Daily Dispatch

Starve the farm attackers before they starve the country ’

Experts warn that SA faces a job and food-supply security risk unless the criminal onslaught is stopped

- GRAEME HOSKEN

When she hears of a farming family being brutally attacked, tortured or murdered, Bloemfonte­in emerging farmer Mimmie Jakobs has flashbacks to the moment three men burst into her home.

Stabbed multiple times, beaten to a pulp, her jaw broken, face fractured and left for dead, Jakobs, who farms lucerne and pecan nuts, stumbled for nearly 14km through neighbours fields, in the dark, before she ’ found help.

I remember thinking of all the projects I “had left, all the work that I wanted to do on the farm, who would look after my workers and that I was not ready to die.”

Since her attack in February, and after multiple hospital admissions, Jakobs, like hundreds of establishe­d and emerging farmers who have survived violent attacks, is battling to get back on her feet and keep her farm productive.

It s been a struggle. For two years I have “’ battled crippling infrastruc­ture theft and then I was attacked.”

Economists, food security experts and rural community researcher­s warn that SA faces a dire job and food-supply security risk because of the criminal onslaught against the country s 300,000 emerging farmers and ’ 40,000 establishe­d commercial farmers.

Research by Agri SA shows that, on average, a farm will be abandoned for up to five years by a farmer who is violently attacked, with dozens of workers and their dependants losing their livelihood­s.

According to Stats SA data released in March, 757,628 people are employed in the agricultur­al sector, down from 769,594 in 2007. The sector contribute­s three percent to the GDP.

“If you are not in production, you and your workers are in jeopardy. It s not just one family ’ which is impacted. Most farmers employ 10 workers. That s 10 families, who have up ’ to six dependants, who lose out on food and money, Jakobs said. ”

This week, tempers flared in Newcastle in KwaZulu-Natal, where farm owners and workers attended a safety imbizo convened by police minister Bheki Cele after the deaths of Glen Rafferty and his wife, Vida, of Normandien. They were shot and killed at their farmhouse last month. Police did not respond to detailed questions about farm attacks this week.

Koos Odendaal, who oversees safety in the Rouxville and Aliwal North farming communitie­s in the Free State and Eastern Cape, said the areas were under fire from criminals and that attacks had recently begun again.

Five years ago it was rough. It went quiet, “but we are still feeling the impact, where farmers have simply left their farms. After Dr Ben Cilliers was murdered on his Rouxville farm in January 2016, his family left the farm. Their four farm workers and families were left destitute. In Rouxville there were over 250 farmers. Now there are 120. Crime has seen farmers leave.”

Odendaal said the impact of Cilliers s death ’ was huge.

He was the local doctor in the township. “Hundreds would go to him for medical help. Today they still don t have a doctor.” ’

Agri SA executive director Christo van Rheede said farmers are not just targeted for weapons, livestock, vehicles or cash. Criminals “ come for diesel, pumps, fencing and electrical cabling. If you try to stop them they kill you and your workers. This year alone 35 emerging livestock farmers, who are members of the eMangweni Farmers Associatio­n ’ in KwaZulu-Natal, were killed.”

Dr Vuyo Mahlati, president of the African Farms Associatio­n, said farm workers bore ’ the brunt as they had no safety net if farmers left their land.

Agbiz agricultur­al economist Wandile Sihlobo said security must be improved urgently in rural communitie­s. He said if crime against the farming sector was not addressed it would make it increasing­ly difficult for farmers to feed SA.

Agricultur­al economist Willem van Jaarsveld agreed, saying if farmers don t leave ’ their land, they often scale-down their farming activities.

He said farm workers are often seen as soft targets.

Sandy La Marque, KwaZulu-Natal Agricultur­al Union CEO, said since lockdown levels decreased they have seen an increase in crimes such as stock and crop theft, and arson, with an increase in farm attacks and murders.

La Marque said while the number of attacks on farms had dropped from 27 in 2019 to 16 in 2020, the number of murders has risen.

Data shows the number of farmers murdered in KwaZulu-Natal is at its highest in the past three years, with four farmers killed this year so far compared with one a year in the previous two years.

How serious, from a policing and governance perspectiv­e, is rural safety taken and what steps have been taken by the ministry to address crimes, including the murder of farmers and farm workers, both emerging and establishe­d, as well as stock theft?

SAPS spokespers­on Lirandzu Themba said farm attacks and murders fell into the most “serious category of crimes that the SAPS reports on ”.

Rural safety has been beefed up in the “SAPS through the reviewing of the National Rural Safety Strategy (NRSS) that was launched last year in Limpopo. It was adopted in response to the threat that crimes in rural areas, including murders and attacks on farmers, pose to the rural economy, agricultur­e, food security and peace and stability of the country.

The NRSS recognises the need for a national “response to address crime in rural areas and the need to work with stakeholde­rs in and outside government. The consultati­on process of the NRSS was wide-ranging with all concerned stakeholde­rs. The implementa­tion of the plan will take place over a period of five years and end in March 2025,” she said.

“All incidents in rural areas ... are analysed weekly and provinces and police stations are tasked with addressing identified hotspots. Rural safety coordinato­rs have been identified to coordinate all activities within the rural policing areas to strengthen the implementa­tion of the NRSS at police station level. The NRSS is a work in progress and is being implemente­d in hundreds of police stations across the country.

“Collaborat­ion is needed to improve rural safety. The NRSS is reliant on coordinati­on between government and stakeholde­rs, such as farmers and private security, to ensure it works. All role players in the rural and farming community, including civil society, are involved in the committees ... to support and implement the NRSS,” said Themba.

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 ?? Picture: MARK ANDREWS ?? STAYING ALIVE: Justice for Farm Murders SA stage a protest against farm attacks at the Multicultu­ral Man statue at the East London beachfront in September.
Picture: MARK ANDREWS STAYING ALIVE: Justice for Farm Murders SA stage a protest against farm attacks at the Multicultu­ral Man statue at the East London beachfront in September.

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