A South African politician infamous for his genocidal, anti-white rhetoric is finally being held accountable, or at least to some degree, thanks, some say, to the influence of U.S. President Donald Trump.
Julius Malema, the founder of the radical Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), has been found guilty by South Africa’s “equality court” of spouting “hate speech” against white people.
The ruling was prompted by what Malema uttered during a 2022 rally.
“No white man is going to beat me up. You must never be scared to kill. A revolution demands that at some point there must be killing,” he said.
Malema was found guilty of hate speech in South Africa.
Never forget the genocidal freaks in US media that denied his calls for the murder of Whites, and made up excuses for quotes like “No White man is going to beat me up… you must never be scared to kill.” pic.twitter.com/9cKkh0pCjC
— Alpha Loaf (@eshewbiehew) August 27, 2025
The remarks inspired two complaints against him — “one by South Africa’s Human Rights Commission and another by a person who alleged they had been threatened because of the politician’s remarks,” according to the BBC.
“Whilst calling out someone who behaves as a racist may be acceptable, calling for them to be killed is not,” the equality court said in its ruling.
“And calling for someone to be killed because they are a racist who has acted violently, is an act of vigilantism and an incitement of the most extreme form of harm possible,” the court added.
The EFF, for its part, responded to the ruling by claiming that Malema’s clear-cut words had somehow been taken out of context.
“[The ruling] is fundamentally flawed and deliberately misreads both the context and the meaning of the speech,” the EFF said. “It assumes that the reasonable listener is incapable of understanding metaphor, revolutionary rhetoric, or the history of liberation struggles.”
Why has the ruling only just now been made, despite Malema’s remarks being three years old? Some believe it’s because of President Trump.
While meeting with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa in the Oval Office four months ago, the president played a montage of Malema’s most incendiary remarks.
Watch:
The optics here are insane.
Trump plays a montage of South African politician Julius Malema calling for the death of white farmers for South African president Cyril Ramaphosa.
Watch Rampaphosa absolutely squirm through it. pic.twitter.com/lrNidzjmwX
— Steven Crowder (@scrowder) May 21, 2025
As previously reported, Malema has a history of calling for black South Africans to “kill the Boer, kill the farmer,” which is a reference to South African white people of Dutch descent.
When Malema spoke with the BBC in 2022, he claimed that “when the unled revolution comes…the first target is going to be white people,” adding that so-called “black elites” would also be at risk.
Dubbed “the Hitler of South Africa,” Malema said something even more chilling in 2018: “I’m saying to you, we’ve not called for the killing of white people, at least for now. I can’t guarantee the future.”
What the hell did that mean?
According to Zero Hedge, Malema “had been brought up on charges of inciting race violence through hate speech before, and was convicted on lesser incidents in 2011.”
However, none of the charges targeting his genocidal chants have ever stuck until now.
This is Julius Malema who has time and time again called for the genocide and slaughter of white people living in South Africa.
Share this far and wide.
— Defiant L’s (@DefiantLs) May 13, 2025
The charging of Malema comes amid a broader attack by the Trump administration on South Africa’s genocidal culture.
In February, President Trump signed an executive order placing sanctions on South Africa over its ties to Iran, its activism against Israel, and its expropriation of land from white farmers.
“In shocking disregard of its citizens’ rights, the Republic of South Africa recently enacted Expropriation Act 13 of 2024, to enable the government of South Africa to seize ethnic minority Afrikaners’ agricultural property without compensation,” the president said in a statement at the time.
“This Act follows countless government policies designed to dismantle equal opportunity in employment, education, and business, and hateful rhetoric and government actions fueling disproportionate violence against racially disfavored landowners,” he added.
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Author: Vivek Saxena
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