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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
Zim
needs good farmers not mass land resettlement - agriculture analyst
- Part 2 of 5
Darren
Taylor, VOA News
September 30, 2008
View article
on the VOA website
Read other articles
in this series: Part
1, Part
3, Part
4, Part 5
Zimbabwe's
historic power-sharing pact
recognizes that the revival of the agriculture sector is essential
to the recovery of the country's devastated economy. Analysts
blame President Robert Mugabe's confiscation of white-owned
farms largely for the rapid decline of agriculture in the southern
African nation. Since the ruling ZANU-PF party began the farm seizures
in 2000, the country is no longer a regional breadbasket but an
importer of food. Aid organizations say many Zimbabweans are now
facing serious food shortages. Mr. Mugabe, though, blames drought
and sanctions from some in the international community.
Zimbabwe's new
prime minister and the head of the Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC), Morgan Tsvangirai, calls the situation in his country "one
of the worst man-made humanitarian disasters," and says more
than five million of his compatriots are endangered by "starvation
and famine" - largely because of ruling party policies
that have eroded his country's once-thriving agricultural
base.
"Large-scale commercial
farm output . . . is a complete disaster," says Deon Theron,
vice president of Zimbabwe's Commercial Farmers Union.
Production of staple
food crops, such as maize (corn), is down, and in recent years Zimbabwe
has consistently failed to meet its export quotas of beef, for example,
to the European Union. So valuable foreign currency has been lost,
deepening the suffering of the country's people.
It's in this context
that a new-look government made up of former enemies will be expected
to unite to resurrect Zimbabwean agriculture.
It's a "frightening
responsibility," says Geoff Hill, the Zimbabwean author of
several books about his homeland, which include analysis about its
agricultural decay.
Infrastructure
and expertise lacking
The United Nations rates
southern Africa one of the world's fastest urbanizing regions.
"There's
therefore a real need to grow crops on a big scale to feed people
in the cities," says Hill.
The UN estimates that
up to 70 per cent of Zimbabweans live in towns and cities, far away
from farmlands.
In a scenario such as
this, argues Hill, and with a small economy, very large commercial
agriculture is the only successful response to hunger in Zimbabwe.
"Tomatoes are cheap
only if grown by the ton. Ditto most other foods," he states.
Hill points out that
it usually takes only a season to turn seeds into crops, and crops
into food.
"So the problem
isn't in planting food. Zimbabwe's huge problem at the
moment is that there really isn't the infrastructure and the
expertise necessary for commercial farming. We need train lines
along which you can cart the fertilizer, the roads to take crops
to market, the tractor parts getting to remote areas to maintain
equipment, the dealerships where farmers can buy essential products.
All of this has broken down in the turmoil of the past decade or
so."
Hill says Zimbabwe's
entire agricultural sector "basically needs to be rebuilt
from the ground up, and that's going to take time and money."
Acute shortages
of fertilizer and seed and bad weather have also hurt Zimbabwean
agriculture in recent years, according to Ben Gilpin, of the country's
Justice for Agriculture
group. He says Zimbabwe is set to face the most serious cereal shortages
since 2000.
Land
reform mustn't be 'emotional'
President Mugabe has
consistently maintained that his land reform program, under which
farms owned mostly by the descendants of British settlers were sometimes
brutally seized by ZANU-PF militants, the police and army, has worked.
It's been successful, he says, because it's given land
to impoverished black people.
Hill responds, "It
wasn't a land reform program, it was a land redistribution
program. What happened was the land was simply given to Mugabe cronies,
like war veterans and army generals, who didn't know anything
about farming. They use the land to entertain themselves and their
friends."
Hill agrees that "responsible"
land reform is necessary in Zimbabwe to address the inequalities
of the past, and adds that the "hopelessly irresponsible"
land seizures are largely responsible for the country's meltdown.
"Agriculture is
not just about using land for food," he explains. "Zimbabwe
used to be the world's number one tobacco producer, and a
top producer of cotton. It was near the top in producing high-end
foods and flowers, coffee and tea, for the world market -
things that you can sell overseas in order to get foreign currency,
with which you can buy petrol and car tires and all the things that
Zimbabwe simply cannot manufacture locally."
The power-sharing agreement
commits the signatories to land reform in Zimbabwe, saying they'll
"ensure that all Zimbabweans who are eligible [shall] be allocated
land and who apply for it shall be considered for allocation of
land irrespective of race, gender, religion, ethnicity or political
affiliation."
But Geoff Hill counsels
against a "mass allocation" of land to Zimbabweans.
"Agriculture should
be looked at as a means of feeding the people, not as a means whereby
people are settled on land. People need education to get better
work, not parcels of land."
Besides, he says, as
the UN statistics show, Zimbabweans are continuing to move away
from the rural areas and into urban areas.
"Worldwide -
in Brazil, Philippines, Thailand, Zimbabwe - if you give young
people an education, the first thing they do is go to town . . . .
Now the challenge is to feed them once they're in town."
Hill says this challenge
will only be met by "putting lots and lots of fairly low cost
food" into the country's stores. He's adamant
that agriculture should be the responsibility of a relative few
skilled farmers who produce food and cash crops and not a "whole
bunch" of small-scale landowners who won't be productive.
"It is important
get agriculture up to a commercial status as quickly as possible.
That means you don't want somebody growing a patch of tomatoes
outside his or her hut; you want someone who's going to grow
ten hectares of tomatoes, do it properly, and get them into the
shops at a rate that is competitive with what you'd pay in
Johannesburg or anywhere in a country of similar economy to Zimbabwe."
Hill says agriculture
mustn't be seen as a "place to hide unemployment by
taking educated kids and dumping them on small plots of land to
become peasants."
He questions attitudes
among some in the international community regarding land ownership
and agriculture in Africa.
"When I give talks
around the world on the books that I've written, always -
in Sydney, or New York, or London - someone will ask me whether
giving people plots of land is not a good way to stem unemployment.
I'm never actually asked that question when I address people
inside Africa."
There's a good
reason for this, Hill says: most Africans want jobs to ensure their
livelihoods, not land.
"There is this
notion - it is racist but it's not meant to be -
that when white children get their (education), they should get
a job in the bank, but when black children get the same education,
they should be satisfied with a hectare of land and growing pumpkins;
(like they're) going to walk with a copy of Shakespeare in
the one hand and a donkey in the other. And of course it's
just not going to happen."
White
farmers won't easily return
The agreement accepts
that land ownership has been "at the core" of Zimbabwe's
political fight, but recognizes that the parties differ as to the
way land reform must, and should have, happened in the country.
The pact, however, makes it clear that land taken from white farmers
will not be returned to them, but that former colonial power Britain
- under whose rule prime land was given to the whites -
should compensate them for their loss.
Hill says even if the
agreement had said the land should be returned to the white farmers,
this would not have been practical. Many of them are now successful
farmers in other parts of Africa, especially in Nigeria and Mozambique,
where white Zimbabweans are credited with spurring agricultural
productivity.
"It's not
so easy for these people to just literally pull up their new roots
and return to Zimbabwe. It's taken them years to establish
themselves in other countries, you can't just expect them
to return to Zimbabwe at the drop of a hat," Hill explains.
Besides, he says, Zimbabweans
who left the country in droves in recent years are mainly waiting
to see if the agreement results in meaningful reform in their homeland
before deciding whether or not to return.
In the light of this,
says Hill, says land reform in Zimbabwe must be practical, not "too
emotional."
Ultimately, he states,
Zimbabwean agriculture will revive if the authorities realize that
it's not the farmer's race that matters, but his or
her ability to work the land productively.
"(The government
must say) we're not giving you land for a weekend retreat
where you can take your friends for a (barbecue), like many of the
ministers are doing; we're not giving you land just to sit
there and stare out at the open spaces, we're giving you land
to grow food economically, viably - either for export or to
feed the nation. If you don't do that, the government must
have the right to throw people off (the land)."
Sam Moyo, the
executive director of the African
Institute for Agrarian Studies in Harare, agrees that a reversal
of Mr. Mugabe's controversial land redistribution process
isn't feasible, and won't necessarily result in better
agriculture in Zimbabwe. What's needed, he believes, is training
to ensure that the country's farmers use the land in a sustainable,
productive manner, and better economic policies.
Moyo says land redistribution
should continue in Zimbabwe and should include white farmers. But
he says the policy should be "one person, one farm."
The power-sharing agreement
does indeed make provision for a land audit, to eliminate "multiple
farm ownerships." If completed successfully, such an audit
would remove farms from a number of the ZANU-PF elite, who now own
more than one farm.
"The bottom
line," though, according to Hill, is "to get the land
back into commercial production to feed the subcontinent and to
generate foreign exchange to get Zimbabwe moving forward again."
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