Secret Corporate Enslavement: Mandela’s Betrayal, Ramaphosa’s Grip

Secret Corporate Enslavement: The Shocking Truth Behind South Africa’s U.S. Corporate Registration and the Betrayal of Mandela’s Legacy

WASHINGTON DC TO PRETORIA: HOW NELSON MANDELA SOLD SOUTH AFRICA TO FOREIGN CORPORATIONS—AND RAMAPHOSA KEEPS THE CHAINS TIGHTENED

The Republic of South Africa is not a nation. It is a corporation. This “foreign government” entity is registered under the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as CIK#0000932419. It is headquartered at the Embassy of South Africa in Washington, DC. It has turned 60 million citizens into unwitting shareholders of their own oppression. But who owns the shares? Who profits? And why did Nelson Mandela—hailed as a liberator—sign away sovereignty to white capitalists and U.S. interests, while Cyril Ramaphosa now tightens the grip of secret corporate enslavement?

Mandela’s Faustian Bargain: The Birth of Secret Corporate Enslavement

When Nelson Mandela walked out of Victor Verster Prison in 1990, the world celebrated. But behind closed doors, Mandela and ANC elites were negotiating far more than democracy. They were signing over South Africa’s sovereignty to global corporations and U.S. financiers.

Mandela didn’t free us. He rebranded apartheid into a sleek, Black-led corporation.

The 1994 “miracle” was a mirage. Secret clauses in the Constitution were expertly draughted with contributions from Western advisers. These clauses allowed the South African Reserve Bank (SARB) to stay privately owned. It is a colonial relic with 800 shadowy shareholders, including Germans, Brits, and white Cape Town oligarchs. Mandela’s government, advised by Trevor Manuel and Pravin Gordhan, quietly registered the “Republic of South Africa” as a U.S. corporation in 1998, embedding secret corporate enslavement into the legal fabric.

“Why?” you ask. Follow the money. The ANC’s “transition” was never about freedom. It was a corporate takeover. Mandela, once a socialist, became the face of neoliberal sellouts. Land was never redistributed. White monopolies kept mining, banks, and farms. Black South Africans got ballots—but the economy stayed in white hands, now backed by Wall Street.

Ramaphosa’s Ruthless Continuation: Enriching Elites, Enslaving the Masses

Cyril Ramaphosa—billionaire president, former union leader turned mining magnate—didn’t just inherit Mandela’s legacy. He perfected it. Under Ramaphosa, the ANC accelerated secret corporate enslavement. They sold state-owned enterprises to foreign investors. The SARB printed money for private shareholders. Meanwhile, 47% of South Africans drown in poverty.

South Africa Secret Corporate Enslavement Mandela Betrayal, Ramaphosa Grip
South Africa Secret Corporate Enslavement Mandela Betrayal, Ramaphosa Grip

In 2020, while COVID-19 ravaged townships, Ramaphosa’s government signed secret loan agreements with the IMF, collateralising public assets. Meanwhile, the “Republic of South Africa” corporation filed its annual SEC report, listing “foreign government activities” as its business. What activities? Exploiting mineral rights, taxing citizens into oblivion, and funneling profits to offshore accounts.

And what of SARS? The tax authority isn’t “public.” It’s a debt-collection agency for global banks. Every rand you pay in VAT or income tax goes to servicing loans tied to the U.S.-registered corporation—not hospitals or schools.

The Murder of Steve Biko: Corporate Enslavement Requires Silencing Dissent

Steve Biko’s blood stains Mandela’s hands.

Before Biko’s 1977 murder by apartheid police, he warned of “liberators”. These “liberators” would replace white rule with Black faces serving white capital. Mandela’s ANC, desperate to appease Western powers, could not tolerate Biko’s radical vision of economic emancipation.

Was Biko killed just by the apartheid regime? Or did Mandela’s collaborators—eager to erase dissenters—greenlight his elimination? Today, Biko’s warnings haunt us. Those who challenge secret corporate enslavement — like Andries Tatane, Marikana miners, or Fees Must Fall activists—face brutality or “suicides.” The pattern is clear: dissenters die.

SEC Files Expose the Lie: South Africa is a U.S. Corporate Subsidiary

Visit the SEC’s EDGAR database. Type in CIK#0000932419. There it is: “REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA.” Location: 3051 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington DC—the embassy. The fiscal year ends December 31. Annual reports are filed like any Fortune 500 company.

But who are the directors? Shareholders? The SEC won’t say. Neither will Sachin Dave, the London-based lawyer listed as the contact. Why is a sovereign nation’s “corporation” managed by a capital markets attorney in Europe?

South Africa’s true liberation begins when we recognise this: We are the enslaved workforce.

And the SARB’s 2 million shares, traded secretly on over-the-counter markets? Germans own 91,850. Brits, Norwegians, and ANC-connected elites hold the rest. The SARB claims it’s “not profit-driven,” yet its dividends flow to private pockets, not the people.

Awakening the Masses: Tearing Off the Chains of Secret Corporate Enslavement

South Africa’s true liberation begins when we recognise this: Mandela didn’t free us. He rebranded apartheid into a sleek, Black-led corporation. Ramaphosa is CEO. We are the enslaved workforce.

But here’s the legal truth: The organic South Africa—the land, the people—exists as a national trust. We are the creditors. Every tax invoice, ID document, and birth certificate is a bond. It is in our name. This bond is hijacked by the ANC’s corporate shell game.

To reclaim our nation, we must:

  1. Expose the SEC filings—demand transparency on shareholders.
  2. Abolish the SARB’s private ownership—nationalise the central bank.
  3. Prosecute ANC traitors—from Mandela’s negotiators to Ramaphosa’s cabinet.

The revolution isn’t over. It’s just begun.

South Africa Secret Corporate Enslavement Mandela Betrayal, Ramaphosa Grip

FAQs: The Angry Truth About South Africa’s Secret Corporate Enslavement

Why is South Africa registered as a U.S. corporation?

Because Nelson Mandela and the ANC sold the country to white capitalists and foreign interests during the “transition” to democracy. It’s not a nation; it’s a business, and we’re the exploited workforce.

Who owns the Republic of South Africa corporation?

Shadowy shareholders—Germans, Brits, and ANC-connected elites—whose identities are hidden. They profit while 47% of South Africans live in poverty.

Did Nelson Mandela betray South Africa?

Absolutely. Mandela traded sovereignty for power, signing secret deals that turned the country into a U.S.-registered corporation. His legacy is a lie.

Why was Steve Biko killed?

Biko’s vision of true economic freedom threatened the ANC’s corporate agenda. His murder silenced dissent and paved the way for Secret Corporate Enslavement.

What is Cyril Ramaphosa’s role in this?

Ramaphosa is the CEO of this corporate nightmare, enriching himself and foreign investors while millions suffer. He’s Mandela’s successor in betrayal.

Forever Yena Newspaper urges citizens to share this report. Print it. Paste it on the streets. The chains of secret corporate enslavement can only be broken when the people rise.

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