 I became an activist in the struggle against apartheid, not out of choice. It happens out of the fact that you come from the womb of a black woman. So I'm a black child of Africa. And there was discrimination. We made a statement that there comes a time in the life of a nation where you either live forever on your knees or die standing on your feet. The system that was dangerously wrong in South Africa was that discrimination in the form of apartheid was a government policy, not a private citizen's policy. In this case, it was a government promoting that, so the government had to go. But that did not remove discrimination everywhere in the world. Certainly in South Africa, you still have enclaves of people. Of course, it's illegal now. We still need to shine the torch of truth and turn that truth to power, whoever it may be across the world, because we should not remain silent when the human rights of other people are violated. As Tokyo Sahuale, who spent 15 years in prison on Roman island with Yasemadele, I wish to say stand up against racism and stand up for human rights.