Quote: Nogget @ 6th December 2013, 8:00 AM GMThttp://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/12/05/nelson-mandela-terrorist_n_4394392.html
While he was revered by politicians today as a human rights icon, Mandela remained on the U.S. terrorism watch list until 2008, when then-President George W. Bush signed a bill removing Mandela from it.
Former U.K. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher also described Mandela's ANC as a "typical terrorist organization" in 1987
Mandela was a great man, but a complicated one. It's too easy to dismiss our governments as fools for branding him a terrorist, because the truth is terrorist acts did occur amongst people close to him, although Mandela denied being being involved in them.
I think it's worth remembering this when we are trying to bring peace to places like Afghanistan, where we may have to deal with people we don't really want to deal with.
They may have a future great leader of their own who we have already branded a terrorist.
Yes - absolutely. The key word in the news is reconciliation. In conflict, it is easier to say than achieve. There was that very special strand to Mandela's character and ironically it developed as a consequence of incarceration. But I doubt he fundamentally changed as the anger only boiled over in regard to Sharpeville.
I am one of the tiny millions who were moved by the Mandela story in the 1980s. I do feel some sort of connection and shed a tear this morning as well as feeling a desire to listen to upbeat South African music. In 1982-83, I was studying British race relations with specific reference to the Brixton riots. In 1986, I went to Clapham Common for my very first outdoors gig which was organised by Jerry Dammers against apartheid.
The day Madiba was released was extraordinary. Oddly, there was a lot of anticipation about what he would look like as well as how he would leave the prison. I think we were surprised that he was elderly and yet we knew that he had been in prison for the whole of our lifetimes. It was - and is - easy to forget he was well into his 40s when he was taken to Robben Island and that must have been immensely difficult to manage.