VIDEO TENSED SCENE at the White House: What pictures of Trump on Ramaphosa to see / South African leader: “I would like to know where that place is”


The President of the United States, Donald J. Trump (right), meets the president of South Africa, Cyril Ramaphosa, in the Oval Office of the White House. Ramaphosa's visit takes place one week after Trump claimed that a “genocide” against the white population would take place in South Africa. PHOTO: Media Punch, MediaPoint Inc / Alamy / Profimedia
Donald Trump was surprised by South Africa President on Wednesday during a White House meeting, speaking a video that claimed to demonstrate the existence of a “genocide” against the white population in this country, Skynews reports. The US president, who received the South African leader Cyril Ramaphosa in the Oval Office, claimed that the images show the tombs of thousands of white farmers.
After an initially friendly conversation, in which Donald Trump praised a few South African golf players in the room, a video installation was designed, while President Cyril Ramaphosa remained seated, silent and almost impassive. Later, Ramaphosa commented: “I would like to know where that place is, because [aceste videoclipuri] I never saw them. “
The lights were reduced in the Oval Office during the broadcast of the images, which included alleged statements of some South African officials calling for violence against white farmers.
The scene in the heart of the White House administration recalled the moment Trump put it in a similar situation on the President of Ukraine, Volodimir Zelenski, in February last year.
South African authorities reject the idea that whites, especially white farmers, would be more targeted than others by crime in the country.
Among the broadcast images are a video with a communist politician playing a controversial song from the anti-Apartheid period, which contains lyrics about killing a farmer. Trump has accused South Africa of not doing enough to stop killing white farmers. “People run from South Africa for their safety,” the US president said. “The lands are confiscated, and in many cases they are killed.”
Referring to people who appear in the broadcast videos, Trump said: “They are official and say … to kill the white farmer and take their land.”
Subsequently, the US president showed several printed press articles, which he said documenting the killed South African cases. By browsing them, he repeated: “death, death.”
About one of the articles, he added: “Here are graves everywhere – all of them are white farmers who are buried.”
Breaking: President Trump Brings a TV into the Oval Office in front of the south African President and Shows Him a Video of His Own Government Calling for the Genocide of White Farmers.
Savage.
“Turn the Lights Down. Turn the Lights Down and Just Put This On.”
Cyril Ramaphosa… pic.twitter.com/wdrk76cc1x
– Collin Rugg (@Collinrugg) May 21, 2025
Ramaphosa rejected Donald Trump's accusations. “What you have seen – the speeches that were spoken – do not represent the policy of the Government. In South Africa we have a multipartite democracy that allows people to express and political parties to follow different policies.”
“And in many cases – or in some cases – these policies are not in accordance with the government's policy.”
“Our government policy is complete, completely against what that man in the video installation said. Even in the Parliament. It is a minority party, who has the right to exist according to our Constitution.”
South African president acknowledged that there is crime in the country, stressing that most victims are color. Trump interrupted and said, “Farmers are not black.” To which Ramaphosa replied: “These are concerns that we are willing to talk about.”
Trump has canceled the aid for South Africa, expelled the South African ambassador, and offered asylum for the white minority, invoking alleged racial discrimination-accusations that Pretor rejects as unfounded.
South Africa experts have stated that there is no evidence that whites would be specifically targeted. Farmers of all races are victims of violent attacks in homes, in a country known for the extremely high crime rate.




