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What made the process of decolonization more difficult in South Africa?
Group of answer choices

The African nationalists were already in control.

The political system was dominated by European settlers.

There was no European presence.

There was no desire to decolonize Africa.

User Rxxxx
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Answer:

Originally, African nationalism was based on demands for self-determination and played an important role in forcing the process of decolonization of Africa. The answer is the African nationalists were already in control.

Step-by-step explanation:

African education was not "westernized" like other parts of the world (such as India) After the war the imperial powers were under strong international pressure to decolonize. In Southern Africa, however, the transfer of power to an African majority was greatly complicated by the presence of entrenched white settlers. decolonization proceeded in three stages: first, the relatively peaceful achievement by 1968 of independence by those territories under direct British rule (the High Commission territories became Lesotho, Botswana, and Swaziland, and Northern Rhodesia and Nyasaland became Zambia and Malawi)

User Bob Esponja
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