60 Minutes tries to debunk South African white genocide–farmer sets them straight

"I live cautiously," farmer Daryl Brown said, "always aware of potentially getting killed."

"I live cautiously," farmer Daryl Brown said, "always aware of potentially getting killed."

ad-image
CBS’s 60 Minutes released a clip on social media examining violence against white farmers in South Africa, including statements previously made by President Donald Trump. The program traveled to KwaZulu-Natal to review some of the publicly cited evidence and speak directly with local farmers.

The segment featured Daryl Brown, a seventh-generation rancher, who described the dangers faced by his family and community. Brown recounted how his 82-year-old father was attacked in a robbery a decade ago, and how friends Glenn and Vida Rafferty were murdered on their farm in 2020. Brown also described burying his friend Tully Nell, who was killed during a burglary in which Nell’s son was tied up while cash and weapons were stolen.

“I live cautiously,” Brown said, “always aware of potentially getting killed.”



The program had taken issue with Trump previously citing the burial sites of over a thousand farmers, displaying a video showing crosses marking these locations.

60 Minutes found that the crosses were temporary memorials Brown had planted for friends who had died in farm attacks, rather than actual graves, and were removed within 48 hours. Brown keeps the crosses in a shed and has reused them for subsequent funerals. Correspondent Anderson Cooper located Brown and documented the circumstances surrounding the memorials.

The issue has also surfaced in diplomatic discussions. During an Oval Office meeting in May, Trump raised concerns with President Cyril Ramaphosa about the chant “kill the Boer, kill the farmer,” used by political figures at rallies. Ramaphosa said, “It’s not meant to be a message that elicits or calls upon anyone to be killed. We are a country where freedom of expression is in the bedrock of our constitutional arrangements.”

Trump referenced a video of Julius Malema, leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters, using the chant before crowds. Malema also said, “We are going to occupy land, we require no permission.” Ramaphosa clarified that South Africa’s revised expropriation law allows for “nil compensation” only under specific conditions, such as when landowners are untraceable or the land is needed for public purposes, and that court oversight is included to ensure outcomes are “just and equitable.”

Image: Title: 6 0 mins

Opinion

View All

Trans male lawmaker tapped to lead Brazilian women's rights committee

"...Women, trans women, and transvestites will not be abandoned in this discussion, and I don't care ...

CHRISTIANE EMERY: Inside Siebel Newsom's nonprofit that funds... herself

While legal, the governor's solicitation of donations to the California Partners Project raises ethic...

Iran claims it cannot participate in World Cup after US killed Supreme Leader

“Definitely, it’s not possible for us to take part in the World Cup.”...

Iran releases purported message from new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, vowing to weaponize Strait of Hormuz

"I assure everyone that we will not refrain from avenging the blood of your martyrs."...