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Who actually owns the farm?
IRIN
News
September 24, 2009
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=86269
A comprehensive
land audit to establish who owns what after almost a decade of often
chaotic land transfers in Zimbabwe is being stalled by a lack of
money.
President Robert Mugabe
launched the fast-track land reform programme in 2000 to redistribute
white-owned commercial farms to landless blacks. It also heralded
the country's steep economic decline, widespread food shortages
and political violence, while allegations that the redistribution
process served as a smokescreen for land grabs by members of Mugabe's
ruling ZANU-PF elite were rampant.
The audit formed
part of the Global
Political Agreement (GPA) signed on 15 September 2008 by Mugabe,
Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change
(MDC), and an MDC faction led by Arthur Mutambara.
The agreement led to
the establishment of the unity government in February 2009, but
major donors have held back billions of dollars in aid, adopting
a wait-and-see attitude to gauge Mugabe's commitment to democracy.
"While differing
on the methodology of acquisition and redistribution, the parties
acknowledge that compulsory acquisition and redistribution of land
has taken place under a land reform programme undertaken since 2000,"
the GPA noted.
"The parties hereby
agree to conduct a comprehensive, transparent and nonpartisan land
audit during the tenure of the Seventh Parliament of Zimbabwe, for
the purpose of establishing accountability and eliminating multiple
farm ownership."
Three land audits were
undertaken by the ZANU-PF administration but the findings have yet
to be made public. Herbert Murerwa, the current Minister of Lands
and Rural Resettlement, said his ministry required US$31.2 million
to perform the audit, which could take up to nine months to complete,
rather than the anticipated three months or so.
"The 100 days given
for the exercise is inadequate and, without resources, implementation
of the programme is very difficult. We are also seeking to establish
an independent land committee - an inter-ministerial [body] to be
made up of permanent secretaries and other senior government officials.
The committee will also be replicated at provincial and district
levels," Murerwa said.
However, Justice
for Agriculture (JAG), an organization advocating the rights
of the more than 4,000 white farmers forced from their land, was
pessimistic about the proposed audit.
"To start with,
if an audit is to be done then it should be done by an independent
group of people and not government officials, who may be beneficiaries
of the same programme," JAG spokesman John Worswick told IRIN.
"I don't think there
will be a comprehensive audit anytime soon because senior [ZANU-PF]
government officials, judges and the military have taken over many
farms - we have cases where individuals own as many as two or three
farms," he said.
"Farming activities
have been disturbed by senior government officials, who get on to
a farm and strip all the assets before moving to a new farm."
There has also been renewed violence on commercial farms in recent
weeks.
Moreover, Minister of
Justice Patrick Chinamasa announced that Zimbabwe would withdraw
from participating in the Tribunal of the Southern African Development
Community (SADC) after it ruled in favour of 78 former commercial
farmers, describing their evictions as racist, discriminatory and
illegal under the SADC treaty. The SADC was responsible for negotiating
the GPA.
The Zimbabwean government
also intends recalling a judge seconded to the SADC Tribunal in
2005, although Tsvangirai said the country would not pull out as
there had been no consultation on the matter.
"The decision to
pull out of the SADC Tribunal was a comment by an individual minister
and the country cannot be bound by that. The issue has not been
discussed in cabinet and we cannot therefore be bound by the decision
of a single minister."
Gorden Moyo, Minister
of State in the Prime Minister's Office, told IRIN that the government
would try to raise the necessary finance to conduct the audit, even
if it meant conducting it in phases. He said offers of funding had
been made and it was envisaged that the audit would also involve
local and international land experts.
He blamed the renewed
farm disturbances on "residual elements" wanting to frustrate
the GPA. "As the government, we are yet to establish the source
of those problems, but what is clear is that some of them are political
motivated, while others are driven by corruption and criminal tendencies,"
Moyo said.
"The government,
in its entirety, is convinced that a comprehensive land audit is
important to, among other things, address multiple farm ownership,
productivity, security of tenure and transparency."
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