After Donald Trump’s explosive confrontation with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa over alleged attacks on White farmers, Ramaphosa’s own White Agriculture Minister jumped to his defense — but the move backfired. As Trump revealed shocking evidence claiming to prove targeted violence and genocide, the minister’s denial only fueled outrage. Critics are now questioning the South African government’s narrative, while others demand international accountability. The clash is reigniting a fierce global debate over race, land reform, and media silence.
00:00We have a multi-party democracy in South Africa that allows people to express themselves.
00:06Our government policy is completely, completely against what he was saying, even in the parliament.
00:16But you do allow them to take land.
00:19And then when they take the land, they kill the white farmer.
00:22And when they kill the white farmer, nothing happens to them.
00:25Their heads chopped off. They died violently.
00:30Let me clarify that because what you saw, the speeches that were being made,
00:35one, that is not government policy.
00:38We have a multi-party democracy in South Africa that allows people to express themselves,
00:45political parties to adhere to various policies.
00:48And in many cases, or in some cases, those policies do not go along with government policy.
00:57Our government policy is completely, completely against what he was saying, even in the parliament.
01:07And they are a small minority party, which is allowed to exist in terms of our constitution.
01:14But you do allow them to take land.
01:17No, no, no, no, no.
01:18You do allow them to take land.
01:19Nobody can take land.
01:20And then when they take the land, they kill the white farmer.
01:23And when they kill the white farmer, nothing happens to them.
01:27No, there is quite...
01:28Nothing happens to them.
01:29There is criminality in our country.
01:32People who do get killed, unfortunately, through criminal activity, are not only white people.
01:40Majority of them are black people.
01:43And we have now...
01:44The farmers are black.
01:45The farmers are not black.
01:46I don't say that's good or bad.
01:48But the farmers are not black.
01:50And the people that are being killed in large numbers, and you saw all those grave sites,
01:56and those are people that, loved ones going, I guess on a Sunday morning, they told me,
02:00to pay respect to their loved ones that were killed.
02:04Their heads chopped off.
02:06They died violently.
02:08And, you know, I mean, we're here to talk about it, and I didn't know we'd get involved here, but I will say this, that if the news wasn't fake, like NBC, which is fake news, totally one of the worst, ABC, NBC, CBS, horrible.
02:23But if they weren't fake news, like this jerk that we have here, if we had real reporters, they'd be covering it.
02:31But the fake news in this country doesn't talk about that.
02:35They don't want to talk about it, but now they have to talk about it.
02:39But they won't.
02:40This won't even be a subject.
02:41They'll have him talking about why did a country give a free, think of this, why did a country give an airplane to the United States Air Force?
02:52Okay.
02:52The United States, not to me, to the United States Air Force, so they could help us out, because we need an Air Force One until our, so that's Air Force One, it's being built.
03:03Two of them being built.
03:04But Boeing's a little bit late, unfortunately, so why did they give us a plane to the United States Air Force?
03:11That's what that idiot talks about, after viewing a thing where thousands of people are dead.
03:16I'm sorry, I don't have a plane to give you.
03:18I wish you did.
03:19I would take it.
03:21I would take it.
03:22If your country offered the United States Air Force a plane, I would take it.
03:26Okay.
03:26But coming back to this issue, which I really would like us to talk about, and talk about it very calmly,
03:33we were taught by Nelson Mandela that whenever there are problems, people need to sit down around a table and talk about it.
03:43Well, there are problems.
03:43And this is precisely what we would also like to talk about, including, of course, trade matters, investment matters.
03:50So, the issues that concern you as the United States, those are all deaths.
03:57In many ways, I mean, one should say you are a partner, partner of South Africa, and you are raising concerns, and these are concerns that we are willing to talk to you about.
04:11Let me just add quickly, you know, the criminality that we are experiencing in our country needs quite a lot of technological capability.
04:23And in one of our areas in South Africa, we are using U.S. technology, which is able to, in many ways, identify where shootings are happening and all that.
04:36And I'd like to talk about that, because there is support that we can get from you as the United States to help us deal with all these acts of criminality.
04:46And that is what I believe partnership is all about.
04:49And we are here as a partner so that we can help each other whenever there are challenges.
04:57So, I'd like us to discuss it, and of course, outside of the media, so that we sit down and have a really good discussion that will lead to good outcomes.
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