'The time for reconciliation is over': South Africa votes to confiscate white-owned lan
28
February, 2018
South
Africa's parliament has voted in favour of a motion that will begin
the process of amending the country's Constitution to allow for the
confiscation of white-owned land without compensation.
The
motion was brought by Julius Malema, leader of the radical Marxist
opposition party the Economic Freedom Fighters, and passed
overwhelmingly by 241 votes to 83 against. The only parties who did
not support the motion were the Democratic Alliance, Freedom Front
Plus, Cope and the African Christian Democratic Party.
It
was amended but supported by the ruling African National Congress and
new president Cyril Ramaphosa, who made land expropriation a key
pillar of his policy platform after taking over from ousted PM Jacob
Zuma earlier this month.
"The
time for reconciliation is over. Now is the time for justice,"
Malema was quoted by News24 as telling parliament. "We must
ensure that we restore the dignity of our people without compensating
the criminals who stole our land."
According
to Bloomberg, a 2017 government audit found white people owned 72 per
cent of farmland in South Africa.
ANC
deputy chief whip Dorries Eunice Dlakude said the party "recognises
that the current policy instruments, including the willing-buyer
willing-seller policy and other provisions of Section 25 of the
Constitution may be hindering effective land reform".
ANC
rural affairs minister Gugile Nkwinti added: "The ANC
unequivocally supports the principle of land expropriation without
compensation. There is no doubt about it, land shall be expropriated
without compensation."
Thandeka
Mbabama from the Democatic Alliance party, which opposed the motion,
said there was a need to right the wrongs of the past but
expropriation "cannot be part of the solution".
"By
arguing for expropriation without compensation, the ANC has been
gifted the perfect scapegoat to explain away its own failure,"
she said in a statement.
"Making
this argument lets the ANC off the hook on the real impediments —
corruption, bad policy and chronic underfunding. Expropriation
without compensation would severely undermine the national economy,
only hurting poor black people even further."
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