EFF leader Julius Malema
had conveyed a motion asking for ANC to change the constitution to allow for
land expropriation without compensation.
The EFF leader Julius Malema offered his party's support to the
ANC to make that occur,a change of the constitution requires a two-thirds
majority vote. Had the ANC voted with the EFF‚ it would have reached the
required threshold.
However‚ the ANC forbidden
Malema's motion and voted against it‚ with the DA.The motion came after
President Jacob Zuma renewed calls for radical economic transformation‚ which
includes land reform. Malema criticised the ANC after the vote‚ saying the
party never implemented its promises.
Fransman said the party had
a chance during the debate‚ but unsuccessful to take it.
"We failed to honour our own commitment to put one of the
mechanisms in place to fast-track the issue of land redistribution‚" said
Fransman.
He said the ANC had clearly stated the need to address land
redistribution in many of its policy conferences.
"The key destruction of colonial and apartheid rule [is]
related to land dispossession and therefore the most crucial intervention in
our democracy will be the issue of land and will remain that‚" he said.
He said the party had failed to uphold its own targets on land
reform.
Fransman called for the scrapping of the willing buyer‚ willing
seller policy.
"Let's mobilise and call on the ANC in parliament to review
the position taken yesterday. Let's put petty issues aside with other parties
and agree on a mechanism in fast-tracking such‚ including constitutional
amendment‚" he said.
Fransman has been suspended from the party by the ANC's national
disciplinary committee after an accusation of sexual harassment brought against
him by a former personal assistant. Fransman is appealing against the sanction‚
meaning he holds on to the provincial chairmanship of the party.
Fransman is also known to be close to Zuma.
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