|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2002 Presidential & Harare Municipal elections - Index of articles
Zimbabwe: Abuses Plague Land Reform
Human
Rights Watch
March 08, 2002
Land Issues at
the Heart of Political Crisis
The "fast
track" land reform program in Zimbabwe has been accompanied by significant
human rights abuses that harm the very people it was designed to assist,
Human Rights Watch charged in a report released on the eve of Zimbabwe’s
elections.
Militia groups affiliated
with the party of President Robert Mugabe have carried out serious acts
of violence against rural dwellers and landless workers on commercial
farms, the report said. Human Rights Watch also received reports of discrimination
in the distribution of land on political grounds.
"Many of the
people who were supposed to benefit from this reform have actually been
targets of the violence," said Peter Takirambudde, executive director
of the Africa Division of Human Rights Watch.
Colonial policies
of expropriation gave white farmers huge, free tracts of fertile land
in what is now Zimbabwe, while rural black people were restricted to crowded
"tribal reserves" of little agricultural value. From independence
in 1980 until 2000, this unjust situation changed little.
In 2000, President
Mugabe’s government passed new laws allowing expropriation of land without
compensation, and encouraging landless peasants to occupy commercial farmland.
In the forty-page
report, "Fast Track Land Reform in Zimbabwe," Human Rights Watch
provides testimonies from people who said that many of those who wanted
land under the "fast track" program had to show support for
the ruling party, ZANU-PF, and those who supported the opposition were
denied land. The landless laborers who live and work on the commercial
farms have been largely excluded from land redistribution. Among the most
disadvantaged Zimbabweans, they have also been particular targets of state-sponsored
violence.
The government also
failed to ensure that women, particularly married women, benefited from
the land reform, despite its stated commitment to gender balance.
While there has been
some reduced violence on commercial farms in recent months, and undoubtedly
some land has been allocated, problems persist. Many people are being
allocated land without security of title and without adequate start-up
infrastructure or resources to become self-sufficient farmers.
Party militias led
by veterans of Zimbabwe’s liberation war have been in the forefront of
the violence, though farm workers and opposition supporters have also
retaliated on occasion. The Human Rights Watch report, researched in 2001,
documents how these militia assaulted farm owners, farm workers, and residents
of rural areas surrounding commercial farmland. The report says that the
police did almost nothing to stop the violence.
Human Rights Watch
called for the post-election government in Zimbabwe to bring to justice
those responsible for abuses, and take steps to ensure that the violence
does not recur. Additionally, any government-sponsored land reform must
respect the rule of law.
A successful program
of land reform is crucial for human rights in Zimbabwe, and the international
community should be committed to addressing the plight of rural dwellers
and farm workers. International logistic and financial assistance is critical
to improve the infrastructure necessary to for land reform.
The report "Fast
Track Land Reform in Zimbabwe" will be available online at:
http://www.hrw.org/reports/2002/zimbabwe/
For more information,
please contact:
In London, Bronwen Manby: +44-20-7241-0309
In Brussels, Jean-Paul Marthoz: +32-2-732-2009
In New York, Peter Takirambudde: +1-212-216-1834
--
Africa Division
Human Rights Watch
New York Office
http://hrw.org/africa/index.php
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|