The first South Africans to us as refugees by the State Council

A group of white South Africans will be relocated in the U.S. on a State Department-leased plane on Monday to arrive in Washington, D.C. as a refugee, a source familiar with their arrival told NBC News.

Even if President Donald Trump suspended the State Department’s refugee enrollment program through executive orders on the first day of his second term.

The group’s scheduled arrival was the first to be reported by The New York Times, the first white man to enter the United States as a refugee.

Trump signed an order on January 20 that the United States “lacks the need to absorb large numbers of immigrants, especially refugees, to protect their safety and safety and ensure proper refugee assimilation in a way that does not undermine the availability of resources for Americans.”

But after a public dispute with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa for signing a land grabbing law a few weeks later, Trump issued a second executive order that both canceled aid to South Africa and approved “African refugees escaped government-sponsored racial discrimination, including racial discriminatory property, including racial discriminatory property.”

Elon Musk, a Trump adviser who was born and raised in South Africa, described the country as having a “racist ownership law” and accused his administration of failing to stop his “genocide” against white farmers.

The South African government expressed concern about the Trump administration's refugee status on Friday's call between South African Deputy Secretary Alvin Botes and U.S. Secretary of State Christopher Landau.

According to readings convened by South Africa, Bots objected to the Trump administration's position that white South Africans were refugees, adding that "the allegations of discrimination are unfounded."

Under the 1951 Refugee Convention and its 1967 agreement, a refugee is defined as a person who has a fear of being fully based on race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion.

The State Department did not immediately respond to requests for comment on how white South Africans adapt to the definition of the Convention, or why they should prioritize fleeing other groups in countries such as Sudan, the Republic of Congo or Myanmar.

"The most regrettable thing is that it is regrettable to relocate South Africans to the United States under the guise of “refugees” as the guise of “refugees” as the guise of “refugees” as the guise of “refugees” as the guise of which it is politically motivated to question the constitutional democracy of South Africa; from once again."

Stephen Miller, deputy chief of staff and homeland security adviser, Friday

“What’s happening in South Africa is in line with the textbook definition of why refugee programs are created,” Miller said. “It’s persecution based on race. The refugee program is not a solution to global poverty, and historically it has been used this way.”

Shawn Vandiver, president of San Diego-based coalition Afghanevac, helped Afghans evacuate and resettle the United States, said the Trump administration was not "picking about the safety that victims deserve."

"If Stephen Miller suddenly supports refugee resettlement in a situation that fits the political narrative, but don't pretend that Afghan allies don't meet the same legal definition," Vandiver told NBC News. "Percension based on race is real in many places, but so is religious, political and gender-based violence. That's exactly what Afghans flee."

Raquel Coronell Uribe contribute.