The farm where one of the country's biggest infectious diseases hospitals, Driefontein Mission Hospital is built is owned by the Catholic Church. The hospital is the main referral centre for tuberculosis patients in Masvingo, parts of Midlands and Mashonaland east provinces
Harare - The government has seized the church-run Driefontein farm in Masvingo in clear violation of its earlier promises not to take over farms run by religious organisations. The farm where one of the country's biggest infectious diseases hospitals, Driefontein Mission Hospital is built is owned by the Catholic Church. The hospital is the main referral centre for tuberculosis patients in Masvingo, parts of Midlands and Mashonaland east provinces. The government issued a Section 8 order against the farm last Friday. Under the government's Land Acquisition Act, the order is a formal notice on the church to wind up operations and vacate the property within 90 days from the date of issue. Lands Minister Joseph Made, in charge of the land acquisition programme, could not be reached yesterday to establish whether the government also planned to take over the hospital. An official at the Catholic Diocese of Gweru under which Driefontein falls said the church had not yet been officially informed of plans by the state to take over the farm. He said: "We have not been advised of the intention by the government to compulsorily take over the farm. However, we will discuss the matter this coming week and see how we can respond."
Before Zimbabwe's independence in 1980, the Catholic Church built schools and hospitals at farms it owned across the country to provide education and health care services to blacks who were marginalised by the country's former white rulers. President Robert Mugabe himself was educated at the Catholic-run Kutama Mission in his Zvimba rural home. Out of Zimbabwe's 124 mission hospitals, 47 are run by the Catholic Church making it the country's second biggest provider of health care services after the government. Also listed for seizure last Friday were two of the country's biggest tea and coffee estates, Aberfoyle Estate and Eastern Highlands Plantations. The two properties, measuring 2 363 353 hectares, produce tea and washed Arabica coffee mainly for export. They are owned by London Stock Exchange-listed Plantation & General plc. The government also ordered the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange-listed plantation firm, Border Timbers, to surrender five timber estates measuring more than 34 154 066 hectares.The government had said it would not seize land owned by churches, agro-firms and plantation and estate companies. But the state has since backtracked on its word grabbing land from companies in the last three months. Most of the land has ended up in the hands of companies owned by ruling Zanu PF party politicians.