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Zimbabwe
farmers wait for promised compensation
VOA
News
September 17, 2008
http://voanews.com/english/2008-09-17-voa29.cfm
Agriculture used to be
Zimbabwe's number-one foreign currency earner. But since the land-reform
program began taking farms from whites, the country has had to rely
on food imports and aid handouts. The black farmers who took over
the land were ill equipped in terms of farming skills and capital
to maintain production.
The mostly white Commercial
Farmer's Union and the Justice for Agricuture group represent less
than 1,000 commercial farmers. Of these less than 300 are actively
farming, down from 4,000 at the beginning of the farm seizures.
Some white farmers have
left Zimbabwe, but others are still in the country fighting to get
their farms back or to be compensated.
The Zimbabwean government
has said it would only compensate farmers for improvements on the
farm, not the land.
It says former colonial-power
Britian should compensate for the land.
The recently signed power-sharing
deal underscores this and also adds that land acquisition and redistribution
is irreversible.
The Commercial
Farmers' Union did not respond to VOA's request for an interview,
but Justice for
Agriculture's John Worsley-Worswick said while the agreement
addresses compensation for land, responsibility for other compensation
lies squarely on the shoulders of current and future Zimbabwean
governments.
"They are talking
about compensation for the land, our compensation issues are not
confined to the land only; we are talking about the fixed improvements
on farms, we are also looking at the fact that no farms have been
legally acquired and no farmer has been compensated fairly or equitably,"
he said.
Worsley-Worswick listed
grievances for which farmers are demanding compensation - including
loss of earnings, loss of equipment, relocation costs and cost of
litigation.
He said his organization
would rather negotiate with the government than continue with litigation,
which he described as a fallback position. The Justice for Agriculture
spokesman warned that should the government not be prapered to compromise,
his organization would try to block international assistance necessary
for Zimbabwe's recovery.
"We have got to
find a way forward that frees up the title in this country and re-engages
international financial support," said Worsley-Worswick. "Certainly
if our property rights continue to be infringed we will make every
effort to have that support culminated."
A spokesman for the British
Embassy in Harare told VOA that while Britain views support of rural
recovery as part of a wider recovery package for Zimbabwe, it has
never accepted responsibility for the compensation of farmers.
The power-sharing
agreement
acknowledges the haphazard manner of the land-reform program and
proposes a non-partisan land audit for the purpose of establishing
accountability and eliminating multiple-farm ownerships.
Critics of Zimbabwe's
President Robert Mugabe have accused him of giving the best land
to ranking members of his government and party. They also charge
that some of the beneficiaries have more than one farm while many
Zimbabweans are still land hungry.
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