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HARARE: Zimbabwe on Wednesday signed a US$3.5 billion compensation agreement with white farmers whose land was seized over 20 years ago under the country's controversial reforms.

Then president Robert Mugabe forcibly took more than 4,000 farms from the country's 4,500 white large-scale commercial farmers.

The compensation is for built structures including farmhouses and irrigation systems on the farms which were redistributed to landless blacks.

But as the cash-strapped government does not have the funds to make the payouts, a committee made up of farmers and donors has been tasked with raising the money.

"In the agreement we have given ourselves 12 months to run around the world, around Zimbabwe to think of ways of raising this funding," Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube said at the signing ceremony in Harare.

"We are determined that we achieve that. It's also about pledges not necessarily about cash being put on the table. It's about commitment."

Zimbabwe launched controversial land reforms in the year 2000 when ruling ZANU-PF party activists and veterans of the 1970s liberation seized large swathes of farms.

Mugabe justified the land grabs as a way to correct historical wrongs by claiming back land that was forcibly taken from the nation's blacks.

Critics blame Mugabe's land programme for wreaking havoc on the agriculture sector - a mainstay of the economy.

Economic output fell by half following the land seizures, and the economy has been hobbled ever since.

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