King, ANC heading for bruising war
Zwelithini issues strong warning over trust’s 2.8 million hectares of land
LEAVE the Ingonyama Trust alone! That is the message from Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini, who is headed for what could be a bruising battle with the ANC over the sensitive issue of rural land custodianship.
During its national conference in Johannesburg last month‚ the party resolved that traditional leaders should relinquish custodianship of the land held in trust by the government.
“That land belongs to the people and we have resolved that 13% of the land under the custodianship of traditional leaders be transferred to the people who live in those communities‚” Deputy Traditional Affairs Minister Obed Bapela said.
The ANC’s resolution followed the release in November‚ just before the party’s conference‚ of a report by the High Level Panel on the Assessment of Key Legislation and Fundamental Change.
The panel‚ headed by former president Kgalema Motlanthe‚ has recommended that the Ingonyama Trust Act be repealed or amended and that the Ingonyama Trust‚ of which King Zwelithini is the sole trustee‚ be dissolved.
The trust‚ which administers 2.8 million hectares of land on behalf of Zwelithini‚ was established in 1994 to be the custodian of the land previously administered by the former KwaZulu-Natal government. However‚ Zwelithini would have none of it.
Delivering a speech during the commemoration of the Battle of Isandlwana in Nquthu‚ northern KwaZulu-Natal‚ on Saturday‚ the king issued a strong warning against any attempts to dissolve the Ingonyama Trust.
“I want to send a message to those who think that they can do whatever they like about our soul‚ which is our land‚ that we should not be provoked,” he said.
“There is no need for Zulus to be abused for their inheritance.”
The Zulu monarch said land under the Ingonyama Trust “which we hear that we don’t deserve was not a gift but a fraction of what was taken from us”.
“This history makes us ask ourselves what is the aim of the person who is brewing the war by saying that our land should be taken?
“As Zulus, we’re asking ourselves why are we being hated‚” he said.
When President Jacob Zuma reopened land claims under the now repealed Restitution of Land Rights Amendment Act of 2014‚ Zwelethini and other traditional leaders lodged a multimillion-rand land claim that could be South Africa’s largest to date.
The claim went outside the boundaries of KwaZuluNatal to the Eastern Cape‚ Free State and part of Mpumalanga.
Zwelithini defended his blanket land claim.
“These people accused us of destabilising [development] trusts by claiming our land‚” he was quoted as saying during a speech to celebrate the traditional circumcision of 200 young men in Kokstad in 2015.
“This is shocking‚ because this land was not taken from the trusts but from traditional leaders‚ and your fathers and mothers, who were murdered.”
Hundreds of amakhosi [traditional chiefs]‚ who live on land administered by the Ingonyama Trust‚ are expected to gather at the Durban International Convention Centre tomorrow and Thursday to discuss their response to the panel’s report.