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Govt
starts evicting A2 farmers
Clemence
Manyukwe, The Zimbabwe Independent
November 17, 2006
http://www.theindependent.co.zw/viewinfo.cfm?linkid=11&id=8839&siteID=1
FOLLOWING President
Robert Mugabe’s assenting to the Gazetted
Land (Consequential Provisions) Bill, government plans to evict
nearly 50 A2 farmers in Mashonaland West, some of whom were arrested
this week following skirmishes with a senior Zanu PF official in
the area.
The new legislation
dictates that "no person may hold, use or occupy gazetted land without
lawful authority" and provides that former farm owners or occupiers
who violate the law are "liable to a fine not exceeding level seven
or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or both".
Resettled farmers
have in the past four years been protected from eviction by the
Land Occupiers
(Protection from Eviction) Act. The Act was repealed by the
new legislation giving government powers to evict resettled farmers,
even those who hold offer letters.
In an interview
yesterday, Mashonaland West provincial governor Nelson Samkange
said a land committee had recommended to government the eviction
of the A2 farmers from Impalavale Farm near Kadoma after an audit
by the Lands Inspectorate established that they were underutilising
land and vandalising irrigation equipment.
Samkange added
that Kadoma businessman and Zanu PF central committee member Jamaya
Muduuri who owns a portion of the farm had made the recommendation.
The governor
said the request had been forwarded to the National Security, Lands,
Land Reform and Resettlement ministry which is yet to make a decision
on whether the people should be evicted or not.
"There was an
audit there and it was established that the people were underutilising
land and vandalising irrigation equipment," Samkange said.
"The land is
not for drinking beer. If you are not planting, it will be taken
from you and the law allows that," Samkange said.
The governor
said currently there was "replanning and reorganisation" and besides
those who were going to lose their land for failing to use it, others
would get reduced portions if found to be failing to fully use their
bigger portions.
He added: "There
is a misconception that everyone should get land. Somewhere for
you to live yes, but there is no nation in the world made up of
farmers, others should be in industry."
On the detention
of farmers by police on Tuesday, Samkange said the law enforcement
agents were called in after the farmers became violent and barred
Muduuri from his property. The farmers accused Muduuri of engineering
their eviction for him to extend his plot.
It could not
be established whether the farmers who were detained at Battlefields
police station in the same province had been charged.
Asked what would
happen to those A2 farmers who had offer letters, the governor responded:
"The law provides that the minister can withdraw an offer letter
if you are not producing. We need to feed this nation."
Muduuri refused
to comment.
Last week President
Mugabe issued 99-year leases to 125 A2 farmers which the government
said would give them security of tenure.
On Wednesday
the MDC faction led by Morgan Tsvangirai said leases alone would
not guarantee increased food production because of government’s
bungling.
It said the
leases had been given out mostly to incompetent people with Zanu
PF connections.
"The granting
of 99-year leases mostly to incompetent farmers will not guarantee
us a bumper harvest," said Vincent Gwaradzimba, the party’s deputy
secretary for lands and agriculture.
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