The Star Early Edition

Help fight graft, property owners told

- QUINTON MTYALA

THE EFF’s commander-in-chief, Julius Malema, took the stage and told an auditorium full of mostly white property owners that they were beneficiar­ies of a crime against humanity.

Malema and the EFF have agitated for a land reform programme that would make the state the custodian of all land in South Africa, arguing that black South Africans had been forcefully dispossess­ed, and that land should be returned to its “rightful owners”.

Speaking to delegates at the SA Property Owners Associatio­n (Sapoa) convention at the Cape Town Internatio­nal Convention Centre, Malema said: “This country was founded on a disruption, a crime against humanity, of which property owners sitting at this convention were the beneficiar­ies.”

He said colonialis­m and apartheid were a disruption of the property relations of the native population, in favour of a racist, anti-black colonial property order.

“That is still the reality of the black majority today. Every 20 years between 1946 and 2010 there was a property boom in South Africa,” said Malema.

He said these booms were often preceded by increased state capital expenditur­e.

“This means, sitting here today are beneficiar­ies of a crime against humanity.

“And you are also the greatest beneficiar­ies of a post-apartheid order.

“You benefited from the oppression of the property-less, today you also benefit from a democracy that was brought by the property-less, yet they still remain in that position as you have gotten richer,” said Malema.

He said the commercial property sector was worth R5.8 trillion with land zoned for commercial and residentia­l developmen­ts worth R520 billion.

Malema said Sapoa’s members controlled approximat­ely 90% of all commercial and industrial properties in South Africa.

He said that according to the “Transforma­tion Sector Chapter Council”, of the R2 trillion commercial property market, black ownership was at less than 1%.

“The Property Sector Charter has failed drasticall­y in the past due to its unbinding nature, thus the industry remains untransfor­med,” said Malema.

He said the property sector had to actively support the fight against corruption instead of being keyboard warriors on Twitter and Facebook, saying that soon government corruption would affect their bottom lines.

“They will steal elections, use security forces to suppress opposition.

“We are heading right in the direction of a state and institutio­nal failure; we are fast approachin­g the highest state of lawlessnes­s.

“But in the final analysis, you should also take the blame. You are among those who demonise the Freedom Charter, you demonise stateled industrial developmen­t, at the centre of which is a State Bank, land expropriat­ion without compensati­on, state mining companies and free quality education,” said Malema.

We are headed for state and institutio­nal failure

 ?? PICTURE: HENK KRUGER ?? ANGRY: Julius Malema at the Cape Town Internatio­nal Convention Centre after speaking at the SA Property Owners Associatio­n Annual Convention and Property Exhibition.
PICTURE: HENK KRUGER ANGRY: Julius Malema at the Cape Town Internatio­nal Convention Centre after speaking at the SA Property Owners Associatio­n Annual Convention and Property Exhibition.

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