Thank you Madam, through you, Chairperson, for the compliments to the department. The Ministry is very strict about this matter and different forensic audits are being conducted. In the end, you have the forensic audits; you have controls through your Chief Commissioner of Land Claims and the restitution commission and you have training and supervisory schemes in the offices of the Restitution Commission, as well as Land Affairs and everywhere else, of course.
The problem is to keep the pressure up that under no circumstances will anything be tolerated which smells of corruption. Now, with regard to these evaluations, we have decisions of the Land Claims Court as well as the Constitutional Court which say that it's an extremely relative matter and that you will have one evaluator saying it is six million while another evaluator will come and say it is ten million. That is why the market value is such an uncertain factor to base land reform and restitution on.
In fact, if you closely read the Constitution, especially section 25 (4), you will see that market value actually is not the guide for land reform and restitution and we will certainly keep it under close control and as this has been proven we will certainly follow up any possible allegations of fraud or corruption. Thank you.