Hletshelweni Lina Nkosi is a 64-year-old pensioner who lives on a piece of land in Maphaya village in Jozini, northern KwaZulu-Natal. The descendant of labour tenants, she grew up with her late sister on a commercial farm and now lives with her grandchildren and her sister’s grandchildren in the village.
“My sister and I pooled together all we had to purchase this land from izinduna (headmen) and the local leader. We did this because we wanted to have a land where our children could grow up without facing the hardships of being labour tenants on white-owned farms.
“After we acquired the land we tried our best to build a house, myself and my sister. I used to sell meat and other items in pension payout points,” she said.
But the Ingonyama Trust Board came to Jozini around 2012 announcing that everyone had to sign leases to protect their land from anyone who wanted to “steal” it. “They told us that those who did not sign will lose their land. But when I went to sign, I was told that I cannot be allowed to sign alone because I am a woman and I must bring along a male relative to co-sign with me,” said Nkosi.
“I was then forced to bring along my then partner and we were allowed to sign. After a while this partner wanted to kick me and my grandchildren out of the house and he was supported by some izinduna. But God intervened and the partner died of natural causes before he could kick us out.”
About two years after signing the lease, Nkosi got a letter from the Ingonyama Trust Board informing her that she owed thousands of rands according to the terms of the lease she had signed. “We asked ourselves why we were now paying for land on which we were already living, the land for which we had already paid. They said we must just pay or we will lose the land,” she said.
Nkosi decided to join the applicants.
She and the other applicants did the unthinkable. They waged a legal battle with the powerful trust that owns 29.67% of the land in KwaZulu-Natal, and won.
KwaZulu-Natal Deputy Judge President Isaac Madondo delivered a trailblazing ruling on 11 June. It was greeted with relief and jubilation, not only by the applicants and their co-applicants – the Council for the Advancement of the South African Constitution and the Rural Women’s Movement – but also the millions of people who live on ancestral land administered by the Ingonyama Trust Board.
The board has been ordered to refund all the money paid under the lease agreements, which the court declared unlawful.
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Mam Ngubane
Another applicant, Bongi “Nelly” Gumede, a 53-year-old woman from Jozini, built her home with the money she earns as a seasonal worker on local commercial farms. She lives in Jozini with seven grandchildren whose parents have died of HIV-related conditions.
“We have to thank Sizani Ngubane [the late land activist and founder of the Rural Women’s Movement, who died in December from Covid-19 complications]. Without her, we would not have had this victory. She is the one who took us through the complicated processes that led to this case.
“I know she is celebrating with us wherever she is. She agreed with us that we cannot be made to pay rent in the property we already owned. Now that Mam Ngubane is gone, we will continue with the struggle until the end,” Gumede said.
It was unfortunate that the applicants had to approach the courts to have their rights secured, said lawyer and regional director of the Legal Resources Centre in KwaZulu-Natal Sharita Samuel, who led arguments in court on behalf of Nkosi and the other applicants.
This “judgment restores our clients’ informal land rights or PTO [permit-to-occupy] rights to their land and will ensure the security of tenure of people living on Ingonyama Trust land. The rightful beneficiaries of the land received no information about the consequences of signing these leases.
“The action of the trust and its board deprived women of their rights to property as the leases had to be co-signed by men, [thus] presenting a problem for unmarried women and forcing them to give away land rights to men they may have not intended [to have] long-term relationships with,” Samuel said.
She added that the trust was abusing its rights and did not need the money it took from the residents, because “in addition to allocation from the state, it had widespread leases of trust-held land across lucrative mining, commercial and agricultural operations, churches and schools.”
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Judiciary to the rescue
Other land activists say this case shows, once again, how the judiciary comes to the rescue of the people as political leaders dither. They say this ruling will force government officials into action, instead of hiding behind political and traditional protocol.
“The court also made findings against the minister of agriculture, rural development and land reform. These have enormous ramifications for the tenure security of the 18 million South Africans living in all former homeland areas.”
According to Zenande Booi, the lead researcher at the University of Cape Town’s Land and Accountability Research Centre, “the court found that Minister Thoko Didiza had breached her duty to respect, protect, promote and fulfil the right to tenure security of the holders of IPILRA [Interim Protection of Informal Land Rights Act] rights in KwaZulu-Natal. It ordered her to report back to the court every three months to explain the practical steps that have been taken and progress made to secure and record such rights,” she said.
Ingonyama Trust Board chairperson Jerome Ngwenya angrily refused to answer questions about the board’s response going forward. He blurted: “It took judges more than six months to decide and write a judgment. Now, do you expect me to respond within a week? Is there any fairness in that?” He added that he is not obliged to give answers to journalists.
Nonetheless, the road ahead for the trust seems bumpy.
Trust workers and officials staged a series of lunchtime pickets outside its offices from Monday 14 June in preparation to go on strike over alleged unfair labour practices at the organisation and the board’s refusal to recognise trade unions such as the National Education, Health and Allied Workers’ Union.
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Champion and protector
When King Goodwill Zwelithini kaBhekuzulu died on 12 March, the trust lost a fierce champion and protector.
A few years ago, King Zwelithini had threatened war or the secession of the Zulu nation if the government touched the land in the Ingonyama Trust.
This was after a high-level panel led by former president Kgalema Motlanthe issued a report saying the Ingonyama Trust Board was trampling on the constitutional rights of the people living on its land, and that the trust must be dismantled and these people given title deeds and full rights.
The amaZulu king repeated these threats in 2018, when a panel of land experts led by late social entrepreneur and gender activist Vuyo Mahlati released a 140-page report recommending, among other things, that the trust be dissolved and the legislation governing it repealed or reviewed.
Now the king is gone and his succession has devolved into a messy dispute, with different factions of the Zulu royal family supporting various would-be successors as candidates. It is not clear how or when, if ever, the succession issue will be resolved.
Ngwenya had used the king as cover previously, when he failed to account to Parliament for the millions of rands the trust has collected over the years.
The finances of the trust are held secret. The board has been accused of dodging accountability and has been at loggerheads with Parliament and the auditor general about a series of unfavourable annual audit outcomes.
The Ingonyama Trust Board told the National Assembly it had collected about R90 million in lease fees in the 2018-2019 financial year. But Ngwenya, as the accounting officer of the trust, has refused in the past to account for revenue collected from leases and mining rights.
This article was first published by New Frame.