The ringleader of a white supremacist
plot to assassinate Nelson Mandela and drive black people out of South
Africa has been sentenced to 35 years in jail, the British Broadcasting Corporation reports.
Former university lecturer Mike du Toit
was convicted last year of treason for his leadership role in the plot,
after a trial lasting nine years.
Twenty other members of his white supremacist militia Boeremag were also jailed for between five and 35 years.
In 2002 it attempted to overthrow the governing African National Congress.
In July 2012 Du Toit, a history lecturer
with a master’s degree in philosophy, was convicted of being behind
nine bombings in Johannesburg’s Soweto township in 2002, killing one
person.
He was also found guilty of authoring a
blueprint for revolution intended to evict black people from most of
South Africa and establish a racially “pure” nation by killing anyone
who got in the way.
Du Toit was the first person to be convicted of treason in South Africa since white minority rule ended in 1994.
Mandela spent 27 years in prison for his
fight against apartheid before becoming the country’s first
democratically elected president in 1994.
Handing down sentence, Judge Eben
Jordaan said there would have been bloodshed and chaos in South Africa
if the Boeremag plot had succeeded.
Mandela would have been killed by a
landmine planted by the group’s bomb squad if he had travelled by road,
rather than by helicopter, to open a school in the northern Limpopo
province, the South African Press Association quotes the judge as
saying.
The bombers had also planned to detonate
five large car bombs in the centres of Pretoria and Johannesburg when
they were caught, it reports.
Analysts say that while race relations
in South Africa are still an issue, white supremacist groups like
Boeremag – which means Afrikaner Power in Afrikaans – have very little
support.
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