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Land affairs
Editor, Cape Times
August 01, 2005

http://www.capetimes.co.za/index.php?fSectionId=330&fArticleId=2787040

Two of the many perspectives at the land summit in Johannesburg over the past five days will be of particular pertinence to the government as it shapes its policies.

The first will be the need for concrete progress in altering the country's vastly skewed land ownership patterns. Zimbabwe's Professor Sam Moyo warned the conference that people tended to take the law into their own hands if the required redress was too slow in coming.

Second, and seemingly contradictory, is the need to take a holistic approach - not just throw land at people who might not have the skills or financial clout to get any benefit out of it.

Land Bank general manager George Oricho pointed to some of the many challenges confronting successful land reform: high interest rates, lack of title deeds, no collateral, lack of training, and inadequate financial innovation.

Talk of adjustments to the "willing seller, willing buyer" principle are driven by the first perspective. It is evident that the pace of land reform has not been served by this principle, with government far from meeting the targets it has set itself.

Those targets might be somewhat ambitious: redistribution of 30% of white-owned agricultural land into black hands by 2014. And striving for them may unintentionally result in the need for a holistic approach being undermined. The consequences could be disastrous both for the reform programme and for the economy generally.

Government appears to be alive to these potential dangers. Land affairs director-general Glen Thomas said: "A process will be put in place to look at (these) matters because they require deeper consultation both inside and outside of parliament, because of the dire consequences that will result if we don't apply our minds sufficiently to them."

South Africans generally can but hope that Thomas's approach wins the day against those who would seek a quick fix to what is an emotionally-charged but very real problem.

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