The conflict in South Africa between the African National Congress (ANC), Pan-African Congress (PAC) and the Azanian Peoples Organisation (AZAPO), on the one side, and the apartheid government and its allies, on the other, is over. The conflict lasted from the early 1960s to the early 1990s, and during this period the international community's level of concern about the conflict steadily mounted. Attempts to apply relevant aspects of humanitarian law to the conduct of the conflict were, however, severely restricted by the attitude of the apartheid government. It erected a laager of national sovereignty, and crawled inside this domain reserve in an effort to seek sanctuary from the unwelcome intervention of international law. And, at least with respect to humanitarian law, it found sanctuary. International law provided no way of penetrating this defence in order to regulate the violence which was taking place within South Africa, and thus, in spite of the international outcry over apartheid, the apartheid government was able to ignore humanitarian law in its prosecution of the conflict.