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S.Africa: Black Race Hatred in Lion case: Kill the Boers!!

WARNING: This is Version 1 of my old archive, so Photos will NOT work and many links will NOT work. But you can find articles by searching on the Titles. There is a lot of information in this archive. Use the SEARCH BAR at the top right. Prior to December 2012; I was a pro-Christian type of Conservative. I was unaware of the mass of Jewish lies in history, especially the lies regarding WW2 and Hitler. So in here you will find pro-Jewish and pro-Israel material. I was definitely WRONG about the Boeremag and Janusz Walus. They were for real.

Original Post Date: 2004-02-18  Posted By: Jan

From the News Archives of: WWW.AfricanCrisis.Org
Date & Time Posted: 2/18/2004 7:11:29 AM
S.Africa: Black Race Hatred in Lion case: Kill the Boers!!

[Take note that the ANC and the South African Communist Party supporters are the ones with the race hate slogans against the Afrikaners. Even though its not a farmer involved, they’re milking this and trying to turn this against the farmers. There should be no doubt in anyone’s mind as to who is really behind the farm killings. Here we see the ANC mayor of a town was the organiser of this white race-hate fest. These are the scum who are fuelling and INCITING blacks to kill white farmers. Make no mistake – they are trying to lead their followers into further confrontations with white farmers. The information their supporters gete is being deliberately misrepresented (that a white farmer carried out the killing). It appears to me this is going to be an ANC/SACP propaganda item for spreading around the world ad infinitum, to be milked for every ounce of anti-white hate-propaganda they can get out of it. It is worrying that one of the black’s arrested now seems to be turning state witness. I can’t help wondering if there’s some bribery, etc involved. Is the white guy in this case going to be the scape goat? This one looks set to become ugly and its aimed directly the white farmers of this country. Jan]

The ANC, SA Communist Party and Cosatu could find themselves in hot water for displaying racist placards at the court appearance of four men accused of feeding a former employee to lions.

Yesterday morning, angry ANC, SACP and Cosatu members carried posters calling for an end to farm killings and the “emancipation of workers”.

Outside the Phalaborwa Magistrate’s Court in Limpopo province, they also displayed printed posters proclaiming “Enough is enough – Kill the farmer, kill the boer”; “Tired with boers”; “Fed up with killer-boers”; and “Castrate boers”.

The SA Human Rights Commission last year declared the liberation slogan “Kill the boer, kill the farmer” to be hate speech. An SAHRC commissioner said last night the parties faced civil claims before either the commission or the recently established equality courts for propagating hate speech.

This was aggravated by the fact that the protest took place in an environment of severe racial tension following the feeding of former construction worker Nelson Chisale to lions last month.

It also follows warnings by Agri-SA last week that the misperception that the murder had allegedly been committed by a farmer on a farmworker was fuelling the tension and could lead to violence on farms.

Chisale was last seen on January 31, when he told friends that he was going to Engedi Lodge, from where murder accused Mark Scott-Crossley ran his construction operations.

Chisale had been fired in November and it is alleged that Scott-Crossley burnt his possessions. Chisale lodged a complaint with Hoedspruit police, but it was not followed up, local station commissioner Superintendent Pat Mogane confirmed to The Star.

While a security guard saw Chisale enter Engedi’s gates, he did not see him leave, Mogane said. Instead, Chisale had allegedly been beaten, tied to a tree and then driven 30km to Mokwalo White Lion Reserve and thrown alive to the predators.

A week later, when police searched the lions’ enclosure, only a skull, scraps of bone and strips of clothing were found. A friend identified Chisale by tatters of fabric that matched the shirt he had last been seen wearing.

In court yesterday, the murder charge was withdrawn against one of the four accused, Robert Mnisi (34), without reasons being given. However, The Star established that Mnisi had apparently agreed to become a witness for the prosecution.

His discharge angered Chisale’s family. Fetsang Jafta, Chisale’s niece, said: “This can’t happen – my uncle is dead.”

Scott-Crossley (35) and two co-workers, Simon Mathebula (43) and Richard Mathebula (41), are still behind bars after the court postponed their bail applications to March 30 and 31.

The applications were postponed because the defence said they could not get access to their clients and were not in agreement with the state over the nature of the charge.

“We need to decide what schedule of murder it is. The state is saying it is schedule 6 – murder which was premeditated and involved a gang – but we are saying the charge should be a schedule 5 – a normal murder charge,” said their legal representative, Charl van Tonder.

Phalaborwa ANC mayor Moses Mukhabele, who claimed he had been instrumental in arranging the protest, said the apparently racist posters were justified.

“(Kill the boer, kill the farmer) is a revolutionary slogan and many people feel this way,” he said.

He refused to accept that the slogans could be hurtful or offensive to whites.

SACP Limpopo leader Justice Piitso, who was also present, said: “I don’t see the slogans as being inciteful. Working-class people are upset by what happened.”

Last night, SAHRC commissioner Professor Karthy Govender said that if the “Kill the boer” slogan had been used by political parties, it was a big worry.

“If, in fact, this did happen, it is of great concern to us because the ANC endorsed the ruling,” he said.

Govender said people who found the slogan offensive could claim civil damages under the Promotion of Equality and Prohibition of Unfair Discrimination Act.

SACP spokesperson Mazibuko Jara said last night the party did not support the slogans, which represented “backward thinking”.

“We support the objective of the march, but not the slogans that were used.”

Cosatu spokesperson Patrick Craven said his organisation did not support such sloganeering.

“We do not support it, although we understand how the protesters felt,” said Craven, adding that Cosatu would probe the incident.

National ANC spokesperson Smuts Ngonyama said he could not comment. “We first need to hear from the ANC structures in that province before we can comment about it.”

Source: The Star, Johannesburg
URL: http://www.star.co.za/index.php?fSectionId=12…br>