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The following lists events that happened during 1981 in South Africa.

Incumbents

  • State President: Marais Viljoen.
  • Prime Minister: P.W. Botha.
  • Chief Justice: Frans Lourens Herman Rumpff.

Events

;January

  • 25 &ndash; The largest part of the town Laingsburg is swept away within minutes by one of the strongest floods ever experienced in the Great Karoo.
  • 30 &ndash; The South African Defence Force launches Operation Beanbag and raids a suspected Umkhonto we Sizwe safe area in the suburb of Matola, Maputo, Mozambique, killing 12 to 24 people. The numbers reported killed vary.

;February

  • 9 &ndash; Tuks FM (107.2FM), the University of Pretoria's campus radio station, is established.
  • Two people are injured when a bomb explodes in a Durban shopping centre.

;April

  • 1 &ndash; The South African Railways and Harbours changes its name to the South African Transport Services.
  • 14 &ndash; A section of railway line between Richards Bay and Vryheid is destroyed by Umkhonto we Sizwe and coal trucks are derailed.
  • 16 &ndash; Bishop Desmond Tutu is arrested and his passport is confiscated.
  • 21 &ndash; Limpet mines explode and destroy two transformers at a sub-station in Durban.

;May

  • 6 &ndash; The railway in the Hoedspruit area is damaged.
  • 14 &ndash; The United Nations General Assembly publishes a blacklist of 65 multi-national companies and some 270 sports persons who have links with South Africa.
  • 21 &ndash; A bomb explodes and damages the Port Elizabeth rail link to Johannesburg and Cape Town.
  • 25 &ndash; A pamphlet bomb explodes in Durban.
  • 25 &ndash; The Fort Jackson Police station is attacked.
  • 25 &ndash; The railway line near Soweto is damaged.
  • 25 &ndash; The railway line on the Natal South Coast is damaged.
  • 25 &ndash; Power lines are cut in Vrede.
  • 25 &ndash; A series of terrorist actions in support of Republic Day protests are admitted by Umkhonto we Sizwe.
  • 27 &ndash; A bomb explodes in Durban destroying a South African Defence Force recruiting building.

;June

  • 1 &ndash; Three offices of the Progressive Federal Party are firebombed in Johannesburg, with no injuries.
  • 4 &ndash; The police station in Meyerton is attacked by terrorists.
  • 11 &ndash; The railway line on the Natal North coast is maliciously damaged.
  • 16 &ndash; The railway line near East London is maliciously damaged.
  • 26 &ndash; Two bombs explode at the Durban Cenotaph.
  • 28 &ndash; The railway near Empangeni is maliciously damaged.
  • 30 &ndash; Zwelakhe Sisulu, President of the Black Media Workers Association of South Africa, is arrested under the Internal Security Act.

;July

  • 3 &ndash; A limpet mine is found at the fuel storage yard in Alberton and defused.
  • 21 &ndash; Six bomb explosions at sub-stations in Pretoria, Middelburg, and Ermelo disrupt power supply.
  • 26 &ndash; Two bombs explode at 05:50 and 06:10 in central Durban. Three people are injured and extensive damage is caused to motor vehicle firms.

;August

  • 6 &ndash; A bomb explodes in an East London shopping complex minutes before rush hour.
  • 8 &ndash; A bomb explodes in a Port Elizabeth shopping centre in similar manner to the East London bomb.
  • 11 &ndash; The Voortrekkerhoogte Military Base outside Pretoria is attacked with RPG-7s. Two British citizens, Nicolas Heath and Bonnie Lou Muller, are identified as accomplices in the assault.
  • 19 &ndash; The railway line near East London is maliciously damaged.
  • 23 &ndash; The South African Defence Force attacks South-West Africa People's Organisation bases in Xangongo and Ongiva, southern Angola during Operation Protea.

;September

  • 2 &ndash; Two policemen and two civilians, one a child, are killed during an attack on Mabopane Police station.
  • 12 &ndash; A bomb damages the main railway line at Delville Wood near Durban.

;October

  • 10 &ndash; Umkhonto we Sizwe attacks government offices of the Department of Co-operation and Development. Four civilians are injured.
  • 21 &ndash; Umkhonto we Sizwe destroys a transformer in Evander and a water pipeline feeding Sasol III (Secunda CTL) in Secunda.
  • 26 &ndash; Two policemen are killed during an attack on Sibasa Police station.

;November

  • 1 &ndash; The Jeppes Reef House near the Swaziland border, occupied by the South African Defence Force, comes under RPG-7 attack.
  • 1 &ndash; The South African Defence Force attacks South-West Africa People's Organisation bases in Chitequeta, south-eastern Angola, during Operation Daisy.
  • 9 &ndash; A bomb explodes at the Orlando Magistrates Court in Soweto.
  • 12 &ndash; Rosslyn sub-station in Pretoria is damaged by 4 limpet mines.
  • 19 &ndash; Griffiths Mxenge, lawyer and activist is assassinated by the apartheid death squad.
  • 27 &ndash; Cedric Mayson, a former Methodist minister, is arrested.

;December

  • 4 &ndash; South Africa grants Ciskei independence.
  • 9 &ndash; The offices of the Chief Commissioner of the Department of Co-operation and Development in Cape Town is attacked.
  • 14 &ndash; A Pretoria sub-station is bombed.
  • 23 &ndash; Eastern Cape provincial buildings in Duncan Village are damaged in an Umkhonto we Sizwe attack.
  • 26 &ndash; The Wonderboompoort Police station is attacked.

;Unknown date

  • Trevor Manuel becomes the General Secretary of the Cape Areas Housing Action Committee.
  • Bulelani Ngcuka is detained by police for eight months.
  • A Security Police counter-insurgency unit is started by Dirk Coetzee, Jan Viktor and Jac Buchner with 16 police officers at Vlakplaas.

Births

  • 13 January &ndash; Ayanda Borotho, actress
  • 22 January &ndash; Khabonina Qubeka, actress, TV presenter, dancer, choreographer, fitness & wellness coach
  • 1 February &ndash; Graeme Smith, cricketer
  • 2 February &ndash; Marlene van Staden, politician (d. 2023)
  • 3 February &ndash; Jo-Ann Strauss, 2001 Miss South Africa
  • 10 February &ndash; Maggie Benedict, actress
  • 11 February &ndash; Alexander Peternell, equestrian rider
  • 15 February &ndash; Lee-Anne Pace, golfer
  • 20 February
  • Akona Ndungane, rugby player
  • Odwa Ndungane, rugby player
  • 24 February &ndash; Jean De Villiers, Springboks captain
  • 26 February &ndash; Bridget Masinga, 3rd in the 2002 Miss South Africa pageant, actress, television and radio personality
  • 3 March &ndash; Julius Malema, Member of Parliament and the founder & leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters
  • 16 April
  • Nasief Morris, football player
  • Gareth Echardt, figure skater
  • 4 May &ndash; Jacques Rudolph, cricketer
  • 11 May &ndash; Terry Pheto, actress
  • 21 May &ndash; Jacques le Roux, tenor singer
  • 26 May &ndash; Zakes Bantwini, musician, recording artist and record producer.
  • 29 May &ndash; Iain Evans, field hockey player
  • 10 June &ndash; Albie Morkel, cricketer
  • 12 June &ndash; Gurthrö Steenkamp, rugby player
  • 19 June
  • Quintin Geldenhuys, South African-born Italian rugby player
  • Dorian James, badminton player
  • 22 June &ndash; Linda Mkhize, rapper and producer (d. 2018)
  • 6 July &ndash; Jenna Challenor, long-distance runner
  • 19 July &ndash; Zolani Mahola, singer (Freshlyground)
  • 30 July &ndash; Juan Smith, rugby player
  • 4 September &ndash; Lesley Manyathela, football player (d. 2003)
  • 8 September &ndash; Ashwin Willemse, rugby player & tv rugby analyst
  • 29 September &ndash; Siyabonga Sangweni, football player
  • 19 October &ndash; Lucas Thwala, football player
  • 22 December &ndash; Tumi Morake, comedienne, actress & TV personality
  • 26 December &ndash; Shu-Aib Walters, football player

Deaths

  • 19 November &ndash; Griffiths Mxenge, activist. (b. 1935)

Railways

thumb|[[South African Class 26 4-8-4|Class 26 Red Devil]]

thumb|[[South African Class 37-000|Class 37-000 GM-EMD GT26M2C]]

Locomotives

  • 5 February &ndash; Rebuilding of the Class 26 4-8-4 steam locomotive, popularly known as the Red Devil, is completed at the Salt River Works in Cape Town.
  • Two new Cape gauge locomotive types enter service on the South African Railways:
  • May &ndash; One hundred Class 37-000 General Motors Electro-Motive Division type GT26M2C diesel-electric locomotives.
  • The first of eighty-five Class 6E1, Series 9 electric locomotives.

Sports

Athletics

  • 17 October &ndash; Mark Plaatjes wins his first national title in the men's marathon, clocking 2:16:17 in Potchefstroom.

Rugby

  • 30 May &ndash; The South African Springboks beat Ireland 23–15.
  • 6 June &ndash; The Springboks beat Ireland 12–10.
  • 14 August &ndash; The South African Springbok tour in New Zealand elicits protests.

References