Gauteng - 20 April 2026
In a hard-hitting new video, South African security expert Lukas Swart pulls back the curtain on the patterns behind violent crime, farm attacks, rapes, and targeted hits across the country. Far from random, Swart argues that certain South Africans – particularly those with positive interracial relationships – are disproportionately at risk, while others remain largely untouched. His analysis challenges mainstream narratives and highlights a disturbing cultural clash between Western values and what he describes as elements of Ubuntu that fuel entitlement, revenge, and violence.
WATCH:
The Real Victims: Business Owners, Farmers, Friends, and Employers – Not the Isolated
Swart’s core message is clear: “There is no reason for you to be attacked, unless you fall into certain circles.”
Those most vulnerable, he says, include:
- Business owners and employers who interact daily with staff across racial lines.
- Farmers and agricultural workers who maintain good community relations.
- Homeowners with domestic workers or garden staff.
- Individuals in management roles who supervise black colleagues.
- People who form genuine friendships or professional bonds with other races.
In contrast, those who deliberately avoid contact – no domestic workers, no black colleagues, no farm labour interactions – often escape the worst. But Swart warns this “safe bubble” is an illusion. Even all-white farms face organised pressure and attacks from political actors demanding black employment quotas.
Alarming New Cultural Trend: Layoffs Seen as Justification for Murder
A chilling new pattern emerging under certain black cultural interpretations, according to Swart, is the belief that being fired or laid off grants a “right” to kill the boss responsible.
Whether the employer is black or white, the act of termination is framed as a personal betrayal. Swart links this to broader entitlement mindsets where professional accountability is reframed as racial or personal injustice. This isn’t isolated – it ties into a wider narrative of revenge that extends beyond the workplace.
The Deadly Misreading of Western-Friendly Behaviour: Rape as “Cultural Response”
Swart addresses the epidemic of rape – affecting both black and white women – as rooted in a profound cultural clash.
Women who adopt Westernised body language, eye contact, smiling, or acts of kindness (such as giving food or clothes) are, he claims, often misinterpreted through a traditional lens as sexual invitations. Friendly interactions with black male colleagues, clients, or workers can trigger assaults because the woman’s “Westernised” signals are read as consent or provocation.
Even black women who have embraced Western norms face rape from within their own communities for the same reason. Swart points to management dynamics: a female boss (white or black) who pushes for productivity or “looks down” on male subordinates may be targeted for rape or assault as a lesson in “hierarchy.” Garden workers, domestic staff, or colleagues may organise retribution to “put her in her place.”
The Rise of Hitmen Networks and “Christian” Assassins
One of the most disturbing revelations in the video is the existence of organised hitmen syndicates operating like a shadow service industry.
Unhappy employees – black or white – simply contact these networks to eliminate a difficult boss, colleague, or whistleblower. Swart connects this to political assassinations and doxxing campaigns online, followed by brutal attacks. He cites examples including whistleblowers like Goolam and others who faced swift retaliation after exposing corruption.
A recent case that fits this pattern: On 24 March 2026, Sibanye-Stillwater litigation attorney Chinette Gallichan, 35, was gunned down in a suspected targeted hit in Johannesburg’s CBD. She was en route to the CCMA handling a retrenchment labour dispute for the mining giant – exactly the type of “unfair” professional action Swart describes as triggering revenge. Police and experts described it as a professional assassination.
These hitmen, Swart notes, often attend church every Sunday, pray for forgiveness, and view their work as enforcing “righteousness” against the “unrighteous.” This twisted justification appears in political circles too.
Political Radicalisation Masquerading as Faith
Swart draws direct links to South Africa’s political landscape. Figures like Fikile Mbalula, Cyril Ramaphosa, and Julius Malema hold public faith events while simultaneously inflaming tensions. Carl Niehaus, a good example – a self-proclaimed Christian who has boasted about pre-1994 bomb plantings and aligns with the EFF, which has openly called for radical land policies and anti-white rhetoric.
The message? Everyday fairness in business or politics can be perceived as betrayal of “the people,” turning ordinary citizens into marked targets.
Why “I Have Nothing to Fear” Is a Dangerous Myth
Many South Africans reassure themselves: “I don’t employ black staff. I keep work and home separate. I have no weapons at home.”
Swart dismantles this. Criminal networks don’t need personal grudges – political pressure (as seen with all-white farms), opportunistic hits, or misread social cues can strike anyone. Understanding the “education systems” of criminal networks – the cultural triggers, the hitman pipelines, the doxxing-to-attack sequence – is the only real protection.
Lukas Swart’s Message: Awareness Saves Lives
Lukas Swart, who runs community security workshops and has decades of hands-on experience in South African crime prevention, isn’t fear-mongering. He’s offering a street-level map of risks most media and politicians refuse to discuss openly.
His video is a wake-up call for farmers, business owners, managers, and families: know the patterns, understand the cultural fault lines, and take practical steps to protect yourself and your loved ones.
Want to know more? Contact Lukas Swart directly for his security seminars and in-depth insights. In a country where crime statistics remain among the world’s highest, proactive awareness isn’t optional – it’s survival: 0822 950 350
This article is based on the content and analysis presented in Lukas Swart’s recent video. South Africa’s crime challenges are complex and multifaceted, but Swart’s ground-level perspective offers a rare, unfiltered look at who is truly in the crosshairs.
Comments (0)
Leave a Comment