Free State agricultural towns under siege by 3,000-strong group of black militant gangs with petrol-bombs
Bloemhof: April 14 2014 – Deon Beukes writes: “Thousands of young terrorists who learn and regroup after each attack: and now they are burning all the towns around Bloemhof: report on Boere Krisis Aksie: April 12 2014: "My name is Deon Beukes and I belong to the community of Bloemhof. On Monday- and Tuesday we had to go and defend ourselves as a community to prevent our town from being attacked and plundered. Fortunately our neighbourhood watch was reinforced some eight months earlier with radios, nightvision and thermal imaging goggles. The SAPS were unable to defend themselves on Monday and Tuesday against the masses because the police were too few. At one stage we even had to lend them our shotgun-cartridges...
By Wednesday we were reinforced from as far away as Kathu with about 300 bakkies and men. Our community watch is not politically-driven. We merely acted to protect property irregardless of the political affiliations of the persons who need protecting. These black people had by that time already torched everything in the black neighbourhood and all the intelligence and information we received was that they were marching to attack our town. And this turned out to be correct because they tried three, four times to get into town with a force of about 3,000 people. They behaved in a militant manner - striking us at one place, withdrawing and then striking at us again at another site.
We sat and watched them from the GOS and were able to redeploy our men wherever they were needed. The attackers' main goal was to break into shops and loot them and to torch other buildings in town. We stood fast and stopped this. On Wednesday-night an SAPS-general arrived and ordered us to stand back. We agreed to do this in return for her bringing in reinforcements. After that we understand pretty much all of North West province's riot police were deplayed in our area. Our information is that the masses plan to 'burn the towns around us so that the police will be split up, because the attackers 'want to take Bloemhof'. So the burning around our town has started: Wollies, Makwassie, Hoopstad, Schwezer-Reineke, Hertzogville and Christiana. I tried to lodge a charge of terrorism against this large group of aggressors but I cannot find any lawyer with backbone to do so. I believe that if we can get such a charge lodged, we could turn this thing around. Please help us with advice and even with an attorney will to help us. We need your help. You don't see one-tenth of what is going on on the news. These terrorists are constantly learning from each terror attack and demonstration they engage in. They adapt, take it on board, plan and re-deploy after every 'operation'.
We are of the opinion that they soon will start using the advantage of surprise attacks to try and attack a town and plunder it. We should soon see that attack-groups will no longer regroup outside the towns and then start their riots, but that they will rather regroup inside each town they want to attack, quietly, and then spread into townships and raise amok. This tactic of using violent masses of people is being adapted every day. We are monitoring this process and will keep you informed."
https://www.facebook.com/censorbugbear/posts/823683877645453
‘Suspended’ SAPS-chief Bheki Cele incites black militants to 'invade rich suburbs '
April 14 2014 - The Boere Krisis Aksie group has placed a warning about incitements allegedly made by former SAPS chief Bheke Cele in Philippi near Cape Town recently -- in which the now suspended former police boss had incited people in a speech he made in Xhosa, "to invade rich neighbourhoods to 'protest against service delivery'. BKA warns that whites must heed such warning signs even if Bheki now has 'denied' he ever said it.... "Be aware, protect yourselves and make certain you are linked in (security networks),' writes BKA: " When former police chief Bheki Cele - who was in charge of the South African Police Service and was 'suspended for corruptio' -- makes such statements (which he later denied) we must all be aware of such danger signals. Is this the silence before the storm? Is this a test run (*example: Bloemhof, where some 3,000 black youths armed with petrol-bombs tried their very best to invade the CBD...)
-- BACKGROUND: Bheki Cele (born 22 April 1952) was the National Commissioner of the South African Police Service until October 2011, when he was suspended from duty, due to allegations of corruption. He was appointed to this position in July 2009, replacing Jackie Selebi, who was suspended in January 2008 following charges of corruption. Previously he held the post of Member of the Executive Council (MEC) for Transport, Safety and Security in KwaZulu-Natal. He is a member of the African National Congress.
"The board has found General Cele to be unfit for office and has recommended his removal from office in terms of the provisions of section 8(6)(b)(v) of the South African Police Service Act No. 68 of 1995," said Zuma.
Despite this, in November 2013, he was placed on the ANC's list of preferred candidates to go to parliament.
In January 2014, he attempted to delay the South African Public Protector's report on wasteful expenditure at Nkandla - President Jacob Zuma’s private homestead. Bheki Cele is under investigation, as evidence shows R1.7 billion rand spent on building leases were unlawful, improper and constituted maladministration. Though suspended, South African taxpayers spend at least R1.3-million a year on his salary.
It was Bheki Celi who reportedly encouraged the 'sewerage-protestors' in Cape Town to take their service-delivery protests into the city's ' rich suburbs'. He made the speech in Xhosa during a meeting at Phillipi. The remark was dropped aobut a month after the ANC had reinstated two suspended members Loyiso Nkohla and Andile Lili who had been reprimanded for inciting blacks: organising several marches during which loads of sewage were dumped in public places. Cele later denied he's ever made the comment. However he added in his denial that 'if portable toilets are good enough for certain communities, why can't they be good enough 'for all communities...'