Title: Promised land
Authors: Karl Kemp
Publisher: Penguin Random House
ISBN: 9781776094752
Land reform and the possibility of expropriation without compensation are among the most hotly debated topics in South Africa today, met with trepidation and fervour in equal measure. But these broader issues tend to obscure a more immediate reality: a severe housing crisis and a sharp increase in urban land occupations.
In Promised Land, Karl Kemp travels the country documenting the fallout of failing land reform, from the under-siege Philippi Horticultural Area deep in the heart of Cape Town’s ganglands to the burning mango groves of Tzaneen, from Johannesburg’s lawless Deep South to rural KwaZulu-Natal, where chiefs own vast tracts of land on behalf of their subjects. He visits farming communities beset by violent crime, and provides gripping, on-the-ground reporting of recent land invasions, with perspectives from all sides, including land activists, property owners and government officials.
Kemp also looks at burning issues surrounding the land debate in South Africa – corruption, farm murders, illegal foreign labour, mechanisation and eviction – and reveals the views of those affected. Touching on the history of land conflict and conquest in each area, as well as detailing the current situation on the ground, Promised Land provides startling insights into the story of land conflict in South Africa.


Kommentaar
Very timely. Can't wait to read it!
Expropriation without compensation is illegal in international law, as evidenced by the order that the Zim government must compensate land owners which were violently dispossessed of their property in Zimbabwe.
Therefore, the only manner in which "expropriation without compensation" can take place in South Africa, which is bound by various instruments upholding the right to property, is for the property to be taken by violent means and not by legal means or statutory law, which will either not happen, or it if happens, will likely lead to civil war. It really is as simple as that. Thank you.