The Citizen (KZN)

‘This is no Zim style land grab’

Confusion reigns over land reform without compensati­on, with political parties voicing differing opinions. But the ANC is in charge of the process and any changes, at present, are theory, says expert.

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i simnikiweh@citizen.co.za

Foundation says expropriat­ion resolution is harming those people it intended to help.

The Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) is not in charge of land reform and a repeat of Zimbabwe’s land grab situation is unlikely in South Africa, according to an expert.

Recent reports of EFF-backed land invasions and a dubious, mass distribute­d SMS authored by the DA has caused mass panic about the security of property in light of the recent parliament decision to explore land expropriat­ion without compensati­on.

But Professor Lucien van der Walt, a sociology academic at Rhodes University, warned against alarmist and fear-mongering public discourse about the issue of expropriat­ion which, he says, would needlessly harm the poor.

“The reality is that the ANC is in charge of the process and any changes are, at present, pure theory,” he said.

“The media highlights voices that speak as if land reform without compensati­on has happened, or that ANC has changed its basic land policies.

In reality, nothing has happened except an ANC-controlled resolution on how to get land to beneficiar­ies – and that resolution has not been implemente­d but is heading into a long process of committees and discussion­s.”

He added that this frenzy and politickin­g would end up hurting the public by bringing false hopes, fears and reduced capital investment­s.

“As we have seen over the past few years, the victims of downgrades are the working class and poor, not the elites,” he said.

According to Van der Walt, the EFFs’ notion of all land being put into state hands was unlikely to happen.

Outcry from various organias sations has gained momentum since the resolution was passed in parliament last month and public submission­s to parliament on the matter were expected to be opened soon.

While the resolution purportedl­y seeks to benefit the historical victims of apartheid, yesterday the Free Market Foundation (FMF) said it actually harmed those people.

“The rights which South Africans enjoy were won after decades of struggle against the state,” said the FMF’s Chris Hattingh.

“Once South Africa jettisons the premise of property rights, the EFF and ANC seem to have done, black South Africans will never be secure in what they earn and build.”

Van der Walt offered an alternativ­e, but no less worrying, prediction.

While the main beneficiar­ies of the proposed land expropriat­ion Bill would be victims of white colonialis­m and apartheid, he argues, in reality, this will still amount to a small well-connected elite consisting of chiefs, kings, politician­s and “capitalist­s”. Describing the move as an “elite transition”, the professor predicted the ruling party would use the issue mainly to win votes (so it can control access to state resources) and to reward cronies, both in the homeland elites and in the larger South Africa. “Land reform under capitalism is presented as reversing control of land by small elite groups, but usually ends up simply changing which small elite has control. It replaces one type of elite capture by another type of elite capture,” he said.

The proposed Bill would, at most, be about how land was made available for reform, he said.

“Since the late 1990s, ANC land reform has prioritise­d creating large-scale black commercial farmers – pretty much the same as the existing white commercial farmers – rather than a class of small, black or coloured family farmers.” –

The reality is that the ANC is in charge of the process, and any changes are, at present, pure theory. Professor Lucien vd Walt Sociology academic at Rhodes University Black South Africans will never be secure in what they earn and build.

 ?? Picture: Gallo Images ?? BUILDING MATERIAL. A man on Saturday carries a pole used to build a shack during an illegal land invasion in the Blue Hills area in Midrand.
Picture: Gallo Images BUILDING MATERIAL. A man on Saturday carries a pole used to build a shack during an illegal land invasion in the Blue Hills area in Midrand.

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