Police in action at a Johannesburg protest
- ZA AFRAPIX AP5-14-14.2-14.2.5
- Item
- c1984
Policemen run after a crowd of fleeing protesters in Johannesburg.
Schwegmann, Wendy
Police in action at a Johannesburg protest
Policemen run after a crowd of fleeing protesters in Johannesburg.
Schwegmann, Wendy
Police putting a man in a prison car.
Black policemen load a protestor into a car. One man keeps watch and holds a rubber bullet gun with an injured hand.
Schwegmann, Wendy
Police running with sticks after protesters
Non-white policemen run with sticks.
Schwegmann, Wendy
Jeremy Cronin at a poetry reading
White protest Jeremy Cronin poetry reading at the Wits History Workshop in 1984
Weinberg, Paul
Students attend a youth meeting in Cape Town
Political meeting of youth activists in Mitchells Plain, Cape Town, 1982.
Matthews, Jimi
People of all races gathering before a meeting in Cape Town
Gathering outside a hall before a political meeting in Cape Town to sing freedom songs totally ignoring the fact illegal gatherings act which prohibits this sort of gathering,
Matthews, Jimi
Anti-election picket in Athlone
Anti-election picket on an Athlone street. A young man standing with a poster "UDF Unites, Don't Vote for Apartheid"
Lombard, Rashid
Injured NF anti-election demonstrator
National Forum (NF) anti-election demonstrator injured by police. Scores of demonstrators were injured when police broke up peaceful protests at the polling booth in Lenasia.
Schwegmann, Wendy
Political slogan graffiti for ANC and subsequently SAP
Women walk past political graffiti in Johannesburg. The slogan "Long live ANC" is the original slogan, the ANC has been crossed out subsequently and replaced by SAP. So reads "Long live SAP" with the ANC crossed out. Original graffiti supports the ANC and Subsequent graffiti supports South African Police (SAP)
Schwegmann, Wendy
Political slogan graffiti on a wall about election to Indian House of Delegates
Political slogan graffiti on a wall in Rylands, " H. Osman can't speak to save his own arse. How can he save us? Boycott!!" Popular resentment towards a candidate for the Indian House of Parliament expressed in graffiti. Mr Osman received so few votes in the August 1984 elections he lost his election deposit.
Matthews, Jimi