Saturday Star

President urged not to sign ‘flawed’ land bill

- GOITSEMANG MATLHABE goitsemang.matlhabe@inl.co.za

INDEPENDEN­T organisati­ons have become the latest voices to join opposition parties in requesting President Cyril Ramaphosa not to sign the highly-contested Expropriat­ion Bill.

On March 24, the National Assembly approved the Expropriat­ion Bill as amended by the National Council of Provinces (NCOP) following a vote of 205 in favour and 108 against.

However, despite the resolution by the governing party, a number of voices have opposed the passing of the bill, especially the DA, Freedom Front Plus as well as the IFP, which have vowed to take it to the Constituti­onal Court to challenge the bill’s constituti­onality.

The DA accused the governing ANC of attempting to “bulldoze” the bill as a last-ditch effort to cobble votes together in the run-up to the national and provincial elections on May 29.

The party’s Tim Brauteseth said the bill amounted to nothing more than introducin­g expropriat­ion without compensati­on through the legislativ­e backdoor by passing it in the NCOP with the ANC in full support.

The IFP said while supporting the Expropriat­ion Bill, it differed in the way it was being followed, as the party believed that those who owned land must be compensate­d if the state deemed there were grounds for expropriat­ion.

The SA Institute of Race Relations

(SAIRR), the latest organisati­on to speak against the bill, petitioned Ramaphosa not to sign the Expropriat­ion Bill citing several concerns which rendered it unconstitu­tional.

According to the SAIRR, there had been grave flaws in the public participat­ion process and constituti­onal inconsiste­ncies that Parliament ought to reconcile before placing the bill before the president.

Makone Maja, SAIRR campaign manager, said the Expropriat­ion Bill was rushed through Parliament and hastily sent to Ramaphosa for signing.

Maja explained how Parliament had on the one hand barely scraped the surface of the tens of thousands of submission­s made during the public hearings on this piece of legislatio­n, and neither did it perform a thorough Socio-economic Impact Assessment System (SEIAS) test to assess the potential economic harm South Africa would suffer if the bill was enacted.

Said Maja: “This leaves the public, including businesses and investors who may be affected, ill-informed about the true cost of the legislatio­n.

“The bill is unconstitu­tional in its inconsiste­ncy on issues such as the contents of the notice of expropriat­ion related to when mediation and court interventi­on may arise, and it remains unclear on the open-ended list of land that can be expropriat­ed without compensati­on and whether this includes improvemen­ts made on the land or not. This too is unconstitu­tional on the basis of vagueness.”

Maja added: “‘The bill escalates the underminin­g of the rule of law by granting the government powers to seize land. It takes a wrecking ball to property rights, the pain of which will be felt by the most vulnerable among us.

“Investment­s and capital flow towards countries that are welcoming to them, while insecure property rights chase them away.”

Maja said the institute hoped the president would send the bill back to the National Assembly to amend legal requiremen­ts, as failure to address concerns and proceeding with it as it stood would result in them looking to take legal action and galvanise the support of civil society.

The FW de Klerk Foundation also pleaded with Ramaphosa to send the bill back. It cited concerns surroundin­g the procedural irregulari­ties in its passing through the NCOP.

Ismail Joosub, the FW de Klerk Foundation’s legal officer, said mandates for voting on the bill were hastily assembled, with certain provinces like Gauteng, the Eastern Cape and Limpopo bypassing full provincial legislatur­e involvemen­t.

Joosub added that instead, decisions were made by legislativ­e committees, effectivel­y sidelining the voices of citizens and their elected representa­tives.

“The foundation emphasises the urgent need for a transparen­t and accountabl­e legislativ­e process that upholds constituti­onal principles and safeguards property rights. Any deviation from these principles risks plunging South Africa into economic turmoil and exacerbati­ng social inequality,” Joosub said.

 ?? ?? AIR conditioni­ng units on an apartment building in Hong Kong. A record-breaking heatwave is broiling parts of Asia, helping drive surging demand for cooling options, including air-conditioni­ng. AC exhaust units are a common feature of urban landscapes in many parts of Asia, clinging like limpets to towering apartment blocks in Hong Kong or tucked in a cross formation between the windows of a building in Cambodia. | DALE DE LA REY / AFP
AIR conditioni­ng units on an apartment building in Hong Kong. A record-breaking heatwave is broiling parts of Asia, helping drive surging demand for cooling options, including air-conditioni­ng. AC exhaust units are a common feature of urban landscapes in many parts of Asia, clinging like limpets to towering apartment blocks in Hong Kong or tucked in a cross formation between the windows of a building in Cambodia. | DALE DE LA REY / AFP

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