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Harare
says only 'lucky whites' will remain on farms
ZimOnline
January 22, 2007
http://www.zimonline.co.za/Article.aspx?ArticleId=769
HARARE - White
farmers have no future in Zimbabwe and the government will seize
more land from the few whites still on farms in the country, Lands
Minister Didymus Mutasa said at the weekend.
"Only the lucky
ones among the outgoing (white) farmers" could hope to keep
their farms, said Mutasa in response to questions by ZimOnline whether
eviction orders served on 15 white farmers last week meant the government
was revoking its promise earlier this month to allocate land to
former white farmers wishing to return to farming.
Besides publishing notices
in the state-owned Sunday Mail newspaper saying it would return
land to some white farmers, the government last November also gave
land to about half a dozen whites who were part of a group of about
100 black farmers given 99-year farm leases by the state.
But Mutasa - a close
confidante of President Robert Mugabe and is also in charge of state
security - said despite whatever policy pronouncements or
other actions taken in the past, the government was clear about
the future of farming in the country and that future was black.
He said: "The confusion
is being caused by those who can't read the future. There are black
people still landless out there, and as long as those people remain,
we will continue to take farms for resettlement.
"White farmers do
not represent the future of farming in this country, blacks do.
At the end of it all, I don't expect to see any more white farmers,
just successful black farmers. But of course like with everything
in life, there are the lucky ones. Only the lucky ones among the
outgoing farmers could remain."
Mutasa's comments
should send alarm bells ringing among white farmers still entertaining
hopes of continuing farming in Zimbabwe.
Between 400 and 600 white
farmers remain on land out of the about 4 000 who were farming in
Zimbabwe before the government launched its chaotic and often violent
land redistribution exercise seven years ago.
The largely white-representative
Commercial Farmers Union (CFU) last week said that the government
had stepped up displacement of the remaining farmers, adding that
eviction notices served on the 15 farmers from the south-eastern
Chiredzi district had brought to about 80 the number of farmers
ordered to leave in the past five months.
Zimbabwe, also grappling
with its worst ever economic crisis, has since 2000 relied on food
imports and handouts from international food agencies mainly due
to failure by new black farmers to maintain production on former
white farms.
Poor performance
in the mainstay agricultural sector has also had far reaching consequences
as hundreds of thousands have lost jobs while the manufacturing
sector, starved of inputs from the sector, is operating below 30
percent capacity. -
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