23 May 2012
 
New Zimbabwe Header
PM draws fire over China delegation size
No vacancy for Zanu PF leader: Gumbo
UN envoy gets Mugabe history lesson
Chitungwiza councillor 'sold 388 stands'
MORE NEWS
Mimosa loses 75,000t ore to mine fire
Mpofu, Ncube meet over ZISCO chaos
MORE BUSINESS
'Unpatriotic' Roki gets axe warning
Roki and Maneta: how 'stuff hit the fan'
MORE SHOWBIZ
H'landers stretch lead as Dynamos held
Frimpong joins great trek to Harare
MORE SPORTS
Why Zuma's Spear should stay up
Zuma painting an attack on blacks
MORE OPINION
 
Facebook: reward for innovation
MORE COLUMNISTS
 

Farmers sue 'racist' Zimbabwe government

30/09/2010 00:00:00
by Peta Thornycroft I Voice of America
 
Evictions ... A farmer walks past an armed guard
 
RELATED STORIES
Mulder makes case for Mugabe heroism
Biti feeds white farmers false hope
Writer blames white farmers for crisis
Farmer Campbell dies a broken man
'Quiet diplomacy' SA's Mugabe payback: book
500,000 wait for promised land
White farmer takes farm back
Govt threatens to repossess farms
Angry Mugabe blasts land deals
UZ don fights judge over farm
Court dismisses farmers’ racism claim
Two held over farmer's murder
Farmers to auction Zim property
Land reform 'not a failure': UK study
UK award for Zim farmer's film
CFU hints farm murder political
Chegutu farmer shot dead at home
SADC leaders suspend Tribunal
SADC leaders discuss legality of Tribunal
Mugabe and the white African
Tribunal a bush court: Chinamasa

A GROUP of farmers are in the Supreme Court for the first case in which the 19-month-old unity government is accused of violating the constitution for racism against white farmers.  Finance Minister Tendai Biti is among the seven charged.

The Commercial Farmers' Union and 10 of its members are accusing Zimbabwe's inclusive government of violating the constitution in Zimbabwe's top court.

In papers before the court, farmers' advocate Adrian de Bourbon told Chief Justice Godfrey Chidyausiku the government justifies actions against white farmers because it says it is undoing the wrongs of colonialism.  He said this is not a valid basis in law to commit the international crime of racism.

When Movement for Democratic Change leader Morgan Tsvangirai, now Prime Minister in the inclusive government, President Robert Mugabe and Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara signed a political agreement two years ago, they agreed the rule of law would be supreme.

The farmers claim they sought protection by the rule of law through the unity government, but were harassed, evicted, had their farm equipment stolen and were denied protection they sought from public servants.

The farmers say public servants such as police officers and members of the army were seizing white farms, equipment, fertilizer, and livestock since the unity government came to power.

The farmers received no compensation for the loss of improvements to the land, such as homes, farm buildings and equipment, although it is part of the law that has allowed the state to nationalise white-owned land since 2000.

The application does not seek, unlike previous court cases brought by white farmers, to challenge compulsory acquisition of land seized from them.  White farmers were told by Mugabe's former Zanu PF government they must seek compensation for land from former colonial power, Britain.

Among the seven government political leaders cited as respondents in this case is Finance Minister Tendai Biti, the secretary general of the Tsvangirai-led Movement for Democratic Change.  His budgets since the unity government came to power have not allocated money for compensation for farm improvements to farmers evicted from the land.

De Bourbon argues, if there is no national budget for the payment of compensation, the government cannot comply with its legal obligations.



Advertisement

The seven respondents also include Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa, Police Commissioner Augustine Chihuri and Lands Minister Herbert Murewha, all from President Mugabe's Zanu PF party.

Attacks and harassment against the few-hundred white farmers remaining on small parts of their original landholdings continues on an almost daily basis, according to the Union.


 
Email this to a friend Printable Version Discuss This Story
 
Share this article:

Digg it

Del.icio.us

Reddit

Newsvine

Nowpublic

Stumbleupon

Face Book

Myspace

Fark
 
 
 
 
 
RSS NewsTicker