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    Home » Blog » South Africa’s Malema vows to keep chanting controversial song

    South Africa’s Malema vows to keep chanting controversial song

    May 25, 2025Updated:May 25, 2025 World No Comments
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    South Africa's Malema vows to keep chanting controversial song
    Malema of South Africa swears to recite a controversial song ( Photo: AP )

    The US and South American presidents held a controversial White House meeting on Saturday, and South Africa’s vehement opposition leader on Saturday vowed to continue using obscene chants. US President Donald Trump attacked his West African equivalent Cyril Ramaphosa during a meeting in Washington on Wednesday, displaying a four-minute video to back up his statements of a” bright genocide” in the nation that overcame years of apartheid. The main character in the video, which can be seen in several clips wearing the red beret of his populist, Marxist-inspired Economic Freedom Fighters ( EFF ) party, chanting” cut the throat of whiteness” and “kill the boer, kill the farmer,” was 44-year-old opposition politician. The enduring appeal to the white-minority law movement’s” Kill the Boer” rousing cry, which has been around since the end of apartheid in 1994, has sparked outrage among factions that represent white South Africans. After being overruled in 2010, the ban was lifted because it was only being used by Malema as a “provocative means of advancing his party’s social agenda” and not because it should be viewed in its historical perspective. Malema, who spoke at a local election on Saturday, vowed to continue using the defamatory lyrics and called them” the traditions of our battle.” It’s not my track, I tell you. Overwhelming said in televised feedback,” I did not create this song. The composers of this song are” the battle soldiers.” All I’m doing is keeping the tradition of our battle. He declared,” I will never stop singing,” meaning the song. Malema, 44, is an opposition legislator and president of the anti-capitalist and anti-US Hell that he founded in 2013 after being expelled from the ruling African National Congress ‘ youth group where he was accused of inciting groups. He portrays himself as the protector of society’s most underprivileged, and he has attracted primarily younger supporters upset about the significant cultural disparities that still exist in South Africa 30 years after the end of racism. Ramaphosa and his team took a break from Malema’s speech during the anxious Oval Office meeting.

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