(SWAPO) party in Namibia (formerly South West Africa) that advocated immediate Namibian independence from South Africa. It was founded in 1960, and, after South Africa refused a United Nations order to withdraw from the trust territory in 1966, SWAPO turned to armed struggle. SWAPO's greatest political strength lay among the Ovambo people in the northern part of the territory. Led by Sam Nujoma and backed by the Angolan ruling party, Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola, and the Soviet Union, SWAPO used Angola as a base for guerrilla warfare on Namibian soil; operations were carried out by SWAPO's guerrilla force, the People's Liberation Army of Namibia (PLAN). Beginning in 1978 South Africa made periodic retaliatory land and air strikes into Angola. Herman Toivo ja Toivo, the founder of SWAPO, was imprisoned in South Africa for a 20-year term in 1968 but was released in 1984. Nujoma returned to Namibia in September 1989. In 1978 the UN recognized SWAPO as the sole representative of the people of Namibia. Both SWAPO and South Africa agreed to a UN plan for a cease-fire, withdrawal of South African troops, and free elections to be guaranteed by UN security forces. After years of diplomatic maneuvering, South Africa finally accepted a UN resolution to that effect in December 1988. Sporadic fighting continued. In 1989, 90 percent of Namibia's registered voters turned out to elect members of a constituent assembly to draft a Namibian constitution.
SOUTH WEST AFRICA PEOPLE'S ORGANIZATION
Meaning of SOUTH WEST AFRICA PEOPLE'S ORGANIZATION in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012