First group of 49 white South Africans leaves for the US after Trump
offered them refugee status
[May 12, 2025]
By GERALD IMRAY
CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — A group of 49 white South Africans
departed their homeland Sunday for the United States on a private
charter plane having been offered refugee status by the Trump
administration under a new program announced in February.
The group, which included families and small children, was due to arrive
at Dulles International Airport outside Washington on Monday morning
local time, according to Collen Msibi, a spokesperson for South Africa's
transport ministry.
They are the first Afrikaners — a white minority group in South Africa —
to be relocated after U.S. President Donald Trump issued an executive
order on Feb. 7 accusing South Africa's Black-led government of racial
discrimination against them and announcing a program to offer them
relocation to America.
The South African government said it is “completely false” that
Afrikaners are being persecuted.
The Trump administration has fast-tracked their applications while
pausing other refugee programs, halting arrivals from Afghanistan, Iraq,
most of sub-Saharan Africa and other countries in a move being
challenged in court.
Refugee groups have questioned why the white South Africans are being
prioritized ahead of people from countries wracked by war and natural
disasters. Vetting for refugee status in the U.S. often takes years.

The Trump administration says the South African government is pursuing
racist, anti-white policies through affirmative action laws and a new
land expropriation law it says targets Afrikaners' land. The government
says those claims are based on misinformation and there is no racism
against Afrikaners and no land has been expropriated, although the
contentious law has been passed and is the focus of criticism in South
Africa.
South Africa also denies U.S. claims that Afrikaners are being targeted
in racially motivated attacks in some rural communities. Instead, the
South African government said Afrikaners — who are the descendants of
Dutch and French colonial settlers — are "amongst the most economically
privileged" in the country.
The first Afrikaner refugees were traveling on a flight operated by the
Tulsa, Oklahoma-based charter company Omni Air International, Msibi
said. They would fly to Dakar, Senegal and stop there to refuel before
heading for Dulles.
They departed from OR Tambo International Airport in Johannesburg, where
they were accompanied by police officers and airport officials when they
checked in. Msibi said they would have to be vetted by police to ensure
there were no criminal cases or outstanding warrants against them before
being allowed to leave.
[to top of second column]
|

The Harry S. Truman Building, headquarters for the State Department,
is seen in Washington, March 9, 2009. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite,
File)

The South African government said there was no justification for
them being relocated but said it wouldn't stop them and respected
their freedom of choice.
They are expected to be greeted at Dulles by a U.S. government
delegation, including the deputy secretary of state and officials
from the Department of Health and Human Services, whose refugee
office has organized their resettlement.
The flight will be the first in a “much larger-scale relocation
effort,” White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller told
reporters on Friday. Miller said that what was happening to
Afrikaners in South Africa "fits the textbook definition of why the
refugee program was created.”
“This is persecution based on a protected characteristic — in this
case, race. This is race-based persecution,” he said.
The HHS Office for Refugee Resettlement was ready to offer them
support, including with housing, furniture and other household
items, and expenses like groceries, clothing, diapers and more, a
document obtained by The Associated Press said. The document said
the relocation of Afrikaners was "a stated priority of the
Administration.”
There are around 2.7 million Afrikaners among South Africa’s
population of 62 million, which is more than 80% Black. They are
only one part of the country's white minority.
Many in South Africa are puzzled by claims that Afrikaners are
persecuted and meet the requirements to be relocated as refugees.
They are part of South Africa’s everyday multi-racial life, with
many successful business leaders and some serving in government as
Cabinet ministers and deputy ministers. Their language is widely
spoken and recognized as an official language, and churches and
other institutions reflecting Afrikaner culture hold prominence in
almost every city and town.
The Trump administration has criticized South Africa on several
fronts. Trump's February executive order cut all U.S. funding to
South Africa over what it said was its anti-white stance and also
accused it of pursuing an anti-American foreign policy. It cited
South Africa's ties with Iran and its move to lodge a genocide case
against U.S. ally Israel over the war in Gaza as examples of it
taking "aggressive positions towards the United States."
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
 |