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South African court cuts jail term for white farmers in coffin case

By AFP
03 December 2019   |   2:55 pm
A South African court has cut the sentences of two white farmers who forced a black man into a coffin and threatened to kill him, sparking nationwide outrage.

(FILES) In this file photo taken on October 23, 2017 Willem Oosthuizen (L) and Theo Jackson, the white farmers convicted of attempted murder after they filmed themselves forcing a black man into a coffin and threatening to burn him alive, appear in the Magistrate Court in Mpumalanga, Middelburg on October 23, 2017. – Willem Oosthuizen and Theo Jackson, the two white farmers convicted of filming a video while forcing Victor Mlotshwa into a coffin and threatening to kill him, have had their sentence amended by The Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) on December 2, 2019. (Photo by WIKUS DE WET / AFP)

A South African court has cut the sentences of two white farmers who forced a black man into a coffin and threatened to kill him, sparking nationwide outrage.

South Africa is beset by deep-rooted racial inequality even after the end of white-minority rule in 1994 and racist incidents regularly erupt on social media.

Willem Oosthuizen and Theo Martins Jackson had been sentenced to 16 and 19 years in October 2017 after a video of their activities in the eastern Mpumalanga province went viral.

They had pleaded not guilty and said the incident was only intended to scare Victor Mlotshwa, whom they accused of stealing copper cables from their farm.

The pair were convicted of attempted murder as well as kidnap, intimidation and assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm.

On Monday, the Supreme Court of Appeal set aside the convictions for attempted murder and intimidation, a move that effectively left them to serve five years instead.

“This Court has found that the appellants should have been convicted of assault with intent to do grievous bodily harm instead of attempted murder,” Judge Yvonne Thokozile Mbatha said, sentencing each man to five years in prison.

“I have considered the rationale of sentencing, namely deterrence, retribution and rehabilitation,” Mbatha said.

She also handed each man a one-year sentence for kidnapping, while Jackson received an additional year’s imprisonment for defeating the ends of justice by assaulting the sole witness in an attempt to stop him from testifying.

The shorter terms will run concurrently with the five-year sentence.

Two clips of the 2016 incident, taken on their mobile phones, showed the men shoving Mlotshwa down into the wooden coffin and pressing the lid with their boots as he begged for mercy.

They are also seen threatening to put a snake in the coffin.

Throughout the case, the men denied that their actions had caused the victim to fear for his life.

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