Randall Robinson
Washington, DC, United States
December 7, 1984
1 page
Letter introducing the "Free South Africa Movement" (FSAM) and seeking contributions to TransAfrica, which is coordinating the FSAM. Hundreds of people have participated in daily demonstrations at the South Africa embassy at which prominent leaders have been arrested. Strategies are being developed for an ongoing campaign to put pressure on the South African government, our own government, and U.S. corporations that do business in South Africa. The goals of the FSAM are: 1. To secure the release of 13 strike labor leaders imprisoned without charge in South Africa; 2. To secure the re1ease of Nelson Mandela, Walter Sisulu and others who are the legitimate leaders of the South...
Letter introducing the "Free South Africa Movement" (FSAM) and seeking contributions to TransAfrica, which is coordinating the FSAM. Hundreds of people have participated in daily demonstrations at the South Africa embassy at which prominent leaders have been arrested. Strategies are being developed for an ongoing campaign to put pressure on the South African government, our own government, and U.S. corporations that do business in South Africa. The goals of the FSAM are: 1. To secure the release of 13 strike labor leaders imprisoned without charge in South Africa; 2. To secure the re1ease of Nelson Mandela, Walter Sisulu and others who are the legitimate leaders of the South African people and have been in South African prisons for decades; 3. To compel the start of good faith negotiations between these released leaders and the South African government; and 4. To compel the abandonment of the U.S. accommodationist policy of "constructive engagement" toward the Republic of South Africa.
TransAfrica
Free South Africa Movement
English
text/pdf
Digitized by Columbia College Archives & Special Collections.
Used by permission of TransAfrica.