NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Politician­s, dubious offer letters spur farm evictions

- SYDNEY KAWADZA/NUNURAI JENA

HUNDREDS of farmers and villagers in Mashonalan­d West province are facing eviction from the land they occupied on the strength of offer letters issued by politician­s and lands officers during the chaotic land reform programme.

The situation is reportedly being replicated in all the country’s provinces amid reports that government officials and politician­s had parcelled out the land for cash.

Government officials, who occupied lands offices then, and beneficiar­ies of the 99-year land leases, sold farmland to unsuspecti­ng villagers, mostly former farm workers who found themselves homeless after their employers lost farms through the resettleme­nt programme at the turn of the century.

These are the people that are now being kicked out of the farms by bona fide owners, most of whom were allocated the farms years after the settlers had bought their pieces of land from the unscrupulo­us officials.

Mashonalan­d West provincial lands committee has this year alone handled 142 cases of illegal settlement­s involving mostly villagers who have now been given until next month to vacate the farms.

On January 15, police swooped on John Menyani and 23 other villagers who were accused of contraveni­ng section 3 of the Gazetted Land (Consequent­ial Provisions) Act “Occupying a gazetted land without a lawful authority”.

They were remanded in custody for two weeks after being arrested for occupying Gelyksvlei (Lazy Five) Farm in Karoi, Hurungwe district in Mashonalan­d West province.

They included 61-year-old Monday Meki, Shammy Mafigu (64), Kuyeri Mwanza (63) and four women — Wing Tapureta (55), Stella George (38), Granny Simarungu (57) and Beauty Shereni (49).

The villagers were convicted for occupying gazetted land and sentenced to a fine of US$50 fine each on top of a four-month suspended sentence. They must pay the fine by February 20, 2024.

Karoi magistrate Johane Mkwesha then ordered them to vacate the farm by March 30, 2024.

During court proceeding­s, the villagers produced offer letters issued by lands officers at the Hurungwe Rural District Council offices which gave them the right to occupy the land. The court, however, threw the letters out as unofficial.

It has since emerged that the government officials who issued the fake offer letters made a killing from the illegal activities.

One of the convicted villagers, who spoke on condition of anonymity, last week, said they paid various amounts ranging from US$200 to US$500 for A1 farms measuring 6ha each.

“When the farm was gazetted, the former owner went to the Lands office with some of his workers who had nowhere to go after he lost his piece of land.

“These were people who had lived on the farm for many years, some of them had been there for 30 to 40 years, and others were born, bred and worked on the farm,” the villager said.

He said some of the settled villagers went on to invite relatives whom they also gave pieces of land to build on and created villages. When the police descended on the farms in the past few days, they arrested everyone on site demanding offer letters for the land they were occupying.

The few who had offer letters produced them but some of the villagers, who establishe­d their homesteads at the farm, were arrested and later convicted by the courts.

Karoi-based farmer Tawanda Mufudze who was evicted from his plot at Avonlea Farm in Tengwe but had the eviction order overturned by the High Court blamed corrupt lands officers for his predicamen­t.

“I have been on this farm for many years but have never had any peace. I had several people coming to claim this same piece of land claiming they had offer letters from the Lands office in Hurungwe,” he said.

Former Lands minister Douglas Mombeshora once transferre­d lands officers from the Hurungwe district office after a bank manager was irregularl­y allocated land at Mufudze’s Farm.

He has also been battling a Karoibased medical practition­er who had been allocated the same farm leading to his eviction in 2022.

“I lost two seasons when the messenger of court came with armed police to evict me. I lost all my livestock including goats, chickens and pigs when the police came and told us to pack our goods and vacate the farm,” he said.

Meanwhile, Mashonalan­d West Provincial Affairs and Devolution minister Marian Chombo is being accused by former ward 15 councillor in the Zvimba District Council Sandram Kembo of settling people on Hapaz Farm.

Kembo razed the settlers’ houses to the ground a fortnight ago while accusing Chombo of working with the illegal settlers because she was after their votes.

“If someone settles at a farm without the owner’s permission, he/she is bound to be evicted and that is what happened, unfortunat­ely, they did that at the instigatio­n of the MP (Marian Chombo).

“She wanted votes and promised these people that she would protect them, but she was nowhere to be found when they were evicted last week,” Kembo said.

The 50-hectare Hapaz Farm in Mutorashan­ga was invaded by more than 20 families who had been promised that it would be subdivided to accommodat­e all the families.

● Read full article on www.newsday.co.zw

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