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On December 10, 1987, the prison staff ended late at night when he said goodbye to Prison Mzolisi Dyasi in the province of South Africa.
He remembers a pcifnatinous, cousin and a bumpy driver to the hospital morgue, which is wanted to determine the bodies of an anti-apartheid warrior.
In response, he was thrown from one knee, raised his fist in the air and “Amand!” (in the “power” Zulu), in a submissive action.
However, the word caught in the throat is “completely broken”, Mr. Dyasi, says BBC, reminiscent of their loved ones under cold, bright lights.
In four decades, Mr. Dyasi lights with lights to eliminate the memories of the physical and mental torture he draws in a four-year prison.
He says that he struggles in society, that he fights the armed African National Congress (ANC) as an underground operative for Umkhonto.
ANC led the fight against the racist system of Aparteid, which ended with the rise of the party in the first many racial elections in South Africa in 1994.
A truth and reconciliation commission of truth and reconciliation (TRC), co-chairs, a co-chair of the international clergy (TRC), which has been established, the State Care Fund was established by the co-chairs to detect the atrocities.
But most of this money went very big.
Mr. Dyasi consisted of about 17,000 people from him in 2003 ($ 3,900; $ 3,900; £ 2,900 £ 2,400 £ 2,400), but he did very little to help him.
He wanted to complete the university education, but was not yet paid for the courses taken in 1997.
Now in the 60s, he suffers from chronic health problems and has difficulty taking a special pension for veterans participating in the struggle for freedom and democracy.
Professor Tshepo Madlingozi – said the effects of the South African Human Rights Commission, who spoke to the BBC in the private capacity of Africa – the effects of apartheid continues to be destructive.
“It was not about killing people, the disappearance of people, to close people into interioring poor.
He says despite progress in the last 30 years, the birth-born in 1994 was inherited by South Africans.
The repaired fund does not touch about $ 110 million without such clarity of this work.
“What is the money used? Does money still have?” Commented by Prof Madlingozi.
The government did not meet the BBC request for comment.
Lawyer Howard Varney spent a lot of his career representing victims of apartheid-periods and says the families affected by the repair story in South Africa are “deeply treacherous”.
Currently, a group of South African government and the South African government sues to $ 1.9 million, it is not worthy to resolve political criminal incidents, which are now destroyed by TRC for later research and persecution.
Brian Mphahlele spoke polite and soft; Before answering a question, he would take a break, as if he was waiting for the pool in the pool.
He suffered from memory loss, only one side of the constant impact of the physical and psychological torture in Cape Town’s infamous police prison.
Mr Mphahlele told the BBC that he was insulted for 30,000 Rand Payment for the violations he received for the endurance for 10 years in prison for 10 years.
“It went through my fingers. Everyone passed his fingers, so little,” he said.
Another significant payment explained him to buy his house and frustrated in the yard, explained the frustration in his life in the soup kitchen three times a week.
Mr Mphahlele died because he was talking to the BBC, and he fulfilled a more comfortable life.
Prof. Madlingozi says that after the end of South Africa apartheid, the race was the poster and inspired the world in many ways.
“But we gave a mistake without knowing, and this may not be a result of a crime against humanity,” he says.
Although he feels, it can still be converted.
“South Africa, there is an opportunity for democracy for 30 years to show you can make mistakes and make these mistakes.”
Mr. Dyasi is still an anti-apartment icon of the latest white ruler of South Africa Nelson Mandela’s anti-apartment icon Nelson Mandela’s anti-apartment icon Nelson Mandela’s opened, four years later, the first black president canceled the movements of the United Liberty and other salvation.
However, Mr. Dyasi is not proud of whom today and his disappointment is felt by many of those who flew together with him and their families.
“We don’t want to be a millionaire,” he says. “However, if the government could look at the health of these people, if he could look at the livelihood, to attract them in the country’s economic system.”
“There were children who were orphaned by the fight. Some children wanted to go to school, but they still can’t. Some people are homeless.
“And some people will say:” You were in prison, you also hit. What can you show for this? “”