Dutch traders landed at the southern tip of modern day South Africa in 1652 and established a stopover point on the spice route between the Netherlands and the Far East, founding the city of Cape Town. After the British seized the Cape of Good Hope area in 1806, many of the Dutch settlers (Afrikaners, called "Boers" (farmers) by the British) trekked north to found their own republics in lands taken from the indigenous black inhabitants. The discovery of diamonds (1867) and gold (1886) spurred wealth and immigration and intensified the subjugation of the native inhabitants. The Afrikaners resisted British encroachments but were defeated in the Second South African War (1899-1902); however, the British and the Afrikaners, ruled together beginning in 1910 under the Union of South Africa, which became a republic in 1961 after a whites-only referendum. In 1948, the Afrikaner-dominated National Party was voted into power and instituted a policy of apartheid - the separate development of the races - which favored the white minority at the expense of the black majority. The African National Congress (ANC) led the opposition to apartheid and many top ANC leaders, such as Nelson MANDELA, spent decades in South Africa's prisons. Internal protests and insurgency, as well as boycotts by some Western nations and institutions, led to the regime's eventual willingness to negotiate a peaceful transition to majority rule. The first multi-racial elections in 1994 following the end of apartheid ushered in majority rule under an ANC-led government. South Africa has since struggled to address apartheid-era imbalances in decent housing, education, and health care. ANC infighting came to a head in 2008 when President Thabo MBEKI was recalled by Parliament, and Deputy President Kgalema MOTLANTHE, succeeded him as interim president. Jacob ZUMA became president after the ANC won general elections in 2009; he was reelected in 2014.
South Africa is a parliamentary republic.
Source: CIA World Factbook
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Displaying 66 - 70 of 94Land Administration Amendment Act 1996 (No. 52 of 1996).
This Act modifies the principal Act by indicating as persons to whom powers delegated to the Premier under subsection 1(d) may be delegated: The Director-General of Land affairs of the province concerned or any member of the Executive Council of the province concerned. The powers delegated may be exercised by any officer in the service of the provincial government indicated by the Director-general of the province concerned.
Physical Planning Act.
This Act provides for physical planning in South Africa at national and local level. It assigns functions to the Minister of Regional and Land Affairs for achievement the objects of this Act and grants power to the Minister to divide the Republic into two or more development regions and to divide a development region into two or more planning regions. The Minister shall ensure that physical planning is promoted and coordinated on a national and regional basis.
National Environmental Management Protected Areas Act, 2003 (No. 57 of 2003).
The objectives of this Act are: (a) to provide, within the framework of national legislation, for the declaration and management of protected areas; (b) to provide for cooperative governance in the declaration and management of protected areas; (c) to effect a national system of protected areas in South Africa as part of a strategy to manage and conserve its biodiversity; (d) to provide for a representative network of protected areas on state land, private land and communal land; (e) to promote sustainable utilization of protected areas for the benefit of people, in a manner that would pres
Proclamation of the President regarding the transfer of administration of the Land and Agricultural Development Bank Act, 2002 and powers and functions entrusted by the Act, from the minister responsible for agriculture to the minister of finance (No. ...
This Proclamation of the President transfers the administration and any power or function entrusted to the Minister responsible for agriculture by the Land and Agricultural Development Bank Act, 2002 to the Minister of Finance.
Amends: Land and Agricultural Development Bank Act, 2002 (No. 15 of 2002). (2000-60-8)
Restitution of Land Rights Amendment Act, 2014 (No. 15 of 2014).
The Act amend the Restitution of Land Rights Act, 1994 in sections 6, 11, and 12 in respect o legal proceedings and in section 17 in respect of offences. It also, among other things, repeals sections 23, 26 and 26A and makes an amendment to section 42D with respect to delegation of powers.
Amends: Restitution of Land Rights Act (No. 22 of 1994). (1994-11-25)