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The South African government is failing to adequately protect residents of
commercial farming areas from violent crime, Human Rights Watch charged in a report released today. Black
farm residents are most severely affected by this failure, and black women are most vulnerable of all, Human
Rights Watch said.
The 230-page report, Unequal
Protection: The State Response
to Violent Crime on South
African Farms, is being
published in advance of next
week’s United Nations
conference on racism, to be held
in Durban. It is based on
research carried out by Human
Rights Watch in rural areas of
South Africa during 2000.
The state response to violent
crime against white farm owners
and managers could and should
be improved, Human Rights
Watch said, but black farm
workers and their families have
much more difficulty getting help
from the criminal justice system.
In South Africa, where land ownership was restricted to whites for most of the twentieth century, most farm
owners are still white, whereas farmworkers are mostly black. Since the early 1990s, there has been a marked
increase in assaults and murders of the owners and managers of commercial farms and their families.
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