
Zimbabwe issues Dollar Bonds to pay ex-farmers for land grabs
A Land Compensation Committee has approved compensation for 740 former farm owners, with the first 378 farmers paid 1% of the total compensation value of $311-million in late March as well as receiving Treasury bonds, Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube said.
Following the cash payment the balance is 'being paid in US dollar denominated Treasury bonds with a 2% coupon and maturities of two to 10 years,' Ncube said Wednesday in a statement. The bonds, issued last week, can be sold and held by other market players including pension funds before their maturity date, he said.
The Compensation Steering Committee's Chairperson and former Commercial Farmer's Union President Andrew Pascoe confirmed receipt of the payments. The former farm owners received dollar payments on March 24, he added.
The payment is the latest attempt to resolve the decades-long dispute triggered by former Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe encouraging veterans of the liberation war to evict farmers and their workers from their land in a bid to win support in a close-fought election in 2000. By 2002 at least seven White farmers had been killed alongside dozens of their workers, Human Rights Watch said.
That contributed to sanctions being imposed on Zimbabwean politicians by the US, UK and the European Union leading to the southern African nation's protracted fallout with the West.
Zimbabwe, also has a history of not paying its debts. It has been locked out of international capital markets since 1999 after it defaulted on debt from lenders including the World Bank, Paris Club and African Development Bank.
In February, Zimbabwe began paying compensation to five nations namely Denmark, Germany, Netherlands, Switzerland and the former Yugoslavia and to 56 foreign nationals who despite having their farms protected under bilateral agreements had them seized. The compensation is a crucial step demanded by foreign creditors as the southern African nation seeks to restructure its debt. Zimbabwe owes 57% of its $21-billion debt pile to external creditors.
© Copyright The Zimbabwean. All rights reserved. Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. (Syndigate.info).
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Sharjah 24
19 minutes ago
- Sharjah 24
US agrees to talks with Brazilian WTO delegates on tariffs
Brazil approached the global trade body in early August after President Donald Trump raised duties on more than a third of US-bound exports from the Latin American powerhouse, including key items like coffee, beef, and sugar. Trump hit Brazil with some of his highest tariff rates as punishment for what he calls a "witch hunt" against his ally, former far-right president Jair Bolsonaro, who is on trial for allegedly plotting to attempt a coup. "The United States accepts the request of Brazil to enter into consultations," read a letter dated August 15 from the Washington WTO delegation and published on the organization's website. "We stand ready to confer with officials from your mission on a mutually convenient date for consultations," it continued. The US letter cautioned that some of the issues raised by Brazil "are issues of national security not susceptible to review or capable of resolution by WTO dispute settlement." The WTO consultation process involves seeking a negotiated solution before moving into arbitration. Trump's tariff order also charged that the Brazilian government's recent policies and actions threatened the US economy, national security, and foreign policy. Unlike most countries targeted by Washington's reciprocal tariffs, the United States runs a trade surplus with Brazil, not a deficit.


Fintech News ME
32 minutes ago
- Fintech News ME
BurjX Secures UAE Digital Asset Platform with Fireblocks Infrastructure
BurjX, a UAE-based digital asset trading platform licensed for both brokerage and custody services by the Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA) of the ADGM, has announced it is using Fireblocks, an enterprise platform that provides digital asset infrastructure solutions, to support its trading and custody operations. Amid reports of over US$2.17 billion lost to crypto theft in the first half of 2025, and with only 22% of exchanges offering full insurance coverage, BurjX aims to provide additional protection through Fireblocks' infrastructure and comprehensive insurance underwritten by Relm Insurance, a specialty insurer for digital assets. The platform, built on technology capable of handling one million transactions per second, combines speed, scale and security. At the heart of its custody system is Fireblocks' MPC wallet technology, which secures user assets through advanced cryptography, eliminating single points of failure. Private keys are never exposed, and each transaction is protected by role-based access, automated policy controls and multi-layer authorisation procedures. 'BurjX is entering the market with a clear commitment to regulatory compliance and security-first infrastructure,' said Stephen Richardson, Chief Strategy Officer at Fireblocks. 'We're proud to provide the MPC wallet infrastructure that enables BurjX to operate securely, giving users confidence and control as the UAE's digital asset ecosystem grows.' To enhance compliance and risk monitoring, BurjX has integrated Notabene to comply with the Travel Rule and Chainalysis to monitor transactions and on-chain activity, ensuring transparency and alignment with international anti-money laundering standards. 'All digital asset custody at BurjX, from hot wallets supporting active trading to cold wallets for long-term storage, is underpinned by Fireblocks infrastructure,' said Omar Abbas, Co-Founder and CEO of BurjX. 'This foundation gives our users confidence that their assets are protected by industry-leading security, covered by comprehensive insurance, and fully compliant with one of the world's most rigorous regulatory frameworks.' In addition to enterprise-grade wallet security, BurjX provides comprehensive insurance across both hot and cold wallets, offering protection against internal and external threats. This approach enables both individual and institutional users to access liquidity, fast execution and secure custody on a single, integrated platform. By adopting Fireblocks, BurjX reinforces its focus on providing a regulated and secure digital asset trading environment in the UAE.


Tahawul Tech
an hour ago
- Tahawul Tech
satellite deployment plans Archives
"The current supply is not adequate to meet the demand from large data centres and will not be adequate in the foreseeable future". Learn more about the resulting strain on the U.S. electricity grid below. #tahawultech #DataCentres #EnergyGrid