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Illegal
land sales driving rural vulnerability in Zimbabwe
IRIN
News
October 08, 2012
http://www.irinnews.org/report/98899/illegal-land-sales-driving-rural-vulnerability-in-zimbabwe
In the past decade, 60-year-old
Josiah Makasha, in the rural Seke District outside the dormitory
town of Chitungwiza, some 35 km north of the capital Harare, has
seen urban sprawl shrink pastures and deplete his cattle herd by
two-thirds.
Makasha used to have
15 head of cattle, but now makes do with five. “There is hardly
any more grazing land for our cattle, so we don’t have a choice
but to keep small herds. Our land has been taken over by people
from the city who are buying plots and building houses,” he
told IRIN.
For Seke's villagers,
the receding pastures are not their only problem. Traditional leaders
- empowered to distribute land to members of their communities -
are reducing the sizes of plots to sell parts of the land to buyers
from Chitungwiza and Harare for personal profit.
“It seems we will
soon end up as backyard tenants in the land of our ancestors. Our
headmen are the main culprits as they are enriching themselves at
the expense of the villagers by selling the land that is supposed
to belong to us as a community. Our children have nowhere to go
and end up cramped on our homesteads,” Makasha said.
The traditional leaders,
Makasha said, are supposed to accept a nominal fee of US$7 from
local community members receiving new plots, after which the community
members are supposed to pay $5 annually in tenure fees. But instead,
the headmen are selling two-hectare plots for as much as $4,000
to home seekers from urban areas.
As a result of the widespread
sale of land in the district by headmen and chiefs, he said, villagers
have reduced space to plant crops and engage in market gardening,
particularly the production of green vegetables and tomatoes that
provide extra income to local families.
Encroachment
Warship Dumba, the president
of the Elected Councillors Association of Zimbabwe, a group promoting
the interests of councillors and serving as a watchdog that monitors
municipal authorities, is worried about the unplanned encroachment
into rural areas.
“The situation
is common in rural areas that border cities and towns and seems
to be getting out of hand. Traditional leaders are conniving with
chiefs and district administrators to grab land from helpless villagers,
and of major concern is the fact that this is making rural dwellers
poorer while a few individuals get richer.
“There is no doubt
that cities like Harare and Chitungwiza have serious housing problems,
but it is not acceptable to change land use without following proper
procedures,” Dumba, who said his organization has carried
out several investigations, told IRIN.
Surplus land has long
been held in custody by the traditional leaders to distribute to
expanding families among local communities. But growing demand for
accommodation from nearby urban areas has turned places like Seke
into a sprawling residential areas for urban dwellers.
Low-budget houses have
sprouted in rural Seke over the past 15 years, particularly in the
last four years, according to Makasha, taking up hundreds of hectares
of land that should be reserved for the local people.
Unofficial estimates
indicate that Harare and Chitungwiza, the latter having been built
to cater mainly for commuters working in the capital, have an estimated
housing backlog of over two million units, against a combined population
of about four million.
Commercial
use
Some of the people buying
rural land in rural areas surrounding the two cities of Harare and
Chitungwiza are also doing so for commercial purposes.
Simon Makuvaza, 42, a
senior bank employee in the capital, runs a thriving piggery project
on two hectares that he bought three years ago from a headman whose
village is in Seke.
He has built a small
cottage for two workers who tend his pigs, as well as pens and water
reservoirs occupying slightly under a hectare. He has reserved the
rest of the land for chicken farming and a fish pond.
His plot is one of the
numerous pieces of land that extend into what used to be grazing
wetlands. “The purchase of this land was done secretly because
it is illegal. The headman claimed to the chief that I am his nephew
who was desperate for land and, in that regard, I am covered,”
said Makuvaza, whose pigs number more than 500. He paid $4,000 for
the plot, he told IRIN.
The headman, he said,
persuaded the two families that occupied the land to move to a smaller
space on the outskirts of the village, where the soil is sandy and
therefore unproductive.
One of the headmen, Patrick
Gonyora*, 65, says the illegal sale of communal land has transformed
his family’s life. He has been selling pieces of land to individuals
from Harare and Chitungwiza since 2009, when he was made a traditional
leader, taking over from his late brother. With profits from the
illegal sales of land in his village, he turned his four-room thatched
house into a modern one, complete with electricity.
He also runs piggery
and poultry projects that he started with the money he gets from
land buyers, and owns a used imported truck from Japan.
“Whenever I sell
a piece of land, I notify the chief. I have the right to give land
to people who want it, but these days, nothing comes free of charge,
so they have to pay. I know that there are villagers who have been
complaining to the chief that I am reducing land meant for farming
and grazing, but I don’t care. I am benefiting from the powers
that I was given as a headman,” Gonyora told IRIN.
Municipalities
get in on the action
Ignatius Chombo, the
local government minister whose ministry controls land acquisitions
in urban and rural areas, however, told IRIN that traditional leaders
did not have the power to sell land to private individuals.
“Traditional leaders
are custodians of the communal land and it is illegal for them to
sell it, so they risk being prosecuted. Those that buy the land
are also doing it illegally, and there is no way in which they can
have title deeds, so they would be removed once they are known;
they are not entitled to compensation,” said Chombo.
He said: “It is
unacceptable that the traditional leaders are changing land use
by selling plots for residential and commercial purposes, a trend
that disturbs villagers’ livelihoods.”
Unlike private buyers,
municipalities are legally permitted to take over land within their
districts, said Chombo. Many rural municipalities have worsened
the situation for villagers by expanding into villagers’ land
to build houses for employees, local businesses and workers at rural
business centres.
Chombo urged rural district
councils to ensure that villagers are not disadvantaged when their
plots are taken over by municipalities for commercial and housing
projects. District councils must not move people without finding
alternative places to settle them, he said.
His words, however, could
come too late for Kerina Juru, 65, from rural Goromonzi, about 50km
southeast of Harare. The local district council wants her homestead
for a housing project for its employees and business owners at the
nearby business growth centre.
“City council officials
came here last month and told me that I had to move within six months
because they want to build houses here. They said it was my duty
to find an alternative place to go, but where will I find the land?”
she told IRIN.
Forced
removal
Caring for her four grandchildren
after their mother's death a few years ago, Juru worries she will
be forced to sell her four head of cattle to buy a new plot elsewhere.
“I am not sure if I will be able to find a school near enough
for my grandchildren,” she said.
Since 2005, she said,
the Goromonzi rural district council has moved scores of families
from the village. Some of them have been lucky enough to acquire
new land in other villages, while others have resorted to “squatting”
with their relatives.
“This forced removal
of villagers is ruthless. Many families are now struggling to grow
enough crops to feed their families, and the situation has been
worsened by the fact that the rains are no longer reliable these
days,” Juru said.
*not a real name
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