The Leader, His Driver and the Driver's Wife

Broomfield also spent time with a town councillor and diamond mine owner named Johann, and his friend Anton.

After his arrest in Pretoria, Rudolph was dubbed the "South African Bobby Sands" in reference to his proclamation that he would go on a hunger strike to promote his (and the AWB's) cause for a white homeland.

The film ends with Broomfield and his crew at an AWB rally where a crowd of 5,000 were expected, but in reality not even half that number are present.

The credits roll soon after Terre'Blanche again breaks into fits of rage, citing supposed security violations committed by Broomfield's camera crew.

[8] The case sparked intense media interest in both Britain and South Africa, with several court transcripts appearing in the press; Allan told Carman, "Whatever award is given for libel, being cross-examined by you would not make it enough money.

Allan's case was dealt a heavy blow by the statements of her former flatmate, Linda Shaw, the Sunday Times astrologer.

Allan's QC, Charles Gray dismissed Shaw's "wildly unlikely" testimony and stressed the physical impossibility of her claim.

Allan suggested that pro-government forces in South Africa wanted her to lose the case so that Terre'Blanche would be "irreparably damaged" in the eyes of his "God fearing Calvinist followers".

"[12] The South African business newspaper Financial Mail published a lead story on 6 August detailing the "theory" that F.W.

The libel suit is mentioned amid a montage of photos and camera footage of Jani Allan and reporters outside the London court in 1992 in the 2006 Nick Broomfield film His Big White Self, a sequel to The Leader, His Driver and the Driver's Wife, the documentary that spawned the libel suit.