The Herald (South Africa)

COPE, AfriForum unite to safeguard property rights

- Nonkululek­o Njilo

COPE and AfriForum are urging South Africans and the internatio­nal community to call on the government not to amend the constituti­on to allow for land expropriat­ion without compensati­on.

Speaking at a media briefing on Monday‚ COPE president Mosiuoa Lekota and AfriForum CEO Kallie Kriel said the proposed move was without a legal mandate from voters.

“COPE and AfriForum’s decision to defend the constituti­on‚ property rights and the 1994 settlement came after President Cyril Ramaphosa’s announceme­nt on July 31 that he and the ANC had decided to amend the property rights clause in Section 25 of the South African Constituti­on to allow for expropriat­ion without compensati­on‚” they said in a joint statement.

Lekota said that Ramaphosa had violated his oath by deciding to amend the constituti­on‚ citing Section 83(b) of the Constituti­on‚ which stipulates that the president must uphold‚ defend and respect the constituti­on.

“The protection of property rights is something that should be of common interest to every South African‚” Kriel said.

He said the high unemployme­nt rate in Zimbabwe confirmed that everyone suffered – barring a small‚ elite group – when the violation of property rights destroyed a country’s economy.

“Our stance is not in defence of apartheid or colonialis­m‚ but that Afrikaners as a community cannot be collective­ly blamed or punished,” the parties said. “That would be an injustice.”

While the two parties have vowed to defend the constituti­on‚ Lekota said that land reform was “necessary and welcomed”.

“Land reform should be clear‚ legal and just, not racially divisive – and must lead towards economic developmen­t‚ not economic collapse‚” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa