Johannesburg – A chant that US leader Donald Trump used to back claims of white genocide in South Africa is an apartheid-era slogan that did not really mean for farmers to be killed, the president said on Tuesday.
“It’s not meant to be a message that elicits or calls upon anyone to be killed,” Ramaphosa said.
“We are a country where freedom of expression is in the bedrock of our constitutional arrangements,” he said, brushing aside the suggestion that Malema should be arrested.
ALSO READ | WATCH | ‘WAKE UP AFRICA!’ — Ex-AU envoy Slams Ramaphosa’s team after Trump meeting
Malema, the vocal leader of the populist, Marxist-inspired Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party, is also seen in the video shown at the White House as claiming, “We are going to occupy land, we require no permission.”
This fuels claims repeated by Trump that a revised land expropriation act will allow the government to seize white farmland.
The law contains a “nil compensation” clause but the government says this would only be in exceptional circumstances and after efforts to seek a “just and equitable” settlement.
The revised law brings the judiciary directly into decisions about expropriation, Ramaphosa said.
Scenarios of the government taking property without compensation could include situations where the owners could not be traced or were heavily indebted and the property was required for the public interest, he said.
The Democratic Alliance, the second-largest party in the government of national unity, has gone to court to challenge the “nil compensation” provision, which they say is open to abuse.
Follow African Insider on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram
Picture: X/@PresidencyZA
For more African news, visit Africaninsider.com
Compiled by Betha Madhomu