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Zanu
PF minister slammed for ‘blatant lies’ about land grabs
Alex
Bell, SW Radio Africa
October 16, 2012
http://www.swradioafrica.com/2013/10/16/zanu-pf-minister-slammed-for-blatant-lies-about-land-grabs
A Zanu-PF government
minister has been heavily criticised for ‘blatantly lying’
about the land grab campaign, after insisting that no South African
citizens were affected.
Deputy Finance
Minister Samuel Undenge was responding to concerns raised by a South
African government minister currently visiting Zimbabwe on an investment
mission. The South African minister, Elizabeth Thabethe, said Zimbabwe
had to address concerns about businesses and farms being seized.
But Undenge
denied such incidents have happened, saying there were “no
cases of South Africans who have lost farms,” adding: “If
you have any specific cases of farmers who lost their land during
the reform programme bring them to our attention and we will be
more than happy to respond and give the necessary information.”
The minister’s
comments have been dismissed as ‘blatant lies’ by a
South African civil rights group, which has for years been representing
its farming compatriots affected by the land grabs in Zimbabwe.
AfriForum’s CEO Kallie Kriel told SW Radio Africa that “more
than 400 South Africans have lost their farms.”
“It’s
a blatant lie to say no one has lost their land. It’s hundreds
of people who have lost their land and many of them have been arrested
and detained and charged by the Zimbabwe government,” Kriel
said.
He added: “Unfortunately
there has been no support from the South African government, apart
from sending officials sometimes to appear in those court cases.
So what we would really expect from the South African government
is to take a strong stance.”
Kriel singled
out the landmark Crawford von Abo legal case, which saw South African
businessman Von Abo take the government to court for failing to
protect his interests in Zimbabwe. The Constitutional Court in 2009
upheld a High Court judgement which ruled the South African government
should have offered Von Abo the necessary protection against the
land grabs which left him penniless.
Von Abo is just
one of the hundreds of South Africans affect by the land seizures,
which have been ongoing for over a decade. South African born Dirk
Visagie and his wife Heidi are another example, after they were
forced to pack up their belongings and leave their Chegutu farm
in 2012. The eviction followed a court ruling that Dirk was guilty
of remaining on the property, which had been singled out for invasion
by a Zanu-PF official called Timothy Madavanhu.
In 2011, Zanu-PF
youths in Nyazura evicted two South African farmers, Koos Smith
of De Rust farm and Tienie van Rensburg of Rueben farm, giving them
an hour’s notice to pack up their belongings and leave.
Other South
African’s affected by the land grabs include Louis Fick who
lost his Chinoyi farm after a series of invasions, as well as Philip
and Ellen Hapelt from Grasslands Farm in Somabhula, who were also
kicked off their property in 2010.
The land grabs
after 2009 violate a bilateral investment protection agreement (BIPPA)
that was signed by South Africa and Zimbabwe that same year. The
BIPPA was ratified in 2010 and is meant to offer South African investors
some kind of protection. But in the case of the farms, this never
happened.
A regional SADC
Tribunal ruling in
2008 that declared the land grab campaign unlawful, was also supposed
to protect the South Africans and other farmers in Zimbabwe. But
that court ruling was repeatedly ignored and eventually the court
was suspended by SADC leaders, who refused to take action against
Zimbabwe’s contempt of court.
Former Chegutu
farmer Ben Freeth, who is now the spokesperson of the SADC Tribunal
Rights Watch group, said Wednesday that the lies about the land
grab are a “desperate” attempt to attract much needed
investment. He said that a list currently being compiled to counter
Minister Undenge’s comments, suggests that there are at least
500 South African farmers who lost land in Zimbabwe.
“The Zanu-PF
government is in a position where they realise that the country
cannot move forward unless there is investment. So this is a desperate
attempt to woo investors with a lie,” Freeth said.
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