In the late 90's the Government of Zimbabwe held a conference on land reform in Zimbabwe. Broad agreement was reached between the State, the stakeholders and international aid agencies but the agreement was never implemented. Two years later, in an attempt to destroy the opposition base on commercial farms, the State began what it eventually called the 'Fast Track Land Reform' exercise.
They justified this programme to the rest of the world by arguing that they were redressing historical injustices and racial imbalances in the ownership of the land. The reform programme ignored the legal situation prevailing in respect to farm ownership and it also ignored the issue of fair and reasonable compensation for assets taken over by the State.
The legal position was quite straight forward - commercial farmers held full freehold title and in over 80 per cent of cases, also held a 'certificate of no interest' issued by the Zimbabwe government allowing them to buy the farms on the open market after 1980. Such a requirement was mandatory - in order to enable the State to acquire the farms if they so wished, on a willing seller, willing buyer basis. Some 3,8 million hectares of farmland was in fact acquired in this way since 1980.
Farmers holding both the title and the certificates held an unassailable legal right to the land and all improvements. By so doing they held the right to receive in full, the market value of such assets when they were sold, less any bond obligations to banks.
In the following 8 years, thousands of farms were 'acquired' with the regime changing the law every time a farmer or group of farmers secured legal judgements in their favour. Eventually a group of farmers took their case to the SADC Legal Tribunal in Windhoek, Namibia where they initially obtained a decision saying that they had the right to go to the Tribunal on the issue (the State had apposed the action) and subsequently secured a ruling in favour of the farmers - instructing the Government of Zimbabwe to protect the farmers legal rights.
One small group of affected farmers also enjoyed the protection of a 'Bilateral Investment Protection Agreement' signed between the Government of Zimbabwe and the farmers home Government. A group of farmers of Dutch origin who had invested after Independence and were protected by the BIPA took their case to the international Courts in the Hague. Last week the highest legal tribunal in the world ruled in favour of the Dutch investors and granted them nearly 22 million dollars in compensation, payable in 90 days.