Casualties of Democratic War
One of our former commercial farmers said to me some time ago, "it's because of you guys in the MDC that Zimbabwe is in such a mess!" He expanded his view by explaining that if the MDC had not challenged the hegemony of Zanu PF over the State, they would never have done what they have done, to commercial agriculture. This remark has been simmering in my mind for some time and I think there is a lot of truth in it and that perhaps it was time to unpack this hypothesis a bit more.
When we won the No Vote in 2000 against the adoption of a new Constitution (that we had been agitating for, for nearly a decade), the State President went onto television and stated that he regretted the decision, but respected the views of the people and would continue to govern the country under the old Constitution. Dave Coltart and I watched that telecast and he said to me "watch what that wily old devil does now!'
He was correct; Zanu PF carried out a post referendum analysis and discovered that despite rigging the vote, they had lost massively and that the vote had been split between the urban areas which had voted for MDC and the tribal areas, which had voted Zanu PF. The "swing vote" had been 6000 large scale commercial farms with 350 000 workers and their families - probably 600 000 voters, who had voted for the new boys on the block, MDC. To compound this analysis they concluded that the white farmers, financially strong and well organised had played a key role in this massive result for a fledgling Party just 6 months old and led by a man with two years of formal education.
Within two weeks, the farm invasions began under the guise of a "Fast Track Land Reform Programme" and in the subsequent campaign conducted across the country a number of white farmers were murdered and their farms occupied. In the following years nearly all farmers who do not have good links with the Party, have been forcibly removed from their farms and in many cases, rendered homeless and destitute. Many were not even allowed to take their personal belongings.
All focus was on the white farmers - televisions showed pictures of gangs of thugs burning homes and killing dogs, very few followed what happened to those 350 000 workers and their families. They were dispossessed and made homeless, many creeping back to the farms after the owners had been driven out and squatting on the properties that they worked on. The farms - worth many billions of dollars with nearly 3 million head of cattle, 287 000 hectares of irrigation, 10 000 farm dams and millions of miles of fencing and water pipelines, homes, sheds, 25 000 tractors, were trashed, assets stolen and sold for scrap or transferred to new places. In a Court of law I have no doubt that the compensation bill would be over $30 billion.