ID :
189501
Sat, 06/18/2011 - 23:50
Auther :

ZIMBABWEAN BLACK FARMERS ARE AS PRODUCTIVE AS THE WHITES

By R. Ravichandran

SEPANG, June 18 (Bernama) -- Of late, Zimbabwe’s remarkable economic
growth, largely through the agricultural sector, has proven that black farmers
are as productive as white commercial farmers.

President Robert Mugabe said the perception that black people were not as
productive as white commercial farmers was proven wrong.

He said emphasis had been given on cash crop and main crop that were
required for food production for the people, as well as tobacco, a major export
of the African country.

"They are the main players in the agricultural programme. That means, we are
as productive as them (white commercial farmers), whether big or small farmers,"
he told Bernama on arrival at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA) here
Saturday to attend the three-day LID 2011 in Putrajaya.

Mugabe was commenting on Zimbabwe's nine per cent growth last year, despite
the ongoing sanctions imposed by the West in 2002 and the hardship endured over
the past decade.

Zimbabwe's economy is estimated to maintain a nine per cent growth for the
second consecutive year after merely recording a six per cent growth in 2009.

The inflation rate last year was only 3.5 per cent after experiencing
hyperinflation, a few years ago. Zimbabwe is the first country in the 21st
century to hyper-inflate.

In 2000, Mugabe launched land reforms to hand back land to the landless
black people from the minority white settlers who had grabbed it during the
colonial rule.

The sanctions were imposed as punishment for Zimbabwe's alleged human rights
abuses and its land reform and re-distribution programme which Zimbabwe said was
important to correct the injustices inflicted upon the majority black people by
the minority whites.

Mugabe said, another important sector that contributed to the economic
growth was mining where the country was estimated to have a quarter of the
world's known diamond reserves.

"Thank, God... this shows the British that we have other minerals like
diamond, platinum and uranium...perhaps, we continue to discover more and these
had helped (the economic growth)," he added.

He said, however, the manufacturing sector had declined, and this was being
addressed.

He said, in order to ensure the success of the economic transformation,
there was a need to add value to the primary products.

Chiding the West for the sanctions, he said the West tried to reverse the
gains of the economic revolution.

Citing Libya where western countries were attacking the North African
country, Mugabe said:

"You can see what is happening in North Africa, and North Africa is not
happy at all with all those attacks," he said.

Mugabe was also asked to comment on a study led by a group of academicians,
which among others, had stated that the land given to the Zimbabwean people did
not predominantly go to his friends as the Western media had portrayed all
these years.

"How can land just go to Mugabe's friends and relatives? My friends are my
people and those are the people who fought with us to drive out the British...
therefore, the beneficiaries.

"Anyway, the land belonged to the people...we have a customary system of
chiefs in various areas, and chiefs being custodians of lands in various areas
on behalf of the people. We have maintained that all land is state land," he
said.

-- BERNAMA



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