South Africa on Thursday demanded that Australian Interior Minister, Peter Dutton, should retract comments that suggested white farmers were being persecuted and deserved protection with special visas from “civilised country’’.
Pretoria hauled in Canberra’s High Commissioner for a diplomatic ticking off over Dutton’s remarks, which also included description of white farmers facing “horrific circumstances” – a characterization South Africa has rejected.
“The South African government is offended by the statements which have been attributed to the Australian home affairs minister and a full retraction is expected,” the foreign ministry said in a statement.
Commenting this week on a documentary about violent rural crime in South Africa, Dutton said the farmers deserved “special attention”, according to the Sydney Morning Herald and other Australian media.
“I do think, on the information that I’ve seen, people do need help and they need help from a civilized country like ours,” Dutton said.
He also pointed to plans by President Cyril Ramaphosa to allow expropriation of land as a solution to the massive land ownership inequalities that remain more than two decades after the end of apartheid.
Speaking to parliament this week, Ramaphosa said South Africa was not heading down the road toward the type of violent and chaotic seizure of white-owned farms that triggered economic collapse in Zimbabwe nearly 20 years ago.
“We cannot have a situation where we allow land grabs, because that is anarchy,” Ramaphosa said.
“We cannot have a situation of anarchy when we have proper constitutional means through which we can work to give land to our people.”
Although violent crime is a serious issue across South Africa, killings on farms, the vast majority of which are white-owned, has become a particularly racially charged issue.
Afriforum, a rights group that mainly represents the views of white Afrikaner minority, describes being a white farmer as one of the most dangerous jobs in the country.
Afriforum says a white farmer is twice as likely to be murdered as a policeman, and four times as likely as a private citizen.
However, Gareth Newham, a crime expert at the Pretoria-based Institute for Security Studies,
said the evidence was inconclusive, with murder rates for young black men in townships likely to be far higher than for white farmers.
The government denies that whites are deliberately targeted and says farm murders are part of South Africa’s wider violent crime problem. (Reuters/NAN)