The Portuguese Foreign Ministry said Braga would meet Zimbabwes Foreign Minister Simbarashe Mumbengegwi and Deputy Prime Minister Arthur Mutambara.
It is not clear how many Portuguese nationals are farming in Zimbabwe.
Foreign investors have been jittery about pumping money into Zimbabwe amid fears that it has failed to honour bilateral investment promotion and protection agreements (BIPPAs) signed with other countries.
The advent of the land reform programme in 2000 saw President Robert Mugabes former regime acquiring white-owned farms including agricultural investments covered by BIPPAs, resulting in disputes with foreign investors.
But several foreign nationals whose farms in Zimbabwe were seized by the government have dragged the Harare administration before international and regional courts demanding compensation for the loss of their properties.
A group of Dutch nationals won its case against the Harare regime in April 2009 after appealing to the International Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) in Paris for compensation for loss their properties.
The Dutch farmers argued that their properties were protected by a bilateral investment treaty under which Harare promised to pay full compensation to Dutch nationals in disputes arising out of any investments in Zimbabwe.
Post published in: News

