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SOUTHERN
AFRICA: Mozambican romance gone sour for Zimbabwean migrants
IRIN
News
June 01, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=53653
This is the
second in a series on the impact of Zimbabwe's meltdown on the region,
and focuses on Mozambique. Read other articles in the series:
Zambia reaps as
Zimbabwe lies fallow and South
Africa gives Zimbabweans a haven, but at what cost?
JOHANNESBURG - Mozambique started openly courting Zimbabwe's mainly
white commercial farmers after the ZANU-PF government instituted
its fast-track land reform programme in 2000 and the agricultural
sector, a mainstay of the neighbouring country's economy, began
to crumble.
But unlike Zambia, Mozambique's romance with the migrant Zimbabweans
appears to have faded in the past two years, "mostly because Mozambique
was not ready for them", said Joseph Hanlon, a senior lecturer in
development policy and practice at the London-based Open University.
Hanlon has written extensively on the subject.
Encouraged by tobacco and paprika companies, which provided financial
support, at least 42 farmers moved to Mozambique, mostly in the
central Manica province on the Zimbabwe border, where the government
allowed them to rent up to 1,000ha of land for 50 years.
According to Joel Caibone, a member of local civil society, the
Zimbabwean farmers not only helped uplift subsistence farmers in
the province, but "also brought and taught new farming techniques
to the local farmers".
Small-scale farmers were also contracted to plant paprika and tobacco
to meet the companies' demand, and at the peak of the agricultural
boom that followed, 13,500 families were growing tobacco, 3,600
growing sunflowers and more than 3,000 growing paprika, as well
as over 100 groups organised to grow baby corn and other vegetables
for export, said Hanlon's paper, 'The Manica Miracle is Over', written
jointly with researcher Teresa Smart.
The farmers managed to create 5,000 permanent and seasonal jobs.
Four units were also set up to process roses and vegetables for
export to Europe, and sunflower oil and milk for local sale, creating
hundreds more jobs, according to Hanlon.
In the last two years the situation has changed drastically. "Most
of the Zimbabweans are in deep financial trouble and some have already
left," Hanlon told IRIN. Production of roses and sunflower oil has
ended, while medium-scale Mozambican and Zimbabwean farmers are
producing smaller quantities of tobacco and paprika. The number
of families growing tobacco has dwindled to 5,000 and there are
few jobs on farms.
The main problem was that the Zimbabwean farmers lacked funds and
Mozambique does not have an agricultural support system. There was
a "lack of technical support, there is a total lack of finance for
farming - both short-term annual finance for inputs and wages, and
long-term investment finance. In many other countries, land is cleared
and dams and basic irrigation infrastructure built by the government,
usually on very long-term soft loans. In Mozambique, this is all
the responsibility of the farmer, and there is no credit," explained
Hanlon.
The state owns all the land in Mozambique and although the Zimbabwean
farmers were allowed to rent the farms, Caibone said "the condition
of the lease is that if the land is not put to use properly, the
state has the right to take it away anytime - so there is that uncertainty".
The Zimbabwean government's recent decision to redistribute seized
farms could also have prompted farmers to return home, as "most
of the farms which are being redistributed are located along Manica's
border with Zimbabwe".
According to Hanlon, "The great white commercial Zimbabwean farmer
is a myth. We must understand that several decades of funding and
subsidies by the former colonial government in Zimbabwe, the Rhodesian
government and the apartheid government ... had helped make commercial
farming profitable in the region." A similar strategy should to
be adopted to boost agriculture in Mozambique, "as even the local
farmers do not have the capacity" to run commercial operations.
The farmers also discovered that paprika and tobacco were not the
most appropriate crops to grow in Manica. The climate is more suitable
for subtropical fruits such as mangoes, litchis, avocados and citrus.
"But fruit trees take five years to begin producing, and again,
there are no loans," Hanlon pointed out.
The downside to the impact of Zimbabwe's economic collapse has been
the loss of considerable earnings as a result of shrinking traffic
volumes along the Beira corridor, the strategic transport route
crossing Mozambique to link Zimbabwe with the Indian Ocean, said
Silvestre Filipe Junior of the Mozambique Debt Group, a local civil
society coalition. "I personally know Mozambicans who were running
successful export businesses who have had to close shop because
of Zimbabwe's decline. The central region of Mozambique has really
suffered with Zimbabwe's collapse."
Zimbabwe provided troops to protect the Beira corridor during the
16-year Mozambican civil war because Mozambique had helped in its
liberation struggle, and the route was critical to land-locked Zimbabwe.
Filipe commented that increased investment, which has driven Mozambique's
growth rate to a healthy eight percent, was attracted largely by
its relative stability in the region. But most Zimbabweans putting
money into Mozambique have opted to invest in tourism, because "land
investment is high risk - investors are not going to risk it when
a new government might come in and change the legal framework".
Manica province has close ties to Zimbabwe - between 2,000 and 3,000
people pass through its two border posts every day, to trade, visit
and work, according to local immigration authorities. Many others
come via border posts in the northern Tete province and Gaza province
in the south. Some Zimbabweans also illegally pan for gold along
the border in Mozambique.
"Zimbabwean adults who find employment in Mozambique can work Monday
to Friday, often in agriculture, and then return home to their families
for the weekend. Others arrive and depart on a daily basis because
they cannot leave their properties unattended for extended periods,
for fear their homes and assets will be seized by neighbours," said
Save the Children-UK (SC-UK) in 'Visitors from Zimbabwe', a recent
report by the international rights NGO.
Zimbabwean girls earn money selling bed sheets, clothing and other
products they bring with them by bus from Zimbabwe. Many Zimbabwean
women and children, driven by their desperate economic situation,
have also taken up sex work in Mozambique. SC-UK said some Zimbabwean
sex workers in Manica are younger than 18 years.
The Zimbabwean migrants' knowledge of English has helped some find
jobs. In the central province of Sofala a small number of Zimbabwean
teachers are reportedly teaching English; restaurant owners sometimes
employ Zimbabweans as a status symbol because English-speaking staff
impress customers and can attract more business.
According to Zimbabwe's independent SWRadio, about half a million
Zimbabweans are now based in Mozambique and most of them are finding
it extremely difficult to adjust, with language as the most critical
barrier. The radio quoted Joseph Matongo, an official of the recently
formed Zimbabwe Action Support Group, as saying, "People here speak
Portuguese and Zimbabweans basically fit in well in any English
speaking environment - the language barrier has caused a huge problem
for most of us here."
The Zimbabwean migrants' inability to speak the local language has
made them easy targets for authorities, according to Matongo, and
investment has been mainly short-term, as most Zimbabweans hope
to go back to their country.
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