BNP leader Nick Griffin has called ailing Nelson Mandela a "murdering old terrorist" on Twitter.
In another message Mr Griffin wrote: ‘Statesmen must be judged on results not rhetoric.
And he's one to make that comment with a straight face? lmao
‘Before Mandela, South Africa was safe economic powerhouse. Now crime ridden basket case.’
Yeah. Change produces a little chaos. Before Mandela: "1811 - 1812
The Fourth War of Dispossession between the AmaXhosa and colonists takes place under the command of Commissioner John Graham. In a brutal battle against the AmaXhosa, which includes the indiscriminate shooting of women and other civilians as well as destruction of crops, the AmaXhosa are driven from the Zuurveld.
Women and children are killed although the colonial authorities knew that the AmaXhosa only attack men as men are regarded as soldiers while women are not. The AmaXhosa also never attacks male missionaries" -
General South African History Timeline: 1800s | South African History Online
"1812
Cape Colony: The Apprentice Ordinance is promulgated which gives any white farmer the right to apprentice the children of his labourers for a period of ten years from the age of eight" -
General South African History Timeline: 1800s | South African History Online
"1820
Approximately 5 000 British settlers from economically depressed regions of Britain arrive in Algoa Bay in the eastern Cape to increase the size of the white settler population. Upon arrival it is revealed to them that they are also required to act as a civilian defence force against the indigenous people on whose land they are settled. They are allocated land in the Zuurveld, next to the Fish River" and "The rise of the kingdom of the AmaZulu continues the already violent dispersal of neighbouring political entities competing with each other and with British and Boer colonisers for land and basic resources.
This troubled period goes down in official South African history as either the Mfecane (IsiZulu) or Difaqane (SeSotho) which literally means "forced dispersal" or "forced migration" because the upheavals caused thousands of refugees. The AmaMfengu, for example, flee to the eastern Cape Colony, to the lands of the AmaXhosa. The fleeing political entities engage in armed skirmishes for land with kingdoms and chiefdoms which they encounter during their flight. This conflict continues for a number of years throughout the southern African region. Until the 1990s the view that the upheavals were caused solely by the alleged tyranny of Shaka's rise to power. This view has subsequently been challenged, with some historians disputing the existence of the Mfecane or Difaqane at all. Instead historians identify increasing pressure on the various communities that populated the region as colonisers move in and colonisers and indigenous people fight each other for the dwindling resources.
This phenomenon is seen as a direct result of an increase in population and a quest for power"-
General South African History Timeline: 1800s | South African History Online
etc. etc. etc. Of course, everything would have been a mess before the Dutch and Brits felt the urge to introduce their own brands of mess.
Read a little more of SA's history:
South African History Online
Apartheid in South Africa - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia