A Police supervised press tour of Soweto on 16 June 1984, the 7 years after the Soweto Uprising. Journalists are driven around in a "Raatel" Soldiers stand in the foreground.
A service held in Soweto for Matola Raid victims. Uncertain whether raid of 1981 or 1983. On the podium signs with text "To gun down defenceless men women and children in their sleep is dastardly cowardice"
During the height of apartheid, security forces carried out a raid on ANC houses in Matola, Mozambique, where 16 South Africans and one Portuguese national were killed. Most of the victims were members of Umkhonto We Sizwe in 1981. In a SADF raid on Matola in 1983 at least 6 people died including 2 children and 26 people wounded.
Veteran anti-apartheid activist Helen Joseph (centre) was amongst a group of black and white people at a tea party organised to observe Human Rights Day. A large contingency of security forces monitored the meeting. Soweto.
Walter Sisulu waves to the crowd on his arrival home after his release from detention as a political prisoner. He is accompanied by Albertina Sisulu and a supporter holds up a poster behind saying "Long live the ANC"
Federation of Transvaal Women (FEDTRAW) and Black Sash women remember Hector Pieterson's death 13 Years earlier and place flowers on his grave. Avalon cemetery, Soweto. 16 June 1989.
Delegates give the open palm salute at the launch of the Pan Africanist Movement (PAM) . More than 600 delegates met in Soweto to formally launch the organisation which shares the Pan Africanist Congress' Africanist ideology. Johannesburg, 2 December 1989.