The expropriation without compensation concerto reaches a climax as we enter the final movement

by | Apr 22, 2021 | General | 0 comments

Opinionista • Paul Hoffman • 20 April 2021

The official announcement of the public participation process in respect of the introduction of expropriation without compensation into the constitutional order has been published. But, to pass in Parliament, it needs a three-quarters majority, which is pie in the sky for the governing party.

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In the official announcement, land expropriation committee chairperson Dr Mathole Motshekga said this clears the way for the committee to start engaging and deliberating on the “wording and format” of the 18th Constitutional Amendment Bill. He continued:

“With the report being adopted, the real work of what should be contained in the bill and the way it is formulated starts now. From the outset, all members of the committee departed from the premise that our parliamentary system is a representative and participatory system, and that public representatives do not have the monopoly of wisdom and must therefore involve the public in all legislative processes. This means public participation is a constitutional imperative. In its work, the committee was guided by the Constitutional Court decisions and the rules of Parliament.”

There is an aspect of the expropriation without compensation (EWC) debate that is ignored at the peril of the parliamentary process. Changing the Constitution to include EWC involves an amendment not only of Section 25 of the Bill of Rights, which requires a two-thirds majority vote, but also a change in the rule of law, which requires a more substantial 75% majority. It is impossible, legally speaking, to detract so radically from the property rights protected by the rule of law (which is regarded as “supreme” in the Constitution) without the 75% majority vote, which currently is unattainable given the balance of forces in the National Assembly and the 57% majority to which the governing alliance has been reduced.

When EWC was first raised at Nasrec in 2017 in the form of a resolution of the ANC conference held there, the EFF was quick to jump on the bandwagon, but no other political party of any substance and size in Parliament has joined the call for EWC.

At the time, Accountability Now entered the debate around the notion and warned those in Parliament of the gravity of the task at hand. Now that the noise around EWC is reaching its climax, the opening bars of the concerto are worth revisiting. We see no need to alter one word of what we said on the topic in August 2018, so here it is, without alteration:

It is time to take off the gloves and get to grips with the inwardness of the debate, the parliamentary process and the announcement by the president of the ANC regarding the proposed amendment of section 25 of the Constitution, the property clause.

The very notion of “expropriation without compensation” or EWC is problematic. Confiscation or nationalisation of land is what the protagonists have in mind. The EWC sugar-coating is fooling no one.

The EFF, which has done all the early running in the matter, actually envisages the nationalisation of all land in the country.

The EFF was able to get the National Assembly to refer the issue and its desired amendment of the provisions of section 25 of the Bill of Rights, the property clause, to the Constitutional Review Committee for consideration. Roughly two-thirds of the members present voted for the motion after it was amended at the instance of the ANC. The DA, Cope, FF+ and the ACDP voted against the motion. The actual votes cast were 241 for and 83 against the motion.

Julius Malema, commander-in-chief of the EFF explained the EFF’s rationale for the move:

“Every land (sic) in South Africa should be expropriated without compensation and it will be under the state. The state should be the custodian of the land.”

The EFF’s idea is to transfer all land in South Africa to the state for the benefit of “our people”, whoever they may be. Private ownership of land would accordingly abruptly end upon the implementation of this form of expropriation.

The ANC has a more nuanced approach, as announced by its president, unusually so, on public television on Tuesday, 31 July 2018. It sees private ownership of land as continuing after amendment of the property clause in the Constitution to better reflect the circumstances in which confiscation of land is allowed. It seems that white-owned land is targeted. It remains to be seen how this aim can ever be the subject matter of a “law of general application”, as it must be.

The (now late) Zulu king has been assured that black-owned land and the vast lands he holds in trust for his people are not the target of the ANC’s version of the constitutional amendment being sought through the process currently unfolding. It is clear that confiscation of land owned by “whites” in our non-racial democracy is the target which the ANC has in its crosshairs, while all land is the target of the EFF. All the other major parties see no need to amend the Constitution, a position that the ANC has flirted with but has now abandoned, apparently for the sake of electoral political expediency. How the amendment the ANC has in mind can avoid the proscription of measures that amount to unfair discrimination as contained in section 9 of the Bill of Rights has not been explained or even mentioned.

The Constitutional Review Committee is enjoined to look into amending section 25 and any other provisions of the Constitution that may be implicated in the scheme of the resolution taken by Parliament. The announcement by the president of the ANC rather anticipates the outcome of the parliamentary process in a manner that is questionable given the attachment of the Constitutional Court to meaningful public participation in the law-making process. The government learnt this to its cost in the Doctors for Life and Matatiele Municipality cases. If the EFF holds out for nationalisation of all land, the opposition holds steady to its position and the matter is put to the vote in the currently constituted Parliament, the ANC will lose whether it is a 75% majority that is required or, as is less likely in law, a 66.6% majority.

Most observers seem to think that a two-thirds majority will suffice and that the EFF will abandon its nationalisation pipe dream and fall in line with the confiscation of “white”-owned land that the ANC is currently punting. Whether this is even feasible in law will depend on the wording of the amendment. It seems unavoidable that the respect for property rights, which is a cornerstone of the rule of law, will be implicated in any effective amendment, and if this is what emerges, then an unattainable 75% majority will be needed by the ANC and whomsoever is prepared to be its fellow traveller.

It is prudent to draw the attention of the committee to a provision of the Constitution that is implicated in the move as it has to prepare a report-back and conduct a public participation process before the end of August 2018.

The secretary of the parliamentary committee has confirmed that the first submission made to the committee was that of Accountability Now on 28 February 2018, shortly after the parliamentary motion was passed. As far as can be established, no participant in the public participation process has cavilled at the position taken up by Accountability Now in relation to the type of majority required to dilute respect for the property rights of those who stand to have their property confiscated.

Here follows the reasoning put forward for the consideration of Parliament by Accountability Now at the very outset of the public participation process:

“It is prudent to draw the attention of the committee to a provision of the Constitution that is implicated in the move as it has to prepare a report-back and conduct a public participation process before the end of August 2018.

Section 74(1) of the Constitution is not often referred to in the daily lives of South Africans. In essence, it provides that the foundational values of the new order cannot be amended unless the proposed amendment enjoys the support of 75% of the National Assembly and six of the provinces in the National Council of Provinces.

The calculatedly opaque or somewhat vague resolution of the ANC at Nasrec to support expropriation without compensation is going to bring the foundational values of the Constitution into sharp focus in the deliberations around the legality and wisdom of giving legislative effect to the ANC’s resolution. This attention to section 74(1) is because the rule of law is a foundational value.

It is a primary element of the rule of law that the system in place in any given constitutional democracy should include respect for property rights. The South African Constitution regards the rule of law as “supreme”. The National Accord, which preceded the adoption of the Constitution, was premised upon upholding the rule of law, not “rule by law” which is what was in place under apartheid. Respecting the rule of law is the right way in which to aspire to a society in which the inherent human dignity of all is respected, the achievement of equality is promoted and guaranteed human rights are enjoyed by all.

The rule of law is regarded as sacrosanct in our constitutional dispensation. This high status is also compliant with the internationally accepted definition of the rule of law which the World Justice Project has devised and refined as the basis for its most useful “Rule of Law Index”. In the definition of the rule of law the following words appear:

“The laws are clear, publicised, stable, and just; are applied evenly; and protect fundamental rights, including the security of persons and property.”

In short, security of property rights is a basic tenet of the rule of law everywhere on the planet where the rule of law holds sway.

One of the really hard-fought sections in the Bill of Rights is the “property clause” – section 25. It is also the second-longest section of the Bill of Rights (after the part so beloved of, and well used by, Jacob Zuma, which deals with the rights of arrested, detained and accused persons).

Section 25 is not well understood and has not been put to optimal use in the striving for a better life for all in the new South Africa. A misconception that it envisages the “willing buyer, willing seller” policy that the ANC formerly put in place has wide currency.

This interpretation is simply not correct.

Resort to the wording of the section, a salutary approach, reveals the real deal that was made at the birth of the new South Africa and one searches in vain for the words “willing buyer and willing seller”:

  • No one may be deprived of property except in terms of law of general application, and no law may permit arbitrary deprivation of property;
  • Property may be expropriated only in terms of law of general application – for a public purpose or in the public interest; and subject to compensation, the amount of which and the time and manner of payment of which have either been agreed to by those affected or decided or approved by a court;
  • The amount of the compensation and the time and manner of payment must be just and equitable, reflecting an equitable balance between the public interest and the interests of those affected, having regard to all relevant circumstances, including: the current use of the property; the history of the acquisition and use of the property; the market value of the property; the extent of direct state investment and subsidy in the acquisition and beneficial capital improvement of the property; and the purpose of the expropriation;
  • For the purposes of this section: the public interest includes the nation’s commitment to land reform, and to reforms to bring about equitable access to all South Africa’s natural resources; and property is not limited to land; and
  • The state must take reasonable legislative and other measures, within its available resources, to foster conditions which enable citizens to gain access to land on an equitable basis.

It can been seen from any fair reading of the text that a delicate balance was devised, one in which the interests of the dispossessed masses and the minority dispossessors are catered for so that “equitable access to all South Africa’s natural resources”, not just land, can be achieved.

This approach is unexceptionable; properly implemented it would preserve the fealty of the country to the rule of law and would also address the longing for ownership of land that some of the poor majority still have, despite the rapid urbanisation of the country and the willingness of an increasing number of citizens to make do with life in the cities, where land, lots of land, is not the issue as much as adequate access to housing is. The EFF certainly does not envisage ownership of the land being transferred to the dispossessed, as can be seen from the words of its leader quoted above.

It is conceivable, under the existing approach, that no compensation need be paid in circumstances in which it is not just and equitable to do so. For instance: a flourishing model farm (not called Estina) was stolen by colonialists and reduced to rubble and dirt by vandalism, mismanagement and overgrazing. Upon expropriation of the thieves and receipt of evidence proving the radical diminution in value of the farm and the destruction of its infrastructure, any reasonable court would be hard-pressed to award compensation.

Why, at its Nasrec conference, did the ANC completely change its stance and why has it now plumped for EWC? The change of heart is obviously attributable to the fear that as an election issue, EWC, a populist call if ever there was one, would secure increased support for the EFF and perhaps even bring about a post-2019 election hung Parliament in which the red berets would hold the balance of power and become the kingmakers.

The difficulties are many and varied. From a technical perspective any normal amendment to the Bill of Rights requires a two-thirds majority, while an amendment to the core values of the Constitution requires a 75% majority. This majority would involve increasing the 241 votes in favour of the EFF’s amended motion to 300. Conversely, if the opposition can muster 101 votes EWC will not succeed as a legislated option.

South Africa without EWC has every prospect of cleaning up its act, clearing out the corrupt in high places, boosting the confidence of investors both local and foreign, and putting the flop that the Zuma years have been behind it.

The rule of law is one of our constitutional core values and respect for and security of property rights is an essential element of the rule of law. It is certainly arguable that changing the existing and long-standing system of private ownership of land into a system of “state custodianship” of land would undermine the rule of law in the sense that respect for the existing property rights would end.

These considerations imply that unless the new post-Zuma ANC/EFF alliance finds a way to get the camel through the eye of the needle, it may find itself on the receiving end of constitutional challenges that impugn any but the most carefully worded amendment of section 25 of the Bill of Rights. Business Unity South Africa, AfriForum, Agri-SA and several of the opposition parties in Parliament are already sharpening their knives for the challenges ahead.

From an economic perspective EWC is sheer leftist lunacy. Ask any Zimbabwean, even the new president. Especially the new president. Under Mugabe’s not dissimilar land policy Zimbabwe declined from being the bread basket of Africa to being one of its worst basket cases. The economy tanked, the value of the currency became so ludicrously weak that it was abandoned. The middle class fled and the poor lost their jobs in droves. Today a subsistence economy prevails in Zimbabwe and its new leaders yearn to open it for business.

Will the ANC learn from or copy the mistakes made by Zanu-PF and other liberation movements in Africa whose popularity at the polls wanes? Zambia went through the doldrums as a one-party state and has matured into a multiparty constitutional democracy under the rule of law.

South Africa is already in the shape and form of governance that is able to attract foreign investment and to encourage local investment. Tinkering with section 25 could upset this felicitous state of affairs to the detriment of the poor, more so than to those whose property is expropriated or nationalised. Already there is an “investment strike” in South Africa, one which sees about R1.5-trillion washing around on local balance sheets in cash or near-cash form.

The necessary trust in government that builds the confidence to invest these huge amounts cannot be built on the rocky foundation of EWC, indeed, as the ANC has acknowledged, food security, sustainable farming and the health of the economy will all have to be taken into account if the EWC amendment is not going to bring about a Zimbabwean type of outcome. And, in a sense, as a largely agricultural economy, Zimbabwe is more resilient than South Africa in times of economic hardship because the poor are not urban dwellers and are able to subsist on maize, eggs and the odd chicken in the lean years. In contradistinction, a flight of capital induced by EWC will leave the urban poor in South Africa up the creek without a paddle, a job and even food. Subsistence farming is not an option for them; revolution of a kind not covered by the National Democratic Revolution is a likely outcome.

When the NEC of the ANC has done its homework, has listened to the submissions made in the public participation process and has been given proper legal advice, it is likely to come to the conclusion that the best interests of the country are served by the retention of the status quo and that expropriation with compensation is more likely to render the economic development of South Africa sustainable than EWC ever will.

The introduction of EWC would hole the Land Bank below its waterline. Farmers who offer their farms as collateral security to lenders will be unable to do so and will have to seek greener pastures elsewhere. Many, in anticipation of EWC and for other reasons, have already done so.

If the ANC ends up putting its own interests above those of the country, then EWC will be used to win votes in 2019 (note to readers: this is all part of the 2018 Accountability Now submission). Whether this stratagem will be sufficient to save the ANC from electoral defeat remains to be seen. What can be predicted is that South Africa, with EWC, will descend into failed statehood, another African kleptocracy in which those dreams deferred in the constitutional settlement of 1994 become the nightmares of uhuru in the all-too-near future.

South Africa without EWC has every prospect of cleaning up its act, clearing out the corrupt in high places, boosting the confidence of investors both local and foreign, and putting the flop that the Zuma years have been behind it.

Everyone who cares for the future of the country is encouraged to lobby the Constitutional Review Committee not to follow through with the idea of EWC or the nationalisation of land and state custodianship. These notions undermine the rule of law, they are contrary to the spirit of the Constitution and will cause an economic disaster of the kind we have already experienced indirectly through the presence of many in the Zimbabwean diaspora who have left the land they love to settle in South Africa.

Clear and dispassionate thought applied to the notion of EWC leads to its rejection as a viable policy option. DM

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