South African leader of the Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging(AWB-Afrikaner Resistance Movement) Eugene Terreblanche has been beaten and hacked to death, by two black farm workers with pangas and machetes, on his farm outside Ventersdorp in the north-west.

A province where racial tension in the rural farming community is increasingly being fuelled by irresponsible racist utterances by the ANCYL leader and personal mouthpiece of President Jacob Zuma, Julius Malema, and the North West Cosatu secretary Solly Pheto.

The South African far-right movement of slain white right-wing leader Eugene Terre'Blanche said he was bludgeoned so badly he was barely recognizable and described a gory murder scene indicative of great rage when he visited the farm on Sunday.

"There was blood all over the place, pools on the mattress, the pillow, the floor and splattered on the walls and ceiling," he said.

The fact that attackers were arrested so rapidly smacks of a cover-up

The AWB Iron Guard claims the murder had nothing to do with a wage dispute because the workers had been paid a week before the incident and the violence of the murder also does not fit the anger of a wage dispute.

*Apparently the two blacks had only been working for him for three weeks before they decided to viciously murder him, about an alleged wage dispute; which indicates a possible assassination motive

Why is ANC alliance paying Terre`Blanche killers' legal fees...

The ruling alliance has undertaken to pay for the defence of the killers (see YCL statement).

Killing was politically motivated

The murder comes amid growing anxiety about crime in South Africa and what are irresponsible and racially inflammatory sentiments and hate speech promoting incitement, from the ruling ANC party, heightened by the singing of the contentious song Dubul'ibhunu (Shoot the boer) by Julius Malema. Boer means white farmers in Afrikaans, the language of descendants of early Dutch settlers, or Afrikaners. It is also used as a derogatory term for all whites in South Africa.

Last week, South Africa's High Court banned Malema from singing the racially charged apartheid-era song with the words "kill the Boer". It ruled the song was hate speech, although the ANC is appealing. A DEFIANT ANC encouraged its supporters and "future generations" to continue singing liberation songs despite the high court ruling that banned the singing of the controversial dubul' ibhunu song. The ANC insists the song is a valuable part of its cultural heritage and that the lyrics — which also refer to the farmers as thieves and rapists — are not intended literally and are therefore not hate speech.

The AWB believes the killing was politically motivated, and linked it to the song urging "kill the boer" adopted by the radical youth leader of South Africa's ruling party.

Julius Malema and the ANC to blame for polarisation

Farm murders like animal slaughters and Zuma holds the keys to the abattoir.

The ANC's youth wing has created a climate of hatred towards Afrikaners which will lead to further anarchy, Zimbabwean-style land invasions, famine and even mass murder in South Africa.

Time for retribution . . .

"We will not stand by and watch the 'slaughter of the Afrikaans nation' ”.

It is not only about the gruesome murder of Eugene Terre'Blanche but also the tragic fact that more than 3,000 white farmers have been brutally and barbarically murdered since the end of apartheid in 1994.

The murder of Mr Terreblanche is a declaration of war by the black people of South Africa against the white people who have been killed for more than 10 years on end.

Nobody is safe in South Africa

The killing comes 10 weeks before South Africa prepares to host the first World Cup soccer tournament on African soil, with massive expenditures on infrastructure being questioned as hundreds of thousands of tickets and hotel rooms remain unsold.

Eugene Terreblanche founded the right-wing Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (AWB-Afrikaner Resistance Movement) to protect the rights of the Boers' descendants. The Afrikaners are descendants of the Boers, the first whites who arrived in South Africa 300 years ago and trekked into the hinterland to avoid assimilation with English-speaking settlers. Their short-lived republics, in the Orange Free State, Transvaal and northern Natal, were broken up after the 1899-1902 Anglo-Boer War. Terre'blanche wanted to reconstitute them.

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