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Indigenous
plunder
Rejoice
Ngwenya
June 15, 2011
Converts of
African agrarian reform and those on both sides of the political
divide in Zimbabwe will find my critique unsavoury to the ideological
palate. Unpopularity is unpleasant, but when it ratchets up truth,
justice and common sense, it becomes an invaluable asset. African
National Congress hardliners and Movement for Democratic Change
'moderates- are vague on the punishment to be meted
on plunderers of private property in Robert Mugabe-s ZANU-PF
party. In 2000, he unleashed an orgy of unprecedented violence on
white Zimbabwean citizens to prop up his dissipating political fortunes.
To date, all but 400 commercial farmers remain on their properties,
albeit bruised, frightened and permanently insecure.
The ANC has been conspicuous
by its silence on this plunder, purportedly keeping an eye open
in anticipation of what hardliners term a bomb waiting to explode
in their agrarian backyard. Buoyed by the illusion of Zimbabwe-s
'land reform-, Julius Malema has exploited this policy
blackout, triggering his own version of 'land discourse-
that has left hundreds of white South African farmers dead. More
level-headed politicians - particularly in Helen Zille-s
Democratic Alliance [DA], have lacerated Jacob Zuma for failing
to reign in on Malema-s provocative racist bigotry, reminding
South Africans that Zimbabwe-s crumbling fortunes are traceable
only to widespread property violations. On his part, Mugabe has
acknowledged that farm invasions have failed to 'empower-
black Zimbabweans. He has turned his political gold diggers on multinational
corporations in what Minister Saviour Kasukuwere terms 'indigenisation
of trade and industry-.
And all of this
is taking place against a backdrop of a so-called 'new era
of political reforms- in Zimbabwe, now given traction by Zuma-s
insistence that Mugabe must endeavour to fulfil all terms of the
Global Political
Agreement signed 15 September 2008. Political analysts -
progressive ones at that - are united in that the trajectory
of political transformation is fast moving towards permanently displacing
Robert Mugabe and his ZANU-PF from the seat of national governance.
Once the new 'people driven- constitution is in place,
a raft of SADC-approved electoral, media and security sector reforms
will ensure that free and fair elections in 2012-13 relegate ZANU-PF
to a distant minority. In this case, both Morgan Tsvangirayi and
Welshman Ncube-s MDC will be free to reign! It is in this
context that I insist for Zimbabwe to be fully accepted in the fold
of the league of free nations, MDC, once in full control of political
power, must restore the respect for property rights in the country.
By this, I mean that all land that was illegally and unfairly expropriated
from the 4000 white commercial farmers; all companies and mines
'legally- snatched from citizens under the nefarious
and mischievous 'land reform- and 'indigenisation-
Acts respectively must be unconditionally returned to these innocent
citizens. Irrevocability and irreversibility of illiberal legislation
is as fallacious as it is idiotic.
I say this without so
much as a tinge of shame being convinced that though Ncube and Tsvangirayi
are not 'liberal- in the classic context of the word,
they are true 'democrats-. The civilised world has stood
by them, SADC campaigned in their corner and Zimbabweans will again
vote that they bring sanity to our once beautiful and sophisticated
country. Besides, there is empirical evidence elsewhere in the world
that the Maoris, Aborigines, Aztec Indians, Apache Indians, Amazon
tribes and the Khoisan of Southern Africa are now recognised as
legitimate nationals of their respective countries. According to
Wikipedia, " . . . the Amazon River Basin had a population
estimated at having up to a five million people and perhaps more
than five thousand Amazon tribes. However afterwards, the Amazonia
experienced 500 years of violence, exploitation, and disease that
wiped out most of the original Amazon tribes. .." The good
news is that both South and North American governments are bank
rolling efforts by citizens to restore the dignity of these indigenous
peoples. Vast swathes of land in North America and Australia have
been set aside for 'aboriginals-. This is a true mark
of democratic transformation. White commercial farmers of Zimbabwe
and South Africa may have a 'distant- history of violent
land expropriation, but this generation is one that has participated
in our development. Multinational corporations and 'foreign
owned- companies are integral in creating jobs for us 'indigenous-
Southern Africans. We have worked with them to design some of the
most sophisticated infrastructure on the continent, and for Zimbabwe,
even being a 'bread basket- for Africa.
My appeal to the new
'democratic- MDCs government of 2012 and beyond is that
the respect of property rights be an extension of modern day civilisation.
The white citizens of Zimbabwe are part of our history, our present
and our future. We can pay homage to humanity by returning their
farms and companies.
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