Zimbabwe park seizure - aid consequences
Posted: Mon Aug 27, 2012 8:24 am
Zimbabwe park seizure - aid consequences
2012-08-26 21:51
Jan Raath, Shabtai Gold
Harare - The seizure by the government of a massive, prized wildlife reserve in Zimbabwe could spark a targeted withdrawal of Western aid, two European diplomats told dpa on Sunday.
The privately owned Save Valley Conservancy group says only people who are part of President Robert Mugabe's inner circle stand to benefit from the land grab, while the reserve and the animals, including endangered species, would suffer.
Lions, leopards, elephants, cheetahs and the often-poached rhino all live on the land. As part of the seizure, hunting licenses are being granted to politicians, in a move that has conservationists worried.
The plan is regarded as one of the largest seizures since 2000, when the Zimbabwe government began to kick white farmers off their land and transfer ownership to blacks.
The land reform programme was meant to rectify colonial-era imbalances which heavily favoured the white minority. However, critics say it has largely benefited politically connected elites from Mugabe's Zanu-PF party.
"We are all very concerned," said one diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity. "We are considering appropriate reactions. It's a very serious situation."
One measure could be the withdrawal of support for a United Nations' World Tourism Organisation congress next year, being hosted jointly by Zimbabwe and Zambia at Victoria Falls, a tourist site on the shared border.
"Zimbabwe depends entirely on international support for the congress," said a European diplomat. "It cannot go ahead without us."
The idea would be discussed in Berlin this week, during a meeting of German officials, the diplomats said.
Two-thirds black owned
Zimbabwe's state wildlife authority announced on 9 August it was granting 25 top officials from Zanu-PF control over most of the Save reserve, which covers 2 600km² in the country's arid south-east.
Running along the banks of the Save river, the conservancy - respected as a leader in wildlife management and research - is collectively controlled by international investors, white ranchers who formerly ran cattle on the land, local black businessmen and hundreds of peasant farmers.
"It is a working example of how something really special can be a success, by including all sectors of the community, especially the rural poor who have previously got nothing out of wildlife," said Wilfried Pabst, a German businessman who is vice chairperson of the conservancy.
Pabst rejected accusations by the government that the reserve is opposed to ensuring a fair deal for blacks.
"Two-thirds of stakeholders of the conservancy are blacks. It is now being threatened by a collection of greedy individuals who are bringing nothing into the conservancy and will destroy it," Pabst said.
The Save Valley Conservancy noted in a statement that the government had supported the reserve consistently since the reserve was founded in 1991.
Conservations warn that two other Zimbabwean reserves that were the subjects of takeovers have since collapsed. About 600 workers at Save stand to lose their jobs, should it suffer a similar fate, they say.
The Save group also warned that, already, anti-poaching staff were being removed from their posts and hunting of antelopes was on the rise for sale on local meat markets, in a move apparently spearheaded by a Zanu-PF official.
Diplomats say they are in talks with Zimbabwe's government in an effort to reach a conservation deal.
- SAPA
2012-08-26 21:51
Jan Raath, Shabtai Gold
Harare - The seizure by the government of a massive, prized wildlife reserve in Zimbabwe could spark a targeted withdrawal of Western aid, two European diplomats told dpa on Sunday.
The privately owned Save Valley Conservancy group says only people who are part of President Robert Mugabe's inner circle stand to benefit from the land grab, while the reserve and the animals, including endangered species, would suffer.
Lions, leopards, elephants, cheetahs and the often-poached rhino all live on the land. As part of the seizure, hunting licenses are being granted to politicians, in a move that has conservationists worried.
The plan is regarded as one of the largest seizures since 2000, when the Zimbabwe government began to kick white farmers off their land and transfer ownership to blacks.
The land reform programme was meant to rectify colonial-era imbalances which heavily favoured the white minority. However, critics say it has largely benefited politically connected elites from Mugabe's Zanu-PF party.
"We are all very concerned," said one diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity. "We are considering appropriate reactions. It's a very serious situation."
One measure could be the withdrawal of support for a United Nations' World Tourism Organisation congress next year, being hosted jointly by Zimbabwe and Zambia at Victoria Falls, a tourist site on the shared border.
"Zimbabwe depends entirely on international support for the congress," said a European diplomat. "It cannot go ahead without us."
The idea would be discussed in Berlin this week, during a meeting of German officials, the diplomats said.
Two-thirds black owned
Zimbabwe's state wildlife authority announced on 9 August it was granting 25 top officials from Zanu-PF control over most of the Save reserve, which covers 2 600km² in the country's arid south-east.
Running along the banks of the Save river, the conservancy - respected as a leader in wildlife management and research - is collectively controlled by international investors, white ranchers who formerly ran cattle on the land, local black businessmen and hundreds of peasant farmers.
"It is a working example of how something really special can be a success, by including all sectors of the community, especially the rural poor who have previously got nothing out of wildlife," said Wilfried Pabst, a German businessman who is vice chairperson of the conservancy.
Pabst rejected accusations by the government that the reserve is opposed to ensuring a fair deal for blacks.
"Two-thirds of stakeholders of the conservancy are blacks. It is now being threatened by a collection of greedy individuals who are bringing nothing into the conservancy and will destroy it," Pabst said.
The Save Valley Conservancy noted in a statement that the government had supported the reserve consistently since the reserve was founded in 1991.
Conservations warn that two other Zimbabwean reserves that were the subjects of takeovers have since collapsed. About 600 workers at Save stand to lose their jobs, should it suffer a similar fate, they say.
The Save group also warned that, already, anti-poaching staff were being removed from their posts and hunting of antelopes was on the rise for sale on local meat markets, in a move apparently spearheaded by a Zanu-PF official.
Diplomats say they are in talks with Zimbabwe's government in an effort to reach a conservation deal.
- SAPA