June 1 2011 
The presence of heavily armed members of the  elite national intervention unit could not deter five determined  Boeremag members from trying to make a dash for freedom during a tea  break at their high court treason trial in Pretoria on Tuesday. 
Chaos erupted shortly after  11.30am as the five tried to hot-foot it out of court after spraying  ammonia into the faces of several police officers. 
Amused pedestrians look on as Boeremag accused Herman van Rooyen is  hustled back to jail 
after car guards had helped catch him during a  brazen escape. He was one of five members of the right-wing organisation  who made a break for freedom during their treason trial in the High  Court in Pretoria.
Three of the men only made it out of the courtroom door before they were apprehended. 
The elderly Tom Vorster, said to  be one of the leaders of the Boeremag, made it as far as the foyer  before he was brought down by a female police officer. 
Police screamed orders and  bewildered members of the public trying to leave the building saw Herman  van Rooyen jump through a glass panel. 
Surprised security guard Steven  Molokomme, who was guarding the door, dived towards Van Rooyen but he  was sprayed in the eyes with ammonia. 
Van  Rooyen, who managed to escape from the same court five years ago, was  chased by a group of policemen and security guards as he ran towards  Church Square. Shouts of “Boeremag, Boeremag” alerted car guards, who  joined the chase. 
Van Rooyen was caught on Church  Square by a member of the intervention unit. About five minutes after  the drama began, he was cuffed and led back to court to cheers from  onlookers.  
By the time the Pretoria News  arrived, Vorster was quietly lying in a foetal position on the floor.  His hands were bound with a cable tie. 
He lay there for more than a  minute before a member of the elite intervention unit, part of the group  who daily watch over the Boeremag accused at court, dragged him back  into the court.  
Some of the people claimed Vorster  was stopped at the door by a policewoman, who shocked him with a stun  stick, but this was denied by national police spokeswoman Sally de Beer.   
A senior police official, who was at the scene, claimed Vorster punched a policewoman, who then knocked him down. 
Accused  Dr Lets Pretorius, who was awaiting trial in prison for several years  before he was granted bail, just shook his head while observing Vorster  lying on the ground. “You know, this is frustration. These men are  extremely frustrated. They have been in jail for years now without being  given bail and this trial is taking its toll on them,” he said. 
The other three who tried to  escape were Mike du Toit, and the first to be arrested more than eight  years ago, Gerhardus (“Oom Vis”) Visagie and Rudi Gouws. 
Oom Vis is deep in his 70s and the  chaplain of the group. Early in the trial he often sat with his Bible  on his lap. Gouws escaped with Van Rooyen in May 2006 during a lunch  break. The pair were on the run for several months before they were  apprehended in Lyttelton. 
Since then Gouws and Van Rooyen have been sitting in the dock with leg-irons.  
How it came about that they were  without their leg-irons is still a mystery at this stage. According to  the police, it is part of their investigation. 
De Beer said: “We are going to  make a request to the judge that all those on trial are placed in  leg-irons for their next appearance.” 
When  the Pretoria News entered the courtroom shortly after their attempted  dash for freedom, the only evidence of the escape was a pair of  leg-irons in the dock and another next to the dock. Both pairs still had  their locks attached. 
Several bottles of nose spray, apparently filled with ammonia, were lined up against the wall of the courtroom. 
The police confirmed that  four members of the intervention unit and a security guard were taken to  hospital for treatment after being sprayed with ammonia. 
De Beer on Tuesday confirmed that  all five had been apprehended and said that although there was “a  strenuous struggle between the accused and the police”, minimum force  was used under the circumstances. 
The court resumed sometime later  with the accused who are on bail in the dock. Prosecutor Paul Fick told  Judge Eben Jordaan about the escape attempt. He also said that the dock  was virtually empty as the 11 accused awaiting trial in jail were being  kept in the court cells following the incident. 
http://www.iol.co.za/news/crime-courts/cops-foil-boeremag-escape-1.1076620


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