NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Ex-presidenti­al aide’s sons in land rage

- BY VANESSA GONYE Follow Vanessa on Twitter @vanessa_gonye

FORMER Deputy Chief Secretary in the Office of the President and Cabinet, Justin Mupamhanga’s sons have been taken to court for destroying at least eight hectares of a maize crop belonging to their neighbour, Soul Gomwe in a farm boundary dispute in Mashonalan­d Central province.

The two farmers have been embroiled in a fierce boundary dispute since 2002 with Mupamhanga allegedly encroachin­g into Gomwe’s farm.

The dispute later spilled into the High Court after government officials failed to resolve it.

In a matter heard on 21 and 23 July last year, Gomwe, as the applicant, appealed against the Zimbabwe Land Commission’s failure to conduct oral hearings at the disputed properties.

In his judgment, Justice Happius Zhou said: “The irregulari­ties arising out of a failure to follow the procedures peremptori­ly provided for by the law are serious. These irregulari­ties vitiate the proceeding­s by which the decision was reached.

“Accordingl­y, the decision cannot stand. It is ordered that (1) the decision of the first respondent made on 2 January 2019 be and is hereby set aside; (2) the matter is to be remitted to the second respondent for a fresh investigat­ion and resolution of the dispute between the applicant and 3rd respondent­s (Mupamhanga) in accordance with the procedures provided for in terms of the law.”

Justice Zhou ruled in Gomwe’s favour and ordered Lands minister, the Zimbabwe Land Commission and Mupamhanga to pay costs of the suit.

But on October 9, 2020, Mupamhanga’s sons, Kudakwashe and Kudzanayi allegedly hired gangsters and went to part of the disputed piece of land where Gomwe’s workers were planting maize.

They allegedly dismantled irrigation pipes and destroyed eight hectares of maize using a tractordra­wn disc.

Mupamhanga’s sons were arrested and are facing charges of malicious damage to property at the Bindura Magistrate­s’ Court. The matter is expected to be heard on March 18.

Gomwe’s employees were also arrested for threatenin­g to destroy Mupamhanga’s tractor, but the matter is yet to be set down for hearing.

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