Posted on 07/08/2004 3:23:25 PM PDT by MadIvan
A LARGE baboon in the dusty lorry stop near Zimbabwes border with Zambia daily lays bare the origin of President Mugabes purported bumper harvest.
Squatting on top of a bulky trailer, he rips open the heavy tarpaulin cover and stuffs his cheeks with maize until he can push no more in.
Drivers here say that every day for more than a month up to 30 heavy trucks have been crossing from Zambia with 30-tonne consignments of maize bound for government silos. Grain trade executives report that at least 400,000 tonnes are on order some of it almost certainly grown by white Zimbabweans who moved to Zambia after being driven from their farms by Mr Mugabes land seizures.
That man (Mr Mugabe), he made a big mistake to chase the white man, said Kennedy Phiri, a truck driver who was driving a load of maize.
Similar cargo is crossing the Beitbridge border post with South Africa. The South African Grain Information Service says that 168,000 tonnes of American, Argentine and South African maize, and more than 50,000 tonnes of wheat, has been shipped into Zimbabwe this year.
How Zimbabwes bankrupt Government pays for these surreptitious imports is a state secret, but they give the lie to its claim that the countrys farmers will produce a record harvest of 2.4 million tonnes of maize this year. In a recent interview Mr Mugabe even suggested that the World Food Programme should redirect its efforts to other countries. Why foist this food upon us? We dont want to be choked. We have enough, he told Sky News.
By contrast, the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation predicts a maize harvest of barely 900,000 tonnes, and estimates that 2.3 million people in Zimbabwes rural areas face starvation.
Mr Mugabes opponents have no doubt why he is importing such large quantities of grain, while rejecting the help of international aid organisations whose food distribution programmes he cannot control. They say that he intends to reward supporters with food before next years parliamentary elections, and withhold it from famine-stricken areas that support opposition parties until they cave in through hunger.
They have a plan to starve people to death for political ends, to get everyone aligned to their party at all costs, Pius Ncube, the Catholic Archbishop of Western Zimbabwe, said this week. Indeed, Mr Mugabe once remarked that absolute power is when a man is starving and you are the only one able to give him food.
In truth, the emptiness of Mr Mugabes claims about Zimbabwes food production and of the state radio propaganda jingle that Our land is our prosperity is everywhere apparent. A tour of what was once Zimbabwes most intensive farming region shows that Mr Mugabes mythical agrarian revolution has instead reduced what was once the breadbasket of southern Africa to subsistence agriculture and desperate poverty.
In July the land around Banket, about 70 miles north of Harare, used to be a panorama of stunning green winter wheat. Today there are a handful of green patches, the work of the two white farmers still able to farm, and a few black A2 settlers state and ruling party officials who have taken over white-owned land.
Ben Hlatshwayo, the High Court judge who last month dismissed the opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirais challenge to Mr Mugabes fraudulent election victory in 2002, occupies the lands and homestead of Vernon Nicolle, formerly one of the biggest wheat and barley producers in the country, who is now in Australia. The judges summer crops consist of a patch of stunted maize and sunflowers. He has planted barely any winter wheat.
Massive rotating watering systems stand gaunt above fields of maroon buffalo weed and elephant grass. The 1,000-tonne steel grain bins are empty and vandalised, their function usurped by the rickety wooden cribs of peasant farmers holding perhaps a tonne of maize cobs.
Some of them have made it, but they are few and far between, said a white farmer who asked not to be named. They dont have capital or know-how. The Government hasnt delivered the fertiliser, seed and fuel it promised. They farm at weekends. They planted late and their yields will be hopeless.
They will be able to feed themselves, but thats all. There will be no profit to farm with next season. Its poverty replicating itself.
Nearby, the tattered plastic sheeting over the ribs of a desolate 30-acre horticulture greenhouse flaps in the wind. Six months ago the owner, a widow, was forced off by soldiers with AK-47s.
Other agricultural sectors are in similar straits. Zimbabwe was the biggest exporter of tobacco in the world, producing 245,000 tonnes in 2000. This years crop will be a quarter of that.
At the Zimbabwe International Trade Fair in April in Bulawayo, the heart of the countrys cattle industry, the sole entries in the livestock section were two donkeys.
There are about 300 white farmers still able to farm, says John Worsley-Worswick of the Justice for Agriculture organisation, but the Government has recently passed laws to seize farmers machinery and to hasten the procedure of compulsory acquisition.
Lists of farms for seizure are published with increasing frequency. Were losing one or two farmers every day, said Mr Worsley-Worswick. Its a very real possibility there will be no white farmers by the end of the year.
FAILING CROPS
Tobacco
2000: 245 million kg
2004 (forecast): 65 million kg
Maize
1995: 2.1 million tonnes
2004: 900,000 tonnes
Cotton
2000: 353,000 tonnes
2004 (forecast): 228,000 tonnes
Wheat
2001: 314,000 tonnes
2003: 50,000 tonnes
Milk
2001: 160,000 tonnes
2003: 100,000 tonnes
Regards, Ivan
Ping!
I would volunteer. However, he's one amongst the rat's nest of commies that need to be wiped off the map.
Regards, Ivan
As the US Army said during the Phillippine Insurrection, "Civilize 'em with a Krag."
Electric lights. :)
Regards, Ivan
Note the drastic decline in tobacco production. This is a harbinger of a major drop in deaths due to lung cancer and related diseases. It will save money in long term health care costs nationwide! Unfortunately, they won't just ban the evil weed outright. The comcommitent drop in production of other crops and starvation of the population is an unfortunate side effect. But even though they may starve to death, they won't have to fear lung cancer. In the end, we must remember that to make an omelette, you must break some eggs.(/sarcasm)
http://www.rhodesia.com/oz_wa/gregory.html
Wouldn't be bad for anyone if they went back. Rhodesia was a good country and they didn't oppress anyone with apartheid laws. However, if such a move was done, then of course the rest of the world would take notice and not in a good way either.
Why doesn't Bush speak out against this? haven't heard a word from him.... Maybe he is worried the black caucus will use it against him? or? speaking of which, why aren't THEY saying anything?
At the Zimbabwe International Trade Fair in April in Bulawayo, the heart of the countrys cattle industry, the sole entries in the livestock section were two donkeys.
At least the democrats made a showing.
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Mugabwe is like Comical Ali - lying through his teeth while his country is falling apart behind him.
Is his wife still shoe shopping in London?
Pamwe Chete!!!!
Socialism - serving mankind for a century - raw, boiled, however you like!
Yet another failed socialist dictator.
Wow, they had BOTH of them in the show? . . .
: )
"Rhodesia was a good country and they didn't oppress anyone with apartheid laws."
This is no defense of Mugabe or Rhodesia, but how much freedom did the average person have in Rhodesia. Could they vote? Go to school? Live where they wanted?
Rhodesia might not have had the apartheid system of SA, but it was still a highly segregated place, and most of that segregation was backed up by laws.
http://www.geocities.com/Chilenationalist/rhodesia.html
In terms of what was going on next door, Rhodesia was a far better option for a black African. That's just how it was back then. Personally, if I was black and educated in that time I would have simply left (which many did and perhaps that's why southern Africa is in the state that it is in).
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