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Anti-Apartheid Group UDF Dissolves

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<i> Associated Press</i>

The United Democratic Front, a mass opposition group that led the anti-apartheid fight during much of the 1980s, dissolved Sunday after eight years in operation.

About 2,000 people gathered at the Rocklands Civic Center outside Cape Town for a ceremony ending the front, which claimed hundreds of affiliates and more than 1 million members at its peak.

Many in the UDF backed the previously banned African National Congress, and the front’s role diminished after the ANC was legalized in February, 1990.

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Speakers credited the front with forcing the government to legalize the ANC and release political prisoners such as ANC President Nelson Mandela.

ANC official Mac Maharaj said that a hallmark of the front was its defiance in the face of government repression and a state of emergency from 1986-90.

When the movement was launched Aug. 20, 1983, “Nelson Mandela was still in jail. Today he is the future president of a non-racial, democratic South Africa,” Allan Boesak, a prominent leader of the front, said to resounding applause.

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