Why SA’s land reform is stuck

October 30, 2013  <http://www.herald.co.zw/author/shingirai/> Shingirai Huni
<http://www.herald.co.zw/category/articles/opinion-a-analysis/> Opinion &
Analysis

 <http://www.herald.co.zw/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/Gugile-Nkwinti.jpg>
Description: Gugile Nkwinti

Gugile Nkwinti

Correspondent
THIS year marks the 100th anniversary of the passage of the South African
Land Act, which restricted black people from buying or occupying land except
as employees of white people. The Act gave white people ownership of 87
percent of land, leaving the black majority to settle on the remaining 13
percent.
Although the law was replaced by a policy of land restitution when the ANC
government came to power more than 19 years ago, South Africa is still
struggling to reverse the impact of the Act. There have been problems and
controversies with both policy and implementation of the land reform agenda,
which uses redistribution, restitution and tenure reform to make the
much-needed changes. It is therefore, important to look at some of the
problems that have slowed land reform much to the disgruntlement of the
local people.

Willing-buyer, willing-seller
The government’s restitution policy has taken a “willing buyer, willing
seller” approach, as opposed to the expropriation route adopted by
neighbouring Zimbabwe, after being hoodwinked to follow the willing buyer
willing seller route. The South African government has been paying market
value for the disputed land before it is handed over to the original owners,
who were dispossessed during apartheid. But the government admits the
process has siphoned off its resources and delayed the reform process
considerably. It had been paying twice as much for land restitution as it
was for distribution.

Rural Development and Land Reform Minister Gugile Nkwinti told parliament
recently that from 1994 to January 31 2013 the government spent over US$1,2
billion buying 4.1 million hectares of land for redistribution, while
spending over US$1,6 billion on 1.4 million hectares for restitution.

“The small, white landed class has benefited R10.8 billion (over US$1
billion) from land acquired, while the 71 292 working class claimants
benefited R6 billion (about $600 million),” said the minister.

Nkwinti also indicated that “claimants have chosen financial compensation
over land restoration. This is a reflection of poverty, unemployment and
income want”. Critics on the left argue it also reflects the lack of a
coherent strategy to enhance food security, aid poor urban populations
living on marginal land, aid the predominantly black rural population, and
support emerging black small and commercial farmers. Government detractors
on the right have called land reform a ticking time bomb that could turn
South Africa into Zimbabwe. In response to criticism, the government has
introduced several new initiatives in recent months, such as the Property
Valuations Bill, the Expropriation Bill and the Restitution Amendment Bill.
But the new legislation has only stirred up more debate.
Just and equitable compensation

To shorten the time taken to finalise claims and to reduce the amount of
money spent, the government said earlier this year it is dropping the
“willing buyer, willing seller” principle, pursuing instead a “just and
equitable” principle for compensation, which is set out in the constitution.
The constitution allows for expropriating property “even in cases where the
owners of that property are unwilling to part with the property . . . if the
expropriation is aimed at redistributing land to address the effects of
widespread colonial and apartheid-era land dispossession,” writes legal
expert Pierre de Vos, who teaches law at the University of Cape Town. But
the constitution says a “just and equitable” compensation must be paid for
the property expropriated; it says nothing about paying market value. The
proposed Valuations Bill will create an Office of the Valuer-General to
develop criteria for determining what just value and compensation are.

The government has also proposed amendments to the 1994 Restitution of Land
Rights Act, which would re-open the processing of restitution claims for
people who missed the December 31, 1998 deadline.

But Ruth Hall, a senior researcher with the Institute for Poverty, Land and
Agrarian Studies (PLAAS), writes that the bill might delay the process of
restitution by another two decades. It also requires claimants to prove that
they will use the land productively.

“It is astonishing that such conditionality is being proposed; existing
(mostly white) landowners do not have to prove that they can use their land
productively in order to keep hold of it,” Hall wrote.

“Land restitution is a very complex issue, and it straddles over various
departments. We are doing as much as we can, and now we are all working
together to try and speed up the process,” said Palesa Mokomele,
spokesperson for the Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries.

Lack of good data
But there is not enough “reliable and detailed empirical data on small-scale
farming in South Africa, and in particular on farming by land-reform
beneficiaries,” said Ben Cousins, senior professor at PLAAS.

According to the government, between 1994 and the end of March 2013, 4 860
farms have been transferred to black people and communities through the
redistribution programme, totalling over 4 million hectares.

Almost a quarter of a million people have benefited through land reform,
including over 50 000 women, 32 000 youth and 674 people with disabilities.
Yet is unclear whether the transfer recipients have retained the farms.

There is no national registry of farmers in the country, but pilot studies
have shown that many new black farmers may have given up on their farms.

There is currently no tangible way to determine whether the transfer of land
to black hands has been successful or transformed the lives of the needy.
Additionally, much of the policy literature in South Africa tends to
overlook class dynamics, using terms such as “smallholder” and “small-scale”
farmer, which ignore differences within these broad categories, Cousins said
in a paper. – Irin news.

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