Contents: Projects • Relief • Special Projects • Research and Education • Publications • The Research Center • Membership and Fundraising • General and Administration • The Africa Fund • 1984 Financial Results • Trustees • Advisory Committee • Executive Secretary • The report says 1984 was a year of terrible repression, but also a year of hope; it was a year in which the South African government unleashed the full force of its repressive apparatus against people peacefully protesting for basic human rights; the South African military and police shot and killed at least 165 black people; detention without charge or trial became commonplace; as the year ended, eight...
Contents: Projects • Relief • Special Projects • Research and Education • Publications • The Research Center • Membership and Fundraising • General and Administration • The Africa Fund • 1984 Financial Results • Trustees • Advisory Committee • Executive Secretary • The report says 1984 was a year of terrible repression, but also a year of hope; it was a year in which the South African government unleashed the full force of its repressive apparatus against people peacefully protesting for basic human rights; the South African military and police shot and killed at least 165 black people; detention without charge or trial became commonplace; as the year ended, eight people were charged with treason and other offenses for organizing nonviolent protests against apartheid. The report discusses assistance to southern African refugees, Namibian refugees, primary textbooks, Namibian children, Nahas Angula, Research Director Gail Hovey, the Mazimbu Refugee Center for South African refugees in Tanzania, underwear and pants for women, Judge Kevin Duffy, South African agents, the Center for Constitutional Rights, Kwanza Sul, public education, the Solomon Mahlangu Freedom College, the non-racial South African Medical Association, the American Public Health Association, the Labor Committee Against Apartheid, William Booth, Jennifer Davis, Dumisani Kumalo, Anglo American, Stephanie Urdang, U.S. corporations in South Africa, Bishop Desmond Tutu, the American Committee on Africa (ACOA), humanitarian aid, public understanding of African issues, the Nobel Peace Prize, an agricultural storehouse, South African women's projects, Mozambican women, South African aggression, drought, students, colleges, and universities.