State security agent Rodney Mashingaidze has reportedly relaunched his bid to grab Maleme Ranch in Matabeleland South province, two years after he was blocked by chiefs, civil society and villagers before then Vice-President Phelekezela Mphoko ordered him to vacate the property.
Mashingaidze in 2015 attempted to grab Maleme Ranch from Peter Cunningham, sparking protests from the local community, chiefs, civic groups and opposition political parties, forcing him to back off after Mphoko intervened in the wrangle.
Mphoko then directed the Lands ministry to identify a farm for him elsewhere, saying Maleme Ranch should be preserved as it houses key State institutions, Big Cave Camp and Ebenezer Agricultural Training Centre.
Villagers in the area recently wrote to new Lands minister Perrance Shiri, seeking his intervention to stop Mashingaidze’s renewed interests in the property.
“It has come to our attention that Mashingaidze has been telling people that he is planning to come and retake operations of Maleme and Ebenezer,” the villagers’ letter read in part.
“This has been reported over the last two weeks with recent reports that he has been trying to mobilise village heads from the homestead area where he has been paying them monies to support him in his move to grab the farm.”
The villagers claimed the farm was benefiting at least 800 families, with Cunningham being credited for assisting villagers with various projects, including raising chickens and teaching them modern farming methods.
Maleme Ranch offers grazing pastures to the villagers, who were also given pieces of land by Cunningham to do their small-scale agricultural projects, like poultry.
Villagers, chiefs, political parties and civic groups in Matabeleland argue Mashingaidze should go and grab a farm in his home province, saying that they were fed up with situations where people from outside the region were coming to “grab everything” from jobs to farms from them. Newsday
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Yes every Zimbabwean can settle anywhere in the country.But how do you invade a farm whose surrounding community says no? Common sense tells you cannot live there.This is confrontational.
The locals should continue to resist this move. It doesn’t benefit anyone, not even him because he can not farm. He should go and farm in his rural home.
Daylight criminality which ZACC must include in its investigations.
BAYISANA BAKUGOLI KANTI MUPONI BAZWADZI BETOLEGWA BUTJILO! KAKUGWIWE! TOBOLO TOBOLO!
Lazy people grabbing because they cannot start anything from scratch
Loopsholes in this story
And how will he carry out farming business in such a hostile environment? Why not get a farm elsewhere?
Ohh no not again its the same guys who are preaching No to further farm invasions yet behind everyone back there are busy doing the opposite ,what a pack of hypocrates.