South Africa is set to seize two more white-owned farms, to fast-track land reforms in an attempt to rectify apartheid-era imbalances.
One of the farms is owned and run by a church, a senior government-land official said on Monday.
"The minister of lands has signed the notices of expropriation and they have been sent. The owners have 30 days to respond, following which we will begin expropriation procedures," Tozi Gwanya, the chief land claims commissioner said.
Gwanya said one farm was located near the mining town of
"The claimants to the Cullinan farm are two local families while the local African Pniel community are staking claim to the
Gwanya said negotiations in both cases had been dragging on for two years.
He said the state had offered $66,515 in compensation for the 106-hectare Cullinan farm, while the owner, OJ Botha, was demanding more.
Delays
"The more they delay, the more the land prices go up," he said, adding that the lands minister was in the process of finalizing four more expropriation notices for four more white-owned farms in the northern
The South African government has set itself a target of settling nearly 7,000 rural land claims before a December 2008 deadline.
The city of
Photo Caption
A Farm in