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Trump Challenges South African President on White Farmer Killings in Tense White House Meeting

by Nelson Ugwuagbo
Cyril and Trump

In a tense Oval Office meeting on Wednesday, U.S. President Donald Trump confronted South African President Cyril Ramaphosa with claims of a “genocide” against white Afrikaner farmers, escalating tensions between the two nations.

Trump dimmed the lights to play a video showing crosses he claimed marked the graves of over 1,000 murdered white farmers and displayed news articles to support his allegations of widespread violence. Ramaphosa, maintaining composure, firmly denied the claims, asserting that South Africa faces a general crime problem, not a racially motivated targeting of white farmers.

The exchange, broadcast live, ignited a firestorm of reactions on X, with users divided over Trump’s accusations and Ramaphosa’s response.

Trump’s video, which included footage of opposition politician Julius Malema chanting “Kill the Boer, kill the farmer” at a rally, was presented as evidence of persecution.

He also referenced a 2024 South African land reform law, claiming it enables land seizures from white farmers without compensation. Ramaphosa countered that the chants do not reflect government policy and that the law aims to address historical apartheid-era inequalities, not target any racial group.

“There is criminality in our country. People who do get killed, unfortunately through criminal activity, are not only white people, the majority of them are Black people,” Ramaphosa stated, citing South African police data showing 26,232 murders in 2024, with only 44 linked to farming communities, eight of whom were farmers.

The video Trump showed, later revealed to depict a 2020 protest in KwaZulu-Natal with crosses commemorating farm murder victims, not actual graves, drew sharp criticism. South African officials, including Agriculture Minister John Steenhuisen, emphasized that crime affects all South Africans, with most victims being Black.

Ramaphosa’s calm rebuttal, invoking Nelson Mandela’s call for dialogue, was praised by some as dignified. “I really want to congratulate the president of South Africa for keeping composure,” said Land Reform Minister Mzwanele Nyhontso.

The meeting, initially aimed at resetting U.S.-South Africa trade relations, was overshadowed by Trump’s focus on white farmers, a topic he’s raised since 2018. His recent executive order cutting U.S. aid to South Africa and granting asylum to 59 Afrikaners fueled the controversy.

Ramaphosa, accompanied by golfers Ernie Els and Retief Goosen to appeal to Trump’s interests, left the White House emphasizing trade talks, but the confrontation dominated global headlines.

South Africa’s high crime rate, with a 2023 murder rate of 45 per 100,000, remains a challenge, but experts and courts, including a 2025 Western Cape High Court ruling, dismiss “white genocide” claims as “clearly imagined.”

The clash has strained U.S.-South Africa relations, with Ramaphosa’s team now tasked with navigating trade negotiations amid looming U.S. tariffs set to hit South African exports in July

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