Death Sentence - - Anti-apartheid (1986)

: Sentences were heavily biased; data from 1982–1983 shows that 95% of those sentenced to death were Black. Black activists were often executed for killing white police officers, while white individuals rarely faced the same penalty for killing Black citizens. 2. High-Profile Cases and Campaigns (1986)

: Following the assassination of the "Cradock Four" and rising unrest, President P.W. Botha declared a national State of Emergency in 1986, granting security forces nearly unlimited power. Death Sentence - Anti-Apartheid (1986)

While the South African state intensified executions, the international community responded with legislative pressure. : Sentences were heavily biased; data from 1982–1983

The year 1986 saw a dramatic escalation in resistance and state response. High-Profile Cases and Campaigns (1986) : Following the

: Many political executions were carried out in secret at Pretoria Central Prison, often without full public disclosure of the trials.

Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid Act of 1986 99th Congress (1985-1986)

The use of the death penalty during the apartheid era (1948–1994) represents a intersection of judicial state-sanctioned violence and political repression. By 1986, South Africa was under a heightened State of Emergency, and the use of the death sentence as a weapon against anti-apartheid activists reached a critical peak. 1. The Judicial Weaponization of Execution