Use the pull-down menus to find more stories
  


OR subscribers use AllAfrica's premium search engine


Click here to read or make comments on this topic »

Zimbabwe: Farmers Want to Go On Farming


The Namibian (Windhoek)
 

Email This Page

Print This Page

Comment on this article

The Namibian (Windhoek)

22 July 2008
Posted to the web 22 July 2008

Brigitte Weidlich

"I HAVE lost all my three farms I bought since Zimbabwe's independence in 1980, the last one two months ago, all highly productive farms," says Deon Theron.

His voice falters, his strikingly blue eyes fill with tears, and the elderly man sitting next to him, Zach Freeth, puts his hand on Theron's shoulder.

Theron swallows, collects himself and continues.

"We, the white farmers in Zimbabwe, are not against land reform, but it should be done according to the law and the change of ownership should not result in loss of productivity.

Over 200 more farmers are facing eviction.

"We don't even get compensation."

The scene is a Windhoek law office where a press conference was held on Friday afternoon by a group of Zimbabwean farmers who attended a two-day session of the SADC Tribunal in Windhoek last week.

A judgement in this landmark case, in which the farmers argue that farm evictions in Zimbabwe are unconstitutional and smacked of racial discrimination, is expected within a few weeks.

Only about 400 farmers are left of Zimbabwe's once 4 000-strong white farming community before the country embarked on its 'fast-track' land reform ten years ago.

Zach Freeth, a retired British army colonel who spent two years in Zimbabwe straight after independence to train that country's top defence force officers, never dreamt that his 38-year-old son, sitting next to Theron, would end up in a wheelchair.

The soles of Freeth Junior's feet were severely beaten by so-called Zimbabwean war veterans three weeks ago.

He also suffered a 12-centimetre skull fracture and underwent brain surgery last week to remove a blood clot.

Ben Freeth's right eye is still bloodshot and bruises on his face are a grim reminder of the dreadful nine-hour ordeal, when he and his in-laws, 76-year-old Michael and 66-year-old Angela Campbell, were abducted from the family farm Mount Carmel near Chegutu, 100 km west of Harare.

They were beaten, assaulted and forced to sign a piece of paper declaring that they would withdraw the court case at the regional tribunal of the Southern African Development Community (SADC).

Freeth senior and his wife flew to Harare after their son was assaulted so badly that he can only walk a few steps at a time and will have to rely on a wheelchair for months to come.

"We prayed during this ordeal, not for us, but for those who assaulted us," Ben Freeth says quietly.

"We thought we would die that night, there was a feeling of peace in me, no hatred for our assaulters, that can only come from God, humans usually do not act like that," he adds.

Testing legality of farm seizures six years ago, as a regional official for the Zimbabwe Commercial Farmers' Union, Freeth told its annual general meeting that the accelerated land reform required a legal opinion, after over 1 400 farms were listed in a newspaper as being expropriated by the government in one go.

At the same meeting, he quoted from the Bible's Book of Deuteronomy, that a nation that does not regard God and does not maintain law and order would be destroyed.

Unfortunately for Freeth, several Zimbabwean cabinet ministers attended the 2002 AGM and told its leadership: "That man must go."

Freeth was suspended without pay with immediate effect.

His father-in-law, Michael Campbell, appealed to the Zimbabwean Supreme Court to keep their farm, but was turned down.

In 2005, the SADC Tribunal was constituted.

Campbell's lawyers brought the case before the tribunal and the first hearing took place last December, granting himself, his family, his farmworkers and their families interim protection, ordering the Zimbabwe government not to interfere with their lives and farm activities until a final ruling was made.

Order ignored in March this year, 77 more Zimbabwean farmers joined the Campbell case and the SADC tribunal gave them a similar protection order.

This order was breached on Sunday afternoon, June 29 2008, when thugs calling themselves war veterans arrived on the farm, looting the Campbell farmhouse and abducting the couple in their own vehicle.

Relevant Links

Also abducted was son-in-law Ben Freeth, who drove from his house 1,5 km away to try and rescue them.

Page 1 of 212

Read comments. Write your own.


AllAfrica aggregates and indexes content from over 125 African news organizations, plus more than 200 other sources, who are responsible for their own reporting and views. Articles and commentaries that identify allAfrica.com as the publisher are produced or commissioned by AllAfrica.


 
Share this on:
Facebook
Digg
Del.icio.us
StumbleUpon
Muti


Make allAfrica.com your home page | RSS Feed
Sign up for FREE daily 'top headlines' by email >>

Top | Site Guide | Who We Are | Advertising | Search | My Account

Questions or Comments? Contact us. Read our Privacy Statement.


Relevant Links




Agribusiness


at a Glance





Today's Most Active Stories