Mandela took to Facebook to condemn the group’s departure, describing the move as “clownish theatrics” and a “drama club on tour.”
His comments followed reports that a chartered flight had carried the first group of Afrikaners out of the country citing political persecution and fears over land reform.
“So 49 Afrikaners packed their bags and fled to the US claiming they’re ‘refugees’? Refugees from what? From sharing power?” Mandela wrote in a strongly worded post.
“Imagine colonising a land, benefiting from stolen wealth for centuries, then crying ‘refugee’ because justice is finally knocking,” he added. “That’s not exile. That’s drama.”
Mandela, who is also the founder and CEO of the Melisizwe Mandela Foundation, dismissed the “white genocide” narrative as a fabrication used to undermine the country’s long-overdue transformation.
“They rewrite history, protect apartheid symbols, and shout ‘civilisation’ like we don’t remember the cost of their rise,” he wrote in an earlier post, drawing attention to the socioeconomic privilege enjoyed by white South Africans during apartheid and the enduring inequalities in post-apartheid South Africa.
The self-declared Afrikaner refugees are said to be seeking asylum in the US, a move Mandela criticised as futile.