SANF formed its own paramilitary wing Wit Kommando/White Commando, a not unusual development in the context of
right wing South African politics. In 1980 the Wit Kommando/White Commando began a campaign of
terrorism mainly against blacks. A number of bombings took place, notably against the offices of the
South African Institute of Race Relations and the
University of South Africa. In 1981 they planned to also attack whites whom they regarded as "white kaffirs" or
race mixers. The South African police made arrests and discovered a hitlist of targets which included Bishop
Desmond Tutu, the White Commando having previously "threatened him repeatedly". Fotheringham was not charged but Max (Massimo) Bollo from SANF's national directorate, and leader of the Italian associated grouping UNIDO, received a lengthy jail sentence, as did two other fellow Italians. SANF disbanded in the early 1980s. ==See also==