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Chaos
seen over ninety-nine year leases
Zhean
Gwaze, The Financial Gazette (Zimbabwe)
November 09, 2006
http://www.fingaz.co.zw/story.aspx?stid=1899
GOVERNMENT will
today issue the first batch of 99-year leases for resettled A2 model
farmers but critics have warned that the move could fall short of
providing lasting solutions to financing the troubled sector, amid
fears of a fresh round of disputed claims to land holdings.
The leases will
be issued to 100 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 to be attended
by President Robert Mugabe.
Government,
which has had to extensively subsidise agriculture since the land
redistribution exercise started in 2000, hopes the leases will give
resettled commercial farmers security of tenure, which could serve
as collateral for loans from financial institutions.
The farmers
have in the past cited their inability to raise money and uncertainty
about their future as reasons for the drop in food production levels.
Since the land
would remain state property, industry experts said there was need
for the government to explain whether farmers could use their farms
as collateral as the leases only offered security to increase production
levels.
The A2 farmers
have been faced with shortages of inputs such as fertilisers and
seed as they have depended on government handouts, which has also
not been able to meet demand due to the shortage of funds.
Financial players
have been apprehensive about funding the sector since the land reform
exercise began in 2000 as a risk assessment survey by banks had
revealed that it was risky to fund new farmers who did not have
title deeds to the pieces of land they held.
According to
a report from a local bank, the financial sector would like the
Government to make the 99-year leases transferable in order to serve
as title deeds that can be used as security when borrowing.
The report notes
that although the Minister of State For National Security, Lands,
Land Reform and Resettlement Didymus Mutasa said his Ministry was
now giving 99-leases to Model A2 farmers "in order to give
security of tenure and confidence to the new farmers for them to
invest more in their farms…", he clearly states that the leases
cannot be used as collateral.
In response
to a question in Parliament last month, Mutasa said: "You cannot
borrow money through the lease that you have not put onto the farm.
If you build a house on the farm and you want to use the house to
borrow the money, that is permissible but you may not use the land
as collateral. The land does not belong to you but to the lessor,
that is the Government…"
"Against
this background, it is the banks’ fervent belief that the Government
will soon resolve this important issue of collateral that is at
the core of lending by financial institutions,"
"However,
banks are also empathetic about the Government’s fears in making
the leases transferable — another redistribution of land may take
place, which may require another intervention. In this regard, the
Government should come up with a replacement to land as security,
may be some kind of irrevocable guarantees," the report said.
There are fears
that the issuance of the leases, coupled with the promulgation of
the Gazetted Land law, which will see farmers remaining on gazetted
land facing criminal charges and custodial sentences of up to two
years, could be the decisive stage in the total expropriation of
the few remaining farms occupied by white farmers.
The Commercial
Farmers Union, which largely represents the interests of white farmers,
and has reported an upsurge in evictions of its members in recent
months, has expressed doubt over the efficacy of the new policy.
"Will 99-year
leases in fact really address the issue of security of tenure when
it has been proven around the world that there is a direct link
between development and property rights?" the Commercial Farmers
Union queried when approached to comment on the issuance of the
leases.
Only about 600
out of an estimated 4 000 large-scale producing white commercial
farmers remain in Zimbabwe after the government’s land reform programme
which saw the landless blacks acquiring large tracts of land in
a bid to correct racial imbalances in land ownership.
The CFU also
noted that a few actual transactions of compensation by government
have been concluded with some of the former white commercial farmers
hence it was questionable how the leases would come into effect.
The leases needed
to be supported by surveys and correct demarcation of land and the
government has indicated it lacked capacity.
Permanent Secretary
for Agriculture Ngoni 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.
There are also
concerns that influential people could take advantage of their positions
to get the leases ahead of the intended beneficiaries as happened
with the land reform programme.
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