Mail & Guardian

Didiza moves on illegal KZN leases

The Ingonyama Trust Board is to convert the leases into permission­to-occupy certificat­es

- Paddy Harper Mail & Guardian.

The nine residents of Ingonyama Trust Board (ITB) land who successful­ly challenged its residentia­l lease programme are likely to be the first to have the unlawful leases, which were imposed by the entity, restored to permission-to-occupy certificat­es.

And while the ITB chairperso­n, Jerome Ngwenya, had intended to challenge the ruling by the Pietermari­tzburg high court setting aside the lease programme and ordering that residents be refunded lease fees, he has been instructed not to do so by Agricultur­e, Land Reform and Rural Developmen­t Minister Thoko Didiza, under whose portfolio the ITB falls.

Didiza is also pushing ahead with the process of appointing a new board for the Ingonyama Trust, which controls nearly three-million hectares of land in Kwazulu-natal, and will meet with the presumptiv­e new Zulu monarch, King Misuzulu kazwelithi­ni, to discuss who will chair the board.

In terms of the legislatio­n that enabled the Ingonyama Trust to be formed in the early 1990s, the Zulu king appoints the board chairperso­n.

A source close to the matter said Didiza had “communicat­ed directly with the chairperso­n [days after the judgment] that there is to be no process to take the matter on appeal.”

The source said Ngwenya had intended to issue a media statement rejecting the judgment and indicating his intention to appeal, but had been prevented from doing so by Didiza’s instructio­n.

“The minister made it clear that the board had to respect the court’s judgment and that there was to be no attempt to take the matter on appeal,” the source said. “The chair accepted this, but grudgingly.”

Didiza is in the process of seconding staff from her department to take over executive functions at the ITB, which has been at loggerhead­s with parliament’s land reform portfolio committee and the auditor over poor corporate governance.

Thus far, an acting chief financial officer has been seconded, who, the source said, would help ensure that residents were paid back.

The source said the process of reversing the leases and refunding residents was likely to start with Linah Nkosi and the eight other individual occupants, many of them from the Jozini area, who had brought the applicatio­n along with the Legal Resources Centre (LRC) and several nongovernm­ental organisati­ons.

“The LRC detailed informatio­n in the court documents. It would make sense to start from there. The second phase would be to go back through the books and assess what has been paid since the conversion­s began and take the appropriat­e action. The minister has three months to report back to the court on what has been done to comply, so this is what has to be done urgently,” the source said.

Didiza’s spokespers­on, Reggie Ngcobo, confirmed the secondment process and said the minister was waiting for recommenda­tions from

the ITB, which met on 21 June, as to further appointmen­ts, including that of an acting chief financial officer.

Didiza said that the government accepted the outcome of the court case and that the judgment had “very important implicatio­ns for the government and also for the board”.

“As directed by the court, I am going to develop a plan of complying with the court order, which addresses the breach that has been done with respect to converting permission-tooccupy to leases,” she said.

The department would issue a directive to the ITB to refund all the money paid to it in residentia­l leases, and to restore the permission-tooccupy certificat­es that had been converted into leases.

This, she said, would restore title to the legitimate owners of the land under customary law.

Didiza said she put mechanisms in place to ensure that the order was implemente­d and would give quarterly reports to the court on the implementa­tion process.

The land reform department would, she said, be strengthen­ing its capacity to manage communal land.

The process of appointing a permanent board, which included the monarch, the land reform ministry and the premier of Kwazulu-natal, had been disrupted by the death of King Goodwill Zwelithini kabhekuzul­u.

“We are engaging with the new authoritie­s to make sure we conclude this process as soon as possible,” she said.

In related news, an impending strike by ITB staff over management’s refusal to recognise the National Education, Health and Allied Workers Union (Nehawu) and alleged labour law violations has been averted. The ITB has now agreed to recognise the union, which represents just over 70% of the workforce, after seven years of refusal.

Nehawu members at the ITB last month began lunchtime demonstrat­ions after the Commission for Conciliati­on, Mediation and Arbitratio­n granted them a strike certificat­e.

Andile Zulu, the Kwazulu-natal provincial secretary of Nehawu, said the union had met with the ITB after the strike certificat­e was issued and they were hammering out the terms of a recognitio­n agreement.

Zulu said: “We are not very far from reaching consensus on signing a recognitio­n agreement. We have reached consensus on 98% of the agreement thus far.”

He said that once the agreement was concluded, the union would take up other issues — including wage discrepanc­ies, working conditions and alleged breaches of Covid-19 protocols — with ITB management.

“If all the issues are resolved, then we will have to officially withdraw our strike certificat­e,” Zulu said.

Ngwenya did not respond to calls from the

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? Photos: Delwyn Verasamy & David Harrison ?? Refunds due: The Ingonyama Trust manages land on behalf of the Zulu nation. Its chairperso­n Jerome Ngwenya (below) faces an uncertain future as a new board is to be appointed.
Photos: Delwyn Verasamy & David Harrison Refunds due: The Ingonyama Trust manages land on behalf of the Zulu nation. Its chairperso­n Jerome Ngwenya (below) faces an uncertain future as a new board is to be appointed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa