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| Namibia President Hage Geingob, seen at the UN, said he would push ahead with land distribution, citing the "fundamental issue" of "inequality" (AFP Photo/ TIMOTHY A. CLARY) |
Windhoek
(AFP) - Namibian President Hage Geingob vowed Monday to push ahead with land
redistribution, echoing the government of neighbouring South Africa, where the
issue has become a fierce political battleground.
Namibia,
which was ruled by colonial Germany and then apartheid South Africa until 1990,
has large swathes of agricultural land, as well as major diamond and platinum
mining industries.
"Many
Namibians were driven off their productive land," Geingob said at the
opening of a national conference in Windhoek to discuss new land policy.
"The
fundamental issue is the inequality... We also share a burning land issue and a
racialised distribution of land resources with South Africa.
"This
comes from a common history of colonial dispossession. What we also agree to is
that the status quo will not be allowed to continue."
Geinob
added that "careful consideration should be given to expropriation",
but urged that the process remain peaceful.
The
conference has been boycotted by several traditional leaders, civil society
organisations and political parties for allegedly having predetermined
outcomes.
Traditional
leaders have called on the government to resettle people on land that belonged
to their ancestors.
South
African President Cyril Ramaphosa, who faces elections in 2019, has said
expropriating farms without compensating their owners would "undo a grave
historical injustice" against the black majority during colonialism and
the apartheid era.

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