Mugabe admits land reform blunder in Zimbabwe

Scientific Playa

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takes a big man to admit mistakes in my opinion.
i've read online that he and his wifey have a nice stash of cash/assets in offshore banks. between that and the sanctions will inhibit progress every time.

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Zimbabwe's newly appointed vice president Emmerson Mnangagwa (R) takes the oath of office before President Robert Mugabe (L) at the State House in Harare on December 12, 2014 (AFP Photo/Jekesai Njikizana)

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Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe (C) receives a signed gift next to his wife Grace Mugabe (2nd R) on February 28, 2015 during the celebration of Mugabe's 91st birthday at Victoria Falls (AFP Photo/Jekesai Njikizana)
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Mugabe admits land reform blunder in Zimbabwe
By Fanuel Jongwe February 27, 2015 2:53 PM

Harare (AFP) - Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe has admitted he blundered by giving ill-equipped black farmers vast tracts of farmland seized from whites under his controversial land reforms.

In an interview with the state-owned Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) late Thursday to mark his 91st birthday on February 21, Mugabe also declared he is still in charge, dismissing speculation that his increasingly powerful wife Grace is now running the show.

"I think the farms we gave to people are too large. They can't manage them," Mugabe said, referring to black farmers who benefited from the land reforms
"You find that most of them are just using one third of the land," he said, a surprisingly candid admission of charges that the reforms were poorly executed.

In the past, Mugabe has blamed a drastic drop in agricultural production on erratic rains due to climate change and western sanctions, which he said hampered his government's efforts to procure equipment for the farmers.

The reforms, launched in 2000 and accompanied by violent evictions of white farmers, were aimed to resettle blacks on 4,000 commercial farms.

The farmlands were parcelled out to tens of thousands of blacks.

The land seizures have reduced Zimbabwe from being the regional breadbasket to having to import grain from neighbouring Zambia and other countries, as most of the beneficiaries lacked both farming equipment and expertise.

The rural population now often relies on food aid and at the worst times families are forced to skip meals to preserve their seed stocks and feed on wild fruits and edible leaves.
Critics say the land reforms mostly benefitted allies of the veteran leader, who has been in power since 1980.

Although an individual is not allowed to own more than one farm, Mugabe's wife Grace reportedly owns several.



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Zimbabwe's first lady Grace Mugabe raises her fist during a campaign meeting at the City Sports …
Mugabe said in the interview that despite his wife's surprise rise to key positions in the ruling ZANU-PF, he was still in charge of both the party and state affairs.

Grace Mugabe last year became the leader of the influential women's wing in the party.

"She is not the power behind my throne," said Mugabe of his 49-year-old wife. "She has come into politics in her own right."

Her surprise nomination to lead the women's league and be given a seat in ZANU-PF's powerful politburo sparked speculation that she could be aiming to succeed the ageing ruler in the event of his death or retirement.

- Using one-third of land -


During a series of rallies last year she denounced Zimbabwe's then deputy president Joice Mujuru, claiming she was fomenting factionalism and plotting to topple Mugabe.

Mugabe subsequently sacked Mujuru, replacing her with long-time ally and hardliner Emmerson Mnangagwa. Several of Mujuru's allies, including party spokesman Rugare Gumbo and cabinet ministers, met a similar fate.

Grace said at a rally last year that as a Zimbabwean she had a right to aim for the presidency, lending credence to the speculation that she was seeking to succeed her husband
Mugabe, the world's oldest leader, will be feted at a massive party to be hosted by the ZANU-PF youth wing at a hotel in the resort town of Victoria Falls on Saturday.

His health has been subject of speculation following reports that he is making frequent visits to the Far East to seek medical attention. Government officials insist he is fit and that his only health concern was an eye cataract.

Mugabe said his long life was thanks to God and a strict diet on his part.

"I eat well, not filling my stomach," he said in the interview aired on state television.

"Eating foodstuffs that I believe will sustain one most. You must eat well and really not go for food because it's attractive."

Mugabe also played down his fall at the country's main airport earlier this month which sparked speculation about his physical fitness.

"I would want to see a person who hasn't fallen down. I don't see the reason why anyone should be surprised that the president has fallen."
 

Scientific Playa

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Zimbabwe: Mugabe Reveals Secret to Long Life


South African Press Association, 27 February 2015

Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe, who has just turned 91, said on Thursday that one of his secrets to a long life was "not filling my stomach"

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Zimbabwe: 'Don't Feed Yourself Until Your Tummy is Full' - Mugabe


Harare — Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe, who has just turned 91, said on Thursday that one of his secrets to a long life was "not filling my stomach".


In a televised interview ahead of a huge birthday party in Victoria Falls, Mugabe said: "I do certain things that I believe sustain life.


"I eat well, not filling my stomach, eating foodstuffs that I believe sustain one most. You must eat well, and really not go for food because it's attractive and feed yourself until your tummy is full," the longtime Zimbabwean leader said.


At least 20,000 guests will flock to the golf course of a luxury hotel for the party on Saturday to feast on elephant, buffalo, donated cattle and a giant birthday cake.


Mugabe's half sister, Regina Gata, recently confirmed her brother's disciplined habits, saying he neither smokes nor drinks.


The Zimbabwe leader appears robust, though a fall down some steps at Harare International Airport earlier this month reignited questions over his health. He has made several trips to the Far East in recent years for medical check-ups, officially on his eyes.


In his first public comments on that fall, the president told his interviewer that he had fallen many times before.


"In the house you slip, your foot is held by a carpet that is misplaced and so on, or you hit it against something and you tumble," he said.


"I would want to see a person who hasn't fallen down. I don't see the reason why anyone should be surprised that the president has fallen."

Security agents at the airport tried to get photographers to delete images of the fall but some pictures survived, sparking global headlines and a slew of comedy
memes.

Mugabe holds lavish 91st birthday bash by Victoria Falls
By Philimon Bulawayo 22 hours ago

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Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe (C) arrives for the 24th Ordinary session of the Assembly of Heads of State and Government of the African Union (AU) at the African Union headquarters in Ethiopia's capital Addis Ababa, January 31, 2015. REUTERS/Tiksa Negeri

By Philimon Bulawayo


VICTORIA FALLS, Zimbabwe (Reuters) - Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe celebrated his 91st birthday with a lavish party by the spectacular Victoria Falls on Saturday, prompting many Zimbabweans to question once again when he would leave office and who would succeed him.

Thousands of supporters were expected to attend the $1 million birthday celebration on a golf course near the waterfalls, organised by his ZANU-PF party. His party has said the money was raised from individual and company donations.

Mugabe is a deeply divisive figure at home and abroad and is the only leader the southern African country has known since declaring independence from colonial power Britain in 1980.

He is one of a handful of African leaders remaining from a generation that fought white domination, which included South Africa's Nelson Mandela. But while Mandela served one presidential term and then retired, Mugabe tightened his grip on power and shows no sign of departing from the political scene.

On Friday night Mugabe told state television in an interview, the final of a two-part series, that he would not annoint a successor to take over ruling the ZANU-PF party.

"I don't choose my successor, never. I was not appointed successor by anyone," Mugabe said.

"The successor can come from any level of the party. It may be either of the vice presidents, but it's up to the people."

Last December ZANU-PF re-elected Mugabe, making him candidate in the next election in 2018 when he will be 94.

Mugabe denies media reports he is suffering from prostate cancer and maintains his several trips to Singapore are for routine medical checks and to fix a recurring eye problem.

At his party in Victoria Falls, Mugabe was also joined by his two deputies, senior party and government officials, his children and wife Grace.

A local farmer, who runs a wildlife farm in Victoria Falls told a state-owned newspaper last month that he had donated wildlife meat, including crocodile and elephant, to be part of the menu for the party.

Mugabe was feted with poetry, song and dance by local musicians and one of his favourite Zimbabwean gospel singers performed for him, having travelled from the United States.

Critics say Mugabe is a dictator who wants to rule until he dies. They accuse him of human rights abuses, rigging elections and running one of Africa's most economically promising nations into the ground.
But in some corners, Mugabe is feted as a nationalist hero who triumphed over colonial power Britain on the battlefield and at the ballot box, and who remained steadfast in his commitment to the promotion of black African power.



 

Amestafuu (Emeritus)

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So his racist policies back fired on him. Tough luck.
No ones hands were clean those farmers stole the land. What he did was done in several African countries decades earlier to regain land that was taken by force.

He messed up by giving farm lands to non farmers and using a real cause as a guise to benefit his friends. But I hardly think unsettling racist land thieves is tragic lol

In Kenya when the land was resettled after independence it was actually put in the hands of farming people.
 
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