Business Day

White farmers may get land back

- Kevin Samaita

The Zimbabwean government is likely to give back some land to white farmers, after a land audit set to be completed in March.

Harare The Zimbabwean government is likely to give back some land to white farmers, after a land audit set to be completed in March.

The audit, which is being carried out across the country, seeks to find multiple farm owners and correct some of the wrongs from the country’s chaotic fast-track land reform exercise that began in 2000. The government has implemente­d a one-person-one-farm policy.

Speaking in parliament last week, Douglas Karoro, the deputy minister of lands, agricultur­e, rural resettleme­nt, water and climate, said white farmers would be considered during the land restructur­ing programme.

“Government wants to see a situation whereby there is fairness in land ownership. There is a land audit that is currently under way and we expect the exercise to be finalised by the end of March.

“The redistribu­tion is not going to look at the colour of the farmer, whether black or white. It is not going to look at the political inclinatio­n of an individual, neither is it going to look at the religious affiliatio­n of the farmer. A farmer is going to be looked at as a farmer, who has capacity and competence. The essence is that we want to produce enough food for everybody as a country and surplus for export.

“In short, [the] government is looking at ways that are nondiscrim­inatory in terms of allocating land to those people who want land,” Karoro said.

Zimbabwe was once the bread basket of Southern Africa but after the land seizures, food production plummeted and the country now imports basic foodstuffs because of dire shortages of wheat, soya beans and other crops.

The land audit has various aims, including seeking to identify underutili­sed land and redistribu­te it to productive farmers as agricultur­e accounts for 15% of Zimbabwe’s GDP and provides about 70% of its formal employment. Zimbabwe’s land reform resulted in the displaceme­nt of 6,000 white farmers, with about 300,000 black families benefiting but the programme has been abused by top Zanu-PF officials.

Former president Robert Mugabe reportedly owns at least 21 farms, which is against the government’s policy.

His wife and children are also said to have benefited from the programme.

An informal audit by authoritie­s exposed irregulari­ties in the allocation of farms, with children as young as 10 reportedly getting land.

In 2018, Perrance Shiri, the lands, agricultur­e, rural resettleme­nt, water and climate minister, said Zimbabwe regretted some of the injustices caused by its land reform programme and was taking corrective measures, including compensati­ng white farmers and working with them.

AN AUDIT SEEKS TO FLUSH OUT MULTIPLE FARM OWNERS AND CORRECT WRONGS OF THE COUNTRY’S CHAOTIC LAND REFORM EXERCISE

 ??  ?? New hope: Farmers like Andreo Malus, left, could get their land back after results of a land audit. /Howard Burditt
New hope: Farmers like Andreo Malus, left, could get their land back after results of a land audit. /Howard Burditt

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