The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘Don’t take pay for land away’

THINK TANK: REMOVING CLAUSE ‘LETHAL BLOW’

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‘Sample’ 400 submission­s out of thousands submitted not good enough.

Removing the right to compensati­on, as currently contained in section 25 of the constituti­on, when expropriat­ing property will be a “lethal blow” to the legitimacy and stability of constituti­onal order if done under present conditions, think tank Free Market Foundation (FMF) says.

The governing ANC has signalled plans to amend the constituti­on to allow for acquisitio­n of land for redistribu­tion without paying compensati­on.

FMF legal researcher Martin van Staden said negotiatio­ns in the ’90s had led to a constituti­onal order “that is today widely accepted and acceptable”.

“Expropriat­ion without compensati­on will change this in a very fundamenta­l and dangerous way,” Van Staden said.

He denounced an announceme­nt that the Constituti­onal Review Committee set up to look into expropriat­ion would only consider a “sample” 400 submission­s out of thousands submitted.

“Hundreds of thousands of South Africans and civil society groups poured untold hours, effort and resources into their submission­s to parliament, only to receive a nonchalant response from the committee telling them to get lost,” he said.

“This is the most important constituti­onal moment in South African history after the adoption of the constituti­on itself, yet parliament hopes to wrap it all up in under a year; hopefully in time for the ruling party to brag about it in the upcoming elections.”

Van Staden said if government wanted expropriat­ion in the constituti­on to be truly harmless and legal, the language of the amendment should be specific and “circumscri­bed to an extent we have never before seen in South African legislativ­e drafting”.

The ANC and other political parties such as the Economic Freedom Fighters say land reforms are necessary to address ownership imbalances under apartheid. – ANA

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