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Shame is enough punishment for apartheid crimes, says Tutu
AP
Sunday, November 06, 2005

GREENSBORO, North Carolina (AP) - Those who fostered crimes under apartheid in South Africa didn't get off easy by simply confessing their deeds, Bishop Desmond Tutu said during a visit to a college campus, local media reported.

"The stigma of such public shame and humiliation is a heavy price to pay," Tutu said Thursday to 2,400 people at Guilford College. "We discovered real peace never comes from the barrel of a gun."
Tutu also said South Africa set an example by inspiring reconciliation as a method for handling other conflicts.

He said he admired the Greensboro Truth and Reconciliation Commission that has held hearings into the 1979 shootings that killed five communists during an anti-Klan rally in the southern city. The commission is a grass-roots effort modeled on similar commissions in South Africa and Peru.

"I'm looking on with admiration. ... I believe it is important for people to confront the truth," Tutu said. "Letting bygones be bygones ... returns to haunt you."


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