The cruel tortures meted out to white SA farmers and their families by black attackers: Read: ' Bloedsusters / Bloodsisters
This dramatic story of two strong Afrikaner sisters, Eileen de Jager and Roelien Schutte - who run the company Crime Scene Clean Up. http://www.crimescenecleanup.co.za/. The two sisters work together as a team and also clean up many scenes after farm attacks. But the sadistic cruelty against these Afrikaner families also continues after the murder(s), depending on the police officers who respond to the scene. The two sisters told their auto-biographer in the book: "there are police officers with whom we work well together and who warn us against colleagues who 'insist that they must first show us the bodies before we start cleaning. It is not our job to remove the bodies but such police officers also often ask us to remove the bodies.' The interviewer asks them: "Is that some form of intimidation? Reply: "Perhaps. I think some of those police officers want to break us down emotionally". Not that those two Boer women would allow such cops to do that.... "Still, at some scenes" - and they especially noticed this at scenes of farm-murders of white farm-families -- 'Some police officers are very disrespectful and uncaring' towards the bereaved family of the murder victims. 'Such cops will sit around laughing loudly and joking with each other, showing great disrespect towards the bereaved families. At one such scene we noticed the policemen constantly walking through the living room where all the family members were gathered, consoling each other and crying - but those cops would walk through there and even demanded glasses from the weeping relatives 'so that they can drink cool drinks', and then they went and sat outside in the lapa, laughing loudly, eating, drinking and speaking very loudly and rudely, with the family sitting inside, weeping. There was something nearly defiant about those cops' behaviour,' said Roeleen. The women can 'read the crime scenes' very well after having cleaned up some 1,200 of them, and also often wonder at the behaviour of the farm workers. "We were at a scene where a farmer was pulled behind his own tractor by two attackers - and then they rode over him with a plow. His body was cut into five pieces,' says Eleen. "yet there were some twenty-plus farm workers standing around telling us they were 'too scared to do something',' completes Roeleen her sister's story. "Look you musn't come and pretend-whine with me that you don't know where your food is going to come from now that the farmer is dead. Nor tell me what a good man he had been when you and your colleagues didn't even care enough to try and stop two thugs from killing him right in front of your eyes. Surely twenty people can stop two people?" The list of cruelties which they have seen specifically at the murder-scenes of white farmers, seems endless. "Farmers whose bodies were cut up and chunks thrown into the henhouse. Farmers who are shot dead with their own firearms, or hacked to death with machetes and knobkieries." They also clean crime scenes where black farmers were murdered. "But it is very obvious that there is far less torture, not like it is carried out against white farmers. Black farmers usually just are shot dead and much more stuff gets stolen from their homesteads...'
Read that book. 'Bloedsusters' .
Buy it from LAPA Uitgewers http://www.lapa.co.za/ email lapa@lapa.co.za tel 012 401 0700 ISBN 97800-7993-5174-3
https://www.facebook.com/crimescenecleanup.north?fref=ts
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