| |
Back to Index
Shoot
to kill
Joshua Hammer, Newsweek
January 13, 2006
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10841107/site/newsweek/
Jocelyn Chiwenga
is not a woman to be taken lightly. The wife of Gen. Constantine
Chiwenga, commander-in-chief of Zimbabwe’s armed forces, Mrs. Chiwenga
has earned a reputation in her own right as a vicious enforcer for
President Robert Mugabe and his ruling Zanu PF. In April 2002 she
reportedly showed up at a farm outside Harare, the capital, with
an armed gang and ordered the farm’s white owner to turn over his
property to her or be killed, according to documents filed in a
Zimbabwean court. One year later, Chiwenga accosted Gugulethu Moyo,
an attorney for a pro-opposition newspaper, and beat her so severely
that she had to seek medical attention. "Your paper wants to encourage
anarchy in this country," Chiwenga reportedly shouted as she punched
and slapped the 28-year-old lawyer on a Harare street. "Chiwenga
is as close to the center of power as you get," says David Coltart,
a parliamentarian of the Movement for Democratic Change, the country’s
main opposition party. She also knows how to use her power. About
three years ago, Chiwenga won an auction for a coveted lease on
a 220-square-mile tract of bush, owned by Zimbabwe’s Parks and Wildlife
Authority, located just outside Hwange National Park in southwest
Zimbabwe. Abounding in the Big Five - lion, elephant, Cape buffalo,
leopard, and black rhino - Chiwenga’s property has since become
a choice destination for professional hunters, particularly well-heeled
Americans.
Now, Chiwenga’s
business ambitions - as well as her political clout - have brought
her to the attention of the U.S. government. Last November, the
Treasury Department added Chiwenga, 50, to a list of 128 Mugabe
relatives and cronies who are "undermining democratic processes
or institutions in Zimbabwe." The Treasury Department has blocked
the assets of those on the list and established penalties of up
to $250,000 and 10 years’ imprisonment for anyone who does business
with them. And that executive order has put dozens, if not hundreds,
of Americans who hunt on her land in legal jeopardy. Chiwenga’s
sanctioning by the U.S. government has drawn new attention to the
unsavory, and usually hidden, links between American sportsmen and
the Mugabe dictatorship. During the past six years, Zimbabwe’s economy
has been in free fall, with the country’s gross domestic product
dropping by half and agricultural production sinking by more than
80 percent. But hunting has remained one of the country’s few thriving
industries, bringing in as much as $30 million annually, according
to conservationists and professional hunters in Zimbabwe. Much of
that cash has gone into the coffers of Zanu PF insiders, who have
gained control of government-owned safari land at below market prices,
reportedly through rigged auctions in many cases.
One of Chiwenga’s
neighbors in the Victoria Falls area is Webster Shamu, Mugabe’s
Minister of Policy Implementation, and a key architect of Operation
Murambatsvina - "Clean out the Rubbish" - the brutal slum clearance
program that has left some 700,000 poor black Zimbabweans homeless.
(Shamu is among the original 77 insiders who had their assets frozen
and were barred from entering the United States by the Treasury
Department in 2003). Another big player is Jacob Mudenda, the former
governor of Matabeleland North. All of them do a brisk business
catering to professional American hunters, who make up about half
of the clientele, according to industry insiders. The Mugabe cronies-turned-safari
operators are usually careful to conceal their direct involvement
in the hunting business. Jocelyn Chiwenga, for example, seems to
work through a network of agents that markets safaris heavily in
the United States but never reveal the name of the property’s primary
lease holder.
Among them:
Rob and Barry Style, owners of Buffalo Range Safaris, based in Harare.
The Style brothers are regular participants at the Annual Hunters’
Convention scheduled for next week in Reno, Nevada - a three-day
marketing extravaganza sponsored by Safari Club International, America’s
largest hunting club - and at other venues where American hunters
congregate. Although Rob Style denied in an e-mail to Newsweek that
he had a business relationship with Chiwenga, several professional
hunters in Zimbabwe insist that the brothers have frequently taken
clients to shoot animals on her property. The Hunting Guide, an
industry newsletter published in the United States, also names Buffalo
Range Safaris as a hunting-safari operator on Chiwenga-owned land.
Asked whether Safari Club International was concerned about the
prospect of facilitating commercial links between American hunters
and a sanctioned Zimbabwean figure, David Nagore, an SCI spokesman,
says "On the advice of counsel, SCI has no comment on the matter."
American hunters are also flocking to private-game reserves that
were seized without compensation, and sometimes with violence, from
white farmers and ranchers as part of Mugbe’s radical land-reform
program, which reached a peak in 2002. That property is now mostly
in the hands of Zanu PF activists and Zimbabwe independence war
veterans - considered to be among Mugabe’s most diehard supporters.
While hunting
on these properties doesn't violate U.S. sanctions, human-rights
activists and political opposition figures in Zimbabwe say that
it is morally objectionable and helps to give legitimacy to a repressive
regime. In addition, it is on these ranches, Zimbabwe conservationists
charge, that some of the worst abuses of the country’s environment
are taking place—abuses that could threaten the survival of Zimbabwe’s
rich wildlife, especially the endangered black rhino. Many of the
land owners who took this property by force have no experience in
wildlife conservation: they reportedly ignore strict hunting quotas
established by the Wildlife Authority on prized species such as
lion and leopard. They also allegedly kill animals, including rhino,
inside protected wildlife areas such as Hwange National Park, one
of southern Africa’s most renowned game reserves. "Poaching is rife,"
says Johnny Rodrigues, the head of the Zimbabwe Conservation Task
Force, a private activist group. "There’s no law and order here."
Sorting through
the thicket of charges and countercharges can be difficult. Larry
Cumming, a white rancher, purchased Woodland Estates near Victoria
Falls more than 30 years ago and developed it into one of the country’s
best hunting and safari reserves. "I built dams, fenced the property,
sunk 22 boreholes, purchased wildlife," he says. But in 2001 the
Mugabe regime forced him to surrender half his property - and half
his hunting revenue - to 89 destitute Zimbabwean families as part
of its land-redistribution plan. Threats were exchanged and, in
2003, Cumming and his wife fled the ranch and moved to Victoria
Falls. At that point, a local safari company, Inyathi Hunting -
partly owned by Mudenda, the former provincial governor and a close
associate of Mugabe - signed a deal with the ranch’s new owners
to take over commercial hunts on the property. During the past two
years, Cumming charges, Inyathi has been ignoring quotas, hunting
for game on other properties, and failing to keep track of wounded
animals - a serious violation of hunting ethics. "Inyathi is hunting
there knowing that they will not have the property forever, so there’s
pillage and rape [of the environment]," Cumming charges.
Steve Williams,
the founder of Inyathi and now a marketing consultant for the company,
says that he and his partners had no qualms about buying rights
to hunt on land that Cummings says was stolen from him. "If your
government goes with it [as a policy], then you have to go with
it," he says. Williams claims that Cumming is spreading untrue reports
because he is embittered about losing the property. "I can’t condemn
the man for being emotional about something that’s been his for
years, but we were never a part of that," he says. He argues that
much of the hunting revenue benefits poor black Zimbabweans who
wouldn’t have shared the wealth during the days of white ownership.
"The 89 black families who have taken over Woodland Estate now have
safe drinking water, a better standard of living, an income. We’ve
taken the blows, the allegations, the ridicule of people like Cumming.
But we’re operating the property in a manner that we are proud of,"
Williams says.
That may be
so. But in September 2005, Mudenda, along with three other top officials
of Zanu PF, were accused by a conservation group in Zimbabwe of
using fake hunting permits and poaching wildlife in the Intensive
Conservation Areas in Matabeleland, established by the government
in 1991 to protect rhino, elephant, lion and other prized species.
All have denied the charges. Debate also swirls around what many
industry sources call the most controversial operator in Zimbabwe:
Out of Africa Safaris. Founded by four former South African policemen
and based in both South Africa and Overland Park, Kan., the company
has done a brisk business taking a heavily American clientele to
hunt on several ranches that, according to industry watchdogs in
Zimbabwe, were seized by Zanu PF activists and independence war
veterans. Critics, including the Zimbabwean Association of Tourism
and Safari Operators, say that the group uses poorly trained hunting
guides who, among other violations, sometimes endanger the lives
of their clients and overhunt species in violation of the Zimbabwean
government's hunting rules.
Zimbabwe’s Parks
and Wildlife Authority banned Out of Africa last year from operating
in the country. "This is an unscrupulous organization that doesn’t
respect the environment and pursues unsustainable quotas," says
David Coltart, the opposition leader. Conservationist Johnny Rodrigues
calls the company the most "flagrant violator" of hunting regulations
in Zimbabwe. Dawie Groenewald, one of the founding partners of Out
of Africa, denies that his company has done anything ethically wrong
and says that he has been slandered by white Zimbabwean hunters.
"The white Zimbabweans hunting in Zim don't want anyone else coming
in there to hunt - they hate South Africans coming to hunt in their
kingdom," he told Newsweek. Out of Africa's attorney, Kevin Anderson,
says that "these allegations about poaching and other illegal activities
have been floating around for several years and they've never been
substantiated." Anderson also says that Out of Africa recently decided
to stop organizing hunts in Zimbabwe because "it's just become too
difficult." Whatever the case, next week in Reno, Out of Africa
will set up its usual booth at the SCI convention - just down the
hall from Buffalo Range Safaris, according to the SCI Web site.
But for the hundreds of American sportsmen browsing for an African
safari next week, finding out the full story of those two companies’
activities in Zimbabwe will require a real hunting expedition.
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
|