* CFU says 4,200 farmers face destitution * Government has partially compensated 200 farmers * Violence continuing on commercial farms By MacDonald Dzirutwe HARARE, Nov 6 (Reuters) - Zimbabwe's white farmers union said on Friday it needed to raise $1.2 million each month to look after more than 4,000 members it said had been impoverished by President Robert Mugabe's often violent land seizure drive. The Commercial Farmers' Union (CFU) said violence against white farmers still remaining on farms was escalating and that efforts to engage the government had failed, and warned of a failed 2009/10 cropping season. Mugabe formed a unity government with longtime rival Morgan Tsvangirai, now prime minister, but the coalition has been at odds over how to share power and the CFU said the new government was not protecting them. CFU deputy president Charles Taffs said 150 farmers were being prosecuted in the courts for refusing to make way for new black farmers. The CFU now has less than 400 active farmers, down from more than 5,000 when the seizures started in 2000. "We are actively now trying to raise $1.2 million every month to look after the 4,200 people who are currently facing total destitution," Taffs told journalists. The land issue is emotive in Zimbabwe, where white commercial farmers used to own 70 percent of the country's fertile land, thanks to a colonial system that drove blacks from their ancestral lands. Since the land seizures, which Mugabe argues are necessary to correct colonial land imbalances, 90 percent of the land is now in the hands of black farmers, but who lack proper commercial farming skills and are without adequate inputs. Mugabe and his ZANU-PF party say there are no invasions taking place but that black farmers issued with occupation letters were simply moving on to claim their land, which sometimes caused tensions with the white farmers. "We have some of our elderly members who are so desperate that they are saying they would want some form of compensation to survive," CFU president Deon Theron said. "They are coming to us and saying 'please can you not negotiate with the government, even if its a partial compensation so that we can survive'," said Theron. Farm workers have not been spared from the upheaval in the farming sector, which used to employ 250,000 permanent workers and as much in seasonal labour. There are now 18,000 workers left on commercial farms.
REUTERS PICTURES OF THE DECADE. Zimbabwean commercial farmer Tommy Bayley rides an old bicycle ahead of war veterans and villagers who invaded his farm Danbury Park, 30 kilometres (18.6 miles) northwest ...