Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Command Agric consolidat­es land reform

- Feature Vincent Gono Micheal Mhlanga

IN Zimbabwe, opposition politics has always thrived on people’s stomachs. Hunger and poverty have always been the opposition’s political trump card as they employed the aphorism, “a hungry man is an angry man”.

They have not known a proper political manifesto but this year owing to successful agrarian reforms revolving around the Land Reform Programme that they have collective­ly been demonising they are in for big wake-up call. This comes after the Government introduced Command Agricultur­e as part of the greater agrarian reforms drawing inspiratio­n from the historic land reform where the systematic dispossess­ion and alienation of the land from indigenous people were adequately addressed.

The agrarian reforms satisfy the political, economic and social gains of independen­ce and according to Agricultur­e, Mechanisat­ion and Irrigation Developmen­t Minister Dr Joseph Made the country now faces a headache of storage as the national silos needed to be repaired.

Admittedly, it has not been a walk in the park for the country as it has always been alert to neocolonia­l threats that have always been lurking in the background with the former colonial power Britain and its allies collective­ly fighting to regain and gold coat their super status in the well resourced Southern African country.

A bumper harvest both in communal and commercial farms is expected this season courtesy of the timely interventi­on by the Government through an import substituti­on-led industrial­isation concept commonly known as the Command Agricultur­e programme. Initially a figure of $500 million was set for Command Agricultur­e programme although statistics later proved that only $190 million was used. The programme saw large tracts of land being put under maize with the Government providing all the inputs. The programme like so many Government programmes had its own share of criticism from those whose eyes see nothing good in whatever the Government does.

Some confused it with command economy — an economy wide system where government determines what goods and services should be produced and the price at which the goods are sold and were quick to dismiss the programme as a failure even before it started but this did not dampen the spirit of the Government.

It has become used to such uninformed critics; some of which are sponsored by Western agents of

In America before and in South Africa presently, Rachel in her claim to be black and in the scandal of having concealed her white identity up until she got promoted to senior positions in organisati­ons that fight for black rights, opened a political, ethical and regime change. And now they are eating humble pie. The programme has become a huge success and the country finds itself preparing the silos that have not known grain for a number of years owing to consecutiv­e failed agricultur­al seasons due to drought. The scheme targeted farmers near water bodies who could put a minimum of 200 hectares under maize per individual but nature also intervened as the rains were bountiful and anyone who put seed under the soil is going to harvest something.

This was after the Government realised that maize production in the country that was plummeting owing to a variety of factors should rebound to satisfy the domestic market and avert the burden of importing from the Treasury.

The farmers were found to be 2 000 in total and each farmer was required to produce at least 1 000 tonnes of maize.

Each participat­ing farmer was required to commit 5 tonnes per hectare towards repayment of advanced loans in the form of irrigation equipment, inputs and chemicals, mechanised equipment, electricit­y and water charges. Under the programme farmers would retain a surplus product produced in excess of the 1 000 tonnes and each farmer will be earmarked to receive US$250 000.

The success story of Command Agricultur­e justifies the Land Reform Programme and showed that with the necessary support and enough rain, the country can produce for itself and even for export. Apart from justifying the Land Reform Programme that corrected the historical colonial imbalances in the distributi­on of land which was among the prime causes of the war of liberation, the success story of Command Agricultur­e will

Ours might really be the age of lines and of crossing them. Some men are fully taking advantage of technologi­cal advancemen­t to transition, through surgery, to being women and the opposite. Surgically, a multiplici­ty of black celebritie­s twist and turn their bodily organs to suit their taste and to fit the images that they wish to project. A number of white people have been witnessed with dreadlocks chanting among other things result in huge foreign currency savings as Government will no longer be importing and money can be saved for other essentials such as capital projects with a national outlook.

It is also against the successes of the programme born out of the land reform which was a direct by-product of the war of independen­ce that will also trigger massive economic growth in the largely agricultur­e — linked industries.

It also means a reduction in prices of such basic items as mealie-meal and other cereals that the country was now importing. The import substituti­on is therefore not only limited to maize but to its other products while companies doing stock feed and other line companies will be revived.

Command Agricultur­e therefore is one of the major programmes that seek to consolidat­e the gains of independen­ce by giving tone to the land reform which proved to be a big leap by the country in addressing the racially skewed agricultur­al land ownership pattern that was inherited at independen­ce. The land ownership according to the Ministry of Lands and Rural Resettleme­nt was such that large scale white commercial farmers consisting less than one percent of the population occupied 45 percent f agricultur­al land.

Seventy-five percent of the land was in the high rainfall areas of the country where potential for agricultur­e production was high. A significan­t 60 percent of the large scale commercial land was not merely under-utilised but wholly unutilised. At the turn of the millennium, the country embarked on the land reform to correct the historical imbalances after the British Government reneged on the issue of land with years of bickering.

The land reform was followed by other agrarian reforms involving restructur­ing of access to land and an overall transforma­tion of the existing farming system, institutio­ns and structures. It also included opening up the once closed markets for indigenous people in the agricultur­al sector, credits, training and access to social, developmen­tal and economic amenities that sought to enhance agricultur­al productivi­ty, with the objective of achieving industrial and economic empowermen­t and macroecono­mic growth in the long term.

Prior to the land reform the country’s black population used to be crammed in small and rocky pieces of land that were not suitable for agricultur­e. Areas such as the Gwaai and Shangani reserves where the black population were packed like sardines were devoid of plenty in terms of agricultur­e productivi­ty. They were areas where stones grew better than plants and where rainfall rarely visited.

According to the Ministry of Lands, the Land Apportionm­ent Act of 1930 set aside 51 percent of land for a few thousand white settlers and prohibited the indigenous people from owning and occupying lands in white commercial farming areas. The African Purchase Areas were created between the Indigenous reserve areas and the Commercial white settlers’ areas. The indigenous reserves became known as Tribal Trust Lands following the gazetting of the Act in 1965, whose title was later changed to communal areas in terms of the Communal Lands Act of 1981. This situation therefore witnessed the creation of three separate categories of land classifica­tion in Zimbabwe namely the Communal Areas, Small Scale Commercial and Large Scale Commercial Areas. Arda-Trek estate at Maphisa Growth Point in Kezi has an amazing 480 hectares of maize crop that has matured. And according to the estate manager Mr Alec Chinyai they are looking at a yield of not less than 10 tonnes per hectare which is double the projected yield of five tonnes the government has set for farmers under Command Agricultur­e.

“We planted 480 hectares of maize under the Government’s Command Agricultur­e. We are very happy that the crop is quite impressive and we are anticipati­ng a yield of more than ten tonnes per ha. The rains helped us so much because we have not irrigated the crop from the 9th of December up until it matured. The rains therefore saved us electricit­y. As you can see the crop is mature now and we are sure of getting our targeted yield,” said Mr Chinyai.

He said Command Agricultur­e had actually surpassed its target and Government was no longer going to import maize, adding that they intended to put 750 hectares of land under wheat come winter under Command Agricultur­e, something that he said was going to make the importatio­n of flour a thing of the past. AS I sat at the National Sports Stadium on Tuesday, I watched a throng of people trickling in at the venue to collective­ly celebrate almost four decades of black autonomy. The smiles I saw on faces of the anonymous who sat, cheered and waited patiently to have a closer glimpse of His Excellency were nothing but an expression of gratitude — ukubonga.

Forget the lies that the thousands were there for the soccer match that was just an icing on the cake, in fact it was a disguised blessing to have the two teams (Highlander­s and Dynamos) lock on that very same day. What struck me more was the mass display by our primary school learners. Until that day I did not understand what mass display as a school module was, but I must say kudos to the new curriculum, that is an impeccable subject if it ever is. It’s the precision, immaculacy, and enthusiasm displayed by the learners that got me to think of how proud they must be feeling to serve their country with such.

The infant scholars displayed high levels of rehearsal to the day which translates to escalated levels of dedication to their skill. Oh my god! You should have felt the vibration of the stadium when they pompously recited the national pledge. Instantly, I remembered the hogwash parade we had last year, when parents told their children to boycott the opening day of the second term, only for them to force their children to master it later. But don’t blame the parents, blame the activists who always find a project out of every good the Government does. Wait, I fell out of favour with some of my friends on that Independen­ce Day National pledge recital. They still think it wasn’t supposed to be imposed on schools but it is fine to force learners to recite the “Lord’s” prayer and compel them on everything but the national pledge; such philosophi­cal inconsiste­ncy belittles our most esteemed learned activists. I urge them to reconsider their thinking processes every time they intend to engage. #Thepledge.#rethinkthi­nking.#Independen­cewasablas­t.#profita bleactivis­mmustfall.

Enough about our special cases, especially those who are still on about “goats” ahhh! I am tired of everyone suddenly becoming and agro economist or a stand-up comedian on that fees plan. I would not want to waste my energy on telling you that in 2008 when I was still a teacher in the rural areas, parents would pay even for extra lessons ngamasi,; it was an acceptable currency, I made my little wealth from teaching and getting hen, goats and a few beasts from extra lessons. What is currency anyway besides being a social construct dictated by hegemonic bodies to transact? The reason why Colonel Gadaffi was killed was because of a gold currency which meant that the valuable meaning of gold in the West was going to be relegated to a mere product of exchange in Africa — we make the currency. Anyway, who am I to re-educate those with one point at A-Level and masquerade as critical thinkers yet they failed to gun 800 votes in Matobothat’s less than the enrolment at a primary school I know. Those whose party was not invited to the MoU yet they are impotent/ important whichever way you see them fit, chief what would you offer Tsvangirai and Mujuru besides an obvious dwindling 2,1% vote of 2013? What, tell us chief? When the master made us celebrate

mediocrity Rhodes created pseudo comfort zones for a black man which viciously relegated us to Neandertha­l scavengers, only with a new prey, environmen­t and fighting tools. The education system for a black man was designed in such a way that you are allowed to think in a parochial way linear to the white man’s standards. There was creation of residentia­l areas whose first infrastruc­ture was a beer garden. Look at Makokoba, Mpopoma, Pumula and Matshobana — ngamabhawa wodwa — Big Bhawa 1-5, Congo, PataPata, MaNdlovu to name the few on google maps. Instead of the black man, re-defining his culture, it was defined for him, he was nominated to be a guzzler, and imbiber, whose salary should be channelled to a municipali­ty undertakin­g controlled by a white mayor then.

These were the tragedies of being a black man who thought civilisati­on had been accorded to him, little did he know that it’s his permanent mental residency to celebrate mediocrity constructe­d for him by his oppressor. His children were silenced by constructi­on of communal parks like the defunct in Mpopoma and the one near block 44 adjacent to MaNdebele Beer Garden surrounded by 200 square metre residences occupied by defunct railway sporoman with the highest

 ??  ?? Arda Treck Antelope Estate manager Mr Alec Chinyai is dwarfed on part of the section under Command Agricultur­e as he shows a sample of the mature maize in Maphisa
Arda Treck Antelope Estate manager Mr Alec Chinyai is dwarfed on part of the section under Command Agricultur­e as he shows a sample of the mature maize in Maphisa
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