Foreign
Trump lashes out at SA again as AfriForum thanks US president
US President Donald Trump has lashed out again at South Africa, this time about EFF leader Julius Malema’s ‘Kill the Boer’ chant.
This comes after South African-born CEO of Space X and Tesla, Elon Musk, shared a post on his platform X about a “major political party that was actively promoting white genocide” in the country.
“Very few people know that there is a major political party in South Africa that is actively promoting white genocide. The video [of Malema chanting ‘Kill the Boer’] was just [recent]. A whole arena chanting about killing white people.”
Thanking Trump
Trump then took to his Truth Social platform, where he posted a screenshot of Musk’s tweet on the matter.
The US president’s post ignited a spark of enthusiasm from AfriForum CEO Kallie Kriel, who thanked Trump for his support.
“Thank you, President Donald Trump, for taking note of the irresponsible calls for violence against Afrikaners/whites—through hate chants such as “Kill the Boer, kill the farmer”—in South Africa. The tragic irony is that the latest incident occurred on March 21, which is officially known as “Human Rights Day” in South Africa.
“What makes this even worse is that this renewed call for violence against Afrikaners was not condemned by President Ramaphosa, ANC leaders, or the South African Government. Their silence regarding this gross human rights violation is deafening,” Kriel posted on X in response to Trump’s post.
‘No genocide in SA’
Last month, Patriotic Alliance (PA) leader Gayton McKenzie said he and Kriel agreed that there is no white genocide in South Africa.
“So you are saying there is no white genocide in South Africa?” McKenzie asked.
“No, we’ve never said that, but there is a serious problem,” Kriel replied.
However, McKenzie pushed Kriel for clarity.
“Of course, there is a problem; people being killed on their farms is a problem, but you’re saying there’s no white genocide?” McKenzie asked Kriel again.
“Genocide is what we saw in Rwanda,” Kriel said.
‘Kill the Boer’
In 2024, The Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) dismissed, with costs, AfriForum’s appeal against the court ruling that the EFF singing the “Kill the Boer” song was not hate speech.
The SCA ruling emanated from a judgment by the Equality Court in Johannesburg in August 2020, where Judge Edwin Molahlehi ordered that the “Kill the Boer” song does not constitute hate speech after AfriForum’s witnesses and its deputy CEO Ernst Roets failed to link the song to an allegation that it incited a genocide of white farmers.
AfriForum also pointed to a single occasion when former EFF MP Mbuyiseni Ndlozi chanted a similar song, including the words: ‘Shisa lamabhunu, EFF ingen’endaweni’ (Shisa lamabhunu). The literal English translation of that chant was: ‘Burn these Boers, EFF enters in the space or place’.
The court held that what Malema was doing was no more than exercising his right to freedom of expression.
In 2022, the Pretoria High Court dismissed AfriForum’s hate speech case against the EFF over the party’s use of the struggle song, Dubul’ Ibhunu, which translates to “Shoot the Boer”.
Source: bbc.com
Foreign
15,000-nurse strike hits New York hospitals over pay, safety concerns
Some 15,000 nurses went on strike Monday in New York city at three large private hospital groups over pay and conditions.
Officials declared a state of emergency over the work stoppage which the New York State Nurses Association (NYSNA) said on its website came after months of bargaining for a new contract reached a deadlock.
The association says it is the largest strike by nurses in the city’s history.
Picket lines were set up at several private hospitals across New York including facilities of New York-Presbyterian, Montefiore Bronx, and Mount Sinai.
“Unfortunately, greedy hospital executives have decided to put profits above safe patient care and force nurses out on strike when we would rather be at the bedsides of our patients,” Nancy Hagans, NYSNA’s president, said.
“Hospital management refuses to address our most important issues — patient and nurse safety.”
New York’s Democratic socialist Mayor Zohran Mamdani rallied in support of the nurses Monday, saying “we know that during 9/11 it was nurses that tended to the wounded.”
“We know that during the global pandemic, it was nurses that came into work, even at the expense of their own health,” he said, wearing a red NYSNA scarf.
Mamdani called on all sides to “return immediately to the negotiating table and not leave. They must bargain in good faith.”
The hospital groups involved discharged or transferred a number patients, canceled some surgeries and drafted in temporary staff.
A Mount Sinai spokesperson told CBS News that “unfortunately, NYSNA decided to move forward with its strike while refusing to move on from its extreme economic demands, which we cannot agree to, but we are ready with 1,400 qualified and specialized nurses — and prepared to continue to provide safe patient care for as long as this strike lasts.”
Foreign
Donald Trump Declares Himself “Acting President Of Venezuela”
Donald Trump has proclaimed he’s the “Acting President of Venezuela
Incumbent January 2026.” Styled like an edited Wikipedia page, an image, posted to social media, displayed his official portrait and listed his tenure as both the 45th and 47th President of the United States.
The actual Wikipedia page does not list Trump as Venezuela’s acting president, nor has any international body recognised the claim.
The post followed the US’ capture and removal of sitting Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, who was flown to New York along with his wife to face federal drug trafficking charges. The operation came after months of US pressure, sanctions, and military activity targeting the oil-rich nation. Maduro has claimed he was “kidnapped.” China, Russia, Colombia, and even Spain have called the US action a blatant violation of international law.
Hours after the operation, Trump declared that the US would “run” Venezuela temporarily, citing security concerns and the need for a controlled transition. He also said the US would oversee and sell Venezuelan oil to global markets during this interim period.
Inside Venezuela, Maduro’s second-in-command, Delcy Rodriguez, took the oath as interim President. Rodriguez rejected US claims of authority, demanded Maduro’s release, and declared him the nation’s rightful leader.
Trump warned that Rodriguez could “pay a very big price” if she did not cooperate with the US. Trump suggested her consequences could be even more severe than Maduro’s, who is being held in New York on narcoterrorism and drug trafficking charges.
Trump also claimed credit after Venezuela announced it would release a number of political prisoners as a gesture to “seek peace.” On Truth Social, he said that the releases had occurred “in a big way” following US action and warned the freed prisoners to “never forget it.”
The US President also asked major American oil companies to invest up to $100 billion in Venezuela to rapidly expand the country’s oil production. Speaking at a White House meeting with oil executives last week, Trump said the US would decide which companies are allowed to operate in Venezuela and help rebuild its deteriorated oil sector.
He praised an agreement with Venezuela’s interim leadership to supply 50 million barrels of crude oil to the US and said deliveries could continue indefinitely. He said that increased supply would help lower US energy prices.
Trump also signed an executive order protecting money held in the United States that is derived from sales of Venezuelan oil.
Foreign
Trump Rules Out Pardon for Diddy, Maduro, Others
Sean “Diddy” Combs, currently serving a four-year jail term for offences related to prostitution, has reportedly sought a presidential pardon from Donald Trump, a request the US president says he has no intention of granting.
In an interview with The New York Times published on Thursday, Trump said he was not considering clemency for the hip-hop star or several other prominent figures, including Venezuela’s former leader, Nicolas Maduro.
Combs, 56, was convicted in July on two counts of transporting individuals across state lines for prostitution, although a jury cleared him of more serious charges involving sex trafficking and racketeering.
Trump confirmed that Combs had written to him requesting a pardon but made clear he was uninterested in acting on it. Asked about Maduro—who was recently captured by US forces and now faces drug trafficking charges—Trump replied, “No, I don’t see that.”
The president also recalled that he granted clemency in November to former Honduran president Juan Orlando Hernandez, who had been serving a 45-year sentence for drug-related crimes.
Trump further ruled out pardons for disgraced cryptocurrency executive Sam Bankman-Fried, sentenced to 25 years in prison, and former Democratic senator Robert Menendez, who is serving 11 years for bribery.
Responding to questions about Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer convicted in the 2020 killing of George Floyd, Trump said, “I haven’t been asked about it.”
On his inauguration day, Trump issued pardons to more than 1,500 individuals convicted or charged in connection with the January 6, 2021 attack on the US Capitol, and has since extended clemency to several loyalists.
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