logo
Trump Highlights South Africa's ‘Kill The Boer' Chant: What To Know

Trump Highlights South Africa's ‘Kill The Boer' Chant: What To Know

Miami Herald22-05-2025
In a tense White House meeting with South African leader Cyril Ramaphosa, President Donald Trump showed footage of two South African politicians chanting "kill the boer, the farmer."
The chant is a legacy of the struggle against white majority apartheid rule, and Trump asked president Ramaphosa why they had not been arrested.
Ramaphosa met with Trump in the Oval Office on Wednesday, amid high tensions between the two countries, namely over America's classification of Afrikaans farmers as victims of a "white genocide" and "refugees."
When the pair got to this topic, Trump paused the meeting to play a video that alleged "white genocide."
The four-minute clip featured a series of snippets of Jacob Zuma, the head of uMkhonto weSizwe (once the fighting wing of the African National Congress), and Julius Malema, the head of the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), chanting "kill the boer, the farmer" and talking about land expropriation—an issue that has plagued South African politics since the end of apartheid just 31 years ago.
Ramaphosa responded, saying that the speeches by the growing opposition party leaders shown in the video were "not government policy," adding: "Our government policy was completely against what he (Malema) was saying."
"They are a small minority party," Ramaphosa added, before attributing the killing of white farmers to "criminality in our country."
South Africa's Minister of Agriculture John Henry Steenhuisen also responded, saying: "We have a real safety problem in South Africa. I don't think anyone wants to candy-coat that."
He later added: "The two individuals that are in that video that you've seen are both leaders of opposition minority parties in South Africa uMkhonto weSizwe under Mr. Zuma and the Economic Freedom Fighters under Mr. Malema."
"Now the reason that my party the Democratic Alliance (DA), which has been an opposition party for over 30 years, chose to join hands with Mr. Ramaphosa's party was precisely to keep those people out of power."
When a member of the American press asked Ramaphosa if he denounces the language used in the video, he answered: "Oh yes, we've always done so … we are completely opposed to that."
Trump then interjected with the question: "But why won't you arrest that man?"
South Africa's courts have been grappling with this question for more than two decades—here is everything you need to know about it.
The phrase originated from an anti-apartheid isiXhosa protest chant— "Dubul' Ibhunu," which translates directly as "kill the boer."
It was chanted in protest against white minority rule, which enforced segregation and denied South Africans of color basic political rights, freedom of movement, access to quality education, health care and land
It was widely sung throughout the 1980s and 1990s, during the peak of the anti-apartheid struggle.
Malema started singing the song again in 2010, when he was the head of the ANC's Youth League, according to South African outlet the Daily Maverick.
In response, the Afrikaans civil rights group AfriForum took Malema and the ANC to court which was the start of a long-standing legal battle about the chant that was ruled on by the Supreme Court on March 27 this year.
Although the South African Supreme Court ruled on this case just a few weeks ago, issuing a final refusal of leave to appeal, the crux of the case was decided in 2022, when the Equality Court of South Africa ruled that the chant does not constitute hate speech.
Malema argued that the chant was not literal, rather that it was "directed at the system of oppression."
As an example of this, he told how, "when Black police drove into the Black townships with police vans, they used to run and say there comes the 'Boers' even when there were no white people in the vans," Judge Edwin Molahlehi summarized in his judgment.
Malema "testified that he understood (the chant) to be referring to farmers who represent the face of land dispossession."
Malema "also accepted that the chant was intended to agitate and mobilize the youth to be interested in the struggle for economic freedom," Molahlehi wrote.
Meanwhile, Afriforum argued that the chant is "sung in a climate or environment where farmers are frequently tortured, and murdered and thus that is good reason to believe that the words chanted by Mr. Malema and EFF call on people to kill farmers and amounts to the promotion of hatred on the grounds of race and ethnicity and constitutes incitement to harm."
While Molahlehi found that the chant "may well be found to be offensive and undermining of the political establishment," he ruled that Afriforum could not "show that the lyrics in the songs could reasonably be construed to demonstrate a clear intention to harm or incite to harm and propagate hatred."
The decision has not quelled the controversy around the chant, with the DA, South Africa's long-standing official opposition party, saying in a statement earlier this year that it has "no place in our society, regardless of any legal ruling on its constitutionality."
"This type of divisive language is not just damaging on a local level, it has international repercussions as well," the party said. "South Africa's reputation on the global stage is at risk when such hatred is openly condoned, making our country more vulnerable to external scrutiny."
"We cannot afford to further polarize our society or undermine the international standing we've fought so hard to build," it added.
Newsweek has contacted Ramaphosa's spokesperson, via email, for comment.
Related Articles
Trump Administration to Tackle Billions in Medicare OverpaymentsKremlin Reacts to Report Trump Told Allies Putin Is 'Winning'Trump's Approval Rating Soars Among HispanicsVideo of Theo Von Saying US Complicit in Genocide Viewed 18m Times
2025 NEWSWEEK DIGITAL LLC.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

House Democrat: DC ‘not the safest place in the world'
House Democrat: DC ‘not the safest place in the world'

The Hill

time26 minutes ago

  • The Hill

House Democrat: DC ‘not the safest place in the world'

Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.) said Sunday that Washington, D.C., is 'not the safest place in the world' amid President Trump's crackdown on crime in the District and pushback from Democrats over the president's actions. 'Both of my children live in Washington, D.C. You know it's not — it's not the safest place in the world,' Smith told NewsNation's Chris Stirewalt on 'The Hill Sunday.' 'And also some of the policies the Democrats advanced around crime over the course of the last 10 or 15 years very clearly did not work. There was not enough transparency and not enough accountability,' he added. Last week, Trump announced he was taking federal control of D.C.'s police department and deploying the National Guard in the city to combat crime. Since then, he has received heavy pushback on his law enforcement moves from Democrats and District residents. On Monday, Mississippi became the fourth Republican -led state to unveil plans to dispatch National Guard troops to D.C. to boost Trump's crackdown on crime in the District. 'I've approved the deployment of approximately 200 Mississippi National Guard Soldiers to Washington, D.C., to support President Trump's effort to return law and order to our nation's capital,' Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves (R) said on the social platform X. Smith said last Tuesday it was 'pretty clear' Trump ''wants his own domestic police force.' 'Look, this president is trampling on basic freedoms of the American people to a degree we — I don't think we've ever seen,' Smith said on CNN. 'You see that with what the ICE [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] agents are doing, in terms of picking people up off the streets with no evidence, no due process, locking people up.' 'This is happening all across the country,' the Evergreen State Democrat added. 'Look, it's pretty clear the president wants his own domestic police force, and step by step, he's trying to create it, and we should be deeply alarmed by that, regardless of how you feel about crime in Washington, D.C., or any other city.'

Jeffries: Noem will be among the first ‘hauled up to Congress' if Democrats retake House
Jeffries: Noem will be among the first ‘hauled up to Congress' if Democrats retake House

The Hill

time26 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Jeffries: Noem will be among the first ‘hauled up to Congress' if Democrats retake House

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) said Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem would be a top oversight target if Democrats retake the House in the midterms. 'It's my expectation that Kristi Noem will be one of the first people hauled up to Congress shortly after the gavels change hands to get a real understanding for the American people as to this conduct that has taken place: the lack of respect for due process, for the rule of law, the unleashing of masked agents on law-abiding immigrant communities, and the disappearing of people in some instances, to other countries without any real evidence that criminal behavior took place,' Jeffries said in an interview with Tim Miller on The Bulwark's podcast. 'All of this is going to require aggressive oversight activity.' Jeffries nodded to a number of controversial actions taken by the Trump administration, from sending Venezuelan migrants to a notorious megaprison in El Salvador to side-stepping due process with actions such as moving to dismiss immigration court cases as a way to initiate expedited removal proceedings and bypassing review by a judge. Masked agents have also been conducting arrests at courthouses and in immigration enforcement actions across the country. Jeffries added that he supported the deportation of immigrants who have been convicted of violent crimes, 'but not law-abiding immigrant families, including in some instances, U.S. citizen children who've been sent overseas to a place that they've never known.' Jeffries said Reps. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) and Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), who would lead the House Homeland and Judiciary committees if Democrats flipped the House, would likely play a key role in such efforts. 'We'll figure out what the formulation looks like,' he added. While President Biden was in office, House Republicans impeached then-Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, saying he violated the law, the Secure Fence Act of 2006, by failing to detain every migrant that crossed the border. The Senate swiftly rejected the impeachment.

Mississippi becomes fourth state to send National Guard troops to D.C. in expanding federal crackdown
Mississippi becomes fourth state to send National Guard troops to D.C. in expanding federal crackdown

Boston Globe

time26 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Mississippi becomes fourth state to send National Guard troops to D.C. in expanding federal crackdown

Mississippi joins three other states that have pledged to deploy hundreds of National Guard members to the nation's capital to bolster the Republican administration's operation aiming to transform policing in the Democratic-led city through a federal crackdown on crime and homelessness. West Virginia said it was deploying 300 to 400 troops, South Carolina pledged 200 and Ohio said it will send 150 in the coming days, deployments that built on top of President Trump's initial order that 800 National Guard troops deploy as part of the federal intervention. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Trump's executive order that launched the federal operation declared a 'crime emergency' in the District of Columbia and initiated a takeover Washington's police department. The administration has ordered local police to cooperate with federal agents on immigration enforcement, orders that would contradict local laws prohibiting such collaboration. Advertisement 'D.C. has been under siege from thugs and killers, but now, D.C. is back under Federal Control where it belongs,' Trump wrote on his social media website a day after issuing his order. 'The White House is in charge. The Military and our Great Police will liberate this City, scrape away the filth, and make it safe, clean, habitable and beautiful once more!' Advertisement During a Monday news conference, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser pushed back on Trump's characterization of the city and voiced skepticism about the administration's intentions in flooding the capital with troops and federal agents. 'We don't have any authority over the DC Guard or any other guards, but I think it makes the point that this is not about DC crime,' Bowser said of the administration and states deploying National Guard members onto the streets of the capital. 'The focus should be on violent crime,' Bowser continued. 'Nobody is against focusing on driving down any level of violence. And so if this is really about immigration enforcement the administration should make that plain.' National Guard members in the District of Columbia have been assisting law enforcement with tasks including crowd control and patrolling landmarks such as the National Mall and Union Station. Their role has been limited thus far, and it remains unclear why additional troops would be needed. Federal agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Secret Service and other agencies have patrolled high traffic areas around the capital over the last week. ICE officers, who work under the Department of Homeland Security, have made arrests in neighborhoods across the city, dispersed some public gatherings and torn pro-immigrant signs, according to videos published by the administration. The White House has touted various arrests that local police and federal agents have made across the city since Trump's executive order. Federal agents have made 380 arrests in the week since the start of the operation and in some cases issued charges to detained people. The White House has touted the surge of agents on social media and posted pictures of people arrested by local and federal officers. Advertisement 'Washington, DC is getting safer every night thanks to our law enforcement partners,' Attorney General Pam Bondi wrote on social media. 'Just this weekend, 137 arrests were made and 21 illegal firearms were seized. In total, there have been nearly 400 arrests—and we are not slowing down.' Amid the crackdown, the administration has received criticism for the conduct of some federal agents, who in several high-profile incidents have arrested people while wearing masks that hide their identity and declined to identify themselves to media or members of the public when questioned. Bowser said Monday that she had asked D.C. Police Chief Pamela Smith to seek answers from the administration about the use of masked police. 'It's very important to us that agents be identified,' Bowser said. 'There's no reason for a law enforcement official to be masked.' Over the weekend in Washington, protesters pushed back on federal law enforcement and National Guard troops fanning out in the city. Scores of protesters gathered in the city's Dupont Circle on Saturday and marched to the White House. — Associated Press writer Jeff Amy in Atlanta contributed to this report.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store