logo
US department official says refugee programme is for 'white people'

US department official says refugee programme is for 'white people'

A US Department of State official has reportedly confirmed that the refugee programme offered to South Africans was intended for white people, particularly Afrikaners.
In February, President Donald Trump signed an executive order granting minorities resettlement under the programme on the grounds of 'racial discrimination'.
Since then, two groups of Afrikaner people have arrived in the US, with more expected to follow.
According to Reuters , the US Department of State's Spencer Chretien, the highest-ranking official in the refugee and migration bureau, stated that the refugee programme was 'intended for white people'. Chretien had declined to comment further.
This throws into disrepute the Refugee Admission Programme's claim that it is open to all 'minorities'.
Despite initially being targeted at Afrikaner farmers and white people, US authorities have since included coloured, Indian, and 'mixed-race' South Africans.
Applicants must prove that they are 'persecuted' South Africans who are victims of 'racial discrimination'.
The US Embassy has updated its refugee status programme application, with an announcement that communication will be coordinated by RSC Africa, which manages all US-bound applicants from Africa.
This will include: Conducting intake and referral interviews
Collecting applicants' data and documentation
Requesting background checks
Scheduling USCIS interviews
Arranging for medical exams
Booking travel to the United States
Ultimately, the application will be reviewed and determined by the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS).
The embassy has also detailed that the refugee status application would include several stages, as outlined in the diagram below. Image via US Embassy
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.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Afrikaner refugee reveals car wash job: 'Be prepared to work!'
Afrikaner refugee reveals car wash job: 'Be prepared to work!'

The South African

time5 hours ago

  • The South African

Afrikaner refugee reveals car wash job: 'Be prepared to work!'

Afrikaner 'refugee' Errol Langton has advised South Africans hoping to resettle in the US to accept low-paying jobs. He's also warned them not to have unrealistic expectations about their new lives abroad. The IT business owner and part-time 'leafy green farmer' swapped his life in Johannesburg to live in Birmingham, Alabama. He now works at a local car wash. Langton was amongst the first group of white South Africans who applied for the refugee resettlement programme. In February, President Donald Trump signed an Executive Order, granting refuge to Afrikaners or 'minorities', over his claims of 'racial discrimination' and 'persecution' in South Africa. Speaking in an interview with US intelligence expert Chris Wyatt, Errol Langton revealed that he had taken a job at a local car wash in Birmingham. Langton, who owned an IT business in South Africa, advised fellow refugee applicants to 'come over and be prepared to work.' He said, 'Take what you can get now and work on what you want later. Don't get here and want the $50-an-hour job; take the $15-an-hour job so that you can get on your feet. 'Take the low-paying job to start with and then build to what you want. I promise you, in a year's time, you will be there.' Errol Langton stated that the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) had given resettled refugees a 'starter loan' and aid to get on their feet. Several of his family members had already secured jobs just days into their stay, he claimed. He continued: 'If you play the victim card, you will not fit in. You will not be a part of society. 'It's not discrediting what has happened to you. If you get that out of your system and show that you've taken the opportunity that you've been given, and you go work hard on it, you can open any door. The opportunities are endless.' He also warned South African 'refugees' not to expect the same lifestyle in the US either. He said, 'There is nobody to clean up after you. If you make a mess, you clean it up. 'I don't care if you're 18 or 80, if you've got to do something, you do it. You can pay someone else to do it, but that is going to cost you'. According to various immigration and recruitment agencies, South African migrants flock to countries like Canada, Australia, the UK, the US, and New Zealand. These first-world countries offer the prospects of high living standards, thriving economies and job markets, and communities of South African expats. For immigrants, or refugees, there is a high demand for skilled labour in sectors like engineering, construction, IT, healthcare, finance, and education. 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.

Three months later Trump's Afrikaner ‘refugees' knuckle down to hard reality in US
Three months later Trump's Afrikaner ‘refugees' knuckle down to hard reality in US

Daily Maverick

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Maverick

Three months later Trump's Afrikaner ‘refugees' knuckle down to hard reality in US

Three months after the first group of Afrikaner 'refugees' left for the US, many have gone to ground. A handful are speaking openly about their new lives. 'In the US, I had to face this painful truth: I don't know where I fit in anymore. Can I work for someone else? Will I ever feel 'capable' again in this new place?' This anonymous comment from one of the Afrikaner 'refugees' in the US was shared by the @amerikaners2025 X account — the closest thing to an official mouthpiece for the group — on 4 August. The account has repeatedly advised the Afrikaners, brought over in at least two groups on 11 and 31 May, to avoid sharing much about their lives due to media interest: hence the anonymity of the post. The author, identified only as a mother of five in her 'late fifties — emphasis on very', writes that she came to the US with qualifications including 'courses in Psychology, English, Geography' and 'Trained CADD [computer-aided design and drafting] & surveyor draughtsman'. In South Africa, she had 'owned businesses in sales, publishing, estate sales; revived an arts festival, designed logos and ads; trained marketers, did admin, managed charity projects' and more. In the US, she described getting 'rejected for entry-level hotel jobs for being 'overqualified''. She writes, however, that she has been hired by a care agency to 'care for a few select seniors', while also being shortlisted for an interview with a business consulting agency. Much speculation about lives of 'refugees' A great deal of speculation — and lashings of schadenfreude from some quarters — has been attached to how the lives of the Afrikaner 'refugees' are playing out stateside since US President Donald Trump made his controversial decision to prioritise them for resettlement in the US, while official channels seem to have gone entirely silent on the topic. In the absence of much formal communication, a whole community has sprung up online, with would-be 'refugees' — often attaching 'MAGA' or American flags to their X bios in the apparent belief that this could aid their chances — swapping information about what to expect from the process. Several online figures have emerged as beacons — some of whom are Afrikaners based in the US who are happy to offer advice. One is Sonell van Niekerk, a Biblical content creator based in North Dakota, who gives candid warnings to would-be 'refugees' about the challenges of the uprooting — such as 'the constant missing of your friends and family that you need to live with'. Says Van Niekerk in one recent video: 'It's almost like there's a limb on your body that's missing… You go through stages of grief. You get angry, you get depressed, you get sad.' Van Niekerk has also warned followers that upon arriving in the US she had to work three jobs to survive, one of which was cleaning houses. She advises that the support of a church is indispensable. Another online guide has emerged as fellow expat Andrea Shea, who recently published 'a guide to help you build your refugee case', covering 'how to present a well-founded fear of future persecution using both personal experiences and objective evidence'. However, the towering figure in this community is Chris Wyatt, a former US military YouTuber whose following has almost doubled over the last few months as his content has increasingly focused on offering advice to would-be Afrikaner 'refugees'. Farmer sent to NY flees to South Dakota Wyatt has, in the last two months, posted video interviews with two of the 'refugees', the first being farmer Charl Kleinhaus. Kleinhaus told Wyatt in late July that the refugee programme sent him to Buffalo, New York, somewhat to his horror: 'I thought I'd go to Texas, Montana, somewhere like that where there's farming, but it didn't happen like that.' As a result, he chose to leave the assistance programme after eight days and make his own way, having made contact with a farmer in South Dakota through another South African who had worked on the same farm. The farmer bought plane tickets for Kleinhaus and his family to South Dakota and supplied them with a fully furnished house. Kleinhaus said: 'The biggest challenge is here you work, hey. There's no kitchen lady you call to sweep the house, or clean the house, or stuff like that. You do the work yourself.' He said that even farm owners worked from 'morning till 11pm at night' with no farm labourers to call for help. 'You guys work,' Kleinhaus told Wyatt. 'You play, but you work much harder.' Kleinhaus also expressed apprehension about the upcoming winter in South Dakota, in which temperatures will drop to -30°C. Because the original group of refugees is spread across a vast country, there seems to be little contact among them. Kleinhaus told Wyatt that the '59ers', as the original group call themselves, have a WhatsApp group but 'don't chat much any more'. Alabama 'refugee' had three jobs In late June, Wyatt interviewed another 59er, Errol Langton, whose family group accounted for nine of the original 59, and whose stepdaughter — back home in South Africa — has accused him of rank opportunism, including not being an Afrikaner. Langton now calls home Alabama, which he says he requested. He told Wyatt that he had a gig selling life insurance, which kept him busy driving all over the state — but clarified that he hadn't earned anything yet, as it was commission only. Langton said he was interviewing for another job and starting a third job. 'You're not given a job, you're not given anything,' warned Langton. 'This is the last month we have [state-sponsored] accommodation.' In a subsequent interview with Wyatt in July, Langton said he had secured a job at a car wash. An anonymous refugee X account, @AfrikanerPOV, posted a video on July 12 of 'the accommodation that we were placed in from our arrival in the USA', showing a basic two-bedroom apartment. This is the accommodation that we were placed in from our arrival in the USA. It was a 2 bedroom 1 Bathroom apartment. We had basic furniture (some of which we could have taken with us when we moved) that was provided as well as linens,towels,kitchen utensils. #afrikanerrefugee — AfrikanerPov (@AfrikanerPov) July 12, 2025 The same account has posted: 'We are working and staying on a farm at the moment', and advises that 'refugees' do not need to inform employers about their refugee status, 'if you do not want to'. The account also informed one would-be 'refugee' that it is possible to return to visit South Africa: 'Your case worker will discuss it with you as well when you get like the initial rundown as well after you arrive — you will just need to apply for a travel document and you will need to inform them why you want to go back.' However, he or she strongly advised against this: 'Why would you want to visit a country you fled for your safety but I know for some people it is a make or break subject but I will definitely not be going back for any reason whatsoever.' Despite the work and cultural challenges of their new lives, all the accounts mentioned have stressed the transformative nature of the feeling of safety in the US. 'More important than anything money can buy?' posted the 50-something woman on the Amerikaners account.

Left behind? Somalia secures Starlink
Left behind? Somalia secures Starlink

The South African

time6 hours ago

  • The South African

Left behind? Somalia secures Starlink

Somalia is the latest country on the continent to get Starlink – the internet satellite service belonging to Pretoria-born Elon Musk – leaving many South Africans frustrated at being 'left behind'. The news comes amid reports that the world's richest man is set to bypass transformative legislation like Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) policies to operate his company in his home country. Musk is reportedly planning a R2 billion investment in development in southern Africa. On the X app, Elon Musk announced that Starlink was now operating in Somalia. The news came as a surprise to many, given the East African country's ongoing civil war and widespread poverty. South Africans also joined the commentary. Some, like former DA Renaldo Gouws, expressed their annoyance at South Africa seemingly falling behind. He posted on X: 'A war-torn Somalia manages to get Starlink before South Africa. What does this tell us about the competence of our government?' Another, @G1ngerNomad, added: 'What's actually sad is a country blocking a South African-born billionaire from connecting its poorest schools. While the rest of Africa just says 'yes' and plugs in'. Others claimed that Elon Musk's company was not welcome in South Africa, as long as it did not adhere to transformative legislation that applied to foreign investors. Starlink currently operates in 20 African countries, including South Africa's neighbouring countries, such as Zimbabwe, Botswana, Mozambique, eSwatini, and Lesotho. However, the internet satellite service has yet to be granted an operating licence in South Africa. According to reports, Starlink, which falls under SpaceX, is likely hoping to achieve this with its plans to invest over R2 billion in the country. Business Day reports that the company would finance infrastructure to support the Southern African Development Community (SADC), which is made up of 16 countries. Should Starlink operate in South Africa? Images via X: @starlink The move is thought to be a way to 'work around' local BEE policies, which require 30% local shareholding for foreign investors. In May, Minister of Communications and Digital Technologies Solly Malatsi gazetted a policy direction for his department on EEIPs, which are considered 'alternatives' to transformative legislation. Without mentioning Starlink, the minister claimed that the policy would 'attract investment,' specifically in operating licensing. The minister revealed that current legislation for foreign investments 'did not allow companies to contribute to transformation goals in ways other than traditional ownership'. 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.

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