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White farmers can stay to harvest their crops
IRIN
News
February 06, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57536
BULAWAYO - More
than 100 Zimbabwean white commercial farmers whose eviction notices
expired this month can stay on to harvest their crops, but their
farms will still be up for grabs. The government is forging ahead
with plans to acquire more properties owned by white farmers, according
to a senior official.
Lands minister
Dydimus Mutasa told IRIN on Tuesday that his ministry, in consultation
with other government departments, had agreed to allow the farmers
to harvest their crops. But he insisted there was no going back
on the acquisition of their properties.
"We have, as a
government, agreed to let them [white commercial farmers] stay put
and wind up their businesses, at least until harvest time. It is
then that they will be moving out and making way for our own people
[black farmers], who urgently need land," said Mutasa.
The decision appeared
to be a reprieve of sorts after Mutasa announced earlier this week
that farmers who failed to heed the expiry of their eviction notices
on 3 February faced imprisonment.
"All I can say
is that those who resist leaving the farms will be arrested and
face the full wrath of the law. It is the duty of the police see
to it that those who don't abide by the laws are incarcerated,"
he said.
"Our people have
been deprived of productive land for decades and decades, and now
is the time for them to get the full benefits of freedom by getting
the land that rightfully belongs to them. There is certainly no
compromise on the land redistribution issue."
The Commercial
Farmers Union, which represents the interests of white farmers,
said it was pleased that its members had been allowed to stay, though
temporarily.
Zimbabwe's Land
Act, passed last month, gave the country's remaining white farmers
up to 90 days to vacate their land. The move followed the nationalisation
of all agricultural land in a 2005 constitutional amendment that
also prohibits white farmers from challenging the seizure of their
land in court.
Before the skewed
land reforms began seven years ago, Zimbabwe had an estimated 4,500
productive white commercial farmers who hoisted the nation's flag
as the region's breadbasket, but now only 400 - whose future looks
bleaker than ever - have remained on their farms. Experts note that
the number will tumble drastically as government continues the evictions.
Donald Styer,
a commercial farmer in Chiredzi district in southeastern Zimbabwe,
is among those who will have to leave their farms around August.
He said he was grateful that he would be able to harvest his crops,
but ruled out a legal challenge to the acquisition of his property
as a futile exercise.
"At least there
is some relief for us, but the damage has already been done. The
agricultural sector has been thrown in a shambles and nothing will
be the same again ... I am, however, happy I will be leaving with
my harvest."
Critics note that
the more productive land has often been allocated to politicians
and influential government officials aligned to President Robert
Mugabe. Sharp divisions have emerged within the ruling ZANU-PF party
over the land reform process, with Vice-President Joyce Mujuru and
Reserve Bank Governor Gideon Gono critical of politicians who have
underutilised the farmland they now hold.
In a hard-hitting
televised speech on his monetary policy review last week, Gono,
who apparently enjoys Mugabe's support and protection, accused high-ranking
government officials of using their acquired farms as weekend barbecue
spots, rather than for cultivation.
"Whilst, traditionally,
it has become fashionable to blame successive droughts and illegal
sanctions against us for the country's hardships, the reality on
the ground does, however, reveal startling contradictions and distortions
currently prevailing in the economy," he commented. Gono also urged
a stop to "the retrogressive ... farm disruptions that set a gloomy
fate for our economy and country."
Mugabe has defended
the land reforms, saying they were necessary to correct colonial-era
imbalances in land ownership, but critics have maintained that many
of the new black farmers, who have struggled to produce food, were
allocated farms on the basis of political patronage rather than
agricultural expertise.
Zimbabwe
has experienced a serious deficit in food production, which has
dipped by over 50 percent due to disruptions in the agricultural
sector.
In its latest
report, released two weeks ago, the USAID-funded Famine Early Warning
System Network (FEWSNET) noted that at least 1.4 million Zimbabweans
were in urgent need of food aid, with below-average yields expected
this year as a result of low rainfall.
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