Stephan Hofstatter
12 October 2009
Johannesburg — AGRICULTURE, Forestry and Fisheries Minister Tina Joemat- Pettersson is spearheading a new drive to establish white farmers from SA throughout the African continent -- partly because SA's redistribution programme will create land shortages at home.
Joemat-Pettersson said at the annual congress of farmers' union AgriSA on Friday that the government remained committed to transferring 30% of white-owned farmland to blacks in five years, but this would leave little room for white farmers to expand in SA.
"If we can't find opportunities for white South African farmers in this country, we must do it elsewhere in the continent."
She announced the government was negotiating agreements with five countries, and was offered large swathes of high-quality agricultural land in two. Secure tenure would be a central pillar of the relationships. "We cannot have a repeat of what happened to our farmers in Zimbabwe."
She assured delegates this was not a thinly veiled threat to drive white farmers out of SA. "We absolutely need our commercial farmers. SA is your country. Your forebears are buried here, and you are South Africans."
Another driver was the government's concern that Asian and South American competitors, especially China, India and Brazil, were stealing a march on SA in establishing agricultural enterprises and gaining preferential access to markets elsewhere in Africa, she said in an interview .
She envisaged white farmers retaining some agricultural property at home but expanding their farming operations in other African countries that had more land available.
Countries targeted initially are the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sudan, Angola, Zambia and Uganda. Angola has offered two farms totalling 140000ha in a prime production area, and Uganda 170000ha near Kampala. Reviving southern Sudan's farm production forms part of SA's peace and reconstruction plan for the war-torn region.
This is in addition to agreements in place with Mozambique, Namibia, Botswana, Lesotho and Swaziland, and plans to establish agricultural ties with Burundi. Other countries have approached AgriSA directly with invitations to establish commercial farm enterprises . They include the Republic of Congo, which has 10-million hectares of arable land lying fallow yet needs food aid and imports, and, most recently Libya, which wants private-sector support to revive production along a state-owned canal.
Joemat-Pettersson stressed the relationship between South African farmers and their host country would be symbiotic rather than paternalistic. "It's an equal relationship between people of the African continent," she said.
"One of the concerns the Zambians raised is the perception that white farmers want to create apartheid enclaves. We are assuring the governments of these countries we do not want to export our problems." The thrust would be rebuilding commercial agriculture in the countries targeted, including through a transfer of expertise, technology, equipment and scientific advances.
Commercial farmers would form agriprocessing hubs for neighbouring smallholders, who would benefit from infrastructure, shared knowledge, access to markets and bulk buying of inputs.
The agriculture ministry was thrashing out a policy framework for the initiative in consultation with AgriSA. This would include safeguards for property rights independent of present political leadership.
"We will sign state-to-state agreements confirmed in international courts so you are guaranteed your land will not be taken away from you," the minister told congress delegates.
Theo de Jager, the AgriSA representative instrumental in expanding the reach of South African farmers throughout Africa, said he was heartened by Joemat-Pettersson's announcement. About 600 to 800 South African commercial farmers were already operating in other African countries, mostly in Mozambique, he said. Large fruit exporters in Limpopo and Mpumalanga, where most commercial farmland is under land claim, were establishing orchards in Mozambique until uncertainties surrounding SA's land reforms were resolved.
"But this is not about driving white farmers out," he said.
"Farmers go where there are opportunities to make money. It's a bonus that the government is supporting us now."
Joemat-Pettersson had initially been hostile to De Jager's overtures to other African countries. In June, when AgriSA announced plans to explore opportunities in the Republic of Congo, she warned the government could not guarantee farmers protection.
"We explained we are doing it not because we are negative about SA but positive about Africa. And if anyone is equipped to farm in Africa, it's us -- we've been doing it for more than 300 years."
Zimbabwe remains out of bounds for now as its government refuses to include land tenure security as part of a bilateral investment protection agreement being negotiated with SA.
Libya is the next frontier. A delegation headed by De Jager is expected to go on a fact-finding mission there this month following an invitation from Muammar Gaddafi. Gaddafi apparently rejected World Bank advice to involve Indian or Chinese experts because he insisted on African involvement. "If we can do it in Libya, we can do it anywhere in Africa," said De Jager.
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Brim, stupid comments from a strupid man. What you are writing makes absolutely no sense!! White Farmers should not pay taxes...Is that what is being proposed by white farmers moving to other African countries?...You are out of your mind. White minority farmers in Africa are so full of themselves, that they think the own all African land..I guess apartheid and colonialism created spoiled white farmers...Africans may not need this kind of rubbish!!!
Phiri: Your reaction to my comments is the same as when i asked my children: what do you get when you muliply a n apple by a banana. First I did't mention farmers at all, I said 'all agriculture' However that does include farming. If it means farmers pay less than others, they MUST pay even 1 rand. Tax is the 4th important factor in the control of fire. If as you say, 'white farmers are so full of themselves' then HEED THIS, the incremental control of fire between: on, and full on, is how you get them to pay for the other 3, (health education and good governance) Only other AFRICAN country will have them for refusing to pay one rand, I would call their bluff. IT IS A WONDERFUL WE LIVE IN.
After over 200 years of whites in South Africa, blacks are not prospering and many are still living in dire poverty and struggling with hunger. In fact South Africa is just behind Ethiopia in terms of people being hungry. So if whites in South Africa with all the industry and wealth they have generated for themselves from the land and resources they have taken are not feeding black Africans, then why does the South African government want to claim they will benefit Africans anywhere else? Whites in South Africa and anywhere else in Africa are not there to feed Africans. Their primary goal is to make money off African land using cheap (free) African labor by exporting cash crops. The land situation in South Africa hasn't even been resolved, yet they want to send white farmers to Southern Sudan to GIVE THEM LAND as if they are really going to feed the Sudanese. If they aren't feeding the blacks in South Africa and are exporting a large amount of that food they grow, then what makes you think they are going to feed Sudanese? This is simply another example of neocolonial stooges who have no interest in supporting black people directly for their own day to day survival. They haven't given the land STOLEN from blacks back to the blacks in South Africa, yet they want to ensure that WHITE farmers get access to any land they want in Africa. Yet where is the South African or any other African government when it comes to guaranteeing the rights of BLACK AFRICANS to African land? Where are the proposals and projects to GUARANTEE the rights of black AFRICAN farmers and support for LARGE black African farms to FEED AFRICANS?
now is the new, new beginning for SA all agreculture should be encouraged to do their business. pay their taxes, avoid it where they can, and to make sure none of it end up in the foreign bank accounts of political silly billys. most importantly never to get caught-out on the fiddle, if you do. if you do get caught-out then no man can complain when they wake up one morning to find a guerella laying in bed between him and his missus. ITS A WONDERFUL WORLD WE LIVE IN