|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
Operation Murambatsvina - Countrywide evictions of urban poor - Index of articles
Mugabe
moves against city whites
Peta Thornycroft, The Telegraph (UK)
February 02, 2006
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/
President Robert Mugabe
has begun confiscating and vandalising white-owned property in Zimbabwe's
cities, after taking over most farms in the countryside.
His police last week
evicted hundreds of people from their homes eight miles from the centre
of Harare.
Ian Ross, 68, the
owner of Gletwyn farm, incorporated into the capital in 1996, could hardly
control himself as he recalled how police turfed his workers out into
the rain.
"They arrived to evict
the workers, which they did piece by piece, village by village compound
by compound," said Mr Ross.
"The workers were
dumped. They moved into sheds, into chicken runs. They were living like
rabbits."
Mr Mugabe began violently
evicting and dispossessing some 4,000 white farmers and hundreds of thousands
of their workers in 2000. The whites were punished because the president
said they supported and funded the opposition which almost beat him in
the election that year.
But the campaign against
his people escalated last winter when he sent bulldozers to flatten hundreds
of thousands of small homes and markets in opposition areas in cities.
The United Nations
said 2.4 million people were caught in Mr Mugabe's "Clean out the Filth"
campaign. Now his cronies and the police are wreaking havoc on a daily
basis on Gletwyn.
The police say homes
will be built homes there. This will benefit a property company, Divine
Homes, whose chairman is the deputy finance minister, David Chapfika.
Divine Homes says
it is selling state land, Gletwyn, in 600 plots without title deeds or
planning permission. The "problem over title deeds will sort itself out
when all this settles down", said Washington Jengaenga, a Divine Homes
executive.
John Worsley-Worswick,
of Justice for Agriculture,
said the takeovers were inevitable.
"This is the first
full wholesale attack on a huge tract of land within the city limits,"
he said. "This is not anarchy by default. It has been well designed. No
property is safe. They have nearly finished off the farms so they have
to move to towns and cities."
Mr Ross was so disturbed
by the latest attack on his workers that this week he won a court injunction
restraining police. They were ordered to leave the workers alone and dismantle
their barricades. But they were still in place three days later.
Divine Homes' earth-moving
equipment now pounds across Gletwyn's 1,800 acres, chewing up fields,
upending trees, destroying bore hole pumps, pipes and reservoirs.
"If I go, it will
be in a box," Mr Ross said before driving off down a muddy track.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|