3 days ago
Kenya Faces Backlash Over Role in Controversial Afrikaner Resettlement Plan
A fresh diplomatic storm is brewing in southern Africa as Kenya finds itself entangled in a contentious U.S.-backed program to resettle white Afrikaners from South Africa in the United States. The initiative, first launched under former U.S. President Donald Trump, has sparked legal disputes, political pushback, and rising tensions between Pretoria, Nairobi, and Washington.
According to official sources, the U.S. State Department—working through the NGO Church World Service (CWS)—requested that Kenya send over 30 staff members to South Africa to help process resettlement applications. These staffers reportedly applied for 'volunteer visas' to enter the country, but South Africa's Home Affairs Ministry has signaled it may reject the requests, arguing that the work is paid and falls outside the scope of such visas.
At the heart of the controversy is the unusual way the resettlement program operates. Instead of processing asylum cases in a third country, as is standard practice, the U.S. has chosen to evaluate claims directly within South Africa. The program initially targeted Afrikaners who claimed they were victims of racial persecution, but was later expanded to include 'ethnic minorities facing discrimination.' International bodies such as the International Organization for Migration have refused to recognize these applicants as legitimate refugees.
Former UNHCR official Hans Lunschoff noted that processing asylum claims inside the country of origin is 'highly irregular and generally reserved for exceptional political cases, not mass relocations.'
The initiative has fueled friction between South Africa and the U.S. President Cyril Ramaphosa has repeatedly rejected claims that minorities face systemic persecution, pointing out that violent crime in South Africa affects all racial groups. His government also bristled at Washington's decision to impose 30% tariffs on certain South African imports after failing to halt the program.
Kenya's involvement has added a new layer of controversy. Nairobi-based CWS, which runs a regional office in East Africa, has been tasked with conducting medical screenings, cultural orientation, and travel logistics for the resettled Afrikaners. Kenyan nationals applying for visas to take part in the mission are believed to be tied to this organization, which has both American and Kenyan leadership figures.
With the first group of Afrikaner families already relocated to the U.S. earlier this year and another wave expected by late August, the political fallout is intensifying. Critics in both South Africa and Kenya accuse Washington of politicizing migration, while human rights experts warn of dangerous precedents in redefining refugee status along racial or ideological lines.
The dispute risks straining Kenya's ties with both Pretoria and Washington, raising broader questions about the intersection of migration policy, geopolitics, and the ethics of selective resettlement.