Deputy Speaker, I think we insist and continue to say the land reform programme poses no threat to the economic sector. Let's look at a few factors to back our argument.
Firstly, we are not talking about land that is, in the main, privately owned. We are talking about a programme that seeks to restore land to those people who were dispossessed. This land finds itself in different hands. Some of the land, as I have said, is in the hands of government, the different spheres of government, and some of the land, of course, is in the hands of white commercial farmers. Of course, I said when I started that these farmers came forward and said they were prepared to donate land. That is a positive move to ensure that we can manage this land reform successfully. There is willingness from those people who have land. As we speak, government is preparing itself to redistribute land. We are verifying the land. We are looking at the land use so that, using whichever criteria we are going to set in place, we can say to a farmer who has given land that a particular piece of land can be utilised for this and for