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"They
are day-dreaming"
AFP
December 01, 2008
http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=68&art_id=nw20081201092157112C232848
Zimbabwe's government
has rejected a regional court ruling that said 78 white Zimbabweans
could keep their farms despite Harare's land reform scheme, state
newspaper The Herald reported Monday. "They (the tribunal)
are day-dreaming because we are not going to reverse the land reform
exercise," the Minister of State for National Security, Lands,
Land Reform and Resettlement, Didymus Mutasa, told the newspaper.
"There is nothing special about the 75 farmers and we will
take more farms. It's not discrimination against farmers, but correcting
land imbalances," he added. Mutasa was reacting to Friday's
ruling by the Southern African Development Community (SADC) tribunal
that said the farmers could keep their farms because Harare's land
reform scheme discriminated against them. Judge Luis Mondlane, president
of the tribunal had said Zimbabwe had violated the treaty governing
the 15-nation regional bloc by trying to seize the white-owned farms.
Rather than respect the
ruling, the government would step up its land reform programme and
acquire remaining white-owned farms, Mutasa told The Herald. The
SADC Tribunal would not stall the land reform programme to please
former colonial masters, he added. In Friday's ruling, Judge Mondlane
said: "The 78 applicants have a clear legal title (for their
farms) and were denied access to the judiciary locally." Three
of the 78 farmers have already been forced from their land, and
the court ruled that Zimbabwe had also violated the treaty by failing
to pay them fair compensation, he said. For the remaining 75 farmers,
Mondlane ordered Zimbabwe's government "to take all measures
to protect the possessions and ownership" of their land. No
actions may be taken by insurgents and others to interfere with
or disturb the peaceful activities of the remaining 75 applicants,"
he said.
It was the first major
ruling by the court since it first convened in April last year.
By treaty, the court's rulings are binding. Eight years ago Zimbabwe
began seizing white-owned farms to resettle them with landless blacks,
but the chaotic programme was plagued by deadly violence and some
farms ended up in the hands of President Robert Mugabe's allies.
In Zimbabwe and many neighbouring countries, white settlers took
most of the best farmland during colonial times. Now African nations
face a dilemna in how to bring black farmers back onto the land
without disrupting food production. Zimbabwe gave much of its land
to inexperienced farmers and provided them little support, causing
an enormous drop in food production that critics say is at the root
of current shortages.
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