The Citizen (Gauteng)

Distributi­on of land must be fair

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The DA’s John Steenhuise­n had perhaps the most telling observatio­n to make in the wake of the announceme­nt by President Cyril Ramaphosa that the ANC had decided it would make “expropriat­ion without compensati­on” into law.

In a tweet, Steenhuise­n described Ramaphosa’s late-night address to the nation as “government by announceme­nt”.

And, quite correctly, he pointed to what turns out to be a sham process of consultati­on – via the highly publicised meetings around the country at which members of the public gave their inputs.

In a manner eerily reminiscen­t of the “consultati­on” process over e-tolls, the ANC has gone ahead with something it had clearly decided on long before the request for public submission­s took place.

Clearly, the ANC is hoping that parliament – and no doubt the courts, because legal actions will surely follow – will rubber-stamp its policy decision.

We are not denying that land restitutio­n is an issue which needs to be addressed – but it should be done so responsibl­y.

Given the ANC’s track record in failing to run SA’s health and education systems, the police service and state-owned enterprise­s, we can be excused for not being hopeful about whether land redistribu­tion will be implemente­d efficientl­y, or fairly.

So, while expropriat­ion without compensati­on may be a great vote-grabbing technique, someone, eventually, will have to deal with the realities of making it work. If it is done poorly, the masses, who have been promised much and given little, will be even angrier and possibly even violent.

At the same time, an expropriat­ion programme could deal major blows to the economy through dispossess­ion of productive land owners and by sending a message to investors, local and foreign, that their investment­s will not be safe.

Mr President, beware. We cannot go the way of Zimbabwe. We don’t have any other place to go.

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