South Africa’s Hidden War: ANC’s Deliberate Decay Targets White Minorities

Children play in a White South African squatter camp, a stark symbol of the ANC’s alleged strategy to erode Afrikaner communities through engineered poverty.
Children play in a White South African squatter camp, a stark symbol of the ANC’s alleged strategy to erode Afrikaner communities through engineered poverty.

Uncovered documents, racialised policies and cryptic signals reveal a calculated ANC strategy to erode Afrikaner communities and white minorities through engineered poverty and infrastructure collapse, masked as mismanagement.

A 1993 African National Congress (ANC) document, Circular No. 213-6, published online in 2014 and never publicly challenged by the ANC, outlines a chilling long-term strategy: systematically degrade South Africa’s infrastructure and quality of life to force white minorities, particularly Afrikaners, into economic despair or emigration.

This plan, now unfolding through unspent budgets, rampant crime, and ineffective policing, targets regions like the Western Cape, a stronghold of opposition to ANC policies.

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The goal? To destabilize and marginalize white communities under the guise of post-Apartheid “struggle” narratives, while maintaining plausible deniability through claims of incompetence.

Investigative journalist Lara Logan, a South African native, during a podcast with Tim Pool, described how poverty was historically framed as noble during the anti-Apartheid struggle, uniting people across races. Post-1994, she notes, this narrative shifted to hopelessness, yet the ANC continues to exploit it to deflect blame onto Apartheid’s legacy, fostering resentment toward white minorities while elites enrich themselves.

This aligns with evidence suggesting the ANC’s policies perpetuate a cycle of decay to target Afrikaners, who are unaccustomed to the hardships of informal settlements, pushing them to sell properties cheaply or flee to stable regions like the Western Cape.

The 1993 ANC Circular, the origins of which remain unverified but undenied by the ANC, details a multi-decade plan to “redistribute resources through systemic pressure.” It advocates neglecting infrastructure, allowing crime to flourish, and undermining private security to create unlivable conditions for “historically advantaged groups.”

The document’s alignment with current realities is stark: in 2024, South Africa’s Auditor-General reported that 40% of municipal budgets for basic services like water, electricity, and sanitation went unspent, returned to the Treasury despite desperate need.

Meanwhile, violent crime, including farm attacks often mislabeled as “house robberies” by police, has surged. A 2023 AfriForum report documented 503 farm attacks and 68 murders, with police frequently implicated in corruption or inaction, fueling fears of covert persecution.

The Western Cape, with its significant minority population and opposition-led governance, is a prime target. Proposed amendments to the Private Security Industry Regulatory Authority (PSIRA) regulations, introduced in 2024, aim to restrict private security firms, often a lifeline for rural Afrikaners and minorities by imposing stringent licensing and limiting armed response capabilities.

Critics argue this renders communities defenseless against rising crime, a tactic to destabilize opposition strongholds and leave farmers vulnerable. Effectively the ANC seeks to break the resilience of minorities, even sacrificing their own people along the way to make living condition unbearable for minorities.

ANC Secretary General Fikile Mbalula’s cryptic July 2025 statement, “Together we stand, united we fall,” ahead of a U.S. trade deadline, signals this agenda.

Paired with the ANC’s continued push for Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) laws and expropriation without compensation (EWC), it suggests a willingness to tank South Africa’s economy to maintain the “struggle” narrative.

BEE, intended to redress Apartheid-era inequalities, often enriches ANC elites while excluding white minorities from economic opportunities, further eroding their stability.

Dr. Benway, a pseudonymous South African political analyst, claims the ANC’s endgame is “class suicide,” referencing a 2019 remark by ANC figure Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma. They’ll let tariffs and sanctions crush farming and industry to exact vengeance on minorities, Benway hinted. Critics argue this is a slow-motion cultural genocide.

While President Cyril Ramaphosa denies claims of targeted persecution, calling them a “false narrative” in a March 2025 address, the lived experience of minorities, facing crumbling services, unchecked crime, and economic exclusion, tells a different story.

The ANC’s strategy exploits the “noble poverty” myth to deflect blame.

By framing ongoing poverty as Apartheid’s legacy, the party stokes racial resentment, painting white minorities as unrepentant beneficiaries of past injustices.

Yet, the cadre elites, not white farmers, amass wealth, with studies by the World Inequality Lab showing 85% of the nation’s wealth held by a tiny, often politically connected, minority.

Meanwhile, Afrikaners face home invasions, farm attacks, and a collapsing power grid, driving some to emigrate or relocate to the Western Cape, further straining its resources.

This engineered decay risks not just white minorities but South Africa’s broader stability. The ANC’s willingness to sacrifice basic services for all citizens to target one group reveals a dangerous prioritization of vengeance over progress.

As Logan warns, “They create unsolvable problems, race, poverty, to keep people divided.”

With the Western Cape teetering under pressure, the world must ask: is this mismanagement, or a master plan?


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