CAPE TOWN, South Africa — U.S. President Donald Trump is prioritizing white South Africans in a dramatically decreased quota of refugees allowed into the United States this fiscal year.
The Trump administration is cutting the number of refugee places to as few as 7,500 from a limit of 125,000 last year under the Biden administration, with the places mostly going to members of the Afrikaner white minority from South Africa.
The figure is for the fiscal year that started Oct. 1, and the administration published the news Thursday in a notice on the Federal Registry. It said the reduction for 2026 was ''justified by humanitarian concerns or is otherwise in the national interest.''
Since Trump took office, the U.S. has said that Afrikaners should be resettled because they are being discriminated against by their Black-led government, are the victims of race-based violence and are having their land seized.
The South African government strongly denies those claims, calling them ''completely false'' and the result of misinformation.
Arrivals to U.S.
The Trump administration had already announced a new program earlier this year to fast-track the relocation of Afrikaner farmers to the U.S. while suspending the refugee program from other parts of the world.
Around 70 white South Africans were relocated to the U.S. in two groups in May and June in what U.S. officials described as the start of the program. Around 400 white South Africans in total have reportedly been moved to the U.S. already.