|
Back to Index
Zimbabwe
drops charges against 13 white farmers
SABC News
March 01, 2008
http://www.sabcnews.com/africa/southern_africa/0,2172,165109,00.html
Zimbabwe yesterday withdrew
charges against a group of white farmers who faced trial for resisting
eviction from land targeted for seizure by the government, a defence
lawyer said. President Robert Mugabe's government embarked on a
drive in 2000 to take commercial farms from whites to resettle landless
blacks. An estimated 600 out of the previous 4 500 white farmers
now remain on the land. Thirteen white farmers from Zimbabwe's northwestern
Mashonaland West province, who appealed against their eviction notices,
were being tried for failing to leave the farms after a September
30 deadline lapsed. Defence lawyer David Drury told Reuters yesterday
the state had dropped charges at least for the time being. "It's
anybody's guess what will happen next, but they can revive the case
at a later date. If they do, they must take note of the magistrate's
ruling," he said.
Magistrate Tinashe
Ndokera had ruled that the trial could not proceed before the state
produced documents showing the acquisition of the farms had been
done legally and while a related high court appeal had not been
heard. The prosecution then immediately withdrew the charges. Drury
said the defence would still proceed with an appeal to the Southern
African Development Community (SADC) tribunal on the grounds that
the government land seizures violated a regional pact safeguarding
private property rights. He said the case there had been set for
March 25. Had they been convicted, the farmers faced heavy fines
or up to two years in jail. Critics say Mugabe's controversial land
policy has plunged the southern African country - once a foosssd
exporter - into a severe economic crisis marked by food shortages
and the highest inflation in the world, at above 100 000%. Mugabe
says his land seizure drive was meant to correct colonial imbalances
that saw a few white farmers owning the bulk of the country's prime
farmland.
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
|