South africa constitution is seen as a model of democracy . why
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it includes multiparty democracy with regular elections and universal adult suffrage etc that's y it is considered as model of democracy
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Twenty years ago, South Africa ended decades of oppression under white-minority rule and embraced the dawning of a new democracy.
The year 1994 ushered in a new era of hope for South Africans when the country held its first fully democratic elections and elected its first Black president, Nelson Mandela.
Mandela’s African National Congress has dominated politics ever since and the country has curbed political violence, demolished discriminatory laws and provided basic health care, housing, welfare grants and clean water to millions of impoverished citizens.
However, South Africa celebrates two decades of multi-racial democracy against a backdrop of rising joblessness, inequality, labor strikes and corruption within President Jacob Zuma’s government.
Nobel Peace Prize winner Archbishop Desmond Tutu had hoped 20 years ago that South Africa would become a thriving all-inclusive Rainbow Nation and a shining light for the African continent to follow. But some analysts said that vision has not been realized.
“I personally had great hopes of South Africa leading the continent. For a while, being the continent’s biggest economy and also a strong democracy - South Africa seemed poised to be the natural leader of the continent and I expected Zuma to, even Mbeki, to have a more robust and clearer international policy,” said Kennedy Opalo, a Kenyan doctoral candidate in the Department of Political Science at Stanford University in the United States.
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