I attended the debate on the Traditional Leaders and Khoisan Bill in the chambers of Parliament on February 27, a truly amazing and humbling experience.

Many qualified speakers propagated various viewpoints, the two who stand out for me being chiefs Le Fleur and Buthelezi.

RELATED: Land issue is rooted in history of dispossession

The president of the republic in his dashing manner closed the debate, answering every one of the questions posed, from funding to economics to land expropriation, but he didn’t mention the Khoi and the San. It dawned upon me that our president is uncomfortable addressing my people's plight, that his government's refusal to acknowledge our indigenous status is a planned strategy, a strategy to rewrite history and replace us.

Allow me to state the uncomfortable facts: the Khoi and the San are the original owners of this land, the original sin was perpetrated against us. Our position is clear, and it is not one of subservience, we will never again be second-class citizens in our own home. You cannot expropriate our lands and give them to someone else, this is recolonisation, it is unethical and illegal.