JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - Zimbabwe's government will defy a southern Africa tribunal ruling (see here) to stop the seizure of white-owned farms and will continue its land reforms, a state-run newspaper on Monday quoted a minister as saying.
A South African Development Community tribunal ruled on Friday that Zimbabwe's planned seizure of dozens of white-owned farms violated international law and should be halted immediately.
It said Zimbabwe should take all measures to protect the possessions and property of 75 white farmers who challenged the legality of a contested land reform programme, and also ordered other farmers be compensated for land taken.
But Didymus Mutasa, minister of state for national security, lands, land reform and resettlement, was quoted in the Herald newspaper as saying President Robert Mugabe's government would ignore the judgement.
"They (the tribunal) are day-dreaming because we are not going to reverse the land reform exercise," he said.
"There is nothing special about the 75 farmers and we will take more farms. It's not discrimination against farmers, but correcting land imbalances," he said.