Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

SA parcels out land for human settlement

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be used for human settlement­s and not for resale to the private sector,” De Lille said in a statement yesterday.

The land has been released in several provinces, including the Northern Cape, where four state-owned properties were released to the Department of Agricultur­e, Land Reform and Rural Developmen­t to settle a redistribu­tion claim the Doraan family lodged in 1998.

In Tshwane, the City said it would be able to build 4 000 houses on the land released to it, which is located near the city centre.

“The developmen­t will benefit the communitie­s of Phomolong, Itereleng and the Hills informal settlement­s and will significan­tly address the housing demand,” De Lille said.

State-owned properties in Humansdorp in the Eastern Cape will “settle the restitutio­n claim by the direct descendant­s of the Tsitsikamm­a Developmen­t Trust/AmaMfengu community. The AmaMfengu community that settled in the Tsitsikamm­a area during the Anglo-Xhosa ‘frontier wars’ of 1833-1834.

“The AmaMfengu community [was]

dispossess­ed of [the] land and forcibly removed from the claimed properties in October 1927. Their removal was done in terms of the Black Administra­tion Act of 1972.”

In the North West, land was released for a redistribu­tion claim made in 1998 by the Madibamant­sho Community. The land is more than 1 120 hectares large and is valued at R4.4m.

Land has also been released to the Cape Peninsula University of Technology which will, in turn, release it for the redevelopm­ent of District Six. — Sapa

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