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Because they were racist.

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Q: Why did the south African government change its policie of apartheid?
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How did the laws in South Africa change after the apartheid ended?

A Democratic Constitution set up by the outgoing government and the African National Congress became the basis for future rule.


How did the south African government react to the wind of change speech?

How did the south African government react to the speech? "Wind of change".


What are the reasons for the reverse course u.s. foreign policy?

Nations consist of people; people change. Foreign policie's have to reflect that change too.


Is there a peaceful way to change the south African government?

yes there is a peacfull way to change thiere goverment


Why did several members of the United Nations have an embargo on South Africa?

Many people around the world were disgusted with the South African practice of apartheid. They used economic sanctions to get South Africa to change its policies.


Why was the world unable to make south Africa change?

Actually, the world DID make South Africa change, as did the courageous actions of people like Nelson Mandela. For decades, South Africa's apartheid government brutally discriminated against black people, and there was little outcry in other countries about it. That began to change in the 1960s and 1970s: as civil rights movements took hold in a number of places around the globe (including in the USA), gradual and increasing pressure on the South African government came from an international chorus of voices-- advocates and political figures, as well as artists, musicians, journalists, poets, and movie stars. There was pressure to release Mandela from jail, as well as pressure to end apartheid. The pressure kept increasing throughout the 1970s and well into the 1980s, and the more the media reported about it, the harder it became for the white rulers of South Africa to continue defending the system that treated black citizens so harshly. It took a while for change to occur (social change is rarely immediate), but by the late 1980s, South Africa's government was on its way to ending apartheid.


What did fw de klerk believe in?

Frederik Willem de Klerk was the last state president of South Africa, during the apartheid. He was the president that aided in the change from the racial segregation in the country to the diverse multiracial democracy that it is today. He was succeeded by Nelson Mandela.


Pressure to change the apartheid system included?

international economic sanctions and internal protests.


How did African Americans use national attention to change policy in state and local government in the 1950s and 1960s?

They used national attention and support to influence the national government to force the states to change civil rights and voting policies.


How did African Americans use national attention to change policy in state and local government in 1950 and 1960?

They used national attention and support to influence the national government to force the states to change civil rights and voting policies.


Why did the role of Federal government in civil rights enforcement change?

The role of the federal government in civil rights enforcement changed because African Americans got their rights guaranteed by law.


The economic boycott was designed to?

It is designed to bring about a change in some companies behavior by not buying their product or service. So if a person thinks they are being wronged in some way by a company, they can try to get everyone to not use that company until they change their ways.