Zelda la Grange has since apologized for her Twitter comments, which triggered accusations that she was herself a racist steeped in the ideology of white minority rule.
Apartheid ended when Mandela, who died in 2013 at the age of 95, became South Africa's first black president in 1994. La Grange had accused President Jacob Zuma of making business conditions difficult for white investors and making it clear that whites "are not wanted or needed in South Africa."
She also criticized Zuma for a reported comment this month that South Africa's troubles began with the 1652 arrival of Dutch colonizer Jan van Riebeeck at what became Cape Town. And la Grange expressed frustration with criticism of F.W. De Klerk, the last president of the apartheid era who joined Mandela in negotiating a power transfer for which both men were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. South African ruling party figures have objected to plans to name a Cape Town boulevard after de Klerk, saying he was an enforcer of white racist rule.
La Grange, who wrote a well-received book about Mandela that was published after his death, eventually backed away from her remarks on social media. On Saturday, she wrote: "On any day our democracy is better than apartheid, it's the only way and I'll defend it," and noted that she had the right to criticize.
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