Explain how the system of apartheid in South Africa ended.(1 point)

Responses

Activists used only violent protests and guerrilla warfare to bring attention to apartheid and put pressure on the government for decades, until the government dismantled the policies.
Activists used only violent protests and guerrilla warfare to bring attention to apartheid and put pressure on the government for decades, until the government dismantled the policies.

Activists used nonviolent and violent protests to bring attention to apartheid and put pressure on the government, beginning in 1976, after the government killed children in Soweto.
Activists used nonviolent and violent protests to bring attention to apartheid and put pressure on the government, beginning in 1976, after the government killed children in Soweto.

Activists used nonviolent and violent protests to bring attention to apartheid and put pressure on the government for decades, until the government dismantled the policies.
Activists used nonviolent and violent protests to bring attention to apartheid and put pressure on the government for decades, until the government dismantled the policies.

Activists used only nonviolent protests to bring attention to apartheid and put pressure on the government for decades, until the government dismantled the policies.

Activists used nonviolent and violent protests to bring attention to apartheid and put pressure on the government for decades, until the government dismantled the policies. This included a combination of international pressure, economic sanctions, and negotiations led by anti-apartheid leaders such as Nelson Mandela. Ultimately, apartheid officially ended in 1994 with the first democratic elections in South Africa, where Nelson Mandela was elected as the country's first black president.