By Chris Makhaye
Descendants of a Scottish settler, who married a Pondo princess, are claiming that the Wild Coast Sun land belongs to them.
The area between the Umzamba and Mthavuna rivers on which the Wild Coast Sun resort is built is subject to several claims.
Among others, the Mzamba community - who claim to have been forcibly removed to make way for the resort in the late 1970s - lodged a land restitution claim with the Eastern Cape Land Claims Commission.
Sun International, which owns the Wild Coast Sun Casino and Resort, has rights to lease the land until 2079.
Now a committee representing the mixed-race Smith clan are disputing all other claims to the land and say it is theirs.
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They are descendants of John Gordon Smith, a settler born in Scotland and who later married the daughter of a Pondo chief, Faku Sigcawu.
In 1866, the Smiths claim, Chief Sigcawu gave the land to his son-in-law, who farmed the land and raised cattle.
He paid taxes for the land until he died in September 1910. His descendants continued to pay taxes until the 1950s.
The Smiths claim that they lodged a land claim with the Eastern Cape Land Commission before the 1998 land claim deadline, but have heard nothing from the commission.
"We have documentation to prove that the land belongs to us," said Grace Smith-Smale. "Others may have settled there, but they did not own the land."
The Eastern Cape's Land Commission confirmed a claim had been made by the Smiths .
Smith-Smale said the descendants are scattered all over the country, but regard the land on which the resort is built as their ancestral home.
Neil Smith said they had formed a committee to ensure their claim was taken into account when the final decision was made.
"We have heard there are other land claims being considered.
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