Western Cape Government opposes Constitution 18th Amendment Bill
24 August 2021
Today, the Western Cape Government held a digital press conference unpacking the Provincial Government’s decision to oppose the Constitution Eighteenth Amendment Bill, 2021, through its comments submitted to the Ad Hoc Committee on the Amendment of Section 25 of the Constitution.
The amendment Bill seeks to amend the Constitution to expressly allow for expropriation without compensation. It succeeds a previous version of the amendment Bill which was published in 2019 for public comment.
The Premier of the Western Cape, Alan Winde, said: “We have, from the outset, opposed expropriation without compensation. The right to property is an important right that cannot be done away with. The current amendment Bill is also not only confusing and ambiguous but, on one possible reading, also seeks to exclude the important and constitutional role that courts should play in determining the amount of compensation paid. It also aims to further centralise power to the state by introducing the concept of ‘state custodianship’. In a country impacted severely by corruption and maladministration, further centralising powers to that level of government would be detrimental.”
Premier Winde continued: “The amendment Bill refers to national legislation, yet to be developed, and which we understand to be a reference to the Draft Expropriation Bill, 2019, that is proposed to give meaning to the provisions of the amendment Bill. It is problematic that the national legislation has not been developed and published for comment together with the amendment Bill because the two instruments need to be read together. This will create uncertainty on the circumstances in which expropriation without compensation will be applicable and which the national legislation must provide for.”