Revolutionary Greetings.. 
 
6 days before the 34th anniversary of Soweto Uprising day.
 
herewith is the political information that we ought to remember when we host 
this soccer events and never forget our Story because Europe has erased our 
story with fantasy and glamour.
on lighty note ----Soweto Blues from Welela by Mama  Zenzile Mirriam Makeba is 
a song to listen in this moment 
A me a kalo 
Ras Sipho Gideon Mantula ( Adv)

Friday marks the historic kick-off of the first FIFA World Cup ever held
on the African continent. But, it also has a further significance in the
history of South Africa.

It is the day that Nelson Mandela and his seven comrades were convicted
for sabotage.

On 11 June 1964, Mandela, Walter Sisulu, Ahmed Kathrada, Raymond Mhlaba,
Denis Goldberg, Andrew Mlangeni, Elias Motsoaledi and Govan Mbeki were
found guilty, in the Rivonia Trial, of sabotage.

The following day, the eight, who had expected the death sentence, were
each sentenced to a term of life imprisonment.Goldberg, who was white,
was separated from the group and incarcerated at Pretoria Central
Prison. Mandela and the others arrived in the early hours of the morning
of 13 June, on Robben Island.


Mandela, Sisulu, Mhlaba and Kathrada were transferred to Pollsmoor
Prison on the mainland in 1982.After he was diagnosed with Tuberculosis
in August 1988, Mandela was treated at Tygerberg Hospital and then at
the Constantiaberg MediClinic before being transferred to Victor Verster
Prison outside Paarl in December that year.


He was released from the gates of the prison on 11 February
1990.Goldberg was released in 1985 and Mbeki in 1987. Sisulu, Kathrada,
Mhlaba, Motsoaledi and Mlangeni were released in October 1989.The World
Cup Kick-off day also marks the 22nd anniversary of the "Free Mandela
Concert" held at Wembley Stadium in London on 11 June 1988.

The concert was billed as his 70th birthday concert but was staged to
highlight the plight of all political prisoners in South Africa and to
call for their release.

The date of the World Cup Final on 11 July is also an historic day in
the anti-apartheid struggle.

It is the date in 1963 that police raided Liliesleaf Farm in Rivonia and
made several arrests including Sisulu and Kathrada. Some of the other
accused were arrested elsewhere.

Mandela was not among them. He was, by then, already a sentenced
prisoner. On 7 November 1962, he was sentenced to five years
imprisonment for leaving the country illegally and inciting workers to
strike.

The charges arose from his underground travels to several countries in
Africa in 1962 where he received military training and garnered support
for Umkhonto weSizwe (Spear of the Nation) the armed wing of the African
National Congress. He also visited London.

The incitement charge arose from his call on workers to stay at home in
protest against South Africa becoming a Republic on 31 May 1961.

Initially held in prison in Pretoria, Mandela was sent to Robben Island
in late May 1963, but two weeks later was returned, inexplicably to
Pretoria, a month before the arrests at Rivonia and elsewhere.

He remained incarcerated with his comrades in Pretoria until the day
they were found guilty, 46 years ago on 11 June 1964.

Source:
http://www.polity.org.za/article/friday-historic-for-madiba-sa-2010-06-0
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