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Special Report Transcript Episode 21, Section 4, Time 25:38

Nomasonto and her badly burnt three year old daughter Ayabulela returned to their family home just outside King Williamstown. It is on this windswept smallholding where her mother, a local schoolteacher all her life, was born and buried. Nomasonto, a UDF member, was the only one of her family who was politically involved. Today she is sad rather than bitter that her sister and mother died at the hands of her comrades. She believes the perpetrators were ill-disciplined youths who regarded anyone who did not toe the line as the enemy. // That time there was a misunderstanding between the youth in Duncan Village. So say they want to do something bad and you sort of ask them not to do it or stopping them they think you have AZAPO ideas and they label you as an AZAPO member. But in Duncan Village at the time there was no AZAPO, there was only one organisation, the UDF.

Notes: King Williamstown home; Nomasonto Kumalo

References: there are no references for this transcript

 
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