Land ownership in pre-colonial central and southern
South West Africa was intermittent;
Herero people and
Nama people claimed the land they were currently using.
Heinrich Vedder writes: As the Nama said: Where the foot of our hunter sets there is Namaland, so said the Herero: wherever my cattle grassed there is Hereroland. The notion of permanent ownership of land in the territory of South West Africa was only introduced in the wake of colonialisation. Consequently, the dispossession of land by European settlers from Africans began in the nineteenth century with the coming of
German colonists and traders as the area was incorporated as
German South West Africa. . During South African occupation of the territory, Namibia was divided along ethnic lines. 10
bantustans were established, the remaining territory, including much of the agriculturally viable land, was reserved for
Whites. In the bantustans farm land was communal whereas the farms outside were in private hands. When
Namibia gained independence in March 1990, the country inherited this division of land in which 3,500 farmers, who were almost entirely Whites, owned approximately 50% of the country's agricultural land. These farmers constituted about 0.2% of the total national population. Land reform was one of the biggest goals for many who participated in Namibia's liberation struggle. Government statistics show that white farmers own about 70% of the country's farmland. A total of 53,773 Namibians identified as white in the 2023 census, representing 1.8% of the country's population. ==Reform Strategies==