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'1
million people lost livelihoods in Mugabe's farm seizures'
Nokuthula
Sibanda, ZimOnline
September 22, 2008
http://www.zimonline.co.za/Article.aspx?ArticleId=3689
At least one million
people lost their livelihoods and homes as result of President Robert
Mugabe's controversial farm seizure programme, the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP) said in a report released at the weekend.
The report that highlights
the difficulty that Zimbabwe's incoming power-sharing government
faces in tackling the emotive land issue said an estimated 320 000
workers or about 25 percent of the country's labour force were employed
on commercial farms before the chaotic programme to seize white
farmland for redistribution to landless blacks.
"In the
aftermath of the land invasions over 200 000 farm workers and their
families -- an estimated one million people -- lost their livelihoods
and homes, as well as access to farm schools and other social amenities,"
the UNDP said it's Comprehensive
Economic Recovery in Zimbabwe.
The UNDP, which has in
the past promised to support orderly land reform meant to alleviate
poverty in Zimbabwe, said prior to the country's political crisis
agriculture was the largest formal sector employer and made significant
contributions to export earnings.
The report said that
since the fast track land reforms in 2000, wheat production has
declined from about 270 000 tonnes in 1998 to 62 000 tonnes in 2007
falling well short of the national requirement of 350,000 tonnes
per year. Production of maize, a key staple for Zimbabweans, has
likewise plummeted.
Mugabe, opposition
leaders Morgan Tsvangirai and Arthur Mutambara last week signed
an agreement
to form a government of national unity that is expected to act urgently
to end food shortages in the country.
But a deadlock over how
to share key government posts has stocked up skepticism over whether
the deal could survive deep seated animosity and mistrust among
the three political rivals, while relief agencies warn that prolonged
delay to announce a new government could only worsen the humanitarian
crisis in the country.
Once a regional breadbasket,
Zimbabwe is in the grip of severe food shortages that Mugabe blames
on poor weather and Western sanctions he says have hampered importation
of fertilizers, seed, and other farming inputs.
However critics blame
Zimbabwe's troubles on repression and wrong polices by the veteran
leader such as land reforms that displaced established white commercial
farmers and replaced them with either incompetent or inadequately
funded black farmers resulting in the country facing acute food
shortages.
Meanwhile, the Southern
African Development Community (SADC) Tribunal last week reserved
judgment on an application by a group of Zimbabwean white farmers
against the seizure of their land by the government.
The tribunal said it
withheld a ruling in order to study objections submitted by Zimbabwean
government lawyers but did not say when exactly the judgment would
be delivered.
The regional court had
temporarily barred the Harare government from confiscating land
belonging to 77 white farmers pending the outcome of an application
by the farmers challenging the legality of land reforms
The white farmers wanted
the Tribunal to declare Mugabe's controversial land reform programme
racist and illegal under the SADC Treaty.
Article 6 of the regional
treaty bars member states from discriminating against any person
on the grounds of gender, religion, race, ethnic origin and culture.
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