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By Africa Report Files
White South Africans Decline Trump’s Refugee Offer
Groups representing South Africa’s white minority have declined President Donald Trump’s offer of refugee status and resettlement in the United States.
Trump’s plan was part of a broader response to South Africa’s land reform policy, which he claimed was confiscating land and treating certain classes of people “very badly.”
However, the white minority groups, including AfriForum and the Solidarity Movement, expressed appreciation for Trump’s recognition of their concerns but politely declined his offer, stating that they are “going nowhere” and wish to remain in South Africa.
On Saturday, two of the most prominent groups representing Afrikaners said they would not be taking up Trump’s offer of resettlement in the U.S.
“Our members work here, and want to stay here, and they are going to stay here,” said Dirk Hermann, chief executive of the Afrikaner trade union Solidarity, which says it represents about 2 million people. “We are committed to build a future here. We are not going anywhere.”
At the same news conference, Kallie Kriel, the CEO of the Afrikaner lobby group AfriForum, said: “We have to state categorically: We don’t want to move elsewhere.”
Trump’s move to sanction South Africa, a key U.S. trading partner in Africa, came after he and his South African-born adviser Elon Musk accused its Black leadership of having an anti-white stance. But the portrayal of Afrikaners as a downtrodden group that needed to be saved would surprise most South Africans.
“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,” South Africa’s Foreign Ministry said.
There was “a campaign of misinformation and propaganda” aimed at South Africa, the ministry said.
Whites in South Africa still generally have a much better standard of living than Blacks more than 30 years after the end of the apartheid system of white minority rule in 1994. Despite being a small minority, whites still own about 70% of South Africa’s private farmland. A study in 2021 by the South Africa Human Rights Commission said 1% of whites were living in poverty compared with 64% of Blacks.
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