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Govt
issues 99-year leases to boost food production
IRIN News
November
06, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=56267
HARARE - In a
bid to boost food production, the Zimbabwean government will give
99-year leases to the first batch of resettled black commercial
farmers on Thursday.
Ngoni Masoka,
permanent secretary in the ministry of lands, said in a statement
that the leases would demonstrate the government's commitment to
empowering black farmers who had benefited from the government's
controversial fast-track land reform programme.
The leases will
provide resettled commercial farmers with security of tenure, which
could serve as collateral for loans to procure inputs. They have
cited their inability to raise money and uncertainty about their
future as reasons for the drop in production.
Since the launch
of the land campaign in 2000 to resettle land-hungry black Zimbabweans,
the country's economy has gone into freefall and cash crop production
has dropped dramatically. An annual inflation rate of around 1,000
percent has taken unemployment levels to more than 70 percent, and
shortages of foreign currency have caused rationing of food, fuel
and electricity.
The leases will
be issued to farmers who have been on their plots for at least three
years, and have been vetted by the National Land Board for competence
and commitment to farming, at a ceremony attended by President Robert
Mugabe.
Land expert and
former head of the technical unit of the presidential land review
committee Sam Moyo said the 99-year leases would increase the confidence
of farmers. "Generally, many farmers falling under the A2 [commercial]
scheme perceive having leases as a reason for them to feel more
secure and, hopefully, to increase production."
However, the group
of beneficiaries could be small. "Given that there is a need to
survey the farms, the numbers of farmers might not be large, since
the capacity to survey the land seems limited. I doubt if the figure
will go beyond 1,000." Moyo added that the vetting process by the
land board, while desirable, "might tend to be cumbersome".
He said there
was also concern that influential people could take advantage of
their positions to get the leases ahead of the intended beneficiaries.
At the height of the fast-track programme, many top politicians
were accused of grabbing multiple farms in violation of the land
policy, which stipulated that a person was entitled to only one
farm.
Since the land
would remain state property, there was a need for the government
to clarify whether farmers could use their farms as collateral,
said Moyo. "It is not yet clear how the government will deal with
cases whereby a farmer goes to borrow from a bank and defaults:
will the bank be able to repossess the farm and sell it? Because
for as long as the plots remain state land, the government would
still be involved."
Denford Chimbwanda,
president of the Grain and Cereal Producers Association, told IRIN,
"We welcome the move and most of us are waiting to be given our
own [leases]. However, the process is taking too long and production
on farms is suffering because they are not able to get money from
the banks."
At present the
99-year leases are limited to A2 farmers. Moyo hoped that A1 farmers
(small-scale and communal farmers) would also be given leases.
Permanent secretary
Masoka recently told parliament that the ministry of lands was experiencing
an acute shortage of surveyors because the law only permitted them
to recruit from the University of Zimbabwe.
"It has taken
long to [try to] amend such restrictive legislation ... [because]
it poses serious problems for the capacity of the Surveyor General
to survey land in Zimbabwe," Masoka said, estimating that only 1,500
A2 plots would be surveyed this year - around 15,000 A2 plots needed
to be surveyed, and the process could take three years to complete.
Zimbabwe's annual
cereal requirement is about 1.9 million mt. According to independent
estimates, only 800,000mt of maize was harvested this year, or less
than half the national demand. According to humanitarian aid agencies,
1.4 million people in a population of about 12 million were in urgent
need of food aid.
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