Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

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Zimbabwe Farmers Increasing Tobacco Production on Seized Land

Zimbabwe Farmers Increasing Tobacco Production on Seized Land

http://www.voanews.com/

Peta Thornycroft | Harare, Zimbabwe  May 24, 2011

Zimbabwe’s new farmers are growing massive amounts of tobacco, mainly on 
formerly white-owned farms, and some of them are earning more than they ever 
dreamed possible. Tens of thousands of new farmers are working land seized 
from whites by President Robert Mugabe since 2000.

Peter Garaziwa, who is 55, was a potato farmer in eastern Zimbabwe’s 
mountains until 2004 when he was given white-owned land in a prime tobacco 
area south of his traditional home.

This year he says he will have produced 32 bales of Virginia tobacco 
produced on a farm he says is called Gazala. He does not know what happened 
to the white farmer, but says he uses barns built by the former owner to 
cure his tobacco.

Garaziwa said next year he hopes to produce even more. He was in Harare at 
the Boka Tobacco auction floors selling his first batch of bales.

“At the moment I have got, maximum, seven bales, left, maximum, 25,” said 
Garaziwa. “Tobacco farming, this is the second year. Before that I was just 
studying how to grow this tobacco, so I am now dealing with tobacco and I 
take tobacco as my project.’

Garaziwa and his wife said they are satisfied with the prices for their 
tobacco on the large auction floor south of Harare.

Industry specialists estimate there are 47,000 small scale tobacco farmers, 
most of whom came into the industry in the past two years. In 2004 there 
were about 4,000 small-scale black farmers.

Most leaf grown by the new farmers is lower grade tobacco, and 50 percent of 
Zimbabwe’s crop is bought by the Chinese Tobacco Company.

At the height of white farming activity, Zimbabwe regularly produced more 
than 220 million kilograms of tobacco. After land seizures, the crop size 
fell, until by 2009 Zimbabwe was producing less than a third of what it had 
regularly produced for 40 years.

Industry insiders say this year, Zimbabwe will produce about 135 million 
kilograms, much of it by new farmers resettled on former white-owned farms.

Farayi Kawadende is the information officer at Boka Tobacco, Zimbabwe’s 
largest tobacco auction, which has about 4,000 growers on its books. It 
sells about 6,000 bales a day. He said prices vary by quality.

“Good grades of tobacco going at $4, something not so good you find are 
going for 80 cents,” he said.

Boka Tobacco chief executive Rudo Boka has just reopened the company’s 
auction floors after a decade of difficulties. She said many new farmers 
complain about delays in selling their tobacco, because they do not know the 
complexities involved in sales that have developed over many decades.

“A lot of them are new farmers. They have not done this before so they need 
to register first with the Tobacco Marketing Board,” said Boka. “They have 
to have filed crop estimates and they need to book their tobacco.”

Boka said the farmers are paid the same day their tobacco is sold and there 
are many temptations in a big city like Harare for small-scale farmers far 
from home with more cash in their pockets than ever before.

“A lot of the women are not coming in just to shop, it is a social issue 
because you have got the husband who comes to town, sells his tobacco and he 
disappears once he has got the money, so they are coming to ensure that ‘No, 
no, no,’ he comes back home with the money,” she said. “We  have had two 
babies born here, we had a girl born last Wednesday and a boy two weeks 
before at the floor, it was a miracle.”

Not all new farmers are happy with the prices they received this year. A 
group of unhappy farmers, resettled since 2000 in Zimbabwe’s top tobacco 
producing area 200 kilometers north of Harare, say they can not afford to 
grow tobacco again because of poor prices.

They complained that only big farmers are helped by banks and the 
government, and say even if they grow only one hectare of tobacco, they 
contribute to Zimbabwe’s economy.

“We just expect them to help us, since they know that in the farms there is 
some people who [are] going to be for tobacco, since tobacco is a major, it 
is THE, part which gives us foreign currency in the country,” said one new 
farmer. “As a farmer we are helping the country in fact, and my family.”

Small-scale farmers are assisted by their families to produce tobacco, but 
commercial growers, who produce the best leaf, employ hundreds to produce 
tobacco. Many say the costs are now so high they do not know if they will be 
able to continue next season.

Industry insiders, many of them evicted white tobacco farmers now teaching 
new black farmers to grow tobacco, say the future of Zimbabwe’s tobacco 
industry lies in the hands of the tens of thousands of small-scale 
producers.

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