The Indigenisation Scam
Zanu PF is guilty of many things - the collapse of the economy, the genocide of Ghukurahundi and the wholesale destruction of homes in Murambatsvina. Everybody recognises these as gross human rights abuse and crimes against humanity. But when their outlandish actions are associated with, not only the ruthless pursuit of their political ends but also with wholesale theft and lawlessness; then we need to sit up and take notice.
In 2000 they recognised that they faced a serious threat to their hegemony in the form of the MDC and that the balance of electoral power lay in the hands of 600 000 farm workers and their families on 6000 large commercial farms. So they decided to eliminate them and in the past decade they have done so. In doing so they destroyed the agricultural industry, displaced millions of people, triggered the consequential collapse of the industrial and commercial economy and wiping out billions of economic value.
What people do not see is that this process was basically driven by greed and avarice. Like pirates of old in the West Indies, they were told by their King that they could keep what they could take. They walked into homes, took over hundreds of thousands of cattle, 20 000 tractors, combine harvesters, irrigation equipment capable of watering 280 000 hectares. They took furniture, vehicles and left thousands of farmers and their workers homeless and destitute. All for nothing: a reward for doing their masters business.
When we thought we had seen it all, genocide, mass relocation of populations, systematic destruction of value and theft of private assets on a massive scale, Zanu PF showed us that they still had reserves of evil and ingenuity in them and they invented indigenisation.
It started innocuously enough in 2007 when they introduced the Indigenisation Act into Parliament. MDC did not have enough votes in the Lower House to block the new Act but they fought it and eventually when it came to the vote the MDC legislators walked out rather than be associated with the Act that we recognised would have a profound impact on the economy, freeze new investment and engineer a massive transfer of value from shareholders to a politically selected minority. It was the industrial and commercial version of the farm invasions.