Zimbabwe: Stealing farms will not empower society or grow our economy
In the lawless world of Zimbabwean agriculture in 2014, all it takes for a man to steal someone's home, his livelihood and his crops is an "offer letter" - signed by the Minister of Agriculture, Mechanisation and Irrigation Development. It is as simple as that.
In the case of Centenary Farm in the Figtree district of Matabeleland South province, the workers and their families were all evicted from their homes of many decades on August 5. There was no court process. Police refused to stop the thugs from evicting the farm workers, even though there was a High Court order to stop them. On that occasion I sat at Figtree police station with the farm owner, Dave Conolly, pleading with police that they adhere to the High Court order and protect the farm workers. But lawlessness prevailed and they refused to act.
The Conollys had irrigated food crops in the ground and, with the High Court order in their favour, they bravely tried to carry on farming. Zimbabwe, after all, needs crops - and it needs food. It also needs employment and investment. The economy will continue to decline rapidly without them, and more people will join the ever increasing ranks of the suffering.
Ironically, the Ministry of Agriculture's website still states that: "The future of Zimbabwe ... lies in the development of a diversified, vibrant, competitive and efficient agricultural sector."
The person wanting Conolly's well-established commercial farm is a "chef" - a very senior man in the President's office. Such men, in lawless states, can do what they like. All they need is an "offer letter;" and in the lawless chef world of Zimbabwe, that gives them carte blanche to act in contempt of High Court orders and steal with impunity. The signature and stamp of a judge of the High Court is of no consequence when a chef arrives with an "offer letter" signed by a minister - especially when that chef is Dr Ray Ndhlukula, Deputy Chief Secretary to the President and the Cabinet. Dr Ndhlukula is also in charge of the government's ZimAsset programmme for food and food security, announced in December 2013.