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Land
grab continues
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted
from Weekly Media Update 2004-15
Monday April 12th - Sunday April 18th 2004
The facade of
normalcy with which government has always tried to mask the chaotic
nature of its controversial land seizures peeled off again in the
week to reveal the nasty outlook of the exercise after the authorities
made fresh aggressive bids to take over Kondozi and Charleswood
Farms in Manicaland.
As SW Radio
Africa (13/4) and Studio 7 (12 & 16/4) revealed, this onslaught
follows President Mugabe’s threat in June last year that government
would take over the two farms and more recent statements by Information
Minister Jonathan Moyo that the authorities would take "decisive
and final corrective measures over Kondozi".
Not only did
government’s latest efforts smack of hypocrisy and vindictiveness,
but also exposed serious policy contradictions in the implementation
of government’s ‘fast-track’ agrarian reforms.
Predictably,
the government media ignored the authorities’ violations of the
law and human rights under the guise of the so-called equitable
redistribution of land. As illustrated by The Herald (16/4)
for example, they covered up the illegal and violent nature of the
raids and failed to question why government continued to resort
to this barbaric method to achieve its goals.
This primitive
use of force was all the more alarming since the raids were clearly
in contempt of court orders granted to the owners of the farms barring
government from interfering in their operations.
Instead, The
Herald downplayed the vicious manner in which armed State security
agents evicted workers at Kondozi Farm, ostensibly to pave the way
for the Agricultural and Rural Development Authority (ARDA). It
merely reported that ARDA "has started operations"
at Kondozi after its previous owners, the De Klerk family, who had
"refused" to vacate it after its acquisition
by the government, "made way for the Authority".
Similarly, the
paper reported law enforcement agents as occupying Charleswood Farm
and ordering "defiant employees to leave"
after its owner, MDC MP for the area, Roy Bennet, "deserted
the farm and the constituency opting for his farm at Ruwa".
ZBC simply ignored
the seizures altogether.
But SW Radio
Africa, which has for several weeks closely followed the developments
at the farms, disproved The Herald’s suggestion of civility
in the way state security agents threw out the farm workers.
The private
radio station’s determination to ferret out a more reliable story
about the invasions saw it diligently updating its audiences on
the matter at least four times during the week.
For instance
it reported (13/4) that "truckloads of soldiers armed
with AK-47’s and police units with dogs and baton sticks" descended
on Charleswood on Good Friday and forced all the farm workers and
their families out of the compound, assaulting and injuring several
in the process. Some workers who decided to stay were offered "short-term
contracts and less pay".
The Zimbabwe
Independent (16/4) corroborated the story and quoted farm workers
who claimed that the police beat them up with truncheons "while
children and the infirm were trampled in the melee".
The paper also reported that the Manicaland provincial administrator
had allegedly prevented the Red Cross from helping the stranded
Kondozi farm workers. SW Radio Africa (15/4) also highlighted this.
The station
(14/4) revealed that the seizure of Kondozi had adversely affected
the surrounding community. It quoted journalist Peta Thorncroft
as saying Kondozi supported "more than…8,000 families"
in the province, most of whom were subsistence farmers contracted
to sell their produce to the farm, which in turn exported the products
to the lucrative European Union markets.
In fact, Studio
7 (15/04) reported that such negative repercussions of the takeover
had prompted a high-powered delegation, including 28 chiefs, from
areas surrounding Kondozi to travel to Harare hoping to meet President
Mugabe "to complain about the evictions"
but instead ended up meeting Vice-President Joseph Msika. The
Zimbabwe Independent also revealed this.
Msika reportedly
ordered ARDA off Kondozi saying the original farm "management
must resume operations without interference" (Studio
7, 16/4, and The Standard, 18/4). The Standard quoted
Msika as having claimed that he was unaware of "this
latest land (Kondozi) acquisition neither is John Nkomo (Land Reform
and Resettlement Minister) – nor is the acting police commissioner
– only the police there were aware of this invasion".
Ironically,
while the government was hounding out the remnants of productive
commercial agriculture, the government media attacked Nigerian President
Olusegun Obasanjo for wanting the same rejected farmers to farm
in his country.
They did this
by rehashing previous private media reports claiming that a team
of white former commercial farmers had held talks with Obasanjo
during a week-long visit to that country during which the group
discussed the possibility of relocating there (The Herald, Chronicle,
15/4, and The Herald, 16/4).
But instead
of fairly reporting the matter, the two papers (15/4) abused their
professional roles by politicising the issue, depicting Obasanjo
as a latter day Judas Iscariot.
They claimed
that Nigeria’s move had "raised eyebrows and set tongues
wagging in diplomatic circles, given that General Obasanjo had been
‘a midwife’ involved in moves to mend relations between Zimbabwe
and Britain over the land issue".
To sustain their
attack on Obasanjo the papers falsely claimed that government had
not expelled the farmers but that they had instead spurned government’s
one-man-one-farm policy in favour of multiple farm ownership, "some
of which were idle and have been repossessed for redistribution
among landless blacks".
They deliberately
ignored the fact that government had legislated against the one-man-one-farm
policy through section 9 (2)(a) (iii) of its 2004 Land Acquisition
Amendment. The section dismisses the owning of one piece of land
as constituting "valid grounds for any objection to the
compulsory acquisition of the land nor shall such criteria form
the basis of any claim or right in law…"
However, unlike
the government media’s heavily sanitised reports on agricultural
activity, the private media critically took stock of the pitfalls
surrounding government’s agrarian reforms.
For example,
the private media picked up an IRIN report (the UN’s Integrated
Regional Information Network) on the rapidly shrinking dairy industry
because some newly resettled farmers had given up on dairy production
and had instead turned to the cultivation of maize and soya beans
(The Tribune, 16/4, Zimbabwe Independent and The
Standard).
The Tribune
quoted one of the farmers as saying: "When I took up
dairy farming I thought it was an easy business, but hardly had
I started, did I realise that there was much more to it than leading
cows into a milking pen."
The Zimbabwe
Independent, on the other hand, quoted the National Association
of Dairy Farmers (NADF) spokesperson, Hilary Blair, as saying the
new dairy farmers had been disillusioned mainly because of their
lack of experience and resources. This had resulted in a slump in
the production of milk on some farms by 25 to 45 percent.
Blair said a
dairy farmer "must be… a veterinary doctor, a nutritionist
and must be on duty 24 hours a day, 365 days a year."
In contrast,
the government-controlled media merely carried damage control pieces
as was the case with The Herald (16/4) story, Milk
shortage due to operational problems – DZL. The story unhelpfully
claimed, "Milk producers continue to face various challenges
related to drought, the cost and shortages of critical inputs…"
adding that Dairiboard Zimbabwe Limited was running schemes to help
dairy farmers with funds and infrastructural developments.
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fact sheet
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