Violent
clashes erupted in a remote north western farming community in South Africa on
Monday after two white farmers accused of murdering a 16-year-old black boy
were granted bail.
Residents of Coligny took to the streets after the court
decision, burning down a white family’s home and heightening racial tensions
that erupted after the teen’s death.
Pieter
Doorewaard, 26, and Philip Schutte, 34, are accused of killing Matlhomola
Mosweu on April 20, after they reportedly caught him stealing sunflowers from a
farm in the area. The boy is alleged to have died after being thrown out of a
moving vehicle driven by the pair and suffering a broken neck. A witness has
claimed he was deliberately jettisoned.
The men claim he jumped off the truck
as they were taking him to the police. The death sparked rioting in the town,
with black residents torching and looting white-owned shops. The accused later
handed themselves over to the police. Following Monday’s arson attack on the
white-owned property, a farmer pulled a gun on an AFP photographer at the scene
and attacked him as he took pictures of the inferno.
Another photojournalist,
from a local newspaper, was also attacked and injured in the scuffle.
Magistrate Magaola Foso told a packed court room that he was aware of the
tensions around the case but said he would not respond emotionally. “There is
no link between the said witness evidence and the two persons at this stage,”
he said.
The two accused were released on 5,000 rand bail ($369, 337 euros) and
their case will resume on June 26. Racially charged incidents between white
farm owners and poor black farmhands and residents are common in South Africa.
Last year two white farmers in eastern Mpumalanga province allegedly forced a
black man they accused of trespassing into a coffin. The case sparked outrage
after a video of the alleged incident emerged on social media.
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