Trump Administration Quietly Continues To Admit Unknown Number of White Afrikaner Refugees

Trump Afrikaners
FILE - White South Africans demonstrate in support of U.S. President Donald Trump in front of the U.S. embassy in Pretoria, South Africa, Saturday, Feb. 15, 2025. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay, File)

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(RNS) — When a group of 59 Afrikaners arrived at Dulles International Airport under the humanitarian designation of “refugee” last month, Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau met them at the airport. There were flags and balloons and a press conference.

Since then another group of Afrikaners claiming refugee status arrived at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on May 30 — to much less fanfare.

In fact, the State Department declined to say how many Afrikaners it has admitted to date.

Refugees continue to depart South Africa on commercial flights as part of the Department’s successful efforts to resettle Afrikaners seeking safe haven in the United States,” a spokesperson informed RNS via email. “As a matter of general policy, we are unable to comment on individual cases or internal operations of refugee processing.”

The Refugee Processing Center is not updating its database, either. Its recordkeeping ended in late December.

But news outlets abroad have reported that nine additional Afrikaners arrived in the U.S. on May 30 — and more are coming.

On Friday (June 20), World Refugee Day, faith-based resettlement agencies that work with the government are acknowledging this will be a record-low year for refugees.

Last year, under the Biden administration, around 100,000 refugees from around the world were resettled across the U.S. On his first day in office, President Trump paused the refugee program.

The one group the Trump administration has allowed in are Afrikaners, the white ethnic minority that created and led South Africa’s brutal segregationist policies known as apartheid. Their admission to the U.S. as “refugees” escaping persecution has been widely denounced as a fabrication. The Episcopal Migration Ministries ended its partnership with the government rather than resettle the refugees.

“In light of our church’s steadfast commitment to racial justice and reconciliation and our historic ties with the Anglican Church of Southern Africa, we are not able to take this step,” the Most Rev. Sean W. Rowe — the presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church — said.

Other faith-based refugee agencies have reluctantly agreed to resettle Afrikaners because they hope a court injunction will compel the government to resettle at least 128,000 refugees who had already been approved before Trump’s Jan. 20 suspension of all refugee admissions.

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Yonat Shimron
Yonat Shimron joined RNS in April 2011 and became managing editor in 2013. She was the religion reporter for The News & Observer in Raleigh, N.C. from 1996 to 2011. During that time she won numerous awards. She is a past president of the Religion Newswriters Association.

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