South Africa |
Every year, the list of farmers on the Wall of Remembrance at Nampo Park in Bothaville, Free State, grows longer.
This week, families
visited the monument during the Nampo Harvest Day festival and added
the names of loved ones killed in farm murders.
"The monument is a
memorial to farmers who gave their lives, not in defending the country,
but in trying to feed South Africa," Agri SA's Johannes Moller said.
A wall of
remembrance was erected about 10 years ago, to honour all commercial
farmers and their relatives who had been murdered since May 1961. The
names are engraved on nine stone structures representing the country's
nine provinces.
Three pillars
represent a husband, wife, and child. At the centre of the monument is a
statue of a young man with his arm raised and holding a Bible, to
signify farmers' dependence on the mercy of God.
Moller said the
monument represents the dark side of agriculture. He said Agri SA
recently set up a trauma service due to increasing demand for
counselling from farm workers and other people affected by farm murders.
Farm murders had been on the decrease, but this year the scourge had started increasing again.
"To some extent it
has a connection with poverty and unemployment and because farms can be
considered soft targets. That is probably why we are seeing an
increase."He said the country's 36 000 commercial farmers produced most of its food.
"Every farmer is
responsible for feeding more than 1 500 people in the cities and towns,
and that is why it is so tragic. Farm murders affect not only
agriculture as an industry, but it will eventually have an effect on
food security in South Africa."He said the organisation was proactively trying to enable farmers to protect themselves.
According to an
Africa Check report on farm murders citing police figures, 49 people
were murdered in farm attacks in 2015 and 2016.
They struggled to
understand the brutality of some of the murders. Moller said he had seen
farm attacks during which the victims had been skinned alive.
"I have seen little
children who have been kicked and beaten in such a brutal fashion that
their heads swell bigger than a soccer ball."I have seen cases where people were forced to drink boiling water.
"It is not just the
farmers that are murdered, it is farm workers as well. The murders are
not exclusive to white farmers, it's farmers of all races being killed."Moller said farmers had good co-operation from the police.
"When we have
security meetings, it is really the top brass that attend. We also have
the rural security policy that was developed jointly between Agri SA and
the police service, but their constraint is also funding."
In more than 90% of
cases, the attacks did not involve people living or working on the
farms, but rather outsiders and syndicates.
"Criminals want to
keep the police busy because they know that once there has been a farm
attack, they know that the police will focus on the farm attacks so that
they can do other acts of crime in the area, so they distract the
police."
The Free State, North West, and Gauteng were the hardest hit by farm murders, he said. The murders had a negative impact on the attractiveness of agriculture as a career.
"If you have a
choice of where you are going to make a living as a young person, you
probably know that the second-most dangerous job in South Africa is
being a police officer, and the most dangerous one is being a farmer or a
farm worker."The sector needed to come up with new technology to stop such crimes.
"So that
immediately when you think there is a farm attack, we can activate the
rural safety plan, the police, neighbours, and everyone involved," he
said.
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