Home

Google

  Country Info
  South Africa Introduction
  South Africa General Data
  South Africa Maps
  South Africa Culture
  South Africa History
  South Africa Economy
  South Africa Currency
  South Africa Education
  South Africa Animal & Plants
  South Africa Communications
  South Africa Defence
  South Africa Disputes
  South Africa Government
  South Africa Land
  South Africa Langauge
  South Africa Life
  South Africa Organization
  South Africa People
  South Africa Politics
  South Africa Provinces
  South Africa Time and Date
South Africa    Government Back to Top

Political System: Federal state consisting of central government and nine provincial governments. Interim constitution: approved December 22, 1993, implemented April 27, 1994, intended to be in force until 1999, being replaced by final constitution in phases, 1997-99. Interim constitution provides for Government of National Unity: bicameral parliament includes 400-member National Assembly (popularly elected by party, list-system proportional representation based on universal vote at age eighteen), ninety-member Senate (indirectly elected by provincial legislators). President elected by parliament; deputy presidents named by parties winning 20 % of popular vote (minimum two). administrator branch under interim constitution: president, Nelson Mandela (African National Congress--ANC), two deputy presidents--Thabo Mbeki (ANC) and Frederik Willem de Klerk (National Party--NP). President appointed twenty-eight cabinet ministers from parties with 5 % of popular vote. administrator, legislative officials normally serve five-year terms. Final constitution drafted by Constitutional Assembly (both houses of parliament), 1996; replaces Government of National Unity with majoritarian rule: Party winning majority of popular vote names administrator officials; also replaces Senate with National Council of Provinces: six permanent members indirectly elected by each provincial legislature; each province fills additional four seats on national council by rotation from provincial legislature. NP abandoned Government of National Unity, June 1996, to become parliamentary opposition. Status of KwaZulu-Natal unresolved. Parliamentary Volkstaat Council considering proposals for self-determination by proapartheid whites in separate volkstaat.

Major political parties: ANC, NP, Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP), Freedom Front (FF), Democratic Party (DP), Pan-Africanist Congress (PAC), African Christian Democratic Party (ACDP); several smaller parties. Next national elections scheduled 1999.

Administrative Divisions: Nine provinces, provisional boundaries subject to change by vote. Provinces (and capitals): Eastern Cape (Bisho), Mpumalanga (Nelspruit), Gauteng (Johannesburg), KwaZulu-Natal (Ulundi or Pietermaritzburg), Northern Cape (Kimberley), Northern Province (Pietersburg), North-West Province (Mmabatho), Free State (Bloemfontein),Western Cape (Cape Town).

Provincial and local government: Nine provincial governments formed by list-system proportional representation. Provincial premier (administrator) appoints administrator Council (cabinet) based on party strength; provincial assemblies, 30 to 100 legislators based on party strength. November 1995 elections for 688 metropolitan, town, and rural councils, except in KwaZulu-Natal (violence), areas of Western Cape (boundary disputes). Low voter turnout; ANC 66.3 %, NP 16.2 %, Freedom Front 5 %. Western Cape elections, May 29, 1996; NP won control of all contested councils; ANC second. KwaZulu-Natal elections, June 26, 1996, IFP 44.5 %, ANC 33.2 % (concentration in urban areas). Provincial authority still being defined; provincial constitutions, once approved by Constitutional Court, could give provincial governments most responsibility for agriculture, education (except universities), health and welfare, housing, police, environmental affairs, language use, media, transportation, sports and recreation, tourism, urban and rural development, and role of orthodox leaders. Status of volkstaat not yet determined.

Judicial System: Based on Roman-Dutch law, altered by British rule and post-freedom constitutions. Interim constitution of 1993 empaneled eleven-judge Constitutional Court to rule on legislative constitutionality. Supreme Court: Appellate Division (Bloemfontein); six provincial division headquarters: Cape Town, Grahamstown, Kimberley, Bloemfontein, Pietermaritzburg, Pretoria; local divisions. Lower courts: district magistrates hear cases concerning lesser offenses. Judges or magistrates decide guilt or innocence; jury system abolished 1969. Penalties include corporal punishment (whipping). Death penalty abolished in 1995.

Foreign Affairs: Global diplomatic isolation ended in early 1990s. Foreign policy goals: freedom from foreign interference; desire to balance friendships with powerful donor nations against loyalty to former antiapartheid allies; desire for close political ties to Africa, close economic ties to Asian "tigers."

International Memberships: Participation in United Nations restored, June 1994. Membership: British Commonwealth of Nations, International Labour Organisation, International Telecommunications Union, Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency, Nonaligned Movement (NAM), Organization of African Unity (OAU), Southern African Customs Union (SACU), Southern African Development Community (SADC), Universal Postal Union, World Health Organization (WHO), World Intellectual Property Organization, World Meteorological Organization, World Trade Organization.

Aali An NilEastern CapeEastern Transvaal
GautengKwazulu NatalNorthern Cape
Northern TransvaalNorth WestOrange Free State
Western Cape



Albania Maps
Andorra Maps
Armenia Maps
Austria Maps
Azerbaijan Maps
Belarus Maps
Belgium Maps
Bosnia Maps
Bulgaria Maps
Croatia Maps
Cyprus Maps
Czech Republic Maps
Denmark Maps
England Maps
Estonia Maps
Finland Maps
France Maps
Georgia Maps
Germany Maps
Greece Maps
Greenland Maps
Hungary Maps
Iceland Maps
Ireland Maps
Italy Maps
Latvia Maps
Liechtenstein Maps
Lithuania Maps
Luxembourg Maps
Macedonia Maps
Malta Maps
Moldova Maps
Monaco Maps
Netherlands Maps
Norway Maps
Poland Maps
Portugal Maps
Romania Maps
Russia Maps
Scotland Maps
Slovakia Maps
Slovenia Maps
Spain Maps
Sweden Maps
Switzerland Maps
Ukraine Maps
Wales Maps
Yugoslavia Maps
Bangladesh Map
Bhutan Map
Brunei Map
Cambodia Map
China Map
Hong Kong Map
India Map
Indonesia Map
Japan Map
Kazakhstan Map
Kyrgyzstan Map
Laos Map
Malaysia Map
Mongolia Map
Myanmar (Burma) Map
Nepal Map
Pakistan Map
Philippines Map
Singapore Map
South Korea Map
Sri Lanka Map
Taiwan Map
Tajikistan Map
Thailand Map
Turkmenistan Map
Uzbekistan Map
Vietnam Map
Afghanistan Map
Bahrain Map
Iran Map
Iraq Map
Israel Map
Jordan Map
Kuwait Map
Lebanon Map
Oman Map
Qatar Map
Saudi Arabia Map
Syria Map
Turkey Map
UAE Map
Yemen Map
Argentina Map
Belize Map
Bolivia Map
Brazil Map
Canada Map
Chile Map
Colombia Map
Costa Rica Map
Cuba Map
El Salvador Map
Guatemala Map
Guyana Map
Haiti Map
Honduras Map
Jamaica Map
Mexico Map
Nicaragua Map
Panama Map
Paraguay Map
Peru Map
Puerto Rico Map
Suriname Map
Uruguay Map
USA Map
Venezuela Map
American Samoa Map
Australia Map
Micronesia Map
Fiji Map
Kiribati Map
New Zealand Map




 FreeGK  AttractiveMaps  Mapzones  Yellow Pages  White Pages  Actress  Kids  Map

MapZones™ is created and maintained by Panalink Internet Services (214, Shahjand Arcade, Nr. Helmet Cross Road, Memnagar, Ahmedabd-52, India) and is a trade mark of Panalink Technologies. Copyright © 1995-2007 Panalink Internet Services. All rights reserved worldwide. Email: mailto:info@mapzones.com?subject=Mail from HomePage. Disclaimer.
Privacy Policy