US President Donald Trump wants to take up farmers who are expropriated as refugees in South Africa and promises them rapid naturalization. South Africa is terrible, even too long -in the country in the country, wrote Trump on his social social platform. South Africa takes their country and does worse things. The narrow employees of Trump, tech billionaire Elon Musk, are born in South Africa.
Every farmer and his family who wanted to flee from the country for security reasons are welcome in the United States and get a fast path to citizenship. “This process will start immediately!”, Trump wrote.
South Africa has passed a law that allows the country to set up the country in the public interest to compensate for injustice during the racist apartheid age (1948-1994). At that time, Land was systematically distributed by an ethnic point of view, especially to white South Africans. The effects can still be felt today. The law provides compensation payments for landowners. As a result, expropriations may only take place if earlier negotiations on employment have not been.
Washington Frozen Aid early February
Washington had already frozen help for South Africa at the beginning of February. At the time, Trump accused the government in Pretoria in an “unjust and immoral practices” order. He dedicated all US government agencies to put an end to supporting the economic and development policy for South Africa. South Africa then accused the United States “a campaign of disinformation and propaganda”.
“Victim of unjust racist discrimination”
Trump continued that the United States would hire all foreign help for South Africa. The corresponding obligations amounted to $ 323 million in 2024 (299.18 million euros). Trump said at the beginning of February that certain parts of society in South Africa were treated very badly. The descendants of the European settlers are “victims of unjust racist discrimination”. The trigger was a law in South Africa that should tackle an uneven distribution of arable land. Four percent of them are one of the blacks that make up 80 percent of the population.
Source: Krone

I am Ida Scott, a journalist and content author with a passion for uncovering the truth. I have been writing professionally for Today Times Live since 2020 and specialize in political news. My career began when I was just 17; I had already developed a knack for research and an eye for detail which made me stand out from my peers.