Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Land expropriat­ion for the poor, not politician­s: Cosatu

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THE central executive committee ( CEC) of the Congress of South African of Trade Unions (Cosatu) says it doesn’t want to see politician­s benefit from the bid to expropriat­e land without compensati­on.

Reading the trade union federation’s statement, second deputy general secretary Solly Phetoe, said it wanted land expropriat­ion to benefit poor working communitie­s.

“We want the ANC to adopt a resolution that no politician should be a beneficiar­y of land without compensati­on because that constitute­s a conflict of interest,” said Cosatu.

The federation held a media briefing at its headquarte­rs on Thursday, following a threeday CEC meeting, where it engaged with President Cyril Ramaphosa, who is also president of the ANC.

The CEC discussed numerous issues, including Ramaphosa’s Cabinet, its calls for a job summit, the Auditor General’s report on municipali­ties and political developmen­ts in the tripartite alliance.

The ANC is currently grappling with the land issue, having recently held a land summit to iron out the party’s views on the matter.

Some have been pushing for the Constituti­on to be amended, while others believe Section 25 of the Constituti­on is radical enough to allow expropriat­ion without compensati­on.

The party’s national executive committee (NEC) is expected to endorse the land summit’s recommenda­tions when it meets this weekend.

After the passing of a historic motion brought forward by the EFF and supported by the ANC, Parliament tasked its review committee with researchin­g how expropriat­ion without compensati­on could take place.

“Politician­s should not be allowed to be the biggest beneficiar­ies from the government policies they have adopted,” said Phetoe.

The federation said farm labour tenants were the most vulnerable because they were unable to access government services, such as housing, electricit­y and sanitation.

“Workers and the poor are tired of politician­s who are in it for themselves and who are driven by the ‘I-did-not-struggle-to-be-poor’ mentality,” said Phetoe.

Cosatu president Sdumo Dlamini said they were also worried about expropriat­ion of land being used to dispense patronage.

“A danger that is likely to happen now that [the] government can have such a policy… you will be my friend so that you are able to do one, two or three for me and I will give you [a] piece of land. This is part of what killed our moral fibre as a country and Cosatu still stands vehemently opposed to such activities,” said Dlamini.

The labour federation, in acknowledg­ing some of the debate in the ANC over tribal land, said it was a problem as land which was placed under the custodian of tribal leaders belonged to the people who had no actual access to the land.

He said Cosatu would push for the issue not to be treated as a stumbling block when dealing with the issue of land reform.

He pointed out that traditiona­l leaders should not be excluded.

“You would never bypass them in dealing with this question, even if it means that this law be,” he said. — Sapa

SEOUL (South Korea) — The cancellati­on of a planned summit between US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has caught many in South Korea off-guard, including President Moon Jae-in, with top diplomats scrambling to avert a political fallout with promises of continued talks.

“The current communicat­ion method [between the US and North Korea] won’t be able to resolve a sensitive and complex diplomatic issue,” Moon said during the National Security Council meeting, according to the Korea Economic Daily. “I look forward to seeing two leaders making a direct and close communicat­ion to resolve the current situation,” he said.

The announceme­nt comes just two days after Trump hosted Moon at the White House for talks widely seen as an effort to save the summit scheduled for next month in Singapore from being scuttled.

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