Disappointed' South Africa summons US envoy for Trump tweet

AP  |  Johannesburg 

said today it had summoned the top US in the country to "convey the unhappiness of the people" over Donald Trump's tweet about and the "large scale killing of farmers."

In a statement, said it told US Charge d'Affaires Jessye Lapenn it was "disappointed" over the failure to use available diplomatic channels.

has said Trump's tweet was based on "false information" and served "only to polarize debate on this sensitive and crucial matter."

The country is in the middle of a racially charged debate over land reform, a lawful process that seeks to correct the legacy of decades of white-minority rule that stripped blacks of their land.

Nearly a quarter-century after the end of apartheid, white South Africans, who comprise about 8 per cent of the population, own more than 70 percent of the private agricultural land.

In July, said the ruling would amend the constitution so the state could start to expropriate land without compensation to speed up the process of land redistribution, but that has not yet happened and no land has been seized.

A fringe group of the white minority claims land reform will inspire violent attacks, though experts say farm attacks reflect the country's generally high crime rate and are on the decline.

Claims of "genocide" against white South Africans, however, have been picked up by some white nationalists in the US, and leaders of a right-wing South African group travelled to the US in May to lobby officials about the alleged targeting of white farmers.

Trump's tweet yesterday followed a Fox segment claiming had started seizing white-owned farms.

The tweet was quickly lambasted by many in South Africa, with one top ruling party official, Zizi Kodwa, telling that Trump has never experienced apartheid and doesn't know its legacy of stark inequality.

Later yesterday, State Department said the administration's position was that land expropriation without compensation "would risk sending down the wrong path."

Nauert toned down Trump's language suggesting that were underway and did not repeat the president's suggestion that large numbers of white South African farmers had been killed.

Trump's tweet did find support among some South Africans, while some farmers spoke out about their security concerns.

"We try very hard not to go and live in a walled security area somewhere, but it costs a lot of money in the first place to have the necessary security," said Leon Sholtz, a in Broederstroom in North West province.

"It is fact that we have lost four of our neighbours in the last 10 to 12 years due to farm murders. ... I think it is something that the government should look into and try and stop as soon as possible.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, August 24 2018. 16:35 IST