White farmers appeal to Trump to help recoup 3.5 billion from Zimbabwe

White farmers in Zimbabwe have pinned their hopes on the United States’ president, Donald Trump, to help fast-track the compensation they were promised after a violent revolt in the 2000s led to the confiscation of their lands.

White farmers appeal to Trump to help recoup 3.5 billion from Zimbabwe
White farmers turn to Trump to help recoup 3.5 billion from Zimbabwe

White farmers in Zimbabwe have pinned their hopes on the United States’ president, Donald Trump, to help fast-track the compensation they were promised after a violent revolt in the 2000s led to the confiscation of their lands.

  • White farmers in Zimbabwe, impacted by the violent land seizures in the 2000s, are seeking U.S. intervention to facilitate their promised compensation from the Zimbabwean government.
  • President Donald Trump has historically supported white farmers in Southern Africa, including by implementing strict sanctions against South Africa's land reform laws and reducing the U.S. refugee cap while prioritizing whites facing persecution.
  • A lobbying group, Mercury Public Affairs LLC, is actively working to secure U.S. governmental support for Zimbabwe's debt clearance in the context of generating funds necessary for compensating farmers.
  • Zimbabwe's government pledged to compensate affected farmers, planning to spend $3.5 billion over ten years; however, economic constraints have led to delayed payments.

The U.S. president, who has been very consistent and proactive with aiding farmers of European descent in South Africa, considered disenfranchised and classified as refugees.

Since May 2025, Donald Trump has been providing visas or other types of assistance to white South African farmers who claim to be facing persecution or land seizures because of their race, which has created quite a stir in recent years.

This came to light after President Trump and Elon Musk publicly criticized South Africa's land reform laws, which they branded as racist.

Trump had also imposed strict sanctions against the South African government following the introduction of land reform laws.

Donald Trump and Cyril Ramaphosa
Donald Trump and Cyril Ramaphosa

Later in October, Donald Trump announced a drastic reduction in refugee admissions, cutting the annual cap from 125,000 to just 7,500 while giving priority to white South Africans.

This trend seems to be cutting across the Southern African region as Mercury Public Affairs LLC, a US lobbying group with connections to Trump, has pledged to advocate for the farmers before American officials without charging a fee, according to a previously undisclosed Foreign Agents Registration Act statement filed last month.

Mercury has been assigned the job of convincing the US government to support Zimbabwe's debt clearance process and the creation of new financial arrangements that could "generate the funds necessary to satisfy" the duties of the government to reimburse farmers, according to the letter.

Dror Besserglik, managing director of Johannesburg-based OB Projects Management, described the extent of Mercury's engagement in a letter dated December 2 that was part of the FARA filing, as seen on Bloomberg.

“The services you will provide include contacting appropriate officials in the current administration and Congress to promote paying the Zimbabwean farmers,” Besserglik wrote to Lanza.

Mercury Public Affairs LLC has represented the Zimbabwean government in Washington from 2019 to 2021, during which the country reportedly paid a monthly retainer of US$90,000 to campaign against US sanctions.

Zimbabwe’s recent history with white farmers

In May 2024, around 1,300 Zimbabwean farmers in the Southern African country, whose land was seized in the early 2000s,

“We now have to go through the process of vetting them and confirming the amounts that they are owed,” Andrew Bvumbe, head of debt management in the Ministry of Finance, said in an interview at the time.

“With these 1,300, we want to move as quickly as possible. Maybe by the end of the third quarter of this year, we want to get this out of the way,” he added.

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The Zimbabwean government, under Emmerson Mnangagwa, pledged to compensate 4,000 White farmers whose land was taken by state-backed militants under a 2020 agreement, but it has consistently missed payment deadlines.

Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa.
Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

The administration projects spending $3.5 billion over ten years on the compensation agreement.

Late Zimbabwean president, Robert Mugabe, started the Fast-Track Land Reform Program (FTLRP) in 2000, intending to seize commercial farms owned by whites.

State-backed militias frequently used force or intimidation to seize land.

Approximately 4,000 commercial farms were impacted, significantly lowering Zimbabwe's commercial agricultural output.

Following Mugabe's removal in 2017, the Mnangagwa administration was under pressure to resolve longstanding land conflicts.

In 2020, the Zimbabwean government agreed to pay 4,000 white farmers, committing $3.5 billion over ten years.

Payment delays were common due to economic restrictions and debt pressures.