Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

***The views expressed in the articles published on this website DO NOT necessarily express the views of the Commercial Farmers' Union.***

Zim house to go under hammer for farmers

Zim house to go under hammer for farmers

http://www.iol.co.za/

July 12 2013 at 01:17pm
By Xolani Koyana

Cape Town – A Zimbabwean government-owned property in the city will finally 
go under the hammer to compensate farmers whose land was seized, five years 
after it was attached by a court.

The property in Salisbury Road in Kenilworth was bought by the Zimbabwean 
government in 1994 and was used by the Zimbabwe Consulate in Cape Town.

In 2011, the South Gauteng High Court in Johannesburg ruled that the 
property could be auctioned off but the Zimbabwean government blocked the 
sale when it went to the Supreme Court of Appeal. It finally went to the 
Constitutional Court, which upheld the previous judgments and dismissed the 
case last month.

Willie Spies, a lawyer representing the farmers, said they wanted the 
auction to be held immediately. “There has been nothing arranged yet. But 
the sale will go ahead within the next four to six weeks,” he said.

Spies said that property could fetch anything between R1 million and R3m, 
which would be proportionally paid out to the three farmers and a German 
bank. He said the property had been occupied by a Cape Town family since 
2002, but they had vacated it because of the court action.

The farmers are Louis Fick, Michael Campbell and Richard Etheredge, whose 
farms were among about 4 000 seized during the violent land occupation that 
took place in Zimbabwe.

German banking group KFW Bank Gruppe and AfriForum, which has supported and 
represented the farmers, had initially attached two other properties in 
Zonnebloem and Wynberg. KFW Bank Gruppe had been owed more than e40 million 
by Zimbabwe.

All three properties were to go on auction in 2011, but this was halted by 
court action by the Zimbabwean government.

The South Gauteng High Court in Johannesburg ruled that the properties in 
Wynberg and Zonnebloem enjoyed diplomatic protection.

The Kenilworth property could be auctioned off because it was being rented 
out to a third party, which showed that it was being used commercially, and 
so no longer enjoyed diplomatic protection.

AfriForum said the property was attached by the Southern African Development 
Community Tribunal against the Zimbabwe government in 2008.

“The dismissal of the appeal by the Zimbabwean government means that, for 
the first time in international legal history, it will be possible to 
proceed with the legal sale of a property belonging to a state found guilty 
of gross human rights violations,” the organisation said.

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