Cape Argus

Make land reforms priority to right wrongs of the past

Crucial consultati­ons on such changes and Codesa-like summit suggested

- Mark Paterson

THE prioritisa­tion of land reform presents a historic opportunit­y for civil society and state to right past wrongs and build a more inclusive economy, experts told a recent public meeting in Cape Town. But the issue can also sow division and undermine the agrarian economy, as some land reform efforts in Zimbabwe and South Africa have shown.

Attempts in South Africa to leverage reform through market forces and private property rights have so far failed to create a more inclusive agricultur­al sector or relieve the pressure for land in the cities amid rapid urbanisati­on, according to Professor Ben Cousins, DST/NRF chair in Poverty, Land and Agrarian Studies at the University of the Western Cape.

The success of reform depends on wellplanne­d and properly funded agricultur­al programmes, rather than potentiall­y destabilis­ing and ineffectiv­e political grandstand­ing, speakers told the meeting, which was hosted by the Centre for Conflict Resolution.

While acknowledg­ing the huge historical inequaliti­es in land ownership, which has been skewed along racial lines in both Zimbabwe and South Africa, land reform programmes should seek to right past wrongs through negotiatio­n supported by comprehens­ive plans, in order to support inclusive economic developmen­t and prevent incendiary racial divisions.

In Zimbabwe, land occupation­s were launched in 2000 after a failed attempt by former president Robert Mugabe to change the constituti­on to sanction expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on.

At a time of economic crisis, rising unemployme­nt and food riots, and faced by intransige­nt foreign donors, Zimbabwe’s move to change the constituti­on signalled its political desperatio­n after the British government, under Labour leader Tony Blair, decided to end the financial support for land reform that had previously been given to right historical wrongs.

The three-page summary of the policy, known as the Accelerate­d Fast Land Reform Programme document, basically said “we will take the land” and worry about issues of food security and water supply afterwards.

Similarly, Cousins advised against the South African Parliament changing the country’s constituti­on, which already allows for expropriat­ion and compensati­on at less than the market value of the land, in some cases possibly even zero compensati­on. He noted that reducing the amount of compensati­on was unlikely in itself to become a useful mechanism for speeding up land reform, given the need for thorough planning and post-settlement support.

Zimbabwean land reform targeted smallholde­rs and black commercial farmers. In South Africa, market-oriented smallholde­rs, who number between 250 000 and 500 000, should be the target of land reform, Cousins said.

With adequate support, such as subsidies and training, “these farmers could challenge those controllin­g the food economy”. Also with youth unemployme­nt of 60-65%, small-scale farming could provide jobs and livelihood­s.

In this regard, comprehens­ive planning is necessary to set in motion fundamenta­l change, recognisin­g the importance of labour-intensive enterprise­s and the spatial inequaliti­es of apartheid, Cousins said.

For this to happen, it would need to address market realities. Historical patterns of economic control, which can dampen inclusivit­y must be overturned.

It can take time to overcome structural limitation­s on agricultur­al production that favour larger commercial farmers at the expense of smallholde­rs.

Appropriat­e support to smallholde­rs would need a commitment beyond the 0.4% of the national budget currently allocated to land reform in South Africa. The small sums committed indicate that it had not been taken seriously enough, Cousins said.

Similarly, the model for tenure has failed to address the realities of property ownership for most South Africans, 60% of whom own land or housing outside formal systems.

In an informal system of “social tenure”, non-exclusive land rights are often based on need and recognised membership of a group, rather than payment of a purchase price. But these property systems are not adequately recognised in law. Accordingl­y, Cousins advocated the creation of a new land records act to recognise and record such tenures.

He also criticised collusion between traditiona­l leaders and the state to exploit local communitie­s living on tribal land or around mines and advised that the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Developmen­t Act and such bodies as the Ingonyama Trust in KwaZulu-Natal should be made subject to legislatio­n to prevent dispossess­ion by unscrupulo­us outsiders.

More broadly, Cousins emphasised the importance of new laws, and judicial and dispute resolution processes to ensure equitable, inclusive access to land.

“The poor would be hit most by radical disruption­s in food systems,” warned Cousins. “Our economy is highly dependent on a small number of commercial farmers. We are not in a revolution­ary situation but one of reform, albeit radical reform.”

The government needs to forge a coherent, accountabl­e national framework for land and tenure reform that gives legislativ­e expression to the requiremen­ts of equitable access in the constituti­on and establishe­s plans and mechanisms that address the developmen­tal needs of the agrarian, industrial and urban economies.

An August 2018 deadline has been set for recommenda­tions to Parliament on whether the South African constituti­on should be changed to ease land reform, SACP’s Solly Mapaila – who chaired the meeting – said.

In the meantime, President Cyril Ramaphosa is holding extensive consultati­ons on land reform and has suggested that a new Codesa-like summit should be held on the issue.

“The land question is full of injustice, brutality and denigratio­n,” Mapaila told the meeting. “But it is also full of humanity and forgivenes­s and understand­ing.”

Warning against attempts to use the issue to create division, he stressed the need for justice “to provide a solution to the people of our country… and build a new movement and a new goal”.

LAND QUESTION IS FULL OF INJUSTICE, BRUTALITY AND DENIGRATIO­N. BUT IT IS ALSO FULL OF HUMANITY, FORGIVENES­S AND UNDERSTAND­ING

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? TARGET: Zimbabwean war veterans outside a white-owned north of Harare in 2000. Land occupation­s in that country were launched in 2000 after a failed attempt by then president Robert Mugabe to change the constituti­on to sanction expropriat­ion of land...
PICTURE: AP TARGET: Zimbabwean war veterans outside a white-owned north of Harare in 2000. Land occupation­s in that country were launched in 2000 after a failed attempt by then president Robert Mugabe to change the constituti­on to sanction expropriat­ion of land...

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