The best Zimbabwe news site on the world wide web 
NEWS
FORUMS
NEWS ANALYSIS
READERS' FORUM

CARTOON

BRITISH FOREIGN OFFICE

NEWS

Zimbabwe court throws settlers lifeline


THE farmers were evicted by Zimbabwe police amid heavy property destruction
Only 32% of land ready for planting

Amnesty Int demands inquiry itno Zim farm deaths

Man dies in Porta Farm clashes

Porta Farm residents vow to stay put

Six farmers arrested in Karoi

Mugabe's spin doctor unleashes hounds on wildlife sanctuary

Moyo in hot water over state farm

Grain research award for Zim scientist

Zim seizes Zambia-bound farm equipment

Nkomo declares war on 'saboteurs and infiltrators'

Nkomo orders Moyo, Made and Chinamasa to surrender farms

Mohadi sues Made over invaders

Zanu PF factions battle over farms

Trouble brews on Mohadi's farm

No nationalisation - Moyo

Zim to nationalise land - Nkomo

Supreme Court blow for farmers

Zimbabwe land grab law challenged

Nuns join land grab

Farmer shoots settler dead

Msika: "Not defeated on Kondozi"

Kondozi farm worker shot by police

Nyambuya's workers desert farm

By Agencies

HUNDREDS of families evicted last month from a farm outside the Zimbabwean capital Harare, occupied under the land reform programme in 2000, have been granted a reprieve.

High Court Judge Rita Makarau ruled in favour of Percy Masendu and 429 other settlers who had filed an urgent court application to have their eviction nullified. Home Affairs Minister Kembo Mohadi and police commissioner Augustine Chihuri were cited as the first and second respondents.

In a similar case, Justice Ben Hlatshwayo also ruled in favour of 370 farmers facing eviction in Mashonaland West province.

Last month the government started evicting settlers from Little England Farm, occupied in 2000. Their homes were razed and they were forced to camp along a highway. The official reason given was that the settlers were occupying land earmarked for large-scale farming.

Critics say the small-scale farmers are being moved out to make way for senior politicians and members of the military, a charge denied by the government.

Makarau ordered that "the applicants, and all those claiming through them, be allowed to continue staying at Little England Farm until such time as they are properly resettled or evicted by an order of a competent court. The respondents, or any person acting through them or on their behalf, be interdicted from interfering with applicants' occupation of Little England Farm by unlawfully evicting them or destroying their dwellings."

When IRIN visited the farm on Saturday, the farmers who had been camping on the highway were returning to their razed homes.

Brian Zindi, one of those returning to the farm, said although they were excited by the court order, the evictions had traumatised them and depleted their resources.

"We now need to look for resources to build new houses, and that will be a very costly exercise. Out of desperation, we had sold some of our cattle, goats and sheep. Our children were preparing to write end-of-year course examinations, but what we now face is a small ... crisis," he told IRIN.

Zindi said they would now require food aid, as they had sold most of the grains they harvested this year. "Most settlers were selling their goods in order to raise enough money to transport their families and belongings to their [home] areas."
IRIN
JOIN THE DEBATE ON THIS ARTICLE ON THE NEWZIMBABWE.COM FORUMS

newsdesk@newzimbabwe.com


All material copyright newzimbabwe.com
Material may be published or reproduced in any form with appropriate credit to this website