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june 16 1976latest news & developments
(Photo by Gallo Images/Darren Stewart)

What Youth Day means to South Africa’s young people

Three interns at the Mail & Guardian write about being young in South Africa today

Mbali Ntuli hopes to ‘save’ the Democratic Alliance.

Mbali Ntuli offers hope that goes beyond the DA

She has the political experience and spirit to lead the Democratic Alliance along a new path

Onkgopotse Tiro

Parcel of Death memorialises Onkgopotse Abram Tiro

Journalist and Tiro’s nephew Gaongalelwe gives us a glimpse into the young firebrand’s life.

As we have become accustomed, this year’s narrative will not be different. Broadcast around the country will be the numbing message of how ‘courageous young people turned the course of history’.

​June 16: Don’t let commemorations mangle history

The tragic events that took place on June 16 1976 have been appropriated

#FeesMustFall

Students who sacrificed for #FeesMustFall deserve recognition

As much as we celebrate the youth of 1976, we also need to celebrate the #FeesMustFall generation

The Soweto riots of 1976 were part of a well-orchestrated reaction to apartheid.

Class of ’76 weeps for the past – and the present

When we recall those who paid the ultimate price for quality education, don’t forget current learners who are still struggling for decent schooling.

“We could not attack in this way last year because we did not have Benjamin Mendy, he is so clever to go up and down,” Pep Guardiola said. (David Klein/Reuters)

Legendary photographer Sam Nzima has died

Veteran photographer Sam Nzima has died in a Nelspruit hospital.

(John McCann)

Democracy gives memory a new spin

Youth Day reminds us not to accept a single history blindly but also to question and listen

Rising up in 1976: An image used in Sifiso Khanyile’s documentary ‘Uprize!’

Powerfully unpacking of conditions that led to June 16

‘The story is narrated by people who were there and who relay the climate that led to the day we now know as June 16.’

A struggle without documentation is no struggle: Peter Magubane

Shooting the struggle

Despite being kept in solitary for 20 months in total, a defiant Peter Magubane made it his mission to document South Africa’s turbulent history.

Lest we forget: Families lay flowers at the Hector Pieterson Memorial in Soweto on June 16 this year during celebrations to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the Soweto uprising in 1976.

Letters to the editor: June 24 to 30 2016

Readers write in about 1976, criminal politicians, and the SABC.

Look to the class of ’76 for guidance – Motshekga

Fourty years on, what can the youth of today learn from the past? That education is a right never to be taken for granted, writes Angie Motshekga.

Smouldering: Vhudzani Secondary School is one of about 50 schools that have been burnt or vandalised.

‘We didn’t burn schools,’ Zuma and 1976 activist tell Youth Day crowd

"Each and every student was hell bent on defending their classrooms. Classrooms were never ever torched," 1976 student leader Dan Montsitsi said.

Letters to the editor: May 20 to 26 2016

Readers write in about June 1976, vandalism, and job creation.

There is always the danger of revisionism of history by the victor.

Thanks for reminding us Steve, we want to apologise for apartheid

As the architects of apartheid, it’s time for black people to collectively say sorry for the system Mandela designed to exploit white people.

JZ knows he can’t get away with a massacre anymore so he decides to bring out his secret weapon.

Family feud behind mall’s removal of June 16 statue

A statue of Hector Pieterson was removed earlier this month from Soweto’s Maponya Mall "in response to the demands of Mbuyisa Makhubu’s family".

Hundreds march against use of Mbuyisa Makhubu’s name

The family of Mbuyisa Makhubu, photographed in 1976 carrying a dying Hector Pieterson, wants to stop the "unlawful" use of his name for profits.

South Africa’s population is one of the youngest in the world

Youth Day: Are we missing the mark?

As the country marks Youth Day, concerns are being raised that young South Africans are no longer as involved in politics as their 1976 counterparts.

SPIKE: Ten things about June 16 1976

The day on which black South African school pupils rose up against "Bantu education" is now celebrated as Youth Day.

Education the best honour for the class of 1976

Had the blind, evil apartheid regime acted responsibly on June 16 1976, many a life would have been saved.