White Crime Victims, South Africa – just some pictures from 2008/9
By: Rudi Stettner
Which community suffer from the highest murder rate in the world? If thoughts go through your mind of a gritty urban jungle, you are mistaken. The backdrop of the world's highest murder rate is some of the most beautiful landscapes in the world.
Afrikaner farmers have since the capitulation of their government fallen victim to a wave of murders that are appalling in their sadistic brutality. The small take in the robberies accompanying many of these murders is grotesquely overshadowed by the depravity that accompanies them and with many of the victims being elderly. Since crime statistics have to be approved by the government of South Africa, it is difficult to get a handle on the magnitude of the problem.
At the beginning of the decade there were 40,000 White farmers in South Africa and there have been over 3,037 murdered in racial genocide and more than 20,000 armed attacks perpetrated by groups of militant, young Black racists on commercial farmers, since the ANC came to power in 1994. This is certainly higher as the South African government and police, with the world’s press keep it covered up. Boers are often tortured or raped first, by boiling water forced down their throats, tendons cut, burnings, personal humiliations - most perpetrators are protected by Blacks within government and the police and not tried. Now ask yourselves, gentle readers, how often do you see this on television news or read about it in your quality newspaper?
The idealism that accompanied the birth of a "new South Africa" has been destroyed by Black rule yet the "rainbow nation" is still a fantasy to Western elites. They need to believe in it or face the reality that racial equality does not exist. The dream of truth and reconciliation and the deification of Nelson Mandela make it hard to accept that after Whites gave way to Blacks the Boer minority would be subjected to racial genocide. Boers, you see, have not been sentimentalised, are not figures of sympathy but dehumanised as racists so their murder is not seen as important."
The murder rate among Afrikaner farmers has been estimated to be 310 per 100,000 people. A comparison of general homicide rates gives us an idea of how serious this problem is. The general homicide rate for the USA was 5.8 per 100,000 people in 2009. The general rate for South Africa has been 37.3 murders per 100,000 people in 2009. This means that the Afrikaner farmers are being murdered at a rate that is 10 times the South African national average.
In an attempt to sanitise the problem, the South African government has banned the use of the term "farm murders". The intent is to present the farm murders as random events rather than the ethnically targeted murders that they really are.
Rather than step up police protection for the besieged farmers, the South African government has actually scaled back police protection, leaving the farmers to their own devices to defend themselves. not so coincidentally, there have been attempts by the government to legally expropriate Afrikaner farms and hand them out to Blacks who are chosen as lucky recipients by the government.
"Shaya Ma Buru", ( Kill the Boer) is an African National Congress resistance song that is still sung at national gatherings. In the days of apartheid, "Boer" referred to Afrikaners in general, as well as the state at their disposal. The "Boer" of today is a farmer in the originally intended meaning of the Afrikaner word. He is disarmed in a state in which he is a grudgingly tolerated minority.
"Shaya Ma Buru" is hate speech. It is but one dimension of a general campaign of extermination and dispossession of South Africa's Afrikaners, who have no other homeland in the world. They are in a real sense one of South Africa's tribes.
Where do we go from here? Will South Africa make the same mistake made in Zimbabwe? Will it destroy its agricultural sector and plunge South Africa into inflation and economic chaos? Or will history go full circle with despairing Whites carving their own homeland and haven of safety out of a hostile country? Eugene Terre'Blanche, head of the AWB (Afrikaaner Resistance Movement) is reviled in the mainstream press as a Nazi. but what is wrong with defending a people that is threatened with genocide?
The Australian media reports as follows on Mr. Terre'Blanche:
"ARMS outstretched, his deep voice resonating around the town hall, the white-bearded speaker summoned the Afrikaner "volk" to battle, with rousing words from the past. "Now is not the time to be afraid," he shouted, to grumblings of approval from the audience of burly, khaki-clad farmers, their wives and children. "Now all true Afrikaners must reach out to each other and fight to the bitter end."
Eugene Terre'Blanche, the once-feared White leader in South Africa, is back. He is more subdued and circumspect than in his heyday in the 1980s, but his message has not fundamentally changed.
He told 300 supporters in this small, rundown farming town on the barren veld about 200km southwest of Johannesburg that he was answering the call of the boers (farmers) and revitalising the Afrikaner Resistance Movement (AWB) to save them from the oppression of the black African National Congress government. "Our country is being run by criminals who murder and rob. This land was the best, and they ruined it all," he cried to strong applause, dabbing the spittle off his beard with a neatly pressed handkerchief. "We are being oppressed again. We will rise again."
Who cares about the Afrikaner farmers at all? Has anyone stepped up to the plate to defend the Afrikaners? Is not the campaign of ethnic cleansing being waged against the Afrikaners worthy of condemnation? If he is indeed a Nazi, what has been his death toll? And if we are all pious opponents of his alleged Nazism, what has been the death toll of our disgraceful silence?
If South Africa's White minority is driven out, it will ultimately be its Black majority that will suffer. If the blind eyes that are now turned to the bleeding Afrikaners do not open now, they will open to scenes of famine as are now seen in Zimbabwe.
The curtain of silence that keeps the suffering of the Boers from international view is a blot of shame upon our generation. It is time for our silence to end.
Published by: http://afrikanerbroadcasting.blogspot.com
0 comments:
Post a Comment