Tokyo Sexwale

Politician

Birthday March 5, 1953

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Transvaal, South Africa

Age 71 years old

Nationality South Africa

#46533 Most Popular

1953

Mosima Gabriel "Tokyo" Sexwale ; (born March 5,1953) is a South African businessman, politician, anti-apartheid activist, and former political prisoner.

Sexwale for many years was imprisoned on Robben Island for his anti-apartheid activities, alongside figures such as Nelson Mandela.

1960

In the late 1960s, Sexwale became a member of the Steve Biko's Black Consciousness Movement and became a local leader of the radical South African Students' Movement.

1970

In the early 1970s, he joined the African National Congress's armed wing, Umkhonto we Sizwe ("spear of the nation").

While in Swaziland, he completed a Certificate in Business Studies at the University of Botswana, Lesotho and Swaziland.

1973

In 1973, he graduated from Orlando West High School.

1975

In 1975, Sexwale went into exile, undergoing military officers' training in the Soviet Union, where he specialized in military engineering.

1976

Upon his return to South Africa in 1976, Sexwale, along with 11 others, was captured after a skirmish with the South African security forces.

After an almost two-year trial in the Supreme Court of South Africa in Pretoria, he was charged and later convicted of terrorism and conspiracy to overthrow the government.

1977

In 1977, Sexwale was sent to the Robben Island maximum-security prison to serve an 18-year sentence.

While imprisoned at Robben Island, he studied for a BCom degree at the University of South Africa.

1990

Sexwale was released in June 1990 under the terms of the Groote Schuur Agreement between the National Party government and the African National Congress.

He had spent 13 years in prison.

During this time, he was represented in part by a paralegal named Judy van Vuuren.

They began a personal relationship while he remained in prison, and married soon after his release in 1990.

After his release, Sexwale returned to Johannesburg, where he served as head of the public liaison department of the African National Congress Headquarters.

He was subsequently appointed the head of special projects, where he reported to the ANC's military headquarters.

In September of 1990, he was elected as a member of the executive committee of the ANC in the Pretoria-Witwatersrand-Vereeniging (PWV) region.

1994

After the 1994 general election—the first fully democratic election in South Africa—Sexwale became the Premier of Gauteng Province.

Sexwale was born in the township of Orlando West, in Soweto.

His father was a clerk at Johannesburg General Hospital and had fought against the Germans in World War II.

Sexwale grew up during the black township's upheaval.

After the South African elections in April 1994, Sexwale was elected as the first premier of the new PWV Province (renamed Gauteng Province in December 1994).

In this role, he was credited with bringing peace to several politically volatile townships.

1998

Sexwale left politics for the corporate sector in 1998.

The reasons for this were never made completely clear, but was reportedly due to feeling stifled by central government restrictions as well as becoming exhausted by internal African National Congress intrigues.

Further speculation is that Sexwale left politics due to strong disagreements with the then Vice-President of South Africa, Thabo Mbeki.

Other speculation is that his marriage opened business opportunities in the white-dominated financial sectors that allowed him opportunities not open to other black leaders.

Sexwale, Cyril Ramaphosa and Mbeki were possible candidates jostling for the presidency after Mandela stepped down.

Once Thabo Mbeki appeared as the favourite candidate, both Sexwale and Ramaphosa left politics to follow successful careers as businessmen.

2007

On 7 January 2007, The Sunday Times reported that Sexwale was campaigning for a leadership position within the ANC, which would have put him in position to replace Thabo Mbeki as President of South Africa in 2009.

Sexwale admitted on BBC's Hard Talk that if asked to stand for the elections as party president by structures of the ANC, he would seriously consider it.

He was elected to the ANC's 80-member National Executive Committee in December 2007 in 10th place, with 2,198 votes.

2009

On 10 May 2009, President Jacob Zuma appointed Sexwale as Minister of Human Settlements, a ministry which replaced the Department of Housing.

Upon leaving the public sector, Sexwale founded Mvelaphanda Holdings (mvelaphanda is the Venda word for "progress"), a company of which he is still executive chairman.

Mvelaphanda is primarily focused on the mining, energy and related sectors.

Some of Sexwale's main interests are oil and diamond mining, for which he has been granted concessions across Africa and Russia; these interests are controlled by a subsidiary of Mvelaphanda Holdings called Mvelaphanda Resources.

Through his Mvelaphanda Group, Sexwale has substantial holdings in the mining sector.

He is currently discussing with the Kazakh-owned Eurasian National Resources Corporation a plan to buy into mining interests in Guinea.

A negotiating team is in secret talks about financing a local mining company to be owned by the Guinean state.