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SADC
Tribunal Ruling - Campbell case
SADC
Tribunal
November 28, 2008
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Judgement: Delivered
by H. E. Justice Dr. Luis Antonio Mondlane
1. Factual
background
On 11 October,
2007, Mike Campbell (Pvt) Limited and William Michael Campbell filed
an application with the Southern African Development Community Tribunal
(the Tribunal) challenging the acquisition by the Respondent of
agricultural land known as Mount Carmell in the District of Chegutu
in the Republic of Zimbabwe. Simultaneously, they filed an application
in terms of Article 28 of the Protocol on Tribunal (the Protocol),
as read with Rule 61 (2) - (5) of the Rules of Procedure of
the SADC Tribunal (the Rules), for an interim
measure restraining the Respondent from removing or allowing
the removal of the Applicants from their land, pending the determination
of the matter.
On 13 December,
2007, the Tribunal granted the interim measure through its ruling
which in the relevant part stated as follows:
"[T]he
Tribunal grants the application pending the determination of the
main case and orders that the Republic of Zimbabwe shall take no
steps, or permit no steps to be taken, directly or indirectly, whether
by its agents or by orders, to evict from or interfere with the
peaceful residence on, and beneficial use of, the farm known as
Mount Carmell of Railway 19, measuring 1200.6484 hectares held under
Deed of Transfer No. 10301/99, in the District of Chegutu in the
Republic of Zimbabwe, by Mike Campbell (Pvt) Limited and William
Michael Campbell, their employees and the families of such employees
and of William Michael Campbell".
Subsequently,
77 other persons applied to intervene in the proceedings, pursuant
to Article 30 of the Protocol, as read with Rule 70 of the Rules.
Additionally,
the interveners applied, as a matter of urgency, for an interim
measure restraining the Respondent from removing them from their
agricultural lands, pending the determination of the matter.
On 28 March,
2008, the Tribunal granted the application to intervene in the proceedings
and, just like in the Mike Campbell (Pvt) Ltd. and William Michael
Campbell case, granted the interim measure sought.
Mike Campbell
(Pvt) Ltd. and William Michael Campbell case as well as the cases
of the 77 other Applicants were thus consolidated into one case,
hereinafter referred to as the Campbell case - vide Case SADC
(T) No. 02/2008.
On the same
day another application to intervene was filed by Albert Fungai
Mutize and others (Case SADC (T) No. 08/2008). The Tribunal dismissed
this application on the basis that it had no jurisdiction to entertain
the matter since the alleged dispute in the application was between
persons, namely, the Applicants in that case and those in the
Campbell case
and not between persons and a State, as required under Article 15
(1) of the Protocol.
On 17 June,
2008, yet another application to intervene in the proceedings was
filed. This was by Nixon Chirinda and others - Case SADC (T)
No. 09/2008. The application was dismissed on the same ground as
in Case SADC (T) No. 08/2008.
On 20 June,
2008, the Applicants referred to the Tribunal the failure on the
part of the Respondent to comply with the Tribunal's decision
regarding the interim reliefs granted. The Tribunal, having established
the failure, reported its finding to the Summit, pursuant to Article
32 (5) of the Protocol.
In the present
case, the Applicants are, in essence, challenging the compulsory
acquisition of their agricultural lands by the Respondent. The acquisitions
were carried out under the land reform programme undertaken by the
Respondent.
We note that
the acquisition of land in Zimbabwe has had a long history. However,
for the purposes of the present case, we need to confine ourselves
only to acquisitions carried out under section 16B of the Constitution
of Zimbabwe (Amendment No. 17, 2005), hereinafter referred to
as Amendment 17.
Section 16B
of Amendment 17 provides as follows:
"16B:
Agricultural land acquired for resettlement and other purposes
(1) In this
section -
"acquiring
authority" means the Minister responsible for lands or any
other Minister whom the President may appoint as an acquiring authority
for the purposes of this section;
"appointed
day" means the date of commencement of the Constitution of
Zimbabwe Amendment (No. 17) Act, 2004 (i.e. 16 September, 2005)
(2) Notwithstanding
anything contained in this Chapter
(a) all agricultural
land -
(i) that was
identified on or before the 8th July, 2005, in the Gazette or Gazette
Extraordinary under section 5 (1) of the Land Acquisition Act [Chapter
20:10], and which is itemized in Schedule 7, being agricultural
land required for resettlement purposes; or
(ii) that is
identified after the 8th July, 2005, but before the appointed day
(i.e. 16th September, 2005), in the Gazette or Gazette Extraordinary
under section 5 (1) of the Land Acquisition Act [Chapter 20:10],
being agricultural land required for resettlement purposes; or
- (iii) that
is identified in terms of this section by the acquiring authority
after the appointed day in the Gazette or Gazette Extraordinary
for whatever purposes, including, but not limited to
settlement for agricultural or other purposes; or
- the purposes
of land reorganization, forestry, environmental conservation or
the utilization of wild life or other natural resources; or
- the relocation
of persons dispossessed in consequence of the utilization of land
for a purpose referred to in subparagraph A or B;
- is acquired
by and vested in the State with full title therein with effect
from the appointed day or, in the case of land referred to in
subparagraph (iii), with effect from the date it is identified
in the manner specified in that paragraph; and
(b) no compensation
shall be payable for land referred to in paragraph (a) except for
any improvements effected on such land before it was acquired.
(3) The provisions
of any law referred to in section 16 (1) regulating the compulsory
acquisition of land that is in force on the appointed day, and the
provisions of section 18 (1) and (9), shall not apply in relation
to land referred to in subsection (2) (a) except for the purpose
of determining any question related to the payment of compensation
referred to in subsection (2) (b), that is to say, a person having
any right or interest in the land -
(a) shall not
apply to a court to challenge the acquisition of the land by the
State, and no court shall entertain any such challenge;
(b) may, in
accordance with the provisions of any law referred to in section
16 (1) regulating the compulsory acquisition of land that is in
force on the appointed day, challenge the amount of compensation
payable for any improvements effected on the land before it was
acquired".
Amendment 17
effectively vests the ownership of agricultural lands compulsorily
acquired under Section 16B (2) (a) (i) and (ii) of Amendment 17
in the Respondent and ousts the jurisdiction of the courts to entertain
any challenge concerning such acquisitions. It is on the basis of
these facts that the present matter is before the Tribunal.
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