Daily Nation Newspaper

LAND REFORM IS A ZIM SUCCESS STORY – it'll be the basis for economic recovery under Mnangagwa Dispossess­ion of our ancestral land was the fundamenta­l reason for waging the liberation struggle.

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IBy JOSEPH HANLON N his speech after being sworn in as Zimbabwe’s new president on November 24, Emmerson Mnangagwa, stressed the role of the country’s land reform farmers in boosting the country’s economic recovery. They have excelled recently.

Zimbabwe produced more maize in 2017 than was ever grown by white farmers, who have repeatedly been praised for making the country into the bread basket of Africa. Maize production in 2017 was 2.2 milion tonnes, the highest in two decades.

Good rains helped, but even the United States Department of Agricultur­e said the huge increase in maize production was “mainly due to favourable weather conditions and a special programme for import substituti­on, commonly termed as "Command Agricultur­e.” That programme was implemente­d last year by Mnangagwa, when he was vice president.

Under the programme, land reform farmers signed contracts for a certain number of hectares and agreed to sell at least five tonnes of maize per hectare to the Grain Marketing Board. The government provided seed, fertiliser, and, if needed, tractors and fuel for ploughing, and the cost was deducted from the sale price of the maize. Compared to 2011, another good rainfall year, maize production jumped 700, 000 tonnes - more than half of which was due to the Command Agricultur­e programme.

Earlier this year, before he was dismissed as vice president, Mnangagwa announced that the programme would be expanded for the coming agricultur­al season - when more good rains are also forecast.

The politics of land reform Robert Mugabe was displaced as president partly by pressure from the war veterans, who he led to victory in Zimbabwe’s independen­ce struggle. But they had stood up to him much earlier, in 2000, as I documented in a book on the issue, written with Teresa Smart and Jeanette Manjengwa, who was recently appointed to the Zimbabwe Land Commission.

Mnangagwa was a liberation war veteran, and as he said in his inaugurati­on speech: “Dispossess­ion of our ancestral land was the fundamenta­l reason for waging the liberation struggle.” As we showed in our research, by 2000 the white farms were mostly under-used and the war veterans were fed up with Mugabe’s refusal to take them over. They moved against him. In a carefully organised campaign over the Easter weekend that year, 3, 000 huge white-owned farms were occupied by 170, 000 Zimbabwean families.

Mugabe was initially opposed to the move, but when he saw the popularity of the occupation, he reversed his position – and was happy to be blamed for the occupation by the British press and media.

The occupation was legalised

mainly due to favourable weather conditions and a spemme cial programme for import substituti­on, commonly termed as "Command Agricultur­e.

n is se g e 0 y s sd ner e un and small farms were marked out

on the land that had been formerly d owned by the white farmers. e But the new farmers received little e support and had to pull themselves as up by their bootstraps. It cd took a decade, and the economic mismanagem­ent and hyperinfla­tion of the 2000s did not help, but the 146, 000 smaller farmers with land of six hectares saved and reinvested and became highly productive – and created 800, 000 jobs. The developmen­t economist Ian Scoones points to the way vibrant market towns have grown up around the land reform farms.

But a group of 23, 000 medium-sized farmers with 10-50 hectares had limited capital to get started and farmed only part of their land.

From their limited production they could not save enough to buy the fertiliser and tractors needed for the larger farms. Mnangagwa’s Command Agricultur­e programme was aimed at this group, and credit provided by the programme more than doubled their maize production.

The other success has been tobacco, with US$576m produced in 2017 – mainly by land reform farmers. Clearly, Zimbabwean farmers are willing to work hard, given the land and the opportunit­y. The compensati­on question

Mnangagwa has been part of the government since independen­ce, so this is only a change of leadership. Corruption dogged Zimbabwe under Mugabe, but neverthele­ss, Mnangagwa was already moving to curb it. Participat­ion in the Command Agricultur­e programme was voluntary, but Mnangagwa used the army to check that the agreed number of hectares had been ploughed and planted. Some senior figures from the ruling ZANU-PF party were arrested for fraud for selling fertiliser and diesel that was meant for other farmers.

Officially no family can have more than one land reform farm, but as we found in our research, this did not stop Mugabe’s cronies taking several larger farms each.

Last year, under pressure, a Land Commission was named, and in his inaugural speech Mnangagwa increased support for it “to ensure that all land is utilised optimally.”

The new president will need to rebuild links with the internatio­nal community, and a vexed issue has been the demand for compensati­on for displaced white farmers. Mnangagwa said in his speech that “the principle of repossessi­ng our land cannot be challenged or reversed.” But, he continued: “My government is committed to compensati­ng those farmers from whose land was taken.” But that is a fraught issue inside Zimbabwe, because the white farmers received their land in the 1930s to 1950s only by expelling tens of thousands of Zimbabwean farmers already on the land.

Restarting and restructur­ing the economy will now be a priority. But Mnangagwa recognises the centrality of farming and the success of the land reform, so agricultur­e is likely to take the lead. - THE CONVERSATI­ON.

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Robert Mugabe

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