Dumisani S. Kumalo; The Africa Fund
New York, New York, United States
January 15, 1991
6 pages
As the 102nd U.S. Congress prepares its agenda for the year, the Bush Administration is quietly considering lifting economic sanctions against Pretoria as a “reward” for Mr. de Klerk and his regime. This is in direct contradiction to a call by Nelson Mandela and the ANC National Consultative Conference in December that sanctions should be maintained. (See enclosed statement.) To support Nelson Mandela we need you to collect Vote Campaign ballots which we will deliver to Congress on March 12, Political Prisoners Day to demand that sanctions be maintained. The mailing includes reprints of newspaper articles: “Sanctions: Cohen optimistic” and “SA sanctions may go...
As the 102nd U.S. Congress prepares its agenda for the year, the Bush Administration is quietly considering lifting economic sanctions against Pretoria as a “reward” for Mr. de Klerk and his regime. This is in direct contradiction to a call by Nelson Mandela and the ANC National Consultative Conference in December that sanctions should be maintained. (See enclosed statement.) To support Nelson Mandela we need you to collect Vote Campaign ballots which we will deliver to Congress on March 12, Political Prisoners Day to demand that sanctions be maintained. The mailing includes reprints of newspaper articles: “Sanctions: Cohen optimistic” and “SA sanctions may go this year: Cohen”.
The Africa Fund
English
text/pdf
Used by permission of Africa Action (successor to The Africa Fund).
George M. Houser Africa collection, Michigan State University Libraries Special Collections