Tuesday, November 01, 2005

A Zimbabwean minister has said that many of those given land since 2000 know little about farming and this has led to food shortages

BBC News:

The authorities have previously blamed hunger on poor rains, while critics have pointed to the seizure of most of the country's white-owned land.

Up to three million people will need food aid this year, the UN says.

At the same time, the UN has criticised Zimbabwe for refusing aid for people made homeless by housing demolitions.

Deputy Agriculture Minister Sylvester Nguni was quoted in the state-owned Herald newspaper as saying that while a few of those given land were committed to agricultural production, many others were doing "nothing" on the farms.

Although he mentioned the poor rains, he also told a meeting of the Zimbabwe Farmers' Union: "The biggest letdown has been that people without the slightest idea of farming got land and the result has been declining agricultural output."

In a secretly filmed report for the BBC, villagers said they had only been eating one meal of porridge a day since May.

A woman said her two children had died after eating poisonous roots because they were so hungry.

Much of Zimbabwe's best agricultural land was previously owned by whites, but over the last five years 4,000 white farmers - out of 4,500 - have had their land seized and redistributed to blacks.

Critics say that many of the beneficiaries have been government cronies.

Zimbabwe fingers new black farmers’ apathy for food shortage

White land grab policy has failed, Mugabe confesses

Zimbabwe's white farmers manage one last smile before they leave for good

2 Comments:

At 4:30 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"letdown"

Those funny (ahem, black) Zimbabwe ministers.

Presumably those who "got land" did so because it was given to them, or the transfer to them was approved by, the government. And it must've been well known at the time that the recipients did not have any experience running a farm, and perhaps even no interest in doing that. So how can this reality possibly be called a "letdown"?

 
At 3:09 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

So how can this reality possibly be called a "letdown"?

I guess they were hoping that the magical powers of political correctness would save the day.

 

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