Close Menu
Elon Musk Monitor
  • Home
  • Elon Musk
  • AI
  • Cybertruck
    • DOGE & Cryptocurrency
    • Financial & Business
  • Grok
    • Hyperloop & Urban Mobility
    • Innovations & Future Projects
  • Mars Colonization
  • Neuralink
    • Philanthropy & Humanitarian Efforts
    • Public Perception & Cultural Impact
    • SolarCity & Renewable Energy
  • SpaceX
  • Starlink
  • Tesla
    • The Boring Company
  • X

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

What's Hot

TikTok Pushes Deeper Into AI-Generated Video Ads With New Tools

June 16, 2025

Ethereum Holds Key Range Support – Bulls Set Sights on Higher Levels

June 16, 2025

ElevenLabs Expands Eleven V3 Text-to-Speech Model With Support for 41 New Languages

June 16, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Elon Musk Monitor
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Home
  • Elon Musk
  • AI
  • Cybertruck
    • DOGE & Cryptocurrency
    • Financial & Business
  • Grok
    • Hyperloop & Urban Mobility
    • Innovations & Future Projects
  • Mars Colonization
  • Neuralink
    • Philanthropy & Humanitarian Efforts
    • Public Perception & Cultural Impact
    • SolarCity & Renewable Energy
  • SpaceX
  • Starlink
  • Tesla
    • The Boring Company
  • X
Elon Musk Monitor
Home » A memorial to South Africa’s farm killings tells only part of the story
Public Perception & Cultural Impact

A memorial to South Africa’s farm killings tells only part of the story

elonmuskBy elonmuskJune 16, 2025No Comments7 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link


MOKOPANE, South Africa (AP) — The white crosses are staked in the ground on an otherwise barren hillside on the edge of a farm, each one standing as a reminder of a terrible story of a person being killed.

But the crosses, nearly 3,000 of them, do not tell the full story of South Africa’s farm killings.

The Witkruis Monument — which means White Cross Monument in the language spoken by South Africa’s white Afrikaner minority — is a memorial only to white people who were killed on farms over the last three decades. It’s a visceral snapshot seized on by some South Africans to drive a discredited narrative that white farmers in the majority Black country are being targeted in a widespread, race-based system of persecution.

The false narrative has also been spread by conservative commentators in the United States and elsewhere — and amplified by South African-born Elon Musk and U.S. President Donald Trump. Last month, Trump escalated the rhetoric, using the term “genocide” to describe violence against white farmers.

The South African government and experts who have studied farm killings have publicly denounced the misinformation spread by Trump and others. Even the caretaker of Witkruis says the monument — which makes no reference to the hundreds of Black South African farmers and farmworkers who have been killed — does not tell the complete story.

The killings of farmers and farmworkers, regardless of race, are a tiny percentage of the country’s high level of crime, and they typically occur during armed robberies, according to available statistics and two studies carried out over the last 25 years.

Yet because wealthier white people own 72% of South Africa’s privately owned farms, according to census data, they are disproportionately affected by these often brutal crimes. Black people own just 4% of the country’s privately owned farmland, and the rest is owned by people who are mixed race or of Indian heritage.

Misinformation about farm killings has been fueled by right-wing political groups in South Africa and others outside the country, said Gareth Newman, a crime expert at the Institute for Security Studies think tank in Pretoria.

Some of the fringe South African groups, which hold no official power, boycotted the country’s first democratic elections in 1994, when South Africa’s apartheid system of white minority rule officially ended. They have espoused a debunked theory of persecution — in a country where whites make up about 7% of the population — ever since.

“They held on to these beliefs as a way of maintaining social cohesion in their groups, making sure that they can obtain funding and support,” Newman said. “And they were getting support from right-wing groups abroad because it fit their narrative.”

A monument to white victims

The Witkruis Monument was started in 2004 but recognizes victims going back to 1994.

Each year, more crosses are planted to memorialize white farmers and their family members who were killed, organizers say. Recently, they’ve planted around 50 crosses a year.

Kobus de Lange, a local Afrikaner farmer, has taken on the role of caretaker of Witkruis. He gave The Associated Press access to see the memorial, bringing along his wife and children to help tidy up the monument in the country’s north, near the town of Mokopane.

De Lange expressed the fear and frustration of a white farming community that feels authorities have not done enough to protect them. One of his sons wore a T-shirt with the slogan “enough is enough” — written in their Afrikaans language — in reference to the killings.

But de Lange acknowledged that the memorial does not capture the full scope of farm killings.

“It’s across the board, there are Black farmers who are also attacked,” de Lange said. He said in some farm attacks, Black farmworkers are tortured by criminals for information on how to break into the main farmhouse.

The Witkruis Monument would be willing to put up crosses to Black farmers and farmworkers who have been killed, but their relatives haven’t requested it, he said.

The monument includes memorabilia bearing the flags of conservative Afrikaner movements, symbols that are generally frowned upon because Afrikaners were at the heart of the apartheid government.

Black farmworkers are also vulnerable

From April 2023 through March 2024, there were 49 farm killings recorded by AfriForum, a white Afrikaner lobby group. That’s about 0.2% of overall murders tallied by the government over the same period. The group recorded 296 farm robberies in that timeframe, or about 0.7% of all robberies.

AfriForum’s numbers don’t include killings of Black farmers and workers, and the country’s official crime statistics are not broken down by race.

Black people make up more than 80% of South Africa’s population of 62 million, and most victims of violent crime across South Africa are Black. But there is no public relations campaign to raise awareness about the killing of Black farmers.

Across racial lines, most public outcry about crime in South Africa is over the high rates of rape and murder of women and children, which mostly takes place in cities and townships.

To tamp down misinformation, South African police last month took the unprecedented step of providing a racial breakdown of farm killings during the first three months of the year. Between January and March, there were six murders on farms, down from 12 during the same period last year. One of the victims was white, the rest were Black.

“What Donald Trump is saying about whites being targeted does not exist,” said MmaNtuli Buthelezi, who lives on a farm in Normandien, a rural area in KwaZulu-Natal province.

Black farmworkers also feel vulnerable, Buthelezi said. “We don’t even have small firearms. Our weapons are just a spear and a shield, and sticks we get from the woods.”

Nomandien is an area where the farming community planted white crosses to raise awareness about farm killings in 2020. During a White House visit last month by South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, Trump showed a video in which he incorrectly referred to the location as a “burial site” of slain white farmers.

Also, and without evidence, Trump has accused South Africa’s Black-led government of “fueling” what he said was racially motivated violence against whites. In February, Trump issued an executive order punishing the country by banning all U.S. aid and assistance to South Africa.

What is the motive for South Africa’s farm killings?

The Trump administration has cited a chant used by a minority Black-led political party in South Africa that has the lyrics “shoot the farmer” as contributing to what it claims is the racially motivated killings of white farmers. Violent crimes against farmers were a problem for years before the apartheid-era chant was revived.

The South African government investigated farm killings in 2003. It interviewed dozens of police detectives and other experts and concluded that robbery was the most common motive for violent crimes, including murders, that occurred on farms. A study by the South African Human Rights Commission in 2015 reached a similar conclusion.

“It is criminal individuals and groups that are targeting them because they are considered vulnerable,” said Newham, who has researched the subject for more than 15 years. “They have things like cars, guns and laptops.”

In some cases, perpetrators are former laborers who return to attack, kill and rob farm owners to settle disputes over money. In others, disgruntled former employees had returned simply for revenge, according to historical records of the National Prosecuting Authority.

___

Nqunjana reported from Normandien, South Africa.

___

More AP news on South Africa: https://apnews.com/hub/south-africa



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
elonmusk
  • Website

Related Posts

UK to hold national inquiry into organized child sexual abuse

June 14, 2025

Trump’s recent moves risk politicizing the military

June 13, 2025

Republicans cool on Musk after feud with Trump, AP-NORC poll finds

June 13, 2025
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss
Cybertruck

Tesla Cybertruck police truck donor revealed

A batch of Tesla Cybertrucks were recently revealed to be a donation to the Las…

Tesla upgrades its ridiculous Cybertruck wiper after owners report issue

February 27, 2025

Tesla Cybertruck contract with State Dept. may have been modified after Biden admin

February 26, 2025

This Tesla Cybertruck feature helped it earn a ‘Best Tech’ award

February 25, 2025
Top Posts

Ethereum Holds Key Range Support – Bulls Set Sights on Higher Levels

June 16, 2025

PEPE Pumps 2.67% – Is The Memecoin Preparing For A Major Rebound?

June 16, 2025

Will The Bitcoin Price Move Above $110,000 Again? Global M2 Money Supply Shows What’s Next

June 16, 2025

Still Sleeping On XRP? Analyst Says $8 Breakout Is ‘Just Waiting’

June 16, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

About Us
About Us

Welcome to Elon Musk Monitor, your go-to source for comprehensive, up-to-date information on the life, work, and innovations of one of the most influential figures in the world today—Elon Musk. Our mission is to keep you informed about Musk’s ventures and projects, ranging from electric vehicles to space exploration, and everything in between. Whether you’re a tech enthusiast, investor, or simply curious about Musk’s impact on the world, we’ve got you covered.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks

Ethereum Holds Key Range Support – Bulls Set Sights on Higher Levels

June 16, 2025

PEPE Pumps 2.67% – Is The Memecoin Preparing For A Major Rebound?

June 16, 2025

Will The Bitcoin Price Move Above $110,000 Again? Global M2 Money Supply Shows What’s Next

June 16, 2025
Most Popular

How I met my partner on X/Twitter

February 8, 2025

DOGE staffer resigns after racist posts uncovered. Elon Musk might bring him back.

February 9, 2025

OpenAI accuses DeepSeek of stealing data, internet digs into the ‘irony’

February 9, 2025
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2025 elonmuskmonitor. Designed by elonmuskmonitor.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.