White South Africans Turn Down Trump’s Immigration Offer

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U.S. President Donald Trump’s offer to rehouse white South Africans as refugees fleeing persecution may not spur quite the rush he anticipates, as even right-wing white lobby groups want to “tackle the injustices” of Black majority rule on home soil.

Trump on Friday signed an executive order to cut the U.S. aid to South Africa, citing an expropriation act that President Cyril Ramaphosa signed last month aiming to redress land inequalities that stem from South Africa’s history of white supremacy.

The order provided for resettlement in the U.S. of “Afrikaners in South Africa who are victims of unjust racial discrimination” as refugees.

Afrikaners are mostly white descendants of early Dutch and French settlers who own most of the country’s farmland.

“If you haven’t got any problems here, why would you want to go,”  Neville van der Merwe, a 78-year-old pensioner in Bothasig near Cape Town, said.

There hasn’t been any really bad taking over our land.

The people are carrying on like normal, and you know, what are you going to do over there?

The law seeks to address racial land ownership disparities – which has left three-quarters of privately owned land in the hands of the white minority – by making it easier for the state to expropriate land in the public interest.

Ramaphosa has defended the policy.

White people represent 7.2% of South Africa’s population of 63 million, statistics agency data shows.

The data does not break down how many are Afrikaner.

South Africa’s British rulers handed most farmland to whites. In 1950, the Apartheid-era National Party seized 85% of the land, forcing 3.5 million Black people from their homes.

Ramaphosa’s African National Congress, ANC, the biggest party in the ruling coalition, says Trump is amplifying misinformation propagated by AfriForum, an Afrikaner-led group.

 

 

 

Reuters/Shakirat Sadiq

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