Saturday, May 9, 2026 -Zimbabwe will return dozens of foreign-owned farms seized more than two decades ago during its land reform drive, though officials insist the overall policy is not being reversed.
Agriculture Minister Anxious Masuka announced on Friday that
the government will restore 67 farms that were protected by bilateral
investment pacts "but which remained unoccupied" to investors from
Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, and Switzerland.
The original land seizures, launched by former President
Robert Mugabe in 2000, saw thousands of white farmers evicted in a
redistribution effort aimed at addressing colonial-era injustices. However, the
policy led to international sanctions and significant economic isolation.
Under the new directive, more than 400 white farmers will be
permitted to buy back all or part of their former properties, and another 840
farms belonging to black Zimbabweans will be restored to their original owners.
Despite these concessions, Masuka emphasized that the broader
land reform remains a cornerstone of the nation's identity. He stated that
“land was a core grievance against the heinous and minority settler oppressive
regime,” and noted that the struggle was fought to "liberate ourselves
from the shackles of oppression."
He further declared that "now the people are with their
land and the land with its masters. Land reform is, therefore,
irreversible."
Critics and activists have questioned the move, with some
describing it as political flip-flopping. Social justice activist Tendai
Mbofana remarked that the policy is "characterised by a jarring disconnect
between its revolutionary rhetoric and its pragmatic concessions."
While President Emmerson Mnangagwa previously agreed to a
$3.5 billion compensation deal for evicted commercial farmers in 2020, the
country’s $21 billion debt has made honoring that commitment difficult. This
latest shift appears to be part of an effort to repair relations with Western
creditors as Zimbabwe continues to grapple with chronic food shortages in what
was once considered the region's breadbasket.

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