
The Wrap by /explain/
February 13, 2025 at 03:11 PM
Hi there đđŸââïž
Another week, another Wrap â and a lot has happened: political stunts, social media meltdowns, and meme-worthy momentsđ„
đđš From Donald Trumpâs latest stunt to spicy local politics, weâve got you covered. đ¶ïž Mbuyiseni Ndloziâs exit from the EFF has tongues wagging, while Duduzile Zuma-Sambudlaâs Twitter tirade against Floyd Shivambu is exposing major cracks in the MK Party. And Ramaphosaâs SONA speech? Letâs just say everyone had a lot to say đ
In sadder news, language-learning app mascot Duolingo has been declared dead after years of haunting users with aggressive notifications. "We told you to practise," the owl reportedly whispered before vanishing.
Please also note weâve slightly changed The Wrap structure, with The Big Story first, featuring the must-know story of the week, followed by something lighter to give us all a break. đ
So, letâs dive into these stories and more in this weekâs wrap, brought to you by Verashni Pillay and the explain.co.za team. đ
â-
*Format:*
đŹ WhatsApp msg: Keep scrolling
đ Voice note by Verashni: https://soundcloud.com/explain-za/afrikaners-to-trump-nee-dankie-13-feb-25
đ° Newsletter with pics: https://createsend.com/t/d-69D1A63E4D3CB0562540EF23F30FEDED
đłâđȘâđŒâđžâ
â â â â
â â â *1. BIG STORY: Trumpâs South Africa refugee mayhem: A political stunt gone wrong.*
Youâve probably heard bits of this news already, as itâs dominated the news cycle. Donald Trumpâs latest move on South Africa has sparked global outrage. Last Friday, he signed an executive order freezing US aid to SA and prioritising Afrikanersâspecifically white onesâfor refugee resettlement. His reasoning? He claims they face ârace-based discriminationâ under President Cyril Ramaphosaâs land reform policies, plus he takes issue with SAâs International Court of Justice case against Israel.
The order avoids the word âwhiteâ, but the racial undertones are clear. The White House statement refers to âethnic minority Afrikanersâ as victims of ârace-based discrimination.â Afrikaners arenât a monolithic racial groupâmany Afrikaans speakers are coloured. So, does Trumpâs offer extend beyond those fitting a âwhite victimhoodâ narrative?
SA has firmly rejected Trumpâs claims. The Department of International Relations and Cooperation called it âmisinformation,â while Ramaphosa correctly noted that no land has been illegally seized. Even AfriForum, a major Afrikaner civil rights group whose misinformation campaign is partly responsible for Trumpâs obsession with this issue, opposed mass emigration. CEO Kallie Kriel warned it would âsacrifice Afrikanersâ cultural identity.â
This isnât Trumpâs first intervention in SAâs land debate. In 2018, he claimed white farmers faced âlarge-scale killingsââa claim debunked by crime data. The âwhite genocideâ narrative has been widely discredited yet remains a far-right talking point, particularly in the US.
The coalition government is united in its rejection. DA leader and Agriculture Minister John Steenhuisen warned of âgrave consequencesâ if Trumpâs misinformation spreads. While the DA opposes aspects of the Expropriation Act and is challenging it in court, Steenhuisen dismissed fears of mass land seizures as baseless.
As for Trumpâs resettlement offer? It looks like most Afrikaners are staying put. The only real mayhem here is Trumpâs latest political spectacle.
â â â â
â â â *2. ON THE LIGHTER SIDE: Meme Central*
We admit it: we spend an unhealthy amount of time reading the news, so you donât have to. That ALSO means we come across some of the most laugh-out-loud responses to said news as we peruse social media.
Here are some of our favourites this week.
đč _âElon Muskâs toddler son is putting up more of a fight against Trump than the Democratic Party.â_ - @blakeissweaty. A hilarious response to a video going viral of Elon Muskâs son joining his dad for a bizarre press conference in the Oval Office this week. A hot mic picked up the four-year-old whispering to Trump: âYouâre not the President⊠go awayâ and âI want you to shush your mouth.â đ€Ł
đč _âEuropeans heard Americans are trying to mess with their favourite holiday destination and said: âNot on my watch!â_ [GIF] - @JayFromVenda. While the US Embassy in South Africa has doubled down on Trumpâs lunacy, issuing a âfact sheetâ on farm murders, the ambassadors of France, Germany and Italy and the EUâs deputy ambassador to South Africa clapped back. They published a heartening video on Tuesday labelled âUnited in diversityâ, noting they share South Africaâs values of âsolidarity, equality and sustainabilityâ - a dig at the US Secretary of State who previously tweeted he wonât attend the G20 later this year in Johannesburg because it promotes those values. đ Itâs great to have the EU in our corner in these crazy times!
đč _âGuys please date people that like to defrost first. This man just woke up and spoke about America wanting to take Gaza. Itâs 06:00âŠI donât have the required English đđđâ_ - @ukalamula. No explanation required here! đ Trump is even ruining our love lives.
â â â â
â â â *BRIEFS*
*3. SAâs political drama recap*
If South African politics were a Netflix series, this weekâs episode would be a spicy crossover special. Let's dive in.
_Ndlozi: From EFF darling to political free agent_
After months of speculation, Mbuyiseni Ndlozi has officially left the Economic Freedom Fighters â and, if his exit speech is to be believed, party politics altogether. The former EFF spokesperson says heâs stepping away to focus on academia and civil society, but letâs be real â no one in SA politics ever really retires.
According to Ndlozi, his troubles with the EFF started when he refused to snitch on his old comrade Floyd Shivambu, who defected to the MK Party. This silence reportedly angered Julius Malema, leading to Ndloziâs suspension right before the EFFâs December conference â conveniently sidelining him from a leadership position.
The EFFâs official reason? Some mysterious âintelligence reportâ allegedly linking him to the MK Party. Ndlozi was quick to call the allegations nonsense, saying, âI think that whatever information they say they have was based largely on lies.â
With the EFF struggling post-elections â dropping from 10.8% in 2019 to 9.5% in 2024 â and the MK Party still figuring out if itâs a political force or a family business, the question is: where will Ndlozi land next? He denies any ANC ambitions as has been rumoured, but weâre not convinced, given his glowing tweets featuring ANC stalwarts recentlyâŠ
_Meanwhile, over at the MK Party: The Dudu vs Floyd showdown_
If Ndloziâs exit was a slow-burn drama, Duduzile Zuma-Sambudlaâs antics this week were a full-blown action thriller. In a furious X rant, Dudu unleashed hell on Floyd Shivambu, branding him âthe worst thing that has happened to the MK Partyâ and throwing in a âF** you, Floydâ for good measure. If that wasnât enough, she also accused him and his âminionsâ of ruining the party.
The reason? Shivambu, the EFFâs former deputy president, was swiftly promoted to MKâs secretary-general after joining last year. This didnât sit well with Dudu and other MK old guards, who claim Shivambu has been sidelining them while failing to pay constituency staff and party office rent.
But before Dudu could claim victory, her father, Jacob Zuma, stepped in with a âsit down, young ladyâ moment. The MK Party issued a formal statement warning that she needed to apologise â or face expulsion. And just like that, the backtracking began.
Duduâs apology, however, was as lukewarm as they come. She said she regretted airing grievances publicly but never once mentioned Floyd by name or deleted the tweets. Translation? Sorry, not sorry.
While the Dudu vs Floyd drama might seem like petty Twitter beef, it actually highlights a deeper struggle within the MK Party and extremist politics in SA in general. Together the EFF and MK Party represent a quarter of the vote, frightening stats for parties that hold such radical views. Weâre watching closely.
*4. Murder most fowl: Duolingo mascot murdered*
Why do the (dubiously) good always die young? Condolences are in order after the language learning app Duolingo announced on Tuesday that their beloved (read: feared) mascot, the green owl Duo, had passed away. If youâre wondering how a digitally animated bird can die, same. đ€
In a statement, the company revealed that Duo, real name, Duo Keyshauna Renee Lingo, had âprobably died waiting for you to do your lessonâ and said that it was investigating the owlâs cause of death, noting that âhe had many enemies.
The case took a turn on Wednesday when the company posted a video to social media asking for help identifying the driver of a Tesla Cybertruck that hit the owl mascot in a parking lot. Somehow, this case now involves Elon Muskâbecause of course it does.
The late owl lived an eventful life: hating Drake, walking in Berlin Fashion Week, and famously thirsting after pop star Dua Lipa, who mourned his passing on X, writing, âTil death duo apart.â Weâre not crying, you are.
Before you panic, a Duolingo spokesperson confirmed that Duoâs demise is part of an elaborate marketing campaign. Classic. But it makes senseâDuolingo, founded in 2011, thrives on unhinged social media stunts, much like its 42 language offerings, which include High Valyrian (for Game of Thrones fans) and Klingon (Star Trek nerds, rise). The app and its late mascot are known for encouraging, nay, threatening users to do their daily language lessons.
The big questions remain: Will Duo rise from the ashes like a (bilingual) phoenix? Was Drake behind the Cybertruck wheel? And most importantly, did this stunt finally make you open the app? Until the autopsy results come in, one thing is clearâdo your language lessons. Itâs what Duo would have wanted..đ
*5. A culture of corruption: Itâs not just the politiciansâit's all of us*
The latest Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) has landed. With a score of 41 out of 100, South Africaâs score remains the same, reinforcing its reputation as a "flawed democracy."
We may have thought the days of state capture and dodgy tenders were behind us, but the real problem? Corruption is baked into everyday life.
âItâs not just about big tenders,â says advocate Deborah Mutemwa, former Head of Legal and Investigations at Corruption Watch. âItâs the willingness of the man on the street to pay off a police officer. Itâs an 18-year-old paying for a driverâs license rather than passing the test. Corruption is cultural. Weâre all part of an ecosystem of justice that can fight corruption in small and big ways.â
And thatâs the issueâwhen bribery becomes a normal part of getting things done, it stops feeling like a crime. Politicians dodge accountability, so why should ordinary people play fair?
Decades of political patronage, weak enforcement, and a disillusioned public have entrenched this mindset. The Zondo Commission exposed the rot, but many key players remain untouched. The government has talked a big game about strengthening anti-corruption institutions, but meaningful prosecutions are rare. Meanwhile, fresh scandals pop up like clockwork.
The impact extends beyond our borders. Corruption is now an environmental issue globally, with the CPI report highlighting how corruption impacts countriesâ efforts to combat the climate crisis. This is an important one to watch in South Africa too, beyond the traditional corruption red flags of government tenders. Mean annual temperatures in South Africa have increased by twice the global average (0.7°C). Heat waves are more frequent, and dry spells last longer.
For many, corruption is less about greed and more about survivalâpaying a bribe just ensures they get services they should already be entitled to. But this normalisation is dangerous: it erodes democracy, weakens institutions, and makes voters disengage.
So, can we fix it? Experts say yesâthrough transparency, accountability, and actual consequences. Citizens must demand better governance, and leaders must start leading by example. Until that happens, corruption isnât just a problem in South Africaâit is the system.
*6. Valentineâs Day in the time of swiping: How social media is changing umjolo*
Itâs Valentineâs Day tomorrow! Once upon a time, finding love meant awkward chance encounters and actual conversations. Now? Itâs all about swipes, likes, and the occasional TikTok thirst trap. In this Wrap brief, weâre talking about how social media hasnât just changed datingâitâs completely rewritten the rules.
_â€ïž From Algorithms to âI Doâ_
Online dating isnât as recent as youâd think âbelieve it or not, the first computer-assisted matchmaking happened in the 1950s! By 1995, South Africa had its own digital dating scene with Yid.com, a Jewish dating service. But nothing revolutionised dating quite like Tinder, which gamified romance with a simple swipe. Today, 61% of South Africans say theyâve used the app.
But dating has outgrown apps. A cheeky Instagram DM, a well-timed Twitter reply, or a flirty comment on TikTok can spark romance just as easily. Some even argue that social media is the new dating appâjust without the bios full of âlover of lifeâ and âfluent in sarcasm.â đ
_â€ïž The Social Media Dating Minefield_
While social media makes connecting easier, itâs also made relationships more complicated. Ghosting, breadcrumbing, orbitingâdating lingo now sounds like an episode of Survivor. Then thereâs the pressure to showcase the perfect relationship. Between extravagant proposals and luxury-gift-giving partners, online love can look like a reality show. In reality? Itâs just a highlight reel.
_â€ïž Blue Ticks, Red Flags_
A UKZN study found that for many young South Africans, social media is both a love language and a surveillance tool. Some partners expect constant location updates. Others demand a full purge of âsuspiciousâ followers. WhatsApp, Snapchat, and Instagram have gone from fun to forensic, where a seen message can spark a full-blown argument.
_â€ïž Love in the Age of Likes_
So, has social media ruined dating? Not necessarily. While itâs changed how we connect, love is still about real human connectionâwhether that starts with a right swipe or a retweet. Just remember: curated Instagram love stories arenât real. But mutual respect, trust, and maybe even a solid meme game? Thatâs timeless. đ
*7. SONA 2025: Ramaphosa stands his ground amid political jabs*
We hit âpublishâ on last weekâs Wrap just before President Cyril Ramaphosaâs State of the Nation Address (SONA). In case you missed it, the night was all about pushing back against diplomatic spats. âWe are a resilient people. We will not be bullied,â he declared, responding to growing tensions with the US. Ramaphosa didnât flinch, standing firm on diplomacy in global conflicts, from Ukraine to the Middle East. But did South Africans buy it? It seems so.
Popular TV presenter and TikToker Dan Corder praised Ramaphosaâs speech in a video that garnered 1.7m views. âHe did not back down on anything. No international pressure changed a single word of his speech,â he said, to much agreement from his followers.
Even EFF leader Julius Malemaâusually Ramaphosaâs biggest criticâagreed that SA shouldnât be bullied. But he had one pressing question⊠whatâs the actual plan?
Meanwhile, the China Global Television Network also spotlighted Ramaphosaâs speech, sharing a snippet where he clapped back at Trumpâs claim that SA was âconfiscatingâ land. The online reaction? A wave of support in SAâs defence. Interesting, given Chinaâs plans to step into the power vacuum the US is leaving on the global stageâŠ
Parliamentâs opposition parties spent this week responding to the presidentâs address. The debates have gone as expected and can be summarised as:
đą ANC: "We got this."
đĄ MK Party: Zuma nostalgia central
đŽ EFF: Malemaâs one-man show⊠given many of his most popular MPs have absconded đ
đ FF Plus: âEk is hier om te blyâ. FF Plus leader Pieter Groenewald kept it simple: Afrikaners are part of SAâs DNA. He dismissed land expropriation and said the government should focus on making SA a country people want to stay in, not run from.
Whatâs next? Ramaphosa now responds⊠to the responses in the final SONA debate today. Stay tuned; we will keep you updated.
*8. Sam Nujoma: The freedom fighter who built a nation*
Namibia has lost a legend. Sam Nujoma, the man who led the country to independence and became its first president, has died at the age of 95. His passing on Saturday was met with an outpouring of tributes, with the Namibian presidency calling him âthe most gallant son of our land.â
Itâs hard to overstate just how much Nujoma shaped modern Namibia. Born in 1929 in a village in northwestern Namibia, Nujoma grew up under the rule of apartheid South Africa, which controlled Namibia after World War I. By the 1950s, he had become a fierce opponent of the system, helping to found the Owamboland Peoples Organisation, the independence movement that was the precursor to the countryâs liberation movement and the current governing party SWAPO - a bit like our ANC.
Forced into exile in 1960, Nujoma travelled the world lobbying for Namibiaâs freedom. He petitioned the United Nations and built alliances across Africa, securing support to launch SWAPOâs armed struggle and guerrilla campaign against apartheid South African rule in 1966.
It took over two decades of conflict and international pressure before Namibia finally gained independence in 1990. SWAPO won the countryâs first democratic elections, and Nujoma became its president, serving three terms until 2005.
Nujoma was officially recognised as the âFounding Father of the Namibian Nationâ in 2005âa testament to his role in shaping the country. He championed national unity under the slogan âOne Namibia, One Nationâ and prioritised reconciliation in a country still scarred by apartheid and German colonial rule.
But his leadership wasnât without controversy. His intolerance of media criticism and his governmentâs response to the 1999 Caprivi conflict cast a shadow over his legacy. He also faced backlash for his views on the LGBTQ+ community, which he denounced as a âforeign and corrupt ideology.â
Despite this, many credit him for ensuring Namibiaâs stability and laying the foundation for its democratic institutions. His death marks the end of an era, leaving behind a country that continues to build on the foundations he helped lay.
â-----------
Thatâs it from us at The Wrap, an award-winning product of explain.co.za - simple news summaries for busy people. đđŸââ
The Wrap is sponsored by explainâs agency division. We specialise in content marketing for purpose-driven organisations, often with a pan-African reach. Mail [email protected] for a quote.
đžâđșâđ§âđžâđšâđ·âđźâđ§âđȘâ
Remember to share the love. đ«
Tell your friends to sign up:
đ© Email: http://explain.co.za/subscribe
đČ Our new WhatsApp channel: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vac06yM8kyyLmOulb80J
_Till next time, goodbye from the team_ âđœ
â€ïž
đ
4