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Trump says white South Africans are persecuted; some are returning to a better life

By Nellie Peyton and Tim Cocks

Reuters Naomi and Danny Saphire pose with their children and dogs at their new home in Plettenberg Bay after returning from the U.S., in the Western Cape, South Africa, March 7, 2026. REUTERS/Esa Alexander Naomi Saphire greets a friend in Plettenberg Bay after their return from the U.S., in the Western Cape, South Africa, March 7, 2026. REUTERS/Esa Alexander Naomi and Danny Saphire walk on the beach with their children in Plettenberg Bay, Western Cape, South Africa, after returning from the U.S., March 7, 2026. REUTERS/Esa Alexander Naomi and Danny Saphire watch their children during martial arts training in Knysna after their return from the U.S., in the Western Cape, South Africa, March 7, 2026. REUTERS/Esa Alexander Naomi and Danny Saphire unpack their belongings with their children at their new home in Plettenberg Bay, Western Cape, South Africa, after returning from the U.S., March 7, 2026. REUTERS/Esa Alexander

While Trump offers white South Africans asylum, thousands are returning home to a better life

JOHANNESBURG, March 11 (Reuters) - Andrew Veitch left South Africa after being held up at gunpoint in his car. But now he feels there are greater threats in the United States, he said, citing mass shootings in public places as well as violence by U.S. immigration officers.

"People are being shot in broad daylight. American citizens are being shot ‌and killed," said the 53-year-old, who moved to California in 2003. "I don't want to live in a place like this."

President Donald Trump's officials have said Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers were justified in ‌firing the shots that killed two U.S. citizens in January, although video evidence has contradicted their accounts.

Veitch plans to return to South Africa this year, one of thousands of white South Africans coming back, despite Trump's statements that the white minority is being persecuted by the ​country's Black majority government.

Pretoria says there is no evidence of discrimination or persecution against whites. Many have left since the end of white minority rule in 1994, some citing crime and difficulty getting jobs, but many are also returning.

Veitch is among 12,000 people who have checked their citizenship status in an online portal launched by the government in November after the overturning of a 1995 law that stripped citizenship from some South Africans who left.

They represent a fraction of South Africans abroad. The latest official statistics on returnees, from 2022, show that almost 15,000 white South Africans returned that year.

EXPATS SAY SOUTH AFRICA MEANS LOWER COSTS, LESS TURMOIL

Home Affairs Minister Leon Schreiber said 1,000 people had reclaimed their citizenship, ‌a number he expected to grow significantly as the programme takes off.

"There ⁠is definitely a sense of optimism for South Africans abroad," said Schreiber, part of the white-led Democratic Alliance party that has ruled in coalition with the African National Congress since 2024. He is a returnee himself, having spent time in the U.S. and Germany before coming home in 2019.

Two recruitment agencies that help expats relocate said the number of ⁠inquiries had jumped, and Reuters spoke to 10 South Africans who had either returned or were planning to, seven of them from across Europe and three from the United States.

Their reasons, echoed in a 25,000-strong "Return to South Africa" Facebook group some belong to, included being closer to family, lower living costs and political turmoil abroad.

The Trump administration is ramping up its new refugee programme for white South Africans, focusing on Afrikaners, the descendants of Dutch settlers. About 3,500 South Africans have entered the ​United ​States as refugees since the programme started in May 2025.

Applicants interviewed by Reuters complained of being victims of racially motivated crime ​and employment equity laws that favour non-white candidates in order to redress decades of ‌white minority rule.

Other Afrikaners, like Naomi Saphire, take a different view.

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She had been settled in the United States for two decades when she came back for a holiday and realized how much she missed home.

Last year, she left North Carolina for a seaside town in South Africa's Western Cape, where she said her three children spend more time outdoors, health insurance is affordable and she prefers the schools.

"My heart is just full of gratefulness to be here," the 46-year-old said from her home in Plettenberg Bay. "The U.S. has been really good to me (but) I just felt like I was depriving my kids of this life."

Saphire said she knows many people who are returning home.

RETURNEES USE REMOTE WORKING TO KEEP THEIR JOBS

Crime and joblessness are major issues in South Africa, but the unemployment rate is 35% for Black people compared with 8% for whites, according to the latest figures from the national ‌statistics agency Stats SA.

Police statistics released last year showed that even farm murders, which Trump has focused on, killed more Black ​people than whites. Reuters has found that photos and videos Trump has presented on the matter were taken out of context or ​misrepresented.

Still, Stats SA estimated a net outward flow of half a million whites since 2001, including 95,000 ​from 2021 to 2026. There is no regular data on returnees, but a Stats SA analysis showed that 28,000 South Africans returned in 2022, 52.9% - or some 14,800 - of whom ‌were white.

Anton van Heerden, CEO of employment agency DNA Employer of Record, said inquiries ​from white South Africans seeking to return had jumped ​70% in the past six months. Angel Jones, CEO of Johannesburg-based recruitment firm HomecomingEx, reported a roughly 30% rise in inquiries since 2024.

A boom in remote working since the COVID-19 pandemic has also helped; three of the returnees interviewed by Reuters kept their jobs abroad.

Many South African professionals have extensive private security at home which minimizes crime risks, Van Heerden said.

"If you can afford to live in a ​safe environment, you can have a much better life than I think in most ‌places in the northern hemisphere," he said.

Several returnees also said they felt life in South Africa had improved since they left. Power cuts, which used to be daily, for example, have ​largely stopped.

Thirty-eight-year-old engineer Eugene Jansen, who returned from the Netherlands in December with his wife and two children, said the returnees he knows feel things are getting better.

"The opinion is that ​the country is improving," he said.

(Reporting by Nellie Peyton and Tim Cocks; Editing by Mike Collett-White and Philippa Fletcher)

Trump says white South Africans are persecuted; some are returning to a better life

By Nellie Peyton and Tim Cocks While Trump offers white South Africans asylum, thousands are returning ho...
140 US service members have been injured in the Iran war, Pentagon says

About 140 U.S. service members have been wounded in the first 10 days ofconflict with Iran, according to thePentagon.

The Independent US

"The vast majority of theseinjurieshave been minor, and 108 service members have already returned to duty," Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell said. Eight U.S. service members are currently "severely injured," Parnell added.

The new figure is the first insight into the broader toll of injuries that have been sustained by U.S. troops in the wake of a barrage of retaliatory rocket and drone strikes from Iran that have alsoclaimed the lives of seven soldiersin Kuwait and Saudi Arabia.

At least 1,230 people have been killed in Iran since the war began, at least 397 in Lebanon and 12 in Israel, according to officials.

Iran's attacks on oil infrastructure and pledges to choke off a vital waterway left markets on edge Tuesday as the United States promised blistering new strikes. The war entered its 11th day with no end in sight as its effects were felt across the Middle East and beyond.

Seven service members have died as a result of the war, including U.S. Army Sgt. Benjamin N. Pennington, 26, of Glendale, Ky. (US Army)

Iran launched new attacks against Israel and Gulf Arab countries, while Israel carried out waves of airstrikes on Iran and Lebanon, where it is battling Hezbollah militants.

Residents of Tehran said they had experienced some of the heaviest strikes of the war, leading to electricity cuts in many neighborhoods of the capital. One resident said his area shook for a half hour from strikes overnight and into Tuesday.

A 27-year-old mother of a toddler said she witnessed a residential building get hit. She and others reached by The Associated Press spoke on condition of anonymity to prevent reprisals. Tens of thousands of Iranians have sought shelter in the countryside.

Death toll rises in the Gulf

The United Arab Emirates reported two more deaths as nine drones struck the country, while nearly three dozen other drones and missiles were intercepted. Firefighters battled a blaze in the industrial city of Ruwais — home to petrochemical plants — after an Iranian drone strike, officials said. No injuries were reported there.

Iranian attacks on the wealthy Gulf country — home to the business and travel hub of Dubai — have killed six people and wounded 122 others since the U.S. and Israel launched a surprise bombardment of Iran on Feb. 28.

In Bahrain, authorities said an Iranian attack hit a residential building in the capital, Manama, killing a 29-year-old woman and wounding eight people. Bahrain's Defense Ministry says it has intercepted over 100 ballistic missiles and 175 drones since the war began.

Six soldiers from the 103rd Sustainment Command were killed in action by an Iranian drone strike March 1 in Port of Shuaiba, Kuwait during Operation Epic Fury (Getty Images)

Sirens also sounded in Jerusalem, and sounds of explosions could be heard in Tel Aviv as Israel's air defenses worked to intercept barrages from Iran. Hezbollah, which began firing on Israel after the start of the war, launched missiles into Israel.

US and Iranian leaders trade threats

At the Pentagon, Hegseth warned that Tuesday "will be yet again our most intense day of strikes inside Iran: The most fighters, the most bombers, the most strikes, intelligence more refined and better than ever." He added that the last 24 hours had seen the fewest Iranian missiles fired since the start of the war.

Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said U.S. forces hit more than 5,000 targets.

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Iran's leaders have remained defiant after days of heavy strikes targeting the country's leadership, military, ballistic missiles and disputed nuclear program. Iran's parliament speaker, Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf, said on X that Iran was "definitely not looking for a ceasefire."

"We believe that the aggressor should be punched in the mouth so that he learns a lesson so that he will never think of attacking our beloved Iran again," he said.

A top Iranian security official, Ali Larijani, appeared to threaten Trump himself, writing on X that "Iran doesn't fear your empty threats. Even those bigger than you couldn't eliminate Iran. Be careful not to get eliminated yourself." Iran has been accused of plotting attempts to kill Trump in the past.

Attacks on oil aimed at pressuring the US

Iran has repeatedly targeted energy infrastructure with attacks that appear aimed at generating enough global economic pain to pressure the U.S. and Israel to end their strikes. It has also fired on Israel and U.S. military bases in the region.

Brent crude, the international standard, spiked to nearly $120 on Monday before falling back but was still at around $90 a barrel on Tuesday, nearly 24% higher than when the war started on Feb. 28. The Dow Jones Industrial Average drifted lower initially on Tuesday, but turned positive as oil prices sank and hopes rose that wealthy industrialized countries could tap into strategic reserves.

Iran has effectively stopped tankers from using the Strait of Hormuz, through which 20% of the world's oil is carried. Attacks on merchant ships near the strait have killed at least seven sailors, according to the International Maritime Organization.

Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard said it "will not allow the export of even a single liter of oil from the region to the hostile side and its partners until further notice."

Trump warned on social media that "If Iran does anything that stops the flow of Oil within the Strait of Hormuz, they will be hit by the United States of America TWENTY TIMES HARDER than they have been hit thus far."

A bulk carrier likely came under attack on Tuesday off the coast of the United Arab Emirates, with the captain reporting a splash and a loud bang nearby, according to a monitoring center run by the British military.

Amin Nasser, the president and CEO of Saudi Arabia's oil giant Aramco, said tankers were being rerouted to avoid the strait, and that its East-West pipeline would reach its full capacity of 7 million barrels a day being brought to the Red Sea port of the Yanbu this week.

"The situation at the Strait of Hormuz is blocking sizable volumes of oil from the whole region," he said. "If this takes a long time, that will have serious impact on the global economy."

Hundreds of thousands displaced by fighting

The U.N. refugee agency said Tuesday that more than 667,000 people in Lebanon had registered as displaced — an increase of over 100,000 since a day earlier — and more than 85,000 people from Lebanon, mostly Syrians, had entered neighboring Syria.

The British government said the number of commercial flights from the UAE to the U.K. is returning to normal levels, with 32 flights operated from Dubai to Britain on Monday and another 36 scheduled Tuesday.

However, British Airways said it has suspended flights to and from Jordan, Bahrain, Qatar, Dubai and Tel Aviv until later this month.

Many foreign nationals have been getting out of the Persian Gulf region: Over 45,000 U.K. citizens have returned from the area since the conflict began, the British Foreign Office said, and some 40,000 people returned to the United States, according to the State Department.

140 US service members have been injured in the Iran war, Pentagon says

About 140 U.S. service members have been wounded in the first 10 days ofconflict with Iran, according to thePentagon. ...
FAA issues ground stop for all JetBlue planes

JetBlue Airways has requested for a ground stop at all destinations, the US Federal Aviation Administration said in an advisory on Tuesday.

CNN Mario Tama/Getty Images

The ground stop was issued at the request of the airline, the FAA notice said, without adding further details. JetBlue did not immediately respond to request for comment.

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A ground stop is an air traffic control measure that temporarily halts flights usually due to safety, weather or operational issues.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

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FAA issues ground stop for all JetBlue planes

JetBlue Airways has requested for a ground stop at all destinations, the US Federal Aviation Administration said in ...
Two teen brothers in Texas mariachi band are released from ICE custody amid bipartisan criticism

RAYMONDVILLE, Texas (AP) — A family whose two teen boys are in a nationally recognized mariachi band in South Texas was reunited Monday afternoon after bipartisan criticism that the Trump administration'scampaign for mass deportationoverreached by detaining the family.

Associated Press FILE - The Department of Homeland Security logo during a news conference in Washington, Feb. 25, 2015. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File) FILE - A federal agent wears an Immigration and Customs Enforcement badge in New York, June 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura, File)

Immigrations Enforcement Texas Fatal Shooting

Brothers Antonio Gámez-Cuéllar, 18, and Joshua, 14, were detained along with their 12-year-old brother and their parents Feb. 25. The teenage boys were prominent members of the McAllen High School Mariachi Oro band, which has visited the White House, performed at Carnegie Hall and won eight state championships.

The two younger boys and their parents were released Monday from a family detention center in Dilley, Texas, said U.S. Rep. Joaquin Castro, a Texas Democrat who visited them, marking histhird visitto the detention center.

Antonio was released on Monday by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement from a detention center in Raymondville, Texas.

"They were ecstatic. They were crying. They were excited to be reunited with their son and brother, Antonio, who was being held separately in Raymondville," Castro said at a news conference in San Antonio. "But their mom kept asking, 'What did we do wrong? We followed all the rules. We went to court, we haven't done anything wrong.'"

The family had been checking in regularly with immigration authorities, as instructed, when they were detained, according to a relative and a girlfriend who organized a GoFundMe account for the family.

The Department of Homeland Security said the parents, Emma Guadalupe Cuellar Lopez and Luis Antonio Gamez Martinez, were arrested by immigration authorities and "chose" to bring their three children with them. The department said they entered the U.S. illegally in 2023 near Brownsville, Texas.

Efrén C. Olivares, an attorney with the National Immigration Law Center representing the eldest son, Antonio, clarified that the family entered lawfully through the CBP One app, a legal pathway, in 2023.

Olivares said Antonio was released after attorneys filed a parole request with ICE which ICE granted, and attorneys did not need to ask for a judge's order.

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Elected officials from across the political spectrum voiced support for the family, who are from Mexico and had sought asylum in the U.S. and were going through their immigration proceedings.

"I challenge my colleagues to work together for new enforcement policies that not only secure our border but make safer communities and that ultimately are common sense," U.S. Rep. Monica de la Cruz, a Republican congresswoman representing McAllen, in Raymondville after Antonio's release.

McAllen's Republican mayor, Javier Villalobos, said he supported the family and said he continues to advocate for "responsible pathways for law abiding individuals who want to contribute to our economy, support their families, and become productive neighbors in McAllen."

U.S. Rep. Adriano Espaillat, a New York Democrat and chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, called the family's detention "outrageous."

The boys' mariachi directors visited the family held in Dilley earlier Monday. Alex Treviño, the mariachi director and Neri Fuentes, the assistant director, said the kids were concerned about losing their playing abilities.

"They were worried that their fingers weren't going to work, because they don't have instruments," Treviño said.

Antonio, who had been held apart from the family due to his age, recently won the first chair for trumpet in a state competition.

"This year he's going to be graduating from high school and going to college and joining some other groups in college. He wants to be a music educator," Fuentes said.

Castro attributed the release of the family to an "ensemble" effort and said he continues to push for the family detention center in Dilley to be closed. He said the population at the detention facility had gone down from about 1,100 people in January to about 450 people, with about 100 of them being children.

Two teen brothers in Texas mariachi band are released from ICE custody amid bipartisan criticism

RAYMONDVILLE, Texas (AP) — A family whose two teen boys are in a nationally recognized mariachi band in South Texas was ...
A reporter in Nashville has been covering ICE arrests in her community. Then she was detained herself

Nashville journalist Estefany Rodriguez frequently reports on Immigration and Customs Enforcement action, becoming familiar with the sudden arrests that have become hallmarks of the Trump administration's immigration crackdown.

CNN Estefany Rodriguez was detained by federal agents this week while she was in the car with her husband, according to her lawyers. - Courtesy Alejandro Medina

But when trucks surrounded her and her husband's car Wednesday and agents approached the windows, she was confused, her husband Alejandro Medina said.

Medina realized it was ICE before his wife did, he said. "We really couldn't understand why we're being surrounded."

"We're definitely shocked," he told CNN.

Rodriguez, who was born in Colombia, entered the United States legally, one of her lawyers said. She is a journalist for Spanish-language news outlet Nashville Noticias and has reported stories "critical of the practices" by ICE and was covering immigration arrests the day before her detainment Wednesday, a petition filed by her lawyers for her release stated.

It's the latest instance of journalists being caught up in the Trump administration's nationwidecrackdown on immigration. Mario Guevara,a Salvadoran journalist, was deported in October after being arrested while covering a "No Kings" protest in Atlanta.

The agents swarming the car to detain Rodriguez knew a lot about her and her husband, Medina said. They knew he was born in the US, and they knew they had applied for a green card, he said.

Rodriguez also has a pending political asylum claim and a valid work permit, according to court documents. A spokesperson for ICE told CNN in a statement Rodriguez "currently has no lawful immigration status."

"A pending green card application and work authorization does NOT give someone legal status to be in our country," a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson told CNN.

Rodriguez was at a detention center in Alabama as of Friday before she was set to be sent to Louisiana, according to her lawyer, Joel Coxander.

There is still no evidence she has been transferred from the Alabama detention center, Coxander told CNN on Saturday, adding a federal judge in her habeas corpus case has ordered DHS to show cause in response to the petition challenging her detention.

When she worked for a large broadcaster in her home country of Colombia, she reported on government agencies and instances of corruption, her dad Juan Rodriguez and Coxander said.

But then she started receiving threats, Juan Rodriguez said. She reported them to the police and the country's prosecutor's office, and a security detail was assigned to her for a while, but that later changed to routine check-ins, her father said.

Estefany Rodriguez poses for a photo with her husband Alejandro Medina. - Courtesy Alejandro Medina

"There are a lot of problems, including armed groups, guerrillas, corrupt politicians. When you report, you'll find that some of these people don't like what you're reporting on, and they'll get bothered and think they have to get rid of the reporter because the reporter is making too much noise and informing the public," Juan Rodriguez said.

When her daughter turned 1, Estefany Rodriguez decided to try to find safety in the US, he said. She came to the United States on a tourist visa in 2021, according to court documents. Before it expired, she applied for political asylum, it said.

However, according to ICE, "she failed to depart the country and is in violation of the conditions of her visa and currently has no lawful immigration status. She will remain in ICE custody pending her immigration proceedings."

While Coxander said Friday he asked the court to let him amend his initial petition to release Rodriguez to "specifically address that this is a First Amendment violation and retaliation" for her coverage of ICE activities, the agents said they were detaining her because she had failed to show up for two immigration appointments.

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Rodriguez received a letter from ICE on January 8 asking her to come to the Nashville field office for "processing and additional information," according to court documents. She and her lawyer collected paperwork and were ready for the appointment, Coxander said, but the city was shut down by an ice storm and the office closed.

She soon received a second letter, rescheduling the appointment for February 25, Coxander said.

Three days before the rescheduled meeting, Rodriguez's husband and another attorney visited the ICE office to see if the office could mail the immigration charging documents to Rodriguez's legal team rather than her appearing in person, the petition said.

The lawyer asked the ICE agent directly if she needed to be there on February 25, and the agent said they couldn't find Rodriguez in their computer system for appointments "and could find no sign of an appointment for her on February 25," according to the petition. The agent then said Rodriguez should come on March 17 instead, according to Coxander. The agency gave her another notice that had the March 17 date on it.

Dispute emerges over warrant shared by DHS

DHSposted Saturday on X a photo of what it saidwas a "warrant for arrest of alien" for Rodriguez, dated March 4, purporting to show an immigration officer determined there was probable cause she was removable from the United States.

However, Rodriguez's attorney disputed DHS's version of the document, saying the actual version the department submitted to the court is dated March 2, lacks an Alien Registration Number for Rodriguez, and the section of the warrant where officials are supposed to indicate the warrant was served is blank.

CNN has reviewed the version of the warrant Coxander said was submitted in court filings.

A spokesperson for DHS told CNN the lower section of an immigration arrest warrant is typically completed after an arrest, while the top portion reflects approval to make the arrest.

The document DHS posted on X appears to be different from what Coxander says is the actual document and indicates it was issued following a deferred inspection with ICE that occurred that day. Coxander argues the warrant posted on X could not have been the basis for Rodriguez's initial arrest.

The version of the warrant DHS posted on X appears to cite factors including an alleged "failure to establish admissibility subsequent to deferred inspection" and statements made by Rodriguez to immigration officers as the basis for probable cause she is removable from the United States — boxes that were not checked on the version of the warrant Coxander says was submitted to the court.

In their Friday court filing responding to the government's preliminary documents, Rodriguez's legal team notes that, along with the blank certificate of service on the warrant, ICE's own report of the arrest shows from the moment agents approached Rodriguez in the parking lot until she was taken to the Nashville holding room, she was never presented with a warrant.

This means, the court filing claims, Rodriguez was effectively arrested without a warrant. The documents suggest ICE agents seized her in the parking lot and transported her to the office, bypassing the formal process of serving a warrant.

This distinction is central to her lawyers' argument.

The X post from DHS appeared to come in response to criticism from Texas Rep. Joaquin Castro, whowrote on XFriday that ICE had arrested the journalist "without a warrant" and called her detention part of "the Trump Admin's machine of cruelty that is attacking the free press and violating our rights."

"She's a tough person. Obviously, she's been through a lot and kept being a journalist despite everything that's happened, and despite, you know, obviously, the inherent risk of just being near ICE and while she's covering other arrests," Coxander said.

Medina said his wife "cares about her community, and she cares about her job, and she's really good at it," adding that her work in journalism is only "a piece of her life."

"She is a mother, she's a wife, she's someone that makes her friends feel close," he said.

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A reporter in Nashville has been covering ICE arrests in her community. Then she was detained herself

Nashville journalist Estefany Rodriguez frequently reports on Immigration and Customs Enforcement action, becoming famil...

 

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