The Herald

Mandela set an example but racists bid to stir divisions in South Africa

Donald Trump’s false claims of ‘large scale killings’ of white South African farmers is dangerous, irresponsi­ble and untrue,

- says Foreign Editor DAVID PRATT

spirit at least, Nelson Mandela returned to Glasgow last night. It’s going on 25 years since the great man came in person to the city.

Arriving first from the airport at the city’s Hilton Hotel, few who were there that day back in 1993 will forget how he brought the place to a virtual standstill as staff and guests rose to give him a standing ovation as a bagpiper played him into the building.

Last night aptly enough, The Hilton was again the venue for a Centenary Gala Dinner to mark 100 years since the birth of one of the most iconic political figures of modern times.

Organised by the Nelson Mandela Scottish Memorial Foundation (NMSMF) the event was a fundraiser for a memorial sculpture to be commission­ed by public donation that will stand in the part of central Glasgow that now bears the South African leader’s name – Nelson Mandela Place.

Last night it was my privilege to act as chairman for a discussion that explored the theme “Memories of Mandela”. For half an hour the audience and myself listened to personal reflection­s of Mandela and his legacy from South Africa’s Deputy High Commission­er, Golden Neswiswi, renowned singer Marah Louw and NMSMF chairman Brian Filling.

It was Ms Louw who all those years ago in a rain-sodden George Square sang and danced with Mr Mandela, to the delight of the massive crowd who had come from all over Scotland for a glimpse of the leader shortly to become South African president.

It was Mr Filling, too, who back then as an activist, was the nemesis of the South African apartheid regime’s Consular Section in Glasgow, but is today Scotland’s Honorary Consul for South Africa, a role awarded for his tireless work during those bitter years when racism ruled in the country.

While it’s reassuring to know that those bleak and dangerous days of South African apartheid are now behind us, events of the past week were again a stark reminder that racism and those determined to sow division continue to plague the world.

I’m speaking about the myth fuelled for years by white supremacis­ts that surfaced in a tweet by US President Donald Trump last week.

More than two decades after the end of apartheid, one of the inequities of the system’s legacy remains a profound inequality in land ownership. White South Africans comprise less than 10 per cent of the country’s population but own some 72% of its agricultur­al land.

In an effort to address this issue South Africa’s ruling African National Congress (ANC) has sought to change the constituti­on in order to redistribu­te land and bridge deep inequaliti­es stemming from those decades of white minority rule.

But for some time now fringe groups in South Africa and the US say these white farmers are targeted and killed at disproport­ionately high rates.

That there is no evidence to support such claims matters nothing to those seeking to create trouble and disharmony. President Trump, it seems, has been only too willing to buy into such accusation­s made by those within the US hard right and white-nationalis­t ranks. As ever, it was on Twitter that Mr Trump unleashed his version of events by making two claims.

The first was that the South African government is seizing land from white farmers and that a “large scale killing of farmers” is under way.

As the Washington Post was quick to point out, while the President’s first claim about land seizures may have some basis, it remains mostly false.

Mr Trump’s second claim, meanwhile, that South African farmers are being killed on a “large scale,” is simply a fiction not supported by data or evidence.

Not surprising­ly Mr Trump’s remarks have drawn a rebuke from the South African government, who says that it “totally rejects this narrow perception whch only seeks to divide our nation and reminds us of our colonial past.”

Writing recently in the Financial Times, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa made clear his view that the greatest obstacles to growth in his country remains “the severe inequality between black and white South Africans”.

In few areas is this disparity more devastatin­g that in the ownership and access to land.

This “land question” remains a thorny issue, with critics often sounding off warnings over neighbouri­ng Zimbabwe’s experience back in 2000.

It was in those dark days that then president, Robert Mugabe, sent the national economy into meltdown when he forcibly expropriat­ed land from white Zimbabwean farmers and handed it to his political allies.

The resulting food shortages, hyperinfla­tion and economic strife continue to seriously hamper Zimbabwe to this day.

Africa watchers, however, insist that to conflate the Zimbabawe experience with events and land redistribu­tion in South Africa right now is neither helpful nor strictly accurate. Time and again President Ramaphosa has said any such South African land redistribu­tion plans would be undertaken “in the public interest subject to just and equitable compensati­on”.

Such reassuranc­es, though, don’t wash with those US white supremacis­ts and others on the extreme right, hell-bent on the manipulati­on and propagandi­sing of the issue to stir up racial division.

It’s curious that despite enquiries from many media sources, the White House remains vague as to where Mr Trump got his informatio­n about “large-scale killing of farmers” in South Africa.

Certainly, Africa Check, the non –profit organisati­on set up to promote accuracy in public debate and the media in Africa, can find no data to substantia­te the US President’s claims and it is not alone.

But Mr Trump continues to peddle such accusation­s, his persistenc­e perhaps influenced by the likes of whitesupre­macist websites such as Stormfront, which has a section devoted to South Africa.

Much of Stormfront’s material, too, appears to have originated with a political group called Afriforum that many in South Africa attest is nothing more than a hard-core racist group serving extremist Afrikaner interests.

Years after South Africa threw off the yoke of apartheid both inside and outside the country, there remain those it seems determined to stir up division.

Nelson Mandela would have called them out for doing so. In the same spirit so should we all, even if it includes the US President.

One of the inequities of the system’s legacy remains a profound inequality in land ownership

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„ This colourful parade of umbrellas was captured as pilgrims left after offering noon prayers on the road near the Namirah mosque on Arafat Mountain, during the annual Hajj pilgrimage, outside Mecca, Saudi Arabia. More than two million Muslims embark on the five-day pilgrimage, which represents one of the five pillars of Islam and is required of all able-bodied Muslims once in their life.
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„ Black South Africans own less than 30 per cent of their country’s agricultur­al land.
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Picture: Getty „ South Korean Lee Geum-sum, 92, meets her North Korean son Lee Sung-chul, 71, during a reunion meeting of separated families at the Mount Kumgang resort in North Korea.
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„ These residents make sure they keep their dogs safe as they wade through flood waters on Big Island, Hawaii, after almost 2ft of rain hit some parts of the state as a result of Hurricane Lane.
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