The Citizen (Gauteng)

Little trust in Ingonyama Trust

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The Ingonyama Trust does not appear to keep its beneficiar­ies informed of developmen­ts and operations of the land and it has been more absent in the communitie­s it is supposed to benefit during Covid-19.

This is according to Zenande Booi, who was a panellist at a virtual discussion hosted by the Nelson Mandela Foundation, in collaborat­ion with the Land and Accountabi­lity Research Centre (Larc) at the University of Cape Town and the Public Affairs Research Institute, with the support of the Hanns Seidel Foundation.

The topic of Wednesday’s discussion was The Future of the Ingonyama Trust: Substantiv­e Accountabi­lity in a post-Covid Era.

Booi heads activities within the Larc’s land stream. She said while residentia­l and commercial leases were significan­t sources of income for the trust, its reports to parliament have been unable to show how the money it made benefitted the people who hold leases with it and paid rent.

“There is little indication that these commercial leases are concluded in accordance with the provisions of the Trust Act, Zulu customary law...

“Community partners that we worked with report not being informed of developmen­ts and not knowing the terms of the lessor, the impact the developmen­t will have on their land rights and their ability to access the national resources on this land,” Booi said.

The trust is the biggest landowner in KwaZulu-Natal and King Goodwill Zwelithini is its only trustee.

After the trust could not account for the R22 million allocated to it by the department of agricultur­e, land reform and rural developmen­t, the relevant portfolio committee recommende­d in May that the department suspend payment to the trust.

It pointed out that there were no clear programmes to deal with the empowermen­t of youth, women and people with disabiliti­es in rural communitie­s, in line with the purpose of the board, which was the management of the trust for the material well-being of traditiona­l communitie­s.

In June, portfolio committee chair Zwelivelil­e Mandela said if it was found that the trust was a failure, it should be scrapped.

This was after the trust’s board admitted there was “constant, perennial irregular expenditur­e”.

Booi added that the trust’s absence in keeping its beneficiar­ies abreast was even more felt by communitie­s who bore the brunt of the impact of Covid-19.

She said there had been no indication that the trust was seen in communitie­s during the crisis.

“Community members gave accounts of not being able to access food parcels, services like water and sanitation and other relief efforts in response to Covid-19,” she said.

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