Thursday, August 04, 2011

(NEWZIMBABWE, AFP) Land reforms cost economy $12m, claims CFU

COMMENT - First Gideon Gono, now Deon Theron joins the bandwagon. I want to see their data, just to make sure they aren't pulling their numbers from somewhere. Because there is plenty of data to show that most of the land went to ordinary people, under the A1 and even A2 land redistribution programmes. What Deon Theron does not address is the impact of the credit freeze the government was put under by ZDERA, since Jan. 1 2002. To him, as the head of the Commercial Farmers Union, it was all land redistribution that did it, and that of course is highly suspicious.

Land reforms cost economy $12bn, claims CFU
03/08/2011 00:00:00
by AFP

ZIMBABWE'S land reforms have cost the economy US$12 billion in lost agricultural production over the past decade, the mainly white Commercial Farmers' Union said Wednesday.

President Robert Mugabe's government has publicly insisted that the land reforms were necessary to correct colonial-era injustices by resettling blacks on white-owned land, and that no one should have more than one farm. But CFU president Deon Theron said that Mugabe and his family now own 39 farms, according to a survey by the union.

"Records show that the majority of land has been given to senior politicians, senior members of the security forces, judges, so-called 'ar veterans, civil servants, high-profile clerics and relatives of senior politicians," Theron said.
"For example, President Mugabe and his family own 39 farms," Theron said in the report.

Mugabe launched a land reform programme in 2000 which saw the seizure of more than 3,000 of the country's 4,500 white-owned farms by militant supporters of his party.
Once a food exporter, Zimbabwe has since relied on international aid to feed all of its people.

Theron blamed the land seizures for the collapse of Zimbabwe's economy over the past decade.

"Previously highly productive farms that have been acquired by the government are now producing either very little or nothing," he said.

"Sadly we will once again be unable to feed the nation, and will have to rely on costly imports while vast tracts of prime agricultural land lie unutilised."

The United Nations on Tuesday said Zimbabwe requires an additional $73 million in food aid to avert hunger caused by drought which affected several parts of the country.

Zimbabwe's needs had already been estimated at $415 million this year, but the drought has worsened food shortages in parts of the country, the United Nations said.

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