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Protea Hotel Tyger Valley
Protea Hotel Sea Point
The Ritz
 
Between Airport and Cape Town
Sea Point / Cape Town
Sea Point / Cape Town
 
from $72.95
from $79.95
from $83.95
 
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In 1966, the notorious Group Areas Act was used to uproot whole coloured communities from District Six and to move them to the desolate Cape Flats . Here, rampant gangsterism took vicious root and remains one of Cape Town's most pressing problems today. To compound the problem, the National Party stripped away coloured representation on the town council in 1972.

Eleven years later, at a huge meeting on the Cape Flats, the extra-parliamentary opposition defied government repression and re-formed as the United Democratic Front , heralding a period of intensified struggle to topple apartheid. In 1986, one of the major pillars crumbled when the government was forced to scrap influx control; blacks began pouring into Cape Town seeking work and erecting shantytowns, making Cape Town one of the fastest-growing cities in the world. On February 11, 1990, the city's history took a neat twist when, just hours after being released from prison, Nelson Mandela made his first public speech from the balcony of City Hall to a jubilant crowd spilling across the Grand Parade, the very site of the first Dutch fort. Four years later, he entered the formerly whites-only Parliament, 500m away, as South Africa's first democratically elected president.

Despite five years of non-racial democracy, on the eve of the 1999 elections, Cape Town remained a divided city. On the one hand, the whites still enjoyed a comfortable existence in the leafy suburbs along the two coasts and the slopes of Table Mountain, with the V&A Waterfront complex continuing to develop apace. On the desolate Cape Flats , however, some progress had been made in bringing electricity to the shantytowns, but the shacks were still there - and spreading. Despite white fears about crime, it was still blacks and coloureds who were overwhelmingly and disproportionately the victims of protracted violence, much of it gang-related.

Some attempts were made to foster cultural interaction and to forge a more integrated city. In 1999, the Cape Times launched a highly popular "One City, Many Cultures" campaign, featuring regular articles highlighting the rich diversity of Cape Town's ethnic and religious groups. To the same end, a restructuring of local government began. The city's 69 racially segregated bodies were rationalized into six councils that deliberately linked the wealthy and disadvantaged, and brought black, white and coloured areas under common administrations for the first time.

However, the 2000 local elections proved just how divided a city Cape Town remains. The ANC had hoped its campaign for better services in poorer areas would capture the hearts and minds of the city's African and coloured township dwellers, and allow it to wrest control of the Western Cape and Cape Town city council from the National Party, which had now restyled itself as the New National Party (NNP), and was fronting itself with coloured candidates in an attempt to distance itself from its shabby apartheid past. But in the run-up to the election, the liberal Democratic Party, which for decades had been the only vociferous parliamentary opposition to the apartheid government, joined its NNP former-enemy to form the Democratic Alliance (DA), which won control of the city and the province. The NNP's Gerald Morkel and Peter Marais became the Western Cape provincial premier and Cape Town mayor respectively. Marais - described by the Mail and Guardian as "a buffoon of note" who "offers voters a curious mixture of American evangelism and H.F. Verwoerd" - proved to be a populist and erratic city leader, whose arbitrary behaviour, particularly over the street-renaming debacle, led to his sacking in 2001 by the DA leader, Tony Leon. This in turn led to the swift collapse of the alliance, with Marais opting to stay with the NNP, while Morkel threw in his lot with the Democratic Party.

In a curious twist to the saga, the NNP then entered an alliance with the ANC. Formerly the bitterest of adversaries - the NNP's predecessors had, after all, incarcerated the ANC's leadership on Robben Island - they made unlikely bedfellows. In the farcical follow-up to the street renaming fiasco, the NNP in alliance with the ANC retained control of the province but the DA held on to Cape Town, with Morkel and Marais playing musical chairs. By the end of 2001, Marais had become the provincial premier and Morkel Cape Town mayor. This proved, if nothing else, how resourceful Western Cape politicians can be in preserving their jobs. What remains to be seen is whether they can apply those resources to running Cape Town

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