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Zimbabwe's Elections 2013 - Index of Articles
Sugar
plantations to be seized: Chikovo
Regerai
Tukutuku, The Zimbabwean
September
25, 2012
View
this article on The Zimbabwean website
Zanu-PF plans
to invade sugar plantations in the Lowveld and parcel them out to
new players as part of its election promises, according to a senior
government official.
“We have
summoned Hippo Valley to explain to us why it under-declared its
land,” said Felix Chikovo, the Masvingo provincial administrator.
The company, together with Triangle Limited, is owned by Tongaat
Hullet, an international sugar production player.
Already, a large
swathe of farmland has been earmarked for seizure after the Masvingo
provincial land allocation committee accused Hippo Valley Estates
of dishonesty. The government accuses the company of clinging onto
huge pieces of land at the expense of ordinary farmers keen to try
their luck in the sugar industry.
Management at
Hippo Valley Estates denied the allegation. In fact, said chief
executive officer Sydney Mutsambiwa, his company has always played
a pivotal role in helping new sugar farmers to learn the ropes.
But Chikovo
remains adamant. “Although the company has denied these allegations,
investigations are still continuing and once we find them to be
true we are going to take appropriate action,” he said.
Dzikamayi Mavhaire,
the Minister of Energy and Power Development, gave clear indication
of the government’s plan while addressing hundreds of people
in Mwenezi last week.
“We should
not allow a few individuals to grab land and dish it among themselves
and their relatives,” he said.
“There
should be openness and transparency in the allocation of the new
plots to ensure that we all share the same cake with others.”
Mavhaire said
the programme must lead to an orderly redistribution of sugar cane
plots to help ordinary people in Masvingo.
Meanwhile, some
MDC-T officials say Zanu-PF tried to entice town councillors to
vote for their mayoral candidate in exchange for plots in the Lowveld.
“We were
approached after the elections and advised that if we voted for
a Zanu-PF mayor we would be rewarded with sugar cane plots,”
said one councillor. “We declined the offer.”
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