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Saturday, September 10, 2005

Troops seize British-owned cattle ranch in Venezuela

Jo Tuckman
Saturday September 10, 2005
The Guardian

Venezuelan troops have reportedly seized a huge British-owned cattle ranch as part of an agrarian reform programme targeting large estates that the government says it wants to redistribute to the poor.

Agroflora, a local affiliate of Vestey Group owned by meatpacking tycoon Lord Vestey, said in a statement on Thursday that a convoy of troops and cooperative farmers had arrived at the ranch, which is located in the south-western state of Apure.

However, official confirmation of the events could not immediately be obtained.
The land redistribution plans are rooted in a new constitution, which was passed soon after President Hugo Chávez took office in 1999, and which defines large estates as being "contrary to the social interest".

A land reform law was approved in 2001. This authorised expropriation in cases where historical ownership cannot be proved to go back far enough, or when estate owners allow land to lie idle.

Two months ago, the national lands institute, a government agency, ruled that the 66,700-acre ranch owned by the Vestey Group in Apure failed on both these considerations.

In its statement, quoted by the Associated Press, the company said the property provided pasture for 8,500 cattle, although some of the land was not usable during the rainy season because of flooding.

The company has 12 ranches in Venezuela and claims to provide 4% of all the beef consumed in the country.

The Apure ranch is one of two properties owned by the group which has been in the eye of the land reform storm for the past year.

The other property is another cattle ranch located in the central state of Cojedes. In March, the national land institute ruled that this estate was unlawfully held and underused.

At the time, the company blamed the land's under-productivity on the invasion of about 1,000 squatters encouraged by President Chávez's promises to help the many poor in the oil-rich country.

The president claims that a high proportion of the largest estates in Venezuela were illegally obtained through corruption, before he took office, and that redistribution will help alleviate poverty and improve productivity.

The fear of widespread expropriations helped to unify the anti-Chávez opposition that tried to oust him, first with a coup in 2002 and then with a two-month strike. The president bounced back by winning a referendum on his rule a year ago.

Since that time, the land reform process has accelerated with investigations beginning into dozens of large estates across the country.

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