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To: Free the USA; Cincinatus' Wife;Sarcasm;Travis McGee;Byron_the_Aussie;robnoel; GeronL;ZOOKER...
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4 posted on 06/06/2002 9:00:50 AM PDT by Clive
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To: Clive
This whole saga is so 'Animal Farm' as to be scarcely credible!

Placing the best farmland in the hands of cronies is just so fitting and proper for these scoundrels.

When that happy day comes when they are put to the sword, perhaps they will be amused by the irony of it all. I know I will.

5 posted on 06/06/2002 9:08:58 AM PDT by headsonpikes
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To: nopardons
Bump!
6 posted on 06/07/2002 1:16:54 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Clive; JohnHuang2
Thank you for the ping and the post!!

*** "The United Nations says this is our longest dry spell in 20 years, and yet all our dams are almost 80 percent full. Our dams are so full because the water has not been used to irrigate crops. There are no crops in the ground because government supporters stopped farmers from growing food because they wanted the land for their masters - and now 6 million people face starvation. What a sickening irony." Buckle said that last week, Zimbabwean Agriculture Minister Joseph Made said that any white farmer who did not put a crop of wheat into the ground would have his farm listed for seizure. ***

"I'm not sure where the minister has been these last two years, because he has already listed 95 percent of Zimbabwe's farms for government takeover," Buckle explained. "There are now only 308 farms in the entire country not listed for state seizure. Neither Dr. Made nor any of his officials are prepared to offer any written guarantees to a farmer that he will be able to grow, reap and sell his wheat before the government moves in and takes the farm over. The 6 million starving Zimbabweans have Dr. Made and his government to thank for their plight. We have become like Somalia and Ethiopia and are holding out our begging bowls to the world. A world that would rather feed us than help us to get a democratic government who care for their people."

So who has taken control of Zimbabwe's formerly white-owned farms, one might wonder.

"Last week, the government in Zimbabwe announced that settlers and squatters were being evicted from commercial farms in our nation. All week we have been waiting with bated breath to hear from the Commercial Farmers Union that this is in fact the case and that commercial farmers have begun picking up their lives and getting some food into the ground. From all reports, though, it appears that this is not what is happening. Squatters and settlers are being moved off some farms - those that have been given to Zimbabwe's VIPs," Buckle said.

"Lists of the new owners of Zimbabwe's prime and previously most productive commercial farms have now been made public. The list runs at the moment to 187 names, and it is shocking. … The new owners of Zimbabwe's commercial farms are not farmers at all. They are not graduates from our agricultural schools and colleges. They are not young men and women who are ready to toil under the baking African sun tending crops and livestock." Buckle said that the new owners of Zimbabwe's farms include government ministers, members of Parliament, police officials, military brass and judicial officers. Members of the media friendly to Mugabe have also collected prime property.........

Many South Africans fear that Zimbabwe-style farm invasions are just around the corner. Since 1994, over 1,200 white South African farmers out of a total of 40,000 have been murdered, with another 6,000 attacks reported........

"The SAPS, SANDF (the new South African National Defense Force) researchers and several commissions are adamant that farm attacks are simply acts of crime. Will future presidents release these 'criminals' due to their contribution to the 'extended struggle'? Has membership of the ANC Youth League become the latest qualification required for amnesty, or should farmers read more into it?"

Continued the spokesman, "If this is the case, the 'Mugabe signals' in Zimbabwe are clearly recognizable as party members receive the benefits, whilst opposition members are held in modern maximum-security prisons and those outside intimidated and murdered. The president owes the farmers of South Africa an explanation regarding the implications of his decision, namely, are the attacks on farmers politically inspired? Are farms - and therefore farmers, their families and workers - targets of the 'extended struggle'? And finally, are farm attackers classified as freedom fighters?" "President Mbeki is leaving his flanks open to a 'Mugabe label,'" the spokesman concluded.****

7 posted on 06/07/2002 1:30:48 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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