Yahoo – AFP, Maryke VERMAAK, October 27, 2017
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| Willem Oosthuizen, left, and Theo Jackson filmed themselves forcing a black man into a coffin and threatening to burn him alive (AFP Photo/WIKUS DE WET) |
Middelburg
(South Africa) (AFP) - A South African judge on Friday handed down jail terms
of 19 and 16 years to two white farmers who filmed themselves forcing a black
man into a coffin and threatening to burn him alive.
Willem
Oosthuizen and Theo Martins Jackson, who both shifted nervously in the dock,
laid their heads on the bench after their sentencing while female family
members wept in the public gallery.
"The
conduct of the accused was most dehumanising and disgusting," said judge
Segopotje Mphahlele, handing down sentence in the High Court sitting in
Middelburg, 165 kilometres (100 miles) east of Johannesburg.
They had
pleaded not guilty over the incident last year in the eastern province of
Mpumalanga, saying they only intended to scare Victor Mlotshwa whom they
accused of stealing copper cables from their farm.
They were
convicted on August 25 of attempted murder as well as kidnap, intimidation and
assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm.
Oosthuizen,
29, was sentenced to a 16-year term with five years suspended, while Jackson,
30, was jailed for 19 years, with five also suspended.
"The
most appalling act of the accused was to put the complainant in a coffin
against his will," said Mphahlele.
"Whilst
in the coffin they threatened to set it alight. They asked him how he wanted to
die -- quickly or slowly."
The judge
said it was not the first time that the men had forced someone into a coffin
against their will, saying their behaviour "raised and fuelled racial
tension" in South Africa.
'Lack of
remorse'
The judge
ruled that the convicted men could not appeal the sentence following a bid by
their legal team.
A lawyer
for the men, Wayne Gibbs, called the jail terms "shockingly inappropriate,"
arguing that they were a result of intense media attention and public pressure.
Two clips
of footage taken on their mobile phones showed the assailants shoving Mlotshwa
down into the wooden coffin and pressing the lid closed with their boots as he begged
for mercy.
![]() |
Victor
Mlotshwa, pictured on Monday, begged for mercy as the two farmers
thrust him
into a coffin and threatened to set it on fire (AFP Photo/WIKUS DE WET)
|
When the
first phone footage emerged several months ago, it triggered national outrage
and led to the arrest of the two men.
"Please
don't kill me," Mlotshwa begged the men while in the coffin, the footage
showed.
"Why
shouldn't we, when you are killing our farm?" one of the convicted men
replied.
Throughout
the case, the men denied that their actions had caused the victim to fear for
his life.
"The
evidence of the accused and the conduct of the accused during their trial
clearly displays a lack of remorse," said Mphahlele.
Mlotshwa
was in court to hear the sentences against the two men, who had alleged that he
had threatened to kill their families and burn farm crops before being forced
into the coffin.
He said he
was simply walking to the town of Middelburg to buy provisions for his mother
and had decided to use a short cut when the two men spotted him.
On the
phone footage, which was shown in court during the trial, one of the men said
"Come, come. We want to throw the petrol on".
They are
also seen threatening to put a snake in the coffin.
Mlotshwa,
who sat in court directly behind the families of the convicted men, smiled
following the sentencing.
Members of
rival political parties -- including ruling African National Congress --
celebrated inside the courtroom and outside, where some activists held up a
cardboard coffin to protest against the crime.
Others
brandished placards emblazoned with slogans calling for lengthy sentences for
the accused and for better treatment of labourers.
South
Africa is beset by deep-rooted racial inequality 23 years after the end of
white-minority rule and racist incidents regularly erupt on social media.


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