Mahlangu is guilty as charged - judge

Members of the AWB gather outside the court in Ventersdorp to hear the verdict in the murder case of two labourers accused of killing Eugene Terre'Blanche in April 2010.

Members of the AWB gather outside the court in Ventersdorp to hear the verdict in the murder case of two labourers accused of killing Eugene Terre'Blanche in April 2010.

Published May 22, 2012

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Ventersdorp - A South African court on Tuesday found farmhand Chris Mahlangu guilty of murdering Eugene Terre'Blanche, a white supremacist prominent during the dying years of apartheid, in a wage dispute.

A second man, who was a minor at the time of the April 2010 murder, was found guilty of housebreaking in Ventersdorp, a farming community 125km west of Johannesburg where Terre'Blanche owned a farm.

The case has served as a reminder of the bitter historical divisions in a country now dubbed the “Rainbow Nation” and ruled by the African National Congress, the party that helped end apartheid in 1994.

Many see Terre'Blanche as a relic from a bygone era, with his murder doing little to stir fresh racial tension.

“After all the evidence given, I conclude that accused number one is guilty as charged,” said Judge John Horn.

Prosecutors said Mahlangu and his co-accused broke into Terre'Blanche's home, where they found the 71-year-old asleep and bludgeoned him to death with an axe.

Terre'Blanche, a burly man known for his thick white beard and fiery rhetoric, led the hardline AWB.

Its members adopted military uniforms and called for an all-white homeland in the post-apartheid South Africa.

A small group of his armed supporters attempted a coup in the black-run “homeland” of Bophuthatswana shortly before the first all-race elections in April 1994 but retreated after meeting resistance from security forces.

Graphic images of three AWB men being shot dead at point blank range in the middle of a road by a Bophuthatswana policeman marked the end of any AWB pretensions to be a serious military force. - Reuters

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