Real Estate Investor Magazine South Africa November 2014 | Page 17

upfront agriculture turns its back on Nkwinti’s proposals: “AgriSA favours market-related compensation to the farmer. Farming is a long-term investment. Farmers borrow money with land as collateral. At this stage, agricultural land is worth R155 billion nationally and agriculture debt stands at R89 billion. To lose 50% of their collateral will be a disaster to farmers.” Grain SA says: “We are convinced such a decision will immediately, not only put food security at risk, but lead to massive food price increases, higher inflation, increase in interest rates and eventually manifest in slower economic growth... South Africa can ill afford to destroy wealth by irresponsible government intervention into a free-market system which has produced cheap food and fibre for consumption of its people.” In October, the African Farmers’ Association of South Africa (AFASA); representing around 3,000 established and new farmers countrywide, rejected the ‘shocking’ 50%-land restitution proposal in its entirety. Another development that has sparked grave concern is the Restitution of Land Rights Amendment Act, which amongst other changes, provides for re-opening the lodgement of land claims between June 2014 and June 2019, while about 10,000 of the 80,000 land claims from the previous 1999 deadline still remain unsettled. An estimated further 397,000 valid restitution claims can cost R179 billion, and the means of funding remains unknown. The amendment bill will allow for exceptional claims by the Khoi and San people for the dispossession of land before the promulgation of the 1913 Native Land Act. It can literally open a Pandora’s Box – or perhaps it is open already. In May, Landbouweekblad reported on a judgement by the Grahamstown Land Claims Court, which ruled in favour of the claimants, the community of Salem, who allege