Ever since their arrest in 2002, the Boeremag "treason" trialists have languished in jail after repeatedly being denied bail. (Two members, pictured above, escaped for a few months but were recaptured last year.) What is truly mind-blowing about this 1930's Stalinist style show trial is how the Azanian regime is milking it for all its worth. The accused have been imprisoned for six years, yet the end of the trial is nowhere in sight. The state already closed its case last year, yet the ANC-controlled judiciary seems determined to deny justice to the accused by delaying the trial for as long as possible, ostensibly for propaganda purposes.
The Boeremag rightwingers bombed a number of SAPS facilities, notably the SAPS Air Wing on the East Rand. They also bombed a railway line near Soweto, where a piece of track flew through the air and pierced a corrugated iron shack, killing the she-boon inside. The state wasted no time in filing murder charges, while anyone with an IQ higher than their shoe-size will realise that the more appropriate charge should be manslaughter. I'm no lawyer, but if this is not malicious prosecution then I don't know what is.
Contrast this with the terrorist bombing campaign unleashed by the Muslim PAGAD gang in the Cape in the late 1990's, where several innocent civilians were killed in restaurant bombings, most notably the Planet Hollywood massacre. PAGAD set off in excess of 20 pipe bombs all over the city, which coincidentally was the only major South African city controlled by the White-dominated DA party. After much horse trading between the Marxist ANC and the now defunct National Party, the ANC took over control of Cape Town, after which the bombings remarkably (some insist coincidentally, while others are more forthright) ceased.
Simian warders employ every imaginable trick in the book to make life hell for the long-suffering Boeremag trialists, the latest being the use of bright lights and loud, blaring radios tuned to monkey chatter radio stations to ensure that they get no sleep. That cane-cutting, curry munching piece of charra excrement who heads up the Human Rights Commission is remarkably (but alas, predictably) silent when it comes to gross human rights violations of these Boer prisoners, as is Amnesty International and the entire slew of leftist guilt trippers who are quick to anguish over supposed rights violations when it comes to the most execrable, vile flatnose baby rapists and murderous Simian hijackers.
Some observers have calculated, based on the time already expended on this trial, that it may take up to 25 years for it to reach completion. So much for the "justice delayed is justice denied" dictum...
@@@@@@@
From News24:
Boeremag 6 lose their privacy
Pretoria - Six of the Boeremag treason trialists in C-Max Prison will have to put up with warders watching them around the clock, Pretoria High Court ruled on Thursday. Judge Charl Rabie turned down a bid by six of the 21 accused for an order to allow them to paste paper over windows in their cells.
The accused claimed they could not get a proper night's rest because of the bright lights shining into their cells at night. They contended that their privacy was violated when they dressed and went to the toilet. Warder also "harassed" them by shining torch lights into their eyes at night, the six complained.
Rabie dismissed their claims after personally inspecting their cells one night, and even lying down on one of the accused's beds. "The applicants want complete privacy when they dress and use the toilet in their cells," the judge said.
'At least, they have single cells'
"The applicants are, however, in prison. They cannot expect complete privacy. Prisons are not built to afford that luxury to every individual prisoner. "The applicants are fortunate that they are detained in single cells and that they do not have to use the toilet or dress in the presence of many other prisoners."
Rabie said if he allowed them to cover the windows of their cells, it would completely negate Correctional Services' right to observe prisoners at all times. This would prevent the department from complying with its statutory and constitutional obligations.
Prison authorities opposed the application, saying the Boeremag accused were regarded as high-risk, trial-awaiting prisoners. Special security arrangements had to be made in their case, requiring strict compliance with the security rules and procedures. The treason trial started in 2003 and the end is not yet in sight, although the State has closed its case.
Hello Witleeu,
ReplyDeleteWould you like to join my blog? : )