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Disagreement over Save Conservancy exposes more ZANU PF in-fighting

Disagreement over Save Conservancy exposes more ZANU PF in-fighting

http://www.swradioafrica.com

By Alex Bell
30 August 2012

The intensifying fight for control of the Save Valley Conservancy has 
exposed even more rifts within ZANU PF, with top party officials clashing 
over the Conservancy’s future.

The Conservancy has become the latest target of the ZANU PF led land grab 
campaign, despite warnings about the destructive consequences such a 
campaign will have on the wildlife and tourism sectors. Earlier this year a 
parliamentary committee said in a damning report that the forced seizure of 
Save by top political and military figures with “no interest (or) experience 
in wildlife conservation” had resulted in massive destruction there.

“Save Valley conservancy has ceased to exist in its original form: there is 
extensive habitat destruction, large scale fence destruction and rampant 
poaching of animals, especially the rhino, whose numbers were said to be 
fast dwindling,” the report said.

A group of ZANU PF officials, called the ‘Masvingo Initiative’, were 
identified as the key players behind this destruction. This includes Higher 
Education Minister Stan Mudenge, Masvingo Governor Titus Maluleke and war 
vet Shuvai Mahofa who have all been given 25 year land leases in the 
Conservancy. They have also recently become the recipients of hunting 
licences, handed over by National Parks chief Vitalis Chadenga in the name 
of ‘indigenisation’.

The Masvingo gang has also instilled some of its officials as the new 
Conservancy leaders, after invading the area and taking over a management 
meeting last week.

The legitimate Conservancy chiefs have called the handover of the new 
hunting licenses a ‘criminal act’ that has nothing to do with genuine 
indigenisation efforts. Conservationists have also warned that the situation 
will have a devastating effect on the wildlife and hunting sector, with no 
commitments to the necessary controls for sustainable and ethical hunting 
practices.

The takeover of Save is apart of what ZANU PF is insisting is a government 
approved ‘wildlife based land reform’ policy. But the fight has now seen 
ZANU PF officials face off, with Environment and Natural Resources Minister 
Francis Nhema on one side and Tourism and Hospitality Industry Minister 
Walter Mzembi on the other.

Nhema has said the landowners in Save need to ‘cooperate’ with the new 
beneficiaries, insisting the ‘reform’ of conservancies will go ahead. Mzembi 
meanwhile has expressed concern and opposed the scheme, arguing it threatens 
the successful hosting of next year’s United Nations World Tourism 
Organisation General Assembly in Victoria Falls. Mzembi has also said the 
targeting of the conservancy for ‘reform’ was against Zimbabwean laws.

This has led to the Tourism Minister being labelled a ‘sell-out’ by ZANU PF 
members, who have accused Mzembi of deciding “to side with the whites to 
reverse the land reform programme.”

Political analyst Professor John Makumbe told SW Radio Africa that ZANU PF’s 
bickering over Zimbabwe’s assets is a sign of the “fragile state ZANU PF is 
in.” He said that the rush to grab as much as possible, regardless of the 
damage being done, is linked to this.

“ZANU PF is preparing for the worst by grabbing what they can and attempting 
to legitimise these acquisitions before an election. This is part and parcel 
of the widespread asset stripping going on in Zimbabwe as elections are 
looming,” Makumbe said.

Minister Mzembi has now been urged to engage with his government partners 
and revoke the new hunting licenses. This is the recommendation of the 
Zimbabwe Tourism Authority, whose board has said that “government should 
remove illegal settlers encroaching onto the conservancies.”

“The communities should be empowered through the Community Share Ownership 
Scheme and other empowerment benefits,” a memorandum from the Tourism 
Authority board said.

SW Radio Africa has tried to get comment from Minister Mzembi but his phone 
went unanswered on Thursday.

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