South African Churches Send Food Aid to Zimbabwean White Ex-Farmers

South African Churches Send Food Aid to Zimbabwean White Ex-Farmers

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Commercial Farmers Union Agricultural Recovery and Compensation manager Ben 
Gilpin said his organization will channel the food packages to the farmers 
who are mostly over the age of 65, have no source of income and are no 
longer able to work

Gibbs Dube | Washington  19 May 2011

Millions of Zimbabweans have received food aid over the past decade as the 
country’s agricultural sector collapsed under the impact of a chaotic land 
reform program, but now South African churches are collecting food to send 
to what might seem an unlikely group of recipients: aging white commercial 
farmers left destitute in the process.

Commercial Farmers Union Agricultural Recovery and Compensation manager Ben 
Gilpin said his organization will channel the food packages to the farmers 
who are mostly over the age of 65, have no source of income and are no 
longer able to work.

The union will also urge the British government, which has scaled back such 
assistance, to step it up again, and ask the Zimbabwean government to lend a 
hand.

Gilpin said former commercial farmers receiving such aid lost their 
financial assets in the seizure of their farms, saw their savings wiped out 
by the hyperinflation that ravaged the Zimbabwean economy through early 
2009, and have no pensions.

He said some farmers sunk large amounts into farm improvements only to be 
driven off their farms by liberation war veterans and other supporters of 
President Robert Mugabe who launched land reform in 2000. Most large farms 
ended up in the hands of senior officials of Mr. Mugabe’s ZANU-PF party – 
Mr. Mugabe’s own family holds several.

Development worker Liberty Bhebhe said food handouts from South African 
churches should also go to the thousands who lost their livelihoods as a 
result of land reform.

“We understand that the General Plantation and Agricultural Workers Union is 
currently assessing the needs of ex-farm workers who also need help in terms 
of food aid and other basic necessities,” Bhebhe told VOA Studio 7 reporter 
Gibbs Dube.

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