
White House lays down terms for SA relations amid Afrikaner visit
The first group of Afrikaners from South Africa to arrive in the US for resettlement on May 12, 2025. Picture: Saul Loeb / AFP
Three Afrikaner representatives visited the White House in Washington to call for the normalisation of relations between South Africa and the US.
Freedom Front Plus leader Corné Mulder, SA Agri Initiative (Saai) chair Theo de Jager and National Employers Association of South Africa (Neasa) chief executive Gerhard Papenfus said they held a constructive and high-level meeting with senior US officials, including representatives from the office of the vice-president, the National Security Council and the Homeland Security Council.
Pre-conditions
According to the trio, the officials communicated the pre-conditions for the normalisation of bilateral relations between the two countries.
The conditions include the classification of farm attacks as a priority crime; a clear and unequivocal public condemnation by the ANC of Kill the Boer, Kill the Farmer, whether used in song or any other context; and the exclusion of US entities from all broad-based black economic empowerment (B-BBEE) requirements.
Any race-based legislation that may constitute a non-tariff trade barrier should not apply to US entities, they said.
'The delegation now has a clear understanding of the US administration's expectations.'
A call to convey conditions clearly
White House officials expressed concern that these conditions, despite being communicated multiple times to the South African government, have not been adequately addressed.
ALSO READ: Amerikaners founder denies claims of 'struggling' South African 'refugees' in US
They called on the Afrikaner delegation to convey these conditions clearly. Political analyst Rene Oosthuizen said the trio's statement concerningly highlights a new layer of complexity in SA-US relations.
'These pre-conditions for normalising bilateral trade, particularly the call for US entities to be exempted from B-BBEE and to limit land reform, directly challenge the core of our country's apartheid transformation agenda,' she said.
Oosthuizen was concerned the statement underscores the real diplomatic economic risks facing the country if relations with the US deteriorate further.
Not a good impression?
Senior political lecturer at North-West University Benjamin Rapanyane said this does not at all create a good impression of the Afrikaner community in South Africa.
'First of all, who delegated them to the White House? No one delegated them to go them. Also, why would the White House officials agree to meet this group outside the normal diplomatic channels,' he asked.
South Africa needed to be careful when addressing such matters with big economies like the US, otherwise the country will suffer terrible consequences unnecessarily, Rapanyane said.
ALSO READ: Afrikaner 'refugees' continue to arrive in US on commercial flights – reports
Political analyst Piet Croucamp said it was a common practice for cultural and language groups of interest to visit the United States and speak to individuals.
The visit 'has no impact'
'Speaking to senior White House officials creates the impression that it does have an impact; a significant impact. I am hesitant to accept the statement because we haven't seen it covered in the foreign media, American media or Washington media,' he said.
Croucamp said the trio must be careful not to create expectations of what can be achieved with the statements that they themselves have issued and the clever use of senior White House officials.
'However, it doesn't mean the visit was meaningless and shouldn't be done and that there was reason to criticise it, but it is important to see it for what it is. In the long run, it has no impact.
'Ramaphosa visited Washington and he spoke to US President Donald Trump. They really spoke to senior officials; you could see it – but even that had minimal impact,' Croucamp said.
'The same things were said and there is no indication that there has been influence specifically to a significant extent,' he said.
NOW READ: WATCH: SA should know what leverage it has on the US and act on it, Rasool says
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The South African
2 hours ago
- The South African
I want a three-way with Putin and Zelensky, says Trump on pending meeting
US President Donald Trump said Wednesday he was planning a second meeting with Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin soon after Friday's Alaska summit – this time with Ukraine leader Volodymyr Zelensky included. Trump is due to sit down with Putin in Anchorage on Friday, the first meeting between the Russian leader and a sitting US president since 2021. 'If the first one goes okay, we'll have a quick second one,' he told reporters. 'I would like to do it almost immediately, and we'll have a quick second meeting between president Putin and president Zelensky and myself, if they'd like to have me there.' The high-stakes talks come with Trump seeking to broker an end to Russia's nearly three-and-a-half year war in Ukraine, and Zelensky and his European allies have urged the Republican to push for a ceasefire. A stepped-up Russian offensive, and the fact Zelensky has not been invited to the Anchorage meeting Friday, have heightened fears that Trump and Putin could strike a deal that forces painful concessions on Ukraine. Trump said Russia would face 'very severe consequences' if Putin did not agree to end the war after Friday's meeting, without elaborating. The US leader promised dozens of times during his 2024 election campaign to end the war on his first day in office but has made scant progress towards brokering a peace deal. He threatened 'secondary sanctions' on Russia's trading partners over its invasion of Ukraine but his deadline for action came and went last week with no action announced. Trump told reporters he'd had a 'very good call' with European leaders including Zelensky as he took questions from reporters at an arts event at Washington's Kennedy Center. 'I would rate it at 10. You know – very, very friendly,' he said. Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1. Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news. © Agence France-Presse

IOL News
2 hours ago
- IOL News
Barloworld's future at stake as Competition Tribunal hears acquisition details
Former executives in Barloworld are acquiring Barloworld through Entsha Proprietary Limited while Saudi Zahid Group is the other shareholder in Newco. Image: Supplied The Competition Tribunal hearing concerning the acquisition of the longstanding South African company Barloworld by Newco has ignited discussions around empowerment for historically disadvantaged persons as well as the company's impending delisting from the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE). As the details unfolded on Wednesday, tensions rose over the implications of this significant transaction. Former executives in Barloworld are acquiring Barloworld through Entsha Proprietary Limited while Saudi Zahid Group is the other shareholder in Newco. With Newco intending to bump up its shareholding in the South African company, Barloworld will ultimately be delisted from the JSE. The merging parties through their legal representative told the Competition Tribunal hearing on Wednesday that the delisting of Barloworld was a major condition for the implementation of an Employee Share-Ownership Program (ESOP). After delisting, a women led consortium will also be empowered into the company. 'The merger parties' position is quite clear that if there is no delisting, they're not in a position to implement an ESOP. That being said, we are confident and the likelihood is that there will be a delisting,' the merging parties told the Competition Tribunal hearing. Newco is offering R123.10 per share for Barloworld. The tribunal also heard on Wednesday that Newco now has assurances of about 58% shareholders to raise its stake in the company and delist it. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ Ad loading Barloworld's financial performance adds context to what is at stake. For the year ended September 2024, revenue declined by 7% to R42 billion, with operating profit from core activities falling 12.6% to R3.8bn and Ebitda declining 7% to R5bn. Gross debt, however, eased 29% to R7.9bn. The delisting of Barloworld is important for Newco as without it, it will be 'practically difficult for it to implement' transactions overpowering historically disadvantaged persons. To attain this, Newco is pursuing to bump up its stake to 90%. 'So that is why the HDP transactions are conditional on Newco effectively acquiring all of the Barloworld shares and Barloworld being delisted,' said the merging parties legal representative at the hearing. Wiri Gumbie, principal analyst for mergers and acquisitions at the Competition Commission, told the hearing that he was 'hopeful' that Newco will attain the 90% threshold to unlock total control of Barloworld and delist it. However, some concerns emerged that the delisting of Barloworld may not be easy to attain given that some minority shareholders could be disinterested in giving up their interests in the company. 'It's sounding more and more that the chances of the delisting may certainly not happen. The chances of workers benefiting and the women led consortium benefiting is certainly hanging in the balance in this regard and unfortunately, it is a concern now regardless,' the Competition Tribunal heard. Gumbi also revealed that the Public Investment Corporation (PIC) had indicated that it required the securing of black economic empowerment shareholder participation for it to support the transaction. The merging parties had addressed and resolved this, and the PIC is now satisfied that this has been settled under the conditions set out. Newco had included the empowerment provisions for historically disadvantaged persons and the ESOP after discussions with the PIC. Remaining shareholders that elect not to sell their shares then the requirement to do an ESOP will risk further dilution of their minority stakes. 'If there are minority shareholders that remain on the list and there needs to be, for example, an issuance of new shares or some other major transaction to implement those, there would presumably be some kind of shareholder approvals and and basically shareholder votes required and on such matters,' said the merging parties legal counsel. 'It may well be that if the transaction is implemented by way of an issuance of new shares, they may be affected because they would be effectively a dilution of their shares.' BUSINESS REPORT


The Citizen
3 hours ago
- The Citizen
Here's how much National Treasury has spent on consultants in two years
The National Treasury does not sign contracts directly with the consultants. The National Treasury has spent hundreds of millions of rands on consultants for specialised projects over the past two years. This was revealed in a written parliamentary reply from Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana. Freedom Front Plus (FF Plus) MP Wouter Wessels requested details on whether the National Treasury had appointed any consultants in the last two years, including the nature of their work and the duration of their contracts. National Treasury's spend on consultants Godongwana detailed an extensive list of service providers and revealed that R350 million (R350 902 028.62) was paid to at least 30 consultancy firms between April 2023 and June this year. From April to June 2025 alone, contracts worth more than R20 million were signed. These included a R6.3 million three-year deal with Ston Infrastructure Services to support provincial treasuries in infrastructure delivery, R4.6 million to Nexor 312 for local government infrastructure management, and R3 million to Thovu Construction Group for architectural space planning services. Among the biggest beneficiaries was OBT Advisory, awarded a R161.9 million, five-year contract in March 2024 to support and maintain the Treasury's back-office system for its asset and liability management division. ALSO READ: Almost 40 municipalities facing sanctions from Treasury over mismanagement Tipp Focus Holding secured a R96.3 million contract to enhance and maintain the central supplier database for the office of the chief procurement officer over the same period. Other multimillion-rand consultancy contracts went to firms such as Akhile Management and Consulting, Mntambo Financial Consulting, Luta Management Services, Stangra Investment, S and G Business Consulting, and Propellius. These companies were primarily engaged to review, amend, and prepare Financial Recovery Plans for financially distressed municipalities across the country. The affected municipalities included Mangaung, Madibeng, Sekhukhune, Emfuleni, Thabazimbi, Modimolle, Govan Mbeki, Thaba Chweu, Musina, and Phalaborwa. Individual contracts for the work generally fell in the range of R1 million to R2.7 million each. More contracts The South African arm of the international advisory firm Rothschild and Co was paid R2.5 million in 2023 for debt structuring and capital markets advice during Eskom's debt relief process. Other notable projects included a R3 million contract awarded to PTP Integrated to source a service provider from the Government Employees Pension Fund and Public Investment Corporation panel for professional services on software-related projects within Treasury's Information and Communication Technology unit over a 12-month period. ALSO READ: R279 million budgeted for National Treasury's building rentals and parking spaces Former National Treasury deputy director-general and current adviser, Ismail Momoniat, was also contracted twice – first in 2024 for R1.38 million and again in 2025 for a smaller R10,563.57 engagement – to lead South Africa's efforts to exit the Financial Action Task Force greylist and support related anti-corruption initiatives. Several more contracts were awarded to enhance municipal supply chain management compliance, develop women empowerment programmes, and support local government infrastructure delivery oversight. National Treasury doesn't sign contracts directly with consultants Responding to concerns about whether consultants were filling in for vacancies, Godongwana stated that all appointments were for 'specific and time-bound projects' and not due to staffing shortages. 'No consultants are appointed as a result of vacancies. National Treasury follows the public service regulations to fill positions,' he said. The minister added that the National Treasury signs the service level agreements with the company, not directly with the consultants. NOW READ: Government under fire for splashing on employees' salaries