Thabo Mvuyelwa Mbeki

President of South Africa
President, ANC
Member, National Executive Committee, ANC
Member,
National Working Committee, ANC
President of South Africa
People like to identify Thabo Mbeki as an independent and original thinker,
but one who remains close to the more visible leadership. His profile as a
policy shaper and mediator in the movement has been built up over a lifetime of
involvement. "I was born into the struggle," he says. His birth took place in
Idutywa, Transkei, in June 1942.
Both his parents were teachers and activists. His father is a university
graduate and there were many books in his home which Thabo read at an early age.
Govan Mbeki was a leading figure in ANC activities in the Eastern Cape.
Believing that sooner or later they would be arrested, Mbeki's parents decided
that family and friends would also be responsible for bringing up the children.
Mbeki therefore spent long periods away from home.
He joined the Youth League at 14 and quickly became active in student
politics. After his schooling at Lovedale was interrupted by a strike in 1959,
he completed his studies at home. Thereafter he moved to Johannesburg where he
came under the guidance of Walter Sisulu and Duma Nokwe.
While studying for his British A-levels he was elected secretary of the
African Students' Association (ASA). He went on to study economics as a
correspondence student with London University. The ASA collapsed following the
arrest of many of its members, at a time when political movements were coming
under increasingly severe attack from the state. Mbeki's father was arrested at
Rivonia and sentenced to life imprisonment.
He left the country in 1962 under orders from the ANC. From Tanzania he moved
to Britain where he completed a Masters degree in economics at Sussex University
in 1966. Remaining active in student politics, he played a prominent role in
building the youth and student sections of the ANC in exile.
Following his studies he worked at the London office with the late Oliver
Tambo and Yusuf Dadoo before being sent to the Soviet Union in 1970 for military
training. Later that year he arrived in Lusaka where he was soon appointed
assistant secretary of the Revolutionary Council. In 1973-74 he was in Botswana
holding discussions with the Botswana government about opening an ANC office
there. In 1975 he was acting ANC representative in Swaziland. Appointed to the
NEC in 1975, he served as ANC representative to Nigeria until 1978.
On his return to Lusaka he became political secretary in the office of Oliver
Tambo, and then director of information. From this position he played a major
role in turning the international media against apartheid. His other role in the
'70s was in building the ANC in Swaziland and underground structures inside the
country.
During the '80s Mbeki rose to head the department of information and
publicity and co-ordinated diplomatic campaigns to involve more white South
Africans in anti-apartheid activities. When delegations of sports, business and
cultural representatives visited Lusaka for talks they all expressed surprise to
meet a man deeply engaged in the issues they brought to the table.
From 1989 Mbeki headed the ANC Department of International Affairs, and was a
key figure in the ANC's negotiations with the former government.
Mbeki was hand-picked by Nelson Mandela after the April 1994 general election
to be the first Deputy President of the new Government of National Unity.
At the 50th Conference
of the ANC at Mafikeng, from 16-20 1997, Thabo Mbeki was elected as the new
President of the African National Congress.
Thabo Mbeki was elected
President of South Africa on 14 June 1999 and was inaugurated
as President on 16 June 1999.
Profile of Thabo Mvuyelwa
Mbeki
Personal
Date of birth: 18 June 1942, Idutywa,
Queenstown, one of four children of Govan and Epainette Mbeki
Marital status: Married to Zanele Dlamini (1974)
Academic Qualifications
- Attended primary school in Idutywa and Butterworth
- Acquired high school education at Lovedale, Alice
- Expelled from school as a result of student strikes (1959) and forced to
continue studies at home
- Sat for matriculation examinations at St John's High School, Umtata (1959)
- Completed British "A" levels examinations (1960 and 1961)
- Undertook first year economics degree as an external student with the
University of London (1961 - 1962)
- Master of Economics degree, University of Sussex (1966)
Career details
- Joined ANC Youth League (ANCYL) while a student at Lovedale Institute
(1956)
- Involved in underground activities in the Pretoria-Witwatersrand area
after the ANC was banned in 1960
- Involved in mobilising the students and youth in support of the ANC call
for a stay at home in protest against the creation of a Republic (1961)
- Elected Secretary of the African Students Association (December 1961)
- Left South Africa together with other students on instructions of the ANC
(1962). Went to the then Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), the then Tanganyika
(now Tanzania) and the United Kingdom to study
- Continued with political activities as a university student in the UK,
mobilising the international student community against apartheid
- Worked for the ANC office in London (1967 - 1970). Underwent military
training in the then Soviet Union during this period
- Served as Assistant Secretary to the Revolutionary Council of the ANC in
Lusaka (1971)
- Sent to Botswana (1973). He was among the first ANC leaders to have
contact with exiled and visiting members of the Black Consciousness Movement
(BCM). As a result of his contact and discussions with the BCM, some of the
leading members of this organisation found their way into the ranks of the ANC
- The focus of his activities during this time was to consolidate the
underground structures of the ANC and to mobilise the people inside South
Africa
- Engaged the Botswana government in discussions to open an ANC office in
that country. Left Botswana (1974)
- Sent to Swaziland as acting representative of the ANC. Part of his task
was the internal mobilisation and the creation of underground structures
- Became a member of the National Executive Committee (NEC) of the ANC
(1975)
- Sent to Nigeria (December 1976) as a representative of the ANC. Played a
major role in assisting students from South Africa to relocate in an
unfamiliar enviroment
- Left Nigeria and returned to Lusaka (February 1978)
- Political Secretary in the Office of the President of the ANC (1978)
- Director of the Department of Information and Publicity (1984 - 1989)
- Re-elected to the NEC (1985). Served as Director of Information and as
Secretary for Presidential Affairs
- Member of the ANC 's political and military council
- Member of the delegation that met South African business community led by
the Chairman of Anglo American, Gavin Relly, at Mfuwe, Zambia (1985)
- Led a delegation of the ANC to Dakar, Senegal, where talks were held with
a delegation from the Institute for a Democratic Alternative for South Africa
(Idasa) (1987)
- Led the ANC delegation which held secret talks with the South African
government from 1989 and which led to agreements about the unbanning of the
ANC and the release of political prisoners
- Part of the delegation which engaged the government in "talks about
talks". He participated in the Groote Schuur and Pretoria deliberations, which
resulted in the agreements which became known as the Groote Schuur and
Pretoria Minutes (1990)
- Participated in all subsequent negotiations leading to the adoption of the
interim Constitution for the new South Africa
- Elected chairperson of the ANC (1993). The election to this post meant
succeeding the late former President and chairperson of the ANC, OR Tambo,
with whom he had a close working relationship over the years
- Executive Deputy President of the South African Government of National
Unity (May 1994 - June 1999)
- Elected President of the African National Congress, 18 December 1997
- Inaugurated as President of South Africa, 16 June 1999
Source: Office of the Deputy Executive President, 26 August 1994 (Confirmed,
13 September 1996)