Trump signs order to cut funding for South Africa over land policy; Ramaphosa says will not be bullied

Trump signs order to cut funding for South Africa over land policy; Ramaphosa says will not be bullied

By Reuters


WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump signed an executive order to cut U.S. financial assistance to South Africa, the White House said on Friday, citing disapproval of its land policy and of its genocide case at the International Court of Justice against Washington’s ally Israel.

The United States allocated nearly $440 million in assistance to South Africa in 2023, the most recent U.S. government data shows.

South Africa’s foreign ministry said on Saturday the executive order “lacks factual accuracy and fails to recognize South Africa’s profound and painful history of colonialism and apartheid.”

The White House said Washington will also formulate a plan to resettle white South African farmers and their families as refugees.

It said U.S. officials will take steps to prioritize humanitarian relief, including admission and resettlement through the United States Refugee Admissions Program for Afrikaners in South Africa, who are mostly white descendants of early Dutch and French settlers.

South Africa’s foreign ministry said: “It is ironic that the executive order makes provision for refugee status in the U.S. for a group in South Africa that remains amongst the most economically privileged, while vulnerable people in the U.S. from other parts of the world are being deported and denied asylum despite real hardship.”

Trump has said, without citing evidence, that “South Africa is confiscating land” and that “certain classes of people” were treated “very badly.”

South African-born billionaire Elon Musk, who is close to Trump, has said that white South Africans have been the victims of “racist ownership laws.”

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa – who signed into law a bill last month aimed at making it easier for the state to expropriate land in the public interest – has defended the policy. He has said the government had not confiscated any land and the policy was aimed at evening out racial disparities in land ownership in the Black-majority nation.

Ramaphosa said South Africa “will not be bullied.”

South Africa has a history of colonial conquest and dispossession which pushed the Black majority into crowded urban townships and rural reserves.

The country’s British imperial masters gave most farmland to whites. In 1950, the Afrikaner National Party passed a law taking 85% of territory for themselves and kicking 3.5 million Black people off their ancestral homelands.

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