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South Africa president says G20 will make declaration despite US warning and 'will not be bullied'
AP | November 21, 2025 3:40 AM CST

Synopsis

South Africa said the G20 summit in Johannesburg will issue a joint declaration despite US objections. President Cyril Ramaphosa said the country “will not be bullied” after the US warned there should be no declaration since it is boycotting the meeting. The US pulled out over President Donald Trump’s claims that South Africa’s government is persecuting the white Afrikaner minority, allegations widely dismissed.

The Group of 20 nations will make a joint declaration at the end of their summit in Johannesburg this weekend despite warnings against that from the United States, South Africa's president said Thursday.

He said the summit host country will "not be bullied" by pressure from the Trump administration to water down any final decisions.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa told reporters that the first G20 summit in Africa was moving forward without the US, which is boycotting the two-day meeting of world leaders that opens Saturday over Trump's claims that Ramaphosa's government is violently persecuting a white minority.


A South African G20 ambassador said this week that the US had sent diplomatic communication to South Africa advising that that "there should be no declaration adopted" at the summit because the US was not there and therefore there would be no consensus.

Instead, the US wants a toned-down statement from South Africa only to cap the summit, which is a culmination of more than 120 meetings that Africa's most advanced economy has hosted since it took over the G20's rotating presidency for this year.

"We will have a declaration," Ramaphosa told reporters Thursday, pushing back against the US "The talks are going extremely well. I'm confident we are moving towards a declaration, and they are now just dotting the i's and crossing the t's."

"Without the United States, the whole process of the G20 is moving forward. We will not be bullied. We will not agree to be bullied."

Trump has repeatedly targeted South Africa for criticism since he returned to office. He held a tense meeting with Ramaphosa at the White House in May, when he confronted South Africa's leader with baseless claims of widespread violence against Afrikaners in South Africa.

The US president has repeated his claims in the leadup to the G20 that Ramaphosa's Black-led government is pursuing racist anti-white policies against the Afrikaner white minority.

Trump's allegations have been widely rejected, but the US president cited them when he said the US government would boycott the summit in South Africa's biggest city.

The US will take over the rotating presidency of the G20 from South Africa and Ramaphosa has previously said he will have to pass it to Trump's "empty chair" in Johannesburg, though he said he would talk to Trump after the summit.

The G20 is a bloc made up of 19 nations, including the richest but also the top developing economies. The European Union and the African Union are also members.

South Africa, which is the first African nation to hold the rotating presidency, is hoping to use its summit to make progress on issues especially affecting poor countries. That includes mitigating the impact of climate change and weather-related disasters, easing debt burdens for developing countries and confronting global wealth inequality.

The US has previously derided South Africa's priorities for the group, with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio skipping a G20 foreign ministers meeting in February and dismissing South Africa's priorities as being about diversity, equity and inclusion and climate change.

Rubio said he would not waste US taxpayer money on that agenda.

Other leaders are also skipping the G20 summit, including China's Xi Jinping, Russia's Vladimir Putin and Argentina's Javier Milei, but they have sent delegations to represent them.

"The only country that is not in the room is the United States and, of course, is their choice not to be in the room," Xolisa Mabhongo, a South African ambassador to the G20, told national broadcaster SABC this week.


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