Zanu PF exposes insincererity in the Land Reform

It is now emerging, rather crudely though, that the Zanu PF chaotic land reform was never genuine nor about redressing past colonial imbalances, but a shameful vote buying, patronage jamboree meant to prop up the regime’s waning fortunes.

Temba Mliswa
Temba Mliswa

The current re-invasion and vandalism now targeted at the once Zanu PF perpetrators now turned Zanu PF enemies , Temba Mliswa, Dydimus Mutasa and a host of others around the country, exposes the long entrenched hypocrisy in the chaos faction Zanu PF party and raises a stink.

The whole charade as Manifest in the latest madness of re-grabbing of the once grabbed farms is shameful and vindicates the MDC’s long held assertion that the regime was never sincere both in intention and purpose about the ill fated land reform exercise in the first place. What is most disgusting is the replay of the same chaotic and violent manner of 2000, betraying the worst levels of impunity characterising the regime.

Whilst the country experienced erratic rainfall pattern this season and is faced with hunger, requiring 700 000 tones of maize imports, we hold Zanu PF accountable for this whole disaster owing to the party’s record of poor economic planning and policy discord since 2000.

Despite the country’s vast inland water bodies, the Zanu PF regime has failed to put in place sustainable plans to harness water for crop irrigation and avert hunger. The chaos such is ensuing within Zanu PF itself and reflecting in every sector of the economy is evidence enough of a country in a malign order and is requiring urgent intervention. The Zanu PF chaotic agrarian reform has failed to address poor agricultural productivity, property rights and rural poverty.

At its inception, the MDC identified access to land and the enhancement of agricultural productivity as being central to sustainable development and the eradication of poverty. As such one of the resolutions of the working people’s convention of February 1999, which was reaffirmed by the party’s founding manifesto of the same year, outlined a plan to acquire over 8 million hectares of agricultural land for resettlement purposes and to provide some sort of security to farmers in the communal land.

In 2000, largely in response to the political challenge presented by the MDC, the Zanu PF regime embarked on it so called “Fast Track Land Reform Programme.” It is more than 10 years since that ill-fated programme and the regime is still trapped in that chaotic mode. Suffice it to say to date, only a tiny proportion of the target of 8 million hectares has been lawfully taken over and the rest lies derelict, deserted and unproductive.

The farms have taken over by a political elite that has been unable to maintain production and have presided over the decimation of the capital infrastructure that had existed on the farms prior to the ill-conceived “Fast Track Land Reform Programme.”

Consequently agricultural production has declined by nearly 80%, exports have plummeted and nearly 70% of all foodstuffs are being imported. Because of the synergy between commercial agriculture and other sectors such as manufacturing and banking, the collapse of the agricultural sector has had serious ripple effects on the Zimbabwean economy with almost every industry closed and the entire nation reduced to vendors.

The MDC will address issues of equitable land ownership and security of tenure, property rights, enhanced productivity, food security and sustainable land use, which the Zanu PF regime has clearly failed to address.

Post published in: Analysis

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