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Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Expelled South African envoy accuses Trump administration of racism

South Africa’s former ambassador to the US has told the BBC it was “self-evident” that there was racism within the Trump administration.

Ebrahim Rasool, 62, was ordered to leave the US last week after Secretary of State Marco Rubio called him a “race-baiting politician who hates America”.

This came after Rasool accused US President Donald Trump of trying to “project white victimhood as a dog whistle”.

Asked by the BBC’s Newshour whether he believed the Trump administration was racist, Rasool said: “I think it is self-evident rather than anyone needing to be called out.”

Related Article: South African ambassador to Washington ‘no longer welcome’ in US

The BBC has approached the White House for comment.

In one of his first interviews since being expelled from the US, Rasool added: “I’m saying when a piece of wood has a hinge, you begin to suspect it’s a door.”

The diplomat cited the administration’s emphasis on deporting migrants as well as the targeting of foreign students who had supported pro-Palestinian protests. He also accused Trump’s team of mobilising “certain far-right communities”.

The Trump administration has denied accusations of racism. The president says he has a mandate to deport thousands of migrants who entered the US illegally after it formed a central part of his election campaign last year. Rubio has defended revoking visas for students who “cause chaos” on college campuses.

US-South Africa relations have deteriorated sharply since Trump returned to power in mid-January.

Since taking office, Trump and his ally, South-Africa born Elon Musk, have singled out South Africa, in particular criticising it over its land reform policies.

Trump has cut all aid to the country and, despite his hard-line stance on most refugees and asylum seekers, says that members of South Africa’s white, Afrikaner community would be granted refugee status in the US because of the persecution he says they face at home.

South Africa’s government says it is trying to correct the country’s racial and economic imbalances following decades of white-minority rule by passing measures to help the country’s black majority.

Rasool denied that the Afrikaner population was facing discrimination.

“It is an unadulterated lie because it tries to besmirch the very DNA of a new South Africa that was born under the leadership of someone like Nelson Mandela,” he told the BBC World Service’s Newshour programme.

When questioned whether his language was undiplomatic, Rasool said: “It’s not as if being a good boy warded off any punishment.

It was that at some point South Africa’s dignity is also at stake – you can’t smile through too many untruths being told about your country.”

After returning home to a hero’s welcome on Sunday, Rasool said that he had no regrets about his remarks. 

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