The Star Late Edition

AfriForum dares land reform process

-

AFRIKANER rights group AfriForum has notified Parliament that it is seeking legal advice to have the process to amend section 25 of the constituti­on to allow for expropriat­ion of property without compensati­on declared illegal.

AfriForum deputy chief executive Ernst Roets said in a statement yesterday that it seemed the public input process had been “manipulate­d from the beginning to reach an outcome that will support” the governing ANC’s stance on the issue.

AfriForum had identified 10 potential procedural irregulari­ties that could have a substantia­l impact on the outcome of the public hearings process.

These included that many of the public hearing venues were still unknown to the public; the times were not known; the agenda was not known; contradict­ory lists with different dates and venues for hearings were published by the parliament­ary committee; the known venues were mostly

Everything done so that the outcome favours the governing ANC

located within ANC-supporting wards; too few hearings were scheduled, which would exclude a significan­t section of the population; no security arrangemen­ts had been arranged or made public; and major metropolit­an areas were excluded from the process.

“It appears that none to very little marketing has been done to inform the public of these public hearings, even though very little time is left between the drafting of this letter and the first public hearing, which is scheduled to take place on June 26.

“AfriForum has made a plea to the parliament­ary committee to urgently tackle these issues. The organisati­on has also communicat­ed that even though it reserves its rights in this regard, it will still participat­e in the public participat­ion processes with the aim to lay out important facts regarding expropriat­ion without compensati­on,” Roets said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa