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Jeugkrag

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Jeugkrag(meaning "Youth Power" and also known asYouth for South Africa) was a short-livedSouth Africanyouth group, surreptitiously funded by theapartheidgovernment's department of Military Intelligence in an operation known as Project Essay. Led byMarthinus van Schalkwyk(who is now a member of theAfrican National Congress) it operated exclusively on Afrikaans university campuses and sought to influence the political views of Afrikaans-speaking students.[1][2][3]

Van Schalkwyk was the national chairman. He was supported between 1987 and July 1988 by Cedric de Coning who was both Director of Fund Raising and Publicity Secretary.

Putatively aimed at bringing together youth from different ethnic and ideological backgrounds,[4]Jeugkrag was a transparent effort to supplant the process of youth dialogue originally started by theInstitute for Democracy in South Africa(IDASA), anNGOfounded at the end of 1986 by the liberal ex-parliamentariansFrederik van Zyl SlabbertandAlex Boraine[5]with funding from donors such as the Open Society Foundation[6]and the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC).[7]Slabbert and Boraine, who had decamped in frustration from thetricameral parliament,[8]were part of the white group that held ground breaking discussions with ANC delegates at the historical Dakar meeting.[9]They were vilified byPW Bothawho called them ‘political terrorists’.[10]Peter Mokaba,anANCleader that Jeugkrag had engaged, would later comment: "At the time although we knew that Jeugkrag was not an independent organization, but part of the heart and soul of theNational Party,it was our policy to discuss matters with both progressive and reactionary organizations. "[11]

In 1990 en route to a meeting inBotswana,a 12-person Jeugkrag delegation was detained by police at the Monomotapa Hotel inHarare,Zimbabwe.They were questioned about a meeting that they had attended with members of theZimbabwe Unity Movement(ZUM), a marginal political group opposed toRobert Mugabe'sgovernment.[12]The delegation consisted exclusively of representatives from Afrikaans-language universities including theRand Afrikaans University,Stellenbosch University,and theUniversity of Pretoria.

The University of Pretoria office was headed up by Louis du Plooy until the organisation was disbanded in 1991. The liaison officer was Cleoné Bakker.

References

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  1. ^Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Report, Volume 2,2003, p. 256
  2. ^"FW's heir was MI agent",Mail & Guardian,29 August 1997, archived fromthe originalon 1 October 2007
  3. ^"NP 'moet Van Schalkwyk se Jeugkrag-dae ondersoek",Beeld,p. 12, 19 September 1997, archived fromthe originalon September 27, 2007
  4. ^"Jeugkrag ontbind oor 'n paar maande",Beeld,p. 11, 23 July 1991, archived fromthe originalon September 27, 2007
  5. ^"How did Idasa start".Retrieved2007-05-29.
  6. ^"Donors".Retrieved2007-05-29.
  7. ^"Institute for Democracy in South Africa (IDASA)".Archived fromthe originalon 2007-09-29.Retrieved2007-05-29.
  8. ^Walker, Julie (1998),"Slabbert gets down to some real business",Sunday Times
  9. ^Uys, Gerhard (15 December 2005),"Waansin in woestyn",Beeld,p. 17, archived fromthe originalon September 27, 2007
  10. ^Morris, Michael (2004),Every step of the way: The journey to freedom in South Africa(PDF),Pretoria: HSRC PRESS
  11. ^Kruger, Peet (13 September 1997),"Van Schalkwyk 'te jonk', maar dalk juis 'n bate, glo hy",Beeld,archived fromthe originalon September 27, 2007
  12. ^"Jeugkrag se 12 nóg in duister",Beeld,10 July 1990, archived fromthe originalon September 27, 2007