Fifty years ago I travelled to South Africa and fell in love with the place. It’s a different country today because it’s politics have changed. Soweto used to be in the news and the news was so slanted. The politics of South Africa are complicated and seldom are they reported with accuracy. *****************
Afrikaners to Georgia.. The leader of a plan to settle Afrikaner farmers in Russia — which has made international headlines since it was first mooted five years ago — says the project is finally getting under way, with construction due to start next month and a delegation of farmers due to arrive this month…***************
When Georgia invited South African farmers to revive its agriculture sector
July 10, 2021
According to statistics from the South African government, there are roughly 60 murders of Boer farmers each year, just one example of South Africa’s overarching problem with violent crime.
Boers have also been concerned about their land being appropriated by the South African government in the name of reducing the inequality caused by apartheid.
In recent years, these fears have been heightened since the emergence of Julius Malema, a young, firebrand politician with inflammatory opinions about the European-origin farming community.
As such, it was easy for the Georgian government to present their country as a viable destination for Boers looking to relocate.
Georgia has a strongly pro-business environment, regularly scoring high on the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business index. Crime rates are low, particularly compared to those in South Africa.
Georgia’s potential
Furthermore, despite being blessed with incredibly fertile land and once an agricultural powerhouse, Georgia’s agricultural sector has been underperforming in recent decades, presenting an opportunity for skilled farmers to advantage of.
Less than half of Georgia’s arable land is in use. The country has half the number of cows it did in the early 1990s, when it declared independence from the Soviet Union. And while agriculture employs roughly half the population, it only accounts for eight per cent of the GDP.
In 2010, Georgian authorities offered 100 prospective immigrants a tour of the country. The Georgian government was also interested in the winemaking expertise Boers possessed – Georgia has for centuries been a major producer of wine, but with a few exceptions its domestic products have yet to find much commercial success on international markets.
According to Georgia’s former Minister of Economy and Sustainable Development Vera Kobalia, the initiative was heavily influenced by then-president Mikheil Saakashvili’s Dutch wife, Sandra Roelofs – Afrikaans, the language spoken by the Boers, has substantial similarities with Dutch.
While there are no official statistics ad to the exact number of Boers who have made the journey, according to boers.ge, a website set up by the Transvaal Agricultural Union of South Africa, Boers currently own about 10 per cent of arable land in Georgia. Jam-news, a news site focusing on the Caucasus, estimated that as of 2016, there were “several hundred” South African families now living in Georgia.
The backlash
By all accounts, the settlers have acclimatised well to their new surroundings.
However, the programme to invite Boers to settle in Georgia has not been entirely well received my parts of the Georgian population. Some are frustrated that their government would take such extreme measures to invite and accommodate foreign farmers, but not do the same for Georgians.
Over 40 per cent of the Georgian population still lives in rural areas, relatively underdeveloped compared to the rest of the country.
Addressing a rise in rural discontent, in 2017 and 2018, the Georgian government passed legislation severely limiting the sale of agricultural land to any foreigners. This has restricted new migration from South Africa – according to the Transvaal Agricultural Union, there have been no new land purchases by South Africans since 2017.
Although the programme has largely now been brought to a halt by the legislation driven by the public backlash, it was around long enough for a decent sized South African community to form in Georgia.
Today, the Boers are just one of the myriad peoples living in the Caucasus.
And unlike your run of the mill expat community – they don’t plan on returning home anytime soon.