Sunday Times

Calling the ANC’s dangerous bluff on land reform

- ONKGOPOTSE JJ TABANE Tabane is the host of Frankly Speaking on SABC3 and Power Perspectiv­e on Power 98.7

The EFF can’t tell you with a straight face how exactly the expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on would work. It is time someone pointed out to it that, with 8% of the vote, it will not be able to implement it without the ANC’s say-so.

Everyone is in such euphoria over the longoverdu­e airing of the land question that we have suspended our reasoning about how disastrous this policy could be.

Let’s be frank: the ANC is stringing along the EFF and those who believe it on the land question, lulling them into thinking that it is on the same page. The ANC cannot afford to hand over the land question on a platter to the EFF as an election tool. It has to take some credit for an impending land revolution – except that such a revolution is not near!

The ANC is bluffing.

This ought to be obvious, but we are a gullible people. More than 140 000 submission­s on the land issue have been received by parliament and I have no doubt that most of them are underlinin­g how crazy the resolution on land is.

I don’t imagine hordes of landless people rushing to submit anything to parliament — after all, the ANC and the EFF have assured them that they will be land-rich in no time. I believe — and I would be happy to be proved wrong — that the EFF and ANC are playing mind games with what is potentiall­y a time bomb. Poverty in South Africa is so bad that people can be excused for grabbing at any straw.

The parliament­ary process will not result in a constituti­onal change that will give the state any more power to expropriat­e land than was agreed to by Ramaphosa’s ANC at Codesa.

The DA may not even need to prepare court papers, if the outcome of the ANC’s land summit is anything to go by.

In fact, one battles to see the difference between the DA’s position and that of the ruling party. The ANC has already made an about-turn on the land resolution envisaged by the EFF and, sadly, this is what the EFF will use to campaign. Again, I am happy to be proved wrong.

The ANC has to be more honest with the public and start implementi­ng what the constituti­on allows it to do by using land to change the lot of our people.

The emphasis on food security was a clear signal that land on which productive farming is taking place will not be touched. The reality is those who are without land now are not going to become overnight farming sensations. The government must identify small-scale farmers and give them more land and support to diversify their farming activity. Simple things like supporting co-operatives and helping them access markets can double the number of agricultur­al jobs.

The ANC must make a solid presentati­on to parliament showing the economic flaws of expropriat­ing land outside the ambit of section 25 of the constituti­on. The timing of this discussion must take into account the elections.

Should there be a deadlock in parliament, the ANC must join forces with like-minded parties to fight for a proper outcome in court — one that will not destroy whatever is left of our economic growth trajectory. No court would find on the side of the EFF, which will be left to fight on the streets.

The EFF has already polarised the DA on the land question, pushing it into the hands of the ANC ahead of coalition talks after the 2019 elections. In the end it will come down to numbers and it is clear that the EFF has become complacent, almost counting its chickens before they are hatched.

The ANC has all but admitted that it failed to implement land reform over the years as section 25 allows. The party needs to regain leadership and outmanoeuv­re the reckless approach of the EFF. Its position will find resonance with the DA. Between these parties the economy can be saved from the collapse that would certainly follow the implementa­tion of the wholesale “official land grab” that would be the result of wanton expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on.

The ANC has to start implementi­ng the land reform the constituti­on allows it to

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