In response to the outside world's question of "interfering with and blocking the process of prosecuting apartheid-era crimes", former South African ** Thabo Mbeki denied it in an interview with reporters on the 1st, insisting that he had not received any prosecution for apartheid-era crimes during his tenure in South Africa.
Mbeki, who is about to turn 82, was actively involved in the anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa with Mandela and others in his early years, and was a well-known politician and social activist in South Africa. From 16 June 1999 to 24 September 2008, he served as South Africa's second term since the end of apartheid.
A few days ago, it was rumored that during his tenure, Mbeki intervened and prevented the prosecution process of apartheid-related crimes brought about by the country's "Truth and Reconciliation Commission" (a South African social mediation organization established on November 29, 1995, after the collapse of apartheid in South Africa, to witness, document and, in some cases, pardon perpetrators of human rights violations, compensate victims, and provide trauma for the prosecution of apartheid-related crimes.
In response, Mbeki insisted that the rumours about him were fabricated and that no national prosecution had brought any charges against him for apartheid-era crimes during his tenure in South Africa. "In all my years in the tenure, I have never interfered in any of the work of the **. The South African Administration, in particular, has never prevented the prosecution from pursuing cases referred to justice by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. He said.
In addition, Mbeki denied rumours that during his tenure**, South Africa** had granted amnesty to those implicated in atrocities committed during apartheid. He explained that South Africa** had never applied for any amnesty from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, "and it is important to stress that there is no 'back door' in this process." Reporter Wang Xi).