Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Zwelakhe Sisulu was the leader of the union during Mwasa's strike for fair wages for black journalists in 1980. It was the first strike by black journalists. [1] After the strike was over, he lost his job, was banned from journalism, and ordered under house arrest for three years until 1983.

  2. 4 de out. de 2012 · Zwelakhe Sisulu. journalist, President of Media Workers Association of South Africa, business executive, former SABC CEO, Zwelakhe. Zwelakhe Sisulu was born in Soweto on 17 December 1950, to liberation struggle icons Walter and Albertina Sisulu. He was the third of five children.

  3. Mr Zwelakhe Sisulu was born on 17 December 1950 in Johannesburg. He was a towering figure in the field of journalism, where he played a pioneering role in the establishment of a free press unequivocally committed to the liberation of the country from oppression.

  4. 4 de out. de 2012 · It was with deep sadness that we at the Nelson Mandela Centre of Memory heard of the untimely passing away today of Zwelakhe Sisulu. The son of one of South Africa’s pre-eminent anti-apartheid families, Zwelakhe was himself a seasoned human rights activist.

  5. Zwelakhe Sisulu. Zwelakhe Sisulu was born in 1950 into a political family, the son of anti-Apartheid stalwarts Walter and Albertina Sisulu. His father was imprisoned for more than 20 years, along with Nelson Mandela. Sisulu began writing as a trainee journalist for Rand Daily Mail in the mid-1970s, during a time of rising unrest in his home ...

  6. Zwelakhe Sisulu is the youngest son of Walter Sisulu, the former secretary-general of the outlawed National Congress, who is serving a life sentence with Nelson Mandela, and Albertina Sisulu, a leading in the UDF, who has been under ban most of the time since 1984.

  7. Zwelakhe Sisulu (born 1951), the internationally renowned South African journalist and editor of New Nation, has been detained in solitary confinement in a Johannesburg police cell since 12 December 1986. He is one of the best-known victims of the latest crackdown on censorship in South Africa.