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Trump halts aid to South Africa citing new land law 

President Trump has signed an executive order officially halting all aid to South Africa, citing his cabinet the country's new land law aimed at combating racist apartheid. It urged them to come up with a resettlement programme for Africans who claim to be “a victim of unfair racism.” The era.

in Presidential OrderThe president ticked Friday and hammered South Africa, where he allegedly seized “an agricultural property of minority Africans without compensation.” He also chased the people for gaining a “offensive position” against Israel, an American ally.

The order states that as long as South Africa's “unjust and immoral practices” are in place, the United States should not “provide assistance or assistance to South Africa and the United States, including racist property confiscation. ”

South Africa has been angering Trump in recent weeks, claiming that the president, who was signed to the law last month by South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, claims it is at least a massive human rights violation. Last weekend for everyone. He accused the government of “confiscating the land and treating certain classes of people very badly.”

In the same post on Truth Social, Trump ultimately shows that he will contain aid, writing, “Until a full investigation into this situation is complete, I will cut all future funds to South Africa!” .

South Africa's law, signed into law in January, allows the government to seize land without compensation “fair, fair and in the public interest.”

Ramaphosa pushed back Trump's claims on Monday, saying that the law is “not a means of confiscation, but a constitutionally mandated legal process that ensures public access to the land in a constitutionally guided, fair and fair way. “He said.

“South Africa, like the United States and other countries, always had an expropriation law that balances the public use of the land with the need to protect the rights of property owners,” writes Ramaphosa. “We look forward to being involved with the Trump administration on issues of our land reform policy and bilateral interest.”

South Africa-born high-tech billionaire Elon Musk also chases after Ramaphosa to sign the law, asking, “Why do you have openly racist possession laws?” Ta.

In light of tensions between Trump and Lamfesa, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio wrote Thursday that he would not attend the Foreign Minister G20 Summit in Johannesburg later this month.

“I will not be attending the G20 summit in Johannesburg,” Rubio said. “South Africa is doing very bad things. Expropriation of private property. We use the G20 to promote “solidarity, equality and sustainability.” In other words, day and climate change. ”

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