RT.com
23 Jan 2026, 20:52 GMT+10
Murders in the country affect blacks as well as other racial groups, Democratic Alliance leader John Steenhuisen has said
South Africa has a serious crime problem, but "not a white genocide," Agriculture Minister and Democratic Alliance leader John Steenhuisen has said, dismissing US President Donald Trump's allegations of racial persecution in the country.
Steenhuisen said there were rural safety issues and farm murders were brutal in their nature.
"But if one looks at the cold, hard statistics, it's very clear where the crime problem is and who is bearing the burden of crime is not a white genocide, not at all.
"We have white people murdered, yes, but we also have coloured and black South Africans as well as Indian South Africans and South of Asian descent that are being murdered as well," he said when he was fielding questions from the Press Gallery Association on Thursday.
He made the comment as US President Donald Trump reiterated this week that there was a white genocide in South Africa. According to Steenhuisen, it was clear that Trump has been fed a lie about South Africa.
"Despite all the evidence to the contrary, the hard statistics and many efforts to display that this is not the case in South Africa, that is his perception of the country."
He said Trump has got a different agenda that he was pushing despite whatever the truth he was told. "He is not going to believe it because he has to push that agenda. Well, there's a famous saying, that you can take a horse to the water, but you can't make it drink," he said.
READ MORE: South African president warns against 'bullies'
Steenhuisen said it was strategically important for the United States to have a relationship with South Africa, but the relationship must be two-way and has to have trust. However, he believed that the deterioration of the relationship with the US started long before Trump came in.
"That is why it is so fundamentally important that we understand what our national interest is, unpack that national interest in granular detail, and then use that as the decision-making matrix about how we position ourselves in international affairs.
"I think if we do that, we're genuinely not aligned, and if we filter every foreign policy decision around what is in the best interest of South Africa, its national interest, I think we'll start to make many more wiser choices around how we advance on the geopolitical stage."
Commenting on the US stance towards South Africa, Steenhuisen said it was really unfortunate that the US was missing out on the opportunity to have a partnership with the most industrialised country on the continent and a country whose Constitution and Bill of Rights bore a strong resemblance to the values and principles that the United States purports to uphold.
"South Africa is a wonderful country. There are incredible things happening here, but yes, there are bad things happening here, just as in the United States. There are wonderful things happening there in many places, but there are also terrible things happening there."
He said every country has its own problems, and South Africa remained a solid, good partner for the United States of America.
"Our commitment to democracy, our journey to democracy, our values in our constitution and Bill of Rights all stand out there as a beacon on the continent and to eschew a relationship with us based on false perceptions of the country that have been fed to you by people who don't act in the best interest of the country, I think it's a very sad day, and I think that the US will ultimately be the loser if they don't want to have a relationship with us in that regard."
Get a daily dose of Johannesburg Life news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Johannesburg Life.
More InformationONTARIO, Canada: Decades of overuse and environmental damage have pushed the world's freshwater systems past a critical tipping point,...
HUDSONVILLE, Michigan: Heavy snowfall led to a massive pile-up off an interstate in Michigan on January 19, after more than 100 vehicles...
BOGOTA, Colombia: A Colombian court on January 19 sentenced a former paramilitary leader to 40 years in prison for crimes committed...
Three journalists were assassinated by Israeli military forces in the city of Al-Zahraa in central Gaza on Wednesday. In a separate...
MILAN, Italy: Valentino Garavani, the jet-set Italian designer whose high-glamour gowns were worn by royals, film stars, and fashion...
SANTIAGO, Chile: Raging wildfires in two regions in the south of Chile claimed 19 lives and forced at least 20,000 people to evacuate....
*Over the past 10 years, the cooperation zone project progressed steadily. By the end of 2025, the zone hosted nearly 200 companies,...
Murders in the country affect blacks as well as other racial groups, Democratic Alliance leader John Steenhuisen has said ...
Russian strikes targeting energy infrastructure are causing unprecedented hardship to some of Ukraine's most vulnerable creatures amid...
Dhaka [Bangladesh], January 23 (ANI): The Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) petioned the International Cricket Council's (ICC) independent...
Thiruvananthapuram (Kerala) [India], January 23 (ANI): Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday said the NDA government remains committed...
The decision is in response to Guinea's successful December election, the continental body has said ...
