-
Shahidi hits ton but India bowl out Afghanistan for 218
-
Court bans Spanish PM's wife from leaving country
-
Israel strikes south Lebanon despite truce announced with Hezbollah
-
Japan's Ogura smashes own track record to take Czech MotoGP pole
-
Hurricanes blow away Chiefs in record-breaking Super Rugby final
-
Germany meet Ivory Coast in high-stakes World Cup clash, Sweden face Dutch
-
Ancient Greek theatre revives legendary Callas opera Medea
-
Indian guru urges broader view of yoga
-
Portugal's unofficial exorcism fever worries Church
-
Paraguay's Almiron sent off under new FIFA 'mouth-covering' rule
-
Ancelotti hails 'complete game' as Brazil sink Haiti at World Cup
-
Tunisia ask how Sweden World Cup star Ayari slipped its net
-
Scotland remain bullish despite Morocco World Cup setback
-
USA down Australia to reach World Cup knockout rounds, Brazil swat Haiti
-
Brazil cruise past Haiti to re-ignite World Cup campaign
-
Australia detects first case of contagious H5 bird flu
-
Scheffler career Slam chances blowing in Shinnecock winds
-
Iran's treatment at World Cup 'a dark point' for football: official
-
McIlroy seven back but likes his chances at US Open
-
Nagelsmann eyes same German lineup against I. Coast after Curacao trouncing
-
Clark leads US Open by four with major champs in the hunt
-
Saibari early strike gives Morocco World Cup win over Scotland
-
Archaeologists discover 'never before seen' pre-Hispanic ruins in Mexico
-
Pochettino backs 'high IQ' players to block out World Cup hype
-
James Burrows, prolific innovator in US TV comedies, dead at 85
-
Douglass breaks 50m free world record at Indy Pro Swim
-
World Cup warning with Sweden star Isak 'getting stronger and stronger'
-
'Like China': Cubans welcome reforms but exiles remain skeptical
-
Tunisia coach says 'I am no wizard' after World Cup SOS call
-
USA down Australia to reach World Cup knockout rounds
-
USA beat Australia 2-0 to reach World Cup knockouts
-
Imperious Dupont guides record-breaking Toulouse to Top 14 final
-
Qatar-gifted Air Force One replacement unveiled
-
Venezuelan opposition figure heads to US after transition talks
-
Niemann fires 65 at US Open after upsetting two-shot penalty
-
Canada star Kone to miss rest of World Cup after surgery: team
-
Spain's Yamal says 'too soon' to play full match at World Cup
-
Confident Fitzpatrick makes a run at another US Open title
-
Neymar? He is working remotely at the World Cup, jokes Lula
-
England captain Stokes strikes for Durham as Test recall looms
-
Three-time Stanley Cup champion Toews retires
-
Clark wants to win back fans as well as US Open title
-
Japan wary of fired up and wounded Tunisia for World Cup landmark game
-
Clark leads as fellow major winners charge at US Open
-
'Like a fridge': France cave homes offer lucky few respite from heat
-
Ton-up Nicholls turns the screw for New Zealand against England
-
Hormuz ship traffic climbs after war deal: trackers
-
Sun shines on jockey Lee at Royal Ascot
-
Kane hails World Cup 'Wonderwall' singalong as England highlight
-
Oil edges back up, shares steady after US-Iran talks postponed
S.Africa's Breyten Breytenbach, writer and anti-apartheid activist
Breyten Breytenbach, who died Sunday, was one of South Africa's most honoured writers, who found beauty in his Afrikaans language but was horrified at the white supremacy imposed by his government.
The poet, author and painter had not lived in South Africa for decades, leaving in the early 1960s to settle in Paris, where he became a global voice against apartheid.
What was intended to be a short and secret trip back in 1975 led to him spending seven years in jail, two in solitary confinement, after he was betrayed and arrested.
French president Francois Mitterrand helped secure his release in 1982 and he returned to France to become a citizen.
He travelled back to South Africa regularly, according to his daughter Daphnee Breytenbach, who confirmed his death to AFP.
"My father, the South African painter and poet Breyten Breytenbach, died peacefully on Sunday, November 24, in Paris, at the age of 85," she said.
"Immense artist, militant against apartheid, he fought for a better world until the end."
- 'Albino Terrorist' -
Breytenbach was born in the small Western Cape town of Bonnievale in 1939 at a time when Afrikaans was emerging with a distinct identity as a language, having been derided as "kitchen Dutch".
When in 1964 Breytenbach published his first volume of poetry -- "Die ysterkoei moet sweet", or The Iron Cow Must Sweat -- Afrikaans was not just ascendent but had given the name "apartheid" to South Africa's brutal system of racial segregation.
With Afrikaners in power, their language became ever more associated with the regime.
"I'd never reject Afrikaans as a language, but I reject it as part of the Afrikaner political identity. I no longer consider myself an Afrikaner," he said in an interview with The New York Times the following year.
In his language and politics, Breytenbach pushed back against the strictures of the country in which he was born.
He travelled around Europe in his early 20s, eventually settling in 1962 in Paris, where he met his wife, Yolande Ngo Thi Hoang Lien, who was born in Vietnam and raised in France.
She was refused a visa to visit South Africa in the late 1960s as she was considered "non-white" by the apartheid system.
Breytenbach returned to the country in the early 1970s on a false passport to deliver money to the anti-apartheid struggle and meet white activists.
But he was discovered and sentenced to nine years in prison, serving seven.
Of his more than 50 books, most are in Afrikaans. His acclaimed 1984 prison memoir, "The True Confession of an Albino Terrorist", is in English.
In the book, he recalls the horrors of hearing fellow inmates being hanged, often for political crimes.
"Very often –- no, all the time really –- I relive those years of horror and corruption, and I try to imagine, as I did then with the heart an impediment to breathing, what it must be like to be executed. What it must be like to be. Executed," he wrote.
- Turned to painting -
His path crossed once, briefly, with another famous inmate.
Nelson Mandela was for a time transferred from Robben Island to Pollsmoor prison in Cape Town, where Breytenbach was serving his time.
The writer was tasked with preparing new prison clothes for the future president.
Breytenbach eventually turned to painting to portray surreal human and animal figures, often in captivity, with his art displayed in Johannesburg, Brussels, Amsterdam, Hong Kong and Paris.
His literature gathered several prizes, including the international Zbigniew Herbert International Literary Award (2017), the Mahmoud Darwish Literature Prize (2010) and the Van der Hoogt prize for Dutch literature (1972).
"His poems are rich in metaphors and are a complex mixture of references to Buddhism, Afrikaans idiomatic speech, and memories of the South African landscape," according to the Hague-based Writers Unlimited foundation.
For all his activism, when democracy arrived in 1994, the older and gray-bearded Breytenbach did not return to embrace the new South Africa.
He wrestled with the failings of the democratic government, even with Mandela, despairing at what he called in Harpers magazine in 2008 the "seemingly never-ending parade of corrupt clowns in power at all levels".
Breytenbach also taught at the University of Cape Town, the Goree Institute in Dakar and New York University.
F.Müller--BTB