US President Donald Trump announces that South Africa will not be invited to next year's G20 summit in Miami. The decision follows serious allegations of an ongoing genocide against South Africa's white minority.
Trump claims that systematic attacks and murders of white farmers in South Africa have occurred under the government's silence.
In a post on Truth Social, he writes: "They are killing white people, and randomly allowing their farms to be taken from them".
He directly links the allegations to his decision: "At my direction, South Africa will NOT be receiving an invitation to the 2026 G20, which will be hosted in the Great City of Miami, Florida next year".
Trump adds that the US will also stop all payments and subsidies to South Africa. He also criticizes American media, which he accuses of remaining silent about what he calls genocide.
Among others, the American president singles out The New York Times as particularly complicit through their silence.
Ramaphosa rejects the allegations
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa and other representatives strongly reject the picture of an ongoing genocide.
— That is not the government's policy, Ramaphosa said in May this year, when the issue of land seizures and violence against white farmers came up during a meeting with Trump at the White House.

Both politicians and courts in South Africa have consistently denied that there is a targeted genocide against white people in the country.
According to the president's spokesman Vincent Magwenya, Ramaphosa noted Trump's "regrettable statement" and rejected claims that South Africa does not deserve its place in the G20.
— As a founding member of the G20, South Africa values consensus, collaboration and partnership, Magwenya explained.
The G20 group consists of 19 countries, the EU and the African Union. This year's summit in South Africa was conducted without the presence of high-ranking American representatives, after Trump refused to back down from his allegations.
Next year's G20 meeting will be held at Trump National Doral, the family company's golf resort outside Miami.




