- A friend brought this important news item to my attention.
A contact in Zimbabwe said to me a while back that Mugabe's supporters
are wearing T-shirts reading "Whites out by 2005". It appears
that morale there is finally cracking and many of the last 30,000 are calling
it a day, and walking out with almost nothing but the shirts on their backs.
Note: The comments of a white Zimbabwean businessman who has family in
South Africa as to why he is not going to South Africa. I might as well
add, that over the years, from friends and family in Zimbabwe who left
there - many did say to us too that they were not going to go to South
Africa because they also do not trust the future of this country. - Jan
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- HARARE - The exodus of Zimbabwe's small and anguished
white population is under way with record numbers leaving their homeland,
mostly for Britain or Australia.
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- Few have the R30,000 ($5,000) they need in foreign currency
to transport their goods to new countries, and most are starting new lives
with 22kg of clothes and a few photographs.
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- They say they have hung on during the past four tumultuous
years hoping President Robert Mugabe's "hate" campaign against
them would ease, but it did not, and two months ago when he shut down private
schools for a week for raising fees, they lost their nerve.
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- Up to three million black Zimbabweans have also gone
into exile, Estate agents say there has been a flood of houses on to the
property market in the past few weeks that has slashed prices to record
lows. Thousands of homes from bungalows to mansions along suburban avenues
are on sale for as little as R150 000.
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- Up to three million black Zimbabweans have also gone
into exile, mostly for economic reasons, but they hope to return one day.
Most whites, of whom perhaps 30,000 remain in Zimbabwe, say they will never
return.
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- "It was a painful decision because this is the only
home we know," said Jeremy Callow, 55, one of Zimbabwe's best-known
lawyers. "I love Zimbabwe, love the people, but can't take it any
more."
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- The "last straw" is different for each family
who boards the planes for distant lands.
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- Callow succumbed to "relentless" pressure traipsing
through the courts to assist white farmers legally recover possessions,
and when he succeeded, applying in vain to get court orders enforced.
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- 'I can't cope any longer with seeing grown men cry' "I
spent 80 percent of my time with farmers counselling them and I am not
trained for that, nor can I cope any longer with seeing grown men cry.
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- "The courts do not have the capacity to process
thousands of farms seized by the state. So they change the laws, move the
goal posts."
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- Under a new law ahead of the flawed presidential elections
in 2002, Callow, like thousands of other whites born in the country, had
to renounce access to British or other foreign claims to citizenship to
vote.
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- "It is costing an arm and a leg to claim my British
citizenship now," he said.
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- Among about 350 white farmers who remain on the land
enduring varying levels of instability are some who have never been touched
by ruling Zanu-PF party militants but are now abandoning their homes.
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- "We have recently noticed quite a number who have
been left alone the last four years but are leaving," said Hendrik
Olivier, the director of the remnants of the once 4 000-strong Commercial
Farmers' Union.
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- One of Zimbabwe's most successful younger industrialists,
who asked not to be named, decided to go to Australia a few months after
his family was attacked in December in their home about 20km south of Harare.
The family moved to the city and tried to settle in a new and glamourous
mansion in a leafy suburb. It is now up for sale.
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- "We couldn't recover. In April I sold my business
and as soon as our work permit arrives we will go.
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- "We have young kids and schools are a problem. I
will miss it, especially the bush. We have family in South Africa, but
the future is uncertain there."
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- John Winward, 57, spent Monday night detained in police
cells in Karoi, once a prosperous, pretty village 210km north of Harare.
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- Under pressure from Zanu-PF invaders to get off his farm
last week, Winward went to the local police with court orders proving he
was allowed to remain until September to process about R1,5 million of
crops.
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- "The policeman didn't believe or understand the
court order and locked me up for the night.
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- "I wish now we had quit when the heat was on a couple
of years ago, but I couldn't walk away. I wasted time and money going to
court to fight the inevitable.
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- "If I am left alone to get my tobacco and maize
off and sell the cattle, then we will leave for Britain in a few weeks.
We won't take anything; we can't afford to."
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- Father of four, Chris Shepherd, 38, forced off his Karoi
farm 21 months ago and now almost penniless in Harare said he would never
leave and waited for signs that the madness was waning.
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- "I am going to Australia at the end of the month
to look for a job, perhaps as a labourer, and I do this with a heavy heart,"
he said.
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- David Coltart, an Opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) MP, said: "This is ethnic cleansing, not in the Bosnian
sense of the phrase, as they knew they couldn't get away with wholesale
murder, it's more subtle, designed to drive out whites because Mugabe believes
whites provide funding and administrative support to the MDC.
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- "A year ago [information] minister Jonathan Moyo
said whites would be 'sent out of the country' because they created the
MDC. They are woefully mistaken if they think that driving them out will
crush the MDC," he said.
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- "The laws were changed to deprive whites of any
land they owned. Private schools were closed to get at whites even though
most pupils are black.
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- "Mugabe said whites were 'enemies of the people'
and he is still hammering away at them." - Foreign Service
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- This article was originally published on page 1 of Sunday
Independent on July 11, 2004
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- Source: IOL
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- http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&clic
k_id=68&art_id=vn20040711105647390C223448
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