“just compensation”, and in conformity with the postulates and routine to be ascertained by an Act of Parliament.
In South Africa,
with respect to expropriation, section 10 of the Protection of
Investment Act
54
stipulates that investors have the right to property in terms of section 25 of the Constitution
55
.
Essentially, section 25 of the Constitution
56
as similar to Namibia renders for a just and equitable recompense in the event that an expropriation has taken place. According to section 25(3) of the South
African
constitution57
, just and equitable recompense contemplates an evenhanded equilibrium between the public interest and the private interests of those affected, having attentiveness to all pertinent considerations such as inter alia the occurrent usage of the property, the
intention of the expropriation,
the history of the attainment of the property in addition to the market value and utilisation of the property. In contrast, BITs often more straightforwardly guarantee fair market value recompense in the circumstance of expropriation.
Furthermore, customary international law demands the same level of recompense and thus, the current South African regime might render for less recompense to a foreign investor in the circumstance of an expropriation in comparison to the principles of customary international law.
58 54
No. 22 of 2015.
55
Of 1996.
56
Ibid.
57
Ibid.
58
Mondaq. Available at https://www.mondaq.com/;
last accessed on 25 March 2021.