Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Horror story - Bloody attack on baby blatant hatred

It is with so much sadness that I read an article about a one-year-old baby, savagely beaten, by black "people" who only stole a laptop and modem. This, to me, does not sound like a robbery - it sounds more like blatant hatred.



How can someone beat a child that is so utterly defenceless?


This sort of show of absolute disregard for the sanctity of human life should be punished with the only thing that would ensure that they will never be able to do it again - the death penalty.


This country is crying for a way to curb the murder sprees and rapes. It is weeping for the lives that have been lost. How many more murders must take place before those that claim to be in power take actions against those that have shown no remorse, no feeling, and no compassion?


Bring back the death penalty. Not just to punish those that have killed someone in cold blood, but instead to punish those that have shown that they have no place in this country, or in this world, or on this planet! If you rape, you die. If you kill an innocent person, you die. If you hurt a child, you die. (Although I have a few creative ideas on torture that will, more than likely, ensure the same result.)


Only "cowards" attack defenceless women and one-year-old babies.


Toddler brutally beaten in house robbery


Speculation the attackers pistol-whipped the baby.


Little Marzaan Kruger was severely beaten and brutally assaulted in a gruesome attack during an apparent house robbery in Randburg on Thursday. The toddler had suffered skull fractures and was unconscious when the mother found her daughter lying in a pool of blood after she returned home at around 1pm.


The two Shangaan suspects aged 23 and 25, both from Mozambique, were part of a team of builders who worked on the property earlier this year.


The Times reported on Monday that the domestic worker knew one of the attackers, a Mozambican construction worker, and called him a friend. She let the men into the Johannesburg home, where they watched television with her and the child before attacking them.


The one year-old baby has suffered serious head injuries and is still in a critical condition fighting for her life in ICU at the Sandton Medi-Clinic hospital.


Baby attacker still on the loose

The black monster who pistol-whipped baby Marizaan Kruger, 1

The police are still looking for a third suspect - also a Mozambican citizen - Chakhoma Machaba, 28. According to police spokesperson Eugene Opperman, Machaba has violent tendencies and is dangerous and that he should not be confronted.

2010 FIFA World cup - preparing for it... by striking & trashing the streets of Johannesburg...

Welcome 2010 World Cup Soccer tourists.
A spectacle like the world has never seen.


"We are more than ready". You won't be disappointed.
The government has spent R33-billion on the tournament, building stadiums and improving infrastructure such as roads, telecommunications and transport.


Visitors to SA can learn all about our traditions and culture.
Strikers throwing trash across the streets in the cities. Come join in the fun
Enjoy the mess. Nice hey! The perfect way to invite tourists to come half way around the world.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Zuma extends apartheid blame cut-off deadline as ANC cadres panic

Jacob Zuma has reassured panicky ANC-appointed civil servants, saying that his demand that they stop blaming apartheid for their incompetence would only apply after 20 years of ANC rule. He said that blaming apartheid had provided job-security for thousands of incompetent cadres, adding that they had "at least four more years".

Zuma triggered mass panic amongst loyal party cadres last week when he announced that that they could no longer blame apartheid for their catastrophic incompetence.

However this morning he reassured them, saying that their Grade 4 mathematics skills lay at the root of the misunderstanding.

"I said 'after two decades'," explained Zuma. "And if you add 20 years to 1994 you get, er, you get..."

A presidential aide consulted a calculator and confirmed that 1994 plus 20 years was 2014.

"Which means ANC cadres have at least four more years of being able to blame apartheid for not doing their jobs," said Zuma.

Asked if incompetent civil servants could start blaming the ANC from 2015 onwards, given the party's complete inability to create a functioning education system or efficient, non-corrupt civil service, Zuma said that they could try as long as they had "a taste for teargas and rubber bullets".

Meanwhile the President's message has been echoed by Minister With No Real Job, Trevor Manuel, who urged the country's citizens to take responsibility.

Audience members said they were not sure what "responsibility" was, but added that they were always happy to take anything as long as it was free or if the ANC could quash theft charges afterwards.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Tourist tells of rape ordeal in Cape Winelands hotel

Dutch woman on antiretrovirals after horrifying ordeal in four-star hotel

A Dutch tourist has vowed never to set foot in South Africa again - unless it is to give evidence against the man who gagged, robbed and raped her twice in the Cape Winelands.


Yvonne Petronella Den Hollander, 62, is suing the four-star Lord Charles Hotel for failing to keep her safe and is claiming R1.7-million in damages for the terrifying ordeal she endured.

Den Hollander, a divorced mother of two, was brutalised within hours of checking into the luxury hotel. She was put on antiretrovirals after the attack, and underwent psychological counselling for trauma.

Two years after she was raped and robbed of R3600 at the hotel on March 9 2008:

•Police have yet to arrest a suspect in the case;

•The hotel says it is not liable to pay damages because guests signed a disclaimer protecting it against claims for loss, damage or injury; and

•Den Hollander is being asked to put up R200000 as security for court costs before her lawsuit can proceed against the hotel, because she is a foreigner.

In court papers, she accused the hotel of negligence and failure to put in place measures that could have prevented her ordeal.

Speaking to the Sunday Times this week through her lawyer, Luuk Rijnen, she said she would never again set foot in Africa, except to face her attacker in court.

The trip to South Africa was a dream come true after she had saved up to pay for an affordable 17-day holiday package which included a trek in the Drakensberg mountains, a visit to Swaziland, a trip to the Kruger National Park and KwaZulu-Natal.

It was shortly after arriving at the Lord Charles Hotel, ahead of a tour of the Cape Winelands, that the trip turned into a nightmare.

In the statement to the police after the incident, she said she was convinced she would be killed by the rapist.

"He made me lie on the bed with my face down. He took the telephone wire. With this he tied my ankles. I was lying on my belly with my hands and feet tightly tied to my back.

"I remember that he made this quite tight. After this he put blankets and pillows over me, so I was afraid now he would shoot me because of all this noise-insulating material."

Her assailant had been hiding behind the bathroom door when Den Hollander returned to her room after a few drinks with her tour group.

The hotel, however, is defending the claim and in turn said Den Hollander was negligent with her own safety by not properly locking her room door despite written warnings.

The hotel said it had taken "reasonable steps to guard against harm to guests by among other things, engaging the services of an independent contractor".

Group chief executive officer for Command Security Services, Shaffie Mowzer, said on Friday that what had happened was both unfortunate and tragic but the company could not comment.

The hotel further stated in court papers that Den Hollander had, upon arrival at the hotel, signed a disclaimer absolving it of any liability. It read: "The Lord Charles accepts no responsibility for any loss, damage or injury that may occur on our premises."

The hotel has applied to the court to compel her to pay R200000 in security for costs.

But Den Hollander has vowed to fight on and says she refuses to be bullied.

Den Hollander told the Sunday Times via e-mail: "Did they change anything? Or do they just try to push me away so no one finds out how unsafe it is?"

Saturday, April 24, 2010

South Africa added to Genocide watch

According to Genocide Watch, the Boers/Whites of South Africa are at risk of Genocide, Politicide, or Mass Atrocities in 2010 by Black racists.

South African Boers are facing genocide at the hands of racist Blacks according to this document "Countries at Risk 2010 Genocide Watch April 2010" published by Genocide Watch on their website. Genocide Watch places the genocide at Stage 5 (Polarization).

Source: Genocide Watch

http://www.genocidewatch.org/aboutgenocide/countriesatrisk2010.html
http://www.genocidewatch.org/images/CountriesatRisk2010GenocideWatchApril2010.doc



Genocide of Whites In South Africa


Click on link below to see full story

Genocide In South Africa - Pamela Geller, American Thinker

South Africa, Zimbabwe and Communism

This is the story of what really goes on in Southern Africa, the truth on how communism crawled into Southern Africa with the help of the United States and why they wont help.

This is the truth about Mandela and Mugabe and how the US only funded Zimbabwe when they became communist.

This very short documentary also shows the different stories behind the tribes of South Africa.


Worldwide Protest Against "the ANC - Murderers!"

Sweden: Protest against the genocide in South Africa

On Saturday the 17th of April 2010, the Swedish Resistance Movement (Svenska Motståndsrörelsen) marched to the South African embassy in Stockholm, housing representatives of the ANC government.

We hold the ANC responsible not only for the murder of Eugéne Terre’Blanche, leader of the Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (AWB), but also for the ongoing genocide of whites in South Africa.

Eugéne Terre’Blanche dedicated his life to the struggle for his people and a sovereign state for the white Boer people. Tragically his life ended, just like thousands of other white farmers, brutally murdered by blacks. Several thousands and yet more, are those who mourn the loss. We shall never forget his sacrifice!

Therefore we march - under the slogan "Stop the Boer genocide!" - in honor and remembrance for the white leader of the AWB. But we also march to tell the world about the situation for our kindred people in South Africa. We will tell of a government who in silence support murder, rape and plunder of whites.

Hereby we call upon our brothers and sisters around the globe to take a stand, no longer can we sit and do nothing as the white population of South Africa is being murdered. What happens in South Africa today, will happen in our nations tomorrow!

The Swedish Resistance Movement march to the South African embassy in Stockholm on Saturday 17th of April, to show the Boer nation that they are not alone, that we are with them in their struggle for survival.

We urge YOU to do the same, to show the world that the white race is still a force to reckon with, for this our comrades, IS YOUR DUTY!

- Swedish Resistance Movement
WWW.PATRIOT.NU



Right-wingers worldwide are now launching a campaign to protest against South Africa’s hosting of the 2010 Fifa World Cup – uniting under the slogan “Stop the Boer Genocide”.



The Swedish Resistance Movement is marching to the South African embassy in Stockholm on Saturday to protest the “ongoing genocide of whites” on South African farms.

Counterparts in other countries say they are preparing similar marches on the American Embassy in Washington DC and the SA Embassy in London.

Plans have been mooted to flood call-in radio stations “around the world” with thousands of calls.

The right-wingers are taking their dire predictions to the Internet, including comments to the effect that: “A terrible fire has been started in South Africa … and the only thing that can extinguish it is rivers of blood.”





Russians Protest Boer Genocide

On the same day Swedes took to the streets of Stockholm and other cities to honor slain AWB leader Eugene Terreblanche and bring light to the silent Boer genocide in South Africa, a similar protest was held by Russian nationalists in Moscow.




Members of the Russian Nationalist party DPNI delivered a protest letter to the South African embassy in Moscow that day, blaming ANCYL leader Julius Malema’s repeated public singing of “Kill the Boer” at political rallies for causing Terreblanche’s murder.

The letter, written by DPNI Head of the Central council, Basmanova Vladimir Anatolyevich, also called for fair representation and protection for the White minority in South Africa:

In connection with the murder of prominent politician and South African citizen Eugene Terreblanche due to his race and ideology, as well as in connection with the systematic violation of the rights of White people in South Africa, we require:

1. Providing quoted number of seats for parties representing the interests of the White majority (such as the Freedom Front Plus, revived nationalist party, and etc.);

2. Stop discrimination against whites;

3. Punish those responsible for the murder of Terreblanche, including Julius Malema, who sang “Kill the Boer”;

4. Develop programs for the return of the White citizens of South Africa (most of which are also highly skilled experts, the massive influx of which could significantly contribute to the development of the republic as a whole) who were forced to leave the country due to high levels of racial discrimination (providing a package of social guarantees, funding for development, soft loans for housing purchase and improvement);

5. Cancel job quotas for Blacks in South Africa;

6. Select state subsidies vigilante groups of white citizens;

7. Recognize the national currency of Orania, and the right to develop its own independent media;

8. Recognize the right of the Boers to establish their independent state – Folkstaad or cultural autonomy in the north-east of the country;

9. Curb illegal immigration from neighboring African countries.

A second letter was sent to UN Secretary General Ban-ki Moon, calling on the international body to address the ongoing discrimination against Whites by the South African government:

We, as Russian Public Movement Against Illegal Immigration (DPNI), require from the United Nations to adopt the following measures to ensure security at the South African republic of all persons, regardless of their race, basing on respect of human rights and without double standards:

1. Confirm the right of the Boers to establish their independent state – Volkstaadt or cultural autonomy in the north-east of the country;

2. Consider the issue about establishing a system of financial and humanitarian support for the creation and development of White autonomy, allowing the White population of South Africa to realize their right for national development, as modeled by Orania;

3. To elaborate recommendations for the elimination of discrimination of the White population in South Africa;

4. To abolishing the quota of jobs for Black people;

5. To grant quoted number of seats in Parliament to parties which are representing the interests of national minorities (such as the Freedom Front Plus, Revival Nationalist Party, and etc.);

6. To promote legalisation of the national currency of Orania, the Oranim, and offer the right to develop their own independent media;

7. In case of continued discrimination of White ethnic minority, and pressure on the political opposition, representing their interests of white people, countermeasure is to suspend the membership of South Africa in the UN;

8. To place limited peacekeeping contingent on the territory of South Africa to protect the rights of national minorities, to stop ethnic purges, as well as reducing the level of blatant criminality in the country;

9. Develop programs to address the problem of illegal immigrants, which according to some sources, numbers more than 25% of total population. It is known that illegal immigration is directly proportional to the level of crime, including motivated by racial hatred;

10. Strengthen the monitoring of human rights of the White population in other African countries, especially in those where the White minority has traditionally exercised significant social, economic, political activity, such as Kenya, Ethiopia, Angola and Mozambique.


But the SA tourism department does not believe the recent turmoil surrounding Julius Malema or the murder of Eugene Terre’Blanche will have “any meaningful impact on tourism”, and is “not currently aware of any cancellations that can be directly linked to recent events.

“We believe that our well-deserved reputation as a world-class destination has not been compromised, and we have full confidence that South Africa will host a very successful World Cup,” said spokesman Ronel Bester.

“We remain very positive about the expected visitor numbers for the World Cup, the economic boost to our country and the unparalleled marketing South Africa will receive… As a country we received more than 9,9 million foreign arrivals last year and experienced growth of 3,6% – whilst global foreign arrivals declined by 4%.”

The SA Tourism Services Association (Satsa) has not received any reports of cancellations from tour operators and believes the tournament will “put SA on the map in a very positive way”.

While Satsa communications officers yesterday bemoaned “shocking, sloppy and sensationalist” reports of “machete-wielding gangs” in some British newspapers, it believes the only way to counter such negativity is to “tell our side with dignity”.

“There has been a rapid response to these issues by the police and the President, and the majority of people are actively seeking peace,” Satsa said.

Match, Fifa’s exclusive agent for 2010, was recently criticised for failing to drop prices quickly to adapt to the changing market conditions. The organisation earlier returned 450 000 of bed nights it had reserved, as South African Airways (SAA) unreserved 45 000 domestic flights.

Dutch soccer federation KNVB has meanwhile scaled down estimates from an expected 12 000 visiting fans, to just 5 000.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Kill the Boer and Bring Me My Machine Gun

Robert Morley


Will the soccer World Cup expose a nation on the verge of becoming the next Zimbabwe? Or Rwanda?

Imagine if Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney, or any other politician in America publicly sang songs that said African Americans were dogs, that they were cowards that robbed society and that they should be killed—and then shrugged off criticism by saying the lyrics were just part of America’s heritage and didn’t really mean anything.

There would be an uproar—and rightly so.

What if the president of the United States agreed? And he regularly whipped supporters into a frenzy by dancing and singing a song titled “Bring Me My Machine Gun”? And what if the president was acting like this at a time when black Americans across the country were being hunted down and murdered because of their race?

Human rights activists would be up in arms and the United Nations would be breathing down America’s neck for using hate speech to incite racial violence. There would be lawsuits, international arrest warrants, and very likely assassination attempts. America would be the pariah of the world.

Yet, these are the very words and sentiments espoused by the two most powerful politicians in South Africa. And both are blatantly open about it. Meanwhile, South Africa’s white farmers are being murdered at appalling rates.

Yet the world, and the United Nations—that supposed bastion of anti-discrimination—say little or nothing about it.

Why? Because South Africa is supposed to be the poster nation for anti-racism and reconciliation. After all, the world came together in unity to oust the ruling white government in South Africa. So it is a bit embarrassing to find out that the oppressed have become the oppressors. In this politically correct world, apparently racism only works one way.

But when the racial tension eventually explodes—and explode it will—who will be blamed?

This question was rudely shoved to the forefront of South African society last week. Just months before the 2010 soccer World Cup that will see tens of thousands of international tourists descend upon Johannesburg, Cape Town and other cities, South Africans are reevaluating what 20-plus years of post-apartheid rule has done for the country.

Are things really any better today?

On April 3, Eugene Terre’Blanche, the former leader of the political militia movement that violently opposed the end of apartheid, was brutally hacked to death. His chopped remains were found scattered across his bed. The murder weapons—machete and wooden club—were left next to the bloody remains. According to reports, one of the accused said that Terre’Blanche had verbally abused him for years, and when he refused to pay him his wages (reported to be about $41), he just couldn’t take it anymore.

According to most press reports, the murder was just a wage dispute gone wrong. But the fact that the murderers pulled down the old man’s pants to expose his naked mutilated body—an act previously used to dehumanize murdered white farmers—suggests that it was anything but a simple murder.

Terre’Blanche’s death came at a particularly embarrassing time for South Africa, for two reasons.

First, it was the latest in a string of high-profile, racially motivated attacks against white farmers in South Africa. Just two weeks earlier, Nigel Ralfe was milking his cows on his farm when four men marched into the yard asking to buy milk. When he replied that he had none to sell, they shot him twice and then pistol whipped him. They then dragged him to his house where his wife was bathing their three grandchildren. When his wife opened the door they shot her three times point blank.

As the gang ripped apart the house, the bewildered children emerged from the bathroom to find their grandmother dying on her bed where she had collapsed. After stealing an old pistol, a pair of binoculars and a phone, the four men walked away.

More white farmers were murdered in South Africa during just 2009 than have been in Zimbabwe since Robert Mugabe came to power. Since the end of apartheid, over 3,000 white farmers have been murdered, according to the bbc. South Africa’s News24, on the other hand, says there have been only” 1,600 farmers killed in attacks since 1991. Even if that figure is true, it would still make farming in South Africa one of the most dangerous professions in the world. White farmers are more than twice as likely to be killed as police officers, and far more likely to be killed than miners.

Second, the killing of Terre’Blanche came only a few days after Julius Malema, the firebrand leader of Jacob Zuma’s African National Congress’s (anc’s) Youth League, whipped university students into a frenzy by repeatedly chanting “kill the boer, kill the boer” at a rally. “Kill the boer” is literally translated as “kill the farmer,” but is used to mean “kill the white farmers.” The rest of the song includes the phrases “the cowards are scared,” “these dogs are raping,” and “shoot, shoot … shoot the boer.”

The phrases are reminiscent of the words “kill the cockroach,” which Hutus chanted as they slaughtered the Tutsis in Rwanda. But instead of censoring Malema for his hate speech, Zuma’s anc went to court to challenge an earlier court judgment that declared the lyrics as unconstitutional and unlawful.

On April 3, Malema flew to Zimbabwe to meet Robert Mugabe and take part in lavish celebrations marking 30 years in power for the Zimbabwean president. Malema and Mugabe share the same vision. Malema is pushing to nationalize South Africa’s mining industry and is among those pushing for a controversial new policy to hasten the “redistribution” of white-owned land in South Africa—the same policies that turned Zimbabwe from a breadbasket of Africa into the continent’s biggest basket case.

Like Zimbabwe, South Africa has now nationalized all water rights and mineral rights and is forcing companies to sell partial ownership to black people or organizations.

The trouble facing South Africa’s white population looks set to intensify. The Zimbabwe Guardian wrote,


South Africa should learn from Zimbabwe. … White commercial farmers in Zimbabwe did not heed the sign-o-the-times. …

That naivety has cost them their livelihoods. … [T]here’s not much they can do anymore.
The current is in motion.

South African white farmers and industrialists should not bask in the comfort that their country is called “democratic.” The power of the masses is too strong; especially the majority masses.

If they do not heed the signs; especially the calls for nationalization of farms and industries, then they have themselves to blame if that process is forcibly put in motion ….

South Africa is rapidly barreling down Zimbabwe Road, and unfortunately the same road heads to Rwanda. The farmers may be the first to get run over, but all South Africans should worry. Just look at what has happened in virtually every country north of the border.

Ezekiel 7:23-27 perfectly describe South Africa today. The Bible prophesies that so many bloody violent crimes will occur that they will be like links in a chain—one right after another. This passage even talks about people’s homes being taken away and conflict between nationalities.

Conditions will get so bad in South Africa that eventually—in desperation—people will begin searching for God. They will cry out for Him to save them. But God says it will be futile because He is purposefully sending the punishment (for proof that this passage is referring to the nation of South Africa, read the book The United States and Britain in Prophecy).

But there is hope for South Africa, and the whole world. Verse 27 also says that God is sending the punishment so that “they shall know that I am the Lord.”

God does not want people to suffer. He loves all races and nationalities. And God wants people to be truly happy. But true peace and happiness can only come from obeying His laws and commandments. God wants the people of South Africa and the world to obey Him. If they would, blessings of peace and prosperity would result. A basic theme of the Bible is blessings for obedience and curses for disobedience. Unfortunately, because of disobedience, the curses will keep on coming.

The soccer World Cup is around the corner. What kind of nation will it reveal?




Friday, April 16, 2010

Warning bells for South Africa

Earlier this week SAIRR's new Unit for Risk Analysis described the proposed nationalisation of agricultural land in South Africa as a potentially cataclysmic event for South Africa’s economy.

See Press Statement: Unit for Risk Analysis warns on land reform proposal - 15th March 2010

The Government has subsequently denied any intention to nationalise private property. We have reason to doubt their assurances and warn again that the nationalisation of agricultural land is now a published government proposal, that it follows a trend that saw the nationalisation of both mineral and water rights, and that it follows previous efforts to introduce far reaching expropriation legislation. The likelihood of the Government adopting this policy proposal is therefore something that South Africa’s domestic and foreign investors should be very aware of.

The Government and the Department of Rural Development and Land Reform have responded to our warnings by saying that there is no plan to nationalise South Africa’s farms. The Government has further stated that it respects private property rights and that this will not change. We have little confidence in these assurances and believe them to be an effort to mislead the public and the media.

In part, this is because the Government’s assurances are so obviously contrary to their own written and published plan. While various government officials in the last 48 hours have said that the plan does not talk about “nationalisation”, it does talk about private owners ceding control of their land to the State which will then lease that land back to the farmers. The Government’s proposal also identifies the need to alter Section 25 of the Constitution which deals with and guarantees private property rights.

A second reason to doubt the Government’s assurances is that this latest policy proposal appears to follow an established trend of the State seizing control of what it regards as important ‘national assets.’

In 2002 through the Minerals and Petroleum Development Act, the Government took custodianship of all mineral rights in the country thereby ending private ownership. Mining companies had to re-apply for those rights in order to continue mining. This legislative step did significant harm to the mining industry in the country and to investor sentiment, particularly in the mining sector.

Similarly, the Government took control of all water resources in the country through the National Water Act of 1998. The previous distinction between public and privately owned water was eliminated, making all water a ‘public asset.’ Water allowances were imposed and the Government handed itself the authority of managing the country’s water resources.

What we are now seeing in terms of the Government’s proposed land seizure scheme is therefore a logical progression of government policy that has sought to bring under state control what it regards as important ‘national assets’.

The third reason to doubt the Government’s sincerity is that this latest proposal appears to be a continuation of a pattern of thinking that gave rise to the Expropriation Bill of 2008. The Institute published extensively on the bill, which would have given the State the authority to seize any fixed or movable property ‘in the national interest’ without paying compensation. Ahead of the 2009 elections the Government declared that the controversial Bill would be shelved.

The Government has recently admitted that 9 out of every ten land reform projects that it has managed have failed. Under these circumstances it is unlikely that this same Government will be able to successfully manage South Africa’s entire commercial farming industry. This is particularly so if they erode the capital value in agricultural land, which is important collateral that farmers have against which to raise loans to run their businesses.

We are therefore of the view that if either of the two proposals goes ahead then South Africa will experience a steep reduction in agricultural investment. This will translate into a commensurate fall in agricultural employment which will in turn drive up levels of rural poverty and provide an impetus for greater rural to urban migration.

Further we expect that South Africa’s ability to meet its food needs will be undermined. This will see knock-on effects on downstream food processing industries with corresponding falls in employment and investment. Upstream supply industries will see their markets shrink as demand for their products falls. South Africa will be forced to import a greater portion of its food needs, placing pressure on both the current account deficit and on food price inflation.

The above repercussions will see more poor rural people flocking to urban areas. The Government’s ability to meet service delivery demands will be compromised even further than it already is. In an environment of escalating protest action against Government on the peripheries of large urban settlements, this will pose a further challenge to the hegemony of the ANC.

It is uncertain to what extent the Government and the ANC identifies these risks. Certainly sentiment within the Government and the ANC ignored similar warnings on skills, mining, health, education, security, electricity, and labour market policy for which South Africa paid a heavy price. It is quite possible that the Government may therefore proceed with this scheme only to try and reverse the policy as its negative effects become more apparent.

It is also possible that the Government may identify these repercussions but proceed regardless in order to achieve what they may see as the more important end of breaking the back of white commercial agriculture and handing farms to black farmers. On this score the ANC leadership’s recent support for incitements to shoot and kill white Afrikaans farmers is pertinent. Certainly the Government’s attitude to white skills in the civil service suggests that they are willing to sacrifice performance for racial ideology.

We must also warn against regarding the second of the two proposals as a lesser of two evils. Destroying the economies of scale that make South Africa’s commercial agriculture sector viable will result in precisely the same consequences as we have spelt out above. Keep in mind that when Zanu-PF in Zimbabwe commenced its land reform programme it also commenced with a proposal of ‘one farmer, one farm’.

We therefore warn our readers to take this latest policy proposal seriously, to identify the likely consequences of the proposal, and to prepare for the eventuality of the State going ahead with seizing all or part of South Africa’s agricultural land holdings. We caution strongly against taking Government assurances to the contrary to heart particularly when viewed against the track record of that same Government in nationalising mineral and water rights and in proposing legislation to seize any fixed or movable property without paying compensation.


Frans Cronje and Catherine Schulze

Saturday, April 10, 2010

WORLD CUP MACHETE THREAT

Anti-white hate-speech incites ‘machete threat’ writes UK journo
Teams warned to avoid ‘the land of murder’ this summer

In an article by Steve Hughes of the Daily Star Sunday newspaper in the UK on 5 April 2010 writes: “England fans could be caught up in a machete race war” .

YouTube video warns:

“Burn your tickets…’ Don't go to South Africa you will be murdered by ANCYL Terrorists.

A football fan posted the following warning on YouTube: “this is the depth of depravity we are speaking about here… Julius Malema calls for the murders of all the people of European descent, the Boers…

Your football shirt won’t protect you in South Africa; these people have firearms, will shoot you, and don’t give a shit about football…’


WORLD CUP FANS FACE BLOODBATH

Steve Hughes writes:

ENGLAND fans could be caught up in a machete race war at the World Cup in South Africa.

The killing of white supremacist leader Eugene Terre’Blanche caused far-right campaigners to warn teams to avoid the “land of murder” this summer.

More than 25,000 England fans are due to watch Wayne Rooney, 24, and Fabio Capello, 63, launch the campaign in ten weeks. Many supporters have already hired extra security in the crime-ravaged country. But that was before the murder of Terre’Blanche, 69.

The head of resistance movement Afrikaner Weerstands- beweging was hacked to death with a machete at his home just 40 miles from England’s
World Cup camp.

Two of his black farm workers, who allegedly claimed he owed them money, were being held by police last night.

White leaders have already vowed “revenge” on black groups blamed for inciting the murder.

And machete gangs were roaming the streets.

AWB spokesman Andre Visagie said: “The death of Mr Terre’Blanche is a declaration of war by the black community of South Africa to the white community that has been killed for 10 years on end.

“They attacked him in such a way it was difficult to recognise the face of Eugene Terre’Blanche.

“We will decide upon the action we are going to take to avenge Mr Terre’Blanche’s death.”

AWB’s supporters have blamed African National Congress Youth League leader Julius Malema, who caused outrage by recently singing an anti-white song called Kill The Boers. But the ANCYL denied that Malema’s singing, ruled illegal by a South African court, had anything to do with Terre’Blanche’s killing.

Malema, 29, has already vowed to continue with the inflammatory songs, adding: “We are not going to stop. We are prepared to go to jail and get arrested again.”

The ruling African National Congress last night tried to play down claims of a civil war.

ANC spokesman Jackson Mthembu said: “The black community has never declared war on any other nationality in South Africa.”

South African President Jacob Zuma, 67, called for both sides to remain calm as he desperately tried to prevent an explosion of violence.

FIFA would be left with a “total nightmare” if civil war erupts and means the tournament cannot be played in the country this summer.

With only 10 weeks to go, football’s world governing body would almost certainly not have time to reschedule the World Cup for this year.

Two years ago, FIFA president Sepp Blatter, 74, admitted there was a contingency plan in place, should South Africa not be ready in time.

But a FIFA source said: “If it becomes too dangerous to hold the World Cup in South Africa then we are looking at a total nightmare.

“I don’t know if it could maybe be moved to next year, but we are all hoping that the problems in South Africa are resolved in time for June.”

Even before the race-war threat, more than a million tickets remained unsold.


Source - http://www.dailystarsunday.co.uk/news/ - http://censorbugbear-reports.blogspot.com/

Friday, April 9, 2010

South Africa On the Eve of Uhuru

South Africa faces an organised Rwanda-style massacre

Silent Plans of a South African Genocide

Uhuru campaign planned against South Africa’s Afrikaners

warns leader Dr Dan Roodt

Dan Roodt of the Pro-Afrikaans Action groups writes that the murder of AWB-leader Terre’Blanche – in the runup to the World Cup 2010 – coincides with the widespread disarming of Afrikaner citizens; the ANC youth leader’s genocidal hate-speech against Boers and whites and his calls for the ‘indigenosation of farms’ – i.e. the removal of all whites -- during a visit to Zimbabwe where he was received as an honoured guest of Mugabe’s Zanu-PF.

Roodt points out that this coincides with the fact that a secret airport was built in the Marange diamond fields for the sole purpose of flying in weapons from China. “Mugabe’s airforce now has a specialised airfield just for this purpose.’

He said the murder on Terre’Blanche was symbolic in nature – and needed to increase racial polarisation so that South Africa’s ‘Uhuru’ can start. He warned that the Afrikaner’s Third Freedom War was about to start, probably right after the World Cup 2010 and all the tourists had gone home.
He also warned that the British, Europe’s and the USA support of the ANC-regime had ‘thrown open the door for a Chinese takeover of South Africa’s mineral assets’.

His article follows...

As anyone who took history at school learnt, the assassination of Archbiship Franz Ferdinand of Sarajevo on 28 June 1914 led directly to the First World War. The Murder of AWB leader is at a particularly sensitive moment in South Africa’s history, on the eve of the Soccer World Cup and must be seen in a very serious light.
The following elements of importance are:

  • Julius Malema has been speaking of indiginization, i.e. the expulsion of white farmers from their farms, as done in Zimbabwe
  • Malema’s current visit to Zimbabwe where he is being supported by ZANU-PF for anti-white and anti-Afrikaner action in South Africa
  • A secret airport which according to reports in British newspapers — probably based on observations by British intelligence — is being built in the diamond area of Marange, whose sole purpose would be to receive weapons from China. Unlike some time ago when a ship loaded with Chinese weapons was refused entry to South African ports, Mugabe’s army now possesses a specialized airport purely for this purpose.
  • Statements that ’struggle songs’ which refer to the genocide of farmers and which incite violence against whites, should be considered as the ANC’s ‘cultural heritage’
  • The murder of Eugene Terre’Blanche. 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.
During the deweaponising process of the past few years, the ANC ensured that white weapon owners were intimidated to hand in their weapons. Large numbers of people are now defenceless against the next phase of the "national democratic revolution".

The murders of three AWB men which occurred in Bophutswana in 1994 by a local black policeman was a key moment in the psychological war that was then fed to the Afrikaner, to demonstrate the Afrikaners alleged powerlessness before the emerging black power. The unwillingness of the former generals and South African army to suppress the first phase of the revolution by force was the reason that a few lost AWB’s were the only one’s to provide any resistance to the “liberation movement” total takover of the country and its resources.

But let us not get stuck on the endless strategic mistakes of the past and rather focus on what we should do.

The Afrikaner must realize that he is facing the biggest challenge since 1899 when the British attacked resulting in the Anglo-Boer War. In a real sence it is about the Third War, which for all practical purposes has already begun, because the ‘crime attacks’ we are seeing is recognized everywhere else in Africa as a form of warfare
.
The African does not like a strong opponent and prefers to attack weak and soft targets — women, children, the aged who sleep and can be caught off guard. That Eugene Terre’Blanche was found on his bed, leads many to conclude that he was sleeping during the attack.

We arrive on the even of a very uncertain period during which the current violence will continue and at any time may drastically escalate to full-scale civil war, race war, genocide or any of the versions of the collection of conflicts which have raged in Africa south of the Sahara since 1950. We are, except for handguns and hunting rifles, largely unarmed. The ANC controls the automatic weapons, and the panser school in Bloemfontein from which the whole country can be attacked.

Together with its Zimbawean ally who can provide him with additional weapons and ammunition, including logistics, the table is layed for the ANC to finally exterminate the Afrikaner farmer from his land, and to wage a reign of terror in the cities, because once the countries farms are occupied, why stop there, if you can also occupy the city homes?

Abroad, we certainly cannot expect any help, although it looks as if Britain is busy — much too late — realizing the grotesqueness of their mistake in supporting the radical revolutions in Zimbabwe and South Africa. Not only did Britain open the door to China, to take over in Africa, but he created enemies in the form of both ZANU-PF and the ANC. Although Britain, as well as the United States under Obama, will sit with folded hands while we are being exterminated, they are likely to see for the first time in years in the AFrikaner a possible counter force in Southern Africa, which can resist the revolutionary anarchy of Zimbabwe.

The ordinary Afrikaner will have to be alerted to the existential crisis we are in, of the thunderclouds massing together from the airport in Marange to our homes, farms.
When the last foreign tourist from the SoccerWorld Cup climbs on the plane, uhuru will most likely start. We don’t have much time.

What must be especially avoided, is uncoordinated actions by emotional overcharged individuals. We do not want to see another incident like that which occurred to the AWB in Bophutatswana. We will have to legally organize ourselves into a civilian defense force, with legal weapons and ammunition that we currently have.

During the second world war a small country of Finland stood standing against the mighty Russian Red Army, merely through the effective use of sharpshooters and hunters. Umkhonto we Sizwe and ZANU-PF may currently be better armed than we are, thanks to their takeover of the Defence Force and the incoming Chinese weapons, but we can fight a defensive war on our own land, our own farms and our own suburban streets.

I have full confidence in the Afrikaner’s organizational abilities and eventually all wars are fought and won, on grounds of their organization abilities.

As the old military maxim states: The uninitiated talk strategy while the experienced discuss logistics.

The moment we withdraw from the state and especially the municipalities, the state will spontaneously collapse.

Only a strong state can have a strong army. It does not matter how many Chinese weapons come in via Zimbabwe; once the war begins in all earnest, we shall gain the upper hand.

We have nothing to fear more than the current violence, to which we are already exposed. Let the ANC and its ZANU-PF ally precipitate their war. We are not yet ready for them, but I’m sure within a few weeks or months we could organize ourselves to such an extent that any Western occupying army would find us easy pickings; what to say the emotionally charged, but highly unorganized hordes of the liberation movements.

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Malema loses it

Ranting Malema rails at BBC reporter, the media and the world

www.timeslive.co.za

Malema outdid himself when he lost his cool with reporters, praised Zimbabwe's controversial reserve bank governor and suggested that he might have to go into "exile" so that he could freely sing his "shoot the boer" song.

CLICK HERE TO WATCH THE VIDEO




Malema had invited journalists to the ruling party's Luthuli House headquarters, in Johannesburg, to brief them about his recent visit to Zimbabwe, where he studied that country's nationalisation and land redistribution programmes.

But when a BBC journalist, Jonah Fisher, interrupted Malema during his briefing, the youth league president lost his temper and called the reporter a "bastard" and a "bloody agent" with 'that white tendency'.

What irked Malema was Fisher's comment that Malema should not criticise Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe's opponents for operating from "air-conditioned offices" in Sandton because the youth league leader himself lives in the area.

"Let me tell you before you are tjatjarag [excited]," a fuming Malema said while wagging his finger at the BBC reporter.

"This is a building of a revolutionary party and you know nothing about the revolution. So here you behave or else you jump."

Amazed by Malema's response, Fisher laughed.

"Don't laugh," warned Malema. "Chief, can you get security to remove this thingy?

"If you are not going to behave, we are going to get security to take you out.

"This is not a newsroom, this. This is a revolutionary house and you don't come here with that white tendency, not here. You can do it somewhere else, not here.

"If you have got a tendency of undermining blacks, even where you work, you are in the wrong place. Here you are in the wrong place."

An angry Fisher retorted: "But that's rubbish."

Malema responded: "You can go out. Rubbish is what you have covered in that trouser - that is the rubbish. You are a small boy, you can't do anything. Go out. Bastard! Go out! You bloody agent!"

As Fisher walked out, Malema turned his fury on the rest of the reporters in the room.

"It's not a beer hall here. It's not a drunk beer hall, cheap beer hall, this. And you ask anybody, including political parties, which tried to undermine this house, what happened to them.

"You can undermine all of us, but not the house. Never undermine the house. When you are here, you are in a different terrain. You are in our space and you are going to behave in a manner that is befitting of being in the ANC office.

"You don't howl here, especially when we speak, and you behave like you are in an American press conference? This is not America, it's Africa," he shouted.

He then accused South African journalists of writing "insulting" stories about him and the youth league.

"We don't have a problem with that and we have accepted that you are abusing that space [and] you are abusing us in that space.

"[But] you don't come and abuse us in our own space, in our own house. This is my house and you will behave according to the rules of my house. We are not forcing anybody to be here. If you feel you are offended by the removal of this gentleman, you are most welcome to walk; you are free to go.

"We don't force anybody to come here. We would be worried if the SABC doesn't come, but the rest of you, to be honest, we really don't care. SABC is our own, but the rest, it's okay whether you come or don't come. We don't have a problem."

But Malema was not done. He then dared those reporters who sympathised with Fisher to walk out of the press conference.

"Let's not push each other to a point where we will have to engage each other differently because we are not going to be undermined by young boys, and then we say 'No, we need to restrain ourselves'."

The reporters stayed to hear Malema rave about his trip to Zimbabwe and his visit to a farm owned by that country's reserve bank governor, Gideon Gono, the man many accuse of having played a leading role in bringing the country's economy to its knees.

Gono is currently at the centre of a dispute between Mugabe and Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's MDC.

Tsvangirai wants Gono removed from the post, as agreed by both parties when they formed the unity government in 2008.

President Jacob Zuma, who is mediating in the talks between Mugabe and Tsvangirai, recently met Gono in an attempt to persuade him to step down.

But according to Malema yesterday, Gono is Zimbabwe's model citizen.

"The agricultural genius shown by Gono is an inspiration, not only to the youth of Zimbabwe but to the entire southern African youth," Malema said.

The youth league president begrudgingly accepted the ANC's temporary ban on the singing of struggle songs with the words "shoot the boer" but insisted that nothing stopped him from belting them out when abroad.

"If the song is banned here, we respect that. But we will continue to sing it in full outside South Africa. This song is now in exile. It will be powerful outside this country.
"It is a sad day for the ANC when our songs, which were banned during apartheid days, are now banned when we are in democracy," he said.

On the death of AWB leader Eugene Terre Blanche, Malema said: "When his horse decided to kick him, I was not there, I was not singing the song. Because if I was singing the song, you will say his horse kicked him because of the song.

"This man has been a distaste to the people he lived with, including animals. The horse itself would not have tolerated him, so why do you want to attribute his death to me or to the youth league? It's not our responsibility. He should have known better. This is a lesson to all people in South Africa that let's all treat each other with respect and follow the labour laws - black or white."

Censorship

Malema's attack on the BBC reporter amounted to censorship, the SA National Editors' Forum (Sanef) said on Thursday.

'Malema Share's character flaws of Mugabe'

The Democratic Alliance spokesman on rural development, Mpowele Swathe, said each time Malema "open[s] his mouth, he does damage to our prospects of attracting foreign investment, developing our economy and addressing inequality and poverty."

He was referring to comments Malema made at the briefing hailing Zimbabwe's land reform program.

"His praise for Zanu-PF land invasions, his assault on the Movement for Democratic Change, his assault on our own Constitution and the fact that he threw a journalist out of his press conference for asking perfectly legitimate questions, demonstrates with painstaking clarity that he shares the same deeply flawed and manifestly dangerous characteristics as Robert Mugabe."

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Blacks sing about killing Whites

The songs of the racist ANC, SACP, and MK.

Songs like: "Kill the Boers, kill the racists", "We the members of MK have pledged ourselves to kill them, the Boere", "With this axe, chop them down", "we are going to shoot them, we'll go in with our guns", "we hate you to death".

“Kill The Boer” Song

In this clip blacks sing about killing the Boers or white Afrikaner people of South Africa. No wonder it is open season on white people in South Africa.

Jacob Zuma president of the African National Congress(ANC) leading South Africa with "Bring me my machine gun"

For those who don’t get the “Bring me my machine gun” reference, Zuma’s favourite song is Umshini Wami. The lyrics are quite straightforward but not very appropriate for one of the most violent societies on the planet.


ANC Planning Zim-Style Land Grab

South Africa’s ruling ANC Party plans to enforce a massive Zimbabwe-styled land grab after the Fifa 2010 World Cup Games, with Zimbabwe’s Zanu PF and War Veterans providing crucial support for the effort.

The
Zimbabwe Mail report comes after this weekend’s savage murder of AWB leader Eugene Terreblanche, and two weeks of heightened tensions surrounding ANCYL leader Julius Malema’s repeated singing of the old ANC battle song, “Kill the Boer.”

ANCYL leader Julius Malema in Zimbabwe this past weekend

It is Malema who is setting up meetings between key ANC and
Zimbabwe officials to organize logistical and mobilization plans for sporadic land invasions across South Africa. He also discussed and shared ideas on “youth empowerment and revolutionary tactics” with Zim officials.

Writes
Zimbabwe Mail:

A member of the Zanu PF security department told our reporter that the basis of Malema’s visit to Harare is a follow up to a secret discussion between President Mugabe and his South African counterpart Jacob Zuma, three weeks ago.

The source said when South African President Jacob Zuma visited Zimbabwe during the coalition talks between Zanu PF and the MDC, he discussed at length, matters ranging from the British media’s personal attacks on his private life during the recent visit to the United Kingdom and the need to expedite South African land reform.

It is at this stage that Mugabe converted Zuma into his camp, and the two leaders agreed to join hands in actively assisting each other in the land reform and indigenisation process.


The Standard reports - Malema spoke publicly about the ANC expropriating South African mines, in addition to leading crowds in singing, “Kill the Boer.”

“We hear you are going straight for the mines, that is what we are going to do in South Africa,” Malema told a rally in the Zimbabwean capital Harare.

“They have exploited our minerals for a very long time. We want the mines, now it’s our turn.”

A high-level delegation in the South African security forces, intelligence and media with close links to the ANC are currently in Zimbabwe. They will spend three months training at the Zimbabwe National Army’s Staff College.

(pic right) Malema leads Zimbabwe Youth at rally

Senior Zimbabwe National army officers who led Zimbabwe’s land invasions will train their South African counterparts and impart knowledge based on their experiences.

Zanu PF Youth League national secretary for administration Leslie Ncube confirmed all of this in press conference with reporters, noting how his party and the ANC share the same goals dating back to their origins as Marxist revolutionaries fighting White rule in Africa. “We share the same revolutionary history and they (visiting delegates) are coming to learn from our agrarian reform and indigenisation,” Ncube said.

“The ANC is about to expand its land reforms, and we will share advice and discuss how resources should be equitably distributed to the youth and also how they can benefit from natural resources such as mining,” Ncube said.

Speaking to South African media, Gugule Nkwinti, the Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform accused white farmers of scuttling the land reform programme by frustrating government’s willing buyer willing seller policy through inflating prices.

He warned South Africa risks sinking into chaos as the patience of new black farmers is running thin as evidenced by sporadic farm invasions.

“If South Africans who own land don’t recognise the reality on the ground? and can no walk the mind with government in terms of what is proposed right now then in fact they are the ones who will be responsible for creating conditions of chaos which can be worse than what has been witnessed in Zimbabwe,” said Nkwinti.

Through its “willing buyer, willing seller” program, the ANC has set a goal of acquiring 80 million hectares of land by 2014. However, the world-wide economic downturn has drained budgets set aside for the program.

An effort to pass an
Expropriation Bill which would have amended the South African constitution to allow a Zimbabwe-styled land grab was crushed, but Nkwinti has not ruled out a similar move in the future.

Nkwinti said just like in Zimbabwe where about 4000 white farmers owned most of the country’s arable land, land in South Africa is concentrated in the hands of a few land owners, most of whom are foreigners.

“We have a major monopoly of land ownership in South Africa and we must break that monopoly,” said Nkwinti.

Nkwinti earlier this month told parliament that the government was adopting a “use it or lose it” policy to encourage increased production capacity but his weekend comments appear to be a shift towards a more radical policy.

Last June, Nkwinti called for a new land reform model to replace the current “willing buyer, willing seller” program.

Source Url: http://www.therightperspective.org