Immediately upon independence, Sebe consolidated power in a dictatorship, supported by the 1,000-strong military force. He crushed all opposition, including bitter protests against a transit
fare strike in 1983 (most residents worked outside the bantustan, and relied on public transportation to get them to work). That same year, Sebe's brother, Lieutenant General
Charles Sebe, head of Ciskei's intelligence service, attempted to overthrow the government. Though Charles Sebe was arrested, he escaped from prison in 1986 and made his way to nearby
Transkei, where he continued to agitate against the regime. In 1987, he orchestrated the
kidnapping of Sebe's son Khwane, who was held prisoner in
Transkei until Sebe agreed to release political prisoners in exchange for his son. Sebe visited
Israel on several occasions during his presidency and established a trade office in
Tel Aviv that was run by two Israelis with ties to the
Gush Emunim Israeli settler movement. During this period, the Ciskeian capital,
Bisho, signed a sister-city agreement with the settlement community of
Ariel in the
West Bank. Sebe once claimed that Israel had granted official recognition to Ciskei, although the
Israeli Foreign Ministry denied this. ==Collapse==