NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Mthwakazi vows to stop farm seizure

- BY NQOBANI NDLOVU

THE secessioni­st Mthwakazi Republic Party (MRP) last week stormed Siphosami Malunga’s Kershelmar Farm in Nyamandlov­u, Matabelela­nd North province in a bid to stop government from seizing it for redistribu­tion.

Kershelmar Farm (Private) Ltd is owned by Siphosami Malunga, who is the director for Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa (Osisa).

Siphosami is the son of the late national hero Sydney Malunga.

He jointly owns the farm with businessma­n Charles Moyo and Zephania Dlamini, a scientist working at the National University of Science and Technology (Nust).

Lands minister Anxious Masuka last December gazetted the 553-hectare farm, also known as Esidakeni, for compulsory acquisitio­n.

The move has been widely condemned, with critics claiming that Malunga was being punished for exposing government human rights abuses through Osisa.

Reports say Central Intelligen­ce Organisati­on co-deputy director-general Gatsha Mzithulela, Zanu PF secretary for administra­tion Obert Mpofu and Matabelela­nd North Provincial Affairs minister Richard Moyo were behind the move to seize the property.

Last Thursday, MRP provincial chairperso­n Thembelani Mfulongats­hi Mpofu and other officials visited the property and resolved to resist its takeover.

“It then boggles the mind as to how did the land office agree to illegally and forcefully grab a productive black-owned farm, owned by people from Matabelela­nd,” the MRP said in a statement yesterday.

“We say hands off Esidakeni Farm. It belongs to the three Matabelela­nd sons. We condemn all these notorious individual­s with Zanu PF connection­s.

“As a party, we will always stand by our people. We formed MRP specifical­ly to protect, promote and defend our people and we believe in the rule of law rather than in lawlessnes­s.”

Malunga, Moyo and Dlamini in a letter to Masuka dated June 14, revealed that they would lose over $60 million in potential revenue from their horticultu­ral projects if government insists on its takeover.

In March, MRP activists clashed with police after they descended at Tabas Induna Farm in Ntabazindu­na where they evicted former Vice-President Kembo Mohadi’s son-in-law Floyd Ambrose from the property accusing him of grabbing it from a white farmer, Brain Davies.

 ??  ?? Siphosami Malunga
Follow Nqobani on Twitter @NqobaniNdl­ovu
Siphosami Malunga Follow Nqobani on Twitter @NqobaniNdl­ovu

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