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Rural Zimbabwe empties as chaotic land reform policy collapses

Villagers collect water from a dry river bed in drought hit Masvingo, Zimbabwe, June 2, 2016. REUTERS/Philimon Bulawayo /File Picture - RTSJVWK

Forests engulf fields that used to produce some of the world’s best tobacco around the northern Zimbabwean town of Banket, while sheds that once stored the leaf stand empty, their corrugated iron roofs ripped off and sold for scrap. Most of the farm workers have left.

Villagers collect water from a dry river bed in drought hit Masvingo, Zimbabwe, June 2, 2016. REUTERS/Philimon Bulawayo /File Picture – RTSJVWK

“We are 15 here now, from roughly 50,” said Bruce Mahenya, who lives in a mud-and-grass hut behind a defunct trading store on a farm about 95km northwest of the capital, Harare. “My mother, father and brother have gone. I said I would remain alone in case things get better, but it’s hard.”

It is a familiar story across vast tracts of Zimbabwe, where President Robert Mugabe’s goal of transforming the countryside through the seizure of about 4,500 white-owned commercial farms remains illusive. Some of the best acreage fell into ruin because senior ruling party officials who took it over had no farming expertise. Other farms also failed because they were given to small producers with no money to pay for fertilizer and equipment. In recent years, the crisis has been compounded by drought followed by torrential rains.

Many of those who have abandoned their farms joined an exodus of an estimated 3-million Zimbabweans to SA and other countries or moved to overcrowded urban townships. As many as 4-million Zimbabweans, about a quarter of the population, need food aid, according to the government.

“We thought when we were placed there that we’d be helped, but no, we were just left,” said Alec Kaitano, who abandoned his smallholding outside the northeastern town of Bindura a year ago and survives by selling blemished fruit he finds in garbage cans in Harare. “Those white farmers we displaced had money to farm, but we didn’t so we failed.”

UN data show the proportion of the population living in towns surged to about 32% in 2015, from 11% in 1950, a trend that’s broadly in line with other African countries. While more recent data are not readily available, observations of the countryside and anecdotal evidence suggest migration is accelerating.

Mugabe, who has ruled Zimbabwe since independence in 1980, says the land redistribution programme that intensified around 2000 with the expropriations is a success because it addressed the injustices of colonial and white-minority rule.

“Most of the land which used to be in the hands of the settlers is now in the hands of our own people,” Mugabe told the state-owned Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation in an interview screened on February 21 to mark his 93rd birthday. “What there is now for us is to ensure there won’t be any retrogression, that those who have been given the land will keep it, will use it, cultivate it properly and ensure it is made productive.”

Bad weather

The government was aware some land was standing idle and would take action once it completed an audit to determine the scope of the problem, Lands and Resettlement Minister Douglas Mombeshora said in an interview.

Some small-scale tobacco growers who have benefited from technical assistance and support from companies including British American Tobacco are faring better than their more numerous counterparts who grow maize. Tobacco output has recovered from its lowest levels in 40 years in the mid-2000s and may reach near-record sales in 2017.

The government can do nothing about the weather. The region’s worst drought in at least two decades wiped out much of the maize crop in 2016, while this year’s harvests are at risk from unseasonably heavy rain that has left fields waterlogged and rendered many rural roads unusable. Farms have also been hit by an infestation of fall armyworms, a caterpillar native to the Americas that eats crops including maize.

Elliot Gumbo, who grows maize and tobacco on a smallholding near the northern town of Karoi, is among the dwindling number of small-scale farmers who continue to tough it out, but says he does not know how long he will last.

“Last year we had a drought and this year the tobacco is turning yellow because we’ve had too much rain,” he said. “There’s no help from government because they’re also broke. I get help from my brother in Britain who sends me money. If it wasn’t for him, I would have to probably try to find work in town or leave.”

Bloomberg

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