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South African President Cyril Ramaphosa recently announced plans to allow white people’s land to be taken without compensation, which will then be distributed to black people in a move that he believes will be good for the economy. The president made the announcement late on Tuesday in a televised address to the nation. The farmers have claimed that the government’s plan will be “catastrophic and could lead to anarchy and food shortages like Venezuela or Zimbabwe”.

We’re really heading for a state of anarchy if something doesn’t change drastically AfriForum

The economy of Zimbabwe collapsed after their own land reform was carried out. More than 20 years after the end of apartheid in South Africa, white farmers still own the majority of South Africa’s land. An organisation representing South Africans, AfriForum, said that land expropriation with no compensation would have “catastrophic results like in Venezuela and Zimbabwe".

There has been an angry backlash against the president's reforms

There have been country protests against the government's decision to seize the land

The organisation’s chief executive Kallie Kriel said: “History teaches us that international investors, regardless of what AfriForum or anyone else says, are unwilling to invest in a country where property rights are not protected.” Ian Cameron, of AfriForum, said: “We’re really heading for a state of anarchy if something doesn’t change drastically. “There are places where the police simply refuse to act. They don’t know the law well enough or refuse to apply it to logical reasoning when it comes to defending people’s property rights.”

Since apartheid ended, the majority of landowners in South Africa are white

In the 1990s black South Africans received grants and subsidies to buy land plots, which resulted in overcrowding and poor land use. South Africa’s history of colonial conquest has pushed most of the black people into crowded urban areas or rural reserves. The 1913 Native Lands Act made it illegal for Africans to acquire land beyond these reserves, which became known as "Homelands".