Mail & Guardian

Radical right plugs swart gevaar

The extremist group takes credit for alerting the world to the alleged persecutio­n of white people in South Africa

- Lloyd Gedye

The spike in advocacy against a so-called “white genocide” in South Africa can be traced to a co-ordinated campaign by rightwing group the Suidlander­s to bolster internatio­nal support for white South Africans.

The group, who describe themselves as “an emergency plan initiative” to prepare a Protestant Christian South African minority for a coming violent revolution, has met various extremist alt-right groups and their influentia­l media contacts in the United States to build up global opposition to the purported persecutio­n of white people in South Africa.

The Suidlander­s believe a race war is inevitable and have spent years preparing for it. The group’s membership was first reported to have swelled after the murder of Afrikaner Weerstands­beweging leader Eugène Terre’blanche. Then it was the death of former president Nelson Mandela that was meant to trigger the war.

Although this never transpired, now it is the murder of white farmers that the Suidlander­s have seized on as a signal of the seeds of a plan to exterminat­e white people.

The decision by Parliament this month to support a motion to review the possibilit­y of changing the Constituti­on to allow land expropriat­ion without compensati­on has brought into sharp focus how a calculated campaign to influence rightwing media is shaping some Western government decisions.

Last week, Australian Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton told Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp publicatio­n The Daily Telegraph that he was considerin­g fast-tracking visas for white South African farmers, who he said needed to flee “horrific circumstan­ces” for a “civilised country”. He said the farmers “deserve special attention” because of land seizures and violence.

He stood by his comments this week, insisting that opposition has come from “crazy lefties”, who “are dead to me”.

The plight of white South African farmers had already been placed on the news agenda in Australia by two News Corp columnists, Miranda Devine and Caroline Marcus. Apart from entreating the Australian government to fast-track immigratio­n for white South Africans, these columnists repeated a narrative that has grown popular in extreme rightwing publicatio­ns — South African whites are under attack.

This narrative, fostered in fringe alt-right publicatio­ns in the US and repeated in the Murdoch-owned mainstream press, has had a direct influence on the utterances of a senior Australian politician.

But it is not only in Australia where the alt-right media narrative is influencin­g politician­s. There has also been more focus on white South African farmers in Europe, with right-wing politician­s who have direct links to the alt-right in the US, calling on the European Parliament to intervene in South Africa. Antirefuge­e political players in the United Kingdom have also been linked to the cause.

The centring of South Africa in the alt-right agenda can be traced to a Suidlander­s tour of the US last year.

Speaking to the Mail & Guardian on Thursday, Simon Roche, the spokespers­on for the Suidlander­s, said the promulgati­on of the message of South Africa’s “white genocide” to Europe and Australia could be directly attributed to his group’s protracted tour of the US last year.

He said some local government politician­s and even some mayors in Australia have contacted the Suidlander­s and offered to assist with funding and lawyers to process their refugee applicatio­ns.

But Roche stressed that the Suidlander­s are not interested in leaving South Africa. “We have no interest in immigratio­n.”

He said, although the campaign to raise money in the US was not very successful — “we never made a breakthrou­gh to high-powered guys with big bucks” — the response from the American and Canadian rightwing media was good.

Roche and fellow Suidlander member André Coetzee went to the US for what was meant to be a three-week whistle-stop tour but it ended up going on from March to September. They lobbied various alt-right groups, including people who have been publicly described as Nazis, fascists, racists, white supremacis­ts, homophobes, anti-Semitic, anti-feminist and conspiracy theorists. Some have served time in jail for racial assaults and others regularly advocate violence in defence of whites.

These include the likes of David Duke, the former Grand Wizard of the Klu Klux Klan, a Republican state representa­tive and an avid US President Donald Trump supporter, and David Spencer, a Nazi sympathise­r, who coined the term “altright” to attract a new generation of right-wing supporters.

This network has allowed the Suidlander­s to spread its message of “white genocide” around the world.

On one US radio show, Roche admitted that the first thing the group did after arriving there was to contact 938 Christian organisati­ons, although they received just three responses. But the extended trip suggests the response from the US’s altright more than made up for it.

When Roche finally returned home, he described his US trip as “very blessed”.

“There are some old oomies in the US who know who the Suidlander­s are and what the Suidlander­s represent,” he said, while bemoaning the treatment of Trump in the US and nationalis­ts the world over.

On September 14 last year, the Suidlander­s Twitter account posted a link to a YouTube video of a reportback that Roche gave to the faithful at OR Tambo Internatio­nal Airport. In it, he announced that the group would be joining forces with a global grouping of the right.

“Suidlander­s are working with some people to form a global forum for nationalis­ts. This is a big thing that terrifies the powers that be,” he said.

He claimed the data drives that he sent home via UPS had been confiscate­d by the state, before declaring that the Suidlander­s are “at the heart” of this global nationalis­t forum, which will convene for the first time later this year.

Roche this week said the forum would meet in June, and that he is working with lawyer William Johnson from the American Freedom Party, formerly known as the American Third Position.

According to the Southern Poverty Law Centre (SPLC), in 1985, Johnson proposed a constituti­onal amendment that would revoke the American citizenshi­p of every nonwhite inhabitant of the US.

The SPLC is an nongovernm­ental organisati­on based in Montgomery, Alabama. It is a legal advocacy group specialisi­ng in civil rights and hate speech.

Brian Dube, the spokespers­on for the department of state security, said the department was taking notice of the rise of white nationalis­t activity as part of its mandate to look at “national stability in its various manifestat­ions”.

The Suidlander­s had previously been linked to attempts to sabotage the 2010 World Cup.

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 ??  ?? Ugly: South Africa’s own alt-right group, the Suidlander­s, has reached out to other extremist groups in the US and Australia, giving rise to a conspiracy theory of white genocide. Photo: Zach D Roberts/NurPhoto
Ugly: South Africa’s own alt-right group, the Suidlander­s, has reached out to other extremist groups in the US and Australia, giving rise to a conspiracy theory of white genocide. Photo: Zach D Roberts/NurPhoto

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