Madam Deputy Speaker, let's just go back: The Lancaster House Agreement had a direct involvement of the Thatcher administration representing the Conservative government. In the early period, because there were certain agreements built into the Lancaster House Agreement, including fixed representation for whites and a deferment of the agrarian reform issues in Zimbabwe, there was donor aid. I am told that in the late 1980s after the five-year period had elapsed there were some transfers. I don't know how significant it has been. That's what Whitehall would say - I think that Harare would have a different view on the matter and these issues must still be resolved.
Inevitably, I think that some agency is going to have to assist Zimbabwe, because all agriculture is driven by credit and you can't have agricultural credit without collateral. If you want collateral then you need a deeds registry and if you need a deeds registry then you've got to resolve some of the issues that have happened in the context of land reform. These are matters that will be on the table to be resolved. The key issues depend on that interrelationship between an economic plan that Zimbabweans will develop and allow to be tested by peers and the speed of the political solution that Zimbabweans find for themselves.