December 22, 2024

Idavox Archives

Archived articles originally found on the One People's Project website.

SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE FOIL WHITE EXTREMIST BOMB PLOT

Don’t look for Fox News to talk about this at length! While conservatives keep themselves busy trying to make all Arabs and Muslims guilty of terrorism, it seems that those who are not are making sure that all terrorists are getting a smackdown. That’s what five boneheads in South Africa are learning the hard way as police there snatch them up charging them with planning to bomb black townships. Now we do not know if this has anything to do with the calls for war by the Afrikaner Resistance Movement (a/k/a Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging or AWB) after their founder and leader Eugene Terre’Blanche was hacked to death allegedly by two men who he refused to pay for the farm work they did, but with that as a backdrop, it is pretty damned curious. As the World Cup approaches, it is going to get more and more curious how things go down, but if South Africa are this vigilant now, some Nazis down there might just want to sit back and enjoy the damn game.

Guardian

Police in South Africa say they have foiled a plot by white extremists to bomb black townships ahead of the World Cup.

Five suspects linked to rightwing groups were arrested in police raids that uncovered major caches of explosives, illegal guns and ammunition.

Fears of racial violence flared up last month after the murder of the white supremacist Eugene Terre’Blanche. Some members of his group, the Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (Afrikaner Resistance Movement, or AWB), swore revenge, warning warned foreign tourists and footballers to think twice about their safety at next month’s tournament.

Nathi Mthethwa, the police minister, said officers had “swept” a number of areas soon after the 11 April expiry of a three-month firearms amnesty.

He said arrests made in the administrative capital, Pretoria, concerned people who were “manufacturing arsenals of destruction”. He added: “They were going to test some of their explosives in any black township.”

Zweli Mnisi, a spokesman for Mthethwa, said the five arrests had been made in Pretoria and the western town of Worcester and had a “strong linkage to rightwing operations”.

He added: “Police, through our intelligence, swooped on large cache of firearms, including explosives, illegal guns, ammunition. At this stage we won’t divulge much as it may compromise investigations. We commend our members for the sterling job.”

In 2002, the then president, Thabo Mbeki, blamed extremists for 10 bomb blasts that killed a woman and wounded two others. Nine of the bombs exploded in Soweto, a black township near Johannesburg. But, Mthethwa added, threats of a race war had been blown out of proportion, particularly by British tabloid newspapers. “There is no such thing as a race war,” he said. “But we’re not taking anything for granted.

“Nobody will disrupt the World Cup … They won’t do that because we are monitoring everything in the country.”

South Africa has around 44,000 police officers dedicated to the month-long event, which is expected to draw hundreds of thousands of fans from around the world.

Mthethwa insisted: “Our readiness ranges from personnel to state-of the-art equipment, information communication technology and co-operation with the security agencies from the 31 participating countries.”

But the national police commissioner admitted today that a possible World Cup visit by the US president, Barack Obama, is causing a major security headache.

“One challenge is the American president, who is coming, not coming; coming, not coming: it is 50-50,” General Bheki Cele told parliament’s portfolio committee on police.

“Our famous prayer is that the Americans don’t make the second round,” Cele said, to laughter from MPs and police officials. “We are told that if it goes to the second or third stage, the US president may come. At the moment we have 43 heads of state provisionally confirmed. That 43 will be equal to this one operation.”

Anneli Botha, an expert on terrorism at South Africa’s Institute for Security Studies, said she did not think white extremists would target the World Cup because they were unlikely to attack foreigners. But Botha said police had to prepare for any possibility.

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