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The Southern African Development Community says it will monitor the progress of national dialogue between Zimbabwe's government and opposition leaders aimed at ending 18-months of unrest. However incidents of violence are still being reported.

Zimbabwe's government and opposition will embark on a 'national dialogue'
aimed at ending 18-months of violent unrest, the chairman of a summit of
regional leaders meeting on the crisis in Harare said on Wednesday.

The Associated Press reported that President Bakili Muluzi of Malawi, the chair
of the 14-nation Southern African Development Community (SADC), said nations
in the region would monitor a special committee that would include
representatives of President Robert Mugabe's government and the opposition.

Speaking at a late-night press conference at the close of the two-day
meeting, Muluzi said regional leaders accepted Mugabe's assurances that
there would be an end to violence and intimidation linked to the transfer of
some 5,000 white-owned farms to landless blacks.

However, anxiety remained within the farming community over Mugabe's
commitment amid reports on Wednesday that ruling party militants assaulted a
farmer in eastern Zimbabwe.

A white farmer barricaded himself in his home near Marondera, about 70km
east of Harare after being assaulted earlier in the day by a group of about
15 militants, the Commercial Farmers Union said in a statement. The farmer,
evicted from his farm by militants last month, was advised by police to
return home on Wednesday despite government pledges to ensure the safety of
landowners, the union said in a statement. On his return, the militants
'immediately set upon him, forcing him to seek refuge inside the house.
There was no reaction from police,' the statement said.

The farmer was not identified. However, in a sign that the police were
beginning to crack down, a four-day siege by militants on a farm near
Beatrice, 80 km south of Harare, was broken up by the police, AP reported.
Police freed the white farm manager who had been barricaded in his
homestead, the union said. No immediate comment was available from the
government or police on the incident in Marondera. Union officials said that
on two nearby farms, militants forced farm workers and their families to
attend all-night political meetings where they were had to chant ruling
party slogans and pledge loyalty to the government.