SENEKAL, South Africa
SENEKAL,
South Africa
(Reuters) - South Africa's plans to undo the wrongs of apartheid by returning
land seized from native blacks is embodied in the life of Koos Mthimkhulu.
When
white-minority rule ended in 1994, the new democratic government made it a
priority to return land to those dispossessed. It wrote the idea into the
constitution and made a plan that would make people like Mthimkhulu independent
farmers.
Yet
the practice under the African National Congress (ANC) has fallen far short of
targets and disappointment is stocking up new risks of social, racial and
economic crisis to threaten the very democracy intended to save South Africa
from disaster.
The
post-apartheid government selected Koos Mthimkhulu for a program under which it
would buy agricultural land from white farmers and turn parcels over to blacks
who had claims on the territory. It offered him money, advice and moral
support.
Greying
at the temples and at ease tending a herd of cattle and tilling fields, he now
grows maize and sunflowers in the central flatlands of the Free State, no
longer tethered to white bosses and proud of his substantial 500-hectare
(1,200-acre) holding, of which about a quarter is suitable for crops
But
Mthimkhulu does not own the land, the government does. And in all likelihood,
without ownership, he seems destined for the failure that has hit many like him
who thought themselves among a fortunate few to get land: "I struggled for
a long time and I can't get a loan from banks because I can't use
the farm for security," he said in the local Sesotho language.
That
is not the only drawback small farmers like Mthimkhulu face; South Africa's
land reform ideals are being crushed by government mismanagement and the
economics of pitching the new, small-scale operations into competition with the
industrial-size farms that have made the country a global agricultural powerhouse,
exporting billions of dollars in farm products.
Most
food is grown at places like the Royal Dawn orange farm, 300 km (200 miles)
northeast of Mthimkhulu's homestead, in Mpumalanga province.
There,
hundreds of hectares of carefully maintained citrus groves are crisscrossed by
a network of pipes for automated irrigation. Each row of trees is alphabetized
and bar-coded, enabling the farm manager, a white man like the owners, to keep
a computerized track of fertilizer needs and use.
The
system allows supermarkets in export markets as far away as
Beijing to trace an individual box of oranges back to the row form which they
were picked - by a black laborer.
Other
African states are even recruiting South Africa's big commercial farmers, most
of whom are white, to grow in their countries, hoping their expertise will
increase their overall revenue from farming. Small local outfits
can barely compete.
RACIAL
INJUSTICE
The
origins of the problem the ANC has tried to resolve lie deep. A century ago,
under British rule, South Africa's 1913 Natives' Land Act set aside 87 percent
of all land for the small white minority and 13 percent for black Africans.
Two
decades of land reform under the ANC, which this year seems set to retain
President Jacob Zuma as the leader who will continue its one-party dominance at
elections in 2014 [ID:nL5E8FN1X1], have done little to change those land
ownership ratios set 100 years ago.
Plans
drawn up under the first black president, Nelson Mandela, were meant by 2014 to
hand over to blacks 30 percent of commercial farmland - a type of land that had
been almost exclusively owned by whites, who form less than a tenth of the
population. The government says so far it has achieved only 8 percent, but
still says wants to reach 30 percent in two years.
One
reason for that has been its reluctance to act by force. Its "willing
buyer, willing seller" program means the pace is set by white farmers
agreeing to trade. Striking deals at market rates is often elusive, raising
allegations of corruption in the setting of prices, and in the disposal of
state funds.
And
even when farms are returned to black residents, many are doomed to fail. Then
real estate developers or factory farming businesses, mostly
owned by whites, may step in and buy the land back - reversing progress toward
the land target.
"Restitution
needed to be done. But something went terribly wrong with the
implementation," said Theo de Jager, vice president of AgriSA, a body
which represents the agriculture industry and principally large white-owned
businesses.
Echoing
officials at the Department of Land Reform, who say most reallocated farmland
is "unproductive", de Jager said: "I visited more than 200 farms
that have been transferred over the last two and half years and I haven't been
on one that is a commercial success. None of those farmers are making a profit.
"And
if it is not profitable, it's not sustainable."
A
TIME BOMB
Land
is at the heart of racial injustice in South Africa and has the potential to
dent a democracy where about 40 percent of the population of 50 million lives
in rural areas. The crisis is not now, but without action now it will grow as a
threat.
"The
land issue is a symbol for blacks of everything that has been lost to
whites," said James L. Gibson, a professor of government at Washington
University in St. Louis, Missouri, who has studied the issue intensively in
South Africa.
Gibson
sees land reform as a time bomb, given the large number of the black majority
who feel they have been victimized and the glacial pace at which land is being
returned.
One
of his surveys indicates that an overwhelming majority of blacks feel land was
unfairly taken by the colonizers and current white holders have no right to the
land today.
"The
ANC is fearful on many fronts that a demagogue is going to come along and
present a serious challenge to the establishment. I don't think that it will
spontaneously erupt. It has to be sparked by a leader," he said.
The
ANC this year expelled the most prominent voice calling for an expropriation of
white-owned farms, its youth leader Julius Malema. His demands had raised the
prospect of a seizure of white-owned farmland, like that in neighboring
Zimbabwe, which many argue ruined a thriving agricultural economy.
But
even with Malema being sent to the political wilderness, there are other
prominent voices calling for a seizure of white-owned land, including Irvin
Jim, the general secretary of the powerful metalworkers trade union NUMSA.
Weighing
in the minds of ANC policy makers is what happened when Zimbabwean President
Robert Mugabe started seizing white-owned farms a decade ago. Land has gone
fallow and the breadbasket of Africa has been pushed to the brink of famine.
One
of the ANC's policy priorities for this year is completing its latest policy
paper on land reform. A draft released last year said the goal "is to
ensure that all land reform farms are 100 percent productive", and to meet
the 30 percent redistribution target by 2014.
Lechesa
Tsenoli, land reform deputy minister, said complex claims to ancestral property
slowed the process. Often, he said, relatives disagreed over which of the three
types of available settlement they wanted - namely getting the land that
belonged to their forebears, getting alternative land or cash.
"It
will impossible until we start doing things that we think we will solve
it," he said.
"The
issue is potentially explosive."
Seeking
to make good on commitments to make reallocated farms a success, South Africa
offers one of the strongest farmers advisory agencies on the continent.
With
hundred of offices in every province, the Agricultural Research Council helps
match crops to local soil, gives advice on irrigation and helps diversify the
gene pools of livestock.
But
coordination among government agencies can be poor, adding the troubles of
those pitched into running new farms. The Department of Land Reform is separate
from the Agriculture Ministry. Other local bodies, seed suppliers and
specialized financiers are often not coordinated. And the ARC may not be
notified of small farmers needing help until it is too late.
"If
you are not in the market with the right product at the right time, you are not
really going to make it," said Shadrack Moephuli, ARC's president and
chief executive. "If all the role players are not there for you at the
right time, and sequenced appropriately, you are likely to lose out."
If
beneficiaries can make their way through financing, seed purchases, planting,
growing and mechanized harvesting, they often fail in finding a place to sell
their product.
The
window shuts quickly for success or failure with one poor harvest enough to
bankrupt a new farmer.
Some
want the government to set up cooperatives to help the beneficiaries of its
land reform program get better prices on seeds and fertilizers and share costs
of agricultural machinery.
Moephuli
of the ARC says the government should keep costs down, too, when it buys land
to redistribute and not rush to give it away to people ill-equipped to work it
profitably: "Farming is not an emotional thing," he said.
Koos
Mthimkhulu has learned that lesson all too well.
Strolling
through his acres of maize, on the plain where he also grazes cattle close to
the farmhouse he took over when the white owners moved on, he fears the
government grants that got him started may soon dry up.
Without
profits to plough back in, he then may no longer be able to afford seed -
unless he goes back to laboring for a wage on other farms in the area still
owned by wealthier whites.
"It's
hard to make it as a farmer without the right support," he said.
"Without the right help, we will fail."
Source: Reuters, SENEKAL, South Africa (Editing by Alastair Macdonald).
Comments:
Mandela’s career morphed from Closet Communist
Activist to Martyr in Prison to Blessed Reformer allowing Genocide, property
confiscation and economic failure.
UN Agenda 21 claims that private property is
unsustainable and they also claim that the earth can only sustain a population
500 million, not 7 billion. Agenda 21 is
the global Communist Agenda.
If African leaders want to make a career from
reveling in their own thuggery, they will end up with the famine that they have
engineered for their people. Restoring private property rights may be the only
way to avoid this famine.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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