Mandela relative calls for U.S. to deport Afrikaners


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Summary

Refugee status controversy

Mayibuye Melisizwe Mandela, the great grandson of Nelson Mandela, has publicly called for President Donald Trump to deport South Africans who were accepted as refugees by the U.S.

White genocide claims

President Trump has alleged that there is a genocide against white farmers in South Africa, a claim that South African leadership denies.

US-South Africa diplomatic tensions

The allegations of genocide resulted in South African President Cyril Ramaphosa traveling to the U.S. to meet with President Trump.


Full story

Nelson Mandela’s great-grandson has called on President Donald Trump to deport the South Africans he allowed into the U.S. as refugees. Mayibuye Melisizwe Mandela said the group does not “qualify to be refugees” in the U.S.

Mandela’s call for deportation

The 31-year-old Mandela opened a criminal investigation into the group of Afrikaners who came to America in May. Newsweek reports the affidavit shows Mandela accused the group of “treason, spreading misinformation and incitement against South Africa.”

“Once they land in South Africa, we must arrest them for lying, for us spending thousands and thousands of Rands of our tax money, flying presidents, our president from South Africa to the United States to go and explain something that he shouldn’t even go there because it was a lie,” Mandela told Newsweek.

Newsweek reports the resettlement program of South Africans to America is being scaled, and numbers will dramatically increase in the next few months.

Afrikaners come to America

Trump accepted 59 Afrikaners on May 13, with several others reportedly coming in later weeks. The president alleges there’s a genocide against white farmers in South Africa, which that country’s leadership denies.

However, the Afrikaners who did come to America said they had issues with the Black community there.

“On the day Trump made the offer…it felt like a miracle had been dropped from the sky,” an Afrikaner farmer’s wife named Zenia Pretorius told The Times UK.

South Africa does have one of the highest crime rates in the world, but there’s no evidence to support that it’s race-based. Republicans have pointed to violent language at political rallies and comments from Afrikaners, but those claims have yet to be substantiated.

“I believe they should face prison,” Mandela told Newsweek. “White genocide is a very serious allegation, and in South Africa, we know that there is no white genocide. It’s a country where there is crime, like every other country.”

Elon Musk, a naturalized U.S. citizen who was born in South Africa, has made similar claims of genocide against the country’s white farmers.

US/South Africa Relations

The genocide allegations grew loud enough that South African President Cyril Ramaphosa flew to the U.S. to meet with President Trump on May 21.

The meeting became somewhat contentious between the two world leaders. At one point, President Trump played a video of a far-left politician chanting, “kill the Boer, kill the farmer.”

The man seen chanting in that video is Julius Malema, who heads the Economic Freedom Fighters, an opposition party that Mandela recently joined.

Following the video, Ramaphosa said that it is not representative of what’s happening in his country. “We are completely opposed to that,” Ramaphosa told Trump following the video.

Cole Lauterbach (Managing Editor) and Harry Fogle (Video Editor) contributed to this report.
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Why this story matters

The debate over the resettlement of South African Afrikaners in the U.S. highlights ongoing tensions about refugee status, international perceptions of violence in South Africa and the interplay of political narratives between the United States and South Africa.

Refugee status and legitimacy

Questions surrounding whether South African Afrikaners meet the criteria for refugee status draw attention to the broader challenges of defining and verifying asylum claims.

Allegations of white genocide

Claims and denials of a 'white genocide' among South African farmers are central to political and public debate, influencing international relations and domestic policies.

International political tensions

The controversy over South African migrants and related allegations has led to diplomatic strain, illustrated by high-level meetings and public disagreements between U.S. and South African leaders.