South African Hero Eugene de Kock Freed From Negro Gulag

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
January 30, 2015

 Eugene de Kock, pictured in 1999.
Eugene de Kock, pictured in 1999.

The communist Negro revolutionary coup government of South Africa has finally freed Eugene de Kock, a soldier who fought for his people in defense of the Negro menace.

“Truth and reconciliation” was introduced after the savages and their Jew puppet-masters took over and supposedly meant that no one on either side was to be prosecuted for their alleged crimes, but the Blacks went ahead and threw de Kock in prison anyway.

De Kock worked for the apartheid (legal) government of SA as a special agent putting down Negro terrorist threats.

After being arrested in 1994, he was sentenced in 1996 to two life sentences plus 212 years.

AP:

“In the interest of nation building and reconciliation, I have decided to place Mr. de Kock on parole,” said Masutha, who said the time and place of de Kock’s release would not be made public.

In the same announcement Masutha declined to grant medical parole to Clive Derby-Lewis, the man who planned the assassination of anti-apartheid activist and leader of the South African Communist Party, Chris Hani. Derby-Lewis, who has cancer, was sentenced to life in prison, along with Polish immigrant Janusz Walus, for the 1993 shooting. Masutha said Derby-Lewis has not shown remorse.

Last year, Masutha declined de Kock’s parole appeal, saying that the families of de Kock’s victims had not been consulted.

This idea that Africans have a right to run a judicial system, when the entire thing was built by Whites, is completely insane.  It really speaks to the ideological framework that liberals are working within – “you are being mean to these Blacks, they are just the same as you, give them now everything you have because they have built nothing.”