NEW YORK, NY – SEPTEMBER 29: President of Namibia Hage Geingob speaks on stage during The Africa-America Institute hosts Future Leaders Legacy Fund Awards gala on September 29, 2015 in New York City. (Photo by Bennett Raglin/Getty Images for The Africa-America Institute)

Following in the footsteps of South Africa, Namibia reportedly plans to take back land from white owners and ration it out to its Black population.

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In his speech on Monday, Namibiaโ€™s President Namibia, Hage Geingob announced his land expropriation plans to an effort to resolve the โ€œhistorical inequalityโ€ just like South African President Cyril Ramaphosa declared his country would be, the Daily Mail reports.

โ€œThe fundamental issue is the inequality. We also share a burning land issue and a radicalized distribution of land resources with South Africa,โ€ Geingob said.

โ€œThis comes from a common history of colonial dispossession. What we also agree to is that the status quo will not be allowed to continue.โ€

Geinob is asking for a change in the constitution to give the government access to expropriate land from white citizens and redistribute it.

Geinob said that โ€œcareful consideration should be given to expropriation.โ€ And he said the process should be a peaceful one.

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South Africa takes a stand

South Africaโ€™s new president, Cyril Ramaphosa, wants to address the legacy of colonization in his country by taking land from white farmers and giving it to the Black citizens.

Ramaphosa said in an address to South Africaโ€™sย parliament in Cape Town that the โ€œoriginal sinโ€ of the country was the European colonizers taking land from the tribal people in the 1600s.

The president said that he wanted to seeย โ€œthe return of the land to the people from whom it was takenโ€ฆ to heal the divisions of the past.โ€

โ€œThe expropriation of land without compensationย is envisagedย as one of the measures that we will use toย accelerate redistribution of land to black South Africans,โ€ Ramaphosa said.

He went on to promise,ย โ€œWe will handle it in a way that is not going to damage our economy.โ€

Itโ€™s certainly one way to address the long history of division and hurt that has followed South Africa since its colonization. The racism and division put in place by colonization and perpetuated by apartheid and other racist policies have left the countryโ€™s Black citizens playing an extended game of catch up when it comes to wealth.

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