CAPE TOWN – The Trump administration has expelled the South African ambassador to US Ebrahim Lasor after a statement reportedly made at a conference in Johannesburg, South Africa. In a post on X (formerly Twitter), US Secretary of State Marco Rubio wrote that Lasor is “no longer welcome in our great power.”
“Emrahim Rathor is a politician who baits a race who hates America and hates @potus. He is considered a Persona Non Grata because he has nothing to talk to him,” Rubio writes in X.
Rasool was speaking at the Webinar of the Mapungubwe Institute for Johannesburg, an independent think tank in Johannesburg, at a webinar on the US government’s diplomatic response to South Africa’s land expropriation law and the support of Palestinians. He had previously said he plans to tone down talking about Gaza so that it would not affect South Africa’s inclusion in Ana.
In his second post as ambassador four years from 2011 to 2015, Rasool reportedly stated that what Donald Trump is launching is an existing attack by mobilizing supremacy at home. The great American moves show very clear data that is predicted to make US voters 48% white, for example.
He then said the US government’s efficiency director was involved in “revolutionary exports.” Musk was born in South Africa.
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“It’s no coincidence that Elon Musk became involved in British politics and promoted Nigel Farage and the reform movement. On his way to the Munich Security Summit, Vice President Vance addressed the alternative fürdeutschland (AFD) to strengthen them in his election campaign. As a white victim, there is a global conservation movement enveloping the white community, saying in the webinar.
Since Trump took office, diplomatic relations between the US and South Africa have deteriorated.
The US president cites “bad behavior” by South Africa, “unfair racism” against white Africans, and signs an executive order in February that freezes national aid, and refers to the Land Expropriation Act.
Rasool’s family was one of those forced to take away hundreds of people from their homes during the apartheid regime. He was later caught up in a struggle for freedom, detained for 16 months without trial, and was banned and restricted for 18 months from 1985 to 1988.