US President Donald Trump speaks during a press conference in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, DC, on Oct 15, 2025. (File photo: Reuters/Jonathan Ernst)

Trump sets refugee ceiling at record-low 7,500 with focus on white South Africans

Trump has claimed Afrikaners face persecution based on their race in the Black-majority country, allegations the South African government has denied.

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WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump set the refugee admissions ceiling at 7,500 for fiscal year 2026, the lowest cap on record, a White House document published on Thursday (Oct 30) said, part of a broader effort to reshape refugee policies in the US and worldwide.

Trump said in an annual refugee determination dated Sep 30 that admissions would be focused largely on South Africans from the country's white Afrikaner ethnic minority.

Trump has claimed Afrikaners face persecution based on their race in the Black-majority country, allegations the South African government has denied.

Trump paused all US refugee admissions when he took office in January, saying they could only be restarted if they were established to be in the best interest of the United States.

Weeks later, he launched an effort to bring in Afrikaners, sparking criticism from refugee supporters. Only 138 South Africans had entered the US by early September, Reuters reported at the time.

In the determination published on Thursday, Trump said his administration would consider bringing in "other victims of illegal or unjust discrimination in their respective homelands".

An internal document drafted by US government officials in April suggested the administration could also prioritise bringing in Europeans as refugees if they were targeted for expressing certain views, such as opposition to mass migration or support for populist political parties. Europeans and other groups were not named in Trump's public refugee plan.

During the United Nations General Assembly in September, top Trump administration officials urged other nations to join a global campaign to roll back asylum protections, a major shift that would seek to reshape the post-World War Two migration framework.

Reuters and other outlets earlier this month reported Trump's plans for the 7,500-person refugee ceiling, which contrasts sharply with the 100,000 refugees who entered under former President Joe Biden in fiscal 2024.

Gideon Maltz, CEO of Tent Partnership for Refugees, said in a statement that refugees help address labour shortages and that the programme "has been extraordinarily good for America".

"Dismantling it today is not putting America first," he said in a statement.

In a related move, the White House said it would move oversight of the refugee support programmes from the State Department to the Department of Health and Human Services.

Source: Reuters/fs

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