Will Trump help or hinder Zimbabwe's white farmers in their compensation battle?
Will Trump help or hinder Zimbabwe's white farmers in their compensation battle? 6 hours ago
And some see Zimbabwe's vast and untapped deposits of rare-earth minerals and the transactional nature of Trump's politics as key to unlocking the cash.
The seizures - meant to redress a colonial-era land grab - led to the collapse of Zimbabwe's economy.
This ex-farmer's mother - who had been a co-owner of their farm - is well over 90 years old and has spent the last 25 years awaiting hundreds of thousands of dollars in compensation. She is now being supported by British-based charity Zimbabwe A National Emergency (Zane), which provides a twice-yearly stipend to struggling pensioners.
But what was a tightly knit community is now divided in its approach to compensation - and some see Trump as key to speeding things up. To that end a Washington-based lobby group Mercury Public Affairs LLC, which has ties to the Trump administration, has been engaged.
This came to light because of a declaration filed by Mercury in late December with the Department of Justice - US law requires those engaged in political activity on behalf of foreign organisations to disclose the relationship. The documentation showed OB Projects' letter of engagement addressed to Mercury partner Bryan Lanza, a Republican strategist and former Trump elections campaign communications director. It said Mercury's services, to be provided free of charge, would include "contacting appropriate officials in the current administration and Congress to promote paying the Zimbabwean farmers the remaining balance of $3.
It would be quite a feat if Zimbabwe was able to refinance its debts, as the southern African nation has not received loans from the World Bank in more than 25 years after it defaulted on interest payments. This is also linked to US legislation enacted in 2001 as a consequence of the land reform programme. The Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act (ZDERA) specifically requires the US Treasury to vote against any new loans, credits or debt relief for Zimbabwe from international financial institutions. It also says the president should impose targeted economic and travel sanctions on those responsible for the violence and the breakdown in law.
The bill has yet to be considered by the two houses of Congress - so there is a long way to go before it becomes law, but the timing is propitious for the lobbyists, who have key White House contacts. Susie Wiles, now Trump's chief of staff, served as Mercury's co-chair for several years before her appointment at the start of the president's second term. OB Projects said it was representing the Zimbabwean farmers on behalf of four groups - though some of them have disputed this. Zimbabwe's Property and Farms Compensation Association (Profca) chairman Bud Whittaker confirmed to the BBC that his organisation had written to an American firm "a month or two ago" asking them to "look into" the matter.
Its members represent the larger faction of farmers, who have rejected the government bonds offer. A CFU member, not authorised to speak for the group, cited concerns that the OB Projects' letter to Mercury was sent on their behalf without consulting them. He told the BBC: "We would support anything that can support compensation in a fair way in accordance with international standards. " The CFU was speaking not only to US diplomats in Harare but to other Western embassies for support to secure outright payment, he added.
They feel Trump's approach there was too racialised and say the white community still wants to make a go of it in Zimbabwe, with some who went to live overseas during the economic crash returning to take up business opportunities. AFP via Getty Images AFP via Getty Images This includes hundreds of young white farmers going home to lease farms.
Another 53-year-old shareholder in a family farm told the BBC she was wary of getting another foreign government to "meddle" in Africa, saying that the UK - the former colonial power - "should resolve it". At one stage one farmer said contacts in South Africa had attempted to set up meetings with South African-born tech billionaire Elon Musk to see if he was interested in a deal to finance the $3. Whittaker from Profca said his group had also contracted a US company to find money to buy up the government bonds already issued to farmers. This is one part of a multipronged strategy that also seeks to attract the US government hungry for new investments in critical minerals in exchange for a commitment to settle the debt owed to former farmers. Zimbabwe has some of Africa's largest lithium reserves, as well as chromium, cobalt and rare earth minerals. This is not Mercury's first involvement with Zimbabwe - and it is well aware of its mining potential. The BBC has reached out to the Zimbabwe government for comment about the latest development involving Mercury.
We are paying anyway and we would like to pay faster," he is quoted as saying. A former farmer in his 80s agreed that big offshore finance would have to be involved to foot the compensation bill quickly, though he said involving Trump was like walking a tightrope. "With Trump who knows? Things might go sideways," he laughed. com for more news from the African continent
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