The Citizen (KZN)

Last chance to have your say on land

PUBLIC COMMENTS: TWO WEEKS LEFT AMID CALLS FOR NEW DEADLINE

- Gcina Ntsaluba – gcinan@citizen.co.za

South Africans have just over two weeks left to submit their comments.

Amendment Bill was published at start of festive season, when businesses closed.

South Africans have just over two weeks left to submit their comments on the draft Constituti­on 18th Amendment Bill, which aims to amend the constituti­on to allow for land expropriat­ion without compensati­on.

However, some organisati­ons have called for an extension of the deadline for public comment, saying that the Amendment Bill was published for public comment at the start of the festive season, when most businesses had closed.

The Centre for Constituti­onal Rights (CFCR) has written to the chair of the parliament­ary ad hoc committee, requesting an extension of the deadline.

“The CFCR is concerned that such a critically important Amendment Bill was published at the start of the festive season. Most businesses and civil society organisati­ons closed and only reopened early in January.

“Concerns about the timing of the publicatio­n were discussed at a meeting of the committee on December 3, following a letter received from AgriSA, but parliament’s legal services apparently informed the committee a similar process had been followed with Bills in the past,” said the organisati­on, which operates as a unit of the FW de Klerk Foundation.

The CFCR said the committee was pushing to finalise public deliberati­on and adoption of the Amendment Bill before its deadline of March 31.

“However, public engagement cannot be rushed. This is the first opportunit­y for the public to engage with the formulatio­n of the proposed amendment,” it said.

But the chairperso­n of the committee, Dr Mathole Motshekga, disagreed and said the request for an extension was unreasonab­le. “This process started in the fifth parliament. Before we agreed on the deadline, we had a meeting with all the political parties and stakeholde­rs and it was agreed that this would be the deadline.”

Motshekga said after the January 31 deadline, parliament would review all submission­s and make the necessary amendments to the constituti­on as per public recommenda­tions.

The Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) also expressed unhappines­s over the closing date for public comments, saying parliament had published the Bill without “adequate publicity” and just before Christmas.

“We call on all progressiv­e peoples, movements, organisati­ons and formations to make submission­s in support of the expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on because land inequality is not a mere matter of political posturing – it affects millions of South Africans,” the party said.

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