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The 30th anniversary of Nelson Mandela’s release from jail

By David O’Sullivan

As we mark the 30th anniversary of Nelson Mandela’s release from jail, I remembered that on this day 30 years ago it poured with rain in Joburg. It was a Sunday, and I was in Soweto outside Mandela’s little house on Vilakazi Street.
That was a crazy weekend. I was working at Capital Radio, where we had been anticipating Mandela’s release ever since the unbanning of the ANC and other political parties on February 2nd . So when FW de Klerk called a news conference on Saturday the 10th and announced Mandela would be released the next day, we were ready. Sort of.

Earlier that week, my colleague James Lorimer (now a DA Shadow Minister) and I went to Vilakazi Street to organise a phone line near the action that would inevitably take place outside the Mandela residence. Even though Winnie lived further down the road in a huge house nicknamed “Winnie’s Folly”, we’d been told that Mandela would go back to the little house in Vilakazi Street.

Those were the days before cellphones and the big challenge for any radio journalist in the field was finding a phone to file a story. But we were used to it and we used an old trick to locate a phone. We just looked up and down the streets for telephone wires leading to a house. We found one about 30m from the Mandela residence in Ngakane Street (the Mandela home is on the corner of Vilakazi and Ngakane), knocked on the door and offered the homeowner some money to give us the use of the phone, and also not to allow any other journalist to use it. Journalism is a selfish business, you see. Cash changed hands, and our communication was secured.

On Saturday, our trusty pagers beeped with the news that De Klerk was holding a news conference. We knew what THAT would be all about, but we didn’t quite expect getting only one day’s notice.

I remember Capital News reporter John Maytham (now the afternoon drive presenter on Cape Talk) racing off to Orlando West minutes after the announcement to cover the story that was rapidly unfolding there. As he sped past the Orlando Stadium, a traffic cop jumped into the road and pulled him over. The cop wanted to know why a white man was speeding in Soweto on a Saturday afternoon. John, a trained actor, triumphantly told him that Mandela was about to be released. “Go! Go!” shouted the officer, waving John off with his traffic fine book to emphasise the urgency of the situation.
Back in the newsroom, we were quickly putting plans into action. One reporter was sent to Victor Verster prison and another to Grand Parade. I went to Vilakazi Street, and took up a position on the tiny stoep of the house with the phone. Vilakazi Street was the scene of the best street party I have ever attended. I’ve never experienced that kind of crowd euphoria ever again.

The roads outside the Mandela house were crammed with thousands of people, but also with satellite vans. Many of those vans had been flown in from Romania, the scene of the previous big international news story – the fall of Nicolae Ceausescu – before the Mandela release relegated it down the news priority list.

The long delay in waiting for Mandela to emerge from Victor Verster might have aged poor old Clarence Keyter as he blustered his way through the SABC coverage, but I don’t recall it being a problem for the crowds crammed into the streets around Orlando West. It was party time.
We put a TV on a rickety table on the stoep and very quickly the neighbour’s garden was jammed with people as we started getting the news that Mandela’s convoy was on the move. When we got our first glimpse of Mandela on TV, the crowd in the garden went wild sparking the biggest and longest toyi-toyi ever.


As thousands upon thousands of people started toyi-toyi-ing through Orlando West, the skies opened up and it poured with rain. It was a torrential downpour – one of the grandest, loudest, most dramatic Highveld thunderstorms. It did nothing to dampen the mood in the streets.
Brenda Fassie was in the crowd and she decided it was now time to make a more public appearance. So she clambered onto the roof of one of the satellite vans, and started singing and dancing in typical Ma Brrr style. She had such charisma. No microphone, no PA system. Just Brenda and her voice on the top of a satellite van in the pouring rain, adding to the marvellous hysteria.

And when her frenetic dancing on the wet, slippery satellite van roof caused her to take a dramatic tumble, no problem. She was hoisted back onto the roof, only to come plummeting down seconds later. But she was feeling no pain that day. No one was feeling any pain.
I can’t remember what time I left Soweto that night. I do recall feeling like a bit of a party pooper, because that was a party that would last for many days. It was still raging when Mandela finally got home to Vilakazi Street three days later.

Written by: Zuko



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