Manawatu Standard

Trump tweets white nationalis­t talking point

- Us/south Africa

President Donald Trump embraced a longtime white nationalis­t talking point when he tweeted about alleged ‘‘large scale killing’’ of white farmers in South Africa, drawing praise yesterday from white nationalis­ts and protests from antiracism groups in the United States.

‘‘I have asked Secretary of State @Secpompeo to closely study the South Africa land and farm seizures and expropriat­ions and the large scale killing of farmers,’’ Trump tweeted Thursday night. Appearing to quote a Tucker Carlson segment on Fox News, Trump wrote the ‘‘South African Government is now seizing land from white farmers.’’

South Africa’s government immediatel­y protested Trump’s remark, writing on Twitter that ‘‘South Africa totally rejects this narrow perception which only seeks to divide our nation and reminds us of our colonial past.’’

Trump’s tweet drew applause from white nationalis­ts in the US, who have strongly supported his presidency because of his tough stances on immigratio­n and his past reluctance to denounce far-right figures.

‘‘Thank you!’’ tweeted David Duke, a former Ku Klux Klan leader, later adding an image that said, ‘‘Stop White Genocide,’’ with the hashtag #Southafric­a. Duke has strongly praised Trump in the past, including after last year’s violent rally in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, when Trump struggled to criticise white nationalis­ts who clashed with anti-racism protesters.

Land reform is a complicate­d issue in South Africa, and violence is also a serious problem. But experts say white nationalis­ts and other far-right figures in the US and abroad have conflated the issues to push a message of ‘‘white genocide’’ happening in South Africa.

The claim had long percolated among the far-right before appearing on Fox News and in the White House, which is what made its sudden appearance on Trump’s Twitter feed striking to anti-racism groups.

‘‘This is a white supremacis­t talking point,’’ the Anti-defamation League said in a statement on Twitter. ‘‘For years they’ve campaigned to stop ‘white genocide’ in South Africa & made false claims about race-based killings of white South African farmers.’’

For decades, South Africa has struggled to correct the legacy of apartheid, in which a white ruling minority – the descendant­s of European colonialis­ts – had denied black South Africans various rights and access to farmland.

Today, black South Africans make up 80 per cent of the population but own just 4 per cent of the country’s land. The government, dominated by the African National Congress since 1994, has pursued policies seeking to transfer whiteowned farmland to black owners, often meeting failure.

South Africa President Cyril Ramaphosa has suggested amending the constituti­on to allow uncompensa­ted seizures by the government.

South Africa has a high overall homicide rate compared to other countries, and farmers have sometimes been victims of violence. But a recent report by a consortium of agricultur­al associatio­ns said that the number of farmers killed from 2017 to 2018 – 47 – was actually at a 20-year low.

The issue has been closely followed in the US by white nationalis­ts and far-right figures, who have hyped stories of black-onwhite violence in South Africa, as they often do in the US, to help push their political messages about the need for white power.

‘‘Opening up space to talk about white South Africans – giving his base the permission to seriously discuss white dispossess­ion – is a monumental achievemen­t,’’ tweeted Richard Spencer, a prominent white nationalis­t.

Spencer added a caveat: ‘‘I’ll remain critical of all this because Trump is effectivel­y live-tweeting Fox News, and he has simply not been effective at implementi­ng policies that reflect his defining ideas.’’

South African experts and political figures largely denounced Trump’s ‘‘large scale killing’’ tweet.

‘‘People are not being targeted because of their race, but because they are vulnerable and isolated on the farms,’’ Gareth Newham, head of the crime and justice programme at the Institute for Security Studies, told the Associated Press.

‘‘He is part of the right-wing lynch mob using the fear factor in order for us to maintain the status quo,’’ Zizi Kodwa, a member of the ruling party’s national executive committee, said.

‘‘Donald Trump is a weapon of mass destructio­n.’’

A former US ambassador to South Africa under the Obama administra­tion, Patrick Gaspard, accused Trump of using a ‘‘disproven racial myth’’ to distract the public from the recent guilty plea and criminal conviction of close political associates Michael Cohen and Paul Manafort.

But Afriforum, a group that represents some white South African interests, welcomed Trump’s tweet.

‘‘Everyone in South Africa should hope that the pressure from the USA will lead to the (ruling party) reconsider­ing the disastrous route that they want to take South Africa on,’’ Afriforum CEO Kallie Kriel said, according to the AP. –LA Times

‘‘This is a white supremacis­t talking point. For years they’ve campaigned to stop ‘white genocide’ in South Africa & made false claims about race-based killings of white South African farmers.’’ Anti-defamation League

 ?? TNS ?? South Africa President Cyril Ramaphosa has suggested amending the constituti­on to allow uncompensa­ted seizures of whiteowned land by the government.
TNS South Africa President Cyril Ramaphosa has suggested amending the constituti­on to allow uncompensa­ted seizures of whiteowned land by the government.

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