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Trump's evidence of South Africa  ‘white genocide' contains images from DR Congo

Trump's evidence of South Africa ‘white genocide' contains images from DR Congo

Irish Times23-05-2025

The evidence of supposed mass killings of white South Africans presented by
Donald Trump
in a tense
White House meeting on Wednesday
were in some cases images from the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Other footage shown during the meeting
was falsely portrayed as depicting 'burial sites'.
'These are all white farmers that are being buried,' said the US president, holding up a printout of an article accompanied by a picture during the contentious Oval Office meeting South African president
Cyril Ramaphosa
.
The picture accompanying the article was in fact a screengrab of a video published by Reuters on February 3rd and subsequently verified by the news agency's fact check team, showing humanitarian workers lifting body bags in the Congolese city of Goma. The image was pulled from Reuters footage shot after deadly battles with Rwanda-backed M23 rebels.
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The White House did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.
At another point in the meeting, Mr Trump played Mr Ramaphosa a video that he claimed proved genocide is being committed against white people in South Africa.
Within it was footage that Mr Trump claimed showed the graves of more than a thousand white farmers, marked by white crosses.
The footage – taken at a highway connecting the small towns of Newcastle and Normandein in South Africa – in fact showed a memorial site, and not graves.
[
Debunking Trump's claims: Is there any evidence of white genocide in South Africa?
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]
Rob Hoatson, who set up the memorial to capture public attention, told the BBC it was not a burial site.
'It was a memorial. It was not a permanent memorial that was erected. It was a temporary memorial,' he said. The memorial was set up in the aftermath of a murder of two Afrikaner farmers in the local community.
The video played by Mr Trump on Wednesday contained several falsehoods and inaccuracies, but was intended to back the president's offer of 'refuge' to persecuted white farmers, which has angered the South African government which disputes the allegations.
The White House claimed it showed evidence of genocide of white farmers in South Africa. This conspiracy theory, which has circulated among the far-right for years, is based on false claims.
[
South African reaction to Trump-Ramaphosa meeting: 'It was always going to be tough'
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]
The video prominently featured Julius Malema, a firebrand politician known for his radical rhetoric. He was seen in several clips wearing the red beret of his populist, Marxist-inspired Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party and chanting calls to 'cut the throat of whiteness' as well as a controversial anti-apartheid song 'Kill the Boer, kill the farmer'.
Mr Trump falsely said he was a government official, insinuating his inflammatory slogans reflected an official policy against South Africa's white minority.
Mr Malema is an opposition politician who gained prominence advocating radical reforms including land redistribution and nationalising key economic sectors.
The party only came fourth in last year's elections, with 9.5 per cent of the vote.
During the Oval Office meeting, Mr Ramaphosa and his delegation distanced themselves from Mr Malema's rhetoric.
Agriculture minister John Steenhuisen, a member of the centre-right Democratic Alliance, told Mr Trump he joined Mr Ramaphosa's multiparty coalition 'precisely to keep these people out of power'.
Mr Ramaphosa visited Washington this week to try to mend ties with the United States after persistent criticism from Mr Trump in recent months over South Africa's land laws, foreign policy, and alleged bad treatment of its white minority, which South Africa denies. – Guardian

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