Alamein Farm

Alamein Farm, also known as Ruzambu Farm,[1] is a 5,000 hectare farm at Beatrice, in the Mashonaland East area of Zimbabwe, 72 km south of the capital Harare. It was a highly productive commercial farming operation, employing around one thousand people and producing large quantities of tobacco, maize and Rhodes grass, as well as cattle and farmed game. The farm gained notoriety in 2002, when General Solomon Mujuru and his wife, Zimbabwean Vice President Joice Mujuru, evicted the farm owner and all farm inhabitants.[2] under the auspices of the Land Reform Programme and became the first of President Robert Mugabe's inner circle to be found guilty of unlawful land seizures.[3][4] Under General Mujuru, the farm continued to produce tobacco, maize and game.[5] Farm workers also produced their own tobacco on land allocated to them.[1]

Further notoriety was to follow in August 2011, with the death of General Mujuru in the farm homestead in circumstances that many commentators and politicians describe as suspicious.[6][7][8][9]

References

  1. 1 2 "Mujuru condolences pour". ZBC. 16 Aug 2011. Retrieved 2011-08-23.
  2. "Farm owner given minutes to leave his Farm", The London Evening Standard, February 10, 2003
  3. Evicted farmer sues for return of £2m assets, The Daily Telegraph, December 24, 2001
  4. Britain must act on Zimbabwe, The London Evening Standard, January 25, 2002
  5. "Solomon Mujuru the farmer". The Sunday Mail. 21 Aug 2011. Archived from the original on 2011-10-05. Retrieved 2011-08-23.
  6. Zimbabwe's General Solomon Mujuru dies in fire Mail and Guardian
  7. Securocrats, Candles and a raging dictatorship in Mail & Guardian, South Africa
  8. Mujuru death no accident in The Times
  9. Chiwenga ordered Mujuru assassination in Nehanda Radio


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