The Citizen (Gauteng)

Mbeki’s views on land wins a fan

‘BALANCED CRITIQUE’: PAMPHLET UNVEILED THIS WEEK

- Eric Naki – ericn@citizen.co.za

However, many others slammed the former president’s views.

As former president Thabo Mbeki’s opponents within the ANC took turns to lambaste him over his criticism of the ANC land policy, the party’s head of economic transforma­tion subcommitt­ee, Enoch Godongwana, took a different view.

“Former president Mbeki’s paper is a balanced critique of the 54th conference resolution on land expropriat­ion without compensati­on. The document also makes good proposals at the end. It would be a mistake to simply dismiss it,” Godongwana tweeted yesterday.

In the same tweet, he said he enjoyed reading the pamphlet which the Thabo Mbeki Foundation (TMF) unveiled this week.

Godongwana, who was one of the Cyril Ramaphosa strategist­s before and after Nasrec, always put forward sober and researched views on economic issues.

His view contrasted those of Mbeki’s avowed opponents such as ANC secretary-general Ace Magashule, former ANC minister of arts and culture Pallo Jordan and former ANC portfolio committee on defence chairperso­n Tony Yengeni, who all criticised Mbeki for his pamphlet.

Speaking at the handing-over of a house to Mananki, mother of the late child activist Stompie Seipei, in Parys, Free State this week, Magashule lambasted Mbeki, demanding he toe the line and respect the decision of the party.

Another Mbeki opponent, Yengeni, reacted with a tweet disagreein­g with Godongwana.

“Mfxim..! What is balanced there? That resolution is an ANC resolution not a Zuma resolution and it is not inconsiste­nt with the nonracial character of the Freedom Charter..! And by the way Madiba [Godongwana] we are here implementi­ng not debating, sanukusibu­yisela umva maan! [don’t stop our progress].”

The 30-page document said the ANC’s original mission had been to help eradicate the legacy of colonialis­m and apartheid and simultaneo­usly help create a nonracial and nonsexist society, and the decision to expropriat­e without compensati­on was a first for the party in its 106-year existence.

The document criticised the ANC’s idea of taking land from whites and giving it to blacks, saying this amounted to a betrayal of the ANC’s identity.

“Instead of the document being misconstru­ed as an attack on the ANC and/or its leadership, it must be accepted as a call for a serious, reflective and constructi­ve discourse on the matter that has bedevilled our country throughout the colonial and apartheid periods to date,” said Max Boqwana, TMF chief executive officer.

Boqwana said the document was intended for internal discussion within the foundation and was not yet intended for publicatio­n.

He said the ruling ANC should pay attention to the fact that land issue and the national question were intimately interconne­cted.

The foundation was adamant that the “land question” as an historical injustice requires urgent redress.

“The ANC must lead a critical engagement on the policies of the past 24 years adopted by the democratic government to address the land question,” he said The Congress of the People’s national chairperso­n, Pakes Dikgetsi, said his party welcomed the document, which he described as a “constructi­ve guidance on the land questions” and “enriching the process” to find a solution to the question of land reform.

“The content orientatio­n and historical account of the land question as contained in the pamphlet are narrated very clearly and factually,” Dikgetsi said.

But Jordan told a Radio 702 talk show that the foundation’s view was “a falsificat­ion” of the ruling party’s stance on the land question and the pamphlet misreprese­nted the ANC’s approach to the land question.

Wits University vice-chancellor, Adam Habib, who participat­ed in the Radio 702 show, later tweeted: “Looking at the commentary on Mbeki’s paper and all I can do is sigh! Too many don’t read, yet comment.”

It would be a mistake to simply dismiss it.

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