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Empty Chair At G20: Trump Punishes South Africa's Risky Embrace Of Rivals
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) When the G20 leaders gather in Johannesburg this weekend, there will be one conspicuous empty chair: the United States. Donald Trump has confirmed that no U.S. delegation will take part in the summit's talks.
He is accusing South Africa's Black-led government of persecuting its white Afrikaner minority and discriminating against whites through land and employment policies - allegations that South Africa and most international observers reject as misleading or exaggerated.
The clash did not start with the boycott. In February, Trump signed an executive order freezing roughly $440 million in U.S. aid to South Africa, citing a new land-expropriation law and Pretoria's genocide case against Israel at the International Court of Justice.
The same order launched a refugee program to resettle white South African farmers and their families in the U.S., turning a long-running right-wing talking point into official policy.
Relations deteriorated further in March, when Washington expelled South Africa's ambassador over his harsh criticism of Trump and the ANC's foreign policy.
In Congress, a bipartisan bill seeks authority to restrict or cut trade and aid, and a 30% tariff package on South African exports is already on the table.
US South Africa rift overshadows G20
Lawmakers argue that Pretoria has tilted toward Russia, China and Iran - from joint military drills and a disputed Russian arms episode to its voting record on Ukraine and Gaza - and no longer behaves like a reliable U.S. partner.
South Africa, for its part, says it is simply pursuing“non-alignment” and defending international law. Inside South Africa, the dispute plays into raw racial politics.
Trump's focus on white farmers dovetails with a small but noisy campaign at home: the Afrikaner trade union Solidarity has plastered Johannesburg highways with orange billboards declaring the country“the most race-regulated in the world,” a jab at affirmative-action rules designed to undo apartheid-era exclusion.
City authorities ordered at least one billboard removed, prompting promises of legal action and generating viral clips and memes on X, Facebook and Instagram.
All this now collides with the first G20 summit ever hosted on African soil. President Cyril Ramaphosa insists“boycott politics never work” and says he will not allow South Africa to be“bullied” over an agenda centered on debt relief, climate and energy financing, and development for poorer countries.
Yet he is presiding over a fragile economy: years of power cuts, about one-third unemployment, deep poverty and one of the world's worst inequality levels have already eroded confidence at home and abroad.
Why this matters to you is simple. If the U.S. can sit out a G20 in Africa over a domestic racial controversy and foreign-policy disagreements, it signals that great-power grudges are starting to override the one forum where rich and emerging economies still sit at the same table.
For South Africa, the risk is that a“dangerous gambit” of high-profile legal battles, Moscow-friendly diplomacy and race-charged policies ends up costing trade, investment and jobs.
For other mid-sized democracies, Johannesburg is a warning: defying Washington and courting rival powers may bring short-term applause - but it can also bring tariffs, sanctions talk and empty chairs at the world's biggest negotiating table.
He is accusing South Africa's Black-led government of persecuting its white Afrikaner minority and discriminating against whites through land and employment policies - allegations that South Africa and most international observers reject as misleading or exaggerated.
The clash did not start with the boycott. In February, Trump signed an executive order freezing roughly $440 million in U.S. aid to South Africa, citing a new land-expropriation law and Pretoria's genocide case against Israel at the International Court of Justice.
The same order launched a refugee program to resettle white South African farmers and their families in the U.S., turning a long-running right-wing talking point into official policy.
Relations deteriorated further in March, when Washington expelled South Africa's ambassador over his harsh criticism of Trump and the ANC's foreign policy.
In Congress, a bipartisan bill seeks authority to restrict or cut trade and aid, and a 30% tariff package on South African exports is already on the table.
US South Africa rift overshadows G20
Lawmakers argue that Pretoria has tilted toward Russia, China and Iran - from joint military drills and a disputed Russian arms episode to its voting record on Ukraine and Gaza - and no longer behaves like a reliable U.S. partner.
South Africa, for its part, says it is simply pursuing“non-alignment” and defending international law. Inside South Africa, the dispute plays into raw racial politics.
Trump's focus on white farmers dovetails with a small but noisy campaign at home: the Afrikaner trade union Solidarity has plastered Johannesburg highways with orange billboards declaring the country“the most race-regulated in the world,” a jab at affirmative-action rules designed to undo apartheid-era exclusion.
City authorities ordered at least one billboard removed, prompting promises of legal action and generating viral clips and memes on X, Facebook and Instagram.
All this now collides with the first G20 summit ever hosted on African soil. President Cyril Ramaphosa insists“boycott politics never work” and says he will not allow South Africa to be“bullied” over an agenda centered on debt relief, climate and energy financing, and development for poorer countries.
Yet he is presiding over a fragile economy: years of power cuts, about one-third unemployment, deep poverty and one of the world's worst inequality levels have already eroded confidence at home and abroad.
Why this matters to you is simple. If the U.S. can sit out a G20 in Africa over a domestic racial controversy and foreign-policy disagreements, it signals that great-power grudges are starting to override the one forum where rich and emerging economies still sit at the same table.
For South Africa, the risk is that a“dangerous gambit” of high-profile legal battles, Moscow-friendly diplomacy and race-charged policies ends up costing trade, investment and jobs.
For other mid-sized democracies, Johannesburg is a warning: defying Washington and courting rival powers may bring short-term applause - but it can also bring tariffs, sanctions talk and empty chairs at the world's biggest negotiating table.
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