Ramaphosa breaks silence on Trump ‘ambush’: “I was bemused”

Ramaphosa breaks silence on Trump ‘ambush’: “I was bemused”

Ramaphosa jests about Trump’s theatrics and trade talks
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Key topics:

  • Ramaphosa laughs off Trump's Oval Office "White genocide" video ambush

  • South Africa seeks relief from US trade tariffs in D.C. meeting

  • Ramaphosa says he opened talks on future US-South Africa trade deal

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By S'thembile Cele and Ntando Thukwana

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa laughed off Donald Trump’s Oval Office ambush, in his first direct comments since returning from the encounter with his American counterpart last week.

The lights were dimmed as Ramaphosa entered an infrastructure conference in Cape Town on Tuesday, evoking the US president’s call to turn the lights down in the Oval Office to cue up a video montage that amplified his false claims of a White genocide in South Africa.

“When I came in, I saw the room going a bit dark,” Ramaphosa told the audience. “For a moment, I wondered what is this? Is it happening to me again?”

Ramaphosa visited Washington last week to persuade Trump to spare South Africa from the full brunt of his sweeping trade tariffs. The US is the country’s second-largest trading partner after China. While the meeting between the two leaders began with pleasantries, Trump surprised his visitor with the video after a few minutes.

“At that point I was seated very nicely. I was beginning to get into a groove of interacting with this man, and I suddenly hear him say, ‘dim the lights,”’ Ramaphosa recalled, reliving the moment for his Cape Town audience. “Some people have said this was an ambush. I was bemused. I was there thinking what is happening?”

The face-to-face Oval Office meeting marked the first between the leaders followed months of tension, after Trump froze aid to South Africa over his claims about attacks on White farmers. He has also criticized Pretoria’s genocide case against Israel - a key US ally - at the International Court of Justice.

The encounter also took place after 49 South Africans of Afrikaner descent were flown to the US on a plane charted by Washington and granted refugee status on the back of Trump’s claim that White Afrikaner farmers are victims of a genocide and the state is seizing their land.

There have been no official land seizures in South Africa since apartheid ended in 1994, while police statistics show young Black men bear the brunt of violent crime. 

Notwithstanding the video, Ramaphosa declared the visit a success for opening a path to consider a new trade deal between the two countries. He also voiced confidence that Trump will attend the Group of 20 summit in November in Johannesburg, which South Africa is hosting before it hands the leadership of the global forum to the US.

© 2025 Bloomberg L.P.

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