APRIL 2016
PLJ
PEOPLE’S LAW JOURNAL
RURAL LAND
JUSTiCE
PLJ
i
PEOPLE’S LAW JOURNAL
RURAL LAND JUSTICE
Land and Accountability
Research Centre (LARC)
Funeka Miriam Mateza of Cala, Eastern Cape participates in a public
hearing on the repeal of the Black Authorities Act, July 2010.
— formerly the Rural Women’s Action
Research Programme (RWAR) at the
Centre for Law and Society
CONTENTS
Written by the Land & Accountability Research Centre
Faculty of Law
All Africa House
University of Cape Town
Private Bag X3
Rondebosch 7701
Cape Town
South Africa
Introduction: The Struggle for Land Rights in South Africa
1
Customary Law: Some Introductory Thoughts
5
Patriarchs and Pariahs: The Geography of Traditional Leadership
11
Overturning Dispossession: Land Restitution in the Post-Apartheid Era
16
Tel: +27 27 650 3360
Fax: +27 21 650 3095
Empty Promises? Big Talk as Funds for Land Reform Diminish
21
Authors and contributors: Aninka Claassens, Michael Clark, Alide
Dasnois, Monica de Souza, hiyane Duda, Daniel Huizenga, huto hipe,
Tara Weinberg, and Zackie Achmat.
The Politics of Recapitalisation: How Land Redistribution Funds are Being Diverted to Elites
27
Special thanks to the generous contributions of LARC’s funders:
Atlantic Philanthropies, Claude Leon Foundation, Heinrich Böll
Foundation, Millennium Trust, and the RAITH Foundation.
A Luta Continua: New Laws are a Setback for Rural Women
35
“Cleansing of the Statute Book”: Customary Law, Inheritance and the Right to Equality
41
Centralisation without Consent: Rural Communal Land Rights under Threat
47
To the Heart of Land Reform: The Bakgatla ba Kgafela CPA at the Constitutional Court
55
Mining Law: Know the Law, Know Your Rights
60
“They are Robbing Us”: How Mining is Affecting the Residents of Makhasaneni
62
Protecting the Land Rights of Rural People: Is the IPILRA the Answer?
69
Edited and published by Ndifuna Ukwazi
Oice 302, 47 on Strand
Strand Street
Cape Town
Tel: +27 21 423 3089
Fax: +27 21 423 7554
Email: contact@nu.org.za
NU funders:
Ford Foundation, RAITH Foundation, Hivos, Open Society Foundation,
Millennium Trust, Wallace Foundation, South African Development Fund,
International Budget Partnership
Printed by Creda
Design & layout by Chloë Swingewood
he views expressed in this guide are those of the authors and do not
necessarily relect those of the aforementioned funders.
INTRODUCTION
he Struggle for Land Rights in South Africa
F
rom the arrival of Dutch
settlers in the Cape
right through to the fall
of apartheid, the expansion of
colonial power in South Africa
was epitomised by the growth of
white-controlled territory and
the corresponding loss of land by
Africans. A range of treaties and
laws cemented these relations,
and over time radically restricted
African people’s land ownership –
eventually shrinking this to just
13% of the total land in South
Africa (under the 1913 Natives
Land Act and later the 1936 Native
Trust and Land Act).
The term ‘Bantustans’ was first
used in the 1940s, and before long
it came to denote the homelands
set aside by the apartheid
government for black ethnic
groups both in South Africa and
South West Africa. These regions
were specifically designated for
black people living under ‘tribal’
leadership, and were treated
differently from the rest of the
country. Through this project of
fragmentation, the government
sought to strip black people of their
South African citizenship and, by
extension, many of their rights.
The opening lines of the
1993 Interim Constitution reincorporated the homelands
into a unified South Africa. It
ensured a system of elected local
government, replacing ‘tribal’
governance within the former
Bantustans. In section 25(6) of the
1996 Constitution, equality with
respect to land rights was affirmed
with the words:
“A person or community
whose tenure of land is legally
insecure as a result of past
racially discriminatory laws
or practices is entitled, to the
extent provided by an Act of
Parliament, either to tenure
which is legally secure or to
comparable redress.”1
And yet, more than 20 years
on, and notwithstanding the
government’s plans for land
restitution, the realisation of
this constitutional ideal remains
elusive in many rural areas, and
especially for those who live in the
former homelands. Several nongovernmental and communitybased organisations have
expressed concern that current
and proposed legislation either
weakens or has the potential to
1 Section 25(6) goes hand-in-hand with section 25(9),
which compels Parliament to enact the prescribed
legislation.
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1
In troductIon
In troductIon
weaken the security of land tenure
of these rural communities.
Given the importance of
land rights in any equal and
just society, this volume of the
People’s Law Journal (PLJ) focuses
on South Africa’s historically
marginalised peoples, with
particular emphasis on their (lack
of ) access and rights to land. A
number of articles examine the
extent to which post-apartheid
laws have addressed the legacy of
past administrations, while some
reveal the ongoing challenges
confronting the residents of the
former homelands today.
We begin with an introductory
chapter on South African
customary law, in which it is argued
that such a legal system should
be interpreted by the judiciary
as ‘living’ (and not codified).
The second section then reveals
how South Africa’s democratic
government has come to rely on
the homeland boundaries, set
down by the 1951 Black Authorities
Act, in its administrative mapping
of traditional leaderships.
Through an analysis of the
Restitution of Land Rights Act –
which was passed in 1994 to
address the grievances of people
previously dispossessed of land
whether by forced removals or
other discriminatory practices –
the issue of land restitution in
the former homelands is then
brought to the fore in Chapter 3,
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with reference to the experiences
of many residents who have taken
part in this drawn-out process.
Chapters 4-6 focus on
questions of finance, examining
the limitations of restitution
rights, budget allocations, and the
broader financial implications
of land reform for government.
Chapter 7 analyses South African
land reform from the perspective
of rural women, with a focus on
the ways in which women have
navigated and negotiated the
terms on which they have accessed
land for themselves and their
families. What follows is then
an analysis of Bhe and Others v
Khayelitsha Magistrate and Others,
a case involving customary law
and land rights which reached the
Constitutional Court in 2004.
Chapter 8 examines the status
of communal land in South
African law, drawing attention to
the types of rights that individuals
and groups can claim, and how
land in communal areas is
allocated. A second landmark
case, heard at the ConCourt in
2015, is then examined. It involved
the Bakgatla ba Kgafela Communal
Property Association’s capacity to
hold platinum-rich land on behalf
of restitution beneficiaries in the
North West Province.
The next two sections relate
specifically to mining law –
Chapter 10 provides an overview
of the land rights of people living
in mining areas; and, through
a case study of Makhaseni in
KwaZulu-Natal, Chapter 11
illustrates how mining companies
and traditional authorities have
ignored people’s individual and
collective land rights by failing to
consult with them properly.
This volume of the PLJ
concludes with a chapter on the
Interim Protection of Informal
Land Rights Act (IPILRA) which,
passed in 1996, seeks to provide
tenure security to people with
informal land rights. Debates in
recent years have highlighted
contradictions in understandings
of who owns the land in traditional
council areas, giving rise to
insecurity and vulnerability among
residents. This article therefore
offers suggestions as to how this
situation can be improved.
In closing, it is important to
acknowledge the authors of this
publication. At the University of
Cape Town, researchers based
at the Land and Accountability
Research Centre (LARC) –
formerly the Centre for Law and
Society (CLS)’s Rural Women’s
Action Research Programme
(RWAR) – worked in collaboration
with colleagues and activists from
partner organisations. Unless
otherwise specified, each article
in this edition was authored by
the LARC team rather than by any
individual researcher.
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3
CUSTOMARY
LAW
Some Introductory houghts
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customary Law
customary Law
“Rural people are facing
critical times when all
people are free … Facing
a chain of taxation,
being in the position
of losing rights of land
without compensation,
put on the street as wild
animals, treated not as
South Africans, forced
with custom which
comes from apartheid
boundaries, women
are not encouraged to
participate in all matters
freely.”
Melmoth Black Farmers Association,
KwaZulu-Natal (2014)
A consultation between the Mohlohlo farming community and its lawyers, Richard Spoor and Steven Goldblatt, to
discuss attempts by the Anglo-American Corporation to make room for a platinum mine by forcing them off their
land, Mokopane, Limpopo, 2006 (David Goldblatt).
W
hat is customary law?
How is the content
of customary law
determined? Since 1994, the
Constitutional Court has dealt
with several important questions
related to customary law – in cases
regarding land, marriage, divorce,
inheritance, leadership, and
political association. Judgments
on these cases provide insight
into how living customary law is
developing in the Court and how
its evolving content is understood
and applied in relation to rural
land rights.
According to the ConCourt,
customary law must be
understood as ‘living’ – in other
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words, it is law derived from the
actual practices, principles and
negotiations that people use and
engage with in their everyday lives.
‘Living’ customary law is defined
in contrast to an understanding
of customary law that is
‘codified’ (written down) and
thereby strictly defined. Such an
interpretation reflects the Court’s
desire to protect constitutionalism
and democratic process in
customary law.
Several ConCourt judgments,
two of which are discussed
below and another on page 41,
open up opportunities and
spaces, sometimes unexpectedly,
for ordinary people to assert
Customary law of
succession: The
Shilubana case
S
hilubana v Nwamitwa, a
case decided in 2008, arose
from a decision made by the
Valoyi royal family of the Limpopo
region to award the chieftainship
to Tinyiko Shilubana, the daughter
of the previous chief, Fofoza.
As Fofoza had fathered only
daughters, when he died in 1968
the chieftainship had passed
to his younger brother, Richard
Nwamitwa. When the latter died
in 2001, the community resolved
to appoint Ms Shilubana as hosi
(chief).
In its resolution, the community
noted that although “in the past it
was not permissible by the Valoyis
that a female child be heir, in terms
of democracy and the new Republic
of South African Constitution it is
now permissible … since she is also
equal to a male child.”
The Premier of Limpopo
Province Ngoako Ramathlodi duly
appointed Tinyiko as hosi. But
her cousin, Sidwell Nwamitwa,
the son of Richard, challenged
her appointment, saying it was
contrary to customary law. The
Pretoria High Court and later the
Supreme Court of Appeal ruled in
Sidwell’s favour.
However, Shilubana
successfully appealed to the
Constitutional Court, where the
judges found that the Valoyi royal
family did have the authority to
develop its own customary law of
succession, adding that “the free
development by communities of
their own laws to meet the needs
of a rapidly changing society must
be respected and facilitated”
(Shilubana, para 45).
The judgment went on:
“[A] court must consider both
the traditions and the present
practice of the community. If
development happens within the
community, the court must strive
to recognise and give effect to
that development, to the extent
consistent with adequately
upholding the protection of rights”
(Shilubana, para 49).
principles of democracy and
accountability in customary law.
These processes, however, are
rarely straightforward; they have
been (and will continue to be)
contested, even among the judges
themselves. Fortunately, the
ConCourt has been developing
judgments on living customary law
which reflect an understanding of
power relations and politics in the
real world.
Right: Hosi Tinyiko Shilubana was the first woman in
South Africa to legally contest her right to chieftaincy
after the position was assumed by male relatives. Her
position was confirmed in the ConCourt.
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customary Law
customary Law
Right of dissent and
free association in
traditional communities:
The Pilane case
I
CAPTION?
n 2009, members of the
Motlhabe community in the
platinum-rich North West
Province wanted to break away
from the Bakgatla ba Kgafela
traditional community, of
which they were a part, owing to
problems with the chief and the
administration. The provincial
government advised that they
take steps according to the North
West Traditional Leadership
and Governance Act of 2005
and the Traditional Leadership
and Governance Framework Act
of 2003. But before they could
take these steps, their plans
were opposed by the leaders of
the Bakgatla ba Kgafela tribe,
who applied to the North West
High Court to stop the Motlhabe
community from having meetings
about the issue.
The Court granted the
interdict, partly on the grounds
that the Motlhabe leaders –
members of the royal family of
Motlhabe village – had, contrary
to certain legal provisions,
referred to themselves as the
“Motlhabe tribal authority” in
a community notice. The High
Opposite: Community members celebrate the
inauguration of Hosi Tinyiko Shilubana after her
appointment was upheld in the ConCourt.
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Court and the Supreme Court
of Appeal both refused leave to
appeal, but the ConCourt heard
the appeal and upheld it by a
majority of eight judges to two.
The dissenting judges, Chief
Justice Mogoeng and Justice
Nkabinde, suggested that courts
should support and protect
recognised traditional authorities,
and that constitutional rights
should be limited, if necessary, in
order to achieve this. Chief Justice
Mogoeng and Justice Nkabinde
wrote:
“Traditional leadership is a
unique and fragile institution. If
it is to be preserved, it should be
approached with the necessary
understanding and sensitivity.
Courts, Parliament and the
Executive would do well to
treat African customary law,
traditions and institutions not as
an inconvenience to be tolerated
but as a heritage to be nurtured
and preserved for posterity,
particularly in view of the many
years of distortion and abuse
under the apartheid regime.
“Bearing in mind the
need to help these fledgling
institutions to rebuild and
sustain themselves, threats
to traditional leadership and
related institutions should not
be taken lightly. The institution
of traditional leadership must
respond and adapt to change, in
harmony with the Constitution
and the Bill of Rights. But courts
ought not to be dismissive
of these institutions when
they insist on the observance
of traditional governance
protocols and conventions
on the basis of whatever
limitation they might impose on
constitutional rights” (Pilane,
paras 78-79).
The two judges supported the
Bakgatla ba Kgafela claim that
calling a meeting of the Motlhabe
villagers “had the potential of
creating factions and disorder”
which could make the community
“ungovernable”, and noted that
“[d]isorderliness is on the rise
in this country and traditional
communities are no exception”
(Pilane, para 118).
In a judgment written by Justice
Skweyiya, the majority of judges
dismissed this concern:
“I see no reason to believe
that the lawful exercise of the
applicants’ rights would result
in chaos and disorder. Rather,
there is an inherent value in
allowing dissenting voices
to be heard and, in doing so,
permitting robust discussion
which strengthens our
democracy and its institutions”
(Pilane, para 69).
He concluded that it was within
the rights of the Motlhabe
community to meet and that the
law would not tolerate an attempt
to silence criticism or discussion.
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customary Law
In other words, the judges
differed on two questions:
• What is the customary law and
the traditional leadership that
the Constitution says must be
nurtured and preserved?
• Does preserving it mean that
members of the communities
affected do not have the
same rights and freedoms
of association, speech and
assembly as other South
Africans?
The majority found that members
of traditional communities do not
forfeit their constitutional rights
through their membership to
those communities.
The way forward
O
ver recent years there
have been several
legislative efforts to
reverse the democratisation
project and undermine living
customary law. The Traditional
Leadership and Governance
Framework Act (the Framework
Act), the new Traditional and
KhoiSan Leadership Bill (that aims
to repeal the Framework Act),
the Traditional Courts Bill and
recent or promised amendments
to a variety of land laws all show
a desire to put more power in the
hands of traditional authorities
and traditional leaders and to
make them the owners of land and
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assets held under customary law.
The new laws apply only in
the areas set apart by the Bantu
Authorities Act of 1951 – namely,
the tribal jurisdictions that made
up the former Bantustans. This
geography consist of the ‘original
reserves’ established by the 1913
and 1936 Land Acts, in addition
to ‘the dumping grounds’ set
aside for the three and a half
million people who were forcibly
removed from ‘white’ South Africa
during the process of Bantustan
consolidation. The people who
bore the brunt of the Land Acts
and forced removals are therefore
once again being subjected, by law,
and not necessarily by choice, to
imposed tribal identities and allpowerful traditional leaders.
This raises the fundamental
question of whether ‘customary’
law can be imposed on some parts
of the country and not others, or
rather on some South Africans but
not others – without taking into
account the wishes of the people
concerned.
It is one thing to say that, in
general, white South Africans do
not live according to customary
law, and that many black South
Africans do. It is quite another
to reduce customary law to the
power of the chief, to impose it on
everyone living within apartheidera boundaries, and to restrict its
application to 17 million out of 54
million South Africans.
New battles are likely to be
waged over the mineral and land
rights of rural communities, as
we have seen with the platinumrich territories of the North West.
They are likely to concern two
questions: Who is entitled to the
benefits of the mineral rights? And
what is the nature and extent of
the accountability of the leaders
who have control?
We can expect fierce disputes,
since there are significant vested
interests and benefits to be gained
or lost in the mining sector. There
is also widespread disdain for
corruption and the enrichment of
a few at the expense of many.
Given the recent support
the ConCourt has shown for
democratisation processes in
customary law, now is an optimal
moment to bring these issues
before the judges. Only five years
from now, it is likely that mining
rights will have been settled, land
rights will have been lost, and
much of the membership of the
ConCourt will have changed.
PATRIARCHS AND
PARIAHS
he Geography of Traditional Leadership
T
he Bantustans ceased
to exist with the dawn
of democracy in South
Africa. Despite this, laws relating
to traditional leadership and
governance still, for the most part,
apply in the former Bantustans,
or ‘homelands’. This is important
for understanding land rights in
many rural areas because several
laws adopted over the past 12 years
have linked people’s land rights to
traditional leadership.
In this article we explore how,
under democracy, the former
Bantustans came to be the areas
where laws of traditional leadership
still apply. It will focus on the
land-related laws which have been
developed for these areas, while
drawing attention to how these laws
impact the ways people can exercise
their rights to land.
Above: A map depicting the former homelands or
Bantustans - small reserves of rural land designated to
black people in terms of the 1913 and 1936 Land Acts.
The areas where current traditional councils govern
closely mirror these boundaries.
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PatrIarchs and ParIahs
The Bantustans
T
o understand the
significance of laws
applying only to the
former Bantustans, it is important
to understand the history and
purpose of the formation of the
Bantustans, the different ways that
their imposition violated people
and deprived them of their basic
rights, and how the maintenance
of these boundaries continues
to perpetuate particular forms of
violence.
Under apartheid, 7% of the land
in South Africa was allocated to
black people (in accordance with
the Land Act of 1913).
In 1936, the Natives Trust and
Land Act increased this percentage
to 13%. The apartheid government
used this legislation as the basis
for creating ten homelands, each
for a different tribe. The creation
of these homelands was incredibly
violent as hundreds of thousands
of people were forcibly removed
from their homes.
In addition, the Black
Administration Act of 1927 gave
the Governor General of South
Africa the power to create and
divide tribes, as well as to appoint
and dismiss chiefs. In effect, this
enabled the government to call
any group of black people a tribe, to
decide which tribe any individual
belonged to, and to determine
which individual should lead
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PatrIarchs and ParIahs
that tribe. These colonial and
apartheid-era interferences
had a significant impact on the
relationships between chiefs and
the people under their leadership,
as well as how people held chiefs
accountable.
The laws governing
traditional leaders after
apartheid
“Awaking on
Friday morning,
June 20, 1913, the
South African
Native found
himself, not
actually a slave,
but a pariah in the
land of his birth.”
Sol Plaatje (writer, intellectual
and founding General Secretary
of the Native National Congress)
on the Land Act, 1913.
T
he Traditional Leadership
and Governance
Framework Act of
2003 (the Framework Act) was
developed “to restore the integrity
and legitimacy of the institution
of traditional leadership in line
with customary law and practices.”
This law made the chiefs, tribes
and tribal authorities created
before 1994 the new traditional
leaders, traditional communities and
traditional councils, respectively.
Tribal authorities were the
local governance structures in
the Bantustans. Together, their
boundaries made up those of
the Bantustans. By converting
tribal authorities to traditional
councils, the Framework Act
maintained the boundaries of the
Bantustans. Recent laws that deal
Right: Sol Plaatje, seated bottom-right, with other
members of the South African Native National
Congress Deputation which travelled to London
in 1914 in order to challenge the 1913 Land Act
(Historical Papers Research Archive, University of
the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa).
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13
PatrIarchs and ParIahs
PatrIarchs and ParIahs
traditional councils are being
treated as a fourth level of
government that only applies to
traditional council areas. This
is made worse because a large
number of traditional councils are
not democratically elected.
In 2015, the Traditional and
Khoi-San Leadership Bill (which
will replace the Framework Act)
was tabled in Parliament. If this Bill
becomes law, it will retain the same
boundaries for traditional council
areas and strengthen the powers of
traditional leaders in these areas. A
revised version of the Traditional
Courts Bill is also expected in
Parliament later in 2016.
“Gone was the old
give-and-take of tribal
consultation, and in its
place there was now
the autocratic power
bestowed on the more
ambitious Chiefs, who
became arrogant in
the knowledge that
government might
was behind them.”
Govan Mbeki (Rivonia Trialist),
The Peasants’ Revolt (1964).
with traditional councils have
applied to traditional council
areas, meaning that these laws
apply to the former homelands.
Although provisions in many of
the provincial laws, which related
to the Framework Act, allowed for
changes of these boundaries, few
changes have been made.
The Communal Land Rights Act
of 2004 (CLRA) gave traditional
councils the power to administer
communal land and to represent
traditional communities as owners
of the land. This would have
allowed traditional councils
control over the occupation, use
and administration of communal
land. The ConCourt struck down
the CLRA in 2010 (see p. 50).
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Another proposed law – the
Traditional Courts Bill (TCB), first
introduced in 2008 and again in
2012 – would have given traditional
councils more powers. However,
it lapsed in Parliament because
not enough provinces voted in
its favour. The TCB would have
declared that:
• It is a criminal offence not to
appear before a traditional court
once summoned;
• Decisions of a traditional court
have the same force as those of
Magistrates’ Courts;
• Traditional courts can impose
punishments including unpaid
labour; and
• Traditional courts can
revoke people’s customary
rights to land and strip them
of membership of their
community.
In Parliamentary submissions,
many women living within
traditional communities argued
that the TCB would reinforce
patriarchal power especially
because traditional courts are
mostly presided over by men
who have the authority to limit
the extent to which women can
participate.
The Constitution allows for
national, provincial and local
government. Civil-society
organisations have argued that
Above: Govan Mbeki, former leader of the African
National Congress and Rivonia trialist.
hierarchies predetermines
governance structures as well
as the relationship between
traditional leadership institutions
and the people living under this
leadership.
The principles of democracy,
equality, and freedom to
practice one’s culture of choice
should decide the parameters
of traditional governance and
leadership. To imagine African
governance systems as bound to
Bantustan geographical areas is to
merge understandings of African
identity and rights with racist
frameworks established by the
discredited colonial and apartheid
governments.
Citizens or subjects?
T
he Bantustans restricted
millions of black South
Africans to small areas
of land, they imposed traditional
leadership structures in the place
of government bodies that served
‘white South Africa’, and they
treated people as ‘tribal subjects’
rather than citizens.
The continuation of the
artificial boundaries of so-called
traditional areas threatens to
perpetuate many of the founding
values and goals behind the
tribalising of black people through
the Bantustans. In many ways,
this use of old geographical
boundaries and leadership
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15
overt urnIng dIsPossessIon
Law as a Tool of
Dispossession
•
OVERTURNING
DISPOSSESSION
Restitution in the
post-apartheid era
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O
ver the course of the past
400 years, black people
in South Africa have
been repeatedly dispossessed of
their land, rights and livelihoods.
Dispossession arose in many
forms, from colonial wars of
conquest to the economic forces
that pushed the African peasantry
into the wage-labour system on
white-owned farms and mines,
and the laws that were backed
by the might of the colonial and
apartheid governments.
The 1913 Land Act was one of a
series of laws that dispossessed
black people of their land and
rendered their rights to land
insecure. One of the Act’s
intentions was to further sideline
African farmers and labour
tenants and to force black people
into becoming labourers in the
cities or on the mines on terms
set by white owners (Colin
Bundy, The Rise and Fall of the
South African Peasantry, 1979)
Our Constitution recognises that
it is crucial that we roll back the
legacy of land dispossession which
has resulted from colonialism and
apartheid.
The Restitution of Land Rights
Act, passed in 1994, was one of
the laws intended to address the
legacy of dispossession in South
Africa. It opened a window of
five years – between 1994 and
1998 – during which people
could lodge claims for land on
which their ancestors had once
resided. Then, two decades later,
a new Restitution of Land Rights
Amendment Act was passed,
opening a second window from 1
July 2014 until 30 June 2019.
While the restitution programme
Top left: A man leaving Magopa during a forced
removal, 1983 (Paul Weinberg).
•
The 1936 Native Trusts and
Land Act increased the African
reserves slightly (from 7% to
13% of the country). The 1936
Act also established the ‘6 native
rule’, which meant any group of
more than six black people who
had purchased land together
had to constitute themselves
as a tribe under a chief or they
would lose their land. This law
distorted local and customary
land systems in favour of an
undemocratic model that was
easier for the government to
control (Aninka Claassens,
has made some progress, it has
also been riddled with problems.
In particular, the programme
has been very slow to settle and
finalise claims. There remain
30,000 claims which have not
been completely resolved. It is not
surprising, then, that the most vocal
opposition to the Restitution of
Land Rights Amendment Act came
from among the tens of thousands
of dispossessed people who had
waited almost 20 years for their
claims to be settled, their land to be
transferred, or their compensation
to be paid out.
The frustration of these
claimants bubbled over at
public hearings that Parliament
and the Department of Rural
Development and Land Reform
(the Department) held on the
•
“Power, Accountability and
Apartheid Borders” in Land,
Power & Custom, 2008)
After the passing of the Group
Areas Act (1950) and the
Bantu Authorities Act (1951),
the apartheid government
embarked on several waves
of forced removals, lasting
until the late 1980s. Bulldozers
swept across cities and the
countryside, inflicting violence
to Black, Coloured and Indian
people by destroying their
homes, neighbourhoods and
ways of life.
re-opening of claims in 2014. One
woman from Port Elizabeth said
government officials had told her
that, if she put in a land claim,
she would receive enough land to
make her “faint”. “I want to faint!”
she exclaimed at the hearing. “Will
I ever faint?”
“A person or community
dispossessed of property
after 19 June 2013 as
a result of racially
discriminatory laws or
practices is entitled, to
the extent provided by
an Act of Parliament,
either to restitution
of that property or to
equitable redress.”
Section 25 (7) of the Constitution
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17
overt urnIng dIsPossessIon
Land restitution:
A magic solution?
W
ith the land
redistribution and
land tenure reform
programmes still far from their
targets, the urgency with which
the state pushed through the
re-opening of restitution claims
was telling. It indicated that the
government regards it as the
answer to South Africa’s complex
land reform dilemmas. But there
are numerous problems that look
likely to hamper the restitution
programme as new claims are
lodged. Among the most pressing
is the lack of state funds allocated
to the re-opening of land claims
(see p. 21). This suggests that
the government is selling empty
promises.
overt urnIng dIsPossessIon
years. But the current budget for
land restitution is much lower
than this – closer to R2.7 billion per
year. What does this mean? That
it would take another 121 years to
settle all claims.
Since it would take so long
to settle all the claims, the
Restitution Commission will
need to prioritise certain claims
for settlement. People whose
claims have still not been settled
since 1998 have lobbied for their
claims to be ring-fenced and
fully resolved before new claims
are settled. There are fears that,
without transparent guidelines in
place to decide whose claims will
be settled first, the Commission
will prioritise claims by people
with political power behind them,
such as traditional leaders.
RESTITUTION IN NUMBERS (as of 1 April 2015)
How long until all
restitution claims
are resolved?
I
n order to meet its goal of
resolving all existing and
new claims (409,000) in the
coming 15 years, the government
would need to speed up its
settlement rate six-fold. Assuming
that the new claims will be as
cheap and easy to settle as past
claims (an unlikely prospect), it
would require an annual budget
of R12 billion over a period of 15
18
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57 300
claims have already been lodged since July 2014
379 000
new claims are expected before 2019
121 years
the time it would take to finalise pre- and post-1998 land claims if
claims continue to be settled at the current rate
The 1913 cut-off date and
traditional leaders’ claims
M
any traditional leaders
have made it clear that
they intend to lodge
land claims. One is due to be
lodged on behalf of the Zulu king,
King Goodwill Zwelithini, together
with the Ingonyama Trust, for
possibly the entire province of
KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) – including
the Durban Metro – as well as parts
of the Eastern Cape, Mpumalanga
and the Free State. The intention
is to reclaim land taken from the
Zulu kingdom during the colonial
period — from 1838 onwards —
first by the Voortrekkers and then
by the British.
Indeed, President Jacob Zuma
has been encouraging traditional
leaders to make such land claims.
In his speech to the National
House of Traditional Leaders in
2014, he told traditional leaders
to get “good lawyers” so that they
could put in land claims.
But according to the Restitution
Act, only people who were
dispossessed of land after 1913
qualify for restitution. This means
that if King Zwelithini were to
lodge a claim for land lost in 1838,
that claim would not be valid.
The same of course applies to any
other traditional leaders who try to
claim land lost before 1913.
Nevertheless, claims by
traditional leaders on behalf of
people still raise many concerns.
Claims by traditional leaders
often do not take into account the
complex history of the areas from
which they arise. In some cases,
many different groups (families,
clans etc.) have occupied the same
piece of land at different points in
time. The situation is particularly
dangerous in places like KZN,
where there is a history of violent
entanglements around issues of
land and traditional leadership.
For example, in Babanango,
a small town in KZN’s Zululand
municipality, a group filed a land
restitution claim and labour
tenants’ claim many years ago.
Authorities say that these claims
are still “being processed”. King
Zwelithini has recently begun
laying the foundations for the
building of a royal palace on the
Babanango land. While the King
negotiates via the Amafa Heritage
Council, on the grounds that the
area is an important Zulu heritage
site, fences have been erected
preventing the local people from
accessing water and pastures for
their animals.
CPAs versus traditional
leadership
T
he second window for
restitution claims has been
accompanied by a policy
shift which, in effect, reduces the
options available to would-be
claimants and encourages them to
identify with traditional leaders.
Particularly under threat are
Communal Property Associations
(CPAs) which, established in
1996, ensure that land reform
beneficiaries can acquire and
manage land as groups.
According to the Communal
Property Associations Act of
1996, CPAs are intended to give
effect to the democratic decisionmaking processes envisioned by
the writers of the Constitution.
However, two policies developed
by the Department in recent
years – namely, the Draft Policy
Paper on CPAs and the Communal
Land Tenure Policy – have
sidelined CPAs in favour of
traditional leaders.
The Department’s policy
says that no new CPAs will
be established in areas where
traditional councils already exist.
In the Eastern Cape and North
West, there are several groups of
restitution claimants who have
experienced severe delays, either
in the transfer of land to their CPAs
or the registration of the CPAs
themselves (owing to objections
by traditional leaders).
Restitution is a vital component
of South Africa’s land reform
programme. And yet the reopening of the window has
gone hand-in-hand with the
government’s efforts to favour
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19
overt urnIng dIsPossessIon
How the law protects
restitution claimants:
•
Section 18 of the Constitution
protects the right to freedom
of association. This means that
you can choose how you want to
identify yourself or your group
when you make a claim. It can
be a problem if a traditional
leader puts in a claim on your
behalf without your consent.
elites, including traditional leaders
and mining magnets, while sidelining the people whose ancestral
land was taken from them as the
result of racial discrimination.
In light of the slow settlement of
restitution claims and traditional
leaders’ stated intentions to lodge
claims, the government must
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•
To lodge a restitution claim,
you do not have to align with
a traditional leader, council or
tribe. Section 2 of the Restitution
Act confirms that the key
criterion for claiming is that you
must be “a person, community
or part of a community
dispossessed of a right in land
after 19 June 1913 as a result of
past racially discriminatory laws
or practices”.
take action to protect people
who lodged claims before 1998.
If it does not do so, it will be in
violation of section 25(6) and
section 25(7) of the Constitution,
which provide for security of
tenure and restitution for people
who were dispossessed of their
land, respectively.
•
Note that the Restitution Act
defines a community jointly of
people who hold land jointly
and have shared rules about
how to hold, access and manage
the land. The definition also
provides that a community
could be a part of a larger group.
EMPTY PROMISES?
Some tools remain open to
people whose rights to restitution
have been or are now at risk of
being violated. Two of these tools
are the protections provided for in
the law and the ability to organise
on a mass scale.
Big talk as funds for land reform diminish
G
overnment says it is
committed to land
reform but there is
not enough money in the land
reform budget to deliver on these
promises (and this is not the first
time).
When President Jacob Zuma
announced in 2013 that the land
restitution process would be reopened and that people would be
able to lodge new claims until the
end of June 2019, the government
promised that it would dedicate
the resources required to deal
with the expected 379,000 new
claims (at an estimated cost of
R180 billion).
Government also promised
to prioritise the approximately
30,000 outstanding claims
(lodged before the first deadline
in 1998). However, the most
recent national budget clearly
shows that there is not enough
money in the budget to deliver on
government’s promises.
The funds have not been
made available
T
he total funding available
for land restitution in the
2016/17 budget (the latest
budget) of the Department of
Rural Development and Land
Reform (or Department) is 8%
more than it was in 2015/16. The
funding for land redistribution and
tenure reform (grouped together
in the budget) is 0.1% more than
it was in 2015/2016. Such small
increases mask how much the land
reform budget has declined over
the last six years.
In fact, until this year, the
land reform budget has been
shrinking annually. The trend is
alarming. As shown in the figures
on page 22, soon after President
Zuma’s government took office,
the land reform budgets were
increasing. However, since
2010/2011, they have decreased
considerably. Overall, the land
reform budget under President
Zuma is far lower than the budget
during most of President Thabo
Mbeki’s second term.
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21
overt urnIng dIsPossessIon
overt urnIng dIsPossessIon
1+9
Land reform makes up 0.4% of the
national budget (2016)
Budget Trends for Land Restitution and Redistribution 2008-2015
(Inflation adjusted in 2015 constant Rand)
6.0
TOTAL BUDGET, R MILLIONS
5.5
Restitution
5.0
Redistribution
4.5
4.0
3.5
3.0
2.5
Government’s land reform programme includes three projects aimed at
undoing the effects of land dispossession under apartheid:
2.0
2008/09 2009/10 2010/11
2011/12
2012/13
2013/14
2014/15
2015/16
3,4
2,8
2,2
•
LAND RESTITUTION
refers to the process of
returning land to people
who were dispossessed of
their land under apartheid.
•
LAND REDISTRIBUTION
refers to the process of
changing the racial patterns
of land ownership in South
Africa. Under apartheid
most black people were not
allowed to own land and this
project tries to rectify this.
•
TENURE REFORM
refers to processes that try
to strengthen the rights
that people have over
land, especially when
those rights are weak as a
result of apartheid.
1,6
1
Total Funds
for Restitution
Capital Funds
for Restitution
2013/14
22
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Total Funds for
Redistribution and
Tenure Reform
2014/15
Capital Funds for
Redistribution and
Tenure Reform
2015/16
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23
overt urnIng dIsPossessIon
emPty P romIses?
Budget trends in restitution
and redistribution, 2008–
2015
T
o make matters worse,
the increase in funding
for land restitution is
mostly to pay for travel costs,
research consultants and
additional staff at the already
overburdened Commission on
Restitution of Land Rights. Only a
portion of the whole ever reaches
the claimants.
Funds for land reform
speeding up land reform, settling
old land claims, and dealing with
the flood of incoming new land
claims.
The Treasury is also unwilling
to fund new schemes such as that
of paying farmers 50% of the value
of their land (without the farmers’
giving it up) in return for shares for
a small fraction of their workers.
Instead, the National Treasury is
putting in only enough money for
the land reform process to march
on at its current snail’s pace.
The budget figures clearly
show that Government is not
prioritising land reform even
though it claims to be.
I
n general, land reform is
not well-funded. It usually
makes up about 1% of
the national budget. In 2016,
however, the land reform budget
makes up only 0.4% of the
national budget (see R. Hall,
“Land reform: The Time Bomb
Ticks”, PLAAS Blog: Another
Countryside, February 2016).
What does the lower budget
tell us?
T
he budget suggests
that, in practice, the
National Treasury does
not conform to the policy talk of
Government. It is not prepared to
fund the Department’s promises
of expanding certain programmes,
24
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PLJ
25
THE POLITICS OF
RECAPITALISATION
How Land Redistribution Funds are Being
Diverted to Elites
26
PLJ
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27
the PoLI tIcs of recaP I taLIsatIon
the PoLI tIcs of recaP I taLIsatIon
T
he Department of
Rural Development
and Land Reform
(the Department)’s only
funding initiative for land
reform beneficiaries, called the
Recapitalisation and Development
Programme (or RECAP), seems
to be diverting funds away from
land reform and towards a small
group of commercial farmers and
preferred ‘strategic partners’.
According to the new land
policies, the only way to acquire
financial support for land received
through a land reform programme
is through the RECAP. The
two previous grants that were
awarded in terms of the land
redistribution programme (the
Restitution Discretionary Grants
and Settlement Planning Grants)
have been discontinued. In order
to receive a RECAP grant you must
prove that you have a business plan
and a strategic partner.
Empowering or exploiting?
I
Previous page: photo by Chris Morris (2014)
28
PLJ
nstead of using the RECAP
programme to help new
farmers, many of these
strategic partners are ‘farming’
state subsidies. A 2013 report,
commissioned by the Department
of Planning, Monitoring
and Evaluation (DPME) in
the Presidency, found that
beneficiaries in North West and
the Free State are particularly
unhappy with their strategic
partners, raising serious questions
about whether they are actually
empowering or exploiting land
reform beneficiaries.
The report investigated strategic
partners attached to projects in
Gauteng, North West, Limpopo,
the Eastern Cape, KwaZulu-Natal
and the Free State, and found that
the majority of strategic partners
reside in Gauteng. A number
of beneficiaries said they felt
strategic partners were “imposed”
on them. Many beneficiaries also
commented that they had little
control over their own RECAP
funds.
February 2015 meeting of the
Parliamentary Committee
on Rural Development and
Land Reform. “Action needs
to be taken. This is wasteful
and fruitless expenditure,”
said one MP. “Budget is
flowing but the services are
not coming,” said another
(Parliamentary Monitoring
Group (PMG), “Public
Hearings on Implementation
of the Recapitalisation and
Development Programme”,
Public Monitoring Group, 4
February 2015: https://pmg.org.za/
committee-meeting/19977/).
Misallocations
The DPME report
contained further alarming
findings on RECAP:
•
The average expenditure per
beneficiary in the Free State is
R1.02 million, but RECAP has
not created a single full-time job
in the province;
• RECAP swallows at least a
quarter of the Department’s
yearly budget;
• The national average
expenditure is R2.9 million
per project and R463,284 per
beneficiary;
• The average cost per job created
by RECAP is R588,284.
This led to an outcry at a
T
he RECAP programme
was launched to support
people who were given
land under the restitution or
redistribution policies after
1994, but did not get adequate
follow-up capital and support to
farm productively. The DPME
report shows, however, that only
29 grants in its sample went to
restitution projects and 16 to land
redistribution beneficiaries.
In the same period, 564 grants
went to new commercial ventures,
most of them on land owned
by government and leased to
‘beneficiaries’. So RECAP funding
is more often going to new
commercial projects than to land
restitution and redistribution
claimants (which is what it was
intended for).
At the February 2015
parliamentary meeting, Grain SA
told MPs that only 32 of its 600
black emerging farmer members
had received RECAP grants. Their
3,500 members in ‘communal
areas’ were told the policy did
not apply to them (PMG, “Public
Hearings on Implementation
of the Recapitalisation and
Development Programme”, Public
Monitoring Group, 4 February
2015).
The South African government
uses the term communal areas
to refer to all land in the former
Bantustans.
Many of the bigger grants are going
to a few people with political
connections. Farmers who
were already financially strong
“bypassed provincial government
officials and contacted senior
politicians to have their farms
prioritised for recapitalisation,”
the DPME said in its report.
Elite capture
T
he way that RECAP is
being implemented fits
the broader picture of
elite capture across all aspects
of land reform. Far from the
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29
the PoLI tIcs of recaP I taLIsatIon
the PoLI tIcs of recaP I taLIsatIon
“Land reform is
not only about
agriculture but
agriculture is a
crucial component
of land reform.
Land reform should
address the various
land needs of the
beneficiaries …
post settlement
should not only be
seen in terms of the
Farmer Support
Programme
or the existing
Recapitalisation
and Development
Programme which
targets farming
with strategic
partnerships.”
Ad hoc committee on the legacy
of the 1913 Land Act, Report,
November 2014.
land reform budget supporting
redistribution to the poor, it
entrenches inequality between
the rich and poor.
Land reform programmes
should be geared towards
redressing the terrible legacies
of the dispossession of black
South Africans and the persistent,
unequal distribution of land and
resources.
But RECAP, like other land
reform policies such as the
Communal Land Tenure Policy
(CLTP), denies the substantive
land rights of people living in
rural areas by making their ability
to use their land conditional
upon their ability to draw up a
commercial business plan and
the actions of imposed strategic
partners (see p. 47).
“I guess elite capture is part of
the process,” the Department’s
Director General Mdu Shabane
said at the February 2015 meeting
in Parliament. “We’ve seen
people coming from nothing
and becoming so powerful. They
have a vision of saying they want
to make a billion. I think that’s
exactly what we want them to
do. We need to restore the class
of black commercial farmers
destroyed by the 1913 Land Act.”
With the Department
determined to follow the path Mr
Shabane describes, it seems they
will not heed the warnings of
land reform beneficiaries and the
DPME report to move away from
conditional funding systems
with vague selection criteria
and towards a comprehensive
support system for a range
of land reform beneficiaries,
not just those on a path to
commercial agriculture.
Photo by Chris Morris (2014).
30
PLJ
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31
the PoLI tIcs of recaP I taLIsatIon
the PoLI tIcs of recaP I taLIsatIon
LAND REFORM IN
OUR LIFETIME?
he Story of the Stellenbosch Small
Farm Holdings Trust
T
he Stellenbosch Small
Farm Holdings Trust was
formed in 2003 by ten
landless but highly skilled farmers.
All previously disadvantaged
individuals, they lacked the means
to purchase land or to rent land at
market rates.
The Trust’s aim is to “promote,
support and facilitate access to
land and the use of land on an
equitable basis for the benefit
of the Beneficiaries”. It has
been granted access to 65 ha of
commonage land through the
goodwill of a commercial farm
operator holding a long-term lease
on the land from the Stellenbosch
municipality.
Commonage land is municipalowned land that cannot be
sold and must be used for the
socio-economic benefit of the
community. The farmers each
occupy 5 ha where they have been
growing vegetables and herbs,
each for their own account. They
never intend to take ownership
32
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of the plots. Instead, the idea is
for the site to remain in the hands
of the municipality from one
generation of farmers to the next.
In order for this long-term goal to
be achieved, however, the irrigation
infrastructure needs urgent
upgrading. From its earliest stage,
the Trust sought to encourage the
municipality to identify sources of
government grant finance to equip
its piece of commonage land with
the infrastructure necessary for
small-scale farming. In particular,
they needed a water reticulation
system.
The Trust struggled for some
time to convince the local
municipality to get involved in the
administration and funding of the
land reform project. Back in 2006,
the Department of Land Affairs, as
it was then, had already indicated
that, should they receive an
application from the municipality
to upgrade the project’s
infrastructure, they would provide
the funding.
The Department even ringfenced around R11 million for this
purpose. But the municipality
never submitted an application for
government funding until it was
drafted on their behalf in 2008 by
the University of Stellenbosch and
a team of engineers.
In 2011, the Department
(that has since been renamed
Rural Development and Land
Reform) finally responded to
the application. They indicated
that, since the submission of the
application in 2008, the policy had
changed and the application now
had to have “a bit more detail”.
Inexplicably, and despite
exasperated protests from the
farmers, the Department and
the municipality decided not
to simply refine the application
already prepared (at a cost of
R300,000), but instead appoint
consultants at R460,000 to redraft
the application entirely.
The Department paid for these
consultations from its own budget.
The process took several years.
Although the new RECAP policy
had not yet been adopted, RECAP
guidelines were already published
in around 2013.
The requirement to work with
a mentor/strategic partner had
thus already emerged. However,
the Department, together with
the municipality and the farmers,
decided that, given the level of
skills of these farmers, they would
not require such a partner. The
development of the application
proceeded.
Towards the end of 2013, the
completed application then
went missing. It could not be
established whether it had in fact
been submitted or was simply
waiting on someone’s desk. By the
time the Department met with the
farmers and municipality, all of
those officials who had begun the
project were no longer working for
the Department.
As a result, no-one knew how
much money and time had been
spent on the application over the
previous five-to-ten years. Worse
still, it was announced that the
only option for the Municipality
was to develop a third application
for the funding, this time with a
strategic partner/mentor in tow.
Left with no choice, the
municipality has since been forced
to find a strategic partner, despite
the fact that there is no need for
it. Without a strategic partner, the
farmers would never get access to
the water they need to grow their
vegetables.
These are some of the struggles
land reform beneficiaries face
through programmes like RECAP.
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33
A LUTA
CONTINUA
New Laws are a Setback for
Rural Women
S
ince the end of apartheid,
women in rural areas have
used the Constitution
to fight for their rights to land.
In the negotiation of the 1996
Constitution, rural women’s
organisations fought traditional
leaders who argued that the right
to equality should be subject to
official customary law, in which
only married men have rights
to land. The women won that
struggle, and then again when the
ConCourt ruled against the chiefs’
objections to the Constitution.
Since then, in case after
case, the ConCourt has struck
down ‘official’ customary law as
discriminatory and “a distortion
of the true customary law ... which
recognises and acknowledges the
changes which continually take
place” (Bhe, para 86).
But the gains women have won
since 1994 are now at risk of being
eroded by a set of new laws passed
34
PLJ
since 2003 which centralise power
in the hands of chiefs, bolstering
their ability to define the content
of customary law on their own,
without consulting the people who
are affected.
Women and customary law
T
he new laws introduced
since 2003 are based
on claims that women
traditionally had no land rights
under customary law. But
evidence shows that this is not the
case.
Many authors have written
about how official customary law
was ‘constructed’ by government
officials in conversation with
African male chiefs and elders.
Western categories were imposed
on African realities, and the rules
described by male elders were
the ones which became official.
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35
a Lu ta con tInua
a Lu ta con tInua
These rules tended to exaggerate
the power and status of the elders
at the expense of women and
young men, and were often in
contradiction with actual practice
on the ground.
This ‘official’ and simplified
version of customary law, where
the male head of the household
was the only owner of the land and
women were seen only as wives or
daughters, hid a more complicated
reality in which single women
could and did acquire and inherit
land rights.
The Black Administration Act
of 1951, for instance, made the
husband the only property owner
36
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and stripped married women not
only of their legal status but also
of any legal stake in the couple’s
property.
And yet, traditionally, women
did have primary rights to arable
land, and strong rights to their
houses within the extended family.
Even single women were allocated
land in their own right, and there
are also many accounts of women
inheriting land.
At a local level, the official
restrictions imposed on women
were often challenged as being
inconsistent with ‘actual custom’.
But as the power of the apartheid
government grew stronger, and
the land base in the tiny African
reserves (or ‘homelands’) came
under pressure, ‘customary’
restrictions on women’s land
rights came to be more strictly
enforced by white government
officials. Rights over fields came to
be regarded as male property to be
inherited by the eldest son.
Linked to the mounting
pressure on land was the
perception, held by officials and
African patriarchs, that women
with independent land rights
were less likely to marry and that
declining marriage rates would
Opposite, top: Members of the Mogopa community
on their way to a meeting, 1984 (Paul Weinberg).
Opposite, bottom: (from left) Beauty Mkhize, Sizani
Ngubane and Jane Vilakazi, community leaders
and struggle stalwarts, attend the Land Divided
Conference commemorating the centenary of the
1913 Land Act, March 2013.
lead to the collapse of family
networks and, by extension,
society at large. Both government
officials and chiefs were of the
view that women should be under
the control of their fathers or
husbands at all times, and that
women with independent land
rights would have sufficient
agency to reject marriage.
Meanwhile, a woman’s position
as breadwinner through farming
had begun to change as the money
sent home by migrant workers
replaced small-scale agriculture
as the main source of household
income. Men were increasingly
earning the money to pay for
bride wealth. No longer were they
depending on, and contributing
to, family networks held together
by farming, marriage and the
exchange of cattle.
Increasing numbers of widows
and deserted wives found
themselves faced with eviction
from their marital homes at the
whim of their in-laws. Widows
and wives became vulnerable to
losing the homes and resources
they had built up over decades of
married life.
But after apartheid ended and
the homelands were abolished,
women could finally use the
Constitution to argue for the
rights they had lost under ‘official’
customary law.
Resistance by the chiefs
D
uring the mid-1990s, the
Congress of Traditional
Leaders of South Africa
(Contralesa) and the Inkatha
Freedom Party (IFP) argued that
the new Constitution would “put
such hallowed institutions as
lobola (bride wealth) in jeopardy,
open the way to allowing women
to succeed to the monarchy on the
same basis as men, and prevent
a father from claiming damages
for the seduction of his daughter”
(Certification of the Constitution,
para 200).
During this time, Chief
Patekile Holomisa, the President
of Contralesa, declared: “Let
us not confuse each other and
misinterpret that equality shall
be applicable to each and every
thing. No woman can be the head
of a family. The head of a family
is always a man.” He added that it
was “embarrassing and shocking
to see women claiming to be
traditional leaders”.
But the Constitutional
Court has ruled that the official
customary law in textbooks and in
laws like the Black Administration
Act is not ‘true customary law’,
which evolves as people change
their patterns of life (see p. 41).
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37
a Lu ta con tInua
Women’s struggles
since 1994
A
t provincial meetings
held to discuss the new
legislation in 2002 and
2008, residents of the former
homelands recounted stories of
widows and unmarried mothers
successfully claiming residential
sites in their own right. Similar
stories of women claiming, and
obtaining, sites of their own
surfaced in all provinces, although
the pace of change seemed faster
in the Tswana-speaking North
West and Northern Cape than in
KwaZulu-Natal.
The people at the meetings
often combined arguments
about equality under the new
Constitution with old traditions.
For example, single mothers
explained that the custom was that
men were entitled to residential
land only if they had families to
support, and since many women
now had children outside of
marriage, they should be entitled
to sites on the same basis.
In 2008, less than a quarter
of African women between the
ages of 20 and 45 were married.
Marriage rates in South Africa
are very low even compared with
other African countries, and have
been falling for decades.
At the meetings in Limpopo, a
headman described how a single
mother had argued strongly that
38
PLJ
a Lu ta con tInua
she was entitled to a site on the
same basis as a male community
member with a family. She said
that if the tribal council refused
her, they would be denying her
rights under the Constitution.
At the meetings in KwaZuluNatal, a headman said that he
would be “less than human”
if he did not allocate land to
widows evicted from their marital
homes. During the first round
of meetings, it seemed that only
‘responsible’ middle-aged women
with children to support were
being allocated residential land.
In some areas – for example,
KwaZulu-Natal – the woman also
had to have a son.
This had changed by the second
round of meetings from 2008. In
some areas, people explained that
all young mothers are now entitled
to sites; in others, that any woman
is now able to acquire residential
land whether or not she has
children to support, and whatever
her age. But in other areas people
said it is still very difficult for
women to get sites, and impossible
unless they have a son.
In 2011, a survey involving 3,000
rural women was undertaken
by the Community Agency for
Social Enquiry (CASE) in three
different areas (the Ramatlabama
resettlement area near Mafikeng
in North West province, Msinga
around Tugela Ferry in KwaZuluNatal, and Keiskammahoek,
between King William’s Town and
Alice in the Eastern Cape).
It confirmed the evidence
from the consultation meetings,
showing that, after 1994, while
married women were still not
acquiring land, an increasing
number of widows and spinsters
were obtaining land for houses
(CASE, Women, Land and
Customary Law, 2011). Other
studies, in the Eastern Cape and
Limpopo, have corroborated
these results (Aninka Claassens
& Sizani Ngubane, “Women, land
and power: The impact of the
Communal Land Rights Act” in
Land, Power & Custom, 2008).
A man from Keiskammahoek
explained that women were
not allocated residential sites
previously, but that “[this
situation] changed after the
elections and voting – that showed
everyone has rights”.
In Ramatlabama, an older
woman explained that: “after
democracy anyone could get
a stand, even a young woman
could go, as long as she had a
pass [I.D. document] and was
independent... But before ... even
me, as an [adult] unmarried
woman, I couldn’t ... In my view
I think it’s our Constitution that
changed everything because it
says that everybody has a right
to shelter, education ... so it’s
the government that changed
everything.”
Chairperson of the Rural Women’s Movement, Prisca Shabalala, speaking at the Land Divided Conference commemorating the centenary of the 1913 Land Act, March 2013.
A woman in Keiskammahoek
described the changing balance of
power within which the changes
are taking place: “You would
never do that [a husband evicting
his wife] to the young women of
today. They would have you [as
the man] arrested. They have a
mindset that leans towards the law
and the division of cattle, finding a
way to proceed.”
The views of a man in Msinga
also illustrated the impact of
democracy and knowledge: “[It]
is because of these democratic
rights … everyone has their own
rights. [If I] tell my child what
to do, she looks into my eyes,
and says I must leave her alone...
When I tell my wife that I do not
understand this, she says I am
abusing her daughter who also has
her right to answer me. We did not
know that before, we only knew
that my father would have taken a
sjambok and hit her hard.”
Overcoming traditional
stereotypes
W
omen’s rights to land
have been changing
across the former
homelands since 1994. These
changes were triggered by the
transformation of local power
relations after the transition
to democracy and the new
Constitution.
The Constitution played
an important symbolic role in
affirming the values of equality and
democracy of the anti-apartheid
struggle. This emboldened
women to assert claims to sites,
and made men more receptive to
their arguments. In fighting for
their rights, people have been able
to draw on customs which were
weakened under apartheid but not
destroyed.
At the same time, the material
positions of rural women and men
PLJ
39
a Lu ta con tInua
“CLEANSING OF THE
STATUTE BOOK”
Customary Law, Inheritance and
the Right to Equality
O
have changed. Men, the primary
breadwinners during the days
of migrant labour, were hit by
unemployment when the mines
began to lay off workers in the
1980s. Women, meanwhile, began
to acquire cash through the social
grants that have come to replace
income from migrant workers
as the lifeblood of the former
homelands. They not only qualify
for old-age pensions at a younger
age than men, but also receive
child support grants on behalf of
their children.
The changes taking place are a
good example of ‘living’ customary
law and the development of
40
PLJ
customary law in line with the
Constitution. But the set of new
laws introduced since 2003 have
been reminiscent of the old, fixed,
‘official’ customary law. These
laws reinforce authoritarian male
power and the control of the chiefs
and take back the definition of
custom from the people.
Women’s organisations have
argued that the new laws relegate
the approximately 18 million
South Africans living in the
former homelands, once again,
to a separate and authoritarian
legal regime, and to second-class
citizenship.
In order to take this issue
forward, stereotypes of
marriage and ownership must
be questioned. We must take
into account changing family
forms, falling marriage rates and
the independent single women
who have always existed. Law
and policy should be grounded
in these realities, instead of in
stereotypes put forward by selfinterested traditional leaders and
their political lobbies.
Above: A neon installation by South African artist
Thomas Mulcaire at the Constitutional Court.
In this case, the rallying cry 'A Luta Continua'
(Portuguese for 'The Struggle Continues') is
symbolic of Mozambique's war of independence.
n 15 October 2005, the
ConCourt decided one
of the most important
cases on gender equality,
inheritance and customary law
in South Africa. Nontupheko
Bhe, a domestic worker, and her
partner, Vuyo Mgolombane, a
carpenter, started living together
in 1990. Over the next 12 years,
they had two children, both girls.
Three weeks after our country’s
first democratic elections on 18
May 1994, Nonkululeko, their first
daughter was born followed by
her sister, Anelisa, on 3 August
2001. The family home was a
shack on their land in Makhaza,
Khayelitsha.
Ms Bhe and Mr Mgolombane
worked and saved a little money
to supplement their housing
subsidy. They were saving to build
their home. Sadly, their plans were
interrupted when Mr Mgolombane
died on 9 October 2002. Ms Bhe’s
partner, Vuyo had not made a will,
meaning he died intestate and their
family home was in his name.
The father of the deceased
and grandfather of the orphaned
girl-children, Mr Maboyisi
Mgolombane, lived in Berlin
in the Eastern Cape. When the
grandfather decided to take their
inheritance, in this case, it meant
that they could lose their home
under customary law. The elder
Mr Mgolombane approached the
Khayelitsha Magistrate’s Court
relying on the customary rule
stating that the oldest surviving
male relative inherits when a Black
African man dies without sons or
brothers. This rule is known as
primogeniture.
The Khayelitsha Magistrate
decided the case on the basis of
an old colonial and apartheid law,
the Black Administration Act of
1927, a law that the democratic
government had not changed
for ten years. In his ruling, the
magistrate declared the elder Mr
Mgolombane the sole heir of the
shack, the land it stood on, and,
the building materials for their
new home. He decided he wanted
to sell it all, which would have left
the widow and orphans homeless.
Ms Bhe, on behalf of her
daughters, approached the
Western Cape High Court for
protection and relief. The Bhe
family was joined by the Women’s
Legal Centre in Court and they
PLJ
41
“cLeansIng of the stat u te Book”
Above: Ms Nontupheko Bhe's shack in
Makhaza, Khayelitsha, 2015.
42
PLJ
“cLeansIng of the stat u te Book”
argued that the customary law rule
that took their home away through
the Black Administration Act
discriminated on the grounds of
gender, race, age and social status.
After explaining why customary
law had failed to develop, Justice
Sipho Ngwenya held that the
Black Administration Act was
unconstitutional. He wrote that:
“… a situation whereby a male
person will be preferred to a
female person for purposes
of inheritance can no longer
withstand constitutional
scrutiny. That constitutes
discrimination before the law.
To put it plainly, African females,
irrespective of age or social
status, are entitled to inherit
from their parents’ intestate
estate like any male person. … On
the facts before us, therefore …
[Nonkululeko and Anelisa Bhe]
are declared to be the sole heirs
to the deceased’s estate and they
are entitled to inherit equally.”
The Bhe case was then referred
to the ConCourt, heard on 2-3
March 2004 and the late DeputyChief Justice Pius Langa wrote the
decision for the majority of judges.
Justice prevailed and the Bhe girlchildren inherited their home in
Khayelitsha where they lived with
their mother.
The Court’s reasoning on
equality, dignity, the development
of customary law and the rights of
children in the Bhe case provide
activists with critical education
and organising tools. Building
equality and dignity in our homes,
schools, villages, townships,
makhotla, places of worship and
work, Parliament, media and
even the Courts require both a
social and a legal revolution. In his
judgment, the late Chief Justice
Langa laid a legal foundation
for a social revolution in gender
relations and customary law.
Meanings of customary law
T
he ConCourt found that
colonial and apartheid
courts, law schools and
Parliaments blocked customary
law from developing as society
changed. Many customs have
evolved along with life; the
ConCourt called this development
“living” customary law, which
often does not enjoy recognition
in courts or among traditional
leaders. Under the Black
Administration Act, customary law
was used by the powerful against
the powerless.
“… customary law was robbed of
its inherent capacity to evolve in
keeping with the changing life of
the people it served, particularly
of women. Thus customary
law as administered failed to
respond creatively to new kinds
of economic activity by women,
different forms of property and
household arrangements for
women and men, and changing
values concerning gender
roles in society. The outcome
has been formalisation and
fossilisation of a system which
by its nature should function in
an active and dynamic manner.”
All the judges found that the
customary law rule as applied,
and the Black Administration Act,
violated the Constitution. Deputy
Chief Justice Langa found that
the “the Act …was to become a
PLJ
43
“cLeansIng of the stat u te Book”
cornerstone of racial oppression,
division and conflict in South
Africa, the legacy of which will
still take years to completely
eradicate”. The Court held that:
“The positive aspects of
customary law have long
been neglected. The inherent
flexibility of the system is but
one of its constructive facets.
Customary law places much
more store in consensus-seeking
and naturally provides for family
and clan meetings which offer
excellent opportunities for the
prevention and resolution of
disputes and disagreements. Nor
are these aspects only useful in
the area of disputes. They provide
a setting which contributes to
the unity of family structures and
the fostering of co-operation,
a sense of responsibility in and
of belonging to its members, as
well as the nursing of healthy
communitarian traditions such
as Ubuntu. These valuable
aspects of customary law more
than justify its protection by the
Constitution.
It bears repeating, however,
that as with all law, the
constitutional validity of rules
and principles of customary law
depend on their consistency
with the Constitution and the
Bill of Rights.”
Customary law received the
protection and recognition of the
Constitution. This recognition
44
PLJ
“cLeansIng of the stat u te Book”
required the development of
customary law to promote the
values and rights of freedom,
dignity and equality for women
and girl-children such as
Nonkululeko and Anelisa Bhe.
‘Old notions of patriarchy’:
Women became outlaws
T
he ConCourt used
the work of Professor
Thandabantu Nhlapo
to show how women were
discriminated against through the
rule of men (patriarchy). Nhlapo
explained that African law and
custom had a traditional male bias.
Colonialism and apartheid
reinforced this bias by “enthroning
the male head of the household as
the only true person in law”. Only
male household heads – meaning
older men had “civic status”,
controlled the family property and
regarded women as children in
law. He wrote: “African women…
were deprived of the opportunity
to manipulate the rules to their
advantage through the subtle
interplay of social norms, and,
at the same time, denied the
protections of the formal legal
order. Women became ‘outlaws’.”
In addressing the case of the
Bhe family and women, DeputyChief Justice Langa held the
following:
“The exclusion of women from
inheritance on the grounds of
gender is a clear violation of
section 9(3) of the Constitution.
It is a form of discrimination
that entrenches past patterns
of disadvantage among a
vulnerable group, exacerbated
by old notions of patriarchy and
male domination incompatible
with the guarantee of equality
under this constitutional order.”
Equality is not an empty concept.
Time after time, the ConCourt
has asserted the right of women
to equality and in the Bhe case
affirming this right meant that
Ms Bhe and her daughters
retained their home and rightful
inheritance.
Dignity
A
frican women living
under customary law
were excluded from
exercising their right to use, own,
sell or inherit property in their
own name. The Bhe family and
the Women’s Legal Centre argued
the fact that only elders, married
men or eldest sons could control
property under customary law
violated the dignity of women and
girls. Deputy-Chief Justice Langa
supported the right of the Bhe girlchildren and women to dignity. He
found:
“The principle of
primogeniture also violates
Above: The facade of South Africa’s Constitutional Court on Constitution Hill, Johannesburg.
the right of women to human
dignity as guaranteed in section
10 of the Constitution as, in one
sense, it implies that women
are not fit or competent to own
and administer property. Its
effect is to subject women to
a status of perpetual minority,
placing them automatically
under the control of male
heirs, simply by virtue of their
sex and gender. Their dignity
is further affronted by the
fact that as women, they are
also excluded from intestate
succession and denied the right
which other members of the
population have, to be holders
of, and to control property.”
The Bhe judgment’s emphasis
on the relationship between
women’s human dignity and their
right to hold, control, own and
inherit property as free, equal and
autonomous human beings under
customary law is revolutionary.
In this context, women have
the legal power to become
economically independent, to
avoid abusive relationships, to
take care of themselves, or their
families without needing the
permission of a man. Legal power
is not sufficient, the organisation
of women in rural areas, informal
settlements and townships is the
only way to realise the promise of
the Bhe judgment.
PLJ
45
“cLeansIng of the stat u te Book”
Protecting the rights of
children under customary
law
N
onthupheko Bhe and
her partner Vuyo were
not married under
any legal system. Mr. Maboyisi
Mgolombane argued that his
grand-daughters could not
inherit their home as girls or as
children conceived outside a
civil or customary marriage. The
ConCourt made short shrift of that
argument.
Children from extra-marital
relationships and girls, wrote
the Deputy-Chief Justice, “are
ordinarily not in a position to
protect themselves” and they
“particularly vulnerable”. The
best interests of the children and
their right to equality according to
the Court entitled Nonkululeko
and Anelisa Bhe and all other
children in similar circumstances
to inherit the property of their
fathers.
Ten judges of the ConCourt
struck down the Black
Administration Act and the
customary law rule of male
primogeniture. Or, in the words
of the judgment: “The Court’s
task is to facilitate the cleansing of
the statute book of legislation so
deeply rooted in our unjust past”.
46
PLJ
A different view but the
same outcome
J
ustice Sandile Ncgobo who
later became Chief Justice
took a different view from
the other justices of the Court. He
argued that the ConCourt had the
duty to develop customary law
and to do so on the basis of gender
equality.
Justice Ncgobo cited the Nigeria
Court of Appeal in a similar case
where customary law prevented
women from inheriting property.
Justice Tobi of the Nigerian
Appeal Court held that “any
custom”, “societal discrimination”
or “customary law” which
discriminated “on the ground of
sex” was unconstitutional and
“repugnant to natural justice,
equity and good conscience”.
CENTRALISATION
WITHOUT CONSENT
Communal Land Rights are under hreat
A
n estimated 17 million
South Africans reside in
the former homelands (or
Bantustans) according to forms of
communal tenure. Unfortunately,
these people continue to live under
conditions of legal uncertainty
as the South African government
has consistently failed to develop
laws and policies that adequately
capture the nuanced ways in which
people experience and regulate
relations of communal tenure in
their everyday lives.
In this chapter it is argued
that many recent attempts by
the government to formalise
communal tenure systems in law
and policy are in fact based on
earlier pre-democratic models
in which a small number of
individuals exert power and
authority over others without
being accountable to anyone.
Such legislation has also
effectively undermined other
types of community relations
as well as accountability
mechanisms that can facilitate
more equal power relations
between people living in rural
areas.
Communal land and power
relations
I
n order to critically engage
with the government’s
attempts to come up with laws
and policies for communal land,
we need to think seriously about
the kinds of power relations they
entrench.
This is especially important
in the light of South Africa’s
colonial and apartheid history,
which distorted communal and
customary land laws to suit the
interests of white power and
capital. Colonial and apartheid
administrators not only gave
traditional leaders new powers
over land, but they also played
down the usage, occupation and
inheritance rights of most people
within indigenous systems of land
rights.
To what extent is this history
still relevant today? In the postapartheid era, have communal
land policies given some people
in these communities – such as
traditional authorities or even
men in general – the power and
authority to make decisions
over others without consent?
Or have these laws and policies
helped to facilitate more equal
power relations between people,
their traditional leaders, and the
government?
PLJ
47
cen traLIsatIon wI thou t consen t
The Constitution states that:
25(6)
48
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cen traLIsatIon wI thou t consen t
A person or community whose tenure of land is legally
insecure as a result of past racially discriminatory
laws or practices is entitled, to the extent provided by
an Act of Parliament, either to tenure which is legally
secure or to comparable redress.
25(9)
Parliament must enact the legislation referred to
in subsection (6).
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49
cen traLIsatIon wI thou t consen t
Land rights in the
Constitution
S
ection 25(6) and (9) of the
Constitution instruct the
government to pass a law
that will realise the right to security
of land tenure or comparable
redress (see overleaf).
This means that the government
must come up with a law that will
give people the legal and practical
ability to reclaim or defend their
ownership, occupation, use of and
access to land.
The Communal Land Rights
Act of 2004 (CLRA)
E
nacted in 2004, the CLRA
was the first attempt by
government to develop
a law that would secure the
rights of people living in the
former homelands. However,
it also undermined their rights
by giving traditional councils
most of the power and authority
over land, including control
over the occupation, use and
administration of communal law.
All other forms of authority,
including that which derives
from living customary law and
indigenous accountability
mechanisms, were bypassed by
the CLRA. Owing to this, four rural
communities challenged the CLRA
in the courts.
50
PLJ
cen traLIsatIon wI thou t consen t
In May 2010, the CLRA was
struck down by the ConCourt in
Tongoane v National Minister of
Agriculture and Land Affairs. The
ConCourt decided that the law
was unconstitutional because
the government had not properly
consulted affected communities
during the legislative process. This
came as a huge victory for rural
communities across the country.
The Communal Land
Tenure Policy (CLTP)
I
n May 2014, the Department of
Rural Development and Land
Reform (the Department)
published its latest Communal
Land Tenure Policy (CLTP) for
discussion and comment. The
CLTP, which forms the basis for a
new draft law on communal law,
has not yet become law. While
the CLTP outlines a nuanced
history of communal land tenure,
and explains the state of tenure
insecurity in South Africa, the
CLTP fails to translate this deep
understanding of land tenure into
a policy that could uphold the
rights of rural people.
Currently, most communal
land in the former Bantustans
is registered in the name of the
government. The Department’s
proposed CLTP makes provision
for royal households and
traditional councils to play a
meaningful role in land ownership
and administration in the former
homelands.
Government officials argue
that their policy would be to
transfer ‘the outer boundary land’
(as identified on the title deed)
to traditional councils wherever
these councils exist. Technically,
Communal Property Associations
(CPAs) and other rights holders
can also have their rights
recognised by the CLTP.
However, since traditional
councils exist wall-to-wall within
the former homelands, it is likely
that land will be transferred mostly
to traditional councils. This will
affect nearly 17 million people who
live there.
The CLTP proposes that
traditional councils should be given
ownership of communal land (and
control of all developments related
to the communal property – such
as grazing and forests), while
families and households would
only get ‘use rights’ – that is, right to
make use of the land. In addition,
The CLTP would empower
traditional councils to take charge
of investment projects, such as
mining and tourism ventures, that
fall within their territories.
The Communal Land Bill
(CLB)
T
he Department plans on
creating a national law
based on the CLTP called
the Communal Land Bill (CLB),
which is likely to be introduced in
Parliament later in 2016. Although
the CLB has not been made
public, government officials have
said that it will give communities
ownership of communal land.
However, to obtain ownership of
their communal land, communities
will have to choose whether their
land should be managed by a CPA
or a traditional council (Judge for
Yourself, eNCA, 30 August 2015).
Serious questions have arisen
over whether communities will
really have a choice in terms of
the CLB. This is because another
government policy – the Draft
Policy Paper on CPAs – discourages
the registration of new CPAs in areas
where traditional councils already
exist. In this policy, the Department
writes that “registration of new
CPAs on traditional communal
tenure areas [should] be carefully
considered and principally
discouraged” (Department of Rural
Development and Land Reform,
Communal Land Tenure Policy, 2013,
p. 29).
This would mean that
traditional councils will mostly
be granted the power to manage
communities’ land on their behalf,
with the people living in these
communities having little or no
power to hold their traditional
councils to account.
WHAT ARE CPAs?
CPAs are landholding institutions
created in terms of a national law
called the CPA Act. Beneficiaries
of the land reform, restitution
and redistribution programmes
who want to acquire, hold and
manage land as a group must
establish legal entities to do so –
CPAs are one of these entities.
The CPA Act provides for
government registration of CPAs
and also government oversight
to enforce the rights of ordinary
members. An important feature
of CPAs is that they operate
according to democratic
principles including fair and
inclusive decision-making
processes.
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51
cen traLIsatIon wI thou t consen t
Problems with
government’s laws
and policies
A
huge amount is at stake
if the CLTP and CLB
become law. They could
potentially dispossess millions
of people of their land rights.
Once traditional councils are
granted the power to manage
and control communal land on
behalf of rural communities, it
will be very difficult to take these
powers away.
52
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cen traLIsatIon wI thou t consen t
The CLTP and CLB impose
tribal structures over other
pre-existing communities whose
members may not recognise the
traditional authority which has
been designated by the policy.
In other words, autonomous
and historically constituted
communities, such as trusts and
role players at the household
level (who in many areas make
decisions about land), will
be subservient to traditional
councils.
A key issue is that under
apartheid people resisted laws
and used creative methods to
secure their hold on land. For
example, many black people
organised together and bought
land by pairing with a church or
missionary to act as a ‘trustee’
for their purchased land. By
doing this they subverted the
restrictions of the 1913 and
1936 Land Acts, and thereby
collectively owned land.
In addition, many communities’
informal or customary land rights
have been legally recognised by
different laws or contracts, such
as the common law, customary
law, quitrent titles, Permission to
Occupy (PTO) regulations, the
Upgrading of Land Tenure Rights
Act, or title deeds. These laws are
not respected under the CLTP and
the CLB.
Granting traditional
authorities the power to manage
and control these groups and
communities’ land will violate
their constitutional rights to land
as protected by section 25 of the
Constitution. The land rights of
the most vulnerable rural South
Africans are therefore at risk.
The CLTP and CLB extend the
rights of traditional leaders far
beyond their customary role. It is
not true that systems of communal
ownership have historically
allowed chiefs to make decisions
and express power over people
without their consent.
Rather, rights and obligations
can derive from many levels of
authority in the community, the
chief being just one of these. These
rights and obligations derive from
constant practice and mutual
participation.
The CLTP and CLB deny
the existence of accountability
mechanisms in customary
tenure systems. They undermine
the decision-making power of
rural people and fundamentally
change the administration and
management of land. As it stands,
the CLTP and CLB fail to hold
traditional councils to principles
of justice and equality that are
provided for in the Constitution.
Complex and contested
T
he CLTP and CLB are
based on the idea that,
prior to colonialism,
traditional authorities owned
land which they allocated their
‘subjects’ to use. Proponents of
the CLTP claim to believe that it
will rebuild what was allegedly
destroyed under apartheid.
However, this understanding
of the past is highly inaccurate.
Ironically, the authority
structures and power relations
envisioned by the CLTP entrench
colonial laws and apartheid
boundaries (see p. 11). Oral
histories, indigenous knowledge
systems, and academic inquiries
all confirm that land rights were
not vested in traditional leaders
with autocratic powers but rather
through access to, and authority
over, land derived in socially
accepted relationships.
Communal land will remain
a contested idea for as long as
people refuse to acknowledge the
complexity of land tenure systems
that exist in communities across
the country. There is no single
model for communal land because
different people manage land and
its use through often localised
systems of social relationships.
This makes securing land rights
in communal areas very complex.
There is no doubt that recognising
and supporting localised systems
of ownership and access, in a
way that fulfils the principles
of equality and human rights
enshrined in the Constitution, is
going to be difficult. In the context
of the CLTP and the CLB, South
Africans thus find themselves at
a critical stage in the struggle to
secure the rights of millions of
people living in communal areas.
PLJ
53
TO THE HEART
OF LAND REFORM
he Bakgatla ba Kgafela CPA at the
Constitutional Court
54
PLJ
PLJ
55
to the heart of Land reform
to the heart of Land reform
CPA members and land claimants protest outside the ConCourt in support of the Bakgatla ba Kgafela CPA in Johannesburg (2015).
O
n 20 August 2015, the
Constitutional Court
delivered its landmark
judgment in the case of Bakgatla
ba Kgafela Tribal CPA v Bakgatla
ba Kgafela Tribal Authority and
Others. It came as an important
victory for land claimant groups and
Communal Property Associations
(CPAs – see definition on p. 51)
around the country as it addressed
a number of serious problems faced
by CPAs – especially resistance
by traditional councils and
mismanagement by the Department
of Rural Development and Land
Reform (the Department).
Background
T
56
PLJ
he Bakgatla ba Kgafela
community brought a
partially successful land
claim over various pieces of
land in the North West. In order
to be granted ownership of the
restituted land, the community
had to create a legal entity capable
of retaining ownership of the land.
In 2005, the claimant community
members voted in favour of creating
a CPA to hold the land. They elected
a committee to run the CPA and
adopted a draft constitution. The
residents then made an application
to have the CPA registered. However,
the traditional leader, Kgosi Nyalala
Pilane, was unhappy about the
decision to form a CPA, as was the
traditional council. Pilane wanted
the community to create as a trust
instead.
When he voiced his
dissatisfaction to Ms Lulu Xingwane,
the then-Minister of Agriculture and
Land Affairs, she suggested that the
community register a provisional
CPA in terms of section 5(4) of the
CPA Act for 12 months (as opposed
to a permanent CPA in terms of
section 8).
The Department proceeded to
register the provisional CPA in line
with the Minister’s instruction, in
spite of internal memoranda that
included a recommendation by
another government official that
the CPA should be permanently
registered.
In 2008, seven properties
within the Pilanesburg National
Park – that formed part of the land
claimed by the community – were
transferred to the provisional
CPA. Thereafter, the Department
had almost no contact with the
community – and, significantly,
it did not help the community to
convert the provisional CPA into a
permanent CPA.
When, in 2012, the Bakgatla ba
Kgafela CPA tried to prevent the
construction of a shopping centre
on land that it believed it owned,
the traditional council argued that
the CPA no longer existed. The
traditional council argued that
section 5(4) of the CPA Act meant
that a provisional CPA is only valid
for 12 months – after 12 months, if
the CPA has not been turned into a
permanent CPA, it no longer exists.
The CPA went to court to get
confirmation on its legal status. Its
members were specifically worried
about what would happen to their
communal land if the arguments
of the traditional council were
found to be correct. This was the
beginning of a drawn-out legal
battle which eventually found its
way to the Constitutional Court.
What the Constitutional
Court decided
T
he ConCourt unanimously
decided that the Bakgatla
ba Kgafela CPA did
continue to exist and should
be permanently registered.
Although the main issue in the
ConCourt’s decision was the
technical question of whether or
not provisional CPAs can continue
to exist and hold land after 12
months, the decision also dealt
with a range of other issues that are
important for land reform.
The ConCourt’s judgment,
written by Judge Jafta on behalf of
the entire bench, found that the
purpose of the CPA Act is to enable
claimant communities to form
democratic institutions through
which groups can acquire, hold
and manage land received through
the land reform programme.
Referring to the CPA Act as
“a visionary piece of legislation
passed to restore the dignity
of traditional communities”
(Bakgatla CPA, para 31), the
Court found the legislation to be
essential in giving expression to
the right to land restitution.
In addition, the ConCourt
noted that the CPA Act is a tool
for transforming and developing
customary law:
“The Act seeks to transform
customary law and bring it in
line with the Constitution. At
the same time, the Act extends
the fruits of democracy to
traditional communities...”
The judgment confirmed the right
of rural communities to choose
CPAs democratically as their
preferred institution to hold land.
Given Minister Gugile Nkwinti’s
frequent statements that CPAs
should no longer be allowed in
traditional areas – which was then
backed up by the Draft Policy
Paper on CPAs – the ConCourt’s
judgment strengthens and secures
the ability of land claimant groups
to choose CPAs as a mechanism to
hold and manage their land.
There can be no doubt
that [the democratic
principles that CPAs
must adhere to]
safeguard the interests of
members of traditional
communities and
empower them to
participate in the
management of a
communal property.
The creation of an
association introduces
participatory democracy
in the affairs of
traditional communities.
All members of the
community are afforded
an equal voice in matters
of the association and
the property it holds on
behalf of the community.
Bakgatla CPA, para 30
PLJ
57
to the heart of Land reform
How to know whether
a CPA is provisional or
permanent:
T
here are two quick ways
to find out whether a CPA
is a provisional CPA or a
permanent CPA:
• Check the certificate: When
the Department registers a
CPA, it issues a registration
certificate which stipulates
whether the CPA is permanent
or provisional.
• Check the registration
number: Every CPA has its own
registration number. Provisional
CPAs have registration
numbers that end with “P”
(for example, CPA/07/2042/P),
while permanent CPAs have
registration numbers that
end with “A” (for example,
CPA/07/2042/A).
to the heart of Land reform
the CPA has applied for and
been granted an extension).
This interpretation would mean
that if the government failed to
register a permanent CPA within 12
months, the claimant community
would have to start from scratch
in choosing a legal entity to hold
their land. And if, during this time,
land had been transferred to the
provisional CPA, it would probably
then have lost it.
On the other side of the
dispute, the CPA argued that after
12 months a provisional CPA
continues to exist but loses its
right to manage the land. Although
this interpretation would
cause difficulties for claimant
communities, it would also mean
that they would still own the land
in cases where the government
fails to register a permanent CPA
within 12 months. The ConCourt
found the second interpretation to
be correct:
Key interpretations of
the CPA Act
S
ection 5(4) of the CPA Act
provides for the registration
of provisional CPAs. This
section was important in the
Bakgatla ba Kgafela CPA case as the
CPA and the traditional council
disagreed over what it meant.
According to the traditional
council, the section stipulates
that a provisional CPA ceases
to exist after 12 months (unless
58
PLJ
“In the context of
section 5(4), reference to
the period of 12 months
is made simply in
relation to the exercise
of the right to occupy
and use land. The section
makes no mention of the
provisional association’s
lifespan at all.”
(Bakgatla CPA, para 42)
The judgment went on to clarify
that a provisional CPA can exist,
not only for more than 12 months
but until it is deregistered by the
Department. If the government,
however, fails to convert a CPA
from provisional to permanent
within 12 months, the provisional
CPA would not be able to exercise
its right to occupy and manage the
land.
This is very important for
other CPAs which have been
provisionally registered rather
than permanently registered.
It means they continue to exist
and puts the burden on the
Department to register them
properly.
CPA registration
A
nother important finding
in the ConCourt was that
the Bakgatla ba Kgafela
CPA should have been permanently
registered. The ConCourt pointed
out that the CPA had met all of the
requirements in order to qualify
for permanent registration (in
terms of section 8). An official
in the Department had also
recommended that the CPA be
registered because he was satisfied
that the CPA qualified.
The ConCourt’s interpretation
of the definition of a permanent
CPA in the CPA Act supported this
finding. The CPA Act defines a CPA
The Bakgatla ba
Kgafela CPA case
is a significant
victory for rural
communities across
the country. The
judgment affirms
and protects
the right of land
claimant groups to
choose which legal
entity they want to
acquire, hold and
manage land held
on a communal
basis.
Above: A banner voicing support for the Bakgatla ba Kgafela CPA at the ConCourt in Johannesburg (2015).
as a “CPA which is registered or
qualifies for registration in terms of
section 8”. This, the Court found,
means that if a CPA qualifies for
registration (by meeting all the
requirements set out in section
8 of the CPA Act) it should be
registered by the Department.
If a CPA qualifies for
registration, the ConCourt insisted
that the Department must register
it. In not doing so, the Department
would be failing to comply with its
legal obligations. This is important
for claimant communities which
have struggled to establish CPAs
as a result of the unwillingness
or inability of the Department to
register their CPAs, as it empowers
these communities to insist on
registration (if the CPA meets the
requirements in section 8 of the
CPA Act).
Other important comments
T
he ConCourt listed the
duties of the Department
as set out in the CPA Act
in great detail, confirming that
both it and the Director-General
are under a legal duty to assist
and support CPAs when claimant
communities have chosen CPAs
as the entity they want to manage
their land.
This is significant in the context
of the government’s recent policy
developments which seek to
move away from democratic
land holding institutions (such
as CPAs) in favour of traditional
councils and traditional leaders as
owners of communal land.
The ConCourt highlighted
that it would be inappropriate for
the Department to undermine
the establishment, functioning
or legitimacy of a CPA where a
claimant community has chosen
it. This means that as long as the
CPA Act remains in the statute
books, government is bound to
enforce it.
And finally, the Department was
also reminded by the ConCourt
that it should not prioritise the
wishes of traditional leaders over
those of land claim beneficiaries.
PLJ
59
cen traLIsatIon wI thou t consen t
cen traLIsatIon wI thou t consen t
MINING LAW
Know the Law, Know Your Rights
M
any rural communities’
land rights are
threatened by mining
activities. There are different
laws that apply to mining. The
most important of these is the
Mineral and Petroleum Resources
Development Act of 2002 (or the
MPRDA). The MPRDA provides
some protection for the owners of
land and communities who have
informal or customary rights over
land. However, these protections
are not always very strong. This is
partly because mining law gives
preference to the interests of
mining companies.
This section sets out some of
the important information rural
communities should know in
order to protect their land rights
against mining interests.
The law requires
consultation with the
affected community
T
he MPRDA states that
mining companies need
to have a mining licence
before they begin to prospect or
mine. The Act gives government
60
PLJ
the power to give a mining
company a mining licence. But
before the government can do
so the mining company has to
comply with certain requirements.
One of the most important is
that the mining company must
consult everyone who will be
affected. Where people live on
communal land, this includes
community groups.
Consultation should not consist
of a mining company simply
coming to a community and
asking them to sign an acceptance
form. The purpose of consultation
is for communities to tell mining
companies what they think
about mining. For this reason
the law requires that all mining
companies tell local people about
the proposed developments and
explain what the impact of the
mining will be on the land and
the environment. People must be
allowed to ask questions and raise
objections.
Unfortunately, consultation is
not the same as consent. In terms
of the MPRDA, a mining company
does not need the consent of
the community to get a mining
licence. This means that a mining
company may still get a mining
licence even when a community
group does not want it to. This is
contrary to other laws, such as the
Interim Protection of Informal
Land Rights Act (IPILRA) of 1996,
which requires community groups
to consent to deprivations of their
land rights (see p. 69). Courts have
not explained how to deal with the
conflict between these two laws.
The MPRDA does, however,
provide that if a mining company
does not consult properly it
should not be given a mining
licence.
If a community group is not
consulted properly or is not
consulted at all, they should
contact the Department of Mineral
Resources or the Department of
Environmental Affairs as soon as
they can. If this does not help, they
can go to court to challenge the
granting of the mining licence.
BEWARE: Mining companies
often do not consult affected
communities properly or at
all. Sometimes they mislead
communities by giving them
inadequate information.
WHAT CAN COMMUNITIES DO WHEN FACED WITH
MINING IN THEIR AREA?
Get organised
It may be useful to create a committee to represent the community’s interests.
Be informed
Get as much information about the proposed mining as possible. Mining
companies are required to publish a number of reports before they will be
granted a mining licence. A community should try to access all of these
reports to make sure that they understand how mining will affect them.
Demand to be consulted properly
The law says that local people have to be consulted on mining developments,
so communities should insist on this.
Take charge of the consultation process
A community should make sure that their concerns are heard.
Use customary law
Using customary law could allow community groups to take charge of the
consultation process because it allows them to use the language that they feel
comfortable with rather than the technical language mining companies use.
The way communities make decisions must be respected.
Litigate
If all of this fails, a community group may be able to go to court to have the
granting of the mining licence set aside or reversed.
PLJ
61
“they are roBBIng us”
“We are not happy
about the mining.
They are robbing us.
The mine promises
a lot of things but
as the process
continues they do
not deliver anything.
The mine has
brought us nothing.”
An elderly woman from
Makhasaneni (2014)
“THEY ARE
ROBBING US”
How Mining is Afecting the Residents of
Makhasaneni
I
n Makhasaneni – an isigodi
(a tribal ward) of the
Entembeni Traditional
Authority in KwaZulu-Natal’s
Melmoth municipality – there is
a rural community that lives on
land owned by the Ingonyama
62
PLJ
Trust. Most of the residents are
extremely poor and are heavily
dependent on subsistence farming
and livestock.
The apartheid government
forcibly removed many members
of this community from their
previous homes in the 1960s to
make land available for white
commercial farming. The
community was thus relocated to
Makhasaneni and have, over the
years, managed to make it a place
they can call home.
Left: A homestead in Makhasaneni, KwaZuluNatal (2014).
When history repeats itself
through other means
The Ingonyama Trust and
the inkosi
L
T
ike with many people
living in the former
homelands, the residents
of Makhasaneni have rights to
occupy, use and access land under
customary law. These rights have
been protected in the Constitution
and in a national law called the
Interim Protection of Informal
Land Rights Act (or IPILRA).
In 2011, however, an
international mining company
called Jindal Africa (Pty) Ltd (or
Jindal) began prospecting for iron
in the Makhasaneni area. Jindal
is in partnership with another
company called Shungu Shungu
(Pty) Ltd (which had already
obtained a prospecting license
over the land at Makhasaneni
through the Department of
Mineral Resources).
The prospecting activities
include exploratory drilling on
pieces of land identified by the
companies as potentially rich in
iron ore. And yet, despite their
rights, the residents reported that
they had not been consulted about
the proposed mining activities.
When the mining vehicles arrived
on site to begin the prospecting
process, it was the first community
members had heard of it.
he mining company
contended that it had
been given the authority
to conduct prospecting activities
in the area by the nominal owner
of the land (the Ingonyama Trust)
and the local traditional leader,
inkosi Thandazani Zulu.
The Ingonyama Trust
was created by the KwaZulu
Ingonyama Trust Act (‘the Act’)
of 1994. This law ensured that
trusteeship of almost all the land
in the former KwaZulu Bantustan
was transferred to the Trust in the
dying days of apartheid. Currently,
the Trust administers 2.8 million
ha of land in KwaZulu-Natal,
where millions of people live.
According to section 2(2) of
the Act, the land is held in trust by
the Zulu monarch, King Goodwill
Zwelithini, for the “benefit,
material welfare and social wellbeing of the members of the tribes
and communities” who live on
it. Section 2(8) further stipulates
that “the Ingonyama shall not
infringe upon any existing rights
or interests”. This means that the
Trust has an obligation to protect
the rights of rural people living on
and using the land.
Although section 2(5) of the
Ingonyama Trust Act clearly
states that the Trust needs to
obtain the written consent of
PLJ
63
“they are roBBIng us”
a traditional council before
authorising development
activities, the communities living
on the land are still not always
consulted. Instead the consent
of a traditional leader (as the
community’s representative) is
often considered sufficient by
external parties.
In Makhasaneni, residents
claim that their inkosi signed
a contract with Jindal without
informing or consulting them.
When they called a meeting to
confront him about this, the inkosi
admitted that he should not have
agreed to the prospecting without
consulting them and agreed to
“tear up” the contract. However,
he never followed through on this
promise and now claims that he
had in fact consulted properly with
the community.
The community has tried to
protect their land rights
T
he community has tried
to uphold their land
rights and prevent the
prospectors from going ahead.
A local committee even entered
into a memorandum of agreement
with the mining company to hold
the latter accountable to the
community.
For the time being, residents
have been able to halt the
prospecting activities, but they
64
PLJ
“they are roBBIng us”
remain concerned that the mining
company will renew its efforts
soon, and thereby jeopardise the
community’s rural livelihoods.
How the mine has affected
people
O
wing to Jindal’s
prospecting activities,
many residents have
been unable to cultivate their
fields, as drilling has taken place
either in their field or very close by.
Others have lost livestock. Some
have said that the community’s
ancestral graves have been harmed
or destroyed. And others believe
that their water sources have been
contaminated by the chemicals
used by the mining company.
A 70-year old woman living in
Makhasaneni (whose name has
been withheld to protect her) had
a particularly devastating story
to tell. She has been living on the
same plot of land, and cultivating
the same small field, for over
20 years. Heavily dependent on
the crops she grows to feed her
11 grandchildren, as well as five
other children who are “living with
[her and] do not have parents”,
the prospecting quickly became
nothing short of a catastrophe. She
recalled:
“The mine just arrived and said
that they were going to start
working. They started drilling
in the field where I planted my
vegetables. I never agreed to
them using my field.”
The chemicals used during the
drilling destroyed her crop and
irreparably damaged her field.
Jindal not only failed to forewarn
her of its activities but it did not
even rehabilitate the land once
the prospecting was complete.
Instead, they paid her R5 000 as
compensation. Today, she remains
unable to use her field and has
to rely on her neighbours who
occasionally give her a little space
to grow vegetables.
Many of the residents who are
trying to protect their land rights
also speak of death threats and
intimidation which many believe
is linked to their resistance to the
mining activities. Activists who
assert the law are specifically
targeted as troublemakers.
Some people have even gone
into hiding. In the neighbouring
area of Ekuthuleni, land activists
who won their right to manage
restituted land through a
Communal Property Association
(CPA) were also subject to
violence and intimidation. There,
the houses of various members
of the CPA were burnt down.
The police have, so far, failed to
properly investigate these threats.
Undermining customary
land rights
T
he Makhasaneni case
study shows just how
vulnerable the land rights
of many rural communities
are. The community has clear
customary land rights and these
rights have been formalised
in laws like IPILRA and the
Ingonyama Trust Act. And yet,
despite these rights, Jindal and
the local traditional leader
have failed to properly consult
the community about the
proposed prospecting activities
– thereby threatening the latter’s
constitutionally protected land
rights and livelihoods.
The law requires proper
consultation with community
groups, as well as their consent,
before interfering with their land
rights. Although the residents of
Makhasaneni’s struggle to assert
their rights is far from over, the law
is very clearly on their side.
Above: A prospecting site where new dirt roads have
been cut into the previously undisturbed communal
lands around Melmoth in KwaZulu-Natal (2014).
PLJ
65
“they are roBBIng us”
“they are roBBIng us”
QUOTES FROM
MAKHASANENI RESIDENTS
“We should be listened
to but we are not
consulted. We are not
treated like people who
should be consulted or
have rights.”
“The mine promised
that they would create
jobs. They said that
80% of the jobs would
go to people from our
community and that
only 20% of the jobs
would go to other
people. Once they
started prospecting
there were very few
people from our
community that got
employed.”
66
PLJ
“The problem is that the
mine says that we will be
relocated. We are afraid.
We plough our own
food here but if we are
relocated there may not
be fields to plough. Some
of us work here and may
not be able to get work
there. We are scared of
being relocated to an
area that doesn’t suit our
needs.”
“Now we are people who
are like tenants. We live
in fear.”
“I understood that
we have the right to
live here but when our
inkosi’s delegation told
us that we have no rights
it gave me a terrible
fright. They said that
we have no rights at all
because we are not the
owners of the land. They
said that they have rights
over the land. They even
said that we must not
‘play with their land’.”
“We are also afraid
for the elderly people
in the community
who do not have the
strength to relocate
and rebuild. The
government has built
RDP houses here. In
terms of government’s
programme you only
get one house. We
have received out
RDP houses so if
we are relocated we
have already received
our grant. What will
happen to the old
people who have
already received their
RDP house?”
“The mine has finished
our rights. In the days
of apartheid we were
evicted from farms
and left here. We were
removed from those
farms and now they are
going to remove us from
here. Where should we
go?”
“The mine came here
through the amaKhosi
who acted like they are
the owners of the land.”
“I feel like I have been
hurt by the mine.
When they first started
drilling, they drilled in
the field that I planted.
They did not consult me.
I just saw them drilling
there. Now there is a
large metal rod in the
earth [to mark where
the mine has found
minerals]. The mine left
my field fenced and now
I cannot get in. Now I
cannot plough my fields
and cannot sell my crops
anymore.”
– From interviews
conducted in
December 2014
PLJ
67
PRO TECTING
THE LAND
RIGHTS OF
RURAL PEOPLE
Is the IPILRA the Answer?
B
oth the Constitution and
the Interim Protection of
Informal Land Rights Act
of 1996 (IPILRA) recognise and
protect the land rights of people
living in rural areas.
Under apartheid, residents
of the Bantustans were deeply
affected by land laws which
left them vulnerable to forced
removal. And yet, more than 20
years after the end of apartheid,
people in these areas are still
uncertain about their rights.
This is partly owing to the
lack of ‘formal’ documents or
government registers that certify
these land rights, but the situation
has also been exacerbated by the
government’s failure to develop
laws and policies that protect and
strengthen people’s rights over
communal land.
68
PLJ
People have secure tenure when
they are legally and practically
able to defend their ownership,
occupation, use and access to land
against interference from other
people or institutions. Those who
live in the former Bantustans are
not always able to prevent other
people or institutions from taking
over land that they live on and use.
People living in rural areas do not
always have secure tenure. Their
vulnerability is made worse when
government, traditional leaders
and communities all have different
understandings of who owns
the land and who has the legal
authority to use it. For example,
recently, traditional leaders in
KwaZulu Natal, believing that they
are the owners of the communal
land within their jurisdiction, have
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P ro tectIng the Land rIgh ts of ruraL P eoP Le
P ro tectIng the Land rIgh ts of ruraL P eoP Le
What are ‘informal rights’
to land?
•
The land rights of people who
are beneficiaries in terms of a
trust that was created by a law
passed by Parliament. This
was included to protect the
rights of people living on land
registered in the name of a trust,
like the Ingonyama Trust land in
KwaZulu-Natal.
The rights of people who
previously had Permission to
Occupy certificates (PTOs).
These are certificates that
were issued by the apartheid
government to show that
people could use or live on
specific pieces of land.
The rights of anyone who has
continuously lived on the
same piece of land since the
beginning of 1993 as if they
were the owner of the land.
These people are called
beneficial occupiers.
Clearly, the IPILRA applies
in many different contexts.
However, it does not provide any
protection for labour tenants or
anyone who has used or lived
on land merely because the
owner of the land has given them
temporary consent. In these
cases, there are other laws that
provide protection – for example,
the Extension of Security of
Tenure Act of 1997 (or ESTA)
Where land is held on a
communal basis, the IPILRA says
that people may not be deprived of
their informal land rights in terms
of customary law unless certain
requirements are met. There are
two important requirements:
First, the IPILRA says that if
the community is disposing of
(selling) land in which people have
IPILRA rights, the community
must pay those affected
appropriate compensation.
Second, the IPILRA says that
the community can only decide to
deprive someone of their informal
land right if the majority of the
community agrees to this. This
means that most of the people
in the community that have
similar rights to the person being
deprived of their right must agree
to the deprivation. In order to
make sure that the majority of the
community agrees, a community
meeting must be called to discuss
the possible deprivation of the
land right. Section 2(4) of the
IPILRA says that the community
members have to be given enough
notice about when and where the
meeting will take place, and must
be given a chance to participate in
the meeting.
T
he IPILRA protects different
types of informal and
customary land rights. Here
is a list of the rights that it protects:
•
entered into development deals
and land sales without the consent
of the community members living
on the land.
Although there seems to be
confusion about who owns this
land and what people’s rights are,
the law is actually very clear. The
IPILRA provides protection for
people living in rural areas.
The Constitution
and the IPILRA
W
hen the Constitution
came into effect in
1996, it protected the
people living on land in the former
Bantustans by recognising their
rights over land.
In 1996, Parliament also passed
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PLJ
the IPILRA to give effect to the
Constitution’s promise to protect
people whose land rights are
insecure as a result of past racial
discrimination. The IPILRA was
intended to be a temporary law
that would work like a safety net
by protecting people against the
deprivation of their land rights
until a more detailed permanent
law could be passed.
The former Land Rights Bill
of 1999 would have replaced
the IPILRA, but it was never
introduced in Parliament. The
Communal Land Rights Act of
2004 (CLRA) would also have
replaced the IPILRA, but in
2010 the ConCourt declared it
unconstitutional, deciding that
the government had not passed
the CLRA properly because it did
not allow people in the provinces
to participate in its development.
As a result, the IPILRA has been
renewed by Parliament every year.
Although it provides important
protection to rural people, as a
law it appears to be either largely
unknown or misunderstood by
government officials. This has
meant that the IPILRA is not
always used or implemented.
IPILRA rights remain legally
valid however, and people can
insist that they have the right to say
no to developments which deprive
them of informal land rights. If
they say no, the government or
the developer must go to court to
apply for an expropriation order
which is an expensive and time
consuming process.
The right to use, live on, or
access land that falls in one of
the former Bantustans or that
was previously South African
Development Trust land.
This includes customary land
rights. It means that people’s
rights to their household plots,
fields, grazing land or other
shared resources (like forests)
are protected.
What does the
IPILRA say?
T
he IPILRA provides
strong protections for the
informal and customary
land rights of rural people.
Section 2(1) provides that
people cannot be deprived of
‘informal rights’ to land unless
they consent to being deprived
of the land (or the government
expropriates the land and pays
suitable compensation).
This means that a person can
only give up their informal or
customary land right if he or she
agrees to give it up.
•
•
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71
P ro tectIng the Land rIgh ts of ruraL P eoP Le
P ro tectIng the Land rIgh ts of ruraL P eoP Le
“The Government
policy since 1994
recognised inhabitants
of former homelands
as the rightful owners
of the land they occupy,
irrespective of how the
ownership of such land
may be reflected in the
Deeds Registry.”
State Land Lease and Disposal Policy, 2013
“Our history sketches
a bleak picture of
several decades of
forced removals. In
fact, between 1963 and
the late 1980s, a period
where forcible evictions
reached their most
frequent, South Africa
saw approximately 3.5
million people forcibly
removed… [Professor
Colin] Bundy makes
the point that ‘trauma,
frustration, grief, dull
dragging apathy and
surrender of the will
to live’ are some of
the effects of forcible
evictions on the human
conditions.”
Deputy Chief Justice Moseneke,
Joe Slovo judgment
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PLJ
The IPILRA defines a community
as a group of people, or part of a
group of people whose land rights
derive from shared rules. This
means that decisions can also be
made at the level of sub-groups
who have shared rules in respect of
specific areas.
The IPILRA therefore requires that
when government or companies
want to mine or develop land
used by people with informal land
rights, they have to negotiate with
the people who have informal
land rights and get their consent
to use the land. Without the
consent of the community,
these developments cannot take
place. They also need to pay
compensation to the people who
are losing their land. The IPILRA
means that traditional leaders
cannot make decisions about the
land without the consent of the
community.
The need to strengthen the
IPILRA
A
lthough the IPILRA
provides important
protections for the land
rights of rural people, the law has
various shortcomings that require
strengthening or amendment.
Recently, civil-society
organisations have argued that the
IPILRA must be strengthened and
properly enforced. This can be
achieved by making it a permanent
law and by making more people
aware of it. There is also a need
to create regulations that add
more detail to the provisions, as
well as to create processes that
must be followed by government,
companies or traditional leaders
if they want to use land where
people have informal or customary
land rights. Section 4 of the
IPILRA gives the Minister of Rural
Development and Land Reform
the power to make regulations,
but the Minister has not done
so to date. The government has,
however, already developed
Interim Procedures Governing
Land Development Decisions
which Require the Consent of
the Minister of Land Affairs as
Nominal Owner.
•
their informal or customary
land rights because of the
protections in the IPILRA. If
they did not consent to the
deprivation of their rights, the
deprivation is unlawful and they
can fight it in court.
An individual whose communal
land rights are under threat
can insist that the majority
of the community has to
consent to the deprivation. The
community should be notified
if and when relevant meetings
are taking place, that they have
the right to participate in these
meetings, and that they have the
right to be compensated if they
are deprived of their rights. They
can insist that the procedure
explained in this article needs to
be followed - and if not they can
seek litigation.
How can the IPILRA
be used?
K
nowing how the IPILRA
protects people’s
informal land rights is
important, but that is no guarantee
that government, companies
or traditional leaders will not
continue to infringe upon people’s
rights. If people’s informal land
rights are under threat, they
should:
• Insist that they need to
consent to any deprivation of
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