Two white South Africans who brutally killed black teen for ‘stealing’ sunflower jailed

Mildred Europa Taylor March 07, 2019
Pieter Doorewaard (L) and Philip Schutte, pictured May 2017, were found to have killed Matlhomola Mosweu --- eNCA

There was jubilation in a South African court on Wednesday when two white farm workers who pushed a teenage boy out of a moving van after accusing him of stealing sunflowers were sentenced. Pieter Doorewaard, 28, and Phillip Schutte, 35, were sentenced to 18 and 23 years in prison respectively for murder and other offences, reports the BBC.

The two were found to have killed Matlhomola Mosweu on April 20, 2017, after claiming they caught him taking a plant from their employer’s farm in Coligny, a remote northwestern farming community.

Doorewaard and Schutte had claimed that the 16-year-old jumped out of their vehicle while they were taking him to the local police station after catching him stealing from the field.

Last October, The Week reported that the defence called on the court to drop all charges against Schutte and downgrade the charge against Doorewaard to “culpable homicide” (similar to manslaughter).

But the sole eyewitness of the incident, Bonakele Pakisi, testified that Mosweu was pushed from the moving van.

A postmortem report had found that the teen broke his neck when he fell from the van. Doorewaard and Schutte were subsequently found guilty of “murder, kidnapping, intimidation, theft and pointing of a firearm”.

Judge Ronnie Hendricks, during last October’s hearing at the North West High Court in Mahikeng, said: “It is difficult to believe the assumption that the deceased jumped from the van.

“It makes no sense. Why he would all of a sudden, and for no reason, after being so cooperative, jump? I am of the view that their [the accused’s] versions are not reasonably possibly true and are rejected.”

When news of Mosweu’s death reached many in 2017, it sparked off a mass violent protest in Coligny, leaving six houses and three trucks torched, as well as, looting of several white-owned businesses in the town.

Two white South Africans who brutally killed black teen for ‘stealing’ sunflower jailed
Protest outside a court in Coligny where the two accused had earlier appeared — City Press – News24

While announcing his ruling this Wednesday, Judge Hendricks said:
“It cannot be ignored that the community revolted as a result of this incident.”

“This was largely because of the inaction of the police. The community of Coligny was polarised as a result of this incident,” he was quoted by The Telegraph.

The father of the deceased, who had hoped for 30 to 40-year sentences for the two white men, said he would be disappointed if the sentences were appealed.

Racial inequality is inherent in South Africa after two decades of the end of white-minority apartheid rule, with cases of racism making headlines in recent years as whites continue to own most of South Africa’s land.

Mosweu’s death reminded many of the numerous racially charged incidents that have occurred between white farm owners and poor black farmhands.

Between 1994 and March 2012, there had been 361,015 murders in all of South Africa and between 1990 and March 2012, there had been an estimated 1,544murders on South African farms of which 208 of the victims were black, according to statistics.

It will be recalled that in 2016, two white farmers in eastern Mpumalanga province forced a black man they accused of trespassing and stealing copper cables into a coffin.

Two white South Africans who brutally killed black teen for ‘stealing’ sunflower jailed
A screenshot of the video of the man being forced into the coffin — BBC

A 20-second video of the incident was widely circulated on social media, showing the victim, Victor Mlotshwa, “cowering inside a coffin as one man pushes the lid down and the other threatens to put petrol and a snake inside,” news site The Guardian reported, sparking anger.

The accused, Theo Jackson and Willem Oosthuizen were sentenced to 14 years and 11 years respectively.

Last Edited by:Victor Ativie Updated: April 17, 2020

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