Kuwait Times

Suspects in South Africa white farmer murder in court

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SENEKAL, South Africa: Emotions ran high on Friday as two black suspects appeared in a South African court over the murder of a white farmer which has sparked racial tensions. A barbed wire fence ringed the court house in the central town of Senekal and police and a water cannon were deployed as opposing groups of white farmers and black activists gathered near the site.

Around 2,000 supporters of the radical leftist Economic Freedom Fighters gathered for eight hours

under scorching heat for a protest. Crime in this sleepy but rich farming area, 300 km south of Johannesbu­rg, is centered mainly around stock theft, which farmers say is rampant. Murders are relatively rare. But on Oct 2, the body of 22-year-old farm manager Brendin Horner was found. He had been strangled and tied to a fence at a farm in Paul Roux near Senekal. A silver cross with his name engraved on it has been erected at the spot where the body was discovered.

Unrest

The killing of white farmers is a highly emotive issue in South Africa. Some conservati­ve groups claim that farmers are victims of a genocide and the government is not doing enough to protect them. “This young man is paying with his life, he is going to help us solve the (crime) problem,” Horner’s employer Gilly Scheeper, 58, said in reference to the attention brought to the case.

Scheeper has hired private investigat­ors to run a parallel probe into the death “because police here are corrupt”. The motive for the murder has not been establishe­d, but a police officer who is investigat­ing the case said the farmer’s wallet went missing after the attack. A dozen policemen guarded the court house on Friday, dressed in bulletproo­f jackets and armed with assault rifles. Elsewhere around the court’s precincts, police patrolled in cars and from a helicopter.

The two suspects - Sekwetja Mahlamba, 32 and Sekolo Mlatlalets­a, 44 - wore grey jerseys as they appeared for their bail hearing. One of them has previously been arrested 16 times and convicted four times for stock theft and housebreak­ing. “I don’t think that they should get bail because of the seriousnes­s of the offence,” investigat­ing police officer Gerhard Peter Myburgh told the court.

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