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Donald Trump turned out to be a political Rottweiler of the right -wing African groups, fighting against the President of South Africa Cyril Ramaphos.
They quickly celebrated the ambush of the US President Ramaphos in the oval office, and the solidarity movement – who visited the US to lobby for Trump’s administration – saying that he welcomed the fact that “the huge problems of South Africa were posted on the international stage.”
Ernst Roths, a leading person on the right African, showed his admiration for the US president.
“Donald Trump has become history today,” he said in a report on X, before thanking him for showing a video with Firebrand opposition politician Julius Malem, singing “shoot a storm; shoot at the farmer” – and the headlines of the White Farmers’ murder.
Yakh Kleinhans Solidarity went on, saying that Trump earned the Nobel Prize for “putting the murder crisis on the international agenda.”
But for the leading African political observer Peter Juta The ambush showed that “months and years of exaggeration, hyperbola and misinformation used in the American right ecosystem, a number of South African activists got into its mark.”
Like many South Africans, he praised Ramaphos for a measuring manner at the White House, smiling when Trump frowned.
But many people are angry in the right groups, saying that they have shown a lack of patriotism, lobbying Trump administration to take a tough line against the country.
Such critics indicate that in South Africa there is a national unity government – it consists of 10 parties with racial and ideological gaps to solve many problems of the country – from high crime levels that affect all races and classes, to 32%unemployment rate, and black people fight the majority to find a job.
For most South African, the “rainbow nation” was shown in the White House, exposing the united front against Trump.
The government delegation included the oldest white politician in South Africa, John Stunhuisen, the Minister of Agriculture, who heads the second largest party in South Africa, the Democratic Alliance (DA).
He acknowledged that South Africa had a “real security problem”, adding that it requires “a lot of effort to come out.”
“This will require more law enforcement resources,” he said.
But he rejected the opinion that most white farmers fled: “Of course, most farmers in South Africa and small farmers really want to stay in South Africa and make him work.”
Trump’s video has strengthened the role of the Party of Opposition Economic Freedom (EFF) in South African politics, showing that its leader sings the song “Shoot the Bur”.
The party advocates the nationalization of the land, and Malema writes in the singing of the song at its political actions – with Trump requires to find out why no action was taken against it.
The song once was a anthem against the apartheid, and the lobistan groups of Afrikaner tried to ban it. But South Africa’s Supreme Court of Appeal ruled that “a reasonable man” will realize that when “singing protest songs, even politicians, words should not be understood literally, and is not a firing gesture that must be understood as a call for weapons or violence.”
Instead, the song was a “provocative way” to promote the EFF political program – which was to stop “land and economic injustice”.
Ramaphos noted Trump that South Africa was democracy – and while the government was “completely against” what Malm was doing, Eff had the right to exist in accordance with the Constitution.
Eff fell in fourth place in last year’s parliamentary elections, and Ramaphos refused to give small political oxygen with him a transaction with the formation of the coalition government after a poll, which could not create directly the winner.
Stynhuisen said Trump that DA, the right -wing party that denotes the free market economy, joined the government to avoid Eff and help solve South Africa’s problems.
“This government, working together, needs the support of our allies around the world, so that we can strengthen our hand, develop our economy and close the door on this rebel (Malem), making it through the door of the union buildings (government),” he said.
Stynhuisen and Ramaphos hold the middle ground in South Africa’s policy-right Africa and Ef, along with the Umhont War (a spiral of the nation) by the former president Jacob Zuma.
Ramaphos promised to take advantage of unity, referring to the name of the anti-port icon Nelson Mandela-symbol of racial reconciliation in South Africa after the end of the White Minority rules in 1994.
But some Africans believe that they can no longer live in South Africa, and Trump has offered them refugee status. Almost 60 of them were relocated to the US.
Trump gave the impetus to the right, and some of them gathered outside the US Embassy in the South Africa capital, Pretoria, in February with posters that proclaimed: “Make South Africa again great” – adaptation “Make America again.”
The Minister of Land Reform of South Africa Muzanele Nyhonts acknowledged that the meetings in the oval office “uncomfortable”.
“There is no genocide in South Africa … South Africa has crimes like in other countries, and this crime affects many people,” he said in the Newshour BBC program.
Nyhontso applauded Ramaphos for keeping his well -being, not shooting Trump when he planted him and the weapons were burned.
Some also praised the President of South Africa for their tactics – drawing to the meeting of famous African golves to discard tensions.
Inviting to talk, Ernie Els took out his South African passport to prove his patriotism – and spoke about his respect for Mandela after he managed to unite the country at the end of the apartheid – but said he wants South Africa to flourish with America.
Retief Goosen may have added more fuel to the fire, saying how difficult it was for his brother outside the Northern city of Polokwan – explaining how he encountered a “constant battle” with people trying to “burn the farm and chase you.”
Although it ended, saying that despite the fear of the crime, “the guys live a wonderful life, despite what is happening.”
Military Businessman Johann Rupert, also Africa, noted that the highest level of murder in South Africa was in Cape Town cities, where most residents are black or painted – because people mixed races are known in South Africa – and are at large gangs.
While Zingisva Losi, the President of the South Africa’s largest trade union, told Trump about the destructive situation in the countryside, where the black majority is. “
“You will see women, the elderly, raped, kill, kill,” she said.
She urged delegations to solve the problem through trade – and create employment.
“The problem in South Africa is not necessarily a race, but it is a crime.”
These are the moods that the majority of the South Africans agree with.