WASHINGTON — Nobel Peace Prize winner and
international symbol of freedom Nelson Mandela is flagged on U.S.
terrorist watch lists and needs special permission to visit the USA.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice calls the situation "embarrassing,"
and some members of Congress vow to fix it.
The requirement applies to former South African
leader Mandela and other members of South Africa's governing African
National Congress (ANC), the once-banned anti-Apartheid organization.
In the 1970s and '80s, the ANC was officially designated a terrorist
group by the country's ruling white minority. Other countries,
including the United States, followed suit.
Because of this, Rice told a Senate committee
recently, her department has to issue waivers for ANC members to travel
to the USA.
"This is a country with which we now have
excellent relations, South Africa, but it's frankly a rather
embarrassing matter that I still have to waive in my own counterpart,
the foreign minister of South Africa, not to mention the great leader
Nelson Mandela," Rice said.
Rep. Howard Berman, D-Calif., chairman of the
House International Relations Committee, is pushing a bill that would
remove current and former ANC leaders from the watch lists. Supporters
hope to get it passed before Mandela's 90th birthday July 18.
"What an indignity," Berman said. "The ANC set
an important example: It successfully made the change from armed
struggle to peace. We should celebrate the transformation."
In 1990, Mandela was freed after 27 years in
prison for crimes committed during the struggle against Apartheid, a
repressive regime that subjugated black South Africans. In 1994, he was
elected South Africa's first black president.
Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., called ANC members' inclusion on watch lists a "bureaucratic snafu" and pledged to fix the problem.
Members of other groups deemed a terrorist threat, such as Hamas, also are on the watch lists.
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff
says "common sense" suggests Mandela should be removed. He says the
issue "raises a troubling and difficult debate about what groups are
considered terrorists and which are not."
When ANC members apply for visas to the USA,
they are flagged for questioning and need a waiver to be allowed in the
country. In 2002, former ANC chairman Tokyo Sexwale was denied a visa.
In 2007, Barbara Masekela, South Africa's ambassador to the United
States from 2002 to 2006, was denied a visa to visit her ailing cousin
and didn't get a waiver until after the cousin had died, Berman's
legislation says.