The Citizen (Gauteng)

Farmer murders are ‘disproport­ionately high’

- Amanda Watson

An ongoing narrative this year is that farms and farmers are under sustained attack and the noise surroundin­g the issue has created the impression that they are being slaughtere­d by the dozen.

Fact-checking organisati­on Africa Check noted that there was no “farm murder” or “farm attack” crime category in South Africa.

“Rather, the police keep track of crimes which meet a definition included in the 2011 Rural Safety Strategy,” Africa Check noted.

“In 2017-18, the police recorded 62 murders during 58 attacks. Of those murdered, 52 were the owners or occupiers of the farm/smallholdi­ng, nine were farm workers and one was a farm manager.

“Forty-two murders took place on farms, 15 on smallholdi­ngs and one at a cattle post.”

The crime statistics also revealed that an average of 57 people were killed every day in the country for the 2017-08 period.

According to AfriForum’s head of safety Ian Cameron it was an important comparison to make.

“If, for example, all the engineers in SA responsibl­e for providing petrol for the country were attacked at a disproport­ionate rate, obviously we’re going to have a problem with fuel production.

“We’re saying farmers are a very specific group in the country.

“Look at the number of murders in a community of between 22 000 and 30 000, then it creates some context.”

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