-
Pyjamas and bets: Brazil YouTube channel reshapes World Cup viewing
-
Bloodied but unbowed: Sinner avoids shock exit at start of Wimbledon title defence
-
Queueing, strawberries and all white: it must be Wimbledon
-
Top US court upholds $5mn Trump sex assault judgment
-
Stokes backs Brook '100 percent' to succeed him as England Test captain
-
Sinner survives scare to reach Wimbledon second round
-
Ebola outbreak in DR Congo spreads to fourth province
-
Six killed in German 'family tragedy' shooting: police
-
Czech Republic coach Koubek quits after World Cup flop
-
Osaka makes spectacular Wimbledon arrival in kimono-inspired dress
-
French parliament adopts bill to regulate fast fashion
-
Bolivia removes 15-year dollar peg in bid to revive economy
-
Supreme Court boosts Trump's power to fire officials, but protects Fed
-
Russia jails veteran who threatened Putin with mutiny
-
Three things we learned from the Austrian F1 Grand Prix
-
Five shot dead at German youth welfare site, two suspects arrested
-
Burnham pledges radical devolution of UK govt if PM
-
New Zealand thrash England to deny Stokes a fairytale finish
-
Polish businesses press Warsaw, Kyiv to end political rift
-
Tour de France 'ready to adapt' amid extreme heatwave
-
Hovland beats Scheffler in playoff for PGA Travelers title
-
Stocks rise, oil climbs after US-Iran clashes
-
New Zealand thrash England for series win as Stokes bows out
-
Man City hire Maresca to start new era after Guardiola
-
Trump says Iran meeting to take place in Qatar
-
Pegula slams Vondrousova's 'harsh' doping ban
-
Spain raises 2026 growth forecast despite Mideast war turmoil
-
Chavez-era housing complex in ruins after Venezuela quakes
-
Kenya-US rare earths deal challenged in court over secrecy
-
Sinner, Djokovic set to start Wimbledon title charge
-
Santner strikes as New Zealand eye England series win
-
Pakistan launches deadliest attack on Afghanistan in months
-
Broos may change decision to quit as South Africa coach
-
Strauss 'dumbfounded' by timing of Stokes's England exit
-
French swim star Marchand suffers injury scare before Europeans
-
Monza turn to Juric for return to Serie A
-
France skipper Dupont to miss Nations Championship
-
Stocks mixed, oil edges up after US-Iran clashes
-
Springbok milestones loom for Willemse and Kolbe against England
-
Catholic traditionalists risk schism in Church
-
Tennis players end Wimbledon prize-money protest
-
Europe's deadly heatwave scorches eastern flank, takes aim at Ukraine
-
Pogacar rides with Del Toro and Yates in quest for fifth Tour de France
-
PSG in talks with Leipzig to buy Ivory Coast star Diomande
-
Australia to host Brazil double-header after World Cup
-
Venezuela search teams scramble as hope fades of finding quake survivors
-
Stocks rise and oil edges up as US, Iran call end to latest attacks
-
Bondi Beach attack survivor tells of 'trauma' of online AI images
-
South Korea to invest nearly $1.2 tn in chips, AI data centres
-
Pakistan strikes on eastern Afghanistan kill dozens
White S. Africans clamour for US resettlement after Trump order
A deluge of more than 20,000 queries crashed the email server of the South African Chamber of Commerce in the United States after President Donald Trump said he would prioritise white South Africans in a refugee programme, the chamber said Monday.
Trump and Pretoria are locked in a diplomatic row over a land expropriation act that Washington says will lead to the takeover of white-owned farms.
Trump, whose tycoon ally Elon Musk was born in South Africa, said on Friday the law signed in January would "enable the government of South Africa to seize ethnic minority Afrikaners' agricultural property without compensation".
It allows the government, as a matter of public interest, to decide on expropriations without compensation -- but only in exceptional circumstances.
The Afrikaners are descendants of European colonists, mainly of Dutch extraction, and are mainly engaged in farming in South Africa.
English and Afrikaner colonists ruled South Africa until 1994 under a brutal system in which the black majority were deprived of political and economic rights.
"Our email server crashed over the weekend just due to the sheer volume of inquiries we have received," Neil Diamond, head of the South African Chamber of Commerce in the US (SACCUSA) told AFP in an email.
"Given the scale of interest, SACCUSA estimates that this figure could represent over 50,000 individuals looking to leave South Africa and seek resettlement in the United States," he said.
- Trump order 'flawed' -
Diamond warned that this could lead to a skills shortage in South Africa that would impact agriculture and other sectors of the economy.
"If we look at the EB-5, which is an investor visa, you need roughly about 15 to 20 million South African Rand ($800,000 to $1 million) to be able to immigrate... What is alarming to us is the large volume of people that is interested in taking up this opportunity," he said.
South Africa's foreign ministry has said Trump's order "lacks factual accuracy and fails to recognise South Africa's profound and painful history of colonialism and apartheid.
"It is ironic that the executive order makes provision for refugee status in the US for a group in South Africa that remains amongst the most economically privileged, while vulnerable people in the US from other parts of the world are being deported and denied asylum despite real hardship," it added.
Trump has asked Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to "prioritize humanitarian relief, including admission and resettlement through the United States Refugee Admissions Program, for Afrikaners in South Africa who are victims of unjust racial discrimination."
There were no details of how the plan would be enacted as Trump halted refugee arrivals immediately after taking office.
Land ownership remains a contentious issue in South Africa, with most farmland still owned by white people three decades after the end of apartheid.
However, some Afrikaner farmers say the new land laws could lead to the confiscation of white-owned farms as carried out in neighbouring Zimbabwe.
The second largest party in South Africa's national unity government, the Democratic Alliance, on Monday launched a court bid to annul the land law.
E.Rodriguez--AT