Sars will auction off the cabbage and tomato farm to settle unpaid taxes.

JOHANNESBURG - Expelled ANC Youth League (ANCYL) Leader Julius Malema's 140 hectare cabbage and tomato farm will go under the hammer in Limpopo on Monday morning.

The farm, worth R4 million, is being auctioned to settle his unpaid taxes.

Last month Malema's half-built mansion in Sandown was sold for R5.9 million on auction.

The cabbage and tomato farm was seized in March this year by the Asset Forfeiture Unit (AFU).

The property includes a farmhouse with four bedrooms, lounge, dining room, enclosed patio, kitchen with scullery and a study nook.

It includes a thatched rondawel, swimming pool and garage workshop with a partially completed second house.

Malema initially owed the taxman R16 million and after the sale of his Sandown home and auction of his personal belongings in Limpopo, he now owes a little more than R9 million.

Meanwhile, The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) in April said it was ready to start Malema's trial.

However the prosecuting body said it first needed to secure a court date.

The former ANCYL leader is facing a R52 million fraud and racketeering case in Limpopo.

In September, Malema and his co-accused Lesiba Gwangwa and Kagisho Dichabe were arrested on charges of corruption, fraud and money laundering.

The three men are currently out on a bail on R10,000 each.

A trial date will be set and indictments will be served when Malema returns to the Polokwane Magistrate's Court at the end of June.

The NPA spokesperson Medupi Simasiku said the police concluded their investigation.

"We are ready to prosecute which is why we have requested 20 June."

Simasiku said the NPA asked the court to move the matter to the high court.