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Govt
in fresh farm seizures
Kumbirai
Mafunda, The Financial Gazette (Zimbabwe)
October
19, 2006
http://www.fingaz.co.zw/story.aspx?stid=1777
MORE than 100 white
farmers have been forced to cancel their harvesting and cropping
plans just before the start of the summer planting season, as government
presses ahead with fresh farm seizures.
The Commercial
Farmers' Union (CFU) reported this week that its members were
being served with eviction notices barring them from working their
fields.
Against the background of a government undertaking to halt land
seizures, which have decimated agricultural production, government
supporters have reportedly intensified farm invasions, ordering
all production to cease even if crops are ready to be harvested
and appeals against the evictions are pending. Failure to comply
with an eviction order attracts a sentence of up to two years in
prison.
The Mashonaland West and East, Manicaland, Midlands and Masvingo
farming regions are reported to be the worst affected by the fresh
wave of farm disturbances.
In Manicaland, the CFU reported that some ZANU PF gangs had seized
avocado, macadamia, coffee and timber plantations, while some farmers
lost sugarcane plantations in Chiredzi.
In Banket and Karoi, tobacco farmers said they were being served
with eviction notices signed by State Security, Lands, Land Reform
and Resettlement Minister Didymus Mutasa at a stage when they should
be transplanting seedlings.
CFU chief executive officer Hendrik Olivier told The Financial Gazette
that the situation was so bad that some farmers were evicted as
they prepared to harvest their winter wheat crop.
"The disruption is ongoing and we are very disturbed. All
of a sudden there is an upsurge in evictions when farmers have already
secured finance and inputs," said Olivier.
He estimated that between 3 000 and 5 000 jobs could have been lost
as a result of the latest wave of evictions.
"Labour is unsettled as their only source of employment is
being taken away," Olivier said.
Mutasa vowed to press ahead with the evictions.
"We are taking over our farms. Who said land reform yakapera
(is over). We have just taken a little part of the land,"
said Mutasa.
However Mutasa's comments appeared to be inconsistent with
Vice President Joice Mujuru's speech last week when she reassured
more than 300 international guests attending the tourism expo that
"Our land reform programme is now part of our history. I am
happy to say that the issue has now been taken to its logical conclusion."
Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) Governor Gideon Gono says the decline
in food production is militating against efforts to slay inflation,
which at 1 023,3 percent is the highest in the world.
Critics warn that the radical parcelling out of productive pieces
of land to unproductive farmers under the pretext of redressing
colonial injustices could drastically reduce next year's harvest.
Already, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) has indicated
that 1,4 million Zimbabweans will need food aid until next year's
harvest to avert massive starvation.
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