Title: COMMISSION%20ON%20RESTITUTION%20OF%20LAND%20RIGHTS
1COMMISSION ON RESTITUTION OF LAND RIGHTS
- PRESENTATION
- AT THE BUDGET HEARINGS FOR PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE
ON AGRICULTURE AND LAND AFFAIRS - 03 JUNE 2004
- Presented by
- Mr T.T. Gwanya
- P.Bag X833
- PRETORIA
- South Africa
- Tel (012) 312 9244
- Fax (012) 321 0428
- E-mail ttgwanya_at_sghq.pwv.gov.za
- Website www.land.pwv.gov.za/restitution
2LAND REFORM POLICY
- The injustices of racially based land
dispossession of the past, - the need for a more equitable distribution of
land ownership, - the need for a land reform to reduce poverty and
contribute to economic growth, - security of tenure for all, and
- a system of land management which will support
sustainable land use patterns and rapid land
release for development,
3Elements of Land Reform Progamme
- Redistribution aims to provide the disadvantaged
and the poor with access to land for residential
and productive purposes. Its scope includes the
urban and rural very poor, labour tenants, farm
workers as well as new entrants to agriculture
(8713 the White Black land ownership ratio
debate). - Land Restitution covers cases of forced removals
which took place after 1913. They are being dealt
with by a Land Claims Court and Commission on
Restitution of Land Rights established under the
Restitution of Land Rights Act, 22 of 1994
(redress). - Land Tenure reform is being addressed through a
review of present land policy, administration and
legislation to improve the tenure security of all
South Africans and to accommodate diverse forms
of land tenure, including types of communal
tenure (ownership).
4Restitution (Commission)
- Constitution Act 108 of 1996 Ch 2 s25 (6-9)
- Restitution Act 22 of 1994 as amended
- Dispossession after 19 June 1913
- Claim lodged by 31 December 1998
- Racially discriminatory laws and practices
- Just and equitable redress
- Urban and rural claimants
- Land owners, tenants, Users, beneficial
occupations
5OUTLINE OF THE RESTITUTION CLAIMS PROCESS
6OUTLINE OF THE RESTITUTION CLAIMS PROCESS (Cont)
7CLAIMS SETTLED as at 31 March 2004 CUMMULATIVE
up to 31/03/04 By Province
8Settled Claims (Provincial Stats) Cumulative
1995 to date(Finance)
9RURAL /URBAN CLAIMS SETTLED
10RESOURCING OF THE COMMISSION
11RESOURCING OF THE COMMISSION
12CLAIMS SETTLED TO DATE
13CLAIMS SETTLED TO DATE
14EXAMPLES OF RURAL CLAIMS SETTLED
- Guba, near Queenstown, involving 357 households,
6531 hectares of agricultural land. - Tshatshu, near Kingwilliamstown involving 213
hectares and 189 households. - Thaba Patchoa in the Free State, with 1550
hectares of agricultural land for 53 households
as well an additional 650 hectares for the former
sharecroppers. - Bucklands in the Northern Cape, involving 21
farms for 380 claimants households.
15EXAMPLES OF RURAL CLAIMS SETTLED
- Monamaladi in North West province, involving 60
hectares as well as an additional 100 hectares
for the Nkainkela Community of 20 families. - Tigerkloof Educational Institution in North West
measuring 1189 hectares. - KwaBhanye in KwaZulu Natal (KZN) measuring 3000
hectares involving 855 households.
16EXAMPLES OF RURAL CLAIMS SETTLED
- Hlaza in the North West of KZN measuring 1020
hectares for 150 families. - Nkaseni in Mtshezi Local Municipality measuring
11457 hectares for 1050 households. - Rooipan in Limpopo involving 1484 hectares of
agricultural land for 160 households. - Marobala O Itsose involving 10 000 hectares
for 1500 beneficiaries.
17EXAMPLES OF RURAL CLAIMS SETTLED
- Baphalane Ba Mantserre in Limpopo involving
1884,3704 hectares for 500 households. - Bjatladi (Zebediela) in Limpopo involving 5973
hectares for 250 households. - Mdluli claim in Mpumalanga involving 6046.322
hectares and 500 (850 current occupiers)
households. - Giba in Hazyview, involving 1942 hectares and 500
households.
18EXAMPLES OF LAND CLAIMS SETTLED THROUGH LAND
CLAIMS COURT
- Land Claims Court Cases Restitution of Land
Rights Act, No 22 of 1994 - 2003
- (Cases Settled by the Land Claims Court as well
as Supreme Court of Appeal - Richtersveld Community and others v Alexkor and
another. - Restitution of Land Rights Act No 22 of 1994.
Richtersveld Community entitled to restitution of
customary law interest in land. - The claimants have lost their right in land and
mineral rights and therefore took the matter to
Court by way of direct access procedure as
prescribed in the Restitution of Land Rights Act
22 of 1994.
19EXAMPLES OF LAND CLAIMS SETTLED THROUGH LAND
CLAIMS COURT(Continues)
- Richtersveld Community and others v Alexkor and
another. - The Constitutional Court confirmed the Supreme
Court of appeal finding, in ruling that the
communitys rights survived annexation by the
British Crown in 1847, that the community had a
right in land at 1913, and further that the
community was dispossessed of the land through
rationally discriminatory laws or practices.
20EXAMPLES OF LAND CLAIMS SETTLED THROUGH LAND
CLAIMS COURT(Continues)
- Keppler and others v the Department of Land
Affairs - The Court ordered that compensation of R43 300-00
be awarded to Nora Keppler in respect of the
dispossession of Lot 87, The Highlands. This
claim forms part of the larger Highlands Claim.
21EXAMPLES OF LAND CLAIMS SETTLED THROUGH LAND
CLAIMS COURT(Continues)
- Baphiring Community v Uys and others
- A group of some 383 persons who describe
themselves as the Baphiring Community brought a
restitution claim directly to the Land Claims
Court under Chapter III A of the Restitution of
Land Rights Act.
22EXAMPLES OF LAND CLAIMS SETTLED THROUGH LAND
CLAIMS COURT(Continues)
- Baphiring Community v Uys and others(continues)
- The group claimed and order restoring the common
law title of certain land commonly known as the
old Mabaalstad, to a communal property
association. There were 22 defendants in this
case, mostly the present owners of the land
claimed, who resisted the claim.
23EXAMPLES OF LAND CLAIMS SETTLED THROUGH LAND
CLAIMS COURT(Continues)
- Baphiring Community v Uys and others(continues)
- In January 2002 the Land Claims Court ruled that
the Baphiring Community had the necessary locus
standi to bring this claim, and that their claim
met the requirements of Section 2 of the
Restitution Land Rights Act. By agreement
between the parties the Court now had to consider
the issue of just and equitable compensation.
The Court held that the compensatory land and the
cash payment the Community received at time of
dispossession, fell far short of being just and
equitable, and as a result the Community did not
receive just and equitable compensation within
the meaning of Section 2(2) of the Restitution of
Land Rights Act 22 of 1994. - The feasibility of the restoration of land is
still ongoing in the Land Claims Court
24EXAMPLES OF LAND CLAIMS SETTLED THROUGH LAND
CLAIMS COURT(Continues)
- The Khosis Community at Lohatla, The Gatlhose
Community, The Maremane Community vs. The
Minister of Defence and others - The matter was taken to the Land Claims Court to
request that the subject land be restored. The
subject land is situated on a battlefield and
claimants would be endangered in the subject land
were restored to them. The Court found that it
is in public interest that the land on which the
Battle School is situated is not restored to any
claimants.
25FUNDING OF COMMISSION
26CHALLLENGES FOR COMMISSION
- Whilst we have increased the number of claims
settled the processing of rural claims remains
the highest challenge. It takes approximately
two years to finalise a typical rural claim.
Challenges encountered in processing rural claims
include the following- - Most of the land in homeland areas is
unregistered and unsurveyed, which makes deeds
and archival research even more difficult.
27CHALLLENGES FOR COMMISSION
- Time delays in producing identity documents,
birth/death certificates, marriage certificates,
and affidavits, documenting oral evidence and
construction of family trees. - Family and Community (e.g. boundary) disputes
take longer to resolve. It often takes time to
reach an agreement on the manner in which the
claim is to be settled.
28CHALLLENGES FOR COMMISSION
- Claimants are dispersed far and wide, following
the forced removals, it takes an effort and
number of meetings to get claimants together for
community resolutions. We have a number of cases
where those absent reject the decisions made
during their absence. - The exorbitant land prices, particularly of
commercial agricultural farms, game farms, golf
estates and forestry land. The purchase of land
by foreigners has also contributed to increased
land price, thus serious distortion of our land
market
29CHALLLENGES FOR COMMISSION
- Claimants do not want any other land but the
specific land from which they were removed, on
which lies the bones of our forefathers. - Some current landowners are opposed to
restitution and consequently they drag the
process to protracted negotiations.
30CHALLLENGES FOR COMMISSION
- The integrated development approach to
restitution requires a further injection of
capital to ensure sustainable settlement. The
restitution budget for 2004/ 5 has been increased
to R939 million. We however need not less than
R200 million for 2004/5 to enable restitution
beneficiaries to make optimal use of the restored
land, which is in line with the provision of
section 42C of the Restitution Act.
31CHALLLENGES FOR COMMISSION
- The Commission has a staff compliment of 390 out
of 511 funded post. We have witnessed a high
staff turnover recently and this is linked to the
fact that our staff have five year contracts
ending December 2005. We need a staff complement
of 724 to be able to meet the Presidential
directive of 2005.
32FINANCIAL COMPENSATION CHALLLENGES
- There are however a number of challenges related
to financial compensation and these include the
following- - Non disclosure by claimants which may lead to the
exclusion of the rightful descendants and which
in turn leads to family disputes. - Inadequate/conflicting claimants personal
details, which delays payment.
33FINANCIAL COMPENSATION CHALLLENGES
- The value of money depreciates whilst the value
of land appreciates. - Some of the claimants are using the money in
non-value adding activities, which does very
little.
34CONCLUSION
- Indeed the tide has turned, giving land back to
the people. - Our land reform programme is guided by the rule
of law.The steps followed in the restitution
process are necessary to ensure equity, fairness,
justice,restoration of dignity, reconciliation as
well as economic growth and development.
35CONCLUSION
- In this process we have learned a number of
lessons including- - Land restoration is the best option as it
addressed the skewed land ownership. - Financial compensation is a response to poverty
but it has many related problems and thus should
be discouraged.
36CONCLUSION
- People opting for land restoration should be
given support (development planning and
facilitation). - Agricultural land demands dedicated technical
support including skills development, funding and
management.
37CONCLUSION
- Integrated development approach to land reform is
critical, commitment from Provincial Governments
and Municipalities is a must. - We have challenges which are surmountable if
co-operative governance is observed by all.
Rural claims are proving to be quite difficult
and time consuming to process.
38CONCLUSION
- The Private Sector, especially commercial farmers
have a critical role to play in supporting our
land reform programme. - We need both financial and human resources to
speed up the processing of the remaining claims.
Our current budget is R1.2 billion a year to
settle prioritized claims.
39CONCLUSION
- We need a further R200million for development
planning and facilitation. - Generally our performance in restitution has a
faster pace compared to other countries such as
Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Germany - I thank you