WINDHOEK (Reuters) - A southern African tribunal ruled on Friday that Zimbabwe's planned seizure of dozens of white-owned farms violates international law and must be halted immediately (see judgment here).
The ruling by the Southern African Development Community tribunal (SADC) in Windhoek, Namibia, came amid growing impatience in South Africa and elsewhere in the region with Zimbabwe's deepening political and economic crisis.
"The applicants have been discriminated against on the grounds of race," the tribunal said in ruling in favour of more than 75 white Zimbabwean farmers who challenged the legality of a controversial land redistribution programme begun in 2000.
"The (Zimbabwe) government is directed to take all necessary measures through its agents to protect the possession, occupation and ownership of the land by the applicants."
The tribunal also ordered that a handful of farmers whose land had already been confiscated should be compensated by June 30, 2009.
The court's ruling will likely embarrass President Robert Mugabe's government but will almost certainly not divert Harare from its current plan to carry with its land reform programme.