A Tobacco farm in Zimbabwe. |
Zimbabwe's new
minister of lands, agriculture and rural settlement, Retired Air Marshal
Perrance Shiri, has reportedly ordered those who have illegally
occupied farm lands to leave "immediately" or face the wrath of law.
According to the
state-owned Herald newspaper, Shiri said: "If we are to meet the goals
set out by government to use agriculture as the mainstay of the economy,
we need to ensure unquestionable sanity on the farms.
"... All those who were illegally settled or who just settled themselves on resettlement land should vacate immediately".
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Shiri also warned officials from his ministry to desist from engaging
in corrupt activities when issuing out land, as this was a crime that
attracted a jail term.
A BBC report said
that the move could see a return of white farmers who were evicted
during a controversial land reforms programme that was led by former
president Robert Mugabe.
Racial discrimination
Last week, the
Zimbabwean government ordered that land confiscated from a white farmer
to give to an ally of former president Robert Mugabe must be returned.
Robert Smart, who
grew tobacco and corn on his farm in Makoni in eastern Zimbabwe, was
evicted in June after a former minister ordered that the plot be turned
over to pro-Mugabe cleric Trevor Manhanga.
"(He) surrendered
part of his farm during the land reforms and the G40 started racially
profiling him to justify eviction," said Chris Mutsvangwa, a special
adviser to President Emmerson Mnangagwa.
The G40, or Generation 40, was a faction of the Zanu-PF party, mainly younger members, once loyal to Mugabe's wife Grace.
"Smart and others
were victims of racial discrimination, greed and abuse of power. Their
farms were acquired outside the parameters of the law."
Brutal and arbitrary
Mutsvangwa also said at the time that the government was investigating other illegal farm takeovers.
In 2000 Mugabe
launched the disastrous land seizure programme in which farms were
forcibly taken from white farmers, officially justified as an effort to
stimulate economic growth for black Zimbabweans.
The evictions,
often brutal and arbitrary, were blamed for a collapse in agricultural
production and chronic food shortages that forced the one-time
breadbasket of Africa to become dependent on imports of staples.
Economic output
fell by half following the start of the land seizures, as more than 4
000 of the country's white farmers were stripped of their land.
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