South African president chooses Roelf Meyer as next ambassador to U.S


JOHANNESBURG, ⁠April 14 (Reuters) - South African President ⁠Cyril Ramaphosa has chosen Roelf Meyer, ‌a chief negotiator during the talks to end white minority rule in the 1990s, to ​be his country's next ⁠ambassador to the ⁠United States.

"I can confirm that President Cyril ⁠Ramaphosa ‌has appointed Mr Roelf Meyer as South Africa's Ambassador to ⁠the U.S.," Ramaphosa's spokesperson Vincent Magwenya ​told ‌Reuters on Tuesday.

South Africa has not ⁠had an ​ambassador in Washington since its last one, Ebrahim Rasool, was expelled last year ⁠after angering the Trump ​administration.

Meyer, 78, was the chief representative of the white minority National Party government during ⁠1993 talks to end apartheid. Ramaphosa was the chief negotiator for the African National Congress, the liberation movement ​at the time.

Meyer later ⁠served as a minister in the ​multi-party government led by ‌Nelson Mandela.

(Additional reporting by ​Nilutpal Timsina and Tim Cocks;Editing by Alexander Winning and Tim Cocks)

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