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Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

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Wrong thinking behind war for conservancies

Wrong thinking behind war for conservancies

http://www.thestandard.co.zw

by The Standard on September 16, 2012 in Opinion
The fight over the Save Valley Conservancy pitting Zanu PF heavyweights in 
Masvingo against a “small boy” minister seems to be escalating by the day.

Report by Nevanji Madanhire

Observers including me have been left wondering whether this is a fight over 
principle on both sides, or just another factional fight over resources and 
political space in the province.

On the one hand are senior politicians whose voice is now represented by 
that of the controversial dame of Masvingo politics, Shuvai Mahofa, while on 
the other is, almost single-handedly, Minister of Tourism and Hospitality 
Industry, Walter Mzembi.

Mahofa and others argue, as Zanu PF has argued over the past decade or so 
for the indigenisation of the country’s resources by grabbing important 
assets such as land from those formerly favoured by the colonial system. 
They see the Save Conservancy as the latest frontier in this war. Mzembi 
argues that this indigenisation process can go ahead but it must benefit not 
only the heavyweights from the province but also the common people. He 
argues that the heavyweights have already got their fair share from the land 
reform programme launched in 2000.

Analysts say both camps are being insincere. Mahofa and her camp just want 
to grab what they can to enrich themselves, while Mzembi is trying to build 
his political career by touting rationality and good sense as the 
cornerstone of good governance. They say he has in sight the success of the 
United Nations World Tourism Conference set for August next year as his 
greatest coup de main, a victory which would undoubtedly make him the 
politician of the future.

But in this fight, whatever reasons drive the camps, it would seem Mzembi 
emerges the better devil. Recently Mahofa’s mercenary side was revealed in 
interviews she gave to the press. Below is an interview she gave to one 
publication:

“Asked to answer allegations that she lacks requisite wildlife management 
and hunting skills, Mahofa laughed loudly saying, ‘We cannot let the whites 
enjoy riches in our country. We also want blacks in this sector. It is 
unacceptable that these few whites are allowed to harvest the money there.

“In fact, I am realising that farming is a waste of time, there is a lot of 
money to be made in hunting. I am in there and I now know that. I am very 
happy with my hunting business and I have made hundreds of thousands of 
dollars.’”

She is also quoted saying: “Business is very good and there is free money to 
be made out there and Mzembi must leave me to make money and get old and die 
well.”

She alleges Mzembi is standing in their way because she and her colleagues 
voted against him in an election for the post of provincial Zanu PF 
chairman.
But what are the real issues surrounding the invasion of the Save 
Conservancy?

Why is Mahofa wrong for the right reasons and Mzembi right for the wrong 
reasons? Mahofa is right that there should be some rectification of 
historical imbalances but is wrong that invading conservancies and engaging 
in wanton hunting for personal enrichment is the way to do it.

Mzembi is right that any indigenisation process should benefit the majority 
of the people but is wrong that parcelling out the conservancies to the 
majority of the people is the way to go.

What many people have failed to appreciate is the important role wildlife 
plays in the economic wellbeing of any country. In an African traditional 
setting, animals were either a nuisance to be got rid of or a source of food 
to be hunted for meat. There was really nothing wrong with this thinking 
because such hunting and elimination was done at such a small scale that 
wildlife populations were never really threatened.

But with the increase in population and the integration of the country into 
the world economy, wildlife took a very powerful economic dimension as it 
became a source of tourism revenue. To ensure that the business of tourism 
contributed to the national kitty the government came up with policies that 
protected wildlife and ensured that it was exploited in a manner that 
ensured that not only the present generation but also future generations 
benefited from it.

To ensure this happened, government set aside about 28% of the country’s 
landmass as wildlife areas of which about 14% was for National Parks, about 
12% for Campfire and Forestry and 1,9% for Conservancies.

National parks were meant for recreation for both local and foreign 
visitors, Campfire projects were meant to be managed by local people so they 
could benefit from the wildlife in their areas in a sustainable manner that 
ensured the wildlife was harvested properly without completely decimating 
it.

Conservancies were meant for the regeneration of animal herds.

Hunting is not supposed to take place in national parks, the nation only 
deriving income from gate-takings from visitors. But hunting is taking place 
without much control in the parks leading to the depletion of animals. As a 
result of this, fewer tourists are visiting because there is little to see. 
Sadly, poaching has also had an immense toll on the country’s wildlife. It 
has emerged that the poaching menace is no longer just about a few ragtag 
gangs of individual who just happened to lay their hands on an AK47 rifle; 
but that it is big business managed by big fish, some of whom are in 
government or well-connected to those in government.

In the past 15 years during the political turmoil, and because of it, the 
country has lost 80% of its wildlife. Conservancies had remained the only 
wildlife areas where animals were safe because of proactive game.

Like all business, conservancies need huge investment and an environment 
conducive to doing the business. When such an environment is created 
government should then earn money from them through legitimate taxes, which 
money can then be used to empower the majority. The more money the 
conservancies make, the more will find its way to the national purse. Mahofa’s 
model works against this; so does Mzembi’s, for he forgets that these 
wildlife areas are largely situated in arid parts of the country, marked by 
unreliable rainfalls and poor soils. The areas are mostly unsuitable for 
sustainable agriculture or cattle ranching.

Like all other sectors of the economy, the government’s role ought to be to 
create and sustain an enabling environment that ensures more money flows 
into the fiscus for the benefit of the majority. Politics should only play a 
background role.

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