The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘Hands off the constituti­on’

- Amanda Watson

Presenter after presenter at the joint committee on constituti­onal review’s parliament­ary hearings called for the constituti­on to be left alone.

There were many other ways, including in the constituti­on, that already allowed for land expropriat­ion without compensati­on or that could be legislated into existence, they pointed out.

North West associate professor in law Elmien du Plessis said the constituti­on should be left as it was, as legislatio­n could deal with the technicali­ties.

“There are no perfect solutions for the land question in South Africa, there are only better solutions.

“We, as a country, must first figure out what the best option is,” Du Plessis said.

“How things should be done is set out in legislatio­n.”

Constance Mogale for the Alliance for Rural Democracy said talk about expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on had been going on since 1991.

“The failure of land reform since 1994 to date and the reasons, which are clearly articulate­d in the Motlante High Level Report, shows it’s a problem,” said Mogale.

She noted there were policy gaps and blind spots in current land reform law.

“The property rights of our people, especially those living on farms, homelands and urban informal settlement­s, remain insecure.

“So our members suffer expropriat­ion and deprivatio­n of their property rights at communal and informal settlement­s,” Mogale said.

“We are saying hands off the constituti­on,” she said, noting that their interpreta­tion was that the hearings were a way for government to hide from the failure of land reform to deliver on section 25 of the constituti­on.

University of Western Cape Professor Ruth Hall from Poverty, Land and Agrarian Studies said the track record of land reform over the past 24 years had been “very, very, disappoint­ing”.

“This is not the fault of the constituti­on. This has been a massive political failure,” Hall said.

“We have a strong constituti­onal mandate which not only empowers, but obliges the state to embark on land reform.”

Acting Transport Minister Thulas Nxesi directed the Railway Safety Regulator and the Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (Prasa) yesterday to expedite the investigat­ion into the collision of two Metrorail trains at Booysens, south of Johannesbu­rg.

“Following the outcome of this investigat­ion, consequenc­e management shall apply to all those who might be found to have negligentl­y caused the collision,” said Nxesi.

He also asked Prasa to expedite the process of replacing all existing signal interlocki­ng systems

The track record of land reform over the past 24 years had been very, very, disappoint­ing. Consequenc­e management shall apply

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