Revolutionary Pan Africanist Congress PAC POQO of Occupied Azania

Revolutionary Pan Africanist Congress PAC POQO of Occupied Azania We stand united, rejecting the insidious betrayal of the DA, the VF+, and the GNU neo!

These neoliberal coalition deals are not merely a collaboration with white supremacists and capitalists; they are a total abandonment of the sacred PAC principles

19/05/2026

On this day, 13 May 1969, Robert Sobukwe, leader of the Pan Africanist Congress of Azania (PAC), was released after years of imprisonment under apartheid.
Sobukwe had been arrested following the 1960 anti-pass campaign. Even after completing his sentence, the apartheid government used special legislation The Sobukwe Clause to extend his detention, keeping him isolated on Robben Island.
His eventual release marked a symbolic moment in the liberation struggle. Despite imprisonment, Sobukwe remained a powerful ideological figure advocating African nationalism and self-determination and Pan Africanism. Izwe Lethu!

*NGUBENI KA NKHOPE, A Forgotten Architect of the PAC Underground* By Revolutionary PAC-Poqo of Occupied Azania Media.🟢 *...
17/05/2026

*NGUBENI KA NKHOPE, A Forgotten Architect of the PAC Underground*

By Revolutionary PAC-Poqo of Occupied Azania Media.

🟢 *Who he was*

*Stanley Ngubeni April*, known in the movement as *Ngubeni ka Nkhope* (also spelled *Nkophe*), was a *Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) operative based in Botswana* during the most dangerous years of the liberation struggle, the era of the 1976 Soweto Uprisings and the cross-border armed campaign of the *Azanian People's Liberation Army (APLA)*.

He is one of those *"silent generals"* of the struggle, barely known to the public, but central to the PAC underground machinery.

🟢 *His contribution to the liberation struggle*

According to Prof. Ali ka Hlongwane, who is Zeph Lion of Azania Mothopeng historian and biographer:

▪️ He was *"the only PAC operative dealing with trained guerrillas from Dar es Salaam, Zambia, Uganda and Libya"* operating out of Gaborone.

▪️ He worked alongside *Cde Sabelo Phama* (who later became *Secretary for Defence of the PAC* and *APLA Chief Commander*). Together they *"wormed [their] way into the confidences of Sir Seretse Khama"*, President of Botswana, who *okayed Libyan arms shipments to be dropped in Gaborone* and channelled into Soweto, Pretoria townships, the Vaal-Lekoa townships and the Western plus Eastern Cape.

▪️ He arranged exile and military training routes for cadres like *Isaac "Saki" Mafatse* and *Ezrom Serame Mokgakala*, flying them out to *Dar es Salaam*.

▪️ He worked with fellow Botswana-based operatives *Solly Ndlovu* and *Boldwin Hlanti*, of whom he wrote: *"often when we met we were surprised that each was still alive."*

▪️ He personally *recruited hundreds of Black Consciousness Movement (BCM) students* into the PAC after the '76 uprising. In his own words: *"the very first BCM batch ever to go to Lusaka, I forced Thabo Mbeki (then in Lusaka) to accept them in good faith."*

▪️ He was with *Onkgopotse Abraham Tiro*, the iconic SASO leader, *just 30 minutes before Tiro was assassinated* by a parcel bomb in Botswana in 1974. They had literally just shaken hands and agreed Tiro would never open a parcel before having it checked by police.

🟢 *On Robben Island and the broader PAC struggle*

Nkhope's role in the external underground supplemented the work of those who were pushing the Poqo agenda internally. *Zephania Mothopeng, John Ganya, Hamilton Keke, Mark Shinners, Sello Matsobane, Isaac Mafatse*, were nearly all *Robben Island graduates* who came out and went straight back into building the PAC underground that fed the *Bethal 18 Trial* (the longest political trial in apartheid South Africa, in which Uncle Zeph was Accused No. 1 and was sentenced to 30 years for "predicting and engineering" the 1976 Soweto Uprising).

The *PAC has the longest-serving political prisoner in South African history*, *Jafta Kgalabi Masemola, 28 years on Robben Island*, and Nkhope's Botswana operation was the lifeline that kept arms, recruits and political education flowing while those leaders sat behind bars.

🟢 *Ideology, in his own words*

Nkhope was a sharp ideologue who argued *"PAC was very Afrikanist; it had a problem with calling Afrikans Blacks. African identifies us with Afrika and stakes the claim to the land and country whereas the term 'black' as 'um-Ntu omnyama' refers to psychic retardation and therefore a perpetual dependency."*

🟢 *The full quote*

*"Afrikans do not worship heroes. Afrikans did not practice hero worshipping. At the same time Afrikans do honour their distinguished members, and acknowledge persons of talent or achievement in concrete cultural ways such as spontaneously giving names of respect."* by *Ngubeni ka Nkhope*

✋🏾 *Izwe Lethu! iAfrika!*

Revolutionary PAC Poqo of Occupied Azania

Who is benefiting from these deals!? It’s definitely the usual white owned business owners. We are willing to bet 100% t...
05/05/2026

Who is benefiting from these deals!? It’s definitely the usual white owned business owners. We are willing to bet 100% that black African owned businesses are in the minority of beneficiaries to this zero tariffs free trade agreement.

Remember that China 🇨🇳 from 1962/3 became a strategic main supporter of the PAC and more particularly its military wing the Azanian Peoples Liberation Army (APLA) ✋🏾✋🏾

PAC was formed today in 1959Sobukwe: PresidentPotlako Kitchener Leballo: SGAbednego Ngcobo: TreasurerElliot Mfaxa: Natio...
06/04/2026

PAC was formed today in 1959

Sobukwe: President
Potlako Kitchener Leballo: SG
Abednego Ngcobo: Treasurer
Elliot Mfaxa: National Organizer
Peter Molotsi: Secretary for Pan African Affairs
Selby Ngedane (also spelled Ngendane) : Secretary for Foreign Affairs
ZB Molete: Publicity and Information
Peter Raboroko: Education
Nana Mahomo: Culture
Jacob Nyaose: Labour
Hughes Hlatshwayo: Finance Economic Development

Zephaniah Mothopeng: chair: National Working Committee (NWC)
Howard S Ngcobo: Member
CJ Fazzie: Additional Executive Member
MG Maboza – Additional Executive Member

Dr. Peter Ntsele, of Lady Selbourne - Pretoria, contested Sobukwe for the position of president but lost the race. Soon after, the PAC launched the nationwide Positive Action Campaign, which led to the Langa and Sharpeville Massacres, utlimately its banning barely a few months after its launch.

PAC factions to square off at Sharpeville memorialTwo main groups claim to be the original partySunday World (South Afri...
17/03/2026

PAC factions to square off at Sharpeville memorial
Two main groups claim to be the original party

Sunday World (South Africa)15 Mar 2026 - By Setumo Stone

A looming clash between rival factions of the Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) is set to cast a shadow over this year’s commemoration of the Sharpeville Massacre, with both groups planning separate programmes in Sharpeville, Gauteng, on Saturday, March 21.

The divisions within the PAC have resulted in two competing events being organised to mark the 66th anniversary of the anti-pass campaign protest in which 69 people were killed by apartheid police in 1960.

One faction, aligned with the *Revolutionary PAC-POQO of Occupied Azania* , has called for a mobilisation under the theme “Defiance, Revolution and Power”. According to its programme, supporters will gather at the old Sharpeville police station before proceeding to Dlomo Dam, the Phelindaba gravesite of the Sharpeville victims, and the grave of Nyakane Tsolo, culminating in a main rally.

Group leader Prince Mathebula, alias Chris Sankara, also the former national organiser—said, “We start at the police station where the shooting happened. After that we go to the river because it was raining that day and their blood was washed into the river. We then go to the grave sites where they were buried before our main event.”

Promotional material circulated by the group features slogans such as *“Down with collaborators”* and calls for “Azania”, reflecting a militant tone as organisers urge supporters to commemorate the historic anti-pass protest through what they describe as revolutionary mobilisation.

PAC secretary general Apa Pooe, aligned with the group currently in Parliament and forming part of President Cyril Ramaphosa’s government of national unity (GNU), said the party was aware that a small group was planning parallel activities but insisted the organisation remained structured and organised nationally.
“We are not particularly worried about them because they are just a small group, about five people or so, and we have branches and structures.

“They understand that the media is attracted to spectacle, so they try to create noise around those moments,” he said.
Their official programme for the same day begins earlier, at 7am at the Phelindaba Cemetery in Sharpeville.

According to its schedule, supporters will gather at the cemetery for a wreath-laying ceremony at the graves of the Sharpeville martyrs before embarking on a march along Seeiso Street to the Sharpeville Memorial Site. The procession will then return along the same route to Dlomo Dam, where the main commemoration event is scheduled to take place at 11am.

The existence of parallel programmes has raised concerns that rival supporters could converge at key locations in Sharpeville, particularly at Dlomo Dam and the Phelindaba gravesite.

The Sharpeville commemoration is one of the most symbolic events on South Africa’s political calendar. The massacre of unarmed protesters who had gathered to oppose the apartheid government’s pass laws became a turning point in the liberation struggle and later inspired the annual observance of Human Rights Day on March 21.
Historically, the PAC has claimed Sharpeville as a defining moment in its political legacy because the anti-pass campaign that led to the protest was organised by the party.

But years of internal disputes and leadership battles have splintered the organisation into rival groupings, each claiming legitimacy and authority over the party’s heritage.
Sankara said activists aligned with his grouping had played a key role in earlier political campaigns. “Before that election we were the ones campaigning,” he said, adding that their efforts contributed to the election of several councillors.
He said they parted with Pooe’s group after raising concerns about decisions taken within the PAC in the past, saying that even the GNU announcement was made outside the party’s formal structures.

“We started seeing announcements being made outside the PAC, outside the NEC (national executive committee) and outside the branches of the PAC. It became a coalition with the DA and a coalition with the ANC,” he said. “In our view, that process was unconstitutional.”

Despite the tensions, Sankara said his group did not anticipate confrontation with other Africanist formations during the commemorations.

Pooe said the PAC was examining possible legal steps regarding the use of the party’s identity by groups that claim affiliation with it.

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