THE Government of Robert Mugabe tabled
draconian laws yesterday to drive the last white farmers from their
land and crush dissent.
The
constitutional amendments debated in Parliament will nationalise all
agricultural land that has been listed for seizure since 2000.
Landowners will have no right to contest the confiscations and will be
barred from receiving compensation.
Another clause in the legislation gives the Government powers “in the
national interest” to stop people leaving the country. Lawyers said
that this echoed apartheid-era South African laws that stopped critics
from travelling abroad to condemn white-minority rule.
Another section
will introduce an upper chamber in Parliament, with 16 of the 66
senators effectively appointed by President Mugabe. Also on
Parliament’s order paper is a Bill to put private schools, a preserve
of generally pro-opposition middle-class families, under state control.
Yet another amendment will ban civil servants from joining trade
unions.
The legislation
comes after parliamentary elections in March that the ruling Zanu(PF)
party won amid accusations from Western nations and the Opposition that
they were neither free nor fair. The legislative onslaught also comes
after demolitions and evictions in mostly urban areas that made 700,000
people homeless and jobless, according to the UN.
The
package
comes as Mr Mugabe is negotiating with South Africa for a loan, thought
to be £279 million, to prop up the Zimbabwean economy. It is
believed that the loan is conditional on Mr Mugabe reversing his
crackdown on democracy that began in 2000 when the Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC) nearly won elections.
Brian
Raftopoulos, of the Zimbabwe in Crisis Coalition, said that the changes
showed Mr Mugabe’s scorn for the hopes of President Mbeki of South
Africa to start political dialogue in Zimbabwe. “Mugabe will never
accept political conditionality,” he said.
David Coltart,
the MDC’s legal director, said: “Mugabe said the elections were meant
to ‘bury’ the MDC. He failed. Zanu (PF) didn’t win a single urban seat.
What we are seeing now is an incremental approach to finish off the
MDC.”
White Rhodesian grieves
dead farmer - her father.
After five years
of murder, assault and harassment of white-owned farms by state agents,
the Government has managed to confiscate legally only about 10 per cent
of the estimated 4,500 properties. All but a handful of white farmers
have had their property listed for “compulsory acquisition”.
However, most of
them have kept the Government at bay by fighting their eviction in
court. About 450 farmers have stayed on their farms.
Mr Coltart
said: “These constitutional changes are designed for once and for all
to smash the white farmers and to close any possible avenue for using
the constitution to protect human rights.”