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Onkgopotse Ramothibi Tiro - A Brief
biographical outline: 1945 - 1974
Cde Onkgopotse Tiro was
born on the 9th November 1945 in Dinokana, Sefatlhane
District, North West Province, South Africa.
He started his schooling in 1951 at the Ikalafeng
Primary School. The school was closed down as a result
of strikes against passes for women. This disrupted his
studies.
During this period of disruption, i.e. five months, he
worked on a manganese mine for 75 cents per week as a
dishwasher and general hand to raise funds to further
his studies. He was at Naledi High School in SOWETO for
two months but was arrested for a pass offence. He then
went to Barolong High School in Mafikeng where he
matriculated.
He then proceeded to the University of the North (Turfloop)
where he became President of the SRC in 1970 - 1971.
One of his earlier encounters with the administration as
SRC President was when they wanted expunged from the
student diary two articles that they regarded as
"objectionable" : the SASO Policy Manifesto and the
Declaration of Students’ Rights. The administration
confiscated the diaries and removed the items. On
returning these to the student body, the students made a
bonfire of them.
In April 1972, the graduandi of that year asked Cde Tiro
to represent them at the graduation ceremony. He made
his famous speech and was expelled from the institution
by the University Authorities. His parting shot to Prof
J.L. Boshoff, Rector of the university before being
driven away by university administrative staff, was a
quotation from the bible: " For we can do nothing
against the truth, but for the truth". The expulsion has
made me realise that one can be punished for saying two
plus two make four", said Tiro.
In 1973 he took over as SASO’s Permanent Organiser after
the banning of the SASO/BPC leaders in 1973. In that
same year, he was elected the President of the Southern
African Students’ Movement (SASM), an affiliate of the
All-Africa Students’ Union ( AASU).
In his message of solidarity to the 5th SASO General
Students’ Council, as President of the SASM, Cde Tiro
wrote: " From this meeting some of you will be called a
number of names, the most prominent of which will be
communist; some of you will be forced to sleep with
hungry stomachs; some will be faced with external
separation with their parents and friends; some will
languish in prison. This is not new. Our forerunners
have suffered all this. No struggle can come to an end
without casualties. It is only through determination,
absolute commitment and positive self-assertion that we
shall overcome".
This letter was written some two weeks before he was
blown to pieces by a powerful parcel bomb sent to him by
agents of the apartheid regime. He died on the 1st
February 1974; the first Azanian to be pursued beyond
the borders of our country by the enemy and silenced for
good.
Cde Tiro was buried in Botswana because the then
Apartheid regime and its surrogates forces, would not
allow Tiro ‘s body to be buried at his home in Dinokana
Village. The Tiro Family with the support of the Azanian
People’s Organisation, requested the Truth and
Reconciliation Commission to assist them in bringing the
remains of Tiro back into the country for re-burial. On
the 20th March 1998, the President of Azapo, Mosibudi
Mangena, Mrs Moleseng Tiro - Onkgopotse Tiro ‘s Mother,
Mookami Tiro - Tiro ‘s younger Brother and family
members; accepted the remains of Onkgopotse Tiro at the
border post between South Africa and Botswana. Thanks
goes to the Botswana Government for giving the Tiro
Family and Azanian People’s Organisation the permission
to proceed with the exhumation and the permission to
cross-over to South Africa.
Tiro ‘s remains was finally re-buried at his hometown,
Dinokana Village on the 22nd March 1998. Almost a year
later, after his reburial, nobody has accepted
responsibility for Cde Tiro ‘s death. We shall not rest
until those responsible are brought to book. We have
been robbed-off a leader par excellence in this country,
his spirit shall live and remain with us forever.
His commitment, coupled with his disarming humility,
shall always inspire us in the service of our people.
One AZANIA - One Nation
SASO - South African Students Organisation
Sefatlhane District - known as Zeerust
BPC - Black People’s Convention
SRC - Students representative Council
SASM - Southern African Students’ Movement
AASU - All-Africa Students’ Union
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