Posted on 09/27/2005 6:06:53 PM PDT by Flavius
WHITE South African farmers are watching with mounting unease as the Government finalises plans to take over a white-owned farm and hand the land to descendants of its original black owners.
The seizure, which follows the failure of talks lasting more than two years between the authorities and an Afrikaner family, will signal the end of the willing seller/willing buyer policy. Other white farmers fear that it could mark the start of a far more aggressive land redistribution programme.
Land ownership is a sensitive issue in a country that has been spared the violent seizures without compensation of neighbouring Zimbabwe, where more than 4,000 white-owned farms have been taken over since 2000. The Government has faced growing criticism of foot-dragging over the politically explosive issues and recently changed the law to allow expropriation to take place without court approval. Most of South Africa s 40 million people live in rural areas, and they are overwhelmingly black and poor.
Eleven years after the end of apartheid, the Government has transferred slightly more than 3 per cent of agricultural land previously reserved for whites to black owners. Another 27 per cent must follow to meet the official target of 30 per cent black ownership by 2014.
Thoko Didiza, the Land Affairs Minister, said at the weekend that she would submit plans to the Cabinet next month to make the pace of land reform ten times faster.
She said: The quicker we deal with this land issue, the better for all of us. It creates an uncertainty, not just for South Africans, but for others who want to develop partnerships with us and who keep asking when this will end. She added that the target was not negotiable and that policy, not the deadline, will have to change.
The compulsory purchase of Leeuwsprit Farm in Lichtenburg, about 160 miles west of Johannesburg, which reignited the debate, was approved by Blessing Mphela, the North West Land Claims Com- missioner. He said that it was the last option after negotiations with Frans Visser, 82, and his son, Hannes, 47, had failed.
The Government had offered 1.75 million rands (£154,000) but the Visser family was holding out for R3 million for two adjacent farms totalling 500 hectares (1,235 acres).
The Vissers, who bought the land from other Afrikaner farmers in 1968, maintain that they should also be compen- sated for improvements that they have made. They argue that the Government is offering them only the value of the land rather than the value of the entire venture.
The family has pledged to fight the order. Lizanne Burger, 51, Mr Vissers daughter, said: We have yet to receive the papers, but we have been told they are on the way. Her brother, Hannes, said that he would appeal against the order and fight it in the courts. He said: I do not recognise the claim and cannot be forced to sell at the Governments price. He added that he had invested R3.4 million in the cattle and sheep farm as recently as 1994-98, for which he should also be compensated.
Thousands of black families were forcibly removed from their land during white minority rule. Some sold under pressure, but title deeds show voluntary sales. Others were forced out of areas that were suddenly designated for whites only.
Mr Vissers black neighbours successfully argued before the Land Commission that the land on which Leeuwsprit Farm is located had been taken from them against their will in 1939.
Zimbabwe redux, coming soon to SA too!
The results are as clear as day yet they continue down the same path. Very sad.
They can't help themselves. SA will shortly be a 3rd world country with a starving population but they will be oh, so PC.
We all knew this was coming.
I would bail now if I were them. Can they get US visas? We need some good hardworking farmers.
Reducing imports of food and other goods might be a good thing....
Zimbabwe marches south.
strikes me as b/s
the torrens land system and other variants are products of europe to tradk and document land ownership. i doubt the black folk had a comparable system.
to my awareness, concepts of reading / writing / accounting / tax systems are not typical of african history.
its nothing more than grab the whitemans bicyle and ride it as far as they can. soon they will be just like zimbabwe, unable to get the parts to fuel and fix it
I think they'd be more likely to look to,and be more readily accepted in,Australia.
Ah, c'mon: I'm sure Bob Geldorff will arrange a concert to pay off the mortgages of the ANC's luxury flats in London.
If it was stolen, it was stolen and should be given back.
What? American farmers have enough problems. Many South Africans actually find other work esp. small businesses.
The problem is that SA citizens can't take their money out of the country. So they can sell the land, but the money is trapped in SA.
SA has now completed its first lap around the toilet bowl.
Exactly. There was a time when Mugabe was the darling of the western media. Then came a time when the ANC became the darling - oh, that time is now, isn't it? Whites need to get out of SA while they can.
Americans and Canadians can set a great example by giving back all the land we stole from the native americans.
Not the same thing but I'm not surprised someone would post as you do.
The Indians that I know and I am a part of one (Unlike Ward Churchhill I can prove it) are about as prepared to take back over what the White man took from us as the blacks were to take back over at the end of aparthied. The story of the statistics show that blacks as a whole are worse off now than they were before Mandela carried the day. Per capita income, trade deficits, genocides, tribal segragations and mass relocations were virtually unheard of before the end of aparthied now they are common to many if not all African nations.
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