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Africa's
Saddam Hussein: White Farmers and Black Farmers
Sam
Vaknin, Ph.D.
March 10,
2005
http://globalpolitician.com/articles.asp?ID=392
The Western press
casts him in the role of an African Saddam Hussein. Neighboring leaders
supported his policies, but then succumbed to diplomacy and world opinion
and, with a few notable exceptions, shunned him. The opposition and its
mouthpieces accuse him - justly - of brutal disregard for human, civil,
and political rights and of undermining the rule of law. All he wants,
insists Comrade - his official party title - Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe
is to right an ancient wrong by returning land, expropriated by white
settlers, to its rightful black owners.
Most of the beneficiaries, being war veterans, happen to support his party,
the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front, or ZANU-PF, and its
profligate largesse:
"We must deliver the land unencumbered by impediments to its rightful
owners. It is theirs by birth; it is theirs by natural and legal right.
It is theirs by struggle. Indeed their(s) by legacy," he thundered in
a speech he made to the Central Committee of his party in March 2001 in
response to mounting multi-annual pressures from war veteran associations.
It was Margaret Thatcher of Falklands fame who, after two decades of fierce
fighting, capitulated to rebels, headed by Mugabe. The Iron Lady handed
to them, in the Lancaster House agreement, an independent Zimbabwe - literally,
"Great Stone House". The racist Rhodesia was no more. But the agreement
enshrined the property rights of white farmers until 1990 and has, thus,
sown the seeds of the current chaos.
Many nostalgic white settlers in Zimbabwe - mostly descendents of British
invaders at the end of the 19th century - still believe in their cultural
- if not genetic - superiority. Their forefathers bought indigenous land
from commercial outfits supported by the British Crown. The blacks - their
plots and livestock confiscated - were resettled in barren "communal areas",
akin to Native-American reserves in the USA minus the gambling concessions.
Starting in 1893, successive uprisings were bloodily suppressed by the
colonizers and the British government. A particularly virulent strain
of apartheid was introduced. By 1914, notes Steve Lawton in "British Colonialism,
Zimbabwe's Land Reform and Settler Resistance", 3 percent of the population
controlled 75 percent of the land. The blacks were "harshly restricted
to a mere 23 per cent of the worst land in designated Reserves. There
were only 28,000 white settlers to nearly one million Africans in Zimbabwe
at this time."
Land ownership hasn't changed much since. The 1930 "Land Apportionment
Act" perpetuated the glaring inequality. At independence, according to
"Zimbabwe's Agricultural Revolution" edited by Mandivamba Rukuni and Carl
Eicher and published in 1994 by the University of Zimbabwe Publications,
6000 white commercial farms occupied 45 percent of all agricultural land
- compared to only 5 percent tilled by 8500 black farmers. Another 70,000
black families futilely cultivated the infertile remaining half of the
soil.
As black population exploded, poverty and repression combined to give
rise to anti-white guerilla movements. The rest is history. The first
post-independence land reform and resettlement program lasted 17 years,
until 1997. It targeted refugees, internally displaced people, and squatters
and its aims were, as Petrunella Chaminuka, a researcher at SAPES Trust
Agrarian Reform Programme in Zimbabwe, summarizes a 1990 government discussion
paper in the "Workers' Weekly":
"To redress past grievances over land alienation, to alleviate population
pressure in the communal areas and to achieve national stability and progress.
The programme was designed to enhance smallholder food and cash crop production,
achieve food self-sufficiency and improve equity in income distribution."
Land reform was an act of anti-colonialist, ideologically-motivated defiance.
The first lots went to landless - and utterly unskilled - blacks. Surprisingly,
theirs was a success story. They cultivated the land ably and production
increased. Certified farmers and agronomists, though, had to wait their
turn until the National Land Policy of 1990 which allowed for compulsory
land purchases by the government. There was no master plan of resettlement
and infrastructure deficiencies combined with plot fragmentation to render
many new farms economically unviable.
As ready inventory dried up, the price of land soared. Droughts compounded
this sorry state and by the late 1980's yields were down and squatting
resurged. Unemployment forced people back into rural areas. Egged on by
multilateral lenders, white farmers, and Western commercial interests,
the government further exacerbated the situation by allocating enormous
tracts of land to horticulture, ostrich farming, crocodile farming, ranching
and tourism thus further depleting the anyhow meager stock of arable acreage.
International outcry against compulsory acquisitions or targeting of c.
1600 farms forced the Zimbabwean government and its donors to come up
in 1997-9 with a second land reform and resettlement programme and the
Inception Phase Framework Plan. Contrary to disinformation in the Western
media, white farmers and NGO's were regularly consulted in the preparation
of both documents.
In what proved to be a prophetic statement, the aptly named Barbara Kafka
of the World Bank, quoted by IPS, gave this warning in the September 1998
donor conference:
"We are delighted that the government has called this conference as a
key step in our working together to make sure that Zimbabwe reaps the
results it deserves from its land reform programme ... Nevertheless, we
must not be naive. The downside risks are high. There is abundant international
experience to show that poorly executed land reform can carry high social
and economic costs ... For instance, a programme that does not respect
property rights or does not provide sufficient support to new settlers,
is underfunded or is excessively bureaucratic and costly, or simply results
in large numbers of displaced farm workers, can have very negative outcomes
in terms of investment, production, jobs and social stability."
This second phase broke down in mutual recriminations. The government
made an election issue out of the much-heralded reform and the donors
delivered far less than they promised. Acutely aware of this friction,
white farmers declined to offer land for sale.
Even as lawless invasions of private property recommenced in earnest,
the government initiated the Fast Track Land Reform Plan in mid-2000.
It envisioned the purchase of between 5-8 million of hectares of agricultural
land, the resettlement of the rural indigent, the provision of infrastructure,
technical advice and inputs by both civil and military authorities and
the involvement of all "stakeholders" - especially white commercial farmers
- in an on-going dialog in the framework of the Zimbabwe Joint Resettlement
Initiative.
But the Plan fast deteriorated into strong-arm, threat-laden, and litigious
confiscation of white property. Following a setback in the polls - its
proposed constitution was rejected - ZANU-PF aided and abetted in the
disorderly - and, sometimes, lethal - requisitioning of farms by a mob
of war veterans, mock veterans, petty criminals, the rural dispossessed,
party hacks, and even middle class urbanites. Ironically, the very anarchic
nature of the process deterred genuine and the long term settlers.
About 2000 farms were thus impounded by the end of last year. The government
refused to compensate farmers for the land seized insisting that such
reparations should be paid by Britain. It did, however, provide pitiful
sums for infrastructure added to the land by the white settlers.
As pandemic corruption, lawlessness, and mismanagement brought the country
to the brink of insolvency and famine, Mugabe tainted with anti-Western
diatribe his merited crusade for reversing past injustices. He lashed
at the IMF and the World bank, at Britain and the USA, at white farmers
and foreign capital. Xenophobia - no less that patriotism - is the refuge
of the scoundrel in Africa.
In 1997, Britain's New Labor government ceased funding the acquisition
of land from white farmers. Donors demanded matching funds from destitute
Zimbabwe. By 1999, the entire West - spearheaded by the IMF - disengaged.
Zimbabwe was severed from the global financial system.
This was followed by sanctions threatened by the EU and partly imposed
the USA and the Commonwealth. Sanctions were also urged by prescriptive
think tanks, such as the International Crisis Group, and even by corporate
and banking groups, such as Britain's Abbey National.
Yet, discarding land reform together with Mugabe would be unwise. The
problems - some of which are ignored even by the Zimbabwean authorities
- are real. A negligible white minority owns vast swathes of forcibly
obtained prime arable land in a predominantly black country.
A comprehensive - and just - land reform would cater to farm hands as
well. They are mostly black - about one fifth of the population, counting
their dependants. They live in shantytown-like facilities on the farms
with little access to potable water, sanitation, electricity, phones,
or other amenities. They were not even entitled to resettlement until
recently.
According to "Rural poverty: Commercial farm workers and Land Reform in
Zimbabwe", a paper presented at the SARPN conference on Land Reform and
Poverty Alleviation in Southern Africa, in June 2001, only about one third
of the most destitute black farm workforce have been imported as casual
and seasonal workers from neighboring countries.
The rest, contrary to government propaganda, are indigenous. Yet, protestations
to the contrary notwithstanding, the government, preoccupied with relieving
growing tensions in the communal areas and rewarding its own supporters
and cronies, refuses to incorporate farm hands fully in its Fast Track
Resettlement Program. They are being accused of causing previous resettlement
programs to fail.
The problems facing Zimbabwe's agricultural sector are reminiscent of
the situation in Mozambique, Namibia, Malawi, Swaziland, Lesotho, and
South Africa. Namibia has already threatened to emulate Zimbabwe. Sam
Nujoma, the country's president, rebuked the market mechanism as "too
slow, cumbersome and very costly". An understandable statement coming
from the head of a government which, according to Namibian news agency,
NAMPA, turned down 151 farms in 2001 for lack of funds.
"Land Reform in Zimbabwe: Constraints and Prospects", edited by T.A.S.
Bowyer-Bower and Colin Stoneman, notes that development, growth, and poverty
alleviation in the continent are directly linked to the ownership and
cultivation of land - often the sole means of production. That no regional
approach to this pressing issue has arisen attests to the quality of the
self-centred, thuggish, and venal African leadership.
Politically-motivated land reform will lead to the emergence of the next
generations of the deprived and the discriminated against. Resettlement
has to be both fair and seen to be fair. It has to be based on unambiguous
criteria and transparent and even-handed procedures. It has to backed
by sufficient agricultural inputs and machinery, financial and technical
assistance, access to markets, and basic infrastructure.
The proximity of services and institutions - from schools to courts -
is critical. Above all, land reform has to look after people displaced
in the process - commercial farmers and their workers - and thus enjoy
near universal support or acquiescence. Legal title and tenure have to
be established and recorded to allow the new settlers to obtain credits
and invest in buildings, machinery, and infrastructure.
Alas, as both Human Rights Watch and the UNDP concluded in their detailed
reports, none of these requirements is observed in Zimbabwe. Hence the
recurrent failures and the blood-spattered chaos they have produced. Is
Mugabe to blame? Surely. Is he the prime mover of this debacle? Not by
a long shot. He merely encapsulates and leverages pernicious social forces
in his country and in the continent. Until the root problems of Africa
are tackled with courage and integrity Mugabe and his type of "reform"
will prevail.
Sam Vaknin, Ph.D.
is the author of Malignant
Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After
the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He served as a columnist
for Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a United
Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and the editor
of mental health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory
and Suite101.
Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government of
Macedonia. Sam Vaknin's Web site is at http://samvak.tripod.com
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.
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