In this article, published in London's Financial Times,
President Cyril Ramaphosa explains how land expropriation without
compensation will work
While a parliamentary committee is at present
wrapping up public hearings on this issue and still needs to give
consideration to any possible constitutional amendment, there have been
several suggestions on when expropriation without compensation may be
justified. These include, for instance, unused land, derelict buildings,
purely speculative land holdings, or circumstances where occupiers have
strong historical rights and title holders do not occupy or use their
land, such as labour tenancy, informal settlements and abandoned
inner-city buildings.
This is no land grab; nor is it an assault
on the private ownership of property. The ANC has been clear that its
land reform programme should not undermine future investment in the
economy or damage agricultural production and food security. The
proposals will not erode property rights, but will instead ensure that
the rights of all South Africans, and not just those who currently own
land, are strengthened. SA has learnt from the experiences of other
countries, both from what has worked and what has not, and will not make
the same mistakes that others have made.
The proposal on
expropriation without compensation is one element of a broader programme
of land reform that seeks to ensure that all citizens can have their
land rights recognised, whether they live in communal areas, informal
settlements or on commercial farms. It includes the release of
well-located urban land for low-cost housing so that the poor can own
property and live close to economic opportunities.
For land reform
to succeed, it is essential that support is given to beneficiaries of
land redistribution through financing, training, market access,
irrigation and the provision of seeds, fertiliser and equipment, all of
which contribute to the sustainability of emerging agricultural
enterprises.
Land reform in SA is a moral, social and economic
imperative. By bringing more land into productive use, by giving more
South Africans assets and opportunities for sustainable livelihoods, the
country is creating conditions for greater, more inclusive and more
meaningful growth.
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