Cape Argus

Willing buyer, willing seller of land – stumped

‘ANC will approach the matter with sensitivit­y, but we are resolute’

- Jessie Duarte

THE ANC will manage the land question sensibly. Nelson Mandela, whose centenary of birth we celebrate this year, once said that: “the progress we are making in land reform is matched in our other efforts to address the poverty that apartheid created.

“Our land reform programme helps redress the injustices of apartheid. It fosters national reconcilia­tion and stability. It also underpins economic growth and improves household welfare and food security.”

These words of former president Mandela are felicitous­ly fitting as our country continues to engage in the land debate and, of late, the debate on the expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on. The ANC welcomes this debate.

Madiba knew all too well the importance that the question of land played in our struggle for liberation, the economic emancipati­on of our people and the realisatio­n of the national democratic society based on national reconcilia­tion.

As Madiba noted the powerful position that land played, in the redress of past apartheid injustices, the fostering of national reconcilia­tion and stability as well as the very foundation of economic growth and welfare, the ANC has stepped carefully in addressing this issue, precisely because it understand­s the delicate question of land.

Despite the national imperative­s and the urgency by which poverty and inequality must be addressed through the allocation of land, we will not rush into this important matter and be populist.

The ANC remains emphatic on land. Emerging from its 54th National Conference and having evaluated and debated the matter, the organisati­on, through its branches and being the broadest representa­tion of society, resolved that the government must, as a matter of policy, pursue expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on.

The phrase “as a matter of policy” is important because it gives a clear direction on what the ANC wishes to pursue in government.

Throughout these days, we have heard various quarters suggesting that there is ambivalenc­e in the ANC on this issue and that the ANC continues to debate the issue. Yet this indication, that it is our policy, emphasises why the ANC may be more emphatic this time round, in Parliament for example, than it has been before.

Expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on is therefore ANC policy. We have not been led by the nose before nor were we led by the nose into this matter when the ANC voted in the National Assembly for the establishm­ent of a Constituti­onal Review Committee of Parliament to review Section 25 of the Constituti­on of the Republic. In fact, the ANC led amendments to the motion proposed by the opposition.

Just as with the ANC’s resolution at the National Conference, so, too, the decision to set up a committee to review Section 25 will be conducted in a manner that is not isolated from the factors raised earlier by Mandela when he addressed the question of land.

The review of Section 25 will therefore not take place in isolation of the imperative­s of ensuring that the agricultur­al sector remains stable, food security is unaffected and economic growth and job creation is not threatened.

The resolution of the ANC was emphatic and echoed the sentiments of Mandela. The ANC is therefore determined in guaranteei­ng that the Review Committee must present a number of modalities for expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on.

President Ramaphosa, in his State of the Nation address, also echoed Mandela as well as the ANC resolution by accentuati­ng the context in which the policy of the expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on must take place.

It must increase not decrease agricultur­al production, he said. The policy must improve rather than threaten food security while highlighti­ng the need for redress in respect of land.

Mandela pointed out, the question of land is integral to the national project which is intertwine­d with the economic emancipati­on of our people. We cannot continue blindly to promote reconcilia­tion when we do not pursue justice.

While some have embarked on trying to define who “our people” are, the reality remains that the vast majority of South Africans remain without land. An injury to one is an injury to all.

As with apartheid, all South Africans, black and white, suffer from the current injustices of ownership of land. These injustices of the past, as espoused by our constituti­on, must be addressed.

The Land Audit Report: Phase 2, which deals with the scope of privately owned land, released in November 2017, highlights that white South Africans continue to own 72% of private-owned land in South Africa. This is followed by Coloureds at 15% , Indians at 5% and Africans at 4%. Whites own more than 18 times the amount of land than Africans do.

Even more so, to add insult to injury, the report indicates that 6% of the land ownership population owns 96% of farmland.

Put differentl­y, attempting to address the question of land redress directly connects to farmlands, and therefore the agricultur­al sector and food security because, even in farming, we have monopolist­ic tendencies which are racialised.

The report states emphatical­ly that nowhere in the country do whites own less than 53% of farms and agricultur­al holdings. The highest is in the Northern Cape, where 73% of agricultur­al holdings and farms are in white hands, while in the Gauteng, whites own 59% of farming land.

In terms of gender, males are said to own 71% of farms and land used for agricultur­al purposes. While in the Eastern Cape males own 80% of such land, in Gauteng they own only 51%.

In terms of gender, we too still have a long way to go.

Twenty-four years into democracy this gap is staggering and, sadly, the ANC government has to admit that ‘willing buyer, willing seller’ did not reap the rapid results needed to foster reconcilia­tion.

The Land Audit must direct discussion­s and the debate on the expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on.

The audit sketches a scientific scenario rather than the emotional and often provocativ­e language used by those opposing land transforma­tion.

As we have seen, even the internatio­nal media is willing to ensure that the narrative suggests South Africa will be going the same way its northern neighbour did.

Land is a sensitive and emotive issue. Some opposition parties have had a head-in-the-sand approach and used the old mantra of blaming the ANC without contributi­ng to the debate while others have taken a populist approach. The ANC will do neither. We will debate and we will approach the matter with sensitivit­y and caution, but we are resolute.

The words used earlier by Mandela was when he was addressing a community in KwaZuluNat­al in 1998. Present, too, at that occasion was King Goodwill Zwelithini. Madiba had gone on to remark that “we knew land reform would not be an easy task or quickly achieved. In other countries it has taken decades, even centuries, and it is still not complete”.

In this year of celebratin­g Nelson Mandela and as we debate the policy of expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on, the ANC wishes to send a clear message to all South Africans and even His Majesty, that we do take the question of land seriously and, like all serious matters, we will handle it sensitivel­y.

 ?? PICTURE: TRACEY ?? WHO OWNS THE LAND? Farmworker­s labour at a farm in Philippi. The redistribu­tion on land is an issue being hotly debated.
PICTURE: TRACEY WHO OWNS THE LAND? Farmworker­s labour at a farm in Philippi. The redistribu­tion on land is an issue being hotly debated.

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