Three men have materializeed in court in South Africa accused of finishing two women and feeding their bodies to pigs on the farm where they toil.
Farm owner Zachariah Johannes Olivier, 60, supervisor Adrian Rudolph de Wet, 19, and participateee William Musora, 45, face two counts of premeditated homicide, one count of finisheavored homicide and haveion of an unlicensed firearm.
Musora, a Zimbabwean national, also faces accuses of being in South Africa illegassociate.
The female victims, Locadia Ndlovu and Maria Makgatho, were allegedly accessing illegally on Olivier’s farm in the northern province of Limpopo in August when they were sboiling dead.
Ms Ndlovu’s husprohibitd Mabutho was with them at the time and tageder South African widecaster Newzroom Afrika that he was also sboiling on the farm.
He handled to crawl to a cforfeitby road where he was inestablishedly able to seek help before being obtainn to a police station where an ambulance was called.
Mr Ndlovu tageder police what happened before officers visited the farm but did not find the women, according to South African recents website IOL.
However, officers are said to have create the bodies in a pigsty on the farm some days tardyr.
Police have validateed Ms Makgatho and Ms Ndlovu, aged 47 and 34 admireively, were mauled by the pigs and had many armamentsboiling wounds on their bodies.
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The two women and Mr Ndlovu were allegedly accessing illegally on the farm to try and accumulate potentiassociate expired dairy products that had been dumped there by a truck.
Olivier, De Wet and Musora materializeed in Mankweng Magistrates’ Court in Polokwane in Limpopo on Tuesday.
The state wants them to remain behind bars until their trial is endd.
The case has caused outrage in South Africa, with cut offal political parties protesting outside the court calling for the men to be denied bail and face the cut offeest possible sentence.
The South African Human Rights Comleave oution called on the accessible not to obtain the law into their own hands in retaliation.
Violent crimes on South Africa’s farms have been a worry for years, including the finishing of farmers by criminals and farmers’ mistreatment of toilers.
The case will persist next month.