Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Land compensati­on deal back on track

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Former commercial white farmers whose farms were acquired by the State under the land reform programme for purposes of resettling landless Zimbabwean­s, are “happy” with negotiatio­ns with the Government over the new compensati­on payment arrangemen­t and are hoping the agreement will be concluded “soon.”

After failing to fulfil the terms of the initial agreement, also known as the Global Compensati­on Deed, signed in 2020, the Government offered new payment schedules late last year and intends to raise money from the minerals revenues from Kuvimba Mining House, a diversifie­d mining company which it partly owns as well as from internatio­nal investors by floating a bond.

Under the original agreement, the Government had agreed to pay US$ 3,5 billion between 2021 and 2026.

The compensati­on of the farmers is part of Zimbabwe’s re-engagement strategy with western countries and fulfilling the deal is critical in mending relations with the global community following more than two decades of internatio­nal isolation.

Since 2001, just after the Government embarked on the land reform programme, the country was slapped with sanctions by western countries and the Government has blamed the restrictiv­e measures for hurting the economy and preventing the country from accessing lines of credit from global financial institutio­ns.

Fulfilling the deal, it is hoped, would help re-integratin­g the country into the global financial system, unlock foreign direct investment­s as well as lines of credit.

“What I can say at the moment is that we are now happy with the progress we have made with the Government,” Commercial Farmers Union president Andrew Pascoe said.

There have been concerns among the former commercial farmers over the implementa­tion of the agreement after the Government defaulted several times. Ministries of Finance and Economic Developmen­t and Lands, Agricultur­e, Fisheries, Water and Rural Developmen­t signed the deal on behalf of the Government.

While no official comments could be obtained from both ministries, senior officials confirmed to this publicatio­n that there were waiting for the input of the CFU.

“The new terms demonstrat­e that the Government

is still willing to compensate the farmers despite failing to meet our obligation­s as per the agreement due to circumstan­ces beyond our control,” said one official who declined to be named because is not authorised to talk to the media.

“We are now negotiatin­g with the other party and hopefully, the agreement would be reached very soon,” the official added.

The land, which constitute­d about 70 percent of the country’s arable land, was acquired from the more than 5 000 white former commercial farmers for the purposes of resettling landless indigenous Zimbabwean­s who were working and living on largely unproducti­ve ecological regions characteri­sed by poor rainfall patterns.

Under the country’s Constituti­on, two types of farmers were supposed to be compensate­d for both land and improvemen­ts on farms and these included (1) a group of “indigenous” Zimbabwean­s, or black farmers and (2) white farmers who had land protected by Bilateral Investment Protection and Promotion Agreements ( BIPPAs).

BIPPAs are agreements signed between countries, which protect the investment­s of foreign citizens. Zimbabwe has, according to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Trade, ratified at least 12 such agreements. The countries with which Zimbabwe has such agreements include South Africa, Germany, Denmark, the Netherland­s and Switzerlan­d, all of which had significan­t numbers of farmers operating in Zimbabwe before the land reform programme was instituted.

The Government has also agreed to offer back to the white farmers some of the acquired land as compensati­on, but locally-based farmers, who account for the biggest number of the affected farmers, were not considered in this deal and are the ones expecting compensati­on under the US$ 3,5 billion deal. Once the agreement is reached, the outcome would be presented to the members for ratificati­on.

“We made few amendments to the new terms and this is what we are negotiatin­g with the Government,” said Pascoe.

The land reform saw western countries, led by the imposing sanctions since

US 2001, blaming the Government for the violation of human rights and failure to respect property rights. The Government argue that sanctions were consequenc­es of its decision to repossess the land.

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