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Trump, White Farmers and the War on Zimbabwe’s Sovereignty: Why Africans Must Reject this Neo-Colonial Push

Trump, White Farmers and the War on Zimbabwe’s Sovereignty: Why Africans Must Reject this Neo-Colonial Push

Trump, White Farmers and the War on Zimbabwe’s Sovereignty: Why Africans Must Reject this Neo-Colonial Push

By: Mafa Kwanisai Mafa
The Panafricanist

The latest push by a small group of white farmers in Zimbabwe to drag Donald Trump and the United States government into a fight over land compensation is not just a betrayal of Zimbabwe’s revolution; it is a fresh front in an ongoing war to reverse Africa’s emancipation from colonial domination.

Earlier this week, reports emerged that a faction of white former farmers has hired a US lobbying firm with deep ties to Trump’s circle, asking the American president and his Republican allies to pressure Harare into paying billions of dollars in compensation for land seized decades ago under the country’s land reform programme.

Let there be no mistake: this is not about fairness or justice. It is about power, about imperial interference, and about rewriting history to serve the powerful few.

Zimbabwe’s land reform, begun in the late 1990s and early 2000s, was a radical and necessary corrective to colonial theft.

For nearly a century before independence, a white minority dominated the fertile agricultural heartlands of Zimbabwe, while the majority Black population was relegated to crowded reserves and marginal lands.

This was not an accident; it was the design of colonial conquest and racial capitalism. Redistributing that land to Black Zimbabweans was not only just, but it was essential for dignity, self-determination, and economic independence.

Yet now, more than two decades later, a clique of former landowners is trying to internationalise what was a sovereign African decision.

They have turned to Mercury Public Affairs, a US lobbying firm, to persuade Trump’s allies in Washington to intervene in Zimbabwe’s internal affairs.

Their argument is simple: they want billions of dollars in compensation for land that was taken from them. This push is deeply flawed on both moral and political grounds.

First, it ignores the most important fact: these farmers held land that was stolen from the African majority through colonial violence and legal imposition. The land redistribution was not a whim; it was a reckoning with centuries of theft.

To demand that an African nation pay huge sums on behalf of a tiny, historically privileged minority is to ignore the blood, sweat, and struggle of the millions displaced and oppressed by colonial rule.

Second, the compensation campaign is being framed through the lens of Western politics, particularly through the truncated narratives of US Republican rhetoric about “white farmer genocide” in southern Africa, a claim that has been widely debunked and exposed as an extremist fantasy.

Trump and his circle have repeatedly amplified similar claims about South Africa, and now they are seeking to cast Zimbabwe in the same light.

Here we see the danger of allowing Western geopolitical agendas to infiltrate African policy issues. This is not assistance; it is interference.

It is the old colonial project in new clothes: using financial leverage and political pressure to bend sovereign African choices to Western interests.

This is why any appeal to Trump, Congress, or US policymakers should be treated with contempt by all Africans committed to self-determination.

Third, the framing of compensation in this way trivialises the unresolved economic injustices inflicted on Black Zimbabweans under colonialism.

While the question of improvements on the land remains contested and the government has indeed budgeted sums to pay for infrastructure losses, the larger question of returning stolen land and the attendant wealth created from it remains a historical debt owed by colonial powers and settler elites to the African majority.

To accept the premise that a small group of white farmers should be compensated by a Black government at the behest of a racist Western administration undermines the very principles of justice that underpinned Zimbabwe’s struggle for independence.

It suggests that the rights of a minority settler class outweigh the collective rights of the indigenous majority whose land and resources were stolen. This is not justice. This is a replay of colonial logic.

Some critics, including within regional bodies such as the Southern African Development Community, have pointed to legal rulings that favour compensation claims under certain treaties. Yet this too must be contextualised.

The international legal order is replete with biases that favour powerful states and entrenched interests. SADC’s own Tribunal rulings, for example, have been subject to political pushback and controversy precisely because they sit at the intersection of law, sovereignty, and political power.

But no international legal technicality should be allowed to override the core principle that African nations have the right to determine how they manage their land reform and economic priorities without foreign interference.

Let’s also be clear: Zimbabwe’s land reform was not perfect. Implementation was sometimes flawed, and challenges remain in commercial agriculture productivity and rural development.

But these are problems of post-colonial reconstruction and empowerment, not excuses for Western governments and settler elites to return with demands that Zimbabwe bend to their will.

This moment calls for unity, not capitulation. Land reform in Zimbabwe was part of a broader African liberation project that sought to dismantle the economic foundations of colonialism across the continent from Ghana to Guinea, from Namibia to Mozambique.

To allow a return to colonial claims through US political pressure is to undermine the very gains that African revolutionaries fought for.

African nations and leaders, regional organisations, and civil society should stand in unison against this renewed assault on Zimbabwe’s sovereignty. This is not a local issue; it is a continental one.

It is a reminder that the battle for genuine decolonisation, economic, political, and psychological, is far from over.

In Zimbabwe, land belongs to those who reside on it, work it, and whose ancestors were dispossessed by colonial conquest. Seeking compensation from the Zimbabwean state under the influence of an external imperial power is not only unjust, but it is an affront to Africa’s liberation struggle.

Africa must reject these neo-colonial overtures and reaffirm that land reform was and remains a legitimate and necessary correction of historical wrongs.

Zimbabwe’s land reform is not negotiable. Its sovereignty is not for sale. And its liberation history must not be rewritten to serve outsiders. Rejecting this compensation campaign is not only a defence of Zimbabwe, but it is a defence of the African revolution itself.

Urgent Message: Military Attempting To Stop Electoral Process In Guinea Bissau 11/26/2025

Urgent Message: Military Attempting To Stop Electoral Process In Guinea Bissau 11/26/2025

Urgent Message: Military Attempting To Stop Electoral Process In Guinea Bissau 11/26/2025

 

The West African Country of Guinea Bissau held presidential and legislative elections on Sunday, 23rd of November, 2025. Prior to election day, the illegally established Supreme Court disqualified the African Party of Independence of Guinea Bissau and Cape Verde (PAIGC) candidates by inventing the technicality that the PAIGC had not submitted its candidates before the due date. This illegal exclusion led the PAIGC to endorse the candidacy of  Fernando Dias da Costa, Social Renewal Party (PRS) President, and backed by the Inclusive Patriot Alliance (API), Big Calabash and the Terra Ranka Coalition, led by Domingos Simões Pereira of the PAIGC.

Upon completion of voting, official reports to the Regional Electoral Commissions (CRE) from the 10 Regions indicate that Fernando Dias da Costa won the election with a confirmed vote tally of 54%, while Ebalo Sissoco, the illegitimate president seeking re-election,  garnered 44% of the vote. These results were confirmed and signed today, 26 November and are due to be officially proclaimed on tomorrow, 27 November, by the National Electoral Commission.

In an attempt to prevent the announcement of Sissoco's defeat, military forces loyal to him attempted to invade several Regional Electoral Commissions (CRE), but were unable due to the Masses of People who surrounded the CRE Headquarters.

On 26 November, after Sissoco himself announced to several news outlets, such as Jeune Afrique, that he was the victim of a coup, the same group of soldiers loyal to Sissoco announced on National Television that they had “..taken Total Control of the Country..”. Shots have been fired in the streets of the Capitol City, Bissau. Domingos Simões Pereira, President of the African Party of Independence of Guinea Bissau (PAIGC), and President of the National People's Assembly (ANP) has been arrested by these same military forces loyal to Embalo Sissoco.  Sissoco’s whereabouts remain unknown.

The All African People’s Revolutionary Party (AAPRP) and our sister Party, the PAIGC, view these military actions as a futile attempt to keep Sissoco in power by pretending to be the victim of a military coup, which Sissoco himself orchestrated after falsely proclaiming himself the winner of the elections. The revolting military forces intervened when both candidates claimed to win the election, causing a “crisis of uncertainty”. Their real intent is to prevent the proclamation of Fernando Dias da Costa and his PAIGC backers, the winners of Sunday's election.

The AAPRP calls upon all international institutions, regional bodies, progressive and peace-loving People, to join the masses of People in Guinea Bissau to demand:

  • The immediate release of Domingos Simões Pereira and all citizens who have been illegally detained

  • That the military harm no one

  • That all military troops return to the barracks

  • That the electoral process be allowed to go forward with the official proclamation of the vote count and announcement of the winners of Sunday’s elections.

We soundly condemn the desperate attempt by Sissoco and his imperialist masters to once again overthrow the popular will of the Guinean masses and thwart the sovereignty of Guinea Bissau.

Central Committee

All-African People’s Revolutionary Party

Image: A woman casts her vote during the presidential and legislative elections, in Bissau, Guinea-Bissau, Sunday, Nov. 23, 2025. Copyright © africanews. The Associated Press.

The Lobito Corridor: US imperialism's latest plot against the Democratic Republic of Congo

The Lobito Corridor: US imperialism's latest plot against the Democratic Republic of Congo

The Lobito Corridor: US imperialism's latest plot against the Democratic Republic of Congo

“…The latest imperialist scheme against the DRC is the Lobito Corridor also known as the Lobito Atlantic Railway. This railway was originally built between 1902 and 1929 by the colonial governments of Belgium and Portugal to transport copper and cobalt stolen from the DRC and Zambia towards Europe. In September 2023, at the G20 summit in New Delhi, India, the U.S. government and the European Union signed an agreement to revive this old colonial railway linking the DRC to Zambia and the port of Lobito in Angola, to export critical minerals to Europe via the Atlantic Ocean.”

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African Stream coverage of the Africans In Solidarity With Sahel Revolutions At Niger Conference

African Stream coverage of the Africans In Solidarity With Sahel Revolutions At Niger Conference

During 19-21 November, Pan-Africanists, anti-imperialists, and friends of the Alliance of Sahel States (AES) flocked to Niamey, Niger, for the Conference in Solidarity with the Peoples of the Sahel.

The AES is a revolutionary confederation consisting of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger, West African countries that have made enormous strides toward ending neo-colonialism in recent years since their people-backed military coups d’état.

The conference, organized by the West Africa Peoples Organization, Pan-Africanism Today and Nigerien civil society organizations, marks a turning point for global solidarity with Africa’s new self-determining bloc. Delegates representing political and workers’ organizations came from Zambia, Kenya, Ghana, Brazil, Cuba, Venezuela, the US, India, China and other countries.

From day one, African Stream was on the ground in Niamey to interview Nigerien locals, those involved in organizing the event and foreign delegates. In this video, we hear from people after the event’s opening ceremony.

PART 1 from African Stream

The A-APRP Condemns the Attack on the PAIGC and the PAI Terra Ranka Coalition

The A-APRP Condemns the Attack on the PAIGC and the PAI Terra Ranka Coalition

The All-African People’s Revolutionary Party (A-APRP) and the African Party of Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC) are one!

“When the PAIGC and its PAI Terra Ranka Coalition democratically won the absolute majority on 4 June 2023, we sent our message of congratulations after the official results were published. We also congratulated the inauguration of the PAI Terra Ranka Coalition government and the election of brother and comrade Domingos “DSP” Simões Pereira as the President of the National People’s Assembly (ANP), the second figure in the state of Guinea-Bissau.”

READ MORE FULL STATEMENT: The Cause of Violence and Imprisonment on 30 November – 1 December 2023…

Banner photo: Man walking on a dirt road by a sign that says ““La Guinee – Bissau, veut et merite la paix” (English “Guinee - Bissau, wants and deserves peace". (courtey africanliberty.org).