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#EthnicCleansing: #Afrikaners of Krugersdorp forcibly removed to dangerous black squatter camp Muncieville:

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Ethnic cleansing: A tight-knight community of Afrikaners in Kroningspark, Krugersdorp are being forcibly removed from their own BoerRepublican town Krugersdorp by the ruling ANC-regime: The Afrikaner poor squatter Louis Volschenk, was laid off from the SAPS Mine-Crimes division because of the #ANC's anti-white hiring laws, (BEE) -- He had to swallow his pride and moved to the poor-white campsite in Krugersdorp, Kroningspark after he lost everything he had ever worked for. And now he and his family are being forced to move with the entire well-organized 300-member Kroningspark community to the violent black squatter camp of Muncieville. The neat, orderly Krugersdorp poor white settlement has been in the city-centre for 19 years but now has to make way for the ruling #ANC regime's lavish 'dream park' they plan to the tune of R22million in the centre of #Afrikaner-built Krugersdorp which was named after the last independent Boer Republic's president Paul Kruger (1902)."We are heartbroken, having to move,' he told journalist Jacobus Myburg in 29 August 2014. "But we have noi choice. It's the black economic empowerment laws which are bringing the Afrikaner nation to their present destitution, he said. Volschenk said while poor whites are being branded as being 'too lazy and wicked to do a day's work', he 's not like that: he's worked hard all his life and if he had a job, he'd still be working hard. The trained pastoral worker's first job after he graduated from high school was as a policeman,, in 1975. In 1975, he joined the SA Defence Force, and became a member of the SAPS detectives branch investigating crime in mines. He was 'laid off' by the SAPS because of the black-economic-empowerment laws, barring most whites in South Africa from holding down fulltime jobs. He started work as a mine-security official, was pensioned off in 2003 and now tries to survive on a monthly R1,350 monthly income. He said he and his second wife were forced to move to the Kroningspark campsite because of their low income. He lived there for seven years and then was lucky to find another job, a temporary ten-month contract in Port Elizabeth. When the contract expired he returned to Kroningspark. He has two children - one also lives in Kroningspark with his own family. "My other son is a magistrate in Houghton where he's very busy and we don't see him very often." Asked why his magistrate-son doesn't look after him, he replied: "I could have gone to live in an old-age home but we all are one big family here in Kroningspark. We all care about one another, we are a close communityand we create our own jobs,' he said. He said the Kroningspark residents aren't 'drug-addicted beggars at the traffic robots'. The people of Kroningspark trust in God to help them survive each day. We are very spiritual and pray frequently, thanking our Lord that He holds us safe in His hands." https://www.facebook.com/boerekrisisaksie/photos/a.178568022169751.48293.116298045063416/950183395008206/?type=1&theater https://www.facebook.com/boerekrisisaksie/photos/a.178568022169751.48293.116298045063416/950183395008206/?type=1&theater

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