OVER 500 illegal settlers at the Anglican Church-owned
Cyrene Farm in Figtree, Matabeleland South, were on Wednesday served with a
2003 High Court order directing them to vacate the property within seven days.
The High Court in 2003 directed that the settlers be
evicted, but the deputy sheriff, under unclear circumstances, did not serve the
order.
According to church officials, the deputy sheriff together
with the church lawyers finally served the eviction papers to the settlers on
Wednesday, two decades after the farm was occupied at the height of the chaotic
land reform programme in 2000.
The order granted by High Court judge Justice George
Chiweshe reads: “The respondents and any persons claiming through them as well
as other persons presently in unlawful occupation of Cyrene Farm, Figtree, be
and are hereby ordered to vacate Cyrene Farm together with all their property
and possessions immediately upon service of this order, failing which the
deputy sheriff of Bulawayo with the assistance of officer-in-charge Figtree are
hereby authorised and directed to evict the respondents.”
Church authorities were concerned about the new wave of
invasions as settlers were encroaching onto the church’s Cyrene High School
grounds.
Officials said if the settlers did not leave the farm by
Wednesday next week, a forced ejection would be conducted in accordance with
the court order.
Farm workers and church officials said of late, the
invasions had escalated, with the settlers allegedly vandalising fencing
material and destroying the environment as they pan for gold.
Church authorities recently appealed to President Emmerson
Mnangagwa to intervene and stop what they described as lawlessness and wanton
illegal occupation of Cyrene Farm. Matabeleland South police spokesperson Chief
Inspector Philisani Ndebele recently urged the church to secure a court order
so that police could assist them with evictions. Newsday
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