Mothopeng began his struggle against
apartheid in 1943 as a founding member of the
African National Congress Youth League. After his release he was banished to
QwaQwa in the Free State but only stayed for six months before returning to his home in Johannesburg. He was arrested again in August 1976 in connection with the
Soweto uprisings after mobilising and organising students in
Soweto. He was elected as the president of the PAC in 1986 while in prison. Mothopeng was among those who reported police torture because four other detainees had died in detention. Mothopeng became ill with cancer of the throat while in prison. He was unconditionally released by President
F. W. de Klerk in 1988. He rejected calls to join political talks that black people should have all the power. Under Mothopeng, the PAC refused to join the negotiations on democracy with the African National Congress under President F. W. de Klerk as the Pan-Africanist Congress believed that only
guerrilla warfare would end white minority rule. After his early release in November 1988, he settled in Soweto but never recovered his health. ==Personal life==