Cape Argus

Province rejects expropriat­ion

- MWANGI GITHAHU mwangi.githahu@inl.co.za

THE provincial government has rejected the Constituti­on 18th Amendment Bill, 2021, which seeks to amend the Constituti­on to allow for expropriat­ion without compensati­on, and said if passed, the bill would strip citizens of rights and cause economic chaos.

Addressing a digital news conference, Premier Alan Winde and the province’s leader of government business, Ivan Meyer, said the provincial executive committee discussed the bill last week and agreed to oppose it.

“The Constituti­on doesn’t stop us from pursuing expropriat­ion without compensati­on, and it doesn’t say that compensati­on is required,” said Winde.

“Instead, it balances the right to property against our broader constituti­onal values. It rightfully asks us to look at the circumstan­ces where expropriat­ion with substantia­lly reduced compensati­on, or even no compensati­on, are justifiabl­e and fair. Further amendments to the Constituti­on and legislatio­n are simply not necessary,” he said.

Winde said the bill aims to further centralise power to the state by introducin­g the concept of state custodians­hip and that, in a country impacted severely by corruption and maladminis­tration, further centralisi­ng powers to that level of government would be detrimenta­l.

Meyer said: “It is well establishe­d that land distributi­on in South Africa is skewed and that this threatens to destabilis­e our society.

“It is not the existing policy that has failed to create meaningful land reform, but rather a lack of political will, poor implementa­tion, corruption and insufficie­nt resources. The amendment bill or proposed national legislatio­n will not create meaningful land reform, but rather risk exposing us to unintended spillover consequenc­es.”

Provincial leader of the opposition Cameron Dugmore (ANC) accused the provincial government of being out to create panic.

“We are not surprised as the DA and this provincial government has always been against land redistribu­tion and against security of tenure for farmworker­s. In essence, the DA and Premier Winde are rejecting what President Ramaphosa said when he stated that colonial and apartheid land dispossess­ion were the original sin in our country’s history.

“The Expropriat­ion Bill, once law, will assist in releasing land.”

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