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    . can survive as national businesses if they continue to increase their reliance on white people, who themselves constitute less than 10 per cent of the South African population.” One of those interviewed for the survey, a black professional, expressed his frustration thus: "It’s like I have moved 10 or 20 years back. Joburg [Johannesburg] is like so far [ahead], and Cape Town is so very backward. What I always ask myself – where do the black people work in the Western Cape? I don’t see them. You walk in the malls, you walk in the store. It’s either coloured or white people. Where are the black people?" But to claim that racial discrimination in Cape Town is purely a black and white issue would be to ignore the bigotry that exists in and between the black and coloured communities. Full Article at Irish Times
    It’s like I have moved 10 or 20 years back. Joburg [Johannesburg] is like so far [ahead], and Cape Town is so very backward. What I always ask myself – where do the black people work in the Western Cape? I don’t see them. You walk in the malls, you walk in the store. It’s either coloured or white people. Where are the black people?
    SOURCE: Irish Times 4 weeks ago