IFP

IFP doesn’t buy the ANC’s stance on Ingonyama Trust. Photo: Ingonyama Trust Board/web.

IFP doesn’t believe ANC on Ingonyama Trust land sentiments

IFP has developed trust issues over the ANC’s sentiments about distancing itself from seizing the land from the Ingonyama Trust

IFP

IFP doesn’t buy the ANC’s stance on Ingonyama Trust. Photo: Ingonyama Trust Board/web.

The IFP has made it clear that it finds it difficult to believe the ANC on its latest stance regarding land under Ingonyama Trust.

IFP ON ANC’S ABOUT-TURN ON INGONYAMA TRUST DIFFICULT TO BELIEVE

IFP KZN PEC Chairperson Councillor Thami Ntuli said:
“Having championed the Ingonyama Trust for 28 years and having fought continual threats from the ANC-led Government to take the land away from the people, the IFP has received with serious caution a statement issued yesterday by the ANC in KwaZulu-Natal claiming that it has no plans to interfere with the land under the Ingonyama Trust”.

ALSO READ: ANC weighs in on plans to seize land under Ingonyama Trust

“Their statement was in reaction to media reports that the ANC’s Integrity Commission has ordered the ruling Party to use its powers in Government to urgently repeal the Ingonyama Trust Act,” he added.

Ntuli said this echoes the recommendation made in the Report of the High-Level Panel on the Assessment of Key Legislation and the Acceleration of Fundamental Change, chaired by former ANC President, Mr Kgalema Motlanthe, who subsequently called Amakhosi “village tinpot dictators”; a comment which went unchallenged by anyone in the ANC’s leadership.

“That Report followed the 5th National Policy Conference of the ANC in July 2017, which noted that …the KZN ANC has been moving for the repeal of Ingonyama Trust.”

Ntuli
Map showing land under the Ingonyama Trust. Photo: IFP/ Facebook.

NTULI DIGS HISTORY BETWEEN THE ANC AND THE TRUST

He recalled that in 2018, during Questions to the Deputy President in Parliament, Deputy President Mabuza confirmed that a draft Bill was in place to remove land that is administered by traditional leaders.

“Yet now the ANC in KZN is adamant that there are no plans to touch Ingonyama Trust land. They have even highlighted the commitment made by President Ramaphosa to the late King Goodwill Zwelithini kaBhekuzulu on 6 July 2018 that the land under the Ingonyama Trust would not be touched. It would remain under the Trust and not be expropriated by Government.”

He said when the President made this commitment, his colleagues in KZN openly expressed their disapproval.


“With this background, it is difficult to believe the ANC in KZN when it pretends that there is no about-turn on this matter, but that it has always supported the Ingonyama Trust Act, and would continue to do so.”

Ntuli

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He went on to scrutinise the statement made by the ANC of forming collaboration with Amakhosi and mayors, saying a small percentage of traditional leaders sit in on Council meetings without a single of them being afforded the power to vote.

“The IFP, therefore, finds it difficult to take the ANC in KZN at face value when it reassures residents on Ingonyama Trust land that they will never do what they have been trying to do for years; namely take the land from the people and place it under central Government control.
We will be watching closely and will call them out on any contradictions, for the sake of genuinely preserving the role of Amakhosi and the rights of people living on communal land,” Ntuli vowed.