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Black commercial farmer wants SADC Tribunal reinstated
SADC
Tribunal Rights Watch
May 19, 2011
On the eve of
the Southern African Development Community (SADC) Extraordinary
Summit of Heads of State in Namibia
(20/21 May), a dispossessed black commercial farmer from Zimbabwe
who ran a successful agricultural enterprise is selling packets
of sugar to feed his family.
Luke Tembani (74), one
of the first black commercial farmers after Zimbabwean independence
in 1980, lost title to his farm in November 2000 when it was unilaterally
auctioned by the Agricultural Bank of Zimbabwe (ABZ), to cover a
loan.
Despite Tembani's
proposal to sell off a viable section of the farm to cover the debt,
his entire property was sold to a third party at a fraction of the
value estimated by an independent valuator.
Tembani took
his case to the High Court of Zimbabwe, which eventually ruled in
his favour, but the ABZ appealed to the Supreme Court whose members
- apart from one judge - were recipients of "redistributed"
farms, and in November 2007 the execution of the sale was upheld.
With no recourse to justice
in Zimbabwe, Tembani took his case to the SADC Tribunal in Windhoek,
Namibia, where it was heard on 5 June 2009. He won the case and
the Zimbabwe government was told to take all the necessary measures
not to evict him from the property and to stop interfering with
his use and occupation of the farm.
Despite the protection
of the SADC Tribunal, in October 2009 Tembani and his family were
evicted from the farmhouse where they'd been living and struggling
to survive. They were not allowed to remove any of their farm equipment,
are now virtually destitute and want justice.
Background
Information
Tembani's first job in 1954 was working in the garden of a
private home. Subsequently he took up an apprenticeship, but his
objective was to become a commercial farmer. Three years later,
he enrolled at Chibero Agricultural College in Norton. On completion
of the course, he became a farm manager on a dairy farm in the Nyazura
district, where he worked for 18 years.
Three years after independence,
Tembani was ready to farm for himself and acquired a five-year lease
of a farm called Minverwag, a 1,265ha property in Nyazura, with
an option to buy. The farmer, Helgard Muller, gave him a free lease
to help him get established.
The Agricultural Finance
Corporation (AFC), subsequently renamed the Agriculture Bank of
Zimbabwe (ABF), provided a loan and in 1985 Tembani became the registered
owner.
He was appointed onto
the Rural District Council and served as Provincial Chairman for
the Indigenous Commercial Farmers' Union.
Tembani built up Minverwag
into a highly profitable enterprise comprising up to 100 hectares
of tobacco, 80ha of maize, 5ha of marigolds, 10ha of paprika and
40ha of wheat/soya rotation. He also invested time and resources
to improve the farm's irrigation system.
Over the years his beef
herd was increased to 600 animals and he also developed a pig unit
with 16 sows and an ostrich project with up to 89 breeding birds.
In 1986 Tembani decided
to build a school and provide education for the children of farm
workers from the area, but neither the Ministry of Education nor
the Rural Council were able to assist.
He went ahead, using
his own money generated from the farm, and the following year opened
Chimwanda Primary School with four classrooms and free schooling
for 321 pupils between grades 1 and 7, an office and accommodation
for eight teachers.
He also sunk a borehole,
improved his employees' housing and built a church hall.
During the 1990s, when
interest rates escalated sharply and there two were serious national
droughts (1992 and 1994), many commercial farmers ran into financial
difficulties.
Tembani, who had invested
substantially in his school, was among them, so he met with the
planning department of the AFC and arranged to sell off a viable
418 hectare section of the farm as a subdivision in 1996.
The AFC agreed that this
would cover his debt and buyers were found while they waited for
the title deeds to be issued.
Subsequently the renamed
ABZ failed to verify the exact value of Tembani's debt and
reneged on the arrangement, auctioning the entire, undivided property
in November 2000 for a mere Z$6 million although an independent
valuator valued the property at Z$15 million.
"Only two buyers
were present and the farm was sold to Takawira Zembe, a businessman
who only paid 10 percent at the auction and who is believed to have
as many as 18 farming enterprises in the country gained in this
way," said Tembani.
When Zembe took over
Minverwag, he petitioned the Methodist Church in Zimbabwe to undertake
the running of the school.
After Tembani's
eviction in 2009, Zembe refused to let his twins attend the school
their father built, unless Tembani ceded total ownership of the
farm to Zembe and withdrew his appeal against the eviction.
"Zembe is not operating Minverwag as a commercial farming
enterprise but has cut it into plots for peasant farmers who are
paying him for the use of the land," Tembani said.
At the beginning of April
2011, Tembani joined commercial farmer Mike Campbell in signing
papers to take the SADC Heads of State to the Tribunal for initiating
its suspension.
In calling for the review,
the SADC Heads of State denied Tembani access to the Tribunal to
claim damages against the Zimbabwe government for refusing to comply
with his SADC judgment.
Campbell died
a few days after signing from injuries sustained during his abduction
and brutal
beating after the contentious Presidential run-off election
in June 2008, but Tembani remains resolute. "The Tribunal
must continue to function in all respects as established by the
SADC Treaty," he said.
Tembani, his wife and
their two children now live in basic rented accommodation and are
without an income. They cannot afford the school fees of US$300
per term for their daughter, Mildred (15), or for their son, Luke
(10) who requires US$70 per term.
Their other
daughter, Terrylee, who was Luke's twin sister, was killed
tragically in March this year when she was electrocuted due to poor
wiring in their rented accommodation.
"As I speak to you, at the age of 74, I'm sitting on
an old stool with nothing, despite all the years of hard work,"
said Tembani. "We live hand-to-mouth selling little bags of
sugar and other basics in a difficult and competitive environment,
instead of contributing to food security."
"When the hungry
season comes, the food situation is going to be serious in Zimbabwe,"
Tembani warned. "There has been a major drought and between
75 and 80 percent of the people have been affected. The irrigation
systems are not functioning and the land is lying idle."
"My wife and I
want our farm back but right now it's too political,"
Thembani said regretfully. "If we had the money to open a
small shop and stock it with tools, hardware and other more profitable
goods it would be easier to survive. We had a lot of money in the
bank before the Zimbabwe dollar crashed. But when it collapsed and
was replaced by the US dollar, we were left with nothing."
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