Tension, intolerance, hostilities and hatred characterise political and human relations between
the ANC and the IPF, particularly in KwaZulu-Natal but also in the rest of the country.
During August 1984 Coloureds and Indians who are registered voters will have the opportunity to elect men and women from amongst their own people to represent them in the new Parliament and Government of South Africa.
The widespread study of Indian immigrantn in the different colonies since Indentureship in the nineteenth century can be broken down into
several easily identifiable paradigms.
In the Run‐up to the 1999 elections, both academia and the media assumed that there would be a ‘coloured’ and ‘Indian’ vote. This article challenges this assumption through a disaggregation of the election results.