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Monday
Nov012004
Monday, November 1, 2004 at 04:21PM
South Africa must spend some $2.05 billion to
resolve outstanding land claims by blacks in an effort to reform land
ownership in the formerly white-ruled country, the government said
Tuesday. Agriculture Minister Thoko Didiza also acknowledged to
reporters that the cost of completing the return of land legally
claimed as part of a "restitution" process since apartheid ended would
make it hard to meet a 2005 deadline. "We will need around 13 billion
rand ($2.03 billion) to resolve just the restitution," Thoko Didiza
said after a meeting of the country's Commercial Agriculture Working
Group, which includes the country's main farming organizations. That
would comprise a big chunk of planned spending for the 2005/06 budget,
estimated in the last official budget at $64 billion. A decade after
the end of apartheid, most commercial farmland in the continent's
biggest economy remains in the hands of minority white farmers. Land
reform is seen as vital if the forcible seizure and redistribution of
lands undertaken by Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe are to be
avoided. South Africa has long asserted its land reform process will be
conducted in an orderly, legal and transparent manner. The main aim of
the reform is to ensure that 50 percent of farmland is in black hands
by 2014 -- with 30 percent directly owned and another 20 percent
leased. [more ]