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Mutambara leads probe into fresh farm invasions

PROBE: DPM Arthur Mutambara
PROBE: DPM Arthur Mutambara

Ministers threatened with arrest in white farmer's case

Mugabe says farm invasion reports 'lies'

Tsvangirai orders farm invaders arrested

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Joram Nyathi: Propaganda has its limits

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Paul Boateng: Zimbabwe broke land deal

Mutambara: Clumsy Zanu PF propaganda on farms

Posted to the web: 16/04/2009 11:25:03
DEPUTY Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara said Thursday a team of top officials from the unity government was launching an investigation into reports of fresh seizures of white-owned farms.

"Tomorrow we are going to the farms to see for ourselves," Mutambara told journalists.

"A cross-party team is going to the farms to understand what's happening and take action. We are trying to quickly address this political hygiene matter. It's a matter of life and death."

Since Zimbabwe's unity government formed in February, white farmers have reported a surge in violence on their lands, violating the power-sharing deal between long-time President Robert Mugabe and new Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai.

Mutambara had earlier met US ambassador James McGee who expressed concern over the farm violence.

Tsvangirai's spokesman James Maridadi said the Prime Minister had tasked Mutambara with leading the probe into farm disruptions.

Tsvangirai last month decried the fresh wave of farm invasions across the country and warned that those responsible for the farm disruptions risked arrest.

Mugabe, however, has dismissed the new farm invasion reports as "damned lies", insisting that white farmers were refusing to vacate properties legally acquired for resettlement by the government.

The land reforms launched in 2000 aimed to resettle blacks on 4,000 white-owned commercial farms, but the process was marred by politically charged violence.

The scheme has drastically reduced agricultural production, which once accounted for 40 percent of the economy, as most of its beneficiaries lacked both farming equipment and expertise.

While a decade ago, Zimbabwe produced enough maize to feed the nation and export a surplus, now more than half its people are estimated to need food aid.

Zimbabwe's new government wants to attract foreign investment and trade, but major donors have proved reluctant to open their wallets, in part because of the ongoing farm violence. - AFP
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