Video: Stop-Boer-Genocide Protestors Attacked in Calif & Pennsylvania

“This is about the extermination of an ethnic group,” said Erick Weigel, chairman, New Jersey and Eastern Pennsylvania Council of Conservative Citizens…

Dozens of protests took place in front of State Capitol buildings across the USA on February 28 2012 by the South Africa Project. Two of these small peaceful protest-groups were violently attacked by left-radical ‘Occupation’ groups. Thirty-five protestors of the South Africa Project in Sacramento, California were accosted by bottle-throwing ‘Occupy Oakland’ demonstrators whose aggression also injured two California Highway Patrol officers.  And one South Africa Project protestor was sprayed with mace (teargas) by a left-wing protestor in Harrisburg Pennsylvania. The other dozens of protests were peaceful and conducted without any confrontations. Also addressing the rally was Paul Fromm, a Director of the Council of Conservative Citizens, which endorsed this rally. A few of the attacks on farmers may be motivated by robbery, he said. “However, the cruel and prolonged tortures inflicted on men, women and children are motivated by hate – racial hate,” he argued. “These are hate crimes.”
The West has told Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad to stop killing his own people. “The stated reason Canada and the U.S went to war against Col. Gaddafi last year was to stop him from killing his own people,” Mr. Fromm explained. “The West must insist that the South African government crack down on the murder of Whites, especially White farmers, often by its own supporters,” Mr., Fromm insisted.

      Mr. Fromm — who visited South Africa in 1987 —  pointed out that South Africa was one of the few African nations that can feed itself. “This abundance is due largely to the work and efficiency of the “Boers” – South Africa’s farmers. The Dutch-speaking Afrikaners,”—he added —  have been demonised and misunderstood in the West.

“They have been in South Africa since the 17th century. South Africa was uninhabited, except for a small number of KhoiSan as the Boers moved north from the Cape in the 18th century. At about the same time, the various Nguni-tribes were moving south. The Boers or “Afrikaners” are every bit as much South Africans as the Blacks, Mr. Fromm explained,“It’s time to stand behind our European brothers in South Africa,” he concluded.

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2012-02-28