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Letter to Mahlamba Ndlopfu — deal with the land question, because the ‘barbarians are at the gate’

If the land question remains unresolved, it will, irrespective of who replaces the ANC in the next poll, result in an Arab Spring scenario. We will see the scenes of the July ‘Zuma’ 2021 riots tenfold.

Ah, Chief Dwasaho! I missed the State of the Nation Address (Sona) last night. It was a comeuppance on my side since you have consistently refused to engage with a lowly newspaper fellow from Zululand. I understand adult mutism when people are called upon to account for their leadership deficit. While ignoring me has no immediate consequences, the 47th US president, Donald Trump, using megaphone diplomacy and crude language, will be a different kettle of fish to ignore. He is convinced (right or wrong) that South Africa was “confiscating land” and treating “certain classes of people” “very badly”. He stated that funding would be halted until the situation was thoroughly investigated. 

What President Trump doesn’t know won’t hurt him or US interests abroad. The ANC’s failure to deal with the original sin, the land question, for 30 years is a ticking bomb waiting to explode. According to the government’s data – the Land Audit Report 2017 – which provides detailed insights, white individuals own 26,663,144 hectares, accounting for 72% of the total 37,031,283 hectares of farms and agricultural holdings by individual landowners. In contrast, Black Africans own 1,314,873 hectares, representing 4% of such land.   

It gets worse. According to the latest 2023 housing data supplied by the Department of Human Settlements, there are 4,297 informal settlements across the country – which are home to more than two million households – most of which are concentrated in the major metropolitan areas of Johannesburg (210), Cape Town (464) and eThekwini (530). In 2022, the South African Cities Network reported that one in five people in South African cities now live in informal settlements, which is expected to rise. There’s no need to state that the overwhelming majority of shack dwellers are black people. It is also no secret that when the settlers came to our shores in 1652, they didn’t bring with them any land parcels.

No one, not even a Howard University doctorate graduate, can explain why South Africa’s well-documented disparities, which are dragging us ever closer to the brink, are treated with such indifference. 

Meanwhile, the political class – across all parties – is preoccupied with trivialities: bringing the Formula One Grand Prix to the country, rehabilitating abandoned government buildings and chasing undocumented foreigners, as if any of these will solve the country’s deep-seated land crises.

According to the latest data from Statistics South Africa’s Census 2022, there are 50,486,856 Black African people in South Africa, making up 81.4% of the total population. Yet, they own a mere 4% of productive land, live in shacks and remain disproportionately unemployed. If this isn’t an emergency, I don’t know. 

Data from Statistics South Africa’s Quarterly Labour Force Survey for the third quarter of 2024 shows that the unemployment rate among Black African people remains significantly higher than that of other population groups, standing at 36.1%. According to Statistics South Africa’s Census 2022, 4,504,252 white people live here, constituting 7.3% of the total population, yet the unemployment rate is 7.9%. Nobody needs a sociology degree or even a master’s in political science to recognise South Africa’s original apartheid sin – its chronic shortage of opportunities for productive land, decent jobs and meaningful participation in the economy for the black population. The lack of singular focus on these is, frankly, unsustainable.

We in the middle class can pontificate how the ANC has mismanaged the economy – sewage spills, potholes, water shortages and load shedding, our oldest trusted friend. But the so-called barbarians at the gate demand more than just pothole-free roads. They want formal housing, decent jobs and farming land. If none of this materialises soon, Armageddon will arrive faster than Trump’s threats to punish Pretoria for nonexistent land grabs.

To resolve the original sin – the land question – you don’t need short-termism, land seizures or driving white people into the sea. The Constitution, land reform laws passed since 1994, and the recent Expropriation Act provide a blueprint to tackle this crisis of Trumpian proportions. Still, the fiscus cannot be the sole funding source for apartheid redress. There must be a reset in thinking about South Africa’s future from captains of industry, land owners, absentee landlords and those hoarding multiple hectares of idle land. It is more than affirmative action and BBE; it’s about the majority of citizens having a feeling of “home”. Soon, they won’t care who runs the government; we will see the scenes of the July “Zuma” 2021 riots tenfold. 

If we, the educated middle class residing in the suburbs like Waterkloof, fail to engage meaningfully in the debate concerning the future of our homeland, the “barbarians at the gate” will bring an end to South Africa as we know it – more swiftly than Trump’s ill-informed outbursts.

My leader, the point I am making is that the Expropriation Act is 30 years late and will not improve in the short term (20 years) dire land hunger for formal settlements and agriculture by the indigenous people. As Stephen Grootes rightly said, Trump’s comments about the Expropriation Act (which will not result in land being taken for nil compensation unless it has been abandoned) are a deliberate dog-whistle to his voters. The Act is so meticulously phrased that most instances of expropriation, even with compensation, will fall under the judiciary’s scrutiny. This is because the ANC led a multitude of black people into a “covenant” to live side by side with the “oppressor”. The 1996 Constitution and subsequent actions or omissions reinforce my view that no one in the political class (ANC acolytes) is gearing for Armageddon. Unfortunately, the “barbarians are at the gate”, and with one slip, it will be all over for all of us, not just for white people with the land and money, but for all of us. If the land question remains unresolved, it will, irrespective of who replaces the ANC in the next poll, result in an Arab Spring scenario.

As we know, the funding from the US for “perfunctory” projects aimed at keeping the “barbarians at the gate” hopeful for a “Better Life for All” is drying up. Trump is resolute in reorganising US foreign affairs, including dismantling the US Agency for International Development (USAID). USAID operates in about 130 countries, implementing various projects encompassing food security, energy, climate change mitigation and health. The United Nations’ membership stands at 193 nations. The most recent country to join the UN was South Sudan, which continues to grapple with the ongoing war which the world isn’t interested in resolving because we are busy with the Gaza Strip or the Goma imbroglio. 

In recent times, Comrade Leadership, the world (Pretoria included) has watched Mozambique’s slow deterioration for months – another Zimbabwe in the making? Yet, the African Union and the Southern African Development Community wasted no time deploying troops to Cabo Delgado, Mozambique’s northernmost province, because the “barbarians” supposedly threatened regional peace and stability. The same lackadaisical attitude we see in the government of national unity (GNU) in treating the local population as pawns in the grand schemes of political brinkmanship. But the winter of discontent will soon spread beyond villages, slums and townships, and it will be too late to focus on real issues: the land question.  

But, my leader, we all know that the real crisis facing many African nations is political instability, often orchestrated in foreign capitals with generous injections of cash and weapons. Who can explain a rebel group in Africa with mortar bombs? I laughed out loud when General Bantu Holomisa of the UDM stokvel told eNCA that our soldiers in Goma ran out of ammunition. The Battle for Goma is modern warfare – drones, mortar bombs and surface-to-air missiles, not bullets.  

In simple terms, my leader, your 2024 Sona 2.0 under the much-fancied GNU should have been two pages focusing on pulling South Africa from the brink of collapse: the land question, structural economic reforms, dealing with poverty, ending unemployment, and enabling investors to set up “shop” where there is certainty about tarred roads, water and electricity. 

Till next week, my man. Send me nowhere near your GNU, as the dearth of original, progressive political thinking continues unabated, making my stomach turn. DM

Comments (10)

jackt bloek Feb 7, 2025, 07:35 AM

if the land is redistrubuted, and the new farmers cannot produce food, South Africa will need to use FOREIGN EXCHANGE it earns from TOURISM , MINING and EXPORTING cars to pay Ukraine and Russia for food , just like rest of Africa

jackt bloek Feb 7, 2025, 07:35 AM

The rest of Africa has plenty of land Even if 5% of that land is made into agriculure it would feed the continent, but unable to do so.

jackt bloek Feb 7, 2025, 07:38 AM

if the economy crashes because of Arab Spring, it will force the masses to become like the rest of Africa. It is incredible that so many people rely on the state in South Africa , when in rest of Africa the state barely exists. AFRICA is perfect example of Libertarianism

Arnold O Managra Feb 7, 2025, 08:39 AM

I'll point out again for the record that when Jan van Riebeeck landed on the Cape of Good Hope in 1652, the human population of the combined W/N Cape was just 70,000. Bantu tribes then were present in the NE and heading southwards, through brutal conquest. They didn't bring land either.

Arnold O Managra Feb 7, 2025, 10:52 AM

The history of the Batswana people, also known as the Tswana, includes migration, kingdom building, conflict, and colonisation. The Batswana originated in central and eastern Africa, migrating south between the 1300s and 1500s. Even the Dutch tribes reached SA first.

Arnold O Managra Feb 7, 2025, 10:59 AM

And of course the first nation people of Southern Africa - the Bushmen and Khoe-Khoe(n) were colonised and displaced by all of the new arrivals, both Bantu and European. History is interesting indeed.

Arnold O Managra Feb 7, 2025, 11:18 AM

In short, if you decide to position your worldview in Manichean racial terms like "original sin" then you will probably discover that you are very much mistaken. Poor knowledge leads to poor solutions. I urge you to self-educate. Both history and science are important.

Pieter van de Venter Feb 7, 2025, 12:09 PM

No, no, no. It cannot be. The correct version of history is not very popular under some groups in the country. When it suits, this country was only discovered in 1994, except in special circumstances. Like democracy only started in 1994 and ALL the elections since 1912, did not happen.

Ian McGill Feb 7, 2025, 08:57 AM

If there are barbarians at the gate the last thing to be stolen will be land. More likely liquor shops and flat tv's will be looted, farming is hard work and not a sure bet.

Bhekisisa Mncube Feb 7, 2025, 10:32 AM

Farming is hard yet 98 percent of farm workers are black. The irony!

Arnold O Managra Feb 7, 2025, 02:53 PM

I suspect you'll find that by far the majority of farmers are Asian ?.

Alfred E Newman Feb 7, 2025, 09:17 AM

The EFF would have cancelled dm if the author was paler and used the same word to describe the persons at the gate

Bhekisisa Mncube Feb 7, 2025, 10:30 AM

We all know who are the "barbarians at the gate." We either do the right thing and South africa will prosper or do nothing and perish together like fools.

Anthony Kearley Feb 7, 2025, 01:36 PM

We don't agree with you on what the right thing is, to create prosperity. It is not a moral question, it is an economic question. Read less Marx, more Thomas Sowell.

Michael Cinna Feb 10, 2025, 06:49 AM

Glad to see someone reading Thomas Sowell

Miss Jellybean Feb 7, 2025, 10:34 AM

Maybe you need to research properly. The Cabo Delgado conflict is a separatist issue, they want Sharia Law in the north of Mozambique & the government told them where to get off. This conflict has been going on since 2017 but no-one cared until a foreigner was killed

Pieter van de Venter Feb 7, 2025, 12:01 PM

Wow, when the ANC was still outlawed and in the bush, the battlecry was 87% of the population only owns 13% of the land. Now they are only 81% and only owns 4% of the land. Something went horribly wrong under the ANC!!! Where did the billion go for land purchases when it decreased from 13% to 4%

Bhekisisa Mncube Feb 7, 2025, 01:39 PM

That's 1913 figures after the first official land theft. Since 1948, more land grabs happened. You should know this.

Arnold O Managra Feb 7, 2025, 01:57 PM

For perspective, the total population of South Africa in 1913 was about 6 million, which is about the same as today's Joburg.

Arnold O Managra Feb 7, 2025, 02:03 PM

"Cumulative Claims Settled and Finalised from 1995 to 31 March 2023: - Total number of claims = 82976 - Land cost = R25 537 486 215.16 - Total awards = R53 246 619 048" "... 50:50 between Financial Compensation (totalling R20 billion) and Land compensation (totalling R24 billion)"

Michael Thomlinson Feb 7, 2025, 01:35 PM

Land redistribution is a broad term meaning what? If a farm is expropriated who will get ownership? There are plenty of examples of once working farms that are now dormant. Ordinary black people will not get any land. It will all be redistributed to wealthy Politicians and their cronies like in Zim.

Arnold O Managra Feb 7, 2025, 05:44 PM

Let's be quite clear hear, Bheki. The problem "bringing us to the brink" is not inequality per se. Ah, the perennial problem of hierarchical cultures where only the very few have access to the kitty. There are proven paths to solve this conundrum. Ask the right questions.

Arnold O Managra Feb 7, 2025, 07:00 PM

The correct question to ask, Bheki, is what are the cultural and societal principles to enforce in order to achieve broad-based living comfort? The Afrikaners were very successful in this. From country bumpkins to nuclear power in their own language, in about three generations. Not my people?

Arnold O Managra Feb 7, 2025, 09:28 PM

But remember the Afrikaner culture is the original anti-colonial culture. Like the Griquas, it was born from rebellion against the status quo. My people are now best represented by the dregs of the Griquas and the Groot Trek. We need to relearn SA history to overcome it.