Hon Chair, I want to respond to the statement made by the leader of the DA. In my opinion you cannot say equitable share is equitable enough if you expect subsidies from government. You are actually reducing ownership and control to a business transaction, because the manner in which this equitable share is viewed for land reform purposes is that of government having to pay market-value prices for farms that were actually basically obtained through subsidies from government. So the best way is to focus on our policy of land restitution and land reform with the intention of ownership and control by the ordinary citizens of South Africa who do not have equal opportunities of tilling the land they live on and should have the benefit.
Government's responsibility is to make sure that people have access to land. If we have to take certain measures to make sure that they have access to land, we can even go to the extent of looking at expropriation to have them accessing land. But equitable share is not just a business transaction by making government pay for your opinions and thinking that you must bring in people and we must pay. Thank you. [Applause.]