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Jailed Boeremag co-leader Mike du Toit. Photo: AP

South African white extremists jailed for up to 35 years over Mandela assassination plot

Five leaders of white supremacist 'Boer Army' jailed for 35 years after 10-year trial

Five leaders of a "Boer Army" white supremacist plot in South Africa to assassinate Nelson Mandela and drive blacks out of the country were sentenced to 35 years in prison yesterday after a trial lasting more than 10 years.

A Pretoria high court also handed down sentences ranging from five to 20 years to some of the 21 defendants of the "Boeremag", a rag-tag militia of apartheid loyalists accused of a botched 2002 coup attempt in Africa's biggest economy.

Some of the sentences were suspended. Nine of the accused walked free after being held for 11 years behind bars during the trial, National Prosecuting Authority spokesman Medupi Simasiku said.

In the course of the prolonged case, witnesses testified that the Boeremag planned to assassinate anti-apartheid hero Mandela, who was South Africa's first black president, by planting a bomb along a route he was due to travel.

Their plans however were thwarted when the world- famous statesman, now aged 95 and convalescing at home in Johannesburg, travelled to his engagement by helicopter.

Several of the Boeremag members were charged with causing nine explosions at various sites in Gauteng, South Africa's richest province in October 2002, with most blasts taking place in the sprawling township of Soweto, south of Johannesburg, where one woman was killed.

Racial tensions persist almost 20 years since the first democratic elections ended apartheid rule in South Africa. But groups like the Boeremag and the Afrikaner Resistance Movement of murdered far-right leader Eugene Terre'blanche have little backing from the country's almost five million whites.

The alleged mastermind of the Boeremag, former university lecturer Mike du Toit, was the first to be convicted last year for high treason, and was among those given a 35-year sentence.

According to prosecution testimony, the Boeremag's plot, concocted around barbecues and at fast food outlets, had suggested driving South Africa's black majority of about 40 million out of the country and into Zimbabwe by lining a major national road between the two countries with food parcels.

It had also proposed sending the 1.2 million Indians in the country back to the subcontinent by boat.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Extremists jailed over Mandela murder plot
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