Pro Serb Extremist Terreblanche killed in South Africa!


Eugene Terreblanche killed in South Africa

Eugene Terreblanche during a speech at an Afrikaner Resistance  Movement (AWB) gathering in Pretoria in this June 5 1999 file photo.

Mr Terreblanche wanted a separate white homeland

South African white supremacist leader Eugene Terreblanche has been killed on his farm in the country’s north-west.

Mr Terreblanche, 69, was beaten to death after a dispute over unpaid wages, local media reports said. Two people are said to have been arrested.

Mr Terreblanche, who campaigned for a separate white homeland, came to prominence in the early 1980s.

He became the champion of a tiny minority determined to stop the process that was bringing apartheid to an end.

They apparently attacked the leader because they were not paid for work
Adele Myburg, police spokeswoman

“Mr Terreblanche’s body was found on the bed with facial and head injuries,” AFP news agency quoted a police spokesman as saying.

The report said he had been killed after a payment dispute with two workers, who have since been charged with his murder.

“He was hacked to death while he was taking a nap,” a family friend in the town of Ventersdorp was quoted as telling Reuters news agency.

Prison sentence

The murder comes amid growing anxiety about crime in South Africa and what opposition politicians say are irresponsible and racially inflammatory sentiments from a minority of the ruling ANC party, says the BBC’s Karen Allen in Johannesburg.

Farming organisations in the Ventersdorp area have called for calm as they are worried that rising tensions may escalate out of control.

Our correspondent says it is too soon to say whether Saturday’s killing was politically motivated.

ANALYSIS
Martin Plaut, file pic
Martin Plaut, Africa editor

For most South Africans, Eugene Terreblanche was a throwback to another era. But his death is a blow to the country’s image of racial tolerance, fostered so carefully by Nelson Mandela.

Some are likely to believe that the fact that his alleged attackers were arrested so rapidly smacks of a cover-up. Others, on the minority far-right fringe, will see his death as a vindication of their assertion that whites cannot live under black rule.

It is a tragic fact that more than 3,000 white farmers have been murdered since the end of apartheid in 1994. And it is possible that some people may seek retribution.

Mr Terreblanche’s funeral could become a rallying point for such sentiment.

However, a spokesman for Mr Terreblanche’s Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (Afrikaner Resistance Movement – AWB) linked the killing to the recent singing of an apartheid-era song by the head of the ruling ANC party’s youth league.

“That’s what this is all about,” Andre Visagie told Reuters news agency. “They used pangas and pipes to murder him as he slept.”

Mr Terreblanche was released from prison in 2004 after serving three years of a five-year term for attempted murder.

He had founded the white supremacist AWB in 1970, to oppose what he regarded as the liberal policies of the then-South African leader, John Vorster.

His party tried terrorist tactics and threatened civil war in the run-up to South Africa’s first democratic elections.

In the 1980s, the government of PW Botha considered a constitutional plan allowing South Africa’s Asian and coloured (mixed-race) minorities to vote for racially-segregated parliamentary chambers.

For the likes of Mr Terreblanche, this was the start of the slippery slope towards democracy, communism, black rule and the destruction of the Afrikaner nation, analysts say.

Claiming on occasion to be a cultural organisation – albeit one with sidearms and paramilitary uniforms – Mr Terreblanche and his men promised to fight for the survival of the white tribe of Africa.

Mr Terreblance continued to campaign to preserve the apartheid system until the early 1990s but had lived in relative obscurity since it collapsed.

The AWB was revived two years ago and there had been recent efforts to form a united front among white far-right groups.

bbc.co.uk

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