Anderson Cooper‘s long-awaited 60 Minutes segment on “white genocide” in South Africa finally aired , just days after Cooper announced he was leaving the program. The report had faced an “abnormal” editing process at CBS, causing significant delays before it could air.
The segment focuses on claims made by President Trump, who said in May 2025 that white farmers were being systematically murdered in South Africa as part of a genocide. “It’s a genocide that’s taking place that you people don’t want to write about,” Trump said. “It’s a terrible thing that’s taking place and farmers are being killed. They happen to be white.” Cooper traveled to South Africa to investigate these claims firsthand.
According to The Daily Beast, the 60 Minutes report cited police statistics to put the situation in context. In 2024, over 25,000 people were murdered in South Africa, of which an estimated 37 deaths occurred on a farm. These numbers point to a widespread crime problem rather than a targeted genocide against any specific group.
The South Africans closest to the issue are directly challenging Trump’s genocide narrative
Rene Nel, whose husband Tollie was murdered on their farm, was one of the people Cooper spoke with. When asked if she believed a genocide had occurred, she was clear. “Not what I know as a genocide,” she said. “I see our attack as an opportunistic attack. They knew there was money. They knew there were firearms.”
Johann Kotzé, who leads South Africa’s largest agricultural organization, also pushed back against Trump’s claims. “It’s actually not about white genocide,” Kotzé said. “It’s about criminality in South Africa. It’s crime. Any murder is horrendous.” Trump has faced pushback on several other fronts recently, including when the Supreme Court blocked his tariff plans.
Kotzé also recounted a trip to Washington in February of last year, where he met with Trump administration officials. He noted that 44 percent of the black population in South Africa lives in poverty, compared to just 1 percent of the white population.
But he found officials were focused on the genocide narrative. “They asked us about the white genocide, and the first thing I said is, ‘I’m as Afrikaans as what you can get. I grew up Afrikaans. And I never witnessed that.'”
Cooper visited a site Trump described as “burial sites, over a thousand, of White farmers.” Local resident Darrel Brown said he was the one who put up and then took down the crosses shown in the video Trump referenced. “It definitely wasn’t a burial site, I mean, those crosses were there for less than 48 hours,” Brown said. “It was purely an avenue of crosses that we planted there in honor of commercial farmers in South Africa that had lost their lives.”
Journalist and former newspaper editor Max du Preez also dismissed Trump’s claims. “It is not happening,” he said. “Donald Trump was fed this information, this link: farm murders, genocide. There is no such a thing.” Trump has also been making headlines for other bold claims, such as revealing the existence of aliens at what he calls “the right time.”
The delayed airing and the “abnormal” editing process are believed to be contributing factors to Cooper’s decision to leave 60 Minutes after nearly two decades. He reportedly felt “uncomfortable” with what he saw as a “rightward direction” at CBS under Bari Weiss and Paramount CEO David Ellison. Cooper will retain his position with CNN.
Published: Feb 23, 2026 02:35 pm