Exclusive-Trump poised to expand refugee program for white South Africans


FILE PHOTO: People from the first group of white South Africans granted refugee status for being deemed victims of racial discrimination under U.S. President Trump's Refugee plan, check in for a connecting flight, at Dulles International Airport, in Dulles, Virginia, U.S., May 12, 2025. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo

WASHINGTON, April 23 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's administration is considering ⁠more than doubling an annual refugee limit to bring more white South Africans into the U.S., according to three people familiar with the matter.

Trump, a Republican, paused ⁠refugee admissions from around the world when he took office in January 2025. Weeks later, he issued an executive order prioritizing the resettlement of European-descended Afrikaners, ‌saying they faced race-based persecution in majority-Black South Africa. South Africa’s government vehemently denies the claims.

The U.S. Refugee Admissions Program was formally established in 1980 after hundreds of thousands of people fled wars in Vietnam and Cambodia. The program expandedto provide safe haven to persecuted people around the globe. Trump has used it almost exclusively to bring white South Africans into the U.S., part of abroader upending of norms around humanitarian protection.

In recent weeks,U.S. officials have ​discussed expanding the 7,500-person refugee cap by 10,000 to allow more South Africans of Afrikaner ethnicity to obtain refugee ⁠status, saidpeople familiar with internal planning, who spoke on the condition of ⁠anonymity to share non-public government discussions.

The White House referred questions to the U.S. State Department. A State Department spokesperson did not confirm or deny the discussions around expanding the ⁠refugee ‌admissions ceiling.

"If the president decides to raise the FY 2026 refugee admissions cap, he will do so at the appropriate time, and any numbers discussed at this point are only  speculation," the spokesperson said.

During the apartheid era, which ended with the first democratic elections in 1994, South Africa maintained a racially segregated society with separate schools, neighborhoods and public facilities ⁠for people classified as Black, colored, white or Asian.

Blacks make up 81% of South Africa's population, according ​to 2022 census data. Afrikaners and other white South Africans ‌constitute 7% of the population.

The U.S. admitted about 4,500 South Africans as refugees through the first six months of the fiscal year, State Department figures show, on ⁠pace to exceed Trump’s existing ​limits for the program. The only refugees other than white South Africans to enter this fiscal year were three Afghans, according to State Department statistics.

Trump set the record-low refugee ceiling of 7,500 for fiscal year 2026, which began October 1, 2025, down from a ceiling of 125,000 a year under former President Joe Biden.

The Trump administration is also discussing bringing in refugees of other nationalities, one of the people familiar with ⁠planning said.

U.S. officials are weighing whether religious minorities from Iran and countries that used to be part ​of the Soviet Union could be included under what’s known as the “Lautenberg” program, the person said. The program stems from a 1989 budget amendment introduced by then-U.S. Senator Frank Lautenberg that aimed to make it easier for Jewish refugees to resettle in the U.S.

SOME SOUTH AFRICANS IN THE US DECIDE TO GO BACK HOME

Even as Trump looks to further ramp up the entry of South Africans, ⁠an internal U.S. government email reviewed by Reuters showed that at least four refugees already in the U.S. have returned to South Africa.

One South African who arrived in Minneapolis in late January departed the U.S. less than a month later, the email showed. Case notes said that plans for his daughter and grandchildren to join him “fell through” so he returned to his home country.

A pair of South Africans who arrived in Twin Falls, Idaho, in late January via the refugee program turned around a week later, saying a parent was ill in South Africa, the ​email showed.

Another South African resettled in Moline, Illinois, in mid-March returned home weeks later, the email said.

“Resettlement occurred quickly, she had not thoroughly ⁠thought through the process, and her family in South Africa has decided not to continue their own resettlement process,” case notes said. “Additionally, the client’s age (66) and ability to provide for herself is ​a concern.”

Trump has portrayed South Africa as dangerous and oppressive for whites, yet thousands of white South Africans abroad ‌have returned to the country in recent years, Reuters reported in March.

U.S. government contracting documents reported ​by Reuters in February said the U.S. aimed to process 4,500 white South Africans per month through the refugee program. The documents also said the State Department paid to install more than a dozen trailers on embassy property in Pretoria to conduct interviews.

(Reporting by Ted Hesson; Additional reporting; Editing by Craig Timberg and David Gregorio)

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