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UPDATED: Former South African President De Klerk Is Dead

A former South African President, Frederik de Klerk, is dead.

Mr De Klerk, 85, died Thursday, his foundation announced in a statement.

Mr De Klerk was the last white man to rule South Africa, between September 1989 and May 1994.

It was he who released Nelson Mandela from prison before the latter contested and won the South African presidential election.

The statement from his Foundation read: “Former President FW de Klerk died peacefully at his home in Fresnaye (Cape Town) earlier this morning following his struggle against mesothelioma cancer.”

In March, Mr De Klerk was diagnosed with mesothelioma – a cancer that affects the lining of the lungs, but he “started a course of immunotherapy.” His foundation said then that there was no immediate threat at the time “and we are confident that the treatment will be successful.”

In February 1990, he announced sweeping reforms that marked the beginning of the negotiated transition from apartheid to democracy. 

His actions helped bring an end to apartheid-era South Africa, and he became one of the country’s two deputy presidents after the multi-party elections in 1994 that saw Mr Mandela become president.

Mr Mandela defeated Mr De Klerk in the presidential elections just four years after winning his freedom. But even as Mr Mandela invited Mr De Klerk into his transitional government as second deputy president, Mr De Klerk struggled with his diminished role and eventually quit.

His efforts to remake the National Party that his grandfather helped create, from a white-dominated organization into a multiracial one with the clout of the Action National Party (ANC), fizzled.

Frustrated, Mr De Klerk announced his retirement from politics in 1997.

Earlier in 1993, Mr De Klerk won the Nobel Peace Prize, an award he shared with Mr Mandela, but the relationship of the duo was born out of necessity. according to Mr Mandela.

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