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| Thursday, 30 March, 2000, 18:18 GMT 19:18 UK Terreblanche: Full of sound and fury ![]() On horseback to prison - a typical gesture By BBC News Online's Justin Pearce Eugene Terreblanche arrived astride a black horse to begin serving his prison sentence for assault. Even at the moment of his final humiliation, the South African white supremacist paramilitary leader remained as much a master of the grand gesture as he had been throughout his singularly ineffectual political career. Even the name - "white earth" in French, the language of Terreblanche's Hugenot ancestors - seemed too good to be real.
For the likes of Terreblanche, this was the start of the slippery slope towards democracy, communism, black rule and the destruction of the Afrikaner nation. Claiming on occasion to be a cultural organisation - albeit one with sidearms and paramilitary uniforms - Terreblanche and his men promised to fight for the survival of the white tribe of Africa. Their political heartland was in Ventersdorp - a decaying farming town amid the maize fields some 150km (100 miles) west of Johannesburg. 'The leader' From that base, the AWB established cells mostly among the Afrikaans farmers in the north of the country - though occasionally Terreblanche would venture into city Afrikaans communities to hold a public meeting.
"Cover him!" an Estuary English accent would bark - the voice of Iron Guard commander Keith Conroy, the former British soldier reputed to speak barely a word of Afrikaans. Terreblanche's thunderous voice and magnificent style of delivery - alternating between roar and husky whisper, with gestures to match - helped to disguise the complete meaninglessness of what he was saying. His oratory would sweep from the plight of white farmers, to ancient Greek philosophy, to the state of the Soviet Union, without any apparent logic. Green underpants Terreblanche seemed to walk a tightrope between racist menace and national joke.
UK news reports had alleged that Ms Allen - a South African journalist - had had an affair with Terreblanche. Ms Allen sued for libel - and lost. Throughout the court case South Africans were treated to daily reports involving such details as the leader's torn green underpants, as seen through a keyhole by a witness. Invasion Yet as the 1994 elections approached, fears of a white right-wing militant backlash seemed more and more real.
In another grand gesture, AWB fighters barged an armoured vehicle through the plate-glass doors of a building where constitutional negotiations were in progress. But the AWB's most ambitious paramilitary exercise also proved to be its greatest humiliation. The movement took it upon itself to invade Bophuthatswana - one of the nominally independent "homelands" which the apartheid government had set up in a gesture towards black self-determination. The image of three khaki-clad AWB fighters shot dead by Bophuthatswana's soldiers seemed to spell the end of any hopes the AWB may have had of seizing power by force. Support eroded
The quietly-spoken General Viljoen became the respectable face of the far right, preaching segregation rather than supremacism, and prepared to enter negotiations with the ANC over the possibility of setting up a small autonomous Afrikaner homeland. The general's pragmatic approach won the support of right-wingers who were embarrassed by the antics of Terreblanche and others, and who were fast coming to terms with the fact that continued white domination of South Africa was a practical impossibility. In 1995 South African towns, which had always been segregated into white and black municipalities, voted for the first time for unified local authorities. Bowing to the inevitable On voting day in Ventersdorp, Terreblanche and armed bodyguards put in a brief appearance - then retreated to their farms, leaving the town to vote in peace. By now, even members of the Conservative Party - ultra right-wing by any normal standards - had accepted that white town councillors would have to bow to the inevitable and share a council chamber with black delegates - even with a young communist mayor who lived in a tin shanty. Voters expressed relief that Ventersdorp might now cease to be a national laughing stock. Terreblanche's conviction and jail sentence for assault provide the proof that he was a man capable of considerable cruelty. But they also put the lid on any further speculation that his exaggerated posturing may have any lasting influence on South Africa's political history. | See also: 30 Mar 00 | Africa 20 Nov 98 | Entertainment 18 Jun 98 | Africa 30 Mar 00 | Africa Top Africa stories now: Links to more Africa stories are at the foot of the page. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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