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Zim farmers: SADC Tribunal rules Mugabe govt persists in non-compliance
SADC
Tribunal Rights Watch
July 16, 2010
The SADC Tribunal
made another landmark ruling in Windhoek, Namibia, today (July 16)
regarding the Zimbabwean government's continued violation
of decisions
made by the Tribunal with respect to commercial farmers affected
by the country's land reform policies.
Referring to
violations in a further contempt order of June
5, 2009 after the main judgement of November
28, 2008 in the Campbell farm test case, the Tribunal said in
today's judgement:
The Tribunal
found that the Respondent (the Zimbabwe Government), had failed
to comply with the decision in the former case (28 November 2008)
and reported such failure to the Summit to take appropriate action . . . Despite
this the Respondent has continued to violate the decision of the
Tribunal."
Today's ruling
listed three areas, "amongst others", where the Zimbabwe
Government has "continued to violate the decision of the Tribunal"
and therefore the SADC Treaty.
Justice Mtambo said:
"Firstly, there is abundant evidence before us to the effect
that the lives, liberty and property of all those whom the decision
meant to protect have been endangered."
Secondly, the letter
from the Zimbabwe Minister of Justice and Legal Affairs, Patrick
Chinamasa, was cited. Chinamasa noted that "any decisions
that the Tribunal may have made or may make in the future against
the Republic of Zimbabwe are null and void."
Thirdly, the
refusal of Justice Bharat Patel to register the judgement
in the High Court of Zimbabwe announced by Patel on January
26, was cited as a reason for Zimbabwe's continued violation.
The ruling recalled that
the Campbell case "directed the Respondent (the Zimbabwe Government)
to take all necessary measures through its agents to protect the
possession, occupation and ownership of the land of the applicants
and to take all appropriate measures to ensure that no action is
taken directly or indirectly, whether by its agents or others, to
evict the applicants from, or interfere with their peaceful residence
on the land."
The applicants were given
costs in the matter.
Expressing his appreciation
to the SADC Tribunal, Mike Campbell said from Harare: "They
have burnt my house with all its contents, they have looted my crops
and my tractors, they have tortured my workers, they have killed
my animals, they have stripped my farm, they have beaten me to within
an inch off my life - from which I have never recovered - it is
now time that SADC acted."
Ben Freeth, who farmed
Mount Carmel with Campbell, says his father-in-law is currently
in very poor health as a result of his abduction and beating just
two days after the Presidential run-off election.
During the vicious beating
of Campbell, his wife Angela and Freeth, Zanu PF agents tried at
gunpoint to force them to withdraw their case from the Tribunal.
Impact
of land grab
The impact of the chaotic
and violent land grab continues to be felt across Zimbabwe. This
season's wheat crop is set to be a mere three percent of the
total crop grown a decade ago and the country continues to rely
heavily on food aid.
The Commercial
Farmers' Union estimates a wheat crop of just 10,000 tonnes,
down from 300,000 tonnes before the illegal farm invasions began
in 2000. Despite the SADC-brokered Global
Political Agreement (GPA), invasions and looting have continued
unabated.
This has destroyed the
country's ability to feed itself and ruined the entire commercial
farming industry, depriving tens of thousands of additional farm
workers of their jobs and livelihoods.
"Given
that SADC has guaranteed the GPA and that SADC has put in place
the Tribunal, it is up to SADC to take very stern measures to make
sure the Zimbabwe Government, which includes Prime Minister Tsvangarai
addresses the collapse of the rule of law and the human rights abuses
that continue unchecked in the rural areas," said Freeth.
Freeth, who continues
to monitor violations of the SADC rulings through a grouping called
SADC Tribunal Rights Watch, is concerned at Tsvangirai's lack
of action regarding the ongoing violations of farmers and farm workers.
"To date we do
not know of a single commercial farm or a single police station
that the Prime Minister has visited while the Zanu PF elite continues
to commit human rights violations and other crimes," said
Freeth
"If the Prime Minister
is hamstrung by the GPA, it is his responsibility to call on peace
keepers from outside to protect the Zimbabwean people," he
concluded.
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