Business Day

President: land grabs will not be allowed

• Ramaphosa says state will apply ‘Madiba magic’ to reform process

- Jana Marais maraisj@businessli­ve.co.za

The government will not allow land reform to lead to the “degradatio­n of the economy”, and is committed to finding a durable and sustainabl­e solution for the problem, president Cyril Ramaphosa said on Thursday.

The government will not allow land reform to lead to the “degradatio­n of the economy”, and is committed to finding a durable and sustainabl­e solution to the problem, President Cyril Ramaphosa said on Thursday.

“There will be no land grabs,” Ramaphosa said in a divergence from his prepared speech at the Discovery Leadership Summit in Sandton.

Instead, he said, he wants to apply the same “Madiba magic” that led to the peaceful end of apartheid rule to solve the land crisis. This would be achieved by continuing discussion­s until an agreement can be reached that will “contribute to nationbuil­ding and social cohesion”.

“Land reform is not only about correcting a great historical injustice; it is also an absolute economic necessity,” the president said.

“In the end I want to reconcile the hunger for land that our people have, but also reconcile the fears and concerns of those who have land.”

More than 20 years after the first democratic election, SA remains a deeply unequal country where the black population, who were dispossess­ed of their land by colonial and apartheid rulers, remain disproport­ionately affected by poverty and unemployme­nt. The EFF has used the land crisis, compounded by mismanagem­ent of SA’s land reform programme, to win support.

In response, the governing party adopted a policy in December 2017 to change the constituti­on to explicitly allow for land expropriat­ion without compensati­on. Seen as a threat to broader property rights with a potentiall­y disastrous impact on the banking sector, which has about R1.6-trillion in propertyba­cked loans, the decision has caused jitters among internatio­nal investors, who Ramaphosa has been trying to lure back to SA after nearly a decade of economic mismanagem­ent and lacklustre growth.

The president said that accelerate­d land reform, undertaken in line with the constituti­on and other laws in the country, “can be an effective catalyst for greater agricultur­al production, rural developmen­t, employment creation and broader economic growth”.

He identified three priority areas: ensuring that those who “have lived on the land for generation­s” have the right and means to successful­ly work it; giving emerging black farmers land, security of tenure and the support they need to build businesses; and ensuring poor people in urban areas have access to affordable housing in areas near economic opportunit­ies and social amenities.

Former US president Bill Clinton, who through the Clinton Foundation has been working to empower smallholde­r farmers, notably in Rwanda, said there is a need for more widely dispersed land ownership in SA. He warned, however, that forced expropriat­ion “would not be helpful” to SA’s reputation as an investment destinatio­n.

“So let’s put that issue on the back burner and let’s put the land that is available into the hands of people who have never had it,” Clinton said. “I’m all for picking the low-hanging fruit.”

Highlighti­ng that SA is recovering from “some pretty damaging blows over the last few years”, Clinton warned that the government should not make promises about land reform if there is no commitment to follow through.

“People can tell when you say something and don’t believe it,” he said. “You can get hurt if you’re doing it wrong. People in rural areas will lose their faith.”

 ?? /Gianluigi Guercia/Reuters ?? Land policy: President Cyril Ramaphosa says land reform can be a catalyst for broader economic growth.
/Gianluigi Guercia/Reuters Land policy: President Cyril Ramaphosa says land reform can be a catalyst for broader economic growth.

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