|
Back to Index
SADC
Tribunal to hear Zim farmer's case next month
Simplicious Chirinda, ZimOnline
February 27, 2008
http://www.zimonline.co.za/Article.aspx?ArticleId=2788
Harare - A regional Tribunal
will next month hear an application by a Zimbabwean white farmer
against seizure of his land, three months after issuing an interim
order allowing the farmer to keep his property pending final ruling
on his appeal. Zambian Judge Charles Mkandawire, who is registrar
of the Namibia-based Southern African Development Community (SADC)
Tribunal, said it would on March 26 hear farmer William Michael
Campbell's challenge against the legality of President Robert
Mugabe's controversial farm redistribution programme. "We
have finally set the date, the case will be heard on March 26 and
the communication has been sent through to both parties," Mkandawire
told Zim Online by phone from Windhoek. "We had problems previously
with the Zimbabwean government saying it wasn't given enough
time to prepare for the case but we hope this will give both parties
enough time to study the case and give us feedback in case there
are queries," he said.
The Tribunal
last December barred the Harare administration from evicting Campbell
from his Mount Camel farm near the town of Chegutu pending final
determination of the farmer's application that Mugabe's
land reforms violated the SADC treaty. Campbell first appealed against
seizure of his property to Zimbabwe's Supreme Court last March
but took his case to the Tribunal after what his lawyers said was
"unreasonable delay" by the country's highest court
in dealing with the matter. The Supreme Court last month finally
dismissed Campbell's appeal and Land Reform Minister Didymus
Mutasa had said the court's ruling opened the way for the
government to seize his farm. However Harare has not taken the farm
apparently waiting for the Tribunal to make a ruling. Campbell wants
the SADC court to find Harare in breach of its obligations as a
member of the regional bloc after it signed into law Constitution
of Zimbabwe Amendment No.17 two years ago.
The amendment allows
the government to seize white farmland - without compensation -
for redistribution to landless blacks and bars courts from hearing
appeals from dispossessed white farmers. The white farmer has also
asked the Tribunal to declare Zimbabwe's land reforms racist
and illegal under the SADC Treaty adding that Article 6 of the Treaty
bars member states from discriminating against any person on the
grounds of gender, religion, race, ethnic origin and culture. A
ruling declaring land reform illegal would have far reaching consequences
for Mugabe's government, opening the floodgates to hundreds
of claims of damages by dispossessed white farmers. Such a ruling
could also set the Harare government on a collision course with
its SADC allies particularly if - as it has always done with
court rulings against its land reforms - refuses to abide
by the Tribunal judgement. Farm seizures are blamed for plunging
Zimbabwe into severe food shortages after the government displaced
established white commercial farmers and replaced them with either
incompetent or inadequately funded black farmers.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|