Running
out of time
South African farmers
ready to take land issue into their own hands
|
JOHANNESBURG (IPS)�Patrick Mojapelo, 59, has
waited five years for the South African government to return 30 farms
stolen from his community by previous white governments in the 1930s.
On June 5, he told President Thabo Mbeki that he will
wait no longer.
"We have been claiming (our land through the
government�s land restitution program) since 1995 and so far we haven�t
even got one farm. We keep meeting with Department of Land Affairs
officials and they make so many promises, but still we don�t have a
single farm," said Mr. Mojapelo.
He was one of more than 150 people�representing
tens of thousands of families claiming land stolen before and during
apartheid�who traveled hundreds of miles recently to the seat of South
Africa�s new government to demand action from the highest office in
the country.
The peaceful protesters resisted police efforts to
remove them from the public lawn of the Union Buildings in Pretoria.
They waved banners bearing the names of their landless communities who
have grown impatient with post-apartheid promises of land reform.
Five young girls played the drums as the adults told
a representative from Mr. Mbeki�s office that they had had enough.
"The dispossession of Black people from the land
was a central part of the apartheid regime�s systematic subjugation of
the Black majority, politically, economically, culturally and socially.
In the absence of any meaningful land reform, the effects of this
history of dispossession continue to keep people in poverty today.
Despite this, there has been no fundamental change in land access and
ownership in South Africa since 1994," said Mr. Mojapelo, reading a
memorandum from the protesters to Mr. Mbeki.
When South Africa�s first Black government took
power in 1994, it promised widespread land reform to reverse the
apartheid land policy.
Three land reform programs were introduced,
including: land restitution, to restore land to the victims of forced
removals between 1913 and 1994; land redistribution which promised to
transfer 30 percent of agricultural land to Black people by 1999; and
tenure reform to address the insecurity of farm workers, labor tenants
and people living on state and communal land.
According to the protesters� memorandum, however,
"There is virtually no land delivery on Land Restitution. Only two
land claims have been settled in the Northern Province, despite
thousands having been lodged."
Government land reform statistics show that less than
5,000 of the 63,500 land restitution claims lodged across the country
before 1999 have been settled.
The protesters said even these statistics "hide
the fact that most of the claims settled are urban claims settled
through cash compensation." This means, they say, that even amongst
the fortunate few, most have not actually had land restored to them.
The majority, however, have received nothing. And
they are beginning to mobilize.
This protest was led by the Northern Province Land
Rights Coalition, which represents more than 60,000 land claimant
families, and the South Cape and Karoo Land Claims Forum, representing
more than 3,000 community land claims.
The two groups complained that they had written
dozens of letters to Mr. Mbeki, and to Agriculture and Land Affairs
Minister Thoko Didiza, but to no avail.
One South Cape protester, Henry Rhodes, warned that
continued government lethargy could see some communities following the
example of Zimbabwean war veterans and invading their land.
It is a warning that has been repeated by several
communities in recent months.
The slow pace of land restitution is blamed on the
costs of the current land policy, through which the government buys land
on a "willing-seller, willing-buyer" basis, similar to the
policy that slowed Zimbabwe�s land reform efforts.
This has led the government to pay
"market-value" prices for land it purchases from white
farmers, many of whom benefitted from cheap land and large state farming
subsidies during apartheid.
The government�s own statistics show that it has
failed to deliver its promise to redistribute 30 percent of agricultural
land. So far less than one percent of agricultural land has been
delivered to Black people in six years, leaving the country�s
apartheid-era land ownership imbalance�87 percent of land owned by
whites, and 13 percent by Blacks�virtually unchanged.
Tenure reform has also failed to end the insecurity
and brutality that Black farm dwellers suffer at the hands of white
landowners, with gross human rights violations continuing unabated on
white farms.
And last year the government suspended a draft law
intended to improve tenure rights for millions of Black people living in
communal areas, with no word on whether, or when, this will be revived.
The protesters demanded that Mr. Mbeki ensure that
"Land Reform must transform the current inequitable pattern of land
ownership and give the rural poor secure homes, opportunities to produce
for themselves, and lives of dignity."
They warned that for the rural poor, "land
rights are the key to secure homes, jobs, food, and a meaningful social
and cultural life. There can be no full enjoyment of human rights
without land rights". |