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Thwart a tyrant by resolving land crisis
Bernadette Atuahene
July 19, 2005
http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/topstories.aspx?ID=BD4A70479
WHEN
headlines reported “white farmers forcibly evicted from their land
in Zimbabwe”, the international community was in an uproar. Our
sympathies went out to those farmers on viewing pictures of them
dejected and at times laced with their own blood. The blame for
this atrocity was squarely placed on the shoulders of Zimbabwean
President Robert Mugabe and his party, Zanu (PF).
The
international consensus is that Mugabe has evolved into a demagogue
who is manipulating the sentiments of the masses with the sole objective
of remaining in power.
The
international community, however, ignores the fact that the real
demagogue is systemic in nature. Government figures released before
the land crisis showed that 4400 whites owned 32% of the fertile
agricultural land while 1-million blacks owned a mere 38%. The per
capita ownership rate for white farm owners was 2,270ha, while black
farm owners had a paltry 0,06ha. This glaring inequality is due
to the self-perpetuating legacy of colonial-era theft.
The
British usurped land from the Shona and Ndebele people, who were
forced to pay a hut tax and reoccupy their land as tenants. Those
unable to pay were subjected to forced labour on white farms. Blacks
were legally barred from owning land outside of the arid black reserves.
In 1965, white settlers declared independence from Britain and,
with more fervour than before, viciously repressed blacks politically
and economically.
The
inequitable and racially tainted colonial distribution of property
that Zimbabwe inherited in 1980 on independence remains the status
quo. Neutral laws that protect property rights are rightfully thought
to be the cornerstone of a thriving market-based democracy. However,
when those laws protect the ill-gotten gains of any group, they
become a systemic inequality that functions as a razor with the
potential to disembowel a nascent democracy.
The
unfair land situation created a wellspring of systemic injustice.
What Mugabe did was reach into this wellspring, draw up the deep-seated
feelings of unfairness and manipulate these sentiments to serve
his interests. However, rather than viewing Mugabe as the source
of injustice, we must recognise that it is the systemic injustice
that allows a tyrant such as Mugabe to thrive. If the international
community is to help Zimbabwe, we must focus on the wellspring of
unfairness and inequality.
We
must stand behind the principle that radical land reform is imperative,
and give Zimbabweans a clear alternative to the present land grabbing.
Since
independence, a maelstrom of conferences, consultants and projects
concerning the land question has inundated Zimbabwe, but there have
been only nominal funds firmly committed to the gargantuan task
at hand. As a confidence-building measure, we must encourage countries
to contribute money to an escrow account dedicated to land redistribution.
The trustee should release the money in stages as Zimbabwe reaches
certain milestones, such as cessation of land-grabbing and restoration
of civil and political rights.
Zimbabwe’s
poor black masses are in a quandary because they see the injustice
in violently displacing white farmers just as clearly as they see
the injustice in the continuing legacy of their own dispossession.
Placing money into an escrow account demonstrates to the masses
that the international community has not turned a blind eye to their
plight. This will disempower opportunists who want to manipulate
the black masses’ entrenched feelings of injustice for personal
gain.
*Prof Atuahene teaches law, policy and international
development, property law, and international business transactions
at Chicago-Kent College of Law.
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