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'I didn't come here for fun' - Afrikaner defends refugee status in US |
2025-05-16 |
[BBC] Last week, 46-year-old Charl Kleinhaus was living on his family farm in His new home - for now - is a budget hotel near an American highway. He and dozens of other white South Africans were moved to the US under President Donald Trump's controversial policy to protect them from the discrimination he alleges they are facing - an accusation that South Africa rejects. Mr Kleinhaus defends the US president, telling the BBC he left his homeland after receiving death threats in WhatsApp messages. "I had to leave a five-bedroom house, which I will lose now," Mr Kleinhaus tells the BBC, adding that he also left behind his car, his dogs and even his mother. "I didn't come here for fun," he adds. The contrast in homes couldn't be more stark. But for Mr Kleinhaus, his situation in Buffalo, New York, is already a better one. "My children are safe," says Mr Kleinhaus, whose wife died in a road accident in 2006. The status of white South African farmers has long been a rallying cry on the right and far-right of American politics. Trump and his close ally, South Africa-born billionaire Elon Musk, have even argued that there has been a "genocide" of white farmers in South Africa - a claim that has been widely discredited. |
Posted by:Besoeker |
#3 Apparently there will always be deniers. |
Posted by: Besoeker 2025-05-16 02:30 |
#2 More results of Nelson Mandela. |
Posted by: Oregon Dave 2025-05-16 02:07 |
#1 ,,,there has been a "genocide" of white farmers in South Africa - a claim that has been widely discredited." A wish is mother to the deed. |
Posted by: Albert McCoy9505 2025-05-16 01:45 |