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Injury
in addition to insult: human rights violation on commercial farms,
2000 - 2005
Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum
June 16, 2007
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Table
of Contents
- Methodology
of the study
- Background
- The Abuja
Agreement
- Land and
violence
- Results
- Demographic
characteristics of Sample
- Human rights
violations experienced by farmers and farm workers
- Violations
against farmers and their families
- Human rights
violations experienced by farm workers and their families
- Comparing
violations against farmers and farm workers
- Perpetrators
of human rights violations
- Perpetrators
of violations against farmers and their families
- Perpetrators
of violations against farm workers and their families
- Comparing
the perpetrators of violations against farmers and farm workers
- Resorting
to the law and the justice system
- Losses experienced
by farmers
- Losses experienced
by farm workers
- Findings
- Conclusions
- Appendix
Executive
summary
Widespread human
rights violations were inflicted upon white farmers and black farm
workers by agents of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe's
government during the seizures of white-owned farms from 2000 to
2005.
In addition to the human rights abuses, immense financial losses
were inflicted upon the farm owners. Farm workers suffered catastrophic
losses of income, habitation, health services and access to clean
water and sanitation that contributed to a high death rate. The
combination of the human rights abuses and loss of livelihood have
contributed to a growing economic and humanitarian crisis in Zimbabwe.
According to
this survey of 187 former commercial farmers conducted over six
months in 2006-2007, only 6% reported that they are still on their
farms. Seventy-five per cent of the respondents said they are Zimbabwean
citizens and 65% still reside in Zimbabwe. This is significant as
it shows that most white farmers identified themselves as Zimbabweans,
not British.
A total of
53,022 people - farmers, farm workers and their families -
were identified by the survey respondents as having experienced
at least one human rights violation. Many experienced multiple abuses.
These abuses included assaults, torture, being held hostage, unlawful
detention and death threats. If this figure from the limited survey
is extrapolated to include all commercial farms nation-wide, the
number of people suffering abuses during the farm seizures could
be more than 1 million.
The total financial
losses incurred by white farmers responding to the survey, according
to their own estimates, are US$368 million. If the survey's
figures are extrapolated to the entire commercial farming sector
the figure is an astronomical US$8.4 billion. The results of the
survey are inline with other estimates by economists.
The amount of
damages for which the Zimbabwe government should be liable, for
giving open support to the land invasions, would have catastrophic
consequences for an economy already in precipitate decline.
The losses suffered
by the farm workers were life threatening. The survey found that
about 1% of displaced farm workers and their family members have
died since losing their jobs. Extrapolated to the entire population
of 1 million farmer workers and their families, 10,000 people could
have died after displacement from the farms. This is clearly a gross
underestimate and anecdotal evidence from commercial farmers suggests
that the figure is considerably higher.
This report
finds that the gross human rights violations, and the violations
of rights generally, were much greater than had been previously
assumed. It is also evident that the patterns of violations and
those involved in the perpetration of these violations are not commensurate
with conflicts over land between land owners and landless people.
Instead the data from the survey suggests organised appropriation
by an elite, as has been widely claimed.
The report
concludes that the evidence is strongly suggestive of a systematic
campaign, as evidenced by the failure of the police and civilian
authorities to enforce the law and offer the protection of the law.
The report finds that a plausible case can be made for crimes against
humanity having been committed during these displacements. There
is a compelling need for these to be investigated and the perpetrators
to be charged and tried.
War veterans
and members of Zanu(PF) were the largest number of perpetrators
of the violations, followed by the police. Other significant perpetrators
were found to be members of parliament, officials from the president's
office, provincial governors, and other government officials. These
findings point to an organized seizure of land planned by officials,
not a spontaneous seizure carried out by landless blacks, as the
government claims.
All Zimbabweans
have suffered as a consequence of the ill-advised land reform process,
which has devastated the economy and created an enormous humanitarian
crisis. There can be no impunity for gross human rights violations
ever and hence there must be some process of accountability for
the violations that occurred during the land reform exercise. Quite
obviously this accountability must involve both criminal and civil
actions, and both groups - commercial farmers and farm workers
- must be supported in obtaining redress for the violations
they have experienced and the losses they have suffered.
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