Thank you very much. We are not intending to sustain the apartheid legacy. That situation must change. However, we must not lose focus. We must understand that we are talking about the former homelands here. This is the 13% of the area of land that was allocated to black people to run themselves. The land that we are talking about is not arable, it is not fertile, it is dry and it is everything. It is 13% of the entire land. We must not be made to fight about 13% while there is 87% of land that we must share all of us. What I am trying to say is, yes, we must fight for the security of tenure. The piece of land that we must have must be valuable and be economically active and meaningful.
But remember those homelands were driven there; they were forced out. Those lands are barren, dusty, have no rivers or nothing. So we will wait for these people. We will hear what the traditional leaders and everyone who is staying there want. Let's consult them and hear what kind of tenure they want. But I want to say to them they must not lose focus because this is the 13% of the land that they were pushed to.
As government we are saying that we are engaged in this land reform. We want to restore dignity. Most of the people you find there were removed from their fertile land. We must not miss that point and
insists that you must get a title. No, you belong to where you come from - where you were removed. Thank you very much. [Applause.]
Xitsonga: