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Default Estagiário Alemão - Publicação errônea "mata " Nelson Mandela

14-06-13, 18:38 #1
Quote:
DW (English) ‏@dw_english 2m We regret that due to technical difficulties, the report on Nelson Mandela's death was unintentionally published. @dw_english
A notícia:

http://www.dw.de/south-africa-mourns...ela/a-15796097

Quote:
Nelson Mandela, South Africa's first black president ,who was sentenced to life in prison in 1964 because of his fight against apartheid, has died. He will be remembered as an inspiring freedom fighter.
When Nelson Mandela was born in July 1918 in the small village of Mvezo in Transkei, his father Gadla named him "Rolihlahla." His father probably wasn't aware back then of how much his son would live up to this name. It literally translates as "breaking the branches of a tree" in the Xhosa language, but more colloquially it means "troublemaker." Mandela was later given the English name "Nelson" by one of his teachers.
Mandela did indeed cause trouble for South Africa's apartheid regime. "Madiba", as many South Africans called him (his clan name which is a very polite form of address) was imprisoned for 27 years because he dared to fight apartheid.
In the Rivonia trial, Mandela was found guilty of sabotage and in 1964 was sentenced to life in prison. His speech at the end of the trial lasted four hours and became the manifesto of the anti-apartheid movement.
"An ideal for which I am prepared to die"
 
Rolihlahla "Troublemaker" Mandela in 1950
"During my lifetime, I have dedicated myself to this struggle of the African people. I have fought against white domination and I have fought against black domination. I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society," he said. "It is an ideal for which I am prepared to die."
Mandela, the son of the principal counsellor to the chief of the Thembu people near Qunu in what is now the Eastern Cape, had a privileged childhood. He went on to become an activist at University College of Fort Hare in the southeast, where he was elected on to the Students' Representative Council. He was suspended from college for joining in a protest boycott, along with Oliver Tambo with whom he later founded the first black legal practice.
In order to escape a forced marriage he moved to Johannesburg where he soon became politically involved. In 1944, Mandela joined the African National Congress (ANC).
When the National Party came to power after elections in 1948, it implemented racial segregation, prompting mass protests and ANC campaigns of civil disobedience against the apartheid regime.
Attacks on state institutions
After the ANC was banned in 1961, amateur boxer Mandela founded the militant wing "Umkhonto we Sizwe" (the Spear of the Nation). As commander in chief, he directed the underground organization's attacks on state institutions. He secretly went abroad in 1962 to drum up financial support and to organize military training for ANC leaders. On his return to South Africa, he was arrested and sentenced to prison.
 
Mandela became South Africa's first black president in May 1994
Mandela spent 17 years of his imprisonment locked away in the "South African Alcatraz" , the infamous Robben Island off Cape Town. The political prisoner was forced to work in a stone quarry pit where the blazing bright lights ruined his eyes. This is why press photographers were not allowed to use flash lights later when taking pictures of him.
While in prison, he founded the "Robben Island University" where he taught fellow inmates how to read and write. Today, his prison cell number 5 is one of the highlights for tourists visiting South Africa.
Starting in 1988, Mandela was slowly prepared for release from prison. Just three years earlier he had rejected a pardon which was conditional on the ANC renouncing violence. Secret negotiations with South Africa's authorities started - and on February 11, 1990, after 27 years behind bars, Mandela was released.
"I'm standing in front of you, filled with deep pride and joy. We are free," Mandela told cheering crowds in Cape Town.
Trying to reconcile South Africans
 
Mandela (left) and Tutu set up the Truth and Reconciliation Commission
After his releas from prison, the "African Martin Luther" continued his fight for the abolition of racial segregation. In April 1994, the first free elections were held. On May 10, Mandela became South Africa's first elected black president. He then focused his attention on reconciliation. In 1996, he set up the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) to deal with the crimes committed during apartheid, working together with South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu. In 1993, Mandela and his predecessor, Frederik William de Klerk, were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
After he bid politics farewell in 1999, "Madiba" and his charity foundation took on social issues. He especially tried to help children and people suffering from HIV/AIDS. In 2005, his second son Makgatho died of AIDS at the age of 54.
"South Africans have fought against apartheid. Today, they are facing a much bigger threat," Mandela said. However, his successor and protege Thabo Mbeki delayed the fight against the epidemic. Mandela himself lateradmitted he didn't do enough to halt the spread of the disease when he was in power.
The fight against poverty also tarnished Mandela's political heritage as the ANC's 1994 election campaign promise "A better life for all" only became reality for a small black elite. Today, the "rainbow nation" is still suffering from growingcorruption and crime as well as bleak job prospects.
South Africa loses a moral compass
 
South Africa hosted the 2010 World Cup - Mandela prepared the ground for the event
Mandela made use of his popularity to help mediate in the civil war-torn country Burundi, and publicly criticized US policy on Iraq. In 2004, Mandela prepared the ground for South Africa to host the World Cup in 2010. His health took a turn for the worse when his great-granddaughter Zenani was tragically killed on the eve of the tournament. Mandela's decision to retire to his home village Qunu in the Eastern Cap Province gave rise to speculation regarding his health.
Nelson Mandela will be remembered all over the world as a great freedom fighter and statesman. For his home country South Africa, his death means the loss of a moral compass, even though he had not commented on political events for some time. There's reason to believe that Mandela's ANC will now suffer the same fate as most African freedom movements, by giving in to temptations such as the abuse of power and nepotism.





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Never Ping
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14-06-13, 18:50 #2
Aconteceu isso uma vez num portal de notícias brasileiro, que 'matou' um cara centenário e teve que tirar a notícia do ar rapidamente. Ele tava toda hora piorando e melhorando e ae um cara com dedo nervoso publicou a morte dele.

Isso dá muita cadeia, vocês não tem noção.


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Mordred_X
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14-06-13, 19:02 #3
Pessoal que postou que o Luh morreu foi pra cadeia?

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ShadoW
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17-06-13, 09:10 #4
sim

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