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South Africa rights lawyer, judge dies at 81

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JOHANNESBURG – Arthur Chaskalson, a civil rights lawyer who once helped defend Nelson Mandela and later became South Africa’s chief justice, has died. He was 81.

South Africa’s presidency confirmed Chaskalson’s death Saturday. The state-owned South African Broadcasting Corp. said the late judge had been battling leukemia.

Chaskalson served as one of several lawyers on the defense team that challenged the apartheid government’s prosecution of members of the African National Congress for sabotage in the 1960s case known as the Rivonia Trial. Among the defendants was Mandela, who received a life sentence and served part of many years of it on the notorious Robben Island before being freed.

Chaskalson worked on other civil rights cases and later became a judge in the post-apartheid government when Mandela was elected president in 1994.

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