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NAMIBIAN INDEPENDENCE (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   185289


Africa in 1982-83 / Beri, H M L   Journal Article
Beri, H M L Journal Article
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2
ID:   122914


True or false warning? the United Nations and threats to Namibi / Dorn, A Walter; Pauk, Robert; Burton, Emily Cope   Journal Article
Dorn, A Walter Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract The success of the Namibian independence plan in 1989-1990 is a high point in the history of the United Nations (UN). The enormous challenge of Namibia even predated the organization, going back seven decades on the international agenda. South West Africa (Namibia) became a mandate under the League of Nations in 1920 after Germany lost that colonial territory to the then Union of South Africa during World War I. After World War II, the mandate continued as a UN trusteeship under South Africa, but Pretoria refused to accept the required international supervision. It governed Namibia as a colony, complete with the brutal racist institution of apartheid. In 1963, its trusteeship was officially terminated by the UN Security Council and, in 1966, the UN General Assembly declared that South Africa's continued control of Namibia was illegal. Then, in 1978, in a push for Namibian independence, the Security Council unanimously passed Resolution 435 (1978), which outlined an implementation strategy for free elections. But another ten years elapsed before the United Nations and the United States gained South Africa's cooperation.
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