Real Estate Investor Magazine South Africa November 2014 | Page 18

cover story FURTHER LEGISLATION THREATENING PROPERTY RIGHTS 1) The National Development Plan aims to transfer of 20% of the agricultural land in a district to black recipients, at only 50% of the value as determined by the state (in terms of the Property Valuation Bill). 2) The verdict of the Constitutional Court in April 2013 in the case of AgriSA v the Minister of Minerals and Energy distinguishes between “deprivation” and “expropriation”. After the verdict, the state is able to dispossess and redistribute property, as long as the state does not assume ownership of the property and act only as custodian. 3) The Green Paper on Land Reform aims a radical redesign of property rights, with inter alia a type of freehold on land which will drastically limit the rights of owners. Within this context a Land Management Commission is proposed, which will have discretionary powers regarding disputes over title deeds. 4) The Expropriation Bill poses that expropriation may be used for the public interest and public goal. The Bill is not only applicable to land but will cover all types of property. Public interest and public goal are determined in an ad hoc manner and both have restitution as aim. 5) The Promotion and Protection of Investment Bill allows state intervention in investment processes. The Bill explicitly provides for expropriation of any property used for commercial purposes at less than market value. 6) The Infrastructure Development Bill aims to eliminate so-called inequalities in infrastructure. The Presidential Infrastructure Co-rdinating Commission is granted the authority to expropriate in the public interest and for the public good. 7) The Spatial Planning and Management of Land Use Act aims at centralised planning of land ownership. It proposed so-called spatial justice by integrating low and high cost housing in residential developments. 8) The Extension of the Security of Tenure Amendment Bill expands the rights of occupants and their dependents. Evictions are strictly controlled and the Amendment Bill means a significant loss in control over property. 9) The Rental Housing Amendment Bill proposes stricter regulation of the rental property market. Rental Tribunals will hear disputes and will be able to determine rental increases. 10) The National Water Amendment Bill and Policy Review prohibits the trading of water rights and proposes a use-itor-lose-it principle for water rights. Equality (including racial transformation) becomes the criterion for the allocation and re-allocation of water rights. Source: AfriBusiness 18 November 2014 SA Real Estate Investor leaders over land use in former homelands, which is preventing development and productive use. Not all is lost. In October, a new framework for land reform, created by a task team and several affiliated organisations, was tabled at Agri SA’s annual conference, based on constitutional and economically feasible principles and the National Development Plan. Agri SA said Minister Nkwinti made a commitment to consider the proposals and to work with the sector. The real issue Nevertheless, there is a more concerning underlying issue: a web of legislation posing a dangerous threat to the property rights of South African citizens. It is not only land restitution legislation threatening property rights. In fact, property rights are under fire from all sides in South Africa. Economist, Dawie Roodt, notes the most [\ܝ[