The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘Concourt final arbiter on land’

Expert says it can decide if process is in line with law.

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i simnikiweh@citizen.co.za

Twelve MPs voted for motion to adopt the report while four voted against it.

The Constituti­onal Court still has the final say on whether the process by which land expropriat­ion is to be enacted is in line with the law, according to an expert.

Yesterday, the Joint Constituti­onal Review Committee adopted a draft report which recommends the amendment of section 25 of the constituti­on to allow for the expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on.

The draft report, based on public submission­s, found among other statistics that 65% of the participan­ts were against the amendment. An addendum based on recommenda­tions was added to the original draft and EFF deputy president Floyd Shivambu proposed recommenda­tions relating to the urgency with which the amendment should be enacted and the level of clarity this should give on how land can be expropriat­ed by government.

But Ralph Mathekga, a senior researcher at the University of the Western Cape’s centre for humanities research, said not only would a motion to amend section 25 need a two-thirds majority in parliament, it also had to pass the certificat­ion test in order for the ConCourt to decide whether such an amendment would impinge upon other acts in legislatio­n.

This, he said, the apex court could do, whether or not challenges to the process were eventually heard in court or parliament.

This principle was outlined when the original constituti­on was adopted. One of the requiremen­ts of this adoption was that the text in the new constituti­on comply with the constituti­onal principles set out in schedule four to the interim constituti­on.

The text would have no legal force until the ConCourt had certified that all the provisions complied with these principles. In the same way, Mathekga explained, any amendment to the constituti­on had to pass this test.

Twelve members of parliament, primarily from both the ANC and the EFF, voted for a motion to adopt the report while four MPs voted against it.

The DA, the Institute of Race Relations and AfriForum said they would challenge the report adoption through the courts.

Stan Maila, the acting co-chairperso­n, said his committee tried as much as possible to accommodat­e all views in its report. –

65% of the participan­ts were against amendment.

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