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Hi everyone,

I promised in my last message to send out some links regarding immigration
to and asylum in the UK. (Some people have already e-mailed me asking for
the information.) The link to the Immigration and Nationality Directorate
Web site was passed to me by someone in the UK. I had a look through some
pertinent parts of the site and, unless I'm missing something (which is
entirely possible), the major problem for some people who are considering
emigrating might only be a financial one (as if that's not enough).

The home page is at http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/ind , from where you can
find a link to a site map with links to the rest of the site. The asylum
section at http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/ind/asylum/asylum_home.html (that's
an underscore between "asylum" and "home") covers various aspects of the
asylum process, as well as listing information about the 35 countries from
which most asylum applications come. Zimbabwe isn't listed, but the
documents on each country seem to be just briefing documents, not
definitive statements on how asylum applications from those countries are
treated.

There is also a page at
http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/ind/to_the_uk/to_the_uk_14.html (again, those
are underscores, not spaces) that details how Commonwealth citizens who
have UK-born ancestors may have access to live in the UK. Might not be new
information for some people, but it was for me. What I'd like to know is
how those Rhodesian "rebels" and their descendents who stayed in Rhodesia
after UDI are treated. Anybody know?

A couple of quotes that struck me in some recent news articles I read. From
Hitler Hunzvi we have; "We want to warn them (farmers) that if they
continue saying they are offering so many farms to the government, they
will be offering themselves for six feet down." So co-operation,
negotiation and compromise is now a capital offence in Zimbabwe? (Remember,
he's now a sitting member of the government, as opposed to his unofficial
government role before the elections.) I also saw him quoted somewhere else
as saying that all whites should leave Zimbabwe (not that he's the only one
to have said that). This is the same man who claims he's not racist!

Another quote from a news article quoting some government minister who is
involved in land redistribution; "Msika said the government rejected
suggestions by some foreign governments that financial assistance should
bypass government channels. He denied charges that previous phases of the
land reform program had benefited government officials." Hmm, so ZANU-PF
says that Britain should compensate their "settlers" for "giving" them
"stolen" land, since ZANU-PF has said that they will only pay for
improvements to the land. However, that money has to pass through Mugabe's
sticky hands, not go directly to the farmers who lose their land. Right!

I know the "who was there first" debate is old (maybe Mugabe should go back
to Tanzania, where I belive his family is from), but despite whatever side
of that debate you're on I can't see how you can say that unoccupied,
unused land was stolen from anybody. Even if it was, the improvements made
to the land over the last century do not simply include the farm house and
barns sitting on the property. What about the other improvements to the
country -- like cities, schools, hospitals, medicine, an actual economy and
all of the other evil things that the bad white men brought with them? Hmm.

Over the last week I've had some unsettling reports from farmers in
Matabeleland about a new list of farms to be seized, drawn up by Obert
Mpofu, the governor of Matabeleland. Apparently the list has now been
published (after being little more than a rumour) in The Chronicle, a
newspaper in Bulawayo. I wrote to the CFU last week to try and get details,
but they have not answered me. The details are sketchy, but it continues to
be very stressful for the farmers in that area, not knowing what is going
to happen tomorrow or if you are even going to have your farm or be alive
tomorrow. If anyone has any more details that they can send to me,
including a copy of the list, I would very much appreciate it.

That's it from me for now. Back to your regularly scheduled programming.


Craig




Craig
Zimbabwe Crisis Mailing List
zimcrisis@niner.net
http://www.niner.net/zimcrisis


This is currently a manually administered mailing list. To subscribe or
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redistribute published news reports. Rather, it is intended to distribute
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Brief list of helpful sites on the issue:
- Zimbabwe Crisis mailing list archives -- http://www.niner.net/zimcrisis
- Comprehensive news updates -- https://www.zimbabwesituation.com
- Offers of and requests for help for Zimbabweans --
http://pub9.ezboard.com/boffersofhelp
- Commercial Farmers' Union -- http://www.mweb.co.zw/cfu
- Movement for Democratic Change -- http://www.in2zw.com/mdc
- Zimbabwe Democracy Trust -- http://www.zimbabwedemocracytrust.org
- BSAP Pursuit of Zimbabwean Criminals -- http://www.bsaphq.f9.co.uk
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  ironhorse@intonet.co.uk



  Z I M N E W S

  19 July 2000

  We have received a number of emails in support of the Glendale farmers
who yesterday closed down their farming operations in protest at the
continuing anarchy in the rural areas.

  Please express your support for the action of these farmers, who are
risking a lot, not least their lives, by sending your emails to us and
we will forward them to the CFU, the Glendale farmers, and the relevant
authorities.  Short messages will be best.

  Anonymity will be preserved.

  Respond to the address I put above, please!!!!

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Sunday, July 16, 2000 2:47 PM
Subject: deja vu


Dear family and friends
Its been a tumultuous week in Zimbabwe which started last Sunday when our
usually inactive police force shot teargas into a 40 000 strong crowd at a
football match. Thirteen people were trampled to death and the country is
up in arms at the outrageous reaction of the police to a few bottles being
chucked on the field. Two days later the Minister of Home Affairs resigned,
saying he was old and tired and that the tragedy at the football match had
nothing to do with it. We've all waited with baited breath for the
Commissioner of Police to follow suit but he is clearly a man without
conscience and remains in place. The country was even more outraged when
our President went on to accuse the opposition political party of being
responsible for the tragedy; he said they'd taunted police by showing the
open palm symbol of their party. And then, to add even more insult to
injury, the President chose the funeral service of a leading figure, to
start up his farm and land rhetoric again - where is the shame of this man?
Our poor beautiful country seems to totter from one calamity to another and
we wonder when anything will ever be right again.

The situation on farms across the country has been outrageous this week. On
both designated and non-designated farms, "war vets" have been running
riot. Dozens of farms have received ultimatums from squatters. Some have
been given 24 hours, others four days, to vacate their properties;
squatters have refused to allow farm workers to report for duty, have
stopped tobacco from being graded, refused to allow maize to be harvested,
prevented tobacco seed beds from being irrigated. Daily there have been
reports of cattle being stolen and slaughtered and on game farms and safari
ranches, widespread poaching and intimidation - scaring away the last few
tourists who are still brave enough to come to Zimbabwe.

Mid week there were mumblings that something big was going to happen this
weekend. By Thursday farmers were told that Mugabe has put onto "Fast
Track" his programme of land re-distribution. (No doubt before he allows
any opposition in Parliament, scheduled to sit this week). By Friday the
details began to emerge, and the CFU sent out urgent messages to us all to
brace for trouble over the weekend and following days. It seems that
between 160 and 200 of the designated farms are to be given to "landless
peasants" in the next few days. There is no plan in place for what the
current owners of these farms are supposed to do with crops still to be
harvested, tobacco sitting in sheds waiting to be sold. Nothing is said
about all the workers and their families on these 200 properties. Worst of
all though, as of 8pm last night, no one has yet been told which farms are
part of this 200 - it could be any of us and even the CFU leadership have
not been told. So we sit and wait for a huge influx. Vice President Msika
announced yesterday this fast track plan and said publicly that all "war
veterans" on other properties should get off immediately. Aah, a spark of
hope, we think. Hours later war vet leader Chenjerai Hunzvi (wearing an
outrageous pink shirt and looking more manic than usual) appears on TV and
says that his comrades will not get off any properties be they designated
or not, part of the 200 or not. A very depressing sense of deja vu creeps
in; this must be the third or fourth time that a senior Minister has told
them to get off and Hunzvi has said they won't. A BBC reporter said that
Hunzvi "urged his comrades not to listen to the government directive".
Hunzvi though, is now a part of the government. By hook or by crook,
beating or burning, he won a parliamentary seat in the recent elections so
it seems now, that he's going to have a deep personal crisis and if someone
doesn't shut him up soon, how on earth is he going to swear allegiance to
the country on Tuesday when Parliament takes the oath?

On our own farm we've had another quiet week. Our war vets have been busy
elsewhere. On the farm next door to us, owned and operated by a black
Zimbabwean, the night guard was beaten up by two men with rocks and pangas,
had his legs slashes, his wrists tied and was dumped in the maize field.
The storekeeper was dragged out of her house, had her face and legs slashed
and was left unconscious. The attackers then broke into the store and stole
cigarettes and a radio. They were tracked to the "war vets headquarters"
across the road from us, but no arrests have been made yet. We've spent the
week repairing fences and again every day we've closed the gate on the main
road, and the people have opened it and pushed their cattle in to graze.
This went on every day until Thursday when I blew a fuse when about twenty
communal cattle got into the tiny field where my dairy cows were grazing.
We pushed the intruders out and have now wired the gate closed with rusty
barbed wire. So far nothing's happened, the days ahead will tell. I'm sure
it would be tempting fate to say that the worst of our problems are over.
Someone's been busy on one of the huts that have been built below our
house; the walls have been plastered with mud inside and out, a solid
wooden door's been hung - and locked - whoever the builder is, he obviously
thinks he's here to stay.

Enough for now. Hopefully by next week I'll have lots of positive things to
say as Parliament will be in session and perhaps heads will be starting to
roll!
Much love,
C.
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