Reuters
May 9, 2008
Moving to fix what
some lawmakers called an embarrassing leftover in US policy, the House of
Representatives voted to scrap travel restrictions on former South African
President Nelson Mandela and others in his anti-apartheid party.
Lawmakers said it was
astonishing this was not done earlier.
The apartheid era might be history, but
The measure must pass
the Senate before it can become law.
A companion bill was
introduced there this week by Senator John Kerry, a Massachusetts Democrat.
Mandela still has to
get a special waiver to enter the
Berman's legislation, which passed the House on a voice vote and has the
Bush administration's support, removes the ANC from treatment as a terrorist
organization.
The legislation also
would give officials authority to determine that some criminal activities that
otherwise keep people out of the
The laws blacklisting the ANC were an embarrassing remnant of
"Despite
recognizing two decades ago that America's place was on the side of those
oppressed by apartheid, Congress has never resolved
the inconsistency in our immigration code that treats many of those who
actively opposed apartheid in South Africa as terrorists and criminals, in part
because the apartheid regime labelled them as
such," he told the House earlier this week.
Increasingly stringent security measures passed by Congress after the
attacks of September 11, 2001 preserved the ANC's terrorist label because it
had used armed force as part of its campaign against apartheid, Berman said.
US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice said last month she wanted to end the travel restrictions on
Mandela, who won a Nobel Peace Prize, and others from
his party.
The ANC was banned by
the South African apartheid government in 1960, its leaders jailed or forced
into exile until the ban on the movement was lifted 30 years later.
Mandela, who
spearheaded the struggle against apartheid and has become a symbol of freedom
world-wide, was released from jail after 27 years in 1990 and later became the
country's first post-apartheid-era president.