Zimbabwe won’t return land to white farmers

Zimbabwe won’t return land to white farmers
Darryn Smart, left, and his family are welcomed back to their farm, Lesbury, by workers and community members in Tandi, Zimbabwe. Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa said the country will not return anymore land seized from former white commercial farmers. (AP Photo)
Updated 10 February 2018
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Zimbabwe won’t return land to white farmers

Zimbabwe won’t return land to white farmers

HARARE: Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa on Saturday said the country will not return land seized from former white commercial farmers almost two decades ago.
“It will never happen,” Mnangagwa said in a speech to his ZANU-PF party supporters in central Zimbabwe, broadcast on television.
His statement comes two months after white farmer Robert Smart got his land back after being evicted in June by ex-president Robert Mugabe’s government.
Zimbabwe embarked on a violent land reform program in 2000, taking over white-owned farms to resettle landless blacks.
Thousands of white farmers were forced off their land by mobs or evicted, with Mugabe saying the reforms would help black people marginalized under British colonial rule.
Critics blame the land redistribution for the collapse in agricultural production that saw the former regional breadbasket become a perennial food importer.
The government has indicated it will issue 99-year bankable leases to beneficiaries of land reform but Mnangagwa on Saturday said land owners must be more productive.
“Our land must be productive. We must mechanize and modernize our agriculture,” he said, adding that the land reforms were “irreversible.”
Mnangagwa, who came to power after a military intervention ended Mugabe’s decades-old rule last year, said new elections would be held in July.
“We want a peaceful election. We want a united people. There is no reason for ZANU-PF to be violent. There is no reason for any political party to be violent.”
The former deputy president said his government’s top priority was to revive the ailing economy.
“Our economy is struggling, unemployment is high, our youth lack opportunities, too many people are unable to afford essential goods for their families and our infrastructure is stuck in the past,” he said.