
According to lawyers, a white South African farm worker who killed two South African farm workers and accused of charges should feed his body to pigs.
Adrian de Wet is one of the three men facing murder by 45 -year -old Maria Makgato, and 34 -year -old Lucia NDLOVU is known to be looking for food on farms near Polokwane in the northern Limpopo region of South Africa last year.
Their bodies were believed to have been given to pigs with a clear attempt to dispose of evidence.
20 -year -old De Wet said that when the trial began on Monday, he became a state witness and said that farm owner Zachariah Johannes Olivier shot two women.
Mr. Makgato and NDLOVU were looking for a discouraged dairy left for pigs when the pig died.
According to his prosecution and his lawyer, DE WET, a supervisor of the farm, will testify that he is threatened when he needs to throw his body into a pig enclosure.
When the court accepts his testimony, all charges are withdrawn.
This incident caused anger throughout South Africa, worsening the racial tension of this country.
This tension is especially powerful in rural areas despite the end of the racist system of Lertheid 30 years ago. Most private farmers remain in the hands of white minorities, while most farm workers are inducing resentment among the black people due to lack of black and payments, and many white farmers complain about high crime rates.
Another farm worker, William Musora, is the third accuser. He and 60 -year -old Olivier still enter the petition and remain behind the bar.
The three men also interfere with the definition that NDLOVU’s husband, who was with women on the farm, possessed a murder of a shooting case and an unlicensed firearm for the shooting, and was suspected of abandoning the body in a pig enclosure to hide the evidence.
Musora, a Zimbabwean national, faces an additional prosecution of his status as an illegal immigrant under the South African immigration law.
Limpopo High Court was filled with supporters and relatives of the victims ahead of the procedure. There was also an Olivier’s wife sitting in the front row of the public gallery and wiping tears.
Opposition free economic fighters, who had previously demanded to close the farm, also attended court.
The trial was postponed until next week.









