Apartheid icon mourned by family

Published Oct 31, 2006

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- Go to Inside IOL to express your feelings about the death of PW Botha.

PW Botha, who was the face of white South Africa as president at the height of the anti-apartheid struggle, died at his home on Tuesday aged 90, the South African Press Association reported.

Botha was toppled in a cabinet rebellion in 1989 and later replaced by FW de Klerk, who repudiated almost everything the finger-wagging hardliner had stood for, including the laws that were the foundation of apartheid.

Although Botha's security forces killed more than 2 000 people and an estimated 25 000 people were detained without trial and often tortured, he refused to apologise for apartheid and denied he had known about the torture and assassinations.

He declined to appear when summoned by the state-appointed Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), which in its final report in 2003 blamed him for much of the horror of the last decade of white rule.

Since leaving office he had lived a quiet life with his second wife Barbara in a lagoon-side home on the Western Cape coast for almost two decades, occasionally emerging to launch broadsides at the African National Congress, which has ruled the nation since 1994.

- Go to Inside IOL to express your feelings about the death of PW Botha.

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