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Zimbabwe makes first compensation payments to white farmers over land seizures

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Zimbabwe makes first compensation payments to white farmers over land seizures
News

News

Zimbabwe makes first compensation payments to white farmers over land seizures

2025-04-11 03:08 Last Updated At:03:11

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — Zimbabwe says it has started paying compensation to white farmers who lost land and property more than 20 years ago in controversial and often-violent farm seizures, a move the government hopes will help thaw icy relations with the West.

Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube said the government has approved the disbursement of $3.1 million, the first such payment under a deal signed between President Emmerson Mnangagwa and dispossessed white farmers in 2020.

Ncube said in a statement this week that the amount is equivalent to 1% of the total compensation claim of $311 million. He said 740 farms have been approved for compensation, with 378 benefiting from the first batch of payments.

About 4,000 white farmers lost their homes and swaths of land when the Black-majority country’s then-president, Robert Mugabe, launched the often-chaotic redistribution program in 2000.

Mugabe, who died in 2019, justified the evictions on the need to address colonial-era land inequities after the southern African nation gained independence from white minority rule in 1980.

A few thousand farmers owned most of the country’s prime farmland before the land reform, which saw about 300,000 Black families resettled on the acquired land, according to government figures.

The compensation for the former white farmers is not for the land, but for infrastructure such as buildings, wells and irrigation equipment.

According to the deal, the farmers would receive 1% of their claim in cash, with the balance being settled through the issuance of treasury bonds. The government issued treasury bonds related to the first batch of farmers last week, said Ncube.

The government also paid out an initial $20 million in February to foreign farmers from Denmark, Germany, Netherlands, Switzerland and several countries in Eastern Europe as compensation in connection with the land reform program, despite bilateral agreements protecting such property from seizure.

The compensation payments are part of conditions of a debt resolution and international re-engagement strategy by Zimbabwe after years of sanctions and isolation by the United States and other Western countries.

The U.S. and the European Union imposed sanctions on Zimbabwe and dozens of its officials, citing human rights abuses that included violent attacks on white farmers and seizures of their land. Those measures have been gradually eased over the years, although Mnangagwa and some members of his inner circle remain under sanctions.

Mnangagwa has shown signs of rapprochement with the U.S., supporting some of President Donald Trump’s controversial decisions. In February, he backed Trump’s moves to deport undocumented migrants. Last week, he offered support to Trump’s harsh tariff regime and said Zimbabwe in response would slash tariffs on U.S. imported goods to zero “in the spirit of constructing a mutually beneficial and positive relationship.”

FILE - From left: Katrina Liebenberg,17, together with her cousin Natalie van Staden, Natalie's mother Maria, brother Chad, 11, sister Lee-Ann, 17, and grandmother Aletta, on the back verandah of the farm cottage, March 2, 2000, where they have been besieged for four days by Zimbabwe War Veterans. (AP Photo/Rob Cooper, file)

FILE - From left: Katrina Liebenberg,17, together with her cousin Natalie van Staden, Natalie's mother Maria, brother Chad, 11, sister Lee-Ann, 17, and grandmother Aletta, on the back verandah of the farm cottage, March 2, 2000, where they have been besieged for four days by Zimbabwe War Veterans. (AP Photo/Rob Cooper, file)

FILE - Zimbabwe farm squatters burn a field of standing crops at Chirobi Farm, about 43 miles (70 kms) north of Harare, Nov. 11, 2000. (AP Photo, File)

FILE - Zimbabwe farm squatters burn a field of standing crops at Chirobi Farm, about 43 miles (70 kms) north of Harare, Nov. 11, 2000. (AP Photo, File)

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10 killed in Philippines when passenger bus slams into vehicles at a toll booth

2025-05-02 14:24 Last Updated At:14:30

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — A speeding passenger bus slammed into a row of vehicles lined up at a highway toll booth Thursday in the northern Philippines, killing 10 people, including children, police said.

More than two dozen others were injured in the multiple-vehicle collision in Tarlac city, north of Manila, at a heavy travel time on May Day holiday, police said.

The bus driver, who was among the injured, was taken into custody and initially told investigators that he dozed off shortly before the crash, Tarlac police chief Lt. Col. Romel Santos told reporters.

The bus crashed into a van, which was lined up with three other vehicles at the toll booth. Eight of the dead, including children, were in the van, which was pinned between the wayward bus from behind and another car in front, police said.

A couple died in a car in the collisions that happened around midday in the scorching summer heat, police said, adding that many of the injured were bus passengers.

Vehicular accidents are common in the Philippines because of poor enforcement of safety and traffic regulations, faulty vehicles and reckless driving.

This story corrects the death toll according to police.

In this handout photo provided by the Philippine Red Cross, rescuers check the site of a multiple-vehicle collision after a speeding passenger bus slammed into a row of vehicles lined up at a highway toll booth killing about a dozen people in Tarlac city, north of Manila, Philippines on Thursday May 1, 2025. (Philippine Red Cross via AP)

In this handout photo provided by the Philippine Red Cross, rescuers check the site of a multiple-vehicle collision after a speeding passenger bus slammed into a row of vehicles lined up at a highway toll booth killing about a dozen people in Tarlac city, north of Manila, Philippines on Thursday May 1, 2025. (Philippine Red Cross via AP)

In this handout photo provided by the Philippine Red Cross, rescuers check the site of a multiple-vehicle collision after a speeding passenger bus slammed into a row of vehicles lined up at a highway toll booth killing about a dozen people in Tarlac city, north of Manila, Philippines on Thursday May 1, 2025. (Philippine Red Cross via AP)

In this handout photo provided by the Philippine Red Cross, rescuers check the site of a multiple-vehicle collision after a speeding passenger bus slammed into a row of vehicles lined up at a highway toll booth killing about a dozen people in Tarlac city, north of Manila, Philippines on Thursday May 1, 2025. (Philippine Red Cross via AP)

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