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Steve Hofmeyr on choosing to STAY in SA amid 'white genocide'
Steve Hofmeyr on choosing to STAY in SA amid 'white genocide'

The South African

time26-05-2025

  • The South African

Steve Hofmeyr on choosing to STAY in SA amid 'white genocide'

Outspoken Afrikaans singer Steve Hofmeyr has clapped back at remarks that he should flee the country amid his claims of a 'white genocide' in South Africa. The entertainer and activist has been vocal about 'racial discrimination' against white South Africans. In recent years, Hofmeyr has come under fire for his views on the k-word and the old SA flag. On his social media accounts, Steve Hofmeyr has continued to post his controversial comments about the 'persecution' faced by white South Africans, particularly farmers. However, many of his posts have irked the public. When one X user asked Steve why he was still living in a country he believed endured 'white genocide', the singer recently responded: 'Because I can spend everything I make to safeguard my family. Most of my people can not'. Another asked him when 'white genocide' began. He responded: 'The moment South Africans, post 1994, were excluded and denigrated because of our race'. Like many South Africans, Steve Hofmeyr has experienced crime firsthand. In 2010, he spoke out about witnessing a robbery at a local KFC restaurant. Although he did not come into contact with the attackers, he brazenly chased the armed men in his car for several kilometres. In 2015, Hofmeyr's coastal holiday home in KwaZulu-Natal was robbed as he and his wife slept in their bedroom. The thieves made off with several of his possessions in the middle of the night, but the performer was dragged for his comments about them. He told the media: 'The stench [of them] still lingers in my home'. He added, 'Some people said I should have been shot and killed. My culture and family do not scale fences to rape the elderly at midnight. Those nasty comments boggle the mind, but they go to prove that, mostly, we don't have the mindset or civil sensibilities to make this a better country. Not as long as the criminal is glorified. In 2018, Steve Hofmeyr claimed that South Africans should own guns as a means of 'self-defense and protection' in 'the most violent rape and murder capital of be world'. Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1 . Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp , Facebook , X, and Bluesky for the latest news.

Intercape busses their complaints to parliament
Intercape busses their complaints to parliament

The South African

time15-05-2025

  • The South African

Intercape busses their complaints to parliament

Long distance transport operator, Intercape, has turned to parliament to shield them from ongoing attacks on their buses since 2019. They first appeared before Parliament's Portfolio Committee of Police on 14 May 2025. Intercape spokesperson, Lindiz van Zilla, said they want parliament to compel the police to act and stop the ongoing violence and intimidation against their company. 'Intercape submitted to the Portfolio Committee that despite submitting compelling evidence, police have not made a single arrest and no one has been prosecuted', said van Zilla. During their presentation in parliament, Intercape told the Portfolio Committee that they had suffered the following losses: Over R420 000 spent on medical bills for injured passengers R30 million loss of revenue due to being forced to suspend services in certain towns in the Eastern Cape R3 million in additional expenditure spent on private security escorts R5.5 million in repair costs for damaged coaches Since then, Intercape has opened over 200 cases with the police in six years. The charges range from murder, attempted murder, intimidation and extortion. The Portfolio Committee, chaired by Ian Cameron of the Democratic Alliance, heard testimonies alleging that police were lackluster in arresting the perpetrators of the bus attacks. 'The attacks against Intercape are serious and the SAPS' inadequate response to these attacks – even in the face of court orders ordering them to do so – is a failure by the SAPS in its statutory and constitutional duties', said Advocate Kate Hofmeyr. She urged the Portfolio Committee to use its powers to convene a public hearing into the the police's failure. She said key SAPS members should be called to give evidence in the forum in order to hold the police accountable publicly. Senior police management officials denied claims that they were not acting on attacks against Intercape. They said a total of 11 arrests had been made in connection with the attacks. However Hofmeyr said it was the first time they were hearing about the arrests. She said Intercape bussed their complaints to parliament because there was inaction. She further said there were court orders instructing SAPS to inform them of progress related to investigations and that had not been done. 'Intercape and the Portfolio Committee urgently awaits further details from the police to verify the claims related to the arrests and ongoing cases', said Hofmeyr. Intercape first approached the courts in June 2022, wanting the Department of Transport authorities to act swiftly. Despite having nine court victories, no meaningful action has been taken. They said the department still doesn't comply with very specific orders handed down by the High Court. Intercape CEO Johann Ferraira said, 'This is a blatant case of contempt of court and is being committed by a government which undertook a sworn oath of office to uphold the Constitution.' He said government has no respect for the rule of law and is in breach of its Constitutional obligations. Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1 Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.

Intercape bus attacks not investigated because ‘the wrong forms were filled in'
Intercape bus attacks not investigated because ‘the wrong forms were filled in'

Daily Maverick

time14-05-2025

  • Daily Maverick

Intercape bus attacks not investigated because ‘the wrong forms were filled in'

Members of the Portfolio Committee on the Police were left speechless when they were told that there was an affidavit under oath from the police stating that they were not investigating attacks on the Intercape buses as organised crime because 'the company didn't fill in the right forms'. In a revelation that left members of the Portfolio Committee on the Police shocked and speechless, advocate Kate Hofmeyr SC, representing the Intercape bus company, said they were told that crimes against the company, now topping 200, could not be investigated as organised crime because they had not filled in the right form. Most of the attacks occurred in the Eastern and Western Cape. She said Intercape had won all its cases against the police, and the taxpayer had to foot a bill of R2-million for the company's legal bills alone. But she added that despite having won eight cases against the police, the National Prosecuting Authority and the Department of Transport, among others, 'every one of them are in contempt of court'. 'We are sitting with an impossible situation,' she said. There had been cases opened for 46 buses that were stoned and 103 cases of intimidation, of which 15 occurred at the company's headquarters in Cape Town. All the evidence gathered by Intercape — including dashcam videos from the buses — were been handed over to the police. 'It is shocking and unforgivable that the police have had these videos for much longer than three years but there have been no arrests.' Other evidence handed over to the police, she said, included a picture of taxi owners having a meeting that included a whiteboard on which an elaborate price-fixing scheme had been planned, indicating who would have to pay to use the routes, along with the bank accounts into which deposits were made, evidence of recordings and of vehicle registrations. 'Despite this for three years nothing was done,' she said. 'Sustained pattern of organised crime' She added that when the litigation started Intercape had 165 cases, but this had now increased to more than 200. Hofmeyr said these cases should not be seen in isolation, but should rather be investigated as a sustained pattern of organised crime. 'When Intercape was forced to litigate,' she said, 'it was met with staggering opposition from the SAPS.' She said the most staggering of these was a statement, made under oath as part of court papers, that the representatives of Intercape had not filled in the right form when they opened the charges, and should have used the one that was headed 'Organised Crime'. To provide a further example of investigations being blocked by the police, it handed over four registration numbers of people who were intimidating a bus driver in the Eastern Cape to the police in May 2022. 'The police told us the registration numbers belonged to taxi owners. They visited the taxi rank and also obtained statements. Nothing has happened in that case since then.' In another case, she pointed out, a decision by a prosecutor had been pending since May 2023. 'It wasn't enough for the police to be given everything,' she said. She added that her client needed the police's intervention urgently. 'The unfortunate news is that this situation is not getting better. As recently as last month we recorded more incidents.' She added that after adding routes in Mpumalanga and Limpopo the police have been seen watching how people threatened and intimidated bus drivers and did nothing to arrest anyone. After an incident in Phalaborwa the police also phoned Intercape to tell it not to operate on that route before talking to the taxi companies as it was 'beyond the police's control'. The MPs hearing Hofmeyr's submissions were shocked. 'I am disgusted to think I am part of this system,' the EFF's Eugene Mthethwa said. 'Before 1994 when we saw a police van we ran away, even if we did nothing wrong. It seems that now there is no fear.' He said the police's 'modus operandi' of refusing to open cases also took place under other instances. 'The Department of Justice must also come to explain,' he said. 'Why are they always using this policy, this red tape as an excuse?' he asked. 'I am disgraced and flabbergasted.' The Democratic Alliance's Lisa-Maré Schikerling was equally shocked. 'I am at a loss for words,' she said. As was the ACDP's Reverend Kenneth Meshoe. 'Heartbreaking' 'What we have seen and heard is heartbreaking and depressing. I am angry,' he said. 'This is a lawless country where even the police are not taking orders from the court. We need to do something.' Makashule Gana from Rise Mzanzi said the police's lack of action made it seem that the state was weak. 'That video is horrifying. Why are we allowing attacks like that?' he asked. Glen Taaibosch from the MK party said he did not even know where to begin. 'The SAPS must come clean. There is something here that isn't right. I used to be in the taxi industry. Those people are very dangerous.' The Deputy Minister of Police, Polly Boshielo, said they had been grappling with these issues. The police in their representation did not deny the allegations about the form not being filled in, but said they have tried their best to engage in preventive policing on the bus routes. General Godfrey Lebeya from the Hawks said they had a particular mandate and they had reviewed the cases to see which ones they should be investigating. According to the police's list they only had 76 cases, but promised to find the others. The other more than a hundred cases were previously discussed in court papers by the police. Of the 76 cases they looked at, 11 people were arrested. Fourteen cases were withdrawn and 33 were not investigated. These cases included one case of murder, 22 of attempted murder, 34 of intimidation and five of assault. There were 22 cases awaiting a decision from the NPA, the police's presentation showed. DM

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