President plays graphic video during tense White House meeting
A Friendly Start Turns Sour
Washington, D.C. — South African President Cyril Ramaphosa arrived at the White House seeking trade relief. He came bearing gifts, including a coffee-table book of South African golf courses and two of the country’s most famous golfers, Ernie Els and Retief Goosen.
But the tone quickly shifted.

President Donald Trump, now in his second term, dimmed the lights in the Oval Office. He played a video showing a field of white crosses. A voiceover by opposition leader Julius Malema sang, “Shoot the Boer, Shoot the Farmer.”
Trump claimed the crosses marked graves of murdered white farmers. He did not confirm the source. The footage remains unverified. The tweet within the video stated the crosses were symbolic — a protest, not actual burial sites.
Trump Claims ‘White Genocide’
Trump handed Ramaphosa printouts. They described alleged attacks on white South Africans. Then came his accusation: white farmers were being persecuted, even killed, with no justice served.
Ramaphosa firmly denied the claim.
“There is criminality in our country,” he said. “But most victims are black, not white.”
He reminded Trump that South Africa is a democracy. “What Malema said is not government policy,” Ramaphosa stated. “We allow freedom of speech, even for minority parties.”
Tensions Rise in the Oval Office
The South African leader tried to ease the situation. He pointed to the white members of his delegation. “If there was genocide, these men would not be here,” he said, referring to Goosen, Els, and billionaire Johann Rupert.
Trump wasn’t satisfied. He accused South Africa of allowing land seizures and murders. He referred to the controversial 2025 land expropriation law signed by Ramaphosa. The law permits land seizure without compensation under specific conditions.
Ramaphosa calmly replied, “No land has been taken yet. And no one is being killed as a result.”
A Clash of Narratives
Throughout the meeting, Ramaphosa avoided a confrontation. He even joked about offering Trump a plane to visit South Africa.
He invoked the legacy of Nelson Mandela. “We remain committed to reconciliation,” he said.
But Trump pressed on. He claimed that white farmers were under siege. Ramaphosa handed the floor to his agriculture minister, John Steenhuisen — a white South African.
Steenhuisen dismissed the idea of mass emigration. “Most farmers want to stay,” he said.
Behind the Scenes: Politics and Optics
Before the meeting, Ramaphosa had stressed trade as his main agenda. South African exports to the US are set to face a 30% tariff once the pause on Trump’s import taxes ends.
Ramaphosa hoped the meeting would reset relations. Instead, it veered into racial politics.
Trump’s stance aligns with his administration’s recent moves. In February, he offered refugee status to Afrikaners — white descendants of Dutch and French settlers. Days earlier, 59 white South Africans arrived in the US under this program.
Ramaphosa called them “cowards.”
Fallout and Reactions
South Africa’s ambassador to Washington, Ebrahim Rasool, was expelled in March. He had accused Trump of promoting white victimhood.
Opposition leader Julius Malema responded to the White House incident on X: “A group of older men meet in Washington to gossip about me.”
He added: “We will not compromise our land policy for political expediency.”
The US also suspended key aid to South Africa after the country filed a genocide case against Israel at the International Court of Justice.
What Comes Next?
This meeting will likely have long-term consequences. Both leaders appeared entrenched in their positions.
Trump, with an eye on his conservative base, continued to frame the land debate as racial persecution. Ramaphosa, under pressure at home and abroad, refused to back away from land reform.
What was meant to be a diplomatic engagement turned into a global stage for political theater. The fallout may further strain relations between two of the world’s most influential democracies.
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