Department of Water and Sanitation’s racial obsession discriminates against white and black farmers
11 July 2024
The civil rights organisation AfriForum instructed its legal team to bring a review application against the Department of Water and Sanitation (DWS) after the department refused to transfer water rights for irrigation from a black farmer to a white farmer.
A successful, emerging black farmer signed a cooperation agreement with his mentor, a white, commercial farmer. The emerging farmer intended to expand his farming, but because he could not provide sufficient security, he could not obtain a commercial bank loan to buy more land.
As a result, the mentor agreed to lease land suitable for irrigated farming, but for which he had no water rights, to the emerging farmer. In exchange for the mentorship, financial assistance to equip the farm with irrigation infrastructure and ensure access to markets, the emerging farmer would share his future returns equally with his mentor. The emerging farmer has water rights for irrigation on a nearby property and he would temporarily transfer these water rights to his mentor – this would be decisive for the success of this transaction.
It is precisely this application for the temporary transfer of water rights that was rejected by the Free State provincial office of the DWS. The DWS argues in its reasons that the conditions of the emerging black farmer’s water use license prohibit the transfer of water rights from a previously disadvantaged individual to a non-previously disadvantaged individual. According to the DWS, this is contrary to the transformation objectives set out in the National Water Act 36 of 1998.