Of en, e e utio of polit I te io re op it 0 i ou ach ye r, h ndred and ometi tho of p ople in Africa ar e eeu ed i out h vi ny ort of trial-people often Ii in in oppo ilion are or su p�cted of upporting rebel. Over the p t year alone, hundred ve been killed by soldiers in extraj dicial execu­ tions in uritania, Somalia and Liberia. ADd in Chad, Pre ident Hi ein Habre ordered the e - ecutions of ome 300 untried political pri one the day before he fled the country last Decem­ ber. Governments often jUitify the use of the death penalty by aying it i the only way to fight violent crime nd by dra ing on popular upport to back them up. "But in Africa, el e here, that rgument just doe n't tand up," Amnesty Intern tional aid. The number of murder in Bot ana and Nigeria did not drop with the death penalty, ac­ cording to sludie -in the latter the number of homicides actual­ ly increased over 18 years. And in Sudan and Nigeria, where ex­ ecution have been held in public, the supposed shock ef­ fect ha not curbed the number of murders. "The death penal ty as it is now practiced in most African countrie wa imported wi th coloniali m and the arguments still used to justify it are from that era as well," Amnesty Inter­ national said. "The recent politi­ cal reform in some countries iDOl d a ia ca tal , pun It ent, a e we b pe other governments wtll follow." orld." La t year, three African countrie - amibia, Sao Tom nd Principe and Mozambique­ bo lished the de. tb pe It y in their co tltutions, move that are no being con idered in An­ gola and Guinea-Bi au. Cape Verde bas been aboli tioni t since i independence in 1975. Executio have all but been abolished iD eight other countrie , including Senegal, To 0 and Cote Invoire where tbe death penalty exist only for ex­ ceptional crimes or b not been used at all for more than 10 years. Africa by their government in dozens of African countrie each year. La t year lone, Nigeri e­ ecuted more than 120 people, mostly by firing squad. And in Sudan, Tanzania, Tunisi , and M uri tius-countrie where ex­ ecutions h d stopped-they have been revived. South Africa ha announced this ye r that it will tart executing people again, and in Uganda and Egypt the cope of the death penalty ha been broadened. "In some countries the killing J I - Cbaraes of utlDyleveled a.alD 'U.S. aUon, AlrmaD AppreDtlce Adul Hakeem Sbabeed (left), of I St. Geore.e, S.C., a d Sea a Appre tlee J�me Mo of Columbus, Oblo, bave beeD dropped. Tbe I ,Navy aid tbere w re proble I wltb the oDly wltDe . Alle.aUoDs of sabatoae aDd mutlDy to support Iraqi PresldeDt Sadda Du 10 were made olely becau e we are Black Muslim , .ald Sbabeed. -The Blacks who kill and wound each other are inmates of de Klerk '5 own apartheid in­ stitutions - hostels, Bantus­ tans, etc. The Zulu King Goodwin ZweUthini knows of no war between his subjects and those of any other tribe. And Nelson Mandela and Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi deny that their respective or­ ganizations - ANC and IN­ KATHA - are at war with any other group in South Africa. The people hacking one another to death are inmates of de Klerk's hostel and Bantustans over which Mandela and other African leader have no say. Hence Mandela' rejection of de Klerk's invitation .... De Klerk's invitation to Man­ dela is divisive. Mandela and Buthelezi are both averse to the prevailing violence and. have recently met to agree on doing everything to' appeal to tbeir respective memberships to' desist from any acta of "Black­ on Black violence" . ANC and PAC recently met in Harare, Zimbabwe for the ame rea on, to form" United Front of Black gain t apartheid. All African decry the violence, and are in accord that de Klerk's regime should bring peace to the country. But de Klerk won't budge, won't halt the carnage .... He alone has. the, power of law and order to end tbe violence. But he doe n't be­ cau e only Blacks die from these acta of violence. This past eek in New York City, Chri Hani, ANC' leader of the ANC military wing, Umkhonto We Siz e (The, People'a Spear) told his audien­ ces th t ANC would train and help the di mayed African of the "township" to defend tbem- r- . M.and la reject deKlerk' invitation! By D lei MarGleD NNPA Corre99nU'" The past week-end's news flash from South Africa that Mandela has rejected President de Klerk's Invitation to dilcuss ways and means of ending the , current spate of violence ln. African "townships" shouldn't lurprlse anyone. The glob I ma.. media's slanting of new from South I - Africa is causing anxiety everywhere. Sooner or later, tI�il slanting of news will bring about a breat in relations be­ tween European 'and African South Africans. On Sunday, April 30, news, came through from South Africa, loud and clear, that ANC's Deputy President, Nel- . son Mandela rejected outright President F. W. de Klerk's in­ .vuatlon for the two leaders to attempt together to solve the enigmatic problem of "township violence" that has caused the country thousands of slain and wounded Blacks. The news shouldn't surprise ,anyone. Recently, Mandela . made a fresh ultimatum to Pmi­ dent de Klerk that ANC would break away from tb� envisaaed negotiations if de Klerk's regime failed to halt tbe killings in, tbe Blac ' ahettos around Johannesbura. Since 1986, this . genocide bas raged furiously be­ tween Black facllou. But de · Klerk's police and militia are victims of the apartheid- · oriented violence. IT'S PREPOSTERQYS and · foolish to attribute the e cluhes as "Bl ck-on-Blact" or simply · "tribal" faction fightl, because there are no rival Black group in South Africa. . selves. But the pollee force op­ poses thi move. Chri Hani said, "In principle we don't in­ tend to fight INKATHA. They aren't our enemy. Fighting IN­ KATHA isn't in the interest of the people �f South Africa." . IN WASHINGTON, D.C., Chris Hani said, "I don't know why there is a rush to lift sanc­ tions against South Africa." He advised U.S. officials to consult with Black South African group in South Africa before acting. He emphasized that Black in South Africa and 'everywhere else aid tftat sanction shouldn't be lifted. Since Mandela's release, de Klerk ha only criticized ANC; urged it to suspend its arms truggte chip; asked Ii to end violence in the country, and did nothing to end the major pillar of apartheid. , De Klerk ha done nothing to stop rigbtwin Afritans from forming Black 'murder quad and bruraltz aticn of BLacks around the country. Whilst ANC, PAC and INKATHA has pi n - democratic plans - for a future Soutb African non-ra­ cial conatitution, de Klerk and bi� henchmen bave nothing of the sort. One wonders why de Klerk's "friends", "allie" nd propagandists want him to be "rewarded" for his "reforms" hen he h not freed a single African - not even Archbishop l>eamond Tutu - from the slavery of apartheid. Understandably, Mandela rightly rejects de Klert's invita­ tion hicb is divisive and s pi­ clous .... opponents. " hasn't topped even though ome government le ders .y they op­ po e the death penal ty or have themselve once been on death row as former political op­ ponents, tI Amnesty lntemation I said. LAST YEAR, 114 govern­ ment opponent llegedly in ... volved in coup attempts ere executed in three countries alone-Sudan, Ethiopia and Nigeri --often after secret trial where tbey could not even choose their own I wyers. This year, 12 suspected rebels in R wanda were. e ntenced. to death, all of them after their lawyer withdrew following anonymo deatb threats. "Such trial are often nothing more tb n a leg I veneer for the ........ o ... ··.-uv ent'� d io rid �r'�·.,.opponent by n em, " Amnesty International said. THE ORGA IZATION­ which oppo es the death penalty cro the board as the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment- aid the death penal­ ty is inevitably unfair and has no special power to curb crime. And a a nishment that cannot .1)e:i·l1weClCIG, it . me�Mitiillll!lIQIl Don' L Africa tarve Here's how you can help The following organization are among thol accepting tax-deductible donation for African famine relief, which you should de Ignate on your check. Arlcar. Afrlcare Hou.e 440 R Str.et, N. W. Wa.h�ngton, D.C. 20001 American Frl.nd. Servlc. Commltt •• 1501 Cherry St. Philadelphia, P.nn. 18102 Am rlcan J wl.h World Service 1280 Avenue of the America. New York, N.Y. 10104 American Red Cro •• PO Box 37243 Wa.hlngton, D.C. 20013 Catholic Relief ervlce. Socl.1 Mlnl.trle. Offlc. 305 Ichlg.n Ave. Detroit, Mlch, 41221 Church World rvlce PO Box 818 Elkhart, Ind. 48515 (Epl.cop.l) Pre.ldlng BI.hop'. Fund for World Relief 115 econd Ave. New York, N.Y. 10017 Oxfam America 115 Broadw.y Bo.ton, M •••. 02111 U.S.Commltt •• for the United Nation. Children'. Fund (UNICEF) ... 333 E. 38th t. New York, N.Y. 10011- t