Namibia repression

Zone des éléments

Référentiel

Code

Note(s) sur la portée et contenu

    Note(s) sur la source

      Note(s) d'affichage

        Termes hiérarchiques

        Namibia repression

          Termes équivalents

          Namibia repression

            Termes associés

            Namibia repression

              2 Description archivistique résultats pour Namibia repression

              2 résultats directement liés Exclure les termes spécifiques
              US UK-PWP01 PWPFOC001-PWPFOCI033 · Pièce · March–April 1981
              Fait partie de Focus Publication

              This issue documents the South African raid on ANC residences in Matola, Mozambique, killing 15 people, including ANC and SACTU members. It reports widespread detentions, school boycotts, union crackdowns, and new censorship laws. It includes a testimony from SWAPO's Axel Johannes detailing 15 months of solitary detention under Proclamation AG26. Key events include the banning of six journalists, mass opposition to conscription in Namibia, accounts of torture, detentions of AZAPO members, the death of Jonas Shimuefeleni on Robben Island, and the escape of Kassinga detainees. The issue underscores militarization in Namibia, legal mechanisms used for indefinite detention, and state suppression of media and civil liberties.

              US UK-PWP01 PWPFOC001-PWPFOCI049 · Pièce · November–December 1983
              Fait partie de Focus Publication

              Issue 49 focuses on violent repression of SWAPO activism in Namibia during the UN Secretary-General’s visit, the ongoing arrests and torture of activists, and bans on key political figures. It includes detailed lists of restricted and detained persons, coverage of constitutional resistance through the UDF’s launch, and increasing detentions of students and trade unionists in South Africa. It also highlights the torture of detainees, psychiatric abuse, and the use of treason trials to suppress dissent. The issue documents major political trials, mass protests, state censorship, and population clearances in the Kavango region of Namibia.