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)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

1st LD: Israel seeks Hezbollah disarmament, Lebanon calls for ceasefire in talks in U.S.
U.S. stocks close higher
Exclusive-Congo to receive first group of deportees from US this week, sources say
Crude futures settle lower
U.S. dollar ticks down
Tourists to Israel drop to 9,400 in March amid war with Iran
Roundup: Vehicle electrification accelerates in the Netherlands
South Africa’s Ramaphosa to tap Roelf Meyer as next US envoy, Bloomberg News reports
Around 250 missing after Rohingya boat capsizes in Andaman Sea, UN agencies say
Carney vows to tackle cost of living in Canada with new majority government, suspends fuel tax

Others Also Read