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Fewer
whites remain in Zimbabwe: census
AAP
August 23, 2005
http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=58617
Fewer than 50,000 whites remain
in Zimbabwe, down from a peak of 293,000 under white rule, according to
an analysis of the most recent census published in a state-run newspaper.
The figure has continued to
drop since the census was conducted in August 2002 amid the seizure of
thousands of white-owned commercial farms for redistribution to black
Zimbabweans.
Independent analysts estimate
fewer than 30,000 whites remain.
The so-called fast-track land
reform, coupled with years of drought, has crippled Zimbabwe's agriculture-based
economy.
Inflation has soared to 254.8
per cent, unemployment is over 70 per cent and an estimated four million
people are in need of food aid in what was once a regional breadbasket.
Initial results of the 2002
census published in December that year showed that three million to four
million Zimbabweans had fled the country as economic refugees, bringing
the total population down to below 12 million.
A detailed analysis of the
results was completed recently and made available to the state-owned Herald
newspaper.
Independent journalists were
not given a copy.
Among the findings were that
whites numbered just 46,743 in 2002, The Herald reported.
Nearly 10,000 of them were
over the age of 65, and less than 9,000 were under 15.
The white population peaked
at 293,000 in 1974. White rule ended six years later.
Other African nations, including
Mozambique and Nigeria, have welcomed Zimbabwe's experienced white farmers
in the hopes they can help boost commercial agricultural production.
But Zimbabwe officials have
appeared undisturbed by the dwindling population.
Didymus Mutasa, now head of
the country's feared Central Intelligence Organisation, told the British
Broadcasting Corporation at the time of the census that he would be happy
to see Zimbabwe's population halved.
"We would be better off
with only six million people, with our own people who supported the liberation
struggle. We don't want all these extra people," he said.
Other findings included a rise
in the death rate from 11 out of every 1,000 people a year after independence
from Britain in 1980 to 17.2 in 2002, The Herald reported.
Analysts blame the country's
aging population and a surging HIV/AIDS epidemic now estimated to be claiming
at least 3,000 lives a week.
Fertility rates, however, were
about half their 1980 level, with each woman bearing an average 3.6 children.
"The major reason for
this drop is the measures taken soon after independence to ensure all
children, including all girls, had access to full education, coupled with
the development of a wide and effective primary health care network,"
The Herald said.
Aid agencies say family planning
has been widely accepted in Zimbabwe, despite significant drops in the
quality of health care and in school enrolment in recent years due to
the country's deepening economic crisis.
Last week, Finance Minister
Herbert Murerwa slashed spending on health and education even further
to fund the reconstruction of homes and businesses destroyed in a widely
condemned slum clearance campaign.
It was unclear whether HIV/AIDS,
which strikes hardest at people in their prime reproductive years, may
also be contributing to the drop in fertility rates.
The next census is due in 2012.
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