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Zim: White Farmers Fear “Extermination”

WARNING: This is Version 1 of my old archive, so Photos will NOT work and many links will NOT work. But you can find articles by searching on the Titles. There is a lot of information in this archive. Use the SEARCH BAR at the top right. Prior to December 2012; I was a pro-Christian type of Conservative. I was unaware of the mass of Jewish lies in history, especially the lies regarding WW2 and Hitler. So in here you will find pro-Jewish and pro-Israel material. I was definitely WRONG about the Boeremag and Janusz Walus. They were for real.

Original Post Date: 2002-03-20  Posted By: Jan

From the News Archives of: WWW.AfricanCrisis.Org
Date & Time Posted: 3/20/2002 2:41:07 PM
Zim: White Farmers Fear “Extermination”

Source: www.News24.co.za (SA) (124)| March 18, 2002

Harare – The shooting death of a white farmer overnight has spread fear through Zimbabwe’s small white community, many members having already begun thinking about fleeing into exile following violence-wracked elections here.

“It’s the end for us,” said a neighbour of Terry Ford, who was found dead in the early hours of Monday at his farm in Norton, some 40km west of Harare.

“The white farming community is very frightened. People I spoke to feel we are going to be exterminated if we don’t leave,” he added.

Ford was the eighth white farmer killed in the country since early 2000, when ruling party supporters began invading white-owned farms under President Robert Mugabe’s controversial land reforms.

The opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), which is generally backed by the white farming community, has recorded more than 100 deaths among its supporters since 2000.

The Commercial Farmers Union (CFU) said Ford’s farm was looted by supporters of the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (Zanu-PF).

He called for help but the police did not respond, and when neighbours showed up it was too late.

“Terry called me around midnight,” said the neighbour, who is alone on his farm after having evacuated his family.

“He was very upset, he told me to go and get the police as soon as I could because his life was at stake.”

He added: “He told me, ‘Don’t come alone, they’ll kill you,’ and then the line went dead. I couldn’t sleep, I knew deep down that the worst had happened to him.”

Another white farmer, in Mazowe to the north of the capital, would give his name only as David.

He said: “Since Mugabe was re-elected, the invaders know they have a free hand.

“They gave me three hours to leave on Saturday. I’m still here, but I think my death will come soon and through violence.”

In Seke, south of Harare, a white farmer named John said he was considering joining his wife and children in Britain, where they
fled after their farm was occupied by black settlers last year.

“It’s not our homeland, we don’t belong there, but the only choice we have is between exile or death,” he said.

Mugabe, who led the nation to independence in 1980 following a bloody guerrilla war, was widely praised for the conciliatory attitude he adopted towards whites who wanted to stay on in the former Rhodesia, renamed Zimbabwe.

By 2000, race relations had remained surprisingly good considering that two decades after independence whites, making up less than one percent of the population, still hogged 70 percent of the prime farmland in the country, despite early efforts to correct the inequities.

But in February 2000, Mugabe was stung by the failure of a constitutional referendum that would have allowed him to seek two more terms, as well as measures enabling the seizure of white farmland without paying compensation to the owners.

With parliamentary elections looming in June, Mugabe played the race card, promising to take back the land from the whites and actively encouraging his supporters to invade their farms.

Only days after the referendum, pro-Mugabe militants began forcibly invading white-owned farms, saying they were protesting the slow pace of redistributing land to the majority black population.

Though many of the invaders were too young to have fought in the 1970s guerrilla war, they were referred to as war veterans, and their colourful leader Chenjerai “Hitler” Hunzvi, who has since died, added his revolutionary rhetoric to the cause.

Only some 40 000 whites remain in the country out of a total population of some 12 million. Among them, some white farmers still have a reputation of being bigoted.

Many poor landless blacks, on the other hand, view Mugabe’s re-election and his vow to carry on with the land reforms as a long-overdue victory, since whites began chasing blacks off their land more than a century ago.

“Now it’s the whites’ turn to lose everything and leave,” a beaming black peasant said last Friday. – Sapa-AFP