Moonki
There is a misconception here. Restorative justice required that land grabbed at "midnight" by the Smith regime be handed over. Mugabe was patient and even allowed the previous owners to live in slums and reserves. Such land was never meant for commercial farming. Refer to your own treatise to me on ancestral land for greater understanding.
Here is the misunderstanding: I have absolutely no issues with the owners of the land getting it back. My question is whether the manner in which it was done has been beneficial to Zimbabweans. I really can't give a complete answer to that, since I am not one of them. But to the extent that anyone else claims that it was great, I think it is not unreasonable to ask for some objective basis.
Finally as far as I am concerned stolen land was handed back to the owners. Had Kenyatta done that the constant tribal clashes over land would have been avoided. Instead he stole the land and sent off the owners to later aroundbthe country
Interesting. And one has to keep in mind that Kenya is frequently held up as model of how these things ought to be done (or have been done).
Kenya is actually a good study in the problems with the "we fought to get our land back and now we have it" emotional approach, the danger of that approach being that it has no room for objectivity.
What really happened in Kenya is this:
(a) Quite a few wazungus kept whatever land they had.
(b) Some other land went from a few
white wazungu to a few newly-installed
black wazungu.
(Even when Kenyatta & Co were dishing out little bits of land to their "our people"--RV and Coast---it was only leftovers once they had grabbed the good stuff.)
(c) As far as land goes, the average "native" still got f**ked, if that had been his prior state.
(In the RV and at the Coast, they remained largely shafted, but did the end of colonialism really change land ownership elsewhere---Nyanza, Western, Eastern, etc.?)
So, as with Zimbabwe, when Kenyans say "we fought and got back our land", I say: really? where? how? what did the average Kenyan get out of this land transfer?
Beyond the past, there's the point of the Jukwaa thread: the real colonial land-grab is taking place right now.
The first land-grab wasn't all "here's a gun in your face; your land or else". There was plenty of con: "these shiny bits of glass for those zillions of acres of
useless land". And now it's another con: people signing over land for longer periods than the colonialists had the land in the first con while smugly insisting that it is theirs because they fought for it, blah, blah, blah.
Alarm bells are going all over the place, but do the sovereign are independent care?http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/poverty-matters/2011/jan/28/africa-land-grabs-food-security