With Doctor Who being co-produced with Disney+, one of the factors will be whether the BBC and the streamer decide to renew that arrangement, and what alternatives could be explored if they decide not to. And those kind of discussions take a significant amount of time.
Ramaphosa pointed out to Trump that South Africa was a democracy - and while the government was "completely against" what Malema says, the EFF had a right to exist under the constitution.The EFF fell to fourth spot in last year's parliamentary election, with Ramaphosa refusing to give Malema political oxygen by making a deal with him to form a coalition government after the poll failed to produce an outright winner.
Steenhuisen told Trump that the DA, a centre-right party which stands for a free market economy, joined the government to keep the EFF out, and to help tackle South Africa's problems."This government, working together, needs the support of our allies around the world so that we can strengthen our hand, grow our economy and shut the door forever on that rebel [Malema] getting through the doors of Union Buildings [the seat of government]," he said.Steenhuisen and Ramaphosa hold the middle-ground in South African politics - the Afrikaner right-wing and the EFF, along with ex-President Jacob Zuma's uMkhonto weSizwe (Spear of the Nation) party, are at the extremes.
Ramaphosa promised to champion unity, invoking the name of anti-apartheid icon Nelson Mandela - the symbol of racial reconciliation in South Africa after the end of white-minority rule in 1994.But some Afrikaners feel they can no longer live in South Africa, and Trump has offered them refugee status. Nearly 60 of them have been resettled in the US.
Trump has given a boost to the right-wing, with some of them gathering outside the US embassy in South Africa's capital, Pretoria, in February with placards that read: "Make South Africa Great Again" - an adaptation of Trump's "Make America Great Again".
South Africa's Land Reform Minister Mzwanele Nyhontso acknowledged that the meeting in the Oval Office was "uncomfortable to watch"."Kenyans are our neighbours, our brothers, and we cannot ignore each other," she added.
Dubbed "Germany's forgotten genocide", and described by historians as the first genocide of the 20th Century, the systematic murder of more than 70,000 Africans is being marked with a national day of remembrance for the first time in Namibia.Almost 40 years before their use in the Holocaust, concentration camps and pseudoscientific experiments were used by German officials to torture and kill people in what was then called South West Africa.
The victims, primarily from the Ovaherero and Nama communities, were targeted because they refused to let the colonisers take their land and cattle.Genocide Remembrance Day in Namibia on Wednesday follows years of pressure on Germany to pay reparations.