Necklacing is a method ofextrajudicialsummary execution and torture carried out by forcing a rubbertire drenched withpetrol around a victim's chest and arms, and setting it onfire. The term "necklace" originated in the 1980s in black townships of apartheid South Africa where suspected apartheid collaborators were publicly executed in this fashion.[1]
Necklacing was used by the black community to punish its members who were perceived as collaborators with theapartheid government.[2] Necklacing was primarily used on black police informants; the practice was often carried out in the name of the struggle, although the executive body of theAfrican National Congress (ANC), the most broadly supported South African opposition movement, condemned it.[3][4] In 1986,Winnie Mandela, then-wife of the imprisonedNelson Mandela, and who herself had endured torture and four imprisonments to a total of two years,[5] stated, "With our boxes of matches, and our necklaces, we shall liberate this country", which was widely seen as an explicit endorsement of necklacing.[6][7] This caused the ANC to initially distance itself from her,[8] although she later took on a number of official positions within the party.[8]
The first victim of necklacing, according to the South AfricanTruth and Reconciliation Commission, was a young black woman,Maki Skosana ofDuduza, on 20 July 1985:[9]
Moloko said her sister was burned to death with a tire around her neck while attending the funeral of one of the youths. Her body had been scorched by fire and some broken pieces of glass had been inserted into her vagina, Moloko told the committee. Moloko added that a big rock had been thrown on her face after she had been killed.[10]
PhotojournalistKevin Carter was the first to photograph a public execution by necklacing in South Africa in the mid-1980s. He later spoke of the images:
I was appalled at what they were doing. I was appalled at what I was doing. But then people started talking about those pictures ... then I felt that maybe my actions hadn't been at all bad. Being a witness to something this horrible wasn't necessarily such a bad thing to do.[11]
Author Lynda Schuster writes:
'Necklacing' represented the worst of the excesses committed in the name of the uprising. This was a particularly gruesome form of mob justice, reserved for those thought to be government collaborators, informers and black policemen. The executioners would force a car tire over the head and around the arms of the suspect, drench it in petrol, and set it alight. Immobilized, the victim burned to death.[12]
Some commentators have noted that the practice of necklacing served to escalate the levels of violence during the township wars of the 1980s and early 1990s as security force members became brutalized and afraid that they might fall victim to the practice.[13]
This form oflynching was used in Haiti, where it was known asPé Lebrun, orPère Lebrun (French), after a tire advertisement showing a man with a tire around his neck. It was used prominently by mobs allied withJean-Bertrand Aristide to assassinate political enemies. Aristide himself allegedly showed strong support for this practice, calling it a "beautiful tool" that "smells good", encouraging hisLavalas supporters to use it against wealthy people as well as members of the Lavalas party who were not as strong in their fervor.[14][15]
During the 1983Black July riot againstSri Lankan Tamils,Sinhalese rioters used necklacing.[16] Necklacing was also widely used against Sinhalese youth by government supported paramilitary forces in thesecond armed insurrection led by theJanatha Vimukthi Peramuna. A graphic description of one such necklacing appears in the bookThe Island of Blood by journalistAnita Pratap.[17]
This technique was widely used againstSikhs during the1984 anti-Sikh riots, which took place throughoutnorthern India after the erstwhile Indian prime ministerIndira Gandhi, having presided overOperation Blue Star earlier that year, wasassassinated by her Sikh bodyguards.[18]
In the early 1990s, university students inAbidjan, Ivory Coast, were plagued by burglars stealing from their dormitories. The students took matters into their own hands by capturing the alleged thieves, and then executed them by placing tyres around their necks and setting the tyres on fire. Ivorian police, powerless to stop these necklacings, could do nothing but stand by and watch.[19]
In 2006, at least one person died in Nigeria by necklacing in the deadlyMuslim protests over satirical cartoon drawings ofMuhammad.[20]
A form of necklacing where victims are forced inside a stack of tyres doused with petrol and set on fire is widely used by drug dealers in Brazil, notably inRio de Janeiro, where it is calledmicro-ondas, ormicrowave in Portuguese.[21][22][23] JournalistTim Lopes was a notable victim.[24]
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