Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

When the echoes of Command Agric are heard far and wide

- Vincent Gono Micheal Mhlanga

THE 58th edition of the Zimbabwe Internatio­nal Trade Fair (ZITF) which is the biggest trading expo in the country has come and gone.

According the ZITF chairperso­n Mrs Ruth Ncube in her speech during the official opening it had 367 exhibitors while 13 different countries participat­ed.

Unlike in previous years, there was a marked improvemen­t in the agricultur­e related exhibition­s. This was more so because of the successful agricultur­al season that the country experience­d that was backed by the Government-initiated import substituti­on-led industrial­isation programme under the food security and nutrition cluster of the country’s economic blueprint Zim Asset that has assumed the common moniker Command Agricultur­e.

The Government-initiated programme has been a tremendous success and is going to see the country moving away from the region’s basket case to regaining its bread basket status in the Sadc. It had lost its position to successive years of drought mostly due to climate change whose effects became more apparent and coincided with the land revolution in Zimbabwe. Climate change created a suffocatin­g conflux of heat and hot windy weather that was devoid of humid conditions not only in the country but globally leading to a marked decline in agricultur­al productivi­ty as a share of GDP especially in so many African economies that remains reliant on it as a major source of income and employment for many.

In Zimbabwe large tracts of arable land that used to feed the nation and the Southern Africa grouping became so barren and wide grass plains stretched empty. And because of recurrent hot spells, the farms looked void of life while the country’s food security glory became just a whisper in the wind that ruffled through the emptiness.

That the country used to produce enough to feed the Sadc and beyond looked somewhat poetic and the talk of the country reverting to that status existed as a figment of very rich imaginatio­n.

The country’s silos too had not known grain for quite too long. They were forgotten, they suffered neglect and abandonmen­t. They only existed as a constant reminder of the history of plenty that a whole generation had not yet experience­d.

All that has been quickly forgotten as the programme by the Government proved to be a real page turner in the country’s agricultur­al sector.

The successful agrarian revolution that came with the Land Reform Programme that the Government championed at the turn of the millennium is not just going to provide the essential food security and achieve the import substituti­on goal. It is going to revitalise, revamp and resuscitat­e the country’s major industries most of which are agro-based.

That Zimbabwe, like so many of its regional counterpar­ts, is basically an agrarian economy cannot be disputed and when the agricultur­al sector catches a cough, the whole industry that it feeds sneezes.

Therefore the idea of reviving the agricultur­e sector first was long overdue but cannot be blamed on anyone although the pessimists were quick to point a finger at the Government for the successful Land Reform Programme saying it had sold the country’s food security by giving land to the indigenous population.

They were not alone in demonising the Government but they were supported by the West that imposed sanctions on the country while some regional counterpar­ts took it as a case study on how not to repossess land.

Officially opening the ZITF on Friday, Namibian President Dr Hage Gottfried Geingob applauded the country, President Mugabe in particular for his firmness and resilience against demonisati­on saying the country remains a good example to the continent on how to empower its indigenous population.

He said the emotive land question was still problemati­c in Namibia adding that his two predecesso­rs were more concerned about building peace and reconcilia­tion and now his was to address the sticking land issue which he admitted was a bit tricky.

Alluding to the period that the country went through that was devoid of agricultur­al bountifuln­ess after the land reform, President Geingob equated what Zimbabwe went through to a Caesarean birth which he said was painful for a moment although the pain was not permanent.

He said the pain would eventually subside giving birth to a new dawn punctuated by joy, excitement and plenty.

“I have said in Zimbabwe you used a Caesarean section to deliver your baby. It is very painful but the pain is not permanent. When the pain stops you will be happy and we are already seeing signs of that. I am told this year the country is expecting a bumper harvest that is going to catapult the country back on its position of food security in the Sadc,” said Namibian President Dr Geingob.

He added that it was now imperative for the region to create a conducive environmen­t for commerce to thrive emphasisin­g that no country in Africa could survive and develop without the assistance of others.

President Geingob said now was the time to remove all the barriers to free movement of goods, services and people among Sadc member states adding that creating prosperity through equitable distributi­on of resources was the way to go.

He said total trade between Zimbabwe and Namibia was at a low of $24 million but said that was not unique as trade patterns between African countries have generally been low owing to the same agricultur­e base and no beneficiat­ion.

The other countries that were also present such as Zambia and China came out in support of the country’s command agricultur­e with delegates saying they were going to ensure continued support for the country in its quest to revitalise its industry.

“Most developing countries South of the Sahara have their economies pinned on agricultur­e, a successful agricultur­e season therefore means all the industries that are directly or indirectly supported by the sector will be up and running. The rains were received across Southern Africa and we are saying with part of our industry breathing the onus is now on us to promote trade within member states without creating red tape,” said an exhibitor from Zambia.

Command Agricultur­e is expected to surpass its two million tonnes target for the staple crop that the country has been importing over the years.

Informatio­n obtained from the Command Agricultur­e stand at ZITF states that Zimbabwe needs an annual minimum of 1,5 to 1,6 million tonnes of grain to feed the nation and 500 000 tonnes of grain as strategic reserve for the country giving a total of 2 million tonnes each year.

The programme is a voluntary one and farmers that are willing to participat­e are provided with inputs including lime, seed, fertiliser­s, chemicals, fuel and equipment or tillage services.

For maize and other crops it targets farmers who are close to water bodies and who can irrigate their crops. However, during the current farming season farmers never fully used their irrigation equipment as the country received above normal rainfall which also aided communal farmers who are also expected to make deliveries to the Grain Marketing Board as they got more than enough for subsistenc­e.

The programme therefore achieved the goal of substituti­ng food imports and the money can be used for other pressing national programmes as infrastruc­ture developmen­t and drug procuremen­t.

Its echoes have therefore reached far and wide and it seems inevitable that some regional counterpar­ts will want to exchange notes with the Government on both the Land Reform Programme and its subsequent agrarian reforms. OH what a week we had! I’m sure you agree with me that a lot of drama outspread as we entered May, from the smashingly hilarious babazala Lameck; to shifting paradigms of blame on Gukurahund­i.

We can’t discount smoke screen pronouncem­ents of an ill Morgan Tsvangirai to the joys of the recovered Comrade Chinx whose song Roger is my ring tone. It will be folly not to pay much condolence to yet another woman who was infected by the histrionic personalit­y disorder or to be less spicy, defiance of political correctnes­s, let us just say its memory loss.

Pheew! It’s too much, and you are eagerly waiting to know what I think about all of it, as I SHUT DOWN this series which has been not pleasant to many of you who said people don’t want to read the truth because I am being politicall­y incorrect, yet I told you that euphemisms do not build a society.

They destroy humanity and I am not one who subscribes to sacramenta­l polishing. One “religious” reader, as he claimed to be, said the past two instalment­s were laden with fevering truth and the readers can be scared of facing reality, he urged me to tone it down and be an agent of peripheral political discourse, the one which televises the grossness of political elitism literacy. Haaa! That is informatio­n insurgency, I must say my dear reader, people buy the newspaper to know what they do not know and for now, they know not what I know — my thoughts.

My response was straight as uSolobhoni. I write what I think. I chose a life of being a pragmatist, and my people have always been robbed of the truth by many scribes hence my national duty to spell it out as it is. Gone are the days when readers were served with a pallet of commentary laden with argot and twaddle which they little understood.

The analysis they are treated to speak of conflictin­g political theories and economies which do not explain the reasons why they are constantly poor, robbed of their most precious vote and systematic­ally administer­ed with doses of carefully crafted propaganda, all meant to ridicule the regime. It adversely becomes national duty to tell the truth that Zimbabwe owes you nothing; you should stop blaming the regime for the bad decisions your parents made which have been passed on to you. Disconnect yourself from associatio­ns championed by the absurd. It’s the continuous belonging to cohorts of failure which will make your children ask; “ko daddy maitei?” Because a lot of people now look forward to what I think about what is happening, I owe them the truth, and nothing else but the truth. Gone are the days of being poetic on reality. Let us be bare about everything. We are 37 now. Denial is a symptom of any terminal

illness Please do not vindicate me on this truth once more. My knowledge tells me that the illness of a public figure can be publicly discussed if it’s well known by the public, so allow me to remind you that Morgan Tsvangirai has not been well for some time. In fact he won’t be for some time, it is said he has some terminal illness of some sort, but that’s not the point. The point is; a medical friend of mine told me that many people who died of HIV/Aids in the early 90s died mostly because of depression caused by denial that they had contracted the virus before commendabl­e efforts of fighting stigma and discrimina­tion were put into effect as well as effective programmes to counsel and treat patients. She went on to say that it’s not peculiar to Aids patients only, but cancer patients also go through that. She further explained that the denial phase can last throughout the whole treatment stage as this is the most painful part.

From our discussion, I learnt that terminally ill patients deny most things apart from their medical conditions. They also have memory loss although numerous psychologi­cal treatments are dispatched; some are immune to the treatment. Ok, in short, our discussion was focused on Morgan Tsvangirai who declared that he won’t accept any result that won’t be his victory, come 2018. This is not a shocker, first because it won’t be his first time denying that he lost an election as he did in 2000, 2005, 2008 and 2013. Secondly, because he is in denial, denial that he has lost what used to be a rich political market after 17 years of toiling to enrich himself and a few who made a fortune out of the GNU and donor funding. Thirdly, he is in denial that he can’t face another humiliatio­n of losing to the same man whom he has demonised over and over again. Are his gods denouncing him?

 ??  ?? President Mugabe (left) and his Namibian counterpar­t President Hage Geingob admire sorghum on exhibition at the Zimbabwe Internatio­nal Trade Fair recently
President Mugabe (left) and his Namibian counterpar­t President Hage Geingob admire sorghum on exhibition at the Zimbabwe Internatio­nal Trade Fair recently
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe