JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
It is difficult to hide: relations between South Africa and the United States are strained and have been so for months.
Since Donald Trump took office
again as president of the United States, the two countries have repeatedly
clashed over the US plan to resettle white South African farmers, which Donald
Trump claims face "racial discrimination" in South Africa.
And in March, Washington
expelled the South African ambassador Ebrahim Rasool over critical comments he
had made on the subject of the Trump administration.
Late on Wednesday, Pretoria
announced that South African president Cyril Ramaphosa would travel to
Washington next week. On the agenda is a meeting with Donald Trump.
While the South African
presidency did not further comment on the issues to be discussed by the two
presidents, the tensions surrounding the white farmers' refugee status, which
the US granted earlier this week, are likely to be included in the talks.
The US welcomed 59 white
South Africans as refugees this Monday, the start of what the Trump
administration said is a larger relocation plan for minority Afrikaner farmers
who Trump has claimed are being persecuted in their homeland because of their
race.
South Africa denies the
allegations and says whites in the majority Black country are not being singled
out for persecution.
No evidence of
"genocide" of white farmers
The Republican president has
singled out South Africa over what the US calls racist laws against whites and
has accused the government of “fueling” violence against white farmers.
The South African government
says the relatively small number of killings of white farmers should be
condemned but are part of the country’s problems with violent crime and are not
racially motivated.
Trump said Monday that there
was “a genocide taking place” against white farmers that was being ignored by
international media.
This claim has previously
however been discredited, most recently so by a South African court ruling in
February.
The US criticism of what it
calls South Africa’s racist, anti-white laws appears to refer to South Africa’s
affirmative action laws that advance opportunities for Black people, and a new
land expropriation law that gives the government power to take private land
without compensation.
Although the government says
the land law is not a confiscation tool and refers to unused land that can be
redistributed for the public good, some Afrikaner groups say it could allow
their land to be seized and redistributed to some of the country’s Black
majority.
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