article drawn from and quotes a court record, "Forbidden Voices," which is illegal under South African government regulations that have banned reports of court evidence in the media. The pamphlet says the Delmas Trial, which has lasted three years, is the most important treason trial in South Africa since 1961; the 368-page indictment charges treason, murder and other crimes. Most of the 19 defendants belong to the United Democratic Front (UDF), a legal, nonviolent, non-racist organization. The pamphlet includes "South Africa: STOP THE DETENTION OF CHILDREN," with a photograph of a demonstration at the South African Embassy in 1987 organized by the Lawyers' Committee...
The pamphlet includes the article drawn from and quotes a court record, "Forbidden Voices," which is illegal under South African government regulations that have banned reports of court evidence in the media. The pamphlet says the Delmas Trial, which has lasted three years, is the most important treason trial in South Africa since 1961; the 368-page indictment charges treason, murder and other crimes. Most of the 19 defendants belong to the United Democratic Front (UDF), a legal, nonviolent, non-racist organization. The pamphlet includes "South Africa: STOP THE DETENTION OF CHILDREN," with a photograph of a demonstration at the South African Embassy in 1987 organized by the Lawyers' Committee as part of its "Symposium on the Detention of Children in South Africa." The pamphlet also includes a newspaper article "South African Family Mourns Son Who 'Disappeared'" by Christopher S. Wren. The pamphlet discusses apartheid, Patrick Lekota, Popo Molefe, Kees van Dijkhorst, Fanie Goduka, Matome Bopape, Johannes Maisha Bopape, Stanza Bopape, the Mamelodi Civic Association, Keith Coleman, the Community Resource and Information Center, Minister of Law and Order Adriaan J. Vlok, and Sylvia Dhlomo Jele.