South Africa marks 20th anniversary of apartheid's end
South African President Jacob Zuma led celebrations on Sunday to mark the 20th anniversary of post-apartheid democracy in the country, saying it was closer to achieving the dream of a united multiracial nation.
"Our country has done well," Zuma said at a ceremony held two decades after the first all-race election that saw Nelson Mandela become the country's first black president.
"We all have a good story to tell," he said at the "Freedom Day" ceremony held in the gardens of the Union Buildings, the seat of government in Pretoria.
"We have moved closer to our cherished dream of a united nonracial, nonsexist and democratic South Africa," said Zuma.
South Africa is now the most developed country on the continent and boasts, among other things, a strong constitution and an independent judiciary.
But its successes have been sullied by mismanagement and high-level corruption blamed largely on the ANC-led government, as well as a legacy of racial inequality, poverty, rampant crime and a lack of basic services.
The government failings have become a rallying point for the opposition ahead of general elections on May 7, the fifth since the end of decades of sanctioned racial oppression.
'A much better place'
But Zuma - who himself has been tarnished by corruption allegations - used his speech to warn rivals not to dismiss the "tremendous" gains in the country of 51 million people.
"I am sure you all agree with me that working together in the past 20 years and the past five years, we have made South Africa a much better place to live in," Zuma said.
"We must not deny or downplay these achievements, regardless of our political differences, at any given time, including the election period."
However, Nobel peace laureate Desmond Tutu, while conceding that two decades of freedom have seen a "heck of an achievement", said he was pleased Mandela was not alive today to witness the slow pace of transformation.
"I'm glad that Madiba is dead," Tutu was quoted as telling South Africa's Sunday Times. "I'm glad that most of these people are no longer alive to see this."
"I didn't think there would be a disillusionment soon," he said.
Zuma, meanwhile, urged South Africans to turn out in the millions on May 7 for the parliamentary, presidential and local elections.
"Our freedom was not free. It came about through blood, sweat and tears. That is why we must defend it at all cost", Zuma said.
"We are succeeding to heal the wounds of our brutal and divided past."
Freedom Day was marked by a full military parade, including a 21-gun salute and flybys as well as prayers, music and dance.
A colorful cultural parade entered the Union Buildings gardens to the tune of the South African 2010 World Cup's official anthem Waka Waka (This Time for Africa).
The Union Buildings complex is where generations of apartheid leaders penned many of the racial laws that Mandela and others fought against for most of their lives.
Agence France-Presse