The South African Intervention in Lesotho (1998) reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
(provided by Fixed Reference: snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org)

South African Intervention in Lesotho (1998)

Helping orphans the way you would do it
The South African Invasion of Lesotho (codenamed Operation Boleas) was a military invasion launched by the South African government in 1998 into the neighbouring country of Lesotho to quell a suspected coup.

In March of 1998, parliamentary elections in Lesotho resulted in an overwhelming majority for the ruling Lesotho Congress for Democracy Party, which won 79 out of 80 seats. However allegations of vote fraud soon surfaced, and after a failed lawsuit by the opposition parties, widespread rioting broke out.

The Nelson Mandela administration in South Africa (the nation which completely landlocks Lesotho) announced it would hold a formal inquiry to determine the allegations of corruption. Controversially, the report only alleged minor irregularities.

On September 22, 1998 Mandela allowed for a deployment of some 700 South African forces into Lesotho to quell the rioting and maintain order. The operation was described as a "intervention to restore democracy and the rule of law."

Troops were pulled out in May of 1999.