14 March 2001
SOUTH AFRICA: Land restitution continues
South African farmers have
vowed protests after the government issued its first expropriation order this
week against a white farmer reluctant to give his land back to the original
black owners, South African news reports said on March 14. According to a
government notice, Willem Pretorius' Boomplaats Farm will legally belong to the
State as of 20 March after which it will be given to a dispossessed community.
The conservative Transvaal Agricultural Union (TAU) was quoted as
saying that farmers were infuriated by the expropriation, and accused the
government of stealing land. "The monstrous way in which land is taken from
whites and given to others, is blatant discrimination and racism and is
precisely what [Zimbabwean President Robert] Mugabe has done in Zimbabwe - only
in a concealed form," said TAU president Gert Ehlers in a statement. "TAU
confirms its support of Willem Pretorius and will as far as possible (help)
resist this process of land theft," the statement said. The Commission
on Restitution of Land Rights served the expropriation papers on Pretorius, who
for eight months resisted the State's offer to buy the farm for US $107,479 for
the Dinkwanyane community. Pretorius, who bought the land with a soft loan,
wants US $255,903. "I'm going to fight by all means until I get what my farm is
worth," Pretorius was quoted as saying shortly after signing the papers. "I
can't do anything with the [government's offer] because it can't replace what
I've got." Pretorius has eight months in which to appeal the
expropriation in the Land Claims Court. He had farmed the 1,270 hectares of
maize and grazing land since 1982 and would be allowed to continue living on
the farm until 20 May, after which he must find alternative accommodation, the
report said. The farm was claimed by the Dinkwanyane community, which was
forcibly removed from the land by the apartheid government in 1957.
(IRIN)
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