The Star Malaysia

Victory for evicted farmer

White Zimbabwean gets back land illegally seized under Mugabe’s rule

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HARARE: A white Zimbabwean farmer forced from his land as part of controvers­ial mass evictions became this week the first to return to his property under a new government bid to reverse illegal land seizures.

Robert Smart, 71, was thrown off his tobacco and corn farm in eastern Zimbabwe in June as part of chaotic and often violent land grabs led by expresiden­t Robert Mugabe’s government.

Smart said he and his family were evicted at gunpoint “with whatever we had on our backs at the moment” to make way for a cleric close to Mugabe.

But last month, the 93yearold ruler was ousted following a military takeover after more than three decades in power

The government of his successor, Emmerson Mnangagwa, in early December ordered people illegally occupying formerly whiteowned commercial farms to vacate.

Many people had illegally taken over farms cashing in on the land reforms.

After returning to his plot on Thursday, Smart said the new president was “showing he means what he says”.

The farmer said his family had been forced to rely on the kindness of friends and “complete strangers” to survive after their eviction.

And they will have to continue to rely on donations after discoverin­g that their house was now “just a shell”.

“A lot of the property that was inside the house was thrown out and trashed. What little was left was stolen,” Smart said.

“We have to start building from scratch again.”

But returning “is a pleasant feeling. It’s the plus side of things”, he added.

Mugabe launched the disastrous land reform programme in 2000, justifying it as an effort to stimulate economic growth for black Zimbabwean­s.

The evictions, often brutal and arbitrary, were blamed for a collapse in agricultur­al production and chronic food shortages that forced the onetime breadbaske­t of Africa to become dependent on imports of staples. — AFP

 ??  ?? Home sweet home: Smart’s son Darreyn looking on as a security guard moves to unlock the gate to his farm house at Lesbury Estates in Headlands communal lands east of Harare. — Reuters
Home sweet home: Smart’s son Darreyn looking on as a security guard moves to unlock the gate to his farm house at Lesbury Estates in Headlands communal lands east of Harare. — Reuters

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