>From MCELROY@zodiac.rutgers.edu Thu Oct 22 17:52:44 1992 MANDELA: "IRA STRUGGLING FOR SELF-DETERMINATION" There was outrage in Britain this week when South African leader Nelson Mandela argued with Irish pop singer Bob Geldof on national TV after Mandela announced his support for the IRA. The 74 year old African National Congress President shocked the singer turned chat show host by saying "The IRA are conducting a struggle for self - assertion. They do not want Britain--a foreign country--to run a colony. "We do not want any form of colonialism and, wherever it is, we support those who fight it. People have a right to self-expression. Geldof, who, in the past, had made no secret of his disapproval of the IRA, denounced Mandela's statement by pointing out the possibility for the taking of human life in the IRA's bombing campaign in mainland England. In response, Mandela said, "In any country, some people will be hit by crossfire. It has happened throughout history." Geldof, who was interviewing Mandela as part of his own Channel 4 talk show, made his opposition clear by saying "I am from the SOuth and I do not accept your analysis." After being held in jail for almost 30 years by South Africa's apartheid regime, Mandela caused similar shock-waves in 1991 when, during a visit to Britain to meet with Prime Minister John Major, he called for the IRA to be invited to attend the ongoing peace talks process in Northern Ireland. As things stand, the participants at those talks refuse to sit at the same table as the IRA. ***** taken from The Irish Voice, New York. October 27, 1992 for further info on Ireland on Peacenet, see reg.ireland.