The Citizen (Gauteng)

Law can halt land issue

IRR: FIERCE LOBBYIST AGAINST EXPROPRIAT­ION HEADS TO COURT

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i simnikiweh@citizen.co.za

Body argues only 400 out of 720 000 public inputs are being considered.

Ajudicial review of the work done by the Joint Committee on Constituti­onal Review (CRC) on proposed land expropriat­ion legislatio­n could stop the process dead in its tracks before the elections in May next year.

The Institute of Race Relations (IRR), which has fiercely lobbied against the Economic Freedom Fighters’ and ANC’s expropriat­ion without compensati­on resolution in parliament, was briefing lawyers yesterday in preparatio­n for a court bid to have the entire process put under judicial review.

Political parties debated this week whether it was constituti­onally sound to take into considerat­ion only about 400 out of 720 000 public submission­s made to parliament this year.

Today, the committee is likely to recommend that the constituti­on be amended to allow expropriat­ion, the IRR said – a move the group has described as “nationalis­ation by another name”.

The IRR claimed about 80% of submission­s made to the committee were opposed to land expropriat­ion without compensati­on.

It said the committee failed to consider these comments and was likely to make its recommenda­tion without ever having looked at 99.9% of them.

But the Council for the Advancemen­t of the South African Constituti­on (Casac) said it would have been down to the competence of the service provider the committee assigned to process the submission­s and compile a report based on the collected data.

This was the first time so many submission­s had been made to a parliament­ary committee since the drawing up of the constituti­on nearly two decades ago, when more than a million submission­s were made to parliament.

Casac’s executive secretary, Lawson Naidoo, said it was not a case of how many submission­s were considered, as long as the sample used was representa­tive of the totality of the submission­s.

“The issue here seems to be whether the service provider did an adequate job of summarisin­g the submission­s according to the different categories – and that, I think, is the issue facing the committee at the moment,” said Naidoo. “The responsibi­lity of parliament is to consider submission­s and not necessaril­y to agree with them. But they must apply their minds and come to a considered decision on the basis of the submission­s. It is not necessaril­y to follow, even if the majority is saying one thing.”

Bantu Holomisa, leader of the United Democratic Movement, which supported the changing of section 21 of the constituti­on to allow for expropriat­ion, said even if the matter went under judicial review, lawmakers would be able to explain why not all of the submission­s were to be included in the draft report.

“I have no doubt in my mind the lawmakers of that committee have applied their minds in coming up with a rationale to justify their decision to not consider every submission.

“So, they must go to court if they want, but as long as that court process is not intended to jeopardise the bigger picture: that black South Africans are landless; they own nothing; they control nothing.” –

Black South Africans are landless; they own nothing.

 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? THE PEOPLE HAVE SPOKEN. Father of seven Muneer Baxter works on a shack erected during illegal land occupation­s in Mitchells Plain township Cape Town.
Picture: Reuters THE PEOPLE HAVE SPOKEN. Father of seven Muneer Baxter works on a shack erected during illegal land occupation­s in Mitchells Plain township Cape Town.

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