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Zimbabwe farmers flee, start over
Christian Science Monitor ^ | Friday, March 1, 2002 | By Nicole Itano

Posted on 03/01/2002 12:40:40 AM PST by JohnHuang2

CHIMOIO, MOZAMBIQUE - Mozambique has little of the natural mineral wealth of its neighbors and, after years of war, few of the luxuries of modern life. But to white Zimbabwe farmers fleeing turmoil in their homeland, the rich, red soil of the former Portuguese colony's western provinces looks like gold.

Many of the dozen or so families who have come to hew new lives from the overgrown ruins of Mozambique's colonial-era plantations, lost their farms in neighboring Zimbabwe in the last two years of political violence.

One man watched as his timber farm was burned by squatters. Another, who had supported the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), fled to Mozambique in fear of his life after several death threats left him sleeping with a gun beneath his head.

"Zimbabwe didn't look very bright, so we came here to try to make a go of it," says Brendon Evans, whose family recently started Manica province's first dairy. "If we can find security in Africa, then that's the place for us. We've lived our whole lives here."

Zimbabwe, once one of Southern Africa's most stable and prosperous countries, has been engulfed by violence since early 2000. President Robert Mugabe, in a bid to garner popular support in the country's parliamentary elections, began backing bands of squatters who invaded white-owned farms, driving off or even killing the farmers and their families. The invasions crippled the agricultural sector and led to widespread hunger and hyperinflation.

Next week, Zimbabwe will hold its long-awaited presidential elections, but few believe that they will be free and fair. Attacks against opposition supporters - and any one suspected of being one, including election observers from neighboring African countries - have increased in frequency and severity.

In Zimbabwe, Mr. Evans helped work the farm of his wife's family. Their dairy and corn farm was one of the first to be invaded and the family was forced to abandon their property for six weeks. Although the squatters are now gone, they could return, but the future in Mozambique looks more secure.

These days, the Evans family sleeps in a cold, unpainted, concrete house. It's not quite the frontier - they are close enough to Chimoio that a cell-phone hung on the patio still rings - but the five miles of potholed dirt road over which they must take their milk to market becomes nearly unpassable when it rains.

Uncertain of their future in Zimbabwe, one by one, families like the Evans's are picking up and moving to countries such as Mozambique, Zambia, and even war-torn Angola to start again.

Mozambique, devastated by decades of war - first for independence and later by a 16-year civil conflict - is welcoming these experienced farmers to help it build a commercial agriculture sector. But many of the basic necessities, such as reliable telephones, well-paved roads, and experienced laborers, are in short supply.

For the last five months, Ben, another new Zimbabwean farmer, and his business partner, have lived in army-green tents without electricity or running water while they rebuilt the ruins of a small, 1928 house and planted their new 250 hectare farm. In less than half a year, acres of well-tended tobacco and corn crops have sprung up and two dozen employees work the fields and wooden tobacco drying sheds. The farm's neat fields are a stark contrast to the thatched huts and small family plots of corn that otherwise dot the landscape.

With their families still in Zimbabwe until the farm is running smoothly, they have only each other for company. Their neighbors speak only Portuguese, the country's official language. The only English-speaking inhabitants are two Peace Corps volunteers teaching in the local school 2.5 miles away.

Financially, moving to Mozambique has meant starting over for most farmers. The Zimbabwean government has severely limited the amount of money and property they can take out of Zimbabwe and land ownership rules in Mozambique make it difficult to acquire financing. One relic of Mozambique's Marxist past is that there is no private land ownership. Land must be leased from the state, at a rate of about $1 a year for three acres, but no bank will take that lease as collateral for a loan.

"The problem is finance," says one farmer. "There are billions of dollars worth of knowledge among Zimbabwe farmers, but very little capital. That's why there's not a hundred farmers here."

The Mozambican government says it has received between 70 and 80 applications from white Zimbabwean farmers, but most are still struggling to get financing or to find available land. Only about a dozen have so far managed to settle in the provinces Manica or Tete, along the border between the two countries.

In general, the people of Mozambique have welcomed the new farmers for the jobs and experience they bring. Ben employees 25 people, the Evans family 75. A survey by a local farmers' union indicated that there was widespread support for the new farmers and a hope that they would help introduce new farming techniques to Mozambique's largely sustenance farming community.

Many of the new farmers say they will return to Zimbabwe if the opposition MDC wins the election and ends the government's land seizure program. But few hold out much hope that the MDC will be allowed to win, regardless of what the people say at the polls on March 9 and 10.

Before long, some predicted, the countryside of Zimbabwe will look like that of Mozambique, with the ruins of scattered farmhouses as the only testament to the flourishing commercial agriculture that once thrived there.

"I have no doubt that if things go on as they are, my farmhouse in Zimbabwe will be roofless in six months," says the MDC supporter. "The country will disintegrate into nothing within a year."



TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: africawatch
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Quote of the Day by Tijeras_Slim
1 posted on 03/01/2002 12:40:40 AM PST by JohnHuang2
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To: JohnHuang2;nopardons
bump
2 posted on 03/01/2002 12:52:34 AM PST by GeronL
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Comment #3 Removed by Moderator

To: GeronL
These poor people; they fled from one Marxist , war torn country to yet another. Well, they'll have some peace, until the farms are worth something.
4 posted on 03/01/2002 1:21:46 AM PST by nopardons
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To: nopardons
yes, its too bad western countries won't allow them in

I need some sleep, so goodnight

5 posted on 03/01/2002 1:23:11 AM PST by GeronL
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To: JohnHuang2
I hate these stories. What a sense of hopelessness and despair hangs over that continent. And what amazing character those white farmers have.
6 posted on 03/01/2002 1:28:22 AM PST by Deb
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To: Deb;AfricaWatch
Yet another story, sadly indexed--

AfricaWatch:

AfricaWatch: for AfricaWatch articles. 

Other Bump Lists at: Free Republic Bump List Register



7 posted on 03/01/2002 1:32:34 AM PST by backhoe
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To: Deb
Amen, Deb.
8 posted on 03/01/2002 1:35:02 AM PST by JohnHuang2
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To: BurkeCalhounDabney
Until it is once again, taken away from them.

Have you ever read " THIS PERFECT DAY " ?

9 posted on 03/01/2002 1:47:05 AM PST by nopardons
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Comment #10 Removed by Moderator

To: JohnHuang2
the future in Mozambique looks more secure.

What a sad statement. Mozambique will change their stupid laws to help the faremers get established if they have any sense.

11 posted on 03/01/2002 2:43:19 AM PST by technochick99
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To: JohnHuang2; All
Commonwealth Grapples with Zimbabwe Response [Excerpt] Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer, who has backed British calls for measures, was first out of the ministerial meeting, looking angry.

But officials said Malaysia was happy with the outcome, describing the recommendations as "logical." Malaysia has opposed taking steps against Zimbabwe until after the poll.

Commonwealth membership runs the gamut from rich, industrialized nations like Britain and Australia to some of the world's poorest, such as tiny Pacific islands.

It has been unable to agree on Zimbabwe before and inaction now -- as the clock ticks down to a general election the United States Thursday said it did not believe would be "untainted" -- could again raise questions about its relevance.

But McKinnon dismissed suggestions that failing to act would undermine the credibility of the Commonwealth which prides itself on being the moral guardian of its member nations.

"I don't believe this will be our obituary," he said.

The United States said the election may prove to be the most critical moment in Zimbabwe's history since independence from Britain in 1980.

"It could be the moment at which Zimbabwe's potential as a beacon of freedom on a troubled continent is affirmed, or the moment at which Zimbabwe's leadership decides to fully embrace the dictates of despotism," Walter Kansteiner, the top State Department official for Africa, told congressmen in Washington. [End Excerpt]

12 posted on 03/01/2002 3:15:57 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Morning, Cincy.
13 posted on 03/01/2002 3:25:03 AM PST by JohnHuang2
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To: JohnHuang2
Man. I've been to both Zimbabwe and Mozambique and I'm here to tell you from my own personal experience- the situation has to be utterly bleak for people to see Mozambique as a place to flee.

Travelling through Mozambique was the most surreal experience I have ever had. Beira, the second largest city and former colonial jewel, sits in a state of decay that floored us. It must have been really beautiful at one time. Wide boulevards framed by oaks dripping Spanish moss now showcase all the grand old colonial houses that literally have no roofs or windows. They are sad to see- like high born women fallen into destitution and depravity.

Children run away from you on the sidewalks or stare shyly out at you from the empty window sockets of the buildings. Many large ships sit rusting on the miles of white sand beaches after having run aground. The currency has been handled so many times and for so long that it is as soft as toilet paper. The main "highway" running from Beira to Maputo was barely passable by auto, in places craters (not potholes) as big as houses in the middle of the road- in other places you ride on dirt for hours on end and the petrol stations (if they have fuel) are spaced hundreds of kilometers apart.

When we reached further south, we started running into caravans of Afrikaners from S Africa up on "safari" (or so it seemed from the gear they brought). They would ask us if we came up from Jo'burg because of our license plates. We'd tell 'em "no, we came down from the north". The response was almost always the same- disbelief- "you came down in that (pointing at our beat up VW Passat)". They would treat us like we had a screw loose afterwards (and maybe we did). I could describe more, but you probably catch my drift- Mozambique is like something straight out of the Twilight Zone and I'm literally stunned that people would think of it as safe haven.

14 posted on 03/01/2002 3:59:28 AM PST by Prodigal Son
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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Walter Kansteiner is clearly delusional. The time when Zimbabwe could have been considered a potential "beacon of freedom on a troubled contitnent" was when the Ian Smith government was fighting for its life. The US and UK cheerfully doomed the Smith government and now spokesmen for both of those governments want to mouth empty platitudes about the situation created by Marxists in their own ranks.

Zimbabwe can't be seen as anything but what it is now: a Marxist hellhole with the potential for becoming an even more squalid Marxist hellhole.

15 posted on 03/01/2002 5:50:25 AM PST by Twodees
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To: JohnHuang2
Goodmorning JohnHuang2.
16 posted on 03/01/2002 6:13:42 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Twodees
Sad bump.
17 posted on 03/01/2002 6:14:54 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Prodigal Son; nopardons
Bump!
18 posted on 03/01/2002 6:17:54 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: JohnHuang2
"I have no doubt that if things go on as they are, my farmhouse in Zimbabwe will be roofless in six months," says the MDC supporter. "The country will disintegrate into nothing within a year."

Sounds like the whites fleeing from my home town, Cincinnati, Ohio.

19 posted on 03/01/2002 6:22:55 AM PST by swampfox98
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

Public Transport Mozambique style- literally. This is part of the highway from Beira southwards. The jugs you see are fuel cans. Many vehicles like this have to carry extra in order to make it to the next petrol station- sort of like Alaska. This is actually a pretty good stretch of the highway here- we were too busy driving to take good shots of the messed up bits ;-)

20 posted on 03/01/2002 7:05:46 AM PST by Prodigal Son
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