|
The
Republic of South Africa is a
parliamentary democracy comprising nine
provinces which is located at the southern tip of
Africa, with a 2,798 kilometres (1,739 mi) coastline[7][8]
on the
Atlantic and
Indian Oceans.[9]
To the north lie
Namibia,
Botswana
and Zimbabwe;
to the east are
Mozambique
and
Swaziland; while
Lesotho
is an
enclave surrounded by South African territory.[10]
South Africa is known for a diversity in cultures and
languages. Eleven official languages are recognised in the
constitution.[9]
Two of these languages are of European origin:
Afrikaans,
a language which originated mainly from Dutch that is spoken
by the majority of
white and
Coloured South Africans, and
South African English. Though English is commonly used
in public and commercial life, it is only the fifth
most-spoken home language.[9]
South Africa is ethnically diverse. About 79.5% of the
South African population is of
black African ancestry,[4]
divided among a variety of ethnic groups speaking different
Bantu
languages, nine of which have official status.[9]
South Africa also contains the largest communities of
European,
Asian, and racially mixed ancestry in Africa. About a
quarter of the population is
unemployed[11]
and lives on less than US $1.25 a day.[12]
South Africa is a
constitutional democracy in the form of a
parliamentary republic; unlike most parliamentary
republics, the positions of
head of
state and
head of government are merged in a parliament-dependent
President. It is one of the founding members of the
African
Union, and has the largest economy of all the members.
It is also a founding member of the United Nations and
NEPAD. South Africa is a member of the
Commonwealth of Nations,
Antarctic Treaty System,
Group of
77,
South Atlantic Peace and Cooperation Zone,
Southern African Customs Union,
World Trade Organization,
International Monetary Fund,
G20 and G8+5.
History
South Africa contains some of the oldest
archaeological sites in the world.[13][14][15]
Extensive
fossil remains at the
Sterkfontein,
Kromdraai and
Makapansgat
caves suggest that various
australopithecines existed in South Africa from about
three million years ago.[16]
These were succeeded by various species, including
Homo
habilis,
Homo
erectus and modern humans,
Homo sapiens.
Settlements of Bantu-speaking peoples, who were
iron-using agriculturists and
herdsmen, were already present south of the
Limpopo
River (now the northern border with Botswana and
Zimbabwe) by the fourth or fifth century
CE. (see
Bantu
expansion). They displaced, conquered and absorbed the
original
Khoisan speakers, the
Khoikhoi
and
San peoples. The Bantu slowly moved south. The earliest
ironworks
in modern-day
KwaZulu-Natal Province are believed to date from around
1050. The southernmost group was the
Xhosa
people, whose language incorporates certain linguistic
traits from the earlier Khoisan people. The Xhosa reached
the
Great Fish River, in today's
Eastern Cape Province. As they migrated, these larger
Iron Age
populations displaced or assimilated earlier peoples, who
often had
hunter-gatherer societies[citation
needed].
Modern humans have
inhabited Southern Africa for more than 100,000 years.
At the time of European contact, the dominant
indigenous peoples were Bantu-speaking peoples who had
migrated from other parts of Africa about one thousand years
before. The two major historic groups were the Xhosa and
Zulu peoples.
In 1487, the Portuguese explorer
Bartolomeu Dias became the first European known to have
reached southern Africa. On December 4, he landed at
Walfisch Bay (now known as Walvis Bay in present day
Namibia). This was south of the furthest point reached in
1485 by his predecessor, the Portuguese navigator Diogo Cão
(Cape Cross, north of the bay). Dias continued down the
western cost of southern Africa. After 8 January 1488,
prevented by storms from proceeding along the coast, he
sailed out of sight of land and passed the southernmost
point of Africa without seeing it. After he had reached as
far up the eastern coast of Africa as what he called Rio
do Infante, probably the present-day
Groot River, in May 1488 on his return he saw the Cape,
which he first named Cabo das Tormentas (Cape of
Storms). His King,
John II, renamed the point Cabo da Boa Esperança
or
Cape of Good Hope, as it led to the riches of the East
Indies.[17]
Dias' feat of navigation was later memorialized in
Camões' epic Portuguese poem,
The Lusiads (1572).
In 1652, a century and a half after the discovery of the
Cape Sea Route,
Jan
van Riebeeck
established a refreshment station at the Cape of Good
Hope, at what would become
Cape Town,[18]
on behalf of the
Dutch East India Company. The Dutch transported
slaves from
Indonesia,
Madagascar,
and India as labour for the colonists in Cape Town. As they
expanded east, the Dutch settlers met the southwesterly
migrating Xhosa people in the region of the Fish River. A
series of wars, called the
Cape Frontier Wars, ensued, caused by their conflicting
land and livestock interests.
The discovery of
diamonds and later
gold
triggered the 19th-century conflict known as the
Anglo-Boer War, as the
Boers (original Dutch,
Flemish, German and French settlers) and the British
fought for the control of the South African mineral wealth.
Cape Town became a
British colony in 1806. European settlement expanded
during the 1820s as the Boers and the British
1820
Settlers claimed land in the north and east of the
country. Conflicts arose among the Xhosa, Zulu and
Afrikaner
groups who competed for territory.
Great Britain took over the Cape of Good Hope area in
1795, to prevent it from falling under control of the
French First Republic, which had
invaded the
Dutch
Republic. Given its standing interests in Australia and
India, Great Britain wanted to use Cape Town as an interim
port for its merchants' long voyages. The British returned
Cape Town to the Dutch in 1803, but soon afterwards the
Dutch East India Company declared bankruptcy.
The British annexed the Cape Colony in 1806. The British
continued the frontier wars against the Xhosa, pushing the
eastern frontier through a line of forts established along
the Fish River. They consolidated the territory by
encouraging British settlement. Due to pressure of
abolitionist societies in Britain, the
British parliament stopped its global
slave trade with the passage of the
Slave Trade Act 1807, then abolished slavery in all its
colonies with the
Slavery Abolition Act 1833.
In the first two decades of the 19th century, the Zulu
people grew in power and expanded their territory under
their leader,
Shaka.[19]
Shaka’s warfare led indirectly to the
Mfecane
(“Crushing”) that devastated the inland plateau in the early
1820s.[20]
An offshoot of the Zulu, the
Matabele people created a larger empire under their king
Mzilikazi,
including large parts of the
highveld.
During the 1830s, approximately 12,000 Boers (later known
as
Voortrekkers), departed from the
Cape
Colony, where they had been subjected to British
control. They migrated to the future Natal, Orange Free
State and Transvaal regions. The Boers founded the
Boer
Republics: the
South African Republic (now Gauteng, Limpopo, Mpumalanga
and
North West provinces) and the
Orange Free State (Free State).
The discovery of diamonds in 1867 and gold in 1884 in the
interior encouraged economic growth and immigration, the so
called
Mineral Revolution. This intensified the European-South
African subjugation of the indigenous people. The struggle
to control these important economic resources was a factor
between Europeans and the indigenous population, and also
between the Boers and the British.[21]
The Boer Republics successfully resisted British
encroachments during the
First
Boer War (1880–1881) using
guerrilla warfare tactics, which were well suited to
local conditions. However, the British returned with greater
numbers, more experience, and new strategy in the
Second Boer War (1899–1902), which they won.
20th century
Within the country, anti-British policies among white
South Africans focused on independence. During the Dutch and
British colonial years,
racial segregation was mostly informal, though some
legislation were enacted to control the settlement and
movement of native people, including the
Native Location Act of 1879 and the system of
pass laws.[22][23][24]
Power was held by the ethnic European colonists.
After four years of negotiating, the
South Africa Act 1909 created the
Union of South Africa from the Cape and
Natal colonies, as well as the republics of Orange Free
State and
Transvaal, on 31 May 1910, eight years after the end of
the Second Boer War. The newly created Union of South Africa
was a
dominion of the
British Empire. The
Natives' Land Act of 1913 severely restricted the
ownership of land by blacks; at that stage natives
controlled only 7% of the country. The amount of land
reserved for
indigenous peoples was later marginally increased.[25]
In the Boer republics,[26]
from as early as the
Pretoria Convention (chapter XXVI),[27]
and subsequent South African governments, the legislature
passed legally institutionalised
segregation, later known as
apartheid. The government established three racial
classes: white, coloured (people of Asian or mixed racial
ancestry), and black, with rights and restrictions for each.
In 1931 the union was effectively granted independence
from the United Kingdom with the passage of the
Statute of Westminster. In 1934, the
South African Party and
National Party merged to form the
United Party, seeking reconciliation between Afrikaners
and English-speaking "Whites". In 1939 the party split over
the entry of the Union into World War II as an ally of the
United Kingdom, a move which the National Party followers
strongly opposed.
"For use by white persons" – sign from the
apartheid era.
In 1948, the National Party was elected to power. It
strengthened the racial segregation begun under Dutch and
British colonial rule, and subsequent South African
governments since the Union was formed[citation
needed]. The Nationalist Government classified
all peoples into three races, developed rights and
limitations for each, such as pass laws and residential
restrictions[citation
needed]. The white minority controlled the
vastly larger black majority. The system of segregation
became known collectively as apartheid.
While the White minority enjoyed the highest
standard of living in all of Africa, comparable to
First
World Western nations, the Black majority remained
disadvantaged by almost every standard, including income,
education, housing, and life expectancy. On 31 May 1961,
following a whites-only
referendum, the country became a republic and left the
Commonwealth.
Queen Elizabeth II ceased to be
head of
state, and the last
Governor-General became
State President.
Despite opposition both within and outside the country,
the government legislated for a continuation of apartheid.
Apartheid became increasingly controversial, and some
Western nations and institutions began to
boycott
doing business with South Africa because of its racial
policies and oppression of
civil rights. [International sanctions]],
divestment of holdings by investors accompanied growing
unrest and oppression within South Africa. The government
harshly oppressed resistance movements, and violence became
widespread, with anti-apartheid activists using
strikes, marches, protests, and
sabotage
by bombing and other means. The
African National Congress (ANC) was a major resistance
movement.
In the late 1970s, South Africa
began a programme of nuclear weapons development. In the
following decade, it produced six deliverable nuclear
weapons.[28][29]
The
Mahlabatini Declaration of Faith, signed by
Mangosuthu Buthelezi and
Harry
Schwarz in 1974, enshrined the principles of peaceful
transition of power and equality for all, the first of such
agreements by acknowledged black and white political leaders
in South Africa. Ultimately,
F.W. de Klerk negotiated with
Nelson
Mandela in 1993 for a transition of policies and
government.
In 1990 the National Party government took the first step
towards dismantling discrimination when it lifted the ban on
the African National Congress and other political
organisations. It released Nelson Mandela from prison after
twenty-seven years' serving a sentence for sabotage. A
negotiation process followed. The government repealed
apartheid legislation. South Africa destroyed its nuclear
arsenal and acceded to the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. South Africa held its
first universal
elections in 1994, which the ANC won by an overwhelming
majority. It has been in power ever since. The country
rejoined the
Commonwealth of Nations.
In
post-apartheid South Africa, unemployment has been
extremely high as the country has struggled with many
changes. While many blacks have risen to middle or upper
classes, the overall unemployment rate of blacks worsened
between 1994 and 2003.[30]
Poverty among whites, previously rare, increased.[31]
While some have attributed this partly to the legacy of
apartheid, increasingly many attribute it to the failure of
the current government's policies. In addition, the current
government has struggled to achieve the monetary and fiscal
discipline to ensure both redistribution of wealth and
economic growth. Since the ANC-led government took power,
the United Nations
Human Development Index of South Africa has fallen,
while it was steadily rising until the mid-1990s.[32]
Some may be attributed to the
AIDS
pandemic, and the failure of the government to take
steps to address it in the early years.[33]
Government and politics
The Houses of
Parliament in Cape Town, seat of the
legislature
South Africa has three capital cities:
Cape Town,
the largest of the three, is the legislative capital;
Pretoria
is the administrative capital; and
Bloemfontein is the judicial capital. South
Africa has a
bicameral parliament: the
National Council of Provinces (the
upper
house) has 90 members, while the
National Assembly (the
lower
house) has 400 members.
Members of the lower house are elected on a population
basis by
proportional representation: half of the members are
elected from national lists and the other half are elected
from provincial lists. Ten members are elected to represent
each province in the National Council of Provinces,
regardless of the population of the province. Elections for
both chambers are held every five years. The government is
formed in the lower house, and the leader of the majority
party in the National Assembly is the President.
The primary sources of South Africa law are Roman-Dutch
mercantile law and personal law with
English Common law, as imports of Dutch settlements and
British colonialism.[34]
The first European based law in South Africa was brought by
the Dutch East India Company and is called
Roman-Dutch law. It was imported before the
codification of European law into the
Napoleonic Code and is comparable in many ways to
Scots law.
This was followed in the 19th century by
English
law, both
common and
statutory. Starting in 1910 with unification, South
Africa had its own parliament which passed laws specific for
South Africa, building on those previously passed for the
individual member colonies. During the years of apartheid,
the country's political scene was dominated by figures like
B. J.
Vorster and
P. W.
Botha, as well as opposition figures such as
Harry
Schwarz,
Joe Slovo
and
Helen Suzman.
Since the end of apartheid in 1994, South African
politics have been dominated by the
African National Congress (ANC), which has been the
dominant party with 60–70% of the vote. The main challenger
to the rule of the ANC is the
Democratic Alliance party, which received 16.7% of the
vote in the 2009 election and 14.8% in the 2006 election.
The formerly dominant
New National Party, which introduced apartheid through
its predecessor, the National Party, chose to merge with the
ANC on 9 April 2005. Other major political parties
represented in Parliament are the
Congress of the People, which split from the ANC and won
7.4% of the vote in 2009, and the
Inkatha Freedom Party, which mainly represents Zulu
voters and took 4.6% of the vote in the 2009 election.
Since 2004, the country has had many thousands of popular
protests, some violent, making it, according to one
academic, the "most protest-rich country in the world".[35]
Many of these protests have been organised from the growing
shanty towns that surround South African cities.
In 2008, South Africa placed 5th out of 48
sub-Saharan African countries on the
Ibrahim Index of African Governance. South Africa scored
well in the categories of
Rule of Law,
Transparency &
Corruption and
Participation &
Human Rights, but was let down by its relatively poor
performance in Safety & Security. The Ibrahim Index is a
comprehensive measure of African governance, based on a
number of different variables which reflect the success with
which governments deliver essential political goods to its
citizens.[36]
After the end of apartheid in 1994, the "independent" and
"semi-independent"
Bantustans were integrated into the political structure
of South Africa by the abolition of the four former
provinces (Cape
Province,
Natal
Province,
Orange Free State and
Transvaal Province) and the creation of nine fully
integrated new provinces. The generally smaller size of the
new provinces theoretically means that local governments
have more resources to distribute over smaller areas. The
provinces are subdivided into 52
districts: 6
metropolitan and 46
district municipalities. The district municipalities are
further subdivided into 231
local municipalities. The metropolitan municipalities
perform the functions of both district and local
municipalities. The new provinces are:
| Province[37] |
Capital[38] |
Area (km²)[39] |
Population (2010 est.)[40] |
|
Eastern Cape |
Bhisho |
168,966 |
6,743,800 |
|
Free State |
Bloemfontein |
129,825 |
2,824,500 |
|
Gauteng |
Johannesburg |
18,178 |
11,191,700 |
|
KwaZulu-Natal |
Pietermaritzburg |
94,361 |
10,645,400 |
|
Limpopo |
Polokwane |
125,754 |
5,439,600 |
|
Mpumalanga |
Nelspruit |
76,495 |
3,617,600 |
|
Northern Cape |
Kimberley |
372,889 |
1,103,900 |
|
North West |
Mafikeng |
104,882 |
3,200,900 |
|
Western Cape |
Cape Town |
129,462 |
5,223,900 |
| Total |
1,220,813 |
49,991,300 |
Foreign relations and military
Since the end of apartheid, the South African foreign
policy has focused on its African partners particularly in
the
Southern African Development Community (SADC) and the
African
Union. South Africa has played a key role as a mediator
in African conflicts over the last decade, such as in
Burundi,
the
Democratic Republic of Congo, the
Comoros,
and Zimbabwe.
After apartheid ended, South Africa was readmitted to the
Commonwealth of Nations.
As the Union of South Africa, South Africa was a founding
member of the United Nations. The then Prime Minister
Jan Smuts
wrote the
preamble to the United Nations Charter.[41][42]
South Africa was a non-permanent member of the
United Nations Security Council between 2007 and 2008,
and has attracted controversy by voting against a resolution
criticising the
Burmese government in 2006 and against the
implementation of sanctions against
Zimbabwe
in 2008. South Africa is a member of the
Group of
77 and chaired the organisation in 2006. South Africa is
a member of the
South Atlantic Peace and Cooperation Zone,
Southern African Customs Union,
World Trade Organization,
International Monetary Fund,
G20 and G8+5.
The
South African National Defence Force (SANDF) was created
in 1994,[43][44]
as an all volunteer force composed of as the former
South African Defence Force, the forces of the African
nationalist groups (Umkhonto
we Sizwe and
Azanian People's Liberation Army), and the former
Bantustan defence forces.[43]
The SANDF is subdivided into four branches, the
South African Army, the
South African Air Force, the
South African Navy, and the
South African Medical Service.[45]
In recent years, the SANDF has become a major
peacekeeping force in Africa,[46]
and has been involved in operations in Lesotho, the
Democratic Republic of the Congo,[46]
and Burundi,[46]
amongst others. It has also participated as a part of
multi-national UN
peacekeeping forces.
South Africa undertook a
nuclear weapons programme in the 1970s[47]
and
may have conducted a nuclear test over the Atlantic in
1979.[48]
It is the only African country to have successfully
developed nuclear weapons. It has become the first
country (followed by Ukraine) with nuclear capability to
voluntarily renounce and dismantle its programme and in the
process signed the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty in 1991.[47]
Geography
Satellite picture of South Africa
The Drakensberg mountains, the highest mountain
range in South Africa
South Africa is located at the southernmost region of
Africa, with a long coastline that stretches more than
2,500 km (1,553 mi) and along two oceans (the South Atlantic
and the Indian). At 1,219,912 km2 (471,011
sq mi),[49]
South Africa is the 25th-largest country in the world and is
comparable in size to
Colombia.
Njesuthi
in the
Drakensberg at 3,408 m (11,181 ft) is the highest peak
in South Africa. Excluding the
Prince Edward Islands, the country lies between
latitudes
22° and
35°S, and longitudes
16° and
33°E.
The interior of South Africa is a vast, flat, and
sparsely populated scrubland, the
Karoo,
which is drier towards the northwest along the Namib desert.
In contrast, the eastern coastline is lush and well-watered,
which produces a climate similar to the tropics.
To the north of Johannesburg, the altitude drops beyond
the escarpment of the Highveld, and turns into the lower
lying Bushveld, an area of mixed dry forest and an abundance
of wildlife. East of the Highveld, beyond the eastern
escarpment, the Lowveld stretches towards the Indian Ocean.
It has particularly high temperatures, and is also the
location of extended subtropical agriculture.
South Africa also has one possession, the small
sub-Antarctic archipelago of the
Prince Edward Islands, consisting of
Marion Island (290 km2/110 sq mi) and Prince
Edward Island (45 km2/17 sq mi) (not to be
confused with the
Canadian province of the same name).
Climate
South Africa has a generally
temperate climate, due in part to being surrounded by
the Atlantic and Indian Oceans on three sides, by its
location in the climatically milder
southern hemisphere and due to the average elevation
rising steadily towards the north (towards the equator) and
further inland. Due to this varied topography and oceanic
influence, a great variety of climatic zones exist.
The climatic zones vary, from the extreme desert of the
southern
Namib in the farthest northwest to the lush subtropical
climate in the east along the Mozambique border and the
Indian ocean. From the east, the land quickly rises over a
mountainous escarpment towards the interior plateau known as
the Highveld.
Even though South Africa is classified as semi-arid, there
is considerable variation in climate as well as topography.
The extreme southwest has a climate remarkably similar to
that of the
Mediterranean with wet winters and hot, dry summers,
hosting the famous
Fynbos
Biome of
grassland and
thicket. This area also produces much of the wine in
South Africa. This region is also particularly known for its
wind, which blows intermittently almost all year. The
severity of this wind made passing around the Cape of Good
Hope particularly treacherous for sailors, causing many
shipwrecks. Further east on the south coast, rainfall is
distributed more evenly throughout the year, producing a
green landscape. This area is popularly known as the
Garden
Route.
The Free State is particularly flat because it lies
centrally on the high plateau. North of the
Vaal River,
the Highveld becomes better watered and does not experience
subtropical extremes of heat. Johannesburg, in the centre of
the Highveld, is at 1,740 m (5,709 ft) and receives an
annual rainfall of 760 mm (29.9 in). Winters in this region
are cold, although snow is rare.
The high Drakensberg mountains, which form the
south-eastern escarpment of the Highveld, offer limited
skiing opportunities in winter. The coldest place in South
Africa is
Sutherland in the western
Roggeveld Mountains, where midwinter temperatures can
reach as low as −15 °C (5.0 °F). The deep interior has the
hottest temperatures: a temperature of 51.7 °C (125.06 °F)
was recorded in 1948 in the Northern Cape Kalahari near
Upington.[50]
| [hide]Climate
data for Cape Town, South Africa |
| Month |
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
Year |
| Average high °C (°F) |
26.1
(79) |
26.5
(79.7) |
25.4
(77.7) |
23.0
(73.4) |
20.3
(68.5) |
18.1
(64.6) |
17.5
(63.5) |
17.8
(64) |
19.2
(66.6) |
21.3
(70.3) |
23.5
(74.3) |
24.9
(76.8) |
22.0
(71.6) |
| Average low °C (°F) |
15.7
(60.3) |
15.6
(60.1) |
14.2
(57.6) |
11.9
(53.4) |
9.4
(48.9) |
7.8
(46) |
7.0
(44.6) |
7.5
(45.5) |
8.7
(47.7) |
10.6
(51.1) |
13.2
(55.8) |
14.9
(58.8) |
11.4
(52.5) |
|
Precipitation mm (inches) |
15
(0.59) |
17
(0.67) |
20
(0.79) |
41
(1.61) |
69
(2.72) |
93
(3.66) |
82
(3.23) |
77
(3.03) |
40
(1.57) |
30
(1.18) |
14
(0.55) |
17
(0.67) |
515
(20.28) |
| Avg.
precipitation days |
5.5 |
4.6 |
4.8 |
8.3 |
11.4 |
13.3 |
11.8 |
13.7 |
10.4 |
8.7 |
4.9 |
6.2 |
103.6 |
| Sunshine
hours |
337.9 |
299.9 |
291.4 |
234.0 |
204.6 |
174.0 |
192.2 |
210.8 |
225.0 |
279.0 |
309.0 |
334.8 |
3,092.2 |
|
Source: Hong Kong Observatory[51] |
Flora and
fauna
South Africa is ranked sixth out of the world’s seventeen
megadiverse countries,[52]
with more than 20,000 different plants, or about 10% of all
the known species of plants on Earth, making it particularly
rich in plant biodiversity. The most prevalent biome in
South Africa is the grassland, particularly on the
Highveld,
where the plant cover is dominated by different
grasses, low shrubs, and
acacia trees, mainly camel-thorn and whitethorn.
Vegetation becomes even more sparse towards the northwest
due to low
rainfall. There are several species of water-storing
succulents like
aloes and
euphorbias in the very hot and dry
Namaqualand area. The grass and thorn
savannah turns slowly into a bush savannah towards the
north-east of the country, with denser growth. There are
significant numbers of
baobab trees in this area, near the northern end of
Kruger National Park.[53]
The Fynbos
Biome, which makes up the majority of the area and plant
life in the
Cape floristic region, one of the six floral kingdoms,
is located in a small region of the
Western
Cape and contains more than 9,000 of those species,
making it among the richest regions on earth in terms of
floral biodiversity. The majority of the plants are
evergreen hard-leaf plants with fine, needle-like leaves,
such as the
sclerophyllous plants. Another uniquely South African
plant is the
protea genus of flowering plants. There are around 130
different species of
protea in
South Africa.
While South Africa has a great wealth of flowering
plants, only 1% of South Africa is forest, almost
exclusively in the humid
coastal plain of KwaZulu-Natal, where there are also
areas of
Southern Africa mangroves in river mouths. There are
even smaller reserves of forests that are out of the reach
of fire, known as
montane forests. Plantations of imported tree species
are predominant, particularly the non-native
eucalyptus
and pine.
South Africa has lost a large area of natural habitat in the
last four decades, primarily due to overpopulation,
sprawling development patterns and deforestation during the
nineteenth century. South Africa is one of the worst
affected countries in the world when it comes to invasion by
alien species with many (e.g.
Black Wattle,
Port Jackson,
Hakea,
Lantana
and
Jacaranda) posing a significant threat to the native
biodiversity and the already scarce water resources. The
original
temperate forest found by the first European settlers
was exploited ruthlessly until only small patches remained.
Currently, South African hardwood trees like
Real Yellowwood (Podocarpus latifolius),
stinkwood (Ocotea bullata), and South African
Black Ironwood (Olea laurifolia) are under
government protection.
Numerous mammals are found in the
bushveld
including lions, leopards,
white rhinos,
blue wildebeest,
kudus,
impalas,
hyenas, hippopotamus and giraffes. A significant extent
of the
bushveld exists in the north-east including
Kruger National Park and the
Mala Mala Reserve, as well as in the far north in the
Waterberg Biosphere.
Climate change is expected to bring considerable warming
and drying to much of this already
semi-arid region, with greater frequency and intensity
of extreme weather events such as
heatwaves, flooding and drought. According to computer
generated
climate modelling produced by the South African National
Biodiversity Institute[54]
parts of southern Africa will see an increase in
temperature by about one
degree Celsius along the coast to more than four degrees
Celsius in the already hot hinterland such as the
Northern Cape in late spring and summertime by 2050.
The
Cape Floral Kingdom has been identified as one of the
global
biodiversity hotspots since it will be hit very hard by
climate change and has such a great diversity of life.
Drought,
increased intensity and frequency of fire and climbing
temperatures are expected to push many of these rare species
towards extinction.
South Africa houses many
endemic species, among them the critically endangered
Riverine Rabbit (Bunolagus monticullaris) in the
Karoo.
-
Fynbos, a
floral kingdom unique to South Africa, is
found near Cape Town
-
-
Economy
Table Mountain.
Cape Town has become an important retail and
tourism centre for the country, and attracts the
largest number of foreign visitors in South
Africa
South Africa has a
mixed
economy with high rate of poverty and low GDP per
capita. By UN classification South Africa is a middle-income
country with an abundant supply of resources, well-developed
financial, legal, communications, energy, and transport
sectors, a
stock exchange that ranks among the top twenty in the
world, and a modern infrastructure supporting an efficient
distribution of goods to major urban centres throughout the
entire region. South Africa is ranked 25th in the world in
terms of
GDP (PPP) as of 2008.
Advanced development is significantly localised around
four areas:
Cape Town,
Port
Elizabeth,
Durban, and
Pretoria/Johannesburg.
Beyond these four economic centres, development is marginal
and poverty is still prevalent despite government efforts.
Consequently the vast majority of South Africans are poor.
However, key marginal areas have experienced rapid growth
recently. Such areas include
Mossel Bay
to
Plettenberg Bay;
Rustenburg
area;
Nelspruit area;
Bloemfontein; Cape West Coast; and the KwaZulu-Natal
North Coast.
Unemployment is extremely high and South Africa is
ranked in the top 10 countries in the world for
income inequality,[55][56][57]
measured by the
Gini
coefficient. During 1995–2003, the number of formal jobs
decreased and informal jobs increased; overall unemployment
worsened.[30]
The average South African household income decreased
considerably between 1995 and 2000. As for racial
inequality,
Statistics South Africa reported that in 1995 the
average white household earned four times as much as the
average black household. In 2000 the average white household
was earning six times more than the average black household.[58]
The
affirmative action policies, called
Black Economic Empowerment, have seen a rise in black
economic wealth and an emerging black middle class.[59][60]
Other problems are crime, corruption, and
HIV/AIDS.
South Africa suffers from relatively heavy overall
regulation burden compared to developed countries. State
ownership and interference impose high barriers to entry in
many areas.[61]
Restrictive labour regulations have contributed to the
unemployment malaise.[30]
The 1994 government inherited an economy wracked by long
years of internal conflict and external sanctions. The
government refrained from resorting to economic populism.
Inflation was brought down, public finances were stabilised,
and some foreign capital was attracted.[62]
However, growth was still subpar.[62]
At the start of 2000, then President
Thabo
Mbeki vowed to promote economic growth and
foreign investment by relaxing restrictive
labour laws, stepping up the pace of
privatisation, and cutting unneeded governmental
spending. His policies face strong opposition from
organised labour. From 2004 onward economic growth
picked up significantly; both
employment
and
capital formation increased.[62]
South Africa is the largest energy producer and consumer
on the continent. South Africa is a popular
tourist destination, and a substantial amount of revenue
comes from tourism.[63]
Among the main attractions are the diverse and picturesque
culture, the
game reserves and the highly regarded
local wines.
The
South African rand (ZAR), is the most actively traded
emerging
market currency in the world. It has joined an elite
club of fifteen currencies, the
Continuous linked settlement (CLS), where
forex transactions are settled immediately, lowering the
risks of transacting across
time zones. The rand was the best-performing currency
against the United States dollar (USD) between 2002 and
2005, according to the
Bloomberg Currency Scorecard.
The volatility of the rand has affected economic
activity, falling sharply during 2001 and hitting a historic
low of 13.85 ZAR to the US$, raising fears of
inflation,
and causing the
Reserve Bank to increase
interest rates. The rand has since recovered, trading at
7.09 ZAR to the dollar as of Sept. 2010. However, as
exporters are put under considerable pressure from a
stronger domestic currency, many call for government
intervention to help soften the rand.
Refugees from poorer neighbouring countries include many
immigrants from the
Democratic Republic of the Congo,
Mozambique,
Zimbabwe,
Malawi and
others, representing a large portion of the informal sector.
With high unemployment levels amongst poorer South Africans,
xenophobia
is prevalent and many people born in South Africa feel
resentful of immigrants who are seen to be depriving the
native population of jobs, a feeling which has been given
credibility by the fact that many South African employers
have employed migrants from other countries for lower pay
than South African citizens, especially in the
construction, tourism, agriculture and
domestic service industries. Illegal immigrants are also
heavily involved in informal trading.[64]
However, many immigrants to South Africa continue to live in
poor conditions, and the South African immigration policy
has become increasingly restrictive since 1994.[65]
Principal international trading partners of South
Africa—besides other African countries—include Germany, the
United States, China, Japan, the United Kingdom and Spain.[66]
Chief exports include
corn, diamonds,
fruits, gold, metals and minerals, sugar, and
wool.
Machinery and transportation equipment make up more than
one-third of the value of the country’s imports. Other
imports include
chemicals, manufactured goods, and petroleum.
Electricity crisis
After unsuccessful attempts by the government to
encourage private construction of power generation capacity,
the state-owned power supplier
Eskom
started experiencing deficiency in capacity in the
electrical generating and reticulation infrastructure in
2007. Such lack led to inability to meet the routine demands
of industry and consumers, resulting in countrywide
rolling blackouts. Initially, the lack of capacity was
triggered by a failure at
Koeberg nuclear power station, but a general lack of
capacity due to increased demand has become evident since
then. The supplier has been widely criticised for failing to
adequately plan for and construct sufficient electrical
generating capacity,[67]
although ultimately the government has admitted that it is
at fault for refusing to approve funding for investment in
infrastructure.[68]
The crisis was resolved within a few months, but the
margin between national demand and available capacity is
still low (particularly in peak hours), and power stations
are under strain, such that another phase of rolling
blackouts is probable if parts of the supply are halted for
whatever reason. The government and Eskom are currently
planning new power stations. The power utility plans to have
20,000 megawatts of nuclear power in its grid by 2025.[69][70]
Agriculture
Workers planting on a farm in the central area
of Mpumalanga
South Africa has a large agricultural sector and is a net
exporter of farming products. There are almost a thousand
agricultural cooperatives and
agribusinesses throughout the country, and agricultural
exports have constituted 8% of South African total exports
for the past five years. The agricultural industry
contributes around 10% of formal employment, relatively low
compared to other parts of Africa, as well as providing work
for casual labourers and contributing around 2.6% of
GDP for the nation.[71]
However, due to the
aridity of the land, only 13.5% can be used for crop
production, and only 3% is considered high potential land.[72]
Although the commercial farming sector is relatively well
developed, people in some rural areas still survive on
subsistence agriculture. It is the eighth largest wine
producer in the world, and the eleventh largest producer of
sunflower seed. South Africa is a net exporter of
agricultural products and foodstuffs, the largest number of
exported items being sugar,
grapes,
citrus,
nectarines,
wine and
deciduous
fruit. The largest locally produced crop is maize (corn),
and it has been estimated that 9 million tons are produced
every year, with 7.4 million tons being consumed.
Livestock
are also popular on South African farms, with the country
producing 85% of all meat consumed. The dairy industry
consists of around 4,300 milk producers providing employment
for 60,000 farm workers and contributing to the livelihoods
of around 40,000 others.[73]
In recent years, the government has introduced several
agricultural sector reforms, such as
land
reform and the deregulation of the market for
agricultural products. The South African government has set
a target of transferring 30% of productive farmland from
whites to 'previously disadvantaged' blacks by 2014.[74]
Land reform has been criticised both by farmers' groups and
by landless workers, the latter alleging that the pace of
change has not been fast enough, and the former alleging
'racist' treatment and expressing concerns that a similar
situation to
Zimbabwe's land reform policy may develop,[75]
a fear exacerbated by comments made by former deputy
president
Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka.[76][77]
The sector continues to face problems, with increased
foreign competition and crime being two of the major
challenges for the industry. The government has been accused
of either putting in too much effort,[78]
or not enough effort,[79]
to tackle the problem of
farm attacks as opposed to other forms of violent crime.
Another issue which affects South African agriculture is
environmental damage caused by misuse of the land and global
climate change. South Africa is unusually vulnerable to
climate change and resultant diminution of surface waters.
Some predictions show surface water supply could decrease by
60% by the year 2070 in parts of the Western Cape.[80]
To reverse the damage caused by land mismanagement, the
government has supported a scheme which promotes
sustainable development and the use of natural
resources.[81]
Maize production, which contributes to a 36% majority of the
gross value of South Africa’s field crops, has also
experienced negative effects due to climate change. The
estimated value of loss, which takes into consideration
scenarios with and without the carbon dioxide fertilisation
effect,[82]
ranges between 10s and 100s of millions of Rands.[83]
Demographics
|
Historical
populations |
|
Year |
Pop. |
%± |
| 1900 |
5,014,000 |
— |
| 1910 |
5,842,000 |
16.5% |
| 1920 |
6,953,000 |
19.0% |
| 1930 |
8,580,000 |
23.4% |
|
1940 |
10,341,000 |
20.5% |
| 1950 |
13,310,000 |
28.7% |
| 1960 |
16,385,000 |
23.1% |
| 1970 |
21,794,000 |
33.0% |
| 1980 |
24,261,000 |
11.3% |
|
1990 |
37,944,000 |
56.4% |
| 2000 |
43,686,000 |
15.1% |
| 2010
(est.)[84] |
49,109,107 |
12.4% |
Map of population density in South Africa.
|
<1 /km²
1–3 /km²
3–10 /km²
10–30 /km²
30–100 /km²
|
|
100–300 /km²
300–1000 /km²
1000–3000 /km²
>3000 /km²
|
|
South Africa is a nation of about 50 million people of
diverse origins, cultures,
languages, and religions. The last
census was held in 2001 and the next will be in 2011.
Statistics South Africa provided five
racial categories by which people could classify
themselves, the last of which, "unspecified/other" drew
negligible responses, and these results were omitted.[85]
The 2010 midyear estimated figures for the other categories
were
Black African at 79.4%,
White at 9.2%,
Coloured
at 8.8%, and
Indian or
Asian at 2.6%.[86]
The first census in South Africa in 1911 showed that whites
made up 22% of the population; it declined to 16% in 1980.[87]
Even though the population of South Africa has increased
in the past decade[85][88]
(primarily due to immigration), the country had an annual
population growth rate of −0.051% in 2010 (CIA est.), where
the birth rate is higher than the death rate but there is a
net emigration rate.[84][89]
South Africa is home to an estimated 5 million
illegal immigrants, including some 3 million
Zimbabweans.[90][91][92]
A series of
anti-immigrant riots occurred in South Africa beginning
on 11 May 2008.[93][94]
By far the major part of the population classified itself
as African or black, but it is not culturally or
linguistically homogeneous. Major ethnic groups include the
Zulu, Xhosa,
Basotho (South Sotho),
Bapedi (North Sotho),
Venda,
Tswana,
Tsonga,
Swazi and
Ndebele, all of which speak
Bantu
languages.
Some, such as the Zulu, Xhosa, Bapedi and Venda groups,
are unique to South Africa. Other groups are distributed
across the borders with neighbours of South Africa: The
Basotho group is also the major ethnic group in Lesotho. The
Tswana ethnic group constitute the majority of the
population of Botswana. The Swazi ethnic group is the major
ethnic group in Swaziland. The Ndebele ethnic group is also
found in
Matabeleland in Zimbabwe, where they are known as the
Matabele. These Ndebele people are the descendants of a
Zulu faction under the warrior
Mzilikazi
that escaped persecution from
Shaka by
migrating to their current territory. The Tsonga ethnic
group is also found in southern Mozambique, where they are
known as the Shangaan.
The white population is not ethnically homogeneous and
descends from many ethnic groups: Dutch, Flemish,
Portuguese, Norwegian,
German,
Greek, French
Huguenot,
English,
Polish, Irish,
Italian, Scottish and Welsh. Culturally and
linguistically, they are divided into the
Afrikaners, who speak Afrikaans, and English-speaking
groups, many of whom are descended from British and Irish
immigrants (see
Anglo-African). Many small communities that have
immigrated over the last century retain the use of other
languages. There is also a substantial (though decreased)
Jewish population, the majority of whom came from
Lithuania at the turn of the 20th century; though others
came then and later from Great Britain, the former Soviet
Union and Israel[citation
needed]. The
white population has until recently[citation
needed] been on the decrease due to a low
birth rate and emigration; as a factor in their decision to
emigrate, many cite the high
crime rate and the affirmative action policies of the
government.[95][96]
Since 1994, approximately 440,000 white South Africans have
permanently emigrated.[86]
However, between 2009 and 2010 the number of white South
Africans grew by 108,000. Their growth rate of 2.5% was the
highest of any other population group.[86][not
in citation given]
Despite high emigration levels, a high level of non-South
African white immigrants have settled in the country, in
particular from countries such as Britain and Zimbabwe. For
example, by 2005, an estimated 212,000 British citizens were
residing in South Africa. Since 2003, the numbers of British
migrants coming to South Africa has risen by 50%. An
estimated 20,000 British migrants moved to South Africa in
2007. There have also been a significant number of
white Zimbabwean arrivals, fleeing their home country in
light of the economic and political problems currently
facing the country. As well as recent arrivals, a
significant number of white Zimbabweans emigrated to South
Africa in the wake of independence in Zimbabwe in 1980. Some
of the more nostalgic members of the community are known in
popular culture as "Whenwes",
because of their nostalgia for their lives in
Rhodesia
"when we were in Rhodesia".[97]
There have been other white immigration waves to South
Africa in recent decades. In the 1970s, many Portuguese
residents of African colonies such as Angola and Mozambique,
came to live in South Africa after the independence of those
nations. In addition, the apartheid government encouraged
Eastern European immigration in the 1980s and early 1990s,
particularly from Poland and Hungary.
The term "coloured"
is still used for the people of mixed race descended from
slaves brought in from East and Central Africa, the
indigenous Khoisan who lived in the Cape at the time,
Bantus, Whites (mostly the Dutch/Afrikaner and British
settlers) as well as an admixture of
Javanese,
Malay, Indian,
Malagasy and Asian blood (such as
Burmese). The majority speak
Afrikaans.
Khoisan is a term used to describe two separate groups,
physically similar: light-skinned and small in stature. The
Khoikhoi,
who were called Hottentots by the Europeans, were
pastoralists and were annihilated; the San, called
Bushmen
by the Europeans, were hunter-gatherers. Within the Coloured
community, more recent immigrants will also be found:
Coloureds from the former Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe); Namibia
and immigrants of mixed descent from India and Burma (Anglo-Indians/Anglo-Burmese)
who were welcomed to the Cape when India and Burma received
their Independence.
The major part of the South African Asian population is
Indian in origin (see
Indian South Africans); many of them descended from
indentured workers brought in the nineteenth century to work
on the sugar plantations of the eastern coastal area then
known as Natal. Serious
riots in Durban between Indians and Zulus erupted in
1949.[98]
There is also a significant group of
Chinese South Africans (approximately 100,000
individuals) and
Vietnamese South Africans (approximately 50,000
individuals). In 2008, the Pretoria High Court has ruled
that Chinese South Africans who arrived before 1994 are to
be reclassified as
Coloureds. As a result of this ruling, about
12,000–15,000[99]
ethnically Chinese citizens who arrived before 1994,
numbering 3%–5% of the total Chinese population in the
country, will be able to benefit from government
BEE policies.[100]
South Africa hosts a sizeable refugee and asylum seeker
population. According to the World Refugee Survey 2008,
published by the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants,
this population numbered approximately 144,700 in 2007.[101]
Groups of refugees and asylum seekers numbering over 10,000
included people from Zimbabwe (48,400), The Democratic
Republic of the Congo (24,800), and
Somalia
(12,900).[101]
These populations mainly lived in Johannesburg, Pretoria,
Durban, Cape Town, and Port Elizabeth.[101]
Many refugees have now also started to work and live in
rural areas in provinces such as
Mpumalanga
and
KwaZulu-Natal.
Religion
According to the 2001 national census, Christians
accounted for 79.7% of the population. This includes
Zion Christian (11.1%),
Pentecostal (Charismatic)
(8.2%),
Roman Catholic (7.1%),
Methodist (6.8%),
Dutch Reformed (6.7%),
Anglican (3.8%); members of other Christian churches
accounted for another 36% of the population.
Muslims accounted for 1.5% of the population,
Hindus about 1.3%, and Judaism 0.2%. 15.1% had no
religious affiliation, 2.3% were other and 1.4% were
unspecified.[66][102][103]
African Indigenous Churches were the largest of the
Christian groups. It was believed that many of these persons
who claimed no affiliation with any organised religion
adhered to
traditional indigenous religions. Many peoples have
syncretic religious practices combining Christian and
indigenous influences.[104]
Islam in South Africa constitute mostly of those are
described as
Coloureds and those who are described as
Indians. They have been joined by black or white South
African converts as well as others from other parts of
Africa.[105]
South African Muslims claim that their faith is the
fastest-growing religion of conversion in the country, with
the number of black
Muslims growing sixfold, from 12,000 in 1991 to 74,700
in 2004[105][106]
The Hindu population was primarily established during
British colonial period, but later waves of immigration from
India have also contributed to it. Most Hindus are
ethnically South Asian but there are many who come from
mixed racial stock, and some are converts with the efforts
of Hindu missionaries such as
ISKCON.
Other minority religions in South Africa are
Sikhism,
Jainism
and
Bahá'í Faith.[102]
Languages
Map showing dominant South African
languages.
|
Afrikaans
English
Ndebele
Xhosa
Zulu
Northern Sotho
|
|
Sotho
Tswana
Swazi
Venda
Tsonga
None dominant
|
|
South Africa has eleven official languages:[107]
Afrikaans,
English,
Ndebele,
Northern Sotho,
Sotho,
Swazi,
Tswana,
Tsonga,
Venda,
Xhosa and
Zulu. In this regard it is third only to
Bolivia
and
India in number. While all the languages are formally
equal, some languages are spoken more than others. According
to the 2001 National Census, the three most spoken first
home languages are Zulu (23.8%), Xhosa (17.6%) and Afrikaans
(13.3%).[85]
Despite the fact that English is recognised as the language
of commerce and science, it was spoken by only 8.2% of South
Africans at home in 2001, an even lower percentage than in
1996 (8.6%).[85]
The country also recognises several unofficial languages,
including
Fanagalo,
Khoe,
Lobedu,
Nama,
Northern Ndebele,
Phuthi,
San and
South African Sign Language.[108]
These unofficial languages may be used in certain official
uses in limited areas where it has been determined that
these languages are prevalent. Nevertheless, their
populations are not such that they require nationwide
recognition.
Many of the "unofficial languages" of the San and
Khoikhoi people contain regional dialects stretching
northwards into Namibia and Botswana, and elsewhere. These
people, who are a physically distinct population from other
Africans, have their own cultural identity based on their
hunter-gatherer societies. They have been marginalised to a
great extent, and many of their languages are in danger of
becoming
extinct.
Many white South Africans also speak other European
languages, such as Portuguese (also spoken by black
Angolans and
Mozambicans), German, and Greek, while some Asians and
Indians in South Africa speak South Asian languages, such as
Tamil, Hindi, Gujarati,
Urdu and Telugu. French is still widely spoken by French
South Africans[citation
needed] especially in places like
Franschhoek, where many South Africans are of French
origin. South African French is spoken by fewer than 10,000
individuals. Congolese French is also spoken in South Africa
by migrants.
Largest municipalities
In 2007, there were 6 municipalities with more than 1
million inhabitants,[109]
and 8 with between 500,000 and 1 million inhabitants (in
2001 there were 6). Municipalities in the list may include
several towns. Some of them consist of hundreds of tiny
settlements in very close proximity to each other. This is
particularly true of municipalities made up of former
Bantustans, e.g.
KaNgwane
and QwaQwa,
and Libode
in Transkei,
where distributed, non-Western settlement models are
practised.
|
view
·
talk
·
edit

Johannesburg

Cape Town

Durban

Germiston |
Rank |
Municipality |
Core City |
Province |
Pop. |
view
·
talk
·
edit

Pretoria

Port Elizabeth

Bloemfontein

East London |
|
1 |
City of Johannesburg |
Johannesburg |
Gauteng |
3,888,180 |
|
2 |
City of Cape Town |
Cape Town |
Western Cape |
3,497,097 |
|
3 |
eThekwini |
Durban |
KwaZulu-Natal |
3,468,086 |
|
4 |
Ekurhuleni (East Rand) |
Germiston |
Gauteng |
2,724,229 |
|
5 |
City of Tshwane |
Pretoria |
Gauteng |
2,345,908 |
|
6 |
Nelson Mandela Bay Metro |
Port Elizabeth |
Eastern Cape |
1,050,930 |
|
7 |
Mangaung |
Bloemfontein |
Free State |
752,906 |
|
8 |
Buffalo City |
East London |
Eastern Cape |
724,312 |
|
9 |
Emfuleni |
Vanderbijlpark |
Gauteng |
650,867 |
|
10 |
Msunduzi |
Pietermaritzburg |
KwaZulu-Natal |
616,730 |
|
11 |
Thulamela |
Thohoyandou |
Limpopo |
602,819 |
|
12 |
Polokwane |
Polokwane (Pietersburg) |
Limpopo |
561,772 |
|
13 |
Mbombela |
Nelspruit |
Mpumalanga |
527,203 |
|
14 |
Bushbuckridge |
Bushbuckridge |
Mpumalanga |
509,970 |
|
15 |
Makhado |
Louis Trichardt |
Limpopo |
471,805 |
|
16 |
Rustenburg |
Rustenburg |
North West |
449,776 |
|
17 |
King Sabata Dalindyebo |
Mthatha (Umtata) |
Eastern Cape |
444,830 |
|
18 |
Emalahleni |
Witbank |
Mpumalanga |
435,217 |
|
19 |
Matjhabeng |
Welkom |
Free State |
405,031 |
|
20 |
City of Matlosana |
Klerksdorp |
North West |
385,782 |
|
Statistics South Africa (2007)[110] |
Health
The impact of
AIDS
has caused a fall in life expectancy.
The spread of
AIDS (acquired immuno-deficiency syndrome) is an
alarming problem in South Africa with up to 31% of pregnant
women found to be HIV infected in 2005 and the infection
rate among adults estimated at 20%.[111]
The link between HIV, a virus spread primarily by sexual
contact, and AIDS was long denied by prior president
Thabo
Mbeki and then health minister
Manto Tshabalala-Msimang, who insisted that the many
deaths in the country are due to malnutrition, and hence
poverty, and not HIV.[112]
In 2007, in response to international pressure, the
government made efforts to fight AIDS.[113]
In September 2008 Thabo Mbeki was recalled by the ANC and
chose to resign and Kgalema Motlanthe was appointed for the
interim. One of Mr. Motlanthe's first actions was to replace
Mrs. Tshabalala-Msimang with
Barbara
Hogan who immediately started working to improve the
Government's approach to AIDS. After the
2009 General Elections,
President Jacob Zuma appointed
Dr Aaron Motsoaledi as the new minister and committed
his government to increasing funding for and widening the
scope of AIDS treatment.[114]
AIDS affects mainly those who are sexually active and is
far more prevalent in the black population. Most deaths are
people who are also economically active, resulting in many
families losing their primary wage earners. This has
resulted in many 'AIDS orphans' who in many cases depend on
the state for care and financial support.[115]
It is estimated that there are 1,200,000 orphans in South
Africa.[115]
Many elderly people also lose the support from lost younger
members of their family. Roughly 5 million people are
infected with the disease.[113]
Science and technology
Mark Shuttleworth, the first South African in
space
Several important scientific and technological
developments have originated in South Africa. The first
human-to-human heart transplant was performed by cardiac
surgeon
Christiaan Barnard at
Groote Schuur Hospital in December 1967.
Max
Theiler developed a vaccine against Yellow Fever,
Allan McLeod Cormack pioneered x-ray
Computed tomography, and
Aaron Klug
developed crystallographic electron microscopy techniques.
These advancements were all (with the exception of that of
Barnard) recognised with
Nobel Prizes.
Sydney
Brenner won most recently, in 2002, for his pioneering
work in
molecular biology.
Mark Shuttleworth founded an early Internet security
company Thawte,
that was subsequently bought out by world-leader
VeriSign.
Despite government efforts to encourage entrepreneurship in
biotechnology, IT and other high technology fields, no other
notable groundbreaking companies have been founded in South
Africa. However, it is the expressed objective of the
government to transition the economy to be more reliant on
high technology, based on the realisation that South Africa
cannot compete with Far Eastern economies in manufacturing,
nor can the republic rely on its mineral wealth in
perpetuity.
South Africa has cultivated a burgeoning astronomy
community. It hosts the
Southern African Large Telescope, the largest optical
telescope in the southern hemisphere. South Africa is
currently building the
Karoo Array Telescope as a pathfinder for the
$20 billion
Square Kilometer Array project. South Africa is a
finalist, with Australia, to be the host of the SKA.
Society and culture
Decorated houses, Drakensberg Mountains
Traditional South African cuisine
South African culture is diverse; foods from many
cultures are enjoyed by all and especially marketed to
tourists who wish to sample the large variety of South
African cuisine. In addition to food, music and dance
feature prominently.[citation
needed]
South African cuisine is heavily meat-based and has
spawned the distinctively South African social gathering
known as a
braai, or barbecue. South Africa has also developed
into a major wine producer, with some of the best
vineyards lying in valleys around
Stellenbosch,
Franschoek,
Paarl and
Barrydale.[116]
The South African black majority still has a substantial
number of rural inhabitants who lead largely impoverished
lives. It is among these people, however, that cultural
traditions survive most strongly; as blacks have become
increasingly urbanised and
Westernised, aspects of traditional culture have
declined. Urban blacks usually speak English or Afrikaans in
addition to their native tongue. There are smaller but still
significant groups of speakers of
Khoisan languages who are not included in the eleven
official languages, but are one of the eight other
officially recognised languages. There are small groups of
speakers of
endangered languages, most of which are from the Khoi-San
family, that receive no official status; however, some
groups within South Africa are attempting to promote their
use and revival.
Members of middle class, who are predominantly white but
whose ranks include growing numbers of black, coloured and
Indian people,[117]
have lifestyles similar in many respects to that of people
found in
Western Europe, North America and
Australasia. Members of the middle class often study and
work abroad for greater exposure to the markets of the
world.
Asians, predominantly of Indian origin, preserve their
own cultural heritage, languages and religious beliefs,
being either Christian,
Hindu or
Sunni Muslim and speaking English, with Indian languages
like
Hindi,
Telugu,
Tamil or
Gujarati being spoken less frequently, but the majority
of Indians being able to understand their mother tongue. The
first Indians arrived on the famous
Truro ship as
indentured labourers in Natal to work the Sugar Cane
Fields. There is a much smaller
Chinese community in South Africa, although its numbers
have increased due to immigration from
Republic of China (Taiwan).
South Africa has also had a large influence in the
Scouting
movement, with many Scouting traditions and ceremonies
coming from the experiences of
Robert Baden-Powell (the founder of Scouting) during his
time in South Africa as a military officer in the 1890s. The
South African Scout Association was one of the first
youth organisations to open its doors to youth and adults of
all races in South Africa. This happened on 2 July 1977 at a
conference known as Quo Vadis.[118]
Art
The oldest art objects in the world were discovered in a
South African cave. Dating from 75,000 years ago,[119]
these small drilled snail shells could have no other
function than to have been strung on a string as a necklace.
South Africa was one of the cradles of the human species.
One of the defining characteristics of our species is the
making of art (from Latin 'ars' meaning worked or formed
from basic material).
The scattered tribes of
Khoisan
peoples moving into South Africa from around 10000
BC had their own fluent art styles seen today in a
multitude of cave paintings. They were superseded by
Bantu/Nguni
peoples with their own vocabularies of art forms. In the
20th century, traditional tribal forms of art were scattered
and re-melded by the divisive policies of
apartheid.
New forms of art evolved in the mines and
townships: a dynamic art using everything from plastic
strips to bicycle spokes. The Dutch-influenced folk art of
the
Afrikaner
Trekboers and the urban white artists earnestly
following changing European traditions from the 1850s
onwards also contributed to this eclectic mix, which
continues to evolve today.
Literature
South Africa's unique social and political history have
generated a strong group of local writers, which themes that
span the days of apartheid to the lives of people in the
"new South Africa".
Many of the first black South African authors were
missionary-educated, and the majority of which thus wrote in
either English or
Afrikaans.
One of the first well known novels written by a black author
in an African language was
Solomon Thekiso Plaatje's
Mhudi, written in 1930.
Notable white South African authors include
Nadine Gordimer who was, in
Seamus
Heaney's words, one of "the guerrillas of the
imagination", and who became the first South African and the
seventh woman to be awarded the
Nobel Prize for Literature in 1991. Her most famous
novel,
July's People, was released in
1981,
depicting the collapse of white-minority rule.
J.M. Coetzee was the second South African to win the
Nobel Prize for Literature, in 2003. When awarding the
prize, the Swedish Academy stated that Coetzee "in
innumerable guises portrays the surprising involvement of
the outsider".[120]
The press release for the award also cited his "well-crafted
composition, pregnant dialogue and analytical brilliance,"
while focusing on the moral nature of his work.[120]
Athol
Fugard, whose plays have been regularly premiered in
fringe theatres in South Africa,
London
(The
Royal Court Theatre) and
New York.
Olive
Schreiner's
The Story of an African Farm (1883) was a revelation in
Victorian literature: it is heralded by many as introducing
feminism
into the novel
form.
Alan
Paton published the acclaimed novel
Cry, the Beloved Country in 1948. He told the tale of a
black priest who comes to
Johannesburg to find his son, which became an
international bestseller. During the 1950s,
Drum magazine became a hotbed of political satire,
fiction, and essays, giving a voice to urban black culture.
Afrikaans-language writers also began to write
controversial material.
Breyten Breytenbach was jailed for his involvement with
the guerrilla movement against apartheid.
Andre Brink was the first
Afrikaner
writer to be
banned by the government after he released the novel
A
Dry White Season about a white South African who
discovers the truth about a black friend who dies in police
custody.
J. R. R. Tolkien, author of
The Hobbit,
The Lord of the Rings and
The
Silmarillion, was born in
Bloemfontein in 1892.
Cinema
While many foreign films have been produced about South
Africa (usually involving race relations), few local
productions are known outside South Africa itself. One
exception was the film
The Gods Must Be Crazy in 1980, set in the
Kalahari. This is about how life in a traditional
community of
Bushmen is changed when a
Coke bottle, thrown out of an aeroplane, suddenly lands
from the sky. The late
Jamie Uys,
who wrote and directed The Gods Must Be Crazy, also
had success overseas in the 1970s with his films Funny
People and Funny People II, similar to the TV
series
Candid
Camera in the US.
Leon
Schuster's You Must Be Joking! films are in the
same genre, and hugely popular among South Africans.
Arguably, the most high-profile film portraying South
Africa in recent years was "District
9". Directed by
Neill
Blomkamp, a native South African, and produced by
Peter
Jackson, the action/science-fiction film depicts a
sub-class of alien refugees forced to live in the slums of
Johannesburg in what many saw as a creative allegory for
apartheid. The film was a critical and commercial
success worldwide, and was nominated for Best Picture at the
82nd Academy Awards.
Other notable exceptions are the film
Tsotsi,
which won the
Academy Award for Foreign Language Film at the
78th Academy Awards in 2006 as well as
U-Carmen e-Khayelitsha, which won the
Golden
Bear at the 2005
Berlin International Film Festival.
Music
There is great diversity in music from South Africa. Many
black musicians who sang in Afrikaans or English during
apartheid have since begun to sing in traditional African
languages, and have developed a unique style called
Kwaito. Of
note is
Brenda Fassie, who launched to fame with her song
"Weekend Special", which was sung in English. More famous
traditional musicians include
Ladysmith Black Mambazo, while the
Soweto String Quartet performs classic music with an
African flavour. White and Coloured South African singers
are historically influenced by European musical styles.
South Africa has produced world-famous jazz musicians,
notably
Hugh Masekela,
Jonas
Gwangwa,
Abdullah Ibrahim,
Miriam
Makeba,
Jonathan Butler,
Chris
McGregor, and
Sathima Bea Benjamin. Afrikaans music covers multiple
genres, such as the
contemporary
Steve
Hofmeyr and the
punk rock
band
Fokofpolisiekar. Crossover artists such as
Verity (internationally recognised for innovation in the
music industry) and
Johnny
Clegg and his bands
Juluka and
Savuka
have enjoyed various success underground, publicly, and
abroad.
The South African music scene includes Kwaito, a new
music genre that had developed in the mid 80s and has since
developed to become the most popular social economical form
of representation among the populous. Though some may argue
that the political aspects of Kwaito has since diminished
after Apartheid, and the relative interest in politics has
become a minor aspect of daily life. Some argue that in a
sense, Kwaito is in fact a political force that shows
activism in its apolitical actions. Today, major
corporations like
Sony,
BMG, and EMI
have appeared on the South African scene to produce and
distribute Kwaito music. Due to its overwhelming popularity,
as well as the general influence of DJs, who are among the
top 5 most influential types of people within the country[citation
needed], Kwaito has taken over radio,
television, and magazines.[121]
Sports
Soccer City during a soccer match between
South Africa and Colombia
South Africa's most popular sports are
soccer,
rugby and
cricket.[122]
Other sports with significant support are swimming,
athletics, golf, boxing, tennis and netball. Although soccer
commands the greatest following among the youth, other
sports like basketball, surfing[123]
and skateboarding are increasingly popular.
Famous boxing personalities include Baby Jake
Jacob
Matlala,
Vuyani
Bungu,
Welcome
Ncita,
Dingaan Thobela,
Gerrie
Coetzee and
Brian Mitchell. Soccer players who have played for major
foreign clubs include
Lucas
Radebe and
Philemon Masinga (both formerly of
Leeds United),
Quinton Fortune (Atletico
Madrid and
Manchester United),
Benni
McCarthy (Ajax
Amsterdam,
F.C. Porto,
Blackburn Rovers and
West Ham United),
Aaron
Mokoena (Ajax Amsterdam, Blackburn Rovers and
Portsmouth),
Delron
Buckley (Borussia
Dortmund) and
Steven
Pienaar (Ajax Amsterdam and
Everton). Durban Surfer
Jordy
Smith won the 2010 Billabong J-Bay competition making
him the no 1 ranked surfer in the world. South Africa
produced
Formula One motor racing's 1979 world champion
Jody
Scheckter. Famous current cricket players include
Herschelle Gibbs,
Graeme
Smith,
Jacques Kallis,
JP Duminy,
etc. Most of them also participate in the
Indian Premier League.
South Africa has also produced numerous world class rugby
players, including
Francois Pienaar,
Joost van der Westhuizen,
Danie
Craven,
Frik du
Preez,
Naas Botha and
Bryan
Habana. South Africa hosted and won the
1995 Rugby World Cup and won the 2007 Rugby World Cup in
France. It followed the 1995 Rugby World Cup by hosting
the
1996 African Cup of Nations, with the
national team going on to win the tournament. It also
hosted the
2003 Cricket World Cup, the
2007 World Twenty20 Championship, and it was the host
nation for the
2010 FIFA World Cup, which was the first time the
tournament was held in Africa. FIFA president
Sepp
Blatter awarded South Africa a grade 9 out of 10 for
successfully hosting the event.[124]
In 2004, the swimming team of
Roland Schoeman,
Lyndon
Ferns,
Darian Townsend and
Ryk
Neethling won the gold medal at the Olympic Games in
Athens, simultaneously breaking the world record in the
4x100 freestyle relay.
Penny Heyns won Olympic Gold in the 1996
Atlanta Olympic Games.
In golf,
Gary
Player is generally regarded as one of the greatest
golfers of all time, having won the
Career Grand Slam, one of five golfers to have done so.
Other South African golfers to have won major tournaments
include
Bobby Locke,
Ernie Els,
Retief
Goosen,
Trevor Immelman and
Louis Oosthuizen .
Education
Learners have twelve years of formal schooling, from
grade 1 to 12. Grade R is a pre-primary foundation year.
[125] Primary schools span the first seven years
of schooling.[126]
High School education spans a further five years. The
Senior Certificate examination takes place at the end of
grade 12 and is necessary for tertiary studies at a
South African university.[125]
See:
Matriculation in South Africa;
High school: South Africa.
Public universities in South Africa are divided into
three types: traditional universities, which offer
theoretically oriented university degrees;
universities of technology ("Technikons"),
which offer vocational oriented diplomas and degrees; and
comprehensive universities, which offer both types of
qualification. Public institutions are usually English
medium, although instruction may take place in
Afrikaans
as well. There are also a large number of other educational
institutions in South Africa - some are local campuses of
foreign universities, some conduct classes for students who
write their exams at the distance-education
University of South Africa and some offer unaccredited
or non-accredited diplomas. See:
List of universities in South Africa;
List of post secondary institutions in South Africa;
Category:Higher education in South Africa.
Public expenditure on education was at 5.4 % of the
2002-05 GDP.[127]
Under
Apartheid, schools for blacks were subject to
discrimination through inadequate funding and a separate
syllabus called
Bantu Education which was only designed to give them
sufficient skills to work as labourers.[128]
Redressing these imbalances has been a focus of recent
education policy; see
Education in South Africa: Restructuring.
Social
problems
According to a survey for the period 1998–2000 compiled
by the United Nations, South Africa was ranked second for
murder and first for assaults and
rapes per capita.[129]
Official statistics show that 52 people are murdered every
day in South Africa.[130]
The reported number of rapes per year is 55,000,[131]
and it is estimated that 500,000 rapes are committed
annually in South Africa.[132]
Total crime per capita is 10th out of the 60 countries in
the data set.
Rape is a common problem in South Africa, in a 2009
survey one in four South African men admitted to raping
someone.[133]
One in three of the 4,000 women questioned by the Community
of Information, Empowerment and Transparency said they had
been raped in the past year.[134]
South Africa has some of the highest incidences of
child and baby rape in the world.[135]
In a related
survey conducted among 1,500 schoolchildren in the
Soweto
township, a quarter of all the boys interviewed said that 'jackrolling',
a term for
gang rape, was fun.[134]
Middle-class South Africans seek security in
gated communities. Many emigrants from South Africa also
state that crime was a big motivator for them to leave.
Crime against the farming community has continued to be
a major problem.[136]
Along with many African nations, South Africa has been
experiencing a "brain
drain" in the past 20 years. This is believed to be
potentially damaging for the regional economy,[137]
and is almost certainly detrimental for the well-being of
the majority of people reliant on the healthcare
infrastructure, given the HIV/AIDS epidemic.[138]
The skills drain in South Africa tends to demonstrate racial
contours (naturally given the skills distribution legacy of
South Africa) and has thus resulted in large white South
African communities abroad.[139]
In May 2008 societal hostility to African migrants
exploded in a series of
pogroms that left up to 100 people dead and 100,000
displaced.[140]
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