Senwes Scenario April / May 2017 | Page 57

••• • • F UT UR E F O CUS • • It is now time to pray … and it is time to speak up. So give your support to those organisations that are your voice! safety. The bottom line: Farming requires a full-on commitment and there is never a moment when the farmer is not worry- ing over one or other decision: Should we plant/spray/harvest today, tomorrow... next week? Should I hedge my crop now? Will the price move up/down next week? Should I install alarms for improved security? How effective are security companies? Should I buy/sell land... how serious is this threat to land ownership? Should I mechanise...or do the right thing and create employment... but then I am exposed to labour issues and farm workers must be given a share in the farming business... I am hardly surviving in the current economy, how can I facilitate that process? Farmers are as challenged as the most highly pressured businessmen to find the road to survival and anyone believing that farming is an easy career … is wearing rose-tinted spectacles! So what concerns are farmers cur- rently preoccupied with? A “hot” topic on everyone’s lips is the land question. Many a sleepless farmer questions the wisdom of holding onto land which may be expropri- ated without compensa tion… Political analyst JP Landman places the issue under his looking glass. He highlights Zuma’s SONA 2017 wish to “return the land to the people using Constitutional means” and Minister of Land Affairs Gugile Nkwinti’s statement in the National Assembly to con- duct “a pre-colonial audit of land ownership, use and occupation patterns” and to develop a single law to address the issue of land restitution without compensa- tion”. He notes that Ramaphosa deflected the question when asked about expropriation without compensation saying, “Amending the Constitution is a strategy… implementing what is in the Constitution is another strategy”. Landman believes “the balance of forces at the moment is against changing the Constitution”. This is strengthened by the release of ANC policy documents stat- ing: ‘There are no “change the Constitution” or “expropriate without compensation” propos- als… It is all very much “return the land to the people using Constitutional means”. Landman also highlighted Section 25 (2) in the Constitution, which spec- ifies that compensation must be “just and equitable”. Nowhere is the willing buyer, willing seller dispensation entrenched in the Constitution. Theo Boshoff of Agbiz emphasises that Section 25 ‘mechanisms were carefully crafted to bring about transformation and restorative justice in a manner that is just and equitable, based on international norms and stan- dards.’ At the 2017 Grain SA Congress, Chairman Jaco Minnaar empha- sised that the organisation says ‘NO’ to land expropriation without compensation. He also highlighted the fact that increas- ing numbers of farms in the market are readily available for government to buy up for the land reform programme, but these opportunities are not being pursued. Minnaar gave voice to the overwhelming pressure expe- rienced by farmers by taking issue with the way farmers are consis- tently depicted in a negative light and are treated as the culprits in the slow land reform process. The Agricultural Outlook 2016 – 2025, issued by BFAP (http:// www.bfap.co.za), highlights that South African agriculture has performed well in spite of global competition and poor climatic conditions, and is optimistic about producers’ ability to deliver on the food security issue. But it also highlights the fact that uncer- tainty amongst farmers on the property issue means farmers are hesitant to invest new capital e.g. in replacement orchards, employ- ment patterns or labour-intensive crops. The pressure and burden of responsibility for land reform and transformation placed on commercial farmers seems to be an attempt to deflect attention from the inherent weaknesses in failed implementation strategies employed by government. BFAP notes: “Many of the constraints that have hampered growth can be turned around through an efficient and effective bureaucracy and clear and direct leadership” and “Small things which require no further requests to treasury but merely realignment or resources have the potential to bring large returns by unlocking potential growth”. The powers-that-be have the mandate to make changes and they also have the means to … but the will to implement is shrouded in the mists of political ambition and rhetoric. Agri SA’s Omri van Zyl says farmers need > CONTINUES ON PAGE 56 SENWES Scenario • APRIL/MAY 2017 55