south africa

'It's happening to me again!' South African president mocks Trump to laughing audience

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa recently used a speech as an opportunity to make a dig at President Donald Trump, and got the audience to join in with him.

Politico reported Tuesday that during a speech to the 2025 Sustainable Infrastructure Development Symposium in Cape Town, South Africa, Ramaphosa recalled the viral moment from his Oval Office meeting with Trump earlier this month. During one moment at the event, the venue dimmed the house lights. This prompted Ramaphosa to openly wonder if he were about to watch a video purportedly showing crimes against South African farmers.

“When I came in, I saw the room going a bit dark,” Ramaphosa said as the crowd laughed. “They darkened the room. And for a moment I wondered, ‘what is this! It’s happening to me again!’”

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The South African leader told the assembled audience that while he was under the impression that he and Trump were having a productive conversation, he was caught off-guard when Trump asked a staffer to turn off the Oval Office lights and play a video he had cued up. The footage — which CBS said was recorded in 2020 — showed rows of white crosses in a field that Trump asserted were meant to represent white Afrikaner farmers who had been killed, though CBS said that the crosses actually were part of a demonstration for farmers of all races.

"Each one of those white things you see is a cross. And there's approximately a thousand of them. They're all white farmers, the family of white farmers ...Those people are all killed," Trump told Ramaphosa as the video played.

Trump also showed news articles to Ramaphosa that he alleged were of reports on white South African farmers being murdered, though at least one of the article printouts he held up featured a screenshot of the Democratic Republic of Congo. Ramaphosa said he was "bemused" by the encounter.

“I was beginning to get into a groove of, you know, interacting with this man,” Ramaphosa said. “And I suddenly hear him say, no, ‘dim the lights.’ And I must say, a number of people have said, ‘this was an ambush, this was an ambush.’ And I was bemused, I was like, ‘what’s happening!’”

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Click here to read Politico's report in full.

'Speak to their base': Analyst says Trump exploiting 'white grievance' to appease MAGA

During President Donald Trump's Oval Office visit with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, he repeatedly pressed his guest about his government's treatment of white Afrikaners, at one point even asking staff to dim the lights so he could show a video. One journalist is now suggesting that Trump's behavior was calculated to score political points.

On Wednesday, Politico correspondent Eli Stokols told MSNBC host Katy Tur that Trump's conduct was reminiscent of his past campaigns for the White House, opining that the president was simply seeking to stoke racial tensions to fire up the MAGA faithful.

"It was an ambush, but it was also very predictable," Stokols said, pointing out that both Trump and "others in his orbit" like Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, as well as former Fox News host Tucker Carlson, have been vocal in their claims that genocide is being perpetuated against white people in South Africa.

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"But why would Donald Trump be fixated on this issue and presenting these claims of genocide that are seem to be very much exaggerated, to say the least?" He continued. "You and I both covered his 2016 campaign. We've been covering him for the better part of a decade. Donald Trump is a politician who has always focused on the politics of white grievance, white persecution, and that is the same story that he is telling about something going on in South Africa."

As the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) wrote in a 2018 article, the claims of "white genocide" against white South African farmers have been exploited by white supremacists to push a racist agenda. While there have been killings of white farmers in South Africa, the ADL found that Black farmers — and South Africans in general — have been killed at similar rates due to South Africa's higher than average violent crime rate. And the ADL further noted that since the fall of South Africa's apartheid government, white supremacists have been eager to seize on any narrative suggesting state-sanctioned oppression of whites in South Africa.

Stokols observed that despite Trump speaking for more than an hour about the claims of white South African farmers being victimized by an alleged campaign of racially motivated violence, he didn't push for any solution to the violence. And he recalled that Trump "hedged" when a reporter present in the Oval Office asked Trump if he thought that what was happening in South Africa met the definition of "genocide."

"I think that tells you that this White House is interested in elevating this as an issue, because they think it will speak to their base and to the same white fears that have helped or that have led some voters to gravitate towards Donald Trump," he said. "I think this is more about signaling values and priorities and issues and themes that are relevant to Donald Trump rather than it is actually about coming up with solutions."

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Watch the full segment below, or by clicking this link.

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'Debunked': Rapid-fire CNN fact check quashes Trump’s new oval office claim

CNN ‘Inside Politics’ dismantled President Donald Trump’s recent claim of wide-scale white genocide in South Africa using some of Trump’s own information to shred it.

The fact-check was a response to the president pouncing South African President Cyril Ramaphosa today with allegations of what he claims to be a nation’s war on white farmers and landowners.

“This is very bad,” Trump told Ramaphosa, while referencing a video the White House posted on X. “These are burial sites right here … over a thousand of white farmers and those cars are lined up to pay love on Sunday morning, each one of those white things you see are a cross. There’s approximately a thousand of them, they’re all white farmers.”

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Ramaphosa disputed the alleged burial sites in the video, saying “I’d like to know where that is. Because this I’ve never seen.”

CNN host Dana Bash turned to senior reporter Daniel Dale, who quickly pushed hard into details.

“In the last nine months of 2024 in South Africa [there were] 19,696 murders,” said Dale. “How many of them occurred on farms? Thirty-six, about 0.2 percent. That includes employees like security staff and farm workers. How many of them were actual farmers? Seven out of more than 19,000—and it's not even clear that those are all white farmers. Contrary to what the president said, many farmers in South Africa are Black. Even the white ones who have been victims of crime, it's not clear if they’ve been targeted for racial reasons.”

Experts and white South African farmers themselves have repeatedly told media outlets and think tanks that they feel they are more often targeted for robbery and low-level money crimes rather than race, primarily because they are geographically isolated and vulnerable.

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“So, that is bad, but that is not genocide,” said Dale. “And you know who else was skeptical of the genocide narrative, Dana? The Trump administration in 2020.”

According to Dale, Trump’s first administration shared a report revealing claims of racial violence to be more attributed to the country's “high and growing crime rate,” based on information from the Institute for Security Studies.

“This genocide claim … I think it is clearly undermined, debunked by the facts we have available,” Dale said.

Watch the video below, or by clicking here.

- YouTubeyoutu.be

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'Federal funds must be pulled': MAGA lashes out at church for refusing Trump directive

MAGA is furious at the Episcopal Church for refusing a directive from the federal government to help resettle white South Africans granted refugee status.

Newsweek reports the church submitted its refusal days after almost 50 South Africans arrived at a U.S. airport under a fast-tracked refugee program that appears to only serve white south Afrikaners. Other groups, including Black Sudanese refugees fleeing religious violence — who are also from Africa — are not similarly fast-tracked.

The new arrivals are minority descendants of mainly Dutch and French colonial settlers who created the segregationist system of apartheid in 1948, which allows white people to legally steal land and resources from the majority Black population, who were relocated to segregated overcrowded, townships of lean-tos and shacks.

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Data show 73 percent of privately owned land in South Africa is white-owned despite white people comprising only 7 percent of the population. In corporate South Africa, white individuals also occupy 62 percent of top management positions while 17 percent of leadership roles are held by Black managers.

Critics say Trump’s decision to expedite resettlement of Afrikaners bypasses an onerous refugee system that leaves thousands from conflict zones stuck in a years-long vetting processes and dangerous conditions.

Rev. Sean W. Rowe, presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church, confirmed in a letter to church members that the government contacted the church and expected it to resettle some of the South Africans under terms of a grant. But Rowe said the request posed a moral dilemma for the Episcopal Church, which has deep ties to the Anglican Church of Southern Africa and counts the late Archbishop Desmond Tutu — an outspoken apartheid opponent — among its spiritual forebears.

"In light of our church's steadfast commitment to racial justice and reconciliation and our historic ties with the Anglican Church of Southern Africa, we are not able to take this step," Rowe wrote. “… Accordingly, we have determined that, by the end of the federal fiscal year, we will conclude our refugee resettlement grant agreements with the U.S. federal government."

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Right-wing figures roasted the Episcopal Church, with conservative political activist Charlie Kirk posting on X: "I guess you aren't a refugee if you are white. According to the Episcopal Church Jesus doesn't love white people."

Conservative commentator Alex Jones, a conspiracy theorist who settled a lawsuit with families of Sandy Hook victims after calling the mass shooting a “hoax”, wrote: "All Federal Funds MUST Be Pulled From The Episcopal Church. It's Time To Enforce The Separation Of Church And State."

Read the full Newsweek report here.

Trump protecting 'most privileged people' makes 'mockery' of refugee system: NYT reporter

New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof loudly condemned President Donald Trump's decision to grant refugee status to white South Afrikaners in a recent CNN interview.

"He's completely turned refugee policy upside down in ways that reflect racial discrimination. I mean, it's not that the Afrikaner farmers are not suffering from that. It is true that some have been murdered, but Black farmers have been murdered at even higher rates," he told CNN host Anderson Cooper on his show Monday.

"It is true that there was legislation passed in January that theoretically creates an opportunity to confiscate some land without compensation. That has not been implemented. Nobody has had their land taken away, and these Afrikaners are among the most privileged people on the entire continent," he continued.

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Kristof said the world's worst humanitarian crisis right now is being witnessed in Sudan. "I've seen a man who had his eyes gouged out as a reflection of that genocide with a bayonet in Congo," he added.

"But none of those people have any right to be accepted to come to the U.S. as refugees, and instead we bring in, you know, a group of people who don't remotely qualify as refugees. But what distinguishes them is that they are white," he said.

"As a son of a refugee, I just find this makes a mockery of the entire principle of refugee status," Kristof told Cooper.

Earlier on the show, Cooper also criticized the president's decision, saying, "The only Africans President Trump has paved a path for are these South Africans. And yes, they are white."

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"They are Afrikaners, descendants of dutch settlers to South Africa. This is the first group of people granted refugee status to enter the U.S. since the president entered his second term," he added.

The CNN host further said the women and children who have been assaulted in the conflict in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, a place that has seen fighting for decades, deserved to be given refugee status.

He added there has been major fighting between various groups, making it "the deadliest war of our lifetime" and the deadliest since World War II.

"Some 3 to 4 million people have died in this country, and their deaths have virtually gone unnoticed, and there's a whole new round of fighting that's been going on in eastern Congo between the government and an armed group called M23," he said.

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"Thousands have died, hundreds of thousands displaced and widespread reports of sexual violence against women. But president Trump hasn't allowed refugees from there, here, nor from Sudan, where there's been terrible fighting," Cooper said.


Watch the video below or at this link.

- YouTubewww.youtube.com

Episcopal Church ends decades-long agreement with US over 'illegal' Trump policy

One of President Donald Trump's latest policies has prompted one of the largest Christian denominations in the United States to walk away entirely from a 40 year-long partnership with the government.

Religion News Service reported Monday that the Episcopal Church will no longer help the U.S. government resettle refugees after the Trump administration announced its plans to resettle white Afrikaners from South Africa in the United States. The Most Reverend Sean W. Rowe, who is the presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church, said the resettlement proposal forced his church to draw what RNS called a "moral line" in the sand at working with the administration moving forward.

“In light of our church’s steadfast commitment to racial justice and reconciliation and our historic ties with the Anglican Church of Southern Africa, we are not able to take this step,” Rowe wrote. “Accordingly, we have determined that, by the end of the federal fiscal year, we will conclude our refugee resettlement grant agreements with the U.S. federal government.”

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Currently, there are multiple groups suing the Trump administration over its refugee resettlement policies, including four faith-based groups. The plaintiffs are petitioning courts to reinstate plans to place refugees fleeing persecution — including Christian refugees — in safe communities throughout the U.S. after Trump issued an executive order abruptly halting prior resettlement agreements. One of those plaintiffs is Church World Service, which argued that the White Afrikaner proposal shows the administration has the capacity to screen and place refugees, but is instead only doing so for specific groups.

"We are concerned that the U.S. Government has chosen to fast-track the admission of Afrikaners, while actively fighting court orders to provide life-saving resettlement to other refugee populations who are in desperate need of resettlement," Church World Service head Rick Santos said.

"By resettling this population, the Government is demonstrating that it still has the capacity to quickly screen, process, and depart refugees to the United States," Santos added, "It’s time for the Administration to honor our nation’s commitment to the thousands of refugee families it abandoned with its cruel and illegal executive order."

Click here to read RNS' full report.

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