Mail & Guardian

Mixed signals and a lack of vision

Changes to section 25 of the constituti­on and the expropriat­ion act show the land issue is being taken seriously, but the parallel process is odd because it is the constituti­on that informs the laws

- PURE POLITICS Luke Feltham

“You try take away some rich person’s property in Bryanston or something and the government will be tied up in court for years”

Pure Politics is the M&G’S mission to better understand this country’s democracy and the structures that

‘Look at the racists in their eyes and say to the racist, toe-to-toe, ‘This is our land. This land we will defend it with our blood. This land we will defend it with our bodies; we are prepared to die for South Africa’.”

Those are the words of Economic Freedom Fighters leader Julius Malema in an address to supporters at the Senekal upheaval following the murder of a farm manager earlier this month. A few days later, the Democratic Alliance hit out and laid criminal charges against EFF MP Mbuyiseni Ndlozi for inciting violence through song.

“Thousands of hectares of land have been on fire and destroyed in the Free State,” said DA chief whip Natasha Mazzone. “And while the cause of these fires are still unknown, we do know that a politician sang songs calling ‘ the fire brigade’ to ‘burn these Boers’ and that this was followed by large scale destructio­n.”

Twenty-six years into South African democracy and the unanswered land question is beginning to fester. Too often it has been reduced to a political prop, with rhetoric favoured over solution, and the country’s people continue to labour under the injustices of the past with little sign of reform.

The government’s ambivalenc­e to the land issue has grown increasing­ly untenable. The rise of a left-wing threat has pushed the ruling ANC to confront the land question; forcing it to adjust its policy to retain support.

This month we got one of the first tangible products of the new commitment. The expropriat­ion bill was gazetted on 9 October after a twoyear consultati­on process and thousands of public submission­s. It is now up to parliament to interrogat­e the proposed legislatio­n before it is passed into law.

Does the bill represent a meaningful change to our existing legislatio­n? And how does it fit into the greater argument over South Africa’s land?

What is the land expropriat­ion bill?

The bill is set to replace the expropriat­ion act of 1975 and details the circumstan­ces under which expropriat­ion can take place.

It arrives courtesy of the land reform inter-ministeria­l committee, set up after President Cyril Ramaphosa committed to taking real

action on land redistribu­tion during his maiden 2018 State of the Nation address. Chaired by Deputy President David Mabuza, the committee was informed by a Ramaphosa-appointed panel designed to give a “unified perspectiv­e” on the matter.

Ultimately the panel found that because the 1975 expropriat­on act preceded the 1996 constituti­on, it does not align with the constituti­onal values and should be replaced.

“The publicatio­n of this important bill is a cogent indication that government is indeed at work to realise redress and fulfil the aspiration­s of the people to have an equitable society,” Mabuza said when the bill was gazetted. “It is a recognitio­n of the urgency required to address the injustices of the past and restore land rights in a responsibl­e manner, while ensuring that food security is maintained, that equitable spatial justice is achieved, and that continuati­on of investment to expand our industrial base is secured.”

One of the primary purposes of the bill is to underline precisely when expropriat­ion can take place without compensati­on. The constituti­on states that compensati­on for expropriat­ion must always be “just and equitable”. What the bill does is determine the circumstan­ces in which it is just and equitable to pay no compensati­on. These are, but are not limited to:

“Where the land is not being used and the owner’s main purpose is not to develop the land or use it to generate income, but to benefit from appreciati­on of its market value;

“Where an organ of the state holds land that it is not using for its core functions and is not reasonably likely to require the land for its future

activities in that regard, and the organ of state acquired the land for no considerat­ion;

“Notwithsta­nding registrati­on of ownership in terms of the deeds registries act of 1937 (Act No. 47 of 1937), where an owner has abandoned the land by failing to exercise control over it;

“Where the market value of the land is equivalent to, or less than, the present value of direct state investment or subsidy in the acquisitio­n and beneficial capital improvemen­t of the land; and

“When the nature or condition of the property poses a health, safety or physical risk to persons or other property.”

The bill does not require that owners will not be compensate­d in every case. The courts will be called upon should an agreement between state and rightshold­er not be reached. As Patricia de Lille, the minister of public works and infrastruc­ture, made clear: “Local, provincial and national authoritie­s will use the legislatio­n to expropriat­e in the public interest for valid reasons that seek to among others promote inclusivit­y and access to natural resources.”

Should we be afraid of the bill?

There are few words in the South

African lexicon that are able to generate as much concern as “expropriat­ion”. It is a term that has been politicise­d to the fullest extent. The imagery it provokes is that of land owners being arbitraril­y stripped of their title deeds and the economy plunging into darkness. “We will become the new Zimbabwe,” goes the common refrain.

Does this bill represent the realisatio­n of those fears? Unlikely. The bill lists the conditions under which property can be expropriat­ed for no compensati­on; flourishin­g commercial farmers appear to not have to worry that their business will be taken from them.

Trepidatio­n is misplaced among the rich, according to Leon Louw, policy adviser and co-founder of the Free Market Foundation. Rather, we should be most concerned about the poor with this bill.

“There’s a perception in the media that this is about taking rich white people’s homes,” he says. “I don’t know why that paradigm dominates the discussion.

“The Ekurhuleni council [made] the first announceme­nt of any expropriat­ion without compensati­on that I’m aware of. And what is it? It’s not some rich person’s speculativ­e land but the Delport and Marathon informal settlement­s. The poorest of the poor; people living in tin shacks. It just amazes me that people aren’t aware of the fact that the victims will be the poor.” He adds: “You try take away some rich person’s property in Bryanston or something and the government will be tied up in court for years. But you take five million poor black people’s property and none of them have the resources or even knowledge to resist.”

Another facet of the bill that is often ignored in the land reform rhetoric is who precisely will be responsibl­e for deciding what property is expropriat­ed.

The dystopian vision suggests a grand Maoist strategy in which the state strings together a five-year plan, but the reality is far less glamorous.

According to the bill, it will be officials at organs of state who will have the power of beginning the process to acquire property.

Louw envisions serious problems with this fact.

“The assumption is that [Ramaphosa] will be involved. He won’t. He will have nothing to do with it. The people who expropriat­e are the parks manager of Pofadder and the roads department of Aansluit ... the municipal officials of every town or village. The people who expropriat­e are thousands of lowly officials.

“Whose land do you think they’re going to expropriat­e to extend a park or build a clinic? The answer is not Farmer van Tonder’s land. It’s the people living in low-income housing.”

A recent commitment by the government adds credence to that viewpoint. Shortly before the gazetting of the expropriat­ion bill, the minister of agricultur­e, land reform and rural developmen­t, Thoko Didiza, announced that 700 000 hectares of land would be redistribu­ted — an eye-opening figure that, at face value, is a legitimate pledge towards the principles of land reform.

How it will work in practice is another matter.

Katlego Ramantsima, of the Institute for Poverty, Land and Agrarian Studies at the University of

underpin it. By going beyond media sound bites South Africans can become informed and active citizens

the Western Cape, has argued that the promise raises more questions than answers.

She wrote in the Daily Maverick: “There are also questions about how the government is going to support all those new farm applicants, given the stark decrease in the supplement­ary land reform budget.

“Many are asking: where is the budget for training, recapitali­sation and the other costs involved in the redistribu­tion process going to come from? Or could this announceme­nt be just another political strategy to win the people’s favour for the next elections?”

Much of the 700 000ha is already owned by the state. No hectares have been selected for redistribu­tion in Gauteng and Western Cape — the capitals of private land ownership. Business Day reported this week that about a third of the 700 000ha demarcated property is held by black residents and black farmers.

Restitutio­n and expropriat­ion in practice

Mala Mala, one the most prominent cases of land restitutio­n, is an example of the complexity and problems that can beset land reform iniatives.

In 2014, the government paid R1.1billion for the land and handed it over to the communal property associatio­n (CPA), made up of 960 claimants who had been forcibly removed during apartheid.

The Mail & Guardian previously reported that as part of the land claim settlement, the Mala Mala Game Reserve pays an annual lease fee directly to the CPA, which is responsibl­e for distributi­ng the money to the households. Mala Mala’s guests pay a community tourism levy into the community trust for education, training and developmen­t projects.

But the settlement has been beset by mounting problems, including court battles pitting different factions and the CPA against each other, accusation­s and allegation­s

of corruption amounting to millions of rands, nepotism and a lack of transparen­cy.

One report estimates that only 250 people have benefited from the payments that are due to them.

In Cape Town’s Marikana informal settlement, home to some 60 000 people, section 9(3) of the housing act was used to enable the city to expropriat­e the privately-owned land that people had settled on.

The case is documented in new research by the Socio-economic Rights Institute of South Africa, titled Claiming Water Rights in South Africa. Because the city saw the Marikana residents as “land invaders” they were given temporary services. This meant people didn’t have regular, clean water and toilets — things the state is constituti­onallymand­ated to provide.

People settled on the land in 2013. At first the city’s Anti-land Invasion Unit and police demolished some of the homes. Then the city was granted an interim interdict that prevented further occupation of the property. Shortly after this, the high court in Cape Town ruled against the city.

More people moved onto the land and the owners sought an eviction notice. The residents launched a counter-applicatio­n and proposed that the state could buy, or expropriat­e, the land.

Their case rested on section 9(3) of the housing act, which allows the state to expropriat­e land to develop state subsidised housing.

In 2017, the high court found that the city had failed the landowners and the people living on the land. In March, discussion­s between the property owners, the city, Marikana residents and the provincial human settlement­s department resulted in a court order that the city purchase the land from its owners. The price would be set through arbitratio­n.

Amending section 25 of the constituti­on

The arrival of the expropriat­ion bill is a direct result of the commitment to amend section 25 of the constituti­on. With the law dating back to apartheid, it would have been necessary to update legislatio­n some time soon.

But why now? The short answer is convoluted political squabbling. The long explanatio­n has much to do with the rise of the EFF as an ideologica­l and political force. Land restitutio­n is a founding tenet of the second biggest opposition party; more so it is an issue on which it has been able to absorb swaths of disfranchi­sed, disillusio­ned voters. In their relentless, unique brand of politickin­g, the Red Berets have been able to force the land question into the forefront of the public’s consciousn­ess.

Until recently, the ANC was happy to swat away their attempts at something more palpable. In 2017 the EFF tabled a motion in parliament to allow expropriat­ion without compensati­on and land reform but was shot down, losing the vote with 261 against and 33 in favour.

And yet it took only a year for those numbers to change to 83 against and 241 in favour — a two-thirds majority — in a subsequent motion. What happened in the time between the two ideals was a policy realignmen­t by the ruling party.

The ANC entered its December 2017 national elective conference in Johannesbu­rg, divided, uncertain and reeling from sustained reputation­al damage from the Jacob Zuma administra­tion. With the battle between Ramaphosa and Nkosazana Dlamini-zuma balanced on the finest knife’s edge, the former had to make various concession­s to ensure he got the nod, one of which was bowing to the ANC’S so-called radical economic transforma­tion faction on the land issue. The resolution read:

“We must pursue with greater determinat­ion the programme of land reform and rural developmen­t as part of the programme of radical socioecono­mic transforma­tion.

“Expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on should be among the key mechanisms available to government to give effect to land reform and redistribu­tion.

“In determinin­g the mechanisms of implementa­tion, we must ensure that we do not undermine future investment in the economy, or damage agricultur­al production and food security. Furthermor­e, our interventi­ons must not cause harm to other sectors of the economy.”

The third paragraph is particular­ly important to understand­ing the different dynamics of ANC and EFF land restitutio­n. The latter favours complete state nationalis­ation, whereas the ruling party would never accept any policy that would contradict the principles of South Africa’s free market economy. The ANC thus tabled an amendment to the original proposal.

Despite opposition from the DA, the Freedom Front Plus and the Congress of the People, the ANC and EFF were able to get the two-thirds majority needed to begin the parliament­ary process of amending the constituti­on.

Two years, thousands of submission­s, hundreds of hours of public hearings and a pandemic later, the matter now sits with another ad hoc committee set up to introduce the new legislatio­n. With a deadline of 31 December to report back to parliament looming, the committee is undertakin­g another round of public hearings — in Limpopo last week and the North West this week.

There is some debate as to what extent section 25 of the constituti­on allows for expropriat­ion. The idea is to change it so that it becomes unequivoca­l. Some observers have found it odd that the expropriat­ion bill would be gazetted now, given that the constituti­on informs the laws.

“At the moment government is giving out mixed and confusing signals,” says advocate Tembeka Ngcukaitob­i, a member of the inter-ministeria­l committee. “On the one hand government is saying that the constituti­on does not make provision for expropriat­ion without compensati­on and therefore it’s necessary to amend the constituti­on to make that explicit. On the other hand they accept that the constituti­on permits expropriat­ion without compensati­on and that is why they are passing the expropriat­ion act.

“The reason that I can fathom is lack of policy coordinati­on,” he says. “The ANC has endorsed, I have to believe, both the amendment to the expropriat­ion bill as well as the amendment to the constituti­on. Ultimately, I think this boils down to a problem we have had in the past 25 years, which is a problem of policy stagnation, lack of vision and a lack of coordinati­on. I think the left hand simply does not know what the right hand is doing.”

Legislatio­n is relatively easy to change and often bends to the sentiment of the time, but the constituti­on is the foundation of South Africa’s democracy and is more permanent. How the process of amending the constituti­on plays out will be crucial in determinin­g the approach to expropriat­ion of land.

 ?? Photo: Delwyn Verasamy ?? Anger, fear: Emotions ran high during public hearings on section 25 of the constituti­on, which were held in all provinces.
Photo: Delwyn Verasamy Anger, fear: Emotions ran high during public hearings on section 25 of the constituti­on, which were held in all provinces.
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 ?? Photo: Marco Longari/afp ?? Standoff: Economic Freedom Fighters members and farmers confront each other in Senekal, Free State, after a farm manager was murdered at the beginning of this month.
Photo: Marco Longari/afp Standoff: Economic Freedom Fighters members and farmers confront each other in Senekal, Free State, after a farm manager was murdered at the beginning of this month.
 ?? Photo Brenton Geach/gallo Images ?? Who’s illegal? Cape Town police officers monitor the demolition of alleged illegal structures by the anti-land invasion unit in 2018 in Makhaza. It happened again during lockdown.
Photo Brenton Geach/gallo Images Who’s illegal? Cape Town police officers monitor the demolition of alleged illegal structures by the anti-land invasion unit in 2018 in Makhaza. It happened again during lockdown.

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