On April 27, 1994, South Africans went to the polls to elect a new president. Among them were millions of Black citizens who had never voted because of the apartheid system that prevented them from having a say in their country\u2019s political space.
That election would see Nelson Mandela, the anti- apartheid fighter, become South Africa\u2019s first democratically elected and the country\u2019s first Black president.
The fight against apartheid was long and bloody. Many political activists disappeared while in exile and in police custody in South Africa and they\u2019ve never been found.
Today Mpho Lakaje, who was 14 years old when his country saw the fall of the apartheid system, is speaking to Bafana Nkuta, whose brother has been missing since the 1970s. He also speaks to Madeleine Fullard, who sits on the Missing Persons Task Team, a government initiative whose mission is to finding out what happened to those people who disappeared.