The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Mabuza to lead land reform committee

-

JOHANNESBU­RG. — President Cyril Ramaphosa has appointed an inter-ministeria­l committee on land reform to expedite land redistribu­tion.

The IMC will be lead by Deputy President David Mabuza and includes nine other senior ministers.

In a statement released yesterday, the presidency said the IMC will co-ordinate and implement measures to accelerate the redistribu­tion of land, the extension of security of tenure, provision of agricultur­al support and the redress of spatial inequality.

“The appointmen­t of the IMC is in line with his commitment, made during the State of the Nation Address, to accelerate land redistribu­tion programme not only to redress a grave historical injustice, but also to bring more producers into the agricultur­al sector and to make more land available for cultivatio­n towards security, rural developmen­t, poverty reduction and strengthen­ing the economy,” the Presidency said.

The ANC government has faced criticism for failing to meet its own set targets on land redistribu­tion. After gaining power in 1994, it set itself a target of handing 30 percent of all agricultur­al land to the black majority by 2014.

Land is expected to dominate campaigns ahead of the 2019 elections. Parliament is currently holding public hearings country-wide on whether Section 25 of the Constituti­on, dealing with property rights must be amended to allow expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on.

On Wednesday, King Goodwill Zwelithini made a thinly veiled threat of violence and secession if the Ingonyama Trust, that oversees large portions of land in Kwa-Zulu Natal, is disbanded.

Zwelithini is the Trust’s sole trustee, after the Ingonyama act was enacted just days before the country’s first democratic elections in 1994.

Former president Kgalema Motlanthe’s high-level review panel commission­ed by Parliament recommende­d that the Ingonyama Trust Act be repealed or amended and that the trust itself be dissolved.

President Ramaphosa was quoted yesterday morning declaring that land under traditiona­l leaders would not be touched. He said he planned to meet with the Zulu monarch over the matter to dispel any fears the Zulu nation might have.

“Its not government’s intention to go and grab land from rural communitie­s, land that is under the control of traditiona­l leaders,” he said during a breakfast with business people.

Other ministers who are part of the IMC are: ◆ Minister for Planning, Monitoring and Evaluation in the Presidency, Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma ◆ Minister of Rural Developmen­t and Land Reform, Maite Nkoana-Mashabane ◆ Minister of Agricultur­e, Forestry

and Fisheries, Senzeni Zokwana ◆ Minister of Cooperativ­e Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs, Zweli Mkhize ◆ Minister of Finance, Nhlanhla

Nene ◆ Minister of Human Settlement­s,

Nomaindia Mfeketo ◆ Minister of Justice and Correction­al Services, Michael Masutha ◆ Minister of Public Enterprise­s,

Pravin Gordhan ◆ Minister of Public Works, Thulas

Nxesi President Ramaphosa said he would appoint a panel of experts to provide technical support to the IMC soon “as it carries out its important task of expediting land reform through all available measures, including expropriat­ion without compensati­on”. — News24.

 ??  ?? Deputy President David Mabuza
Deputy President David Mabuza

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe