Startling data shows white South Africans are America’s only refugees since October


Not a single refugee who isn’t a white South African has been legally resettled in the United States since October, according to the US State Department’s most recent arrivals report.
The report, published last month, shows that from the start of October 2025 to the end of January 2026, just 1651 people were admitted under the US Refugee Admissions Program.
It allows those who fear persecution based on race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or social group to apply for refuge in the US.
Aside from just three, every one of that 1651 was from South Africa.
Three Afghan refugees were also reported to have been settled in Colorado in November. But since then, their admission has been indefinitely suspended, and those who have entered may be at risk of deportation.
During that same period a year earlier – the final months of the Biden administration – a total of 37,596 refugees arrived in the US, mostly from the Middle East, South Asia and Africa.
The Trump administration dramatically curbed refugee admissions during its first year in power.
On his first day back in office last January, President Donald Trump suspended USRAP processing, leaving about 600,000 people in the pipeline suddenly stranded, including roughly 10,000 who’d already booked flights.
About 130,000 of those refugees had already been through the State Department’s meticulous and taxing vetting process. They were instead “left to languish in refugee camps around the world after being given the promise of safety and a new life in America”, as a group of Democrats in Congress put it.
The next month, however, Trump carved out an exception to the suspension exclusively for white South Africans, who he has falsely claimed face a “genocide,” and severe “discrimination” from land redistribution policies intended to correct extreme apartheid-era inequalities.
After previously discussing a cap of 40,000 refugee admissions for the fiscal year 2026 – already a reduction by over two-thirds from the Biden administration – Trump announced on September 30 that he would lower admissions to just 7500, a historic low.
He announced the change without consultation with Congress, which is required under the 1980 Refugee Act, leading Democrats to accuse him of acting in “open defiance of the law”.
In late February, Reuters reported on an internal State Department document showing that the administration was planning to welcome as many as 4500 white South Africans to the US every month and detailed plans to install trailers on US Embassy property in the country to expedite more immigrant approvals.
Refugees fleeing war, government oppression and genocide in countries such as Syria, Sudan, Ukraine, Afghanistan and others, meanwhile, have been locked out or face threats of arrest by the US Department of Homeland Security under a new policy requiring them to be reinspected to determine their ability for “assimilation”.
Many critics have pointed out the dramatic gulf in treatment between white immigrants from South Africa and members of other, largely non-white, groups of immigrants, whom the Trump administration has gone to extreme measures to remove from the country with expediency.
Last month, a Rohingya refugee, who fled genocide in Myanmar and legally entered the US as a refugee, was found dead on the streets of Buffalo, New York, after being detained and then left outdoors in the freezing cold by immigration agents.
The policy was revealed as part of a case in which a federal judge halted a DHS effort to detain thousands of refugees in Minnesota who did not seek green cards after their first year of residency in the US.
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