Law to bar foreign ownership of SA farms
Feb
12 2013 22:29 Sapa
"All
people who are foreign nationals will not own land, but will lease land on a
long-term basis," said Land Reform Minister Gugile Nkwinti. (Picture:
Beeld)
Paarl
- Foreign nationals will no longer be able to own land in South Africa once
government’s land policy is finalised and passed into law, Land Reform Minister
Gugile Nkwinti said on Tuesday.
"All
people who are foreign nationals will not own land, but will lease land on a
long-term basis," he said.
Nkwinti
was responding to a question during a "dialogue" with farm workers in
Paarl.
The
question had to do with foreign ownership of farms.
The
minister said government had completed an audit of state-owned land, but was
still busy with its audit of public and private land.
"Privately-owned
land includes land which is owned by foreigners. We are busy auditing all of
that land," he said.
When
the audits are complete and government's policy is promulgated into law then
"people who are foreign nationals will not own land, but will lease land
on a long-term basis", said Nkwinti.
Nkwinti
said the matter was being attended to by government.
Speaking
earlier, Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies said the recently-announced
R105 a day wage for farm workers was a minimum wage, and did not mean farmers
could not pay more.
He
said some farms involved in export production could afford to pay more than
this.
Davies
described agricultural labour as "an unorganised sector". "You
are not organised in unions," he told around 200 farm workers who gathered
at the venue for the event.
"If
you get a sufficient number of people enrolled in a trade union, you have the
right to invoke provisions of the Labour Relations Act," he said.
Davies
noted that many of the people he was addressing wore red Fawu or white Bawusa
T-shirts. He added: "Now go and negotiate, and get yourself a better
wage!"
He
said at some rural Western Cape clinics the biggest illness being treated was
not HIV/Aids, but malnutrition.
Agriculture
Minister Tina Joemat-Pettersson said cheap labour was now a thing of the past.
"Cheap
labour is no longer going to be tolerated," she said.
Earlier
on Tuesday, a similar dialogue was held with farmers and commercial farming
organisations.



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