Lula’s Shameful Embrace of a Leader Accused of Turning a Blind Eye to White Farmer Slaughter
By Hotspotnews
In a move that should outrage every freedom-loving Brazilian, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has rolled out the red carpet for South African President Cyril Ramaphosa in Brasília. On March 9, 2026, the two leftist leaders met for a state visit filled with talk of “bilateral ties,” “economic cooperation,” and Global South solidarity. But beneath the diplomatic smiles lies a grim reality that Lula seems determined to ignore: Ramaphosa presides over a nation where white farmers face brutal, targeted violence that many rightly call a slow-motion genocide.
This is not hyperbole. For years, courageous voices—including U.S. President Donald Trump—have shone a light on the horrifying farm murders in South Africa. White farmers, often isolated on remote properties, are attacked, tortured, and killed in numbers that far exceed random crime statistics. These are not mere robberies; many involve extreme cruelty that suggests racial hatred and political motives. Trump directly confronted Ramaphosa in the White House, demanding answers about the deaths of over a thousand white farmers and the government’s failure to protect them. Ramaphosa’s response? Deflection and denial.
Yet Lula, the self-proclaimed champion of the poor and oppressed, welcomes this man without a hint of shame. While Ramaphosa lectures the world on “justice” and land reform—policies that enable the seizure of white-owned farms with little or no compensation—his administration stands accused of fostering an atmosphere where such atrocities go unpunished. Chants of “Kill the Boer, kill the farmer” have echoed at political rallies, often with little condemnation from the top. The message is clear: certain lives matter less.
Conservatives in Brazil and around the world see this meeting for what it is: a betrayal of basic human decency. Lula’s government prioritizes ideological alliances with regimes that trample property rights and ignore racial violence when the victims are white. This is the same Lula who cozies up to dictators and terrorists while lecturing others on morality. Hosting Ramaphosa sends a dangerous signal—that Brazil will overlook farm murders, land grabs, and ethnic targeting if it advances a leftist, anti-Western agenda.
True conservatives stand for the rule of law, the sanctity of private property, and the equal protection of all citizens regardless of race. White South African farmers deserve the same outrage and protection that would be demanded if the victims were any other group. Their blood stains the hands of leaders who refuse to act.
Lula’s warm handshake with Ramaphosa dishonors those victims and every Brazilian who values justice over ideology. It is time for patriots to speak out: No more excuses, no more silence. The slaughter must be named for what it is, and leaders who enable or ignore it must be held accountable.
Brazil deserves better than this moral cowardice.


