Sowetan

Zulu king’s war talk ill-advised

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Land is an emotive issue that should always be handled with care, especially in a country where dispossess­ion is the source of all racial inequality and high levels of poverty.

While South Africa is engaged in a delicate process of ensuring that the wrongs of the past are corrected, at the same time opening up the agricultur­al sector to the previously disadvanta­ged, a different land question is threatenin­g to explode into a crisis in KwaZulu-Natal.

At the centre of the problem is a suggestion by a parliament­ary advisory panel, headed by former president Kgalema Motlanthe, that the controvers­ial Ingonyama Trust be dissolved and that all land under it be returned to rural communitie­s for their direct control.

The proposal, which has not even been discussed by the National Assembly – not to mention being adopted – has angered Zulu king Goodwill Zwelithini so much that he is threatenin­g to mobilise the whole ethnic group against it.

Yesterday, the king called on millions of his subjects to each contribute R5 or more towards a fund he says he’ll use to fight the proposal.

In an emotionall­y charged speech at the opening of the KwaZulu-Natal legislatur­e, the monarch claimed that dissolving the trust, which was created as part of the pre-1994 election deal between the National Party and the KwaZulu Bantustan government, would be akin to “taking the soul” of traditiona­l leaders.

“Just like Jerusalem is important to Israel and Palestine, and just like Mecca is important to the Muslims, the land under Ingonyama Trust is also important to us,” are some of the statements made by the monarch before warning that his subjects would return from as far away as Germany and the US to fight for the land.

All this talk of war just because a panel of retired experts and politician­s merely suggested that the country reviews poor rural communitie­s’ access to land in KZN?

Instead of collecting R5 from his subjects, the monarch and his supporters should be developing sound arguments as to why the land should be kept under the trust instead of being given to people who work and live on it.

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