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Zimbabwe farmer asks tribunal to hear land case

Reuters

Tue 11 Dec 2007, 19:04 GMT

By John Grobler

WINDHOEK, Dec 11 (Reuters) - A Zimbabwean farmer on Tuesday asked a regional
tribunal to help block President Robert Mugabe's government from seizing his
family's farm in a case that could draw Zimbabwe's neighbours into its
thorny land redistribution debate.

The Southern African Development Community (SADC) tribunal in the Namibian
capital Windhoek must rule that it has jurisdiction over the matter if
farmer Mike Campbell is to have any hope of saving the farm.

"If this application is successful, it will raise the matter to an entirely
new level within SADC that will put the Zimbabwean government at odds with
the other member countries," Adrian de Bourbon, Campbell's lawyer, said.

SADC, a regional grouping of 14 African nations that includes Zimbabwe, is
trying to mediate an end to a political and economic crisis in the southern
African nation that threatens to destabilise the region.

The bloc has asked South African President Thabo Mbeki to help broker an
agreement between Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF party and the main opposition
party ahead of general elections scheduled for 2008.

Mugabe's government, often accused of human rights abuses, stifling
political dissent and running Zimbabwe's economy into the ground, has seized
thousands of white-owned farms and redistributed the land to blacks since
2000.

Less than 600 white farmers are still on their land, compared to 4,500 seven
years ago. Zimbabwean officials, however, are continuing with the seizures
and are opposing Campbell's bid to have his farm exempted from confiscation.

Zimbabwe's government says Campbell has not exhausted legal remedies
available to him in Zimbabwe, an argument rejected by his lawyer.

If successful in getting the SADC tribunal to declare jurisdiction, Campbell
intends to file an application for urgent interim relief against the seizure
of his farm in the same court.

A decision is expected later this week. (Editing by Bate Felix, Paul Simao
and Peter Millership)


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Zimbabweans sleeping at banks

News24

11/12/2007 19:09  - (SA)

Chris Muronzi

Harare - Zimbabweans are now sleeping in bank queues as the country's cash
shortages persist, reports said.

A state news agency, New Ziana, reported that increasingly more Zimbabweans
are now spending the night in bank queues in a desperate bid to get cash.

Others join the queues as early as dawn but sometimes go home empty handed
or with a paltry withdrawal.

Banks have set withdrawal limits of up to Z$20m (R120) for individuals and
Z$40m (R240) for companies.

The country's central bank says it is planning a currency changeover in the
near future but has not hinted when it would be done.

Central bank chief Gideon Gono says he is deliberately starving the market
of cash to fight illegal foreign currency dealers.

But foreign currency dealers have already found a way around the cash
problem - they pay a better rate electronically and make out an invoice to
avoid trouble with the banks.

The reports also said the public had appealed to banks to extend banking
hours but analysts say extending business hours will not help much as most
banks run out of cash by mid-day.

Investigations by Fin24 last month revealed that since the cash shortages
started, a number of individuals have been buying cash after banks imposed
limits.

Say one needs Z$100m (R600) in cash, he/she would have to transfer Z$120m or
more electronically, a 20% premium on cash received.

It also emerged that the practice has been prevalent for some time.

After the central bank imposed limits on cash withdrawals last year,
individuals and firms have been courting cash-rich individuals and firms for
instant cash at a premium.

Mostly fast foods operators and mobile air-time dealers are the "cash
barons" smiling all the way to the banks.

Zimbabwe is in the throes of an economic crisis charecterised by high
inflation now believed to be above 15 000%. Critics blame President Robert
Mugabe for the country's economic crisis.

- Fin24


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Mediated talks conclude and skepticism remains over Mugabe’s commitment



By Tererai Karimakwenda
10 December, 2007

The talks between ZANU-PF and the MDC, mediated by South African President
Thabo Mbeki, are reported to have concluded on Monday. According to
journalist Peta Thornycroft, who spoke to diplomats closely following the
progress of the talks, they ended after ZANU-PF’s Patrick Chinamasa and
Nicholas Goche were called back from Johannesburg to Harare to prepare for
the party’s extra-ordinary Congress. She said negotiators left Johannesburg
on Monday and the few bits that remain to be sorted will be concluded in
Harare.

Thornycroft said electoral amendments and a new Constitution have been
agreed to, and all the legal work is done. What is left are the details as
to the timing. The MDC want a period of 6 months after signing a deal,
before elections are held. Thornycroft said she fears that Mugabe will
insist on elections in March, before the new constitution agreed on is put
in place.
In that case, it is believed the MDC will register a complaint with Mbeki,
then withdraw from the elections, if Mbeki fails to convince Mugabe.

Thornycroft explained that Mbeki lured the MDC into supporting Amendment 18,
which harmonised the elections and gave Mugabe the power to appoint a
successor, by guaranteeing that a new constitution would be in place before
the elections. Voting for Amendment 18 alongside ZANU-PF in parliament was a
confidence building measure undertaken by the opposition factions, who are
said to be in full agreement over the talks. Now Mugabe is expected to pay
up.

So far Zanu PF has ignored all the issues that the MDC wanted addressed. The
Mugabe regime has not repealed repressive laws and there is no independent
media. The opposition has dismissed the state appointed Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission on the grounds that the staff are mostly ruling party stooges.
The electoral commission has also started the delimitation of
constituencies, despite objections by the opposition over this process. Then
just last week Mugabe announced that only “friendly and objective” nations
would be invited to observe the elections. Experts said this means he will
invite only those nations that will approve the outcome of the polls,
despite the clearly uneven playing field.

It is not clear what has taken place at the talks in South Africa because
Mbeki has insisted on keeping the process out of the public domain.
Zimbabweans await the results, but the majority have little faith in the
sincerity of the Mugabe regime. What is happening on the ground clearly show
he is not taking the talks seriously.

SW Radio Africa Zimbabwe news


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Zimbabwe's 'Nazi' slur on chancellor rankles Berlin



Fred Attewill and agencies
Tuesday December 11, 2007
Guardian Unlimited

Germany today told Zimbabwe that comments in state-run media referring to
Angela Merkel as a "Nazi" were unacceptable.
Berlin said it had delivered a high-level diplomatic protest following harsh
criticism of the chancellor, who confronted human rights abuses in Zimbabwe
at a summit of EU and African leaders on Saturday.

Yesterday the Herald newspaper, regarded as a mouthpiece of Robert Mugabe's
government, referred to Merkel as a "Nazi remnant" and quoted the
information minister, Sikhanyiso Ndlovu, accusing her of "racism of the
first order".

Ndlovu was also quoted as saying that Mugabe made "some of the European
heads of government and his detractors, including Angela Merkel, look like
dwarfs".
Today Germany's foreign minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, summoned the
Zimbabwean charge d'affaires to the foreign ministry in Berlin.

"It was made clear in strong terms that remarks like the ones made about the
chancellor are in no way tolerable," a government spokesman said.

During the summit in Lisbon, which was boycotted by Gordon Brown because of
Mugabe's presence, Merkel said that the world could not stand by while human
rights were "trampled underfoot".

She added: "I appreciate that some African states have tried to solve the
crisis in Zimbabwe, but time is running out. The situation of Zimbabwe is
damaging the image of the new Africa."

But Mugabe remained defiant after returning to Zimbabwe yesterday evening,
hitting out at the UK. "We defeated the British, we were the victors over
the British. What is Britain after all? They think the empire still runs,"
he was quoted as saying by the Herald.


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Three arrested in WOZA human rights march

zimbabwejournalists.com

11th Dec 2007 18:20 GMT

By Sebastian Nyamhangambiri

HARARE -  About 300 members of the Women of Zimbabwe Arise (Woza) - mostly
women - were yesterday blocked from marching to Parliament by the police
after they took to the streets condemning the deteriorating human rights
abuses in the country.

With their leader Jenni Williams in front, the women waved placards and
denounced the current political and economic crisis prevailing in the
country.

The march started just after lunch hour at the United Nations country
offices in Zimbabwe and was denied entry to Parliament by armed riot police.
The police tried to intimidate the women with button sticks but they did not
budge in. Instead they kept on singing.

For more than five minutes Williams argued with about five policemen corner
Second Street and Nelson Mandela Avenue, while Woza members continued
chanting songs and distributing fliers and Woza literature.

After the police blocked their way to Parliament, the women started to march
along Nelson Mandela westwards and dispersed on their own as they approached
the Harare Main Post Office.

Just after the women had dispersed two trucks of armed riot police arrived
and picked up Gladys Hlatswayo and Maria Mache, officials from the Crisis
Coalition and another lady who was with her. The three -who were not part of
the demonstration - were taken to the Harare Central Police Station.

Andrew Phiri, the police spokesperson refused to comment on the arrests of
the three women.

"I don’t think we have to give prominence to that (Woza and the arrests). I
would rather not comment about it," said Phiri.
But Williams was happy with the way the march had progressed, despite
failing to get to Parliament.

"Any form of intimidation will not deter us. The good part (of yesterday’s
march) is that some of our team members had delivered the People’s Charter
to the UN country office," said Williams.

"The charter has our demands such as the de-politicisation of the police
force, the repealing of repressive laws like POSA and AIPPA."

One of the placards that the women had read: "Beaten, jailed but determined
to be free."


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Outcry as Zim withholds degrees

IOL

    December 11 2007 at 12:10PM

By Tawanda Mashingaidze

In a desperate move to halt the brain drain from Zimbabwe, the
government plans to withhold degree certificates and teaching diplomas from
newly graduated teachers.

All new graduates will be required to serve at least three years in
Zimbabwe before they receive their qualifications.

Across the country, there is a shortage of teaching staff the
University of Zimbabwe, for example, has more than 600 vacant posts.

It is widely expected that the problem will worsen as more teachers
and lecturers simply fail to return after the holidays. Many will leave the
country.

Most departing teachers are driven by poverty. The profession now
ranks among the lowest paid among civil servants.

Those who remain face political persecution and salaries that start at
Z$15-million (R100) a month and seldom reach levels higher than Z$30-million
which is the official though constantly rising poverty level. The inflation
rate is now estimated at 14 000 percent.

But there are still qualified teachers who remain and they are now
threatening to go on strike if their salaries are not increased to
$318-million (R3 180) a month, when schools open in January.

Officials defended the move to make new graduates work for three years
before receiving their qualifications by saying graduates should be
patriotic and "give back to society knowledge acquired".

These comments enraged trainee teachers, a group of whom issued this
statement: "We do not eat solidarity and patriotism. We want to build our
future and have families so we cannot die for peanuts."

The government's plan has been described by trade unions and human
rights groups as a form of slavery. - africanewsfeatures.com

This article was originally published on page 11 of Cape Argus on
December 11, 2007


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Mugabe to meet top officials ahead of party congress

Yahoo News

Tue Dec 11, 10:45 AM ET

HARARE (AFP) - Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe will meet members of his
highest decision-making body, the politburo, on Tuesday ahead of an
extraordinary congress expected to endorse him for another term in office.

According to the conference programme, the normal business of the congress
will start on Thursday, when Mugabe was expected to officially open the
meeting.
Besides endorsing Mugabe as its sole presidential flagbearer in next year's
election, the four-day congress is also expected to draw up a roadmap for
Zimbabwe's political and economical policies for the next five years, said
John Nkomo, the ruling ZANU-PF national chairman.

"I can confirm that preparations for the extraordinary congress are at an
advanced stage with the organising committee satisfied with the
arrangements," Nkomo told state media.

"We will have the Central Committee meeting on Wednesday while normal
business of the extraordinary meeting starts on Thursday. Our greatest
challenge is providing accommodation for the delegates, but we hope that by
the commencement of the event we would have secured accommodation for
everyone."

Party delegates from the ruling ZANU-PF began arriving on Tuesday for the
extraordinary congress which will be held in the capital, Harare.

Nkomo said about 10,000 delegates are expected to attend, including members
of the ruling party, political parties from the region and other solidarity
groups.

The ruling party last held its congress in December 2004, where Mugabe was
mandated to lead the party until 2009 when the normal congress is due to be
held.


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EPAs ‘‘Bringing in Old Issues Through Back Door’’

IPSnews

 
By Tonderai Kwidini

HARARE, Dec 11 (IPS) - With an economy tottering on the brink of collapse
and an unenviable political situation, civil society organisations in
Zimbabwe have every reason to worry about the implications of the interim
agreement on trade in goods that their country has just signed as part of
the economic partnership agreement (EPA) with the European Union (EU).

Many argue that the Zimbabwean government should not agree to the EPA. While
an agreement on trade in goods has been reached with the Eastern and
Southern African (ESA) group of countries, the negotiations on the rest of
the EPA will be continued next year. Zimbabwe forms part of the ESA group.

‘‘The negotiations have not been exhaustive on some of the agreed issues. To
make matters worse, African countries are not negotiating as a bloc because
Europe has managed to fragment them,’’ says Andrew Mushita, director of the
Community Technology Development Trust (CTDT), a non-governmental
organisation with interests in trade and technology issues.

‘‘They will only come out of these EPAs worse off.’’

Mushita says that Zimbabwe ‘‘cannot compete with the EU on an equal footing
because of our economic situation’’.

He is also worried about the rearrangement of regional configurations as
that weakened the position of African countries further.

Other organisations have also added their voices, saying that the EU will
emerge as the biggest winner. It will be folly for countries like Zimbabwe
with an economy in tatters to hope for any ‘‘heavenly manna’’ to arrive via
the EPAs.

‘‘Zimbabwe is just like any other country in the Southern African
Development Community or in East and Southern Africa grouping. It is not
ready to sign an EPA. Opening up our markets in the present state will only
lead to the further exploitation of our raw materials,’’ Joy Mabenge,
executive director of the Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt and Development, told
IPS.

EPAs are a scheme to create a free trade area (FTA) between the EU and
African, Caribbean and Pacific countries. They are a response to continuing
criticism that the non-reciprocal and discriminating preferential trade
agreements offered by the EU to its former colonies under the Cotonou
Agreement are incompatible with World Trade Organisation (WTO) rules.

The EPAs have faced opposition from civil society organisations and some
governments in Africa who see them as a way of liberalising the service and
investment sectors of ACP countries.

‘‘African economies will not be strengthened by signing the EPAs. It’s a
shock that many African countries are rushing into signing the EPAs when
they don’t really understand what they mean. It’s bringing in old issues
through the back door," Mabenge told IPS.

Mabenge says Zimbabwe needs more time to resolve its economic problems
before it can make commitments like the EPAs. The EU is only interested in
African raw materials, which it will return to Africa in the form of
processed products at exorbitant prices. Africa still has to strengthen its
economies and industrial bases.

‘‘Let’s get our economies to function. Then we will be able to compete on an
equal footing with Europe. This issue is being looked at from a simplistic
point of view,’’ Mabenge argues.

Several Zimbabwean analysts say the current economic problems will further
hinder Zimbabweans from benefiting from the EPA. Several Zimbabwean
companies face demise due to government’s populist policies, which have led
to shortages in foreign currency to procure essential industrial components.
Zimbabwe’s inflation rate is 7,800 percent.

These problems, analysts say, make it impossible for Zimbabwean companies to
compete in the EU market. A sector such as agriculture, which has witnessed
a rapid dip in fortunes since 2000 after the introduction of the government’s
‘‘land reform’’ programme, will be forced to compete with subsidised produce
from Europe.

Similarly, the beleaguered manufacturing sector will have to take on an
influx of European commodities.

The Zimbabwean parliament was recently told at a caucus meeting that the
EPAs will take away some of the country’s guaranteed markets.

One organisation has adopted a different position on the EPAs. The Trade and
Development Studies Centre based in the Zimbabwean capital Harare does
policy research and analysis, focusing particularly on the relationship
between trade and development, aid and development, poverty alleviation and
welfare.

‘‘These EPAs are not coming from nowhere. They are the result of a gradual
build-up through several conventions. There is nothing wrong with the EPA.
The problem is its implementation. It can be developmental or have the
opposite effect,’’ Masiiwa Rusare, the director of the Trade and Development
Studies Centre, told IPS.

‘‘We should keep an eye on what happens. What is needed is to encourage the
government to diversify its trade partners and create more options.’’ But
Rusare concedes that, regarding market accessibility and agriculture,
ensuring that the EPA deal works fairly will be a Herculean task.

‘‘It’s like taking a non-boxer into the ring with (boxing champion) Mike
Tyson. The results are obvious,’’ Masiiwa says. (END/2007)


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Zimbabwe – Banking on Mugabe’s fall

Ethical Corporation

11 December 2007

Vulture investors are ready to swoop on Zimbabwe’s cheap assets, but they
are playing a risky game
Zimbabwe has been in economic freefall since 2000 when the country’s ruler,
Robert Mugabe, began his chaotic land reform. The policy was a disaster,
largely obliterating the farming sector of a nation once dubbed the “bread
basket of southern Africa”.

The country’s decline under Mugabe is plain to see. Unemployment is at 80
per cent and inflation at an estimated 7,000 per cent. A third of the
country’s 13 million population has fled (three million of them to South
Africa), while nearly as many of the remainder survive on international food
aid.

But some outside speculators see commercial opportunities amid the poverty.
Dubbed “vulture investors” they are ready to snap up Zimbabwe’s farms,
industrial property and mining leases at considerable discounts using
foreign currency. The vultures plan to buy now, sit tight, and await the end
of Mugabe’s rule.

Vultures hovering

A typical vulture fund is London-based Lonrho. In October it launched
LonZim, a “Zimbabwe investment fund to meet strong demand from around the
world”. Australian-born chairman David Lenigas says most of his fund’s
initial investments will be in property. “Commercial property is cheap as
chips,” he observes. “The infrastructure in Harare is fantastic, but it’s
fire-sale prices.” He sees other potential wins in resorts and game parks,
hoping that once Zimbabwe’s economy recovers, the tourists will return.

One of Lonrho’s first purchases in late September was technology firm
Celsys, for $5.45 million. Celsys owns Zimbabwe’s only Nokia repair facility
and is the largest printer of security documents, cheques and air time
cards. Although the company is now valued at half the purchase price, LonZim
is interested in its “strong future growth potential”.

The Zimbabwe Financial Gazette said it was “particularly audacious” for a
company with such a controversial colonial history to return to the country
at this time. (Former UK prime minister Edward Heath once called Lonrho’s
former chairman, Tiny Rowland, “the unacceptable face of capitalism” for the
way he bought political influence with several post-colonial African
governments despite his company’s South Africa and Rhodesian roots.) Lenigas
says he wants to return the firm to its former status as Zimbabwe’s biggest
employer.

Lonrho has had no shortage of interest from risk-hungry investors. Lenigas
says even his broker was surprised at the responses and although he could
raise more funds he would struggle to deploy them.

Another fund investing in Zimbabwe is Imara, an investment banking and asset
management group represented in the UK and South Africa. In October the firm
used its newly launched Botswana-based Zimbabwe Fund to invest $13.5 million
in about 17 of the 82 companies listed on the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange. Imara’s
chief executive, Mark Tunmer, says Imara decided to launch the Zimbabwe Fund
after its high net worth investors showed an appetite for Zimbabwe in the
company’s Imara Africa Fund, launched back in July 2005. That fund, aimed at
African investors seeking to diversify out of South Africa and Egypt, seeks
to have 10 per cent of its investments in Zimbabwe.

South African funds eyeing Zimbabwe include Sanlam Investment Management,
the investment arm of Sanlam, South Africa’s biggest life assurance company,
Rand Merchant Bank and BoE Private Clients of South Africa.

To a large extent, these funds hoping to capitalise on the country’s
brighter, post-Mugabe prospects, are merely copying the strategy adopted by
local Zimbabwean investors. In a market where exchange controls restrict
domestic insurance and pension fund companies from investing outside the
country, the market is kept liquid through hedging against inflation by
buying property and shares.

One of the country’s longest-standing investors is Old Mutual Asset
Managers, Africa’s biggest money manager. Chief executive Thabo Dloti warns:
“If you have a short-term perspective, you should be extremely worried. We
have a long-term view and we have restructured our portfolios to reflect
that.” Old Mutual has been in Zimbabwe for 110 years. It began switching
into stocks and property in 2000, when Mugabe’s seizure of white-owned farms
gained momentum. Dloti declined to comment on what Zimbabwe assets the firm
now owns.

Propping up the regime

But investors must understand the risks. Investing in Zimbabwe increases the
flow of foreign currency the regime can lay its hands on, thereby prolonging
the survival of Mugabe’s dictatorship. Zimbabwe’s laws force investment
funds to buy various forms of government bonds. There is truth in the claim
that the Zimbabwean subsidiaries of Old Mutual, Barclays and Standard
Chartered have created what the London-based newsletter Africa Confidential
calls a “$400 million financial lifeline to Robert Mugabe’s government over
the past two years”.

In late October the South African-based Zimbabwe Solidarity Trust urged
South African businesses to speak out against the regime’s human rights
abuses. Acknowledging the constraints under which businessmen in Zimbabwe
operated, the trust’s Brian Raftopolous argued that they could and should do
more to avoid complicity. Privately business leaders in South Africa bristle
at this because across the world political leaders from countries other than
Britain, Australia, the US and Botswana have done little to end the crisis
in Zimbabwe.

More worrying for investors in global firms operating in Zimbabwe is the
fact that security of tenure cannot be taken for granted in the country. In
October the Zimbabwean parliament passed the Indigenisation and Economic
Empowerment Act, which requires all “foreign-owned business” to be 51 per
cent owned by black Zimbabweans.

Already the government has cancelled the operating licence of Telcel
Zimbabwe – the mobile phone operator that is majority-owned by Egyptian
Orascom Telecom – because Zimbabweans “only” owned 40 per cent of the
business.

The law’s supporters point to China, where the government’s approach of
taking controlling stakes in foreign firms is said to have kept wealth
within the country. But the crux of Mugabe’s law is that Zimbabweans wanting
to buy the 51 per cent stake in an international business will still have to
borrow the money, something they may find difficult to do at current levels
of inflation.

By halving any potential returns, the Indigenisation Act has called into
question the rationale of opportunistic investment in Zimbabwe. Even if
Mugabe’s regime does respect changes of ownership, funds must consider that
there may well be post-Mugabe claims against the beneficiaries of these
enforced sales as the only ones with money to invest now are likely to have
close links with or will at least have benefited from Mugabe’s regime.

Will he stay or go?

In November observers were encouraged by reports of a breakthrough in talks
between Mugabe’s government and opposition leaders at Lake Kariba. Both
sides have finally began making concessions: the opposition MDC, because
Mugabe’s security forces have nearly destroyed it as an organisation; Mugabe’s
allies, because they know they will outlive their 83-year-old leader who
once again has selected himself as his party’s sole candidate for the March
2008 presidential election.

Optimists see an outline of a post-Mugabe Zimbabwe emerging from the Kariba
talks, but such hopes are not new. Over the past four years the South
African government has repeatedly promised imminent deals and breakthroughs
in the crisis in order to prop up its “quiet diplomacy” approach to the
Zimbabwe crisis, which critics charge has kept the pressure off Mugabe.

The MDC knows it can count most of the business community, bar Mugabe’s
cronies, among its supporters because every business leader wants a return
to a normal, non-hyperinflation economy. But the pressure to speak out is
mounting on business.

Vic van Vuuren, chief operations officer of Business Unity South Africa,
sees a rationale for big business already in Zimbabwe to stay. He says:
“They may take losses, but I think everyone has got the hope that there is
going to be some light at the end of the tunnel, and that the corner is
going to turn soon. And someone is going to then benefit from the long-term
investment.”

Ordinary Zimbabweans living in exile in the UK have called for sanctions,
especially from South Africa, to bring down the regime, pointing out that
things can hardly get worse for ordinary people.

The real challenge for businesses in the country is corruption, says Mike
Flax, executive director of Johannesburg-listed Madison Property Fund
Managers, and one of those promoting investment in property in Africa. He
says: “It is quite important to avoid the cycle of corruption at all costs.
Once you are in, you are sucked into a vortex you can’t get out of.”

Vulture investors should beware that Mugabe has outlived many predictions of
his demise before, warns Flax. If he survives long enough, foreign funds may
find the moral costs of their investments rising as financial returns
continue to lag.


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Zimbabwe's trillion dollar house, billion dollar bed

Reuters

Tue 11 Dec 2007, 14:51 GMT

By MacDonald Dzirutwe

HARARE, Dec 11 (Reuters Life!) - A trillion dollar house, billion dollar bed
and a million dollar beer. That and a severe cash squeeze are the latest
sign of runaway inflation that has vexed consumers in President Robert
Mugabe's Zimbabwe.

A newspaper advertisement shows a four-bedroom house with a pool and tennis
court in Harare's leafy Glen Lorne suburb selling for just under ZW$1
trillion, a whopping $33 million at the official bank rate but only $667,000
on a widely used black market.

An identical property cost half the price a month ago.

Prices of household furniture, groceries and food and rentals have more than
doubled in the past month as businesses seek to eke out a profit and remain
afloat, but at a cost to consumers ravaged by the world's fastest rising
prices.

Shops which were emptied of basic goods after Mugabe announced a blanket
price freeze to tame inflation in June, have started restocking but prices
have skyrocketed.

"Prices are increasing but my salary is not and that is a very big problem
because it's now difficult to settle my bills," Humphrey Chitovhoro, a
trainee with a Harare accounting firm said, a line now recounted many times
by Zimbabweans.

Salaries are failing to keep pace with galloping inflation -- the world's
highest at nearly 8,000 percent -- which has inflamed tensions in a country
with rising unemployment and enduring foreign currency, fuel and food
shortages.

Mugabe's government has so far failed to rein in an economic slide, which
critics say has been badly hit by the veteran leader's policies, including
the seizure of white-owned farms to resettle blacks that has knocked
agriculture output.

CASH CRUNCH

On Tuesday Zimbabweans jammed banking halls, desperately seeking cash, in
short supply, the latest sign of the southern African country's economic
free-fall.

Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono said last month the launch of a new
currency was imminent. This has not happened, instead cash shortages have
worsened, with banks running out of notes.

Gono accuses foreign currency black market dealers of stashing more than
half the total money in circulation and says the bank will not intervene in
the cash crisis.

"I came here at five (0300 GMT) and just got ZW$5 million. What can I do
with that money," an angry mother of two who identified herself only as
Auxilia said as she left a bank where a long queue stretched for a couple of
blocks.

The amount is equivalent to three days of bus fare.

Most Zimbabweans use cash for their transactions since most basic goods like
cooking oil, sugar and maize meal are purchased on the black market.

In a small vote of confidence for Gono, the Zimbabwe dollar has strengthened
against the U.S. dollar on the black market, rising to Z$1.5 million per
dollar on Tuesday from a low of ZW$2.4 million.

But businesses are feeling the cash squeeze as sales have dropped, while
workers spend more time in bank queues.

"We need to have more money in circulation but we cannot expect the central
bank to continue pumping in more money if that which is in circulation can
not be accounted for. We are caught up in a vicious cycle," Joseph Malaba, a
local industrialist told the official Herald newspaper.


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Mugabe: Power, Plunder and the Struggle for Zimbabwe

The Spectator

How to ruin a country
Martin Meredith
Public Affairs/ The Perseus Books Group, 272pp, £8.99, ISBN 97891586485580

Tuesday, 11th December 2007
Robert Salisbury

As Zimbabwe celebrated its independence in April 1980 President Nyerere of
Tanzania had a piece of advice for Robert Mugabe: ‘You have inherited a
jewel. Keep it that way.’ At first, it seemed that Mugabe would take his
fellow socialist’s advice. His address to the nation on the eve of
independence gave all Zimbabweans hope that, white and black, they could
together rebuild the country after the miseries of the guerrilla war.

Guguletho Moyo and Mark Ashurst quote the speech in full at the beginning of
their useful compendium, and Martin Meredith reminds us that, after an
initial interview, Ian Smith himself reported that he had found Mugabe not
‘the apostle of Satan’ but ‘sober and responsible’.

These two books are timely and can be read together. Meredith chronicles
Mugabe’s progress from guerrilla leader to power-obsessed paranoiac. Moyo
and Ashurst look to the future by canvassing a broad range of opinion as to
how to rebuild a country utterly destroyed by a man using yesterday’s
rhetoric in an Africa that is changing rapidly.

Nyerere’s remark is interesting. Meredith chronicles very fairly the white
man’s land grab in Rhodesia from Lobengula to the 1960s and how effective
the land question was as a recruiting sergeant for Mugabe, Sithole and
Nkomo. Equally, there are numerous references in both books to the emergency
laws the Rhodesian Front introduced after UDI and the often brutal treatment
of the ‘terrs’ and those who harboured them by the Rhodesian security
forces. However, what shines through in Meredith’s account is how deeply
implanted certain basic beliefs were in Rhodesian minds and how courageously
Zimbabweans both black and white have resisted ZANU-PF thuggery in defence
of their beliefs.

Take the case of Margaret Dongo. Appalled by the scale and the blatancy of
the corruption of the ZANU-PF elite, this former ZANU fighter and founder
member of the War Veterans’ Association broke with her former associates and
stood for Parliament in the 1995 election in the Harare South Constituency.
The Registrar-General, the official responsible for the fairness of
elections, the caricature figure Tchaiwa Mudede, had, as so often he had
elsewhere, rigged the election. An independent inquiry showed that of 33,251
voters’ names on the electoral role, 41 per cent were not genuine. Margaret
Dongo took her case to the High Court and in the subsequent by-election, in
spite of a concerted campaign of thuggery and vilification, she won.

Hers is only one example of many of the courage, not only of individuals,
but of the Zimbabwean electorate, in resisting the government’s brutality.
It also shows that there still existed, at least until recently, a
functioning judiciary willing to stand up for the rule of law as well as an
ingrained faith in the power of fair elections as a force for peaceful
change.

These were things which, along with a powerful economy and a tradition of
honest and competent administration, were the legacy of Rhodesia to
Zimbabwe. They are things that became rare in Africa after the end of the
colonial era. No wonder Nyerere told Mugabe he had inherited a jewel: but
squander it he did.

Meredith’s account is all the more devastating for the unemotional tone he
employs. Particularly gut-wrenching is the account of the massacres in
Matabeleland, planned by Mugabe and carried out by the North Korean-trained
and specially formed 5th Brigade from 1983-85 and known as ‘Gukurahundi’ or
the rain that blows away the chaff. However, almost as chilling as the
accounts of brutality by the regime and the thieving by the kleptocracy that
ZANU-PF became as soon as it achieved office, is Mugabe’s single-mindedness.

He desires only one thing: power. He bends every sinew to acquire it and
then to keep it. His Catholic/Marxist upbringing and his intelligence have
prepared him well and he cares not a fig for the misery that he has
inflicted on his people. And the horror is very far from over.

Getting rid of him will, for a start, not be easy. As an old Africa hand
once said to me with some asperity, ‘Southern Africans don’t do military
coups.’ In any case military coups, as Martin Rupaya points out in Moyo and
Ashhurst, usually solve very little. There are some indications that many in
ZANU-PF want Mugabe to go, but he has so far proved equal to internal
dissidence. As for external pressure, Thabo Mbeki and his successors are
clearly reluctant to push him out, except on his own terms. In any case, as
Mark Ellis makes clear in an interview Moyo and Ashurst reprint, it is
increasingly difficult to grant immunity to departing tyrants if they are
sued under international law. Mugabe, sensibly from his point of view, would
find immunity comforting.

The tragedy of Zimbabwe is not only what has happened, but that what has
happened will make it difficult to build a country that can fulfil its
potential. It possesses vast resources, mineral, agricultural and aesthetic.
Above all, it has a courageous and able population, both black and white,
who could make it the economic and political motor of Central Africa.
Instead, the chances are that it will remain another African basket case,
suggesting that Ian Smith was right about majority rule. What a triumph it
would be if the people of Zimbabwe were to prove the late Ian Douglas wrong.


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Flight of the young ones

From The Indepoendent (UK), 11 December

Thousands of children are fleeing the misery of Zimbabwe in search of new
lives in South Africa. Even for those who make it, it is a perilous
business. Basildon Peta reports on the charity trying to help.

Laina Moyo's dream was to become a doctor. It was not a wild ambition. She
was the star pupil in maths and science at her school – until, that is, she
was forced to leave because her mother could no longer afford the tuition
fee increases in Zimbabwe's hyperinflationary environment. But it was when
her mother began to be unable to afford not just fees, but also food, that
13-year-old Laina took the boldest decision of her life. Without consulting
anyone she left home and decided to join the "great trek" of Zimbabwean
children streaming across the border into South Africa in search of a better
life. It was a 350-mile walk. Laina is just one of the thousands of
children – no one seems sure of the exact figure – who have undertaken the
lonely and hazardous journey to join the quarter of Zimbabwe's 16 million
people who are estimated to have fled to South Africa to escape the economic
and political turmoil in their own country. Like tens of thousands of
children of her age, Laina's life aspirations have been ruined.

Even as a hero's welcome was being prepared in Zimbabwe yesterday for
President Robert Mugabe, as he returned from what the local press portrayed
as a propaganda triumph at the EU-Africa summit in Portugal over the
weekend, the exodus of ordinary Zimbabweans continued apace. Officials at
the local police station confirm an upsurge in the numbers of children
arrested while illegally crossing the border. The horrors of the
unaccompanied journey undertaken by children, some of them as young as
eight, is itself a testament to how awful life has become inside Zimbabwe,
from which many foreign news reporters are banned. The average life
expectancy for women in Zimbabwe is now just 34 years. The cause of this is
an agriculture-based economy that has been in free fall since the violent
seizures of thousands of white-owned commercial farms from 2000 onwards. The
nation which was once southern Africa's bread basket is now experiencing
acute shortages of food, most basic goods, hard currency, petrol and
medicines. Economic mismanagement has brought it the world's highest
inflation rate.

It was to escape this turmoil that Laina left home. "We went for several
days without meals," she said. "We could not even scavenge for food in
dustbins because none in the neighbourhood had any leftovers to dump." She
knew things could only get worse. Though Zimbabwe's state-run Central
Statistical Office (CSO) has declared that inflation was officially "pegged"
at 14,800 per cent in October, many economists now say it is running at
100,000 per cent. In practice that means it has become incalculable due to
the rapidity of daily price increases. The situation could only get worse
for impoverished families such as Laina's. She decided enough was enough and
set out for South Africa with the intention of finding a job and sending
back money to her mother and three younger siblings. When the cash began to
arrive, she hoped, they would forgive her for abandoning home so abruptly.

It was a perilous journey. She had to contend with the hippo and
crocodile-infested Limpompo river to reach the border. She was also prey to
organised criminals, who pretend to assist illegal cross-border jumping, but
more often rob or rape those they purport to help. They sometimes even
murder their clients. Laina was lucky. But when she arrived at the main
Beitbridge/ Musina border crossing into South Africa she encountered others
with even more desperate stories. When I met her she had teamed up with
Talent Makuyane, who had travelled more than 1,300 miles from eastern
Zimbabwe. The two were thrown together once they became stuck, without any
official papers, in Musina town on the South African side of the border.
Their stories echoed one another uncannily. Talent, also 13, had been forced
to drop out of secondary school because her parents could no longer afford
her fees. At her home there was no food either. She could not remember when
she last ate a slice of bread.

She reached the border by boarding buses and trains even though she had no
money for the fare. By the time she was discovered and thrown off, she would
at least have covered some distance. When she was unable to board some form
of public transport, she would simply walk. "All I wanted was to cross the
border, get any job and earn money to at least have a taste of bread and
milk," she said. But the life they were seeking proved elusive. Many of
those who have fled, Laina and Talent included, have fallen victim to sexual
predators and abusive employers. "The abuses we are now living with here [in
South Africa] are far worse than the hunger we faced at home," said Laina.
Their story is borne out by local people. "Instead of pitying and helping
these children, the people here see them as objects for all manner of
abuse," said Khotso Motswaane, a 45 year old Musina resident. One of his
neighbours, he confided, gave refuge to three Zimbabwean girls, all below
15, because they had nowhere to stay. They are now sex slaves. He said the
things that happened to children in the town were "despicable".

Save the Children – one of the three charities being supported in this
year's Independent Christmas Appeal – is one of the few organisations
working to help the children. Lilian Rambuda, one of the charity's outreach
officers in Musina, confirmed that the story told by Mr Motswaane was by no
means exaggerated. "It is not uncommon for a man here to have three
Zimbabwean girl children under his custody, abusing them sexually," she
said. The complications are far-reaching. Some the girls have contracted
Aids and died. One girl Ms Rambuda is attempting to help is pregnant by a
man old enough to be her great-grandfather. When he found out he abandoned
her. The girl is now too traumatised to talk to strangers and she now spends
her time locked up in his shack.

"Old men here are literally preying on these girls," said Miss Rambuda.
While the randomness of illegal cross border migration makes it difficult to
compile statistics, she says there is no doubt that very large numbers of
girls and boys are streaming across the border into South Africa at regular
intervals. "You see them sleeping under bridges, picking food from dump
sites, then you easily know they are from Zimbabwe," she said. At the border
post, one police officer confirmed that sexual intercourse with a girl under
16 is statutory rape under South African law. But the children won't report
cases of abuse because they fear being arrested when they contact the
police. "It is not easy to deal with this problem. My opinion is that the
government of Zimbabwe must end the suffering of its people by addressing
the problems making them flee their homeland in the first place," said the
officer.

But the most common form of abuse is not sexual. Zimbabwean children are
being used as slave labour. They are offered menial jobs but their employers
do not then pay them. When the children complain the employers threaten to
report them to the police as illegal immigrants. Laina and Talent have both
encountered this. Each has worked as a housemaid doing everything from
washing, ironing, cooking and gardening to looking after the children of
their "employers". But when they asked for the R400 a month (£28) they were
promised the money did not materialise. "When I asked for my pay after two
months without receiving a single penny, I was chased away," said Talent.
There is a clear pattern of this, with employers sending away the children
unpaid and recruiting new arrivals from Zimbabwe ito replace them.

If it were not for Save the Children, which has assisted her with food and
clothes, Laina says she would have died a long time ago. Many other
Zimbabwean children she has met since arriving in Musina are in the same
situation. And like her they have got in this small dusty town because they
cannot afford the fares to travel further to cities such as Johannesburg and
Cape Town. Many of the girls resort to prostitution for survival. Save the
Children is in the process of setting up care centres where the Zimbabwean
children can be given clothes, fed and taught the necessary life skills of
their choice to be able to get better jobs. These safe houses will be for
all vulnerable children, but cause resentment among the locals, who see them
as only helping foreigners. From there the children will be referred to
relevant government and other services including health care and
psycho-social support. Outreach workers, using the centres as bases, will
tour the dusty town in search of vulnerable children. The sadness is that,
as the great exodus from Zimbabwe continues, they will not have to look very
hard before they stumble upon young children who desperately need their
help.


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Diarrhea-cholera hit Mabvuku



CHRA has received an increasing number of reports on diarrhea and cholera
cases from Mabvuku and Tafara in the last two weeks. Residents complain that
while in some parts of Mabvuku and Tafara there has been a steady supply of
water, it is almost always dirty and has a suspicious smell. On Monday
(10/12/07) a CHRA team visited Mabvuku and Tafara and interviewed medical
personnel in private and public clinics. It has emerged that hundreds of
people are suffering from stomach problems which medical personnel liken to
cholera and dysentery.

A survey made by CHRA through its structures also revealed that most people
cannot afford medical attention and resort to traditional means. The survey
also revealed that a lot of people have been hit by the stomach ailments.
The problems of disease outbreaks come after residents in Mabvuku and Tafara
have been hit by serious water shortages resulting in most households
fetching water from streams. As for the few who have water from their taps,
the water is dirty and has visible algae.

The Zimbabwe National Water Authority (ZINWA) took over the administration
of sewer and water services from the City of Harare. The takeover led to a
downward trend in the quality of services offered by the City of Harare.
Sadly, ZINWA has failed to provide adequate water supplies for business and
household use in Harare. The City of Harare has over 60% of water in its
water bodies but ZINWA has no capacity to treat adequate supplies for
residential and industrial use.

CHRA has alerted the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Water Resources
and Infrastructure Development about the disease outbreaks in Mabvuku and
Tafara. CHRA will also send a petition to the Parliament of Zimbabwe and the
Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Water Resources and Infrastructure
Development about the health time bomb that is beginning to explode in
Mabvuku and Tafara.

Farai Barnabas Mangodza
Chief Executive Officer
Combined Harare Residents Association (CHRA)
145 Robert Mugabe Way
Exploration House, Third Floor
Harare
ceo@chra.co.zw
www.chra.co.zw
Landline: 00263- 4- 705114

Contacts: Mobile: 0912638401, 011443578, 011862012 or email info@chra.co.zw,
programs@chra.co.zw and admin@chra.co.zw


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Movement for Democratic Change calls upon government to respect human rights

The Zimbabwean

Tuesday, 11 December 2007 13:03

As the rest of the world celebrates the commemoration of the World Human
Rights Day, Zimbabweans find themselves in an invidious position whereby
they would like to be part of the global village in celebrating this
landmark occasion but on a daily basis their rights are trampled upon by a
cruel and uncaring regime whose obsession to retain power at all costs has
reached alarming proportions.

The people have been resilient as they have endured torture, violence,
intimidation, hunger, poverty and a myriad of other problems all brought
about by a regime whose insatiable appetite for power, greed, and corruption
have brought the country down to its knees and reduced Zimbabweans from all
walks of life to destitutes. Currently, people cannot even access their own
money from banks and they have to queue for days on end only to get paltry
sums like $5 000 000-00 which is not enough to buy a bottle of cooking oil.

Instead of the government acknowledging its mistakes and accepting where it
has gone wrong, it feeds the people on a daily diet of propaganda and blames
everyone else ranging from the opposition, civil society, the western
countries and imaginary sanctions as the cause of the problems facing
Zimbabwe instead of its own mismanagement, maladministration and inability
to govern properly.

The time has come for this regime to put a stop to its madness and treat the
people of Zimbabwe as human beings who are entitled enjoy all the basic
human rights set out in the various United Nations Declarations and African
statutes. It is no use to pay lip service to these lofty ideals and make all
the right pronouncements on paper but in practice do the opposite of what
they preach.

To start with, the government must accept that we need a people driven
democratic constitution which contains a comprehensive bill of rights which
encompasses not only civil and political rights but also covers economic,
social and cultural rights. This can only come about through a process where
the people of Zimbabwe themselves are given an opportunity to participate
freely in the constitution making process which ensures that their
aspirations are freely captured and reflected in the final document.

We also need a new culture whereby those in authority are fully accountable
to the people and this can only happen when we have a government that is
elected through free and fair elections. It is also important that those in
positions of authority recognize that political power is attained through
the will of the people and that no one has a god given right to rule forever
simply because they participated in the liberation struggle.

It is necessary that the culture of impunity where violators of human rights
have gone scot free should come to an end if we are to fully enjoy our
universal rights. As we speak the perpetrators of gross rights violations
during the Gukurahundi era have not been brought to book and the Chihambakwe
Commission which was appointed by the government produced a report which has
not been published up to this day. The late Mark Chavhunduka and Roy Choto
were savagely tortured and assaulted by army personnel and the then Minister
of Defence, the Late Movern Mahachi, had the temerity to say that they had
scratched themselves and up to this day, no investigations have been carried
out to identify and bring the perpetrators to account.

On the 11th March 2007, the president of the Movement for Democratic Change
Morgan Tsvangirai and several others were arrested and beaten up by Police
Officers in a Police Station, denied access to their Legal Practitioners,
denied food and medical attention in violation of their rights and in
defiance of High Court orders and again, nothing has been done about it.
Further, Movement for Democratic Change activists arrested on trumped up
charges went through hell at the hands of the Police and still the regime
has no shame in protecting these gross violators of human rights.

The list is endless and on a regular basis various state agencies and party
militias have all gone on a spree and orgy of violence and mayhem in the
full knowledge that nothing will happen to them as the government is clearly
behind them.

The irony of it all is that it is happening at a time when ZANU (PF) and the
Movement for Democratic Change are engaged in dialogue which is meant to
usher in a new era where the political environment returns to normal but by
its actions it is clear that the ZANU (PF) government is not sincere. One
would have expected to see some tangible evidence on the ground to show that
the regime is truly committed to change its ways but sadly all that it is
interested in is to maintain and tighten its grip on power.

We therefore challenge the government to stop this blame game where all the
country's ills are said to be the result of non existent "illegal" sanctions
and it should instead fully commit itself to a recognition and respect of
human rights. The establishment of a Human Rights Commission on its own does
not have any meaning unless it is accompanied by a genuine commitment on the
part of the ZANU (PF) regime to mend its ways so that Zimbabwe can once
again proudly take its place in the community of civilized nations.

Hon Innocent Gonese, MP
Secretary for Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs


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While others celebrate, Zimbabwe mourns in shame

zimbabwejournalists.com

11th Dec 2007 18:28 GMT

By Zinasu

ZINASU joins Zimbabwe and the rest of the world in commemorating the
International Human Rights Day. While other nation states take this day as a
time to celebrate the protection and promotion of Human Rights in their
countries that were born out of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
proclaimed by the United Nations on December 10, 1948, ZINASU mourns in
shame the deliberate disregard of Human Rights by the Zimbabwean regime.

2007 will go down in record as the historical episode of serious and
unprecedented human rights abuses in Zimbabwe. Many human Rights activists
where either tortured, capriciously arrested or unjustifiably detained.

The flash moments/highlights of these abuses were the arrests and beatings
of opposition and civil society leaders on March 11 2007, the illegal
detention of a student leader at Masvingo Remand prison for 27 days in
November 2007. Student leaders have also been subjects of persistent
persecution; facing suspensions, summaries of dismissal, detentions and
expulsions.

December 10 becomes a day when we sadly reflect on the painful and grotesque
human rights crisis in our country.  Zimbabwe is a signatory to the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights which, in article 1, proclaims that
"All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and Rights. They are
endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a
spirit of brotherhood," .Yet there continues to be serious disregard of
human rights and fundamental freedoms in Zimbabwe.

In the face of such growing political mayhem and state sponsored terror
campaigns, ZINASU also takes this opportunity to congratulate Human Rights
Defenders who continue to resiliently fight for the realisation of a just
and democratic Zimbabwe.

Many have sacrificed their comfort and lives to push forward a shared vision
of a Zimbabwe where Human Rights and fundamental freedoms are embraced. It
is our prayer that the efforts of all, no matter humble and small, to the
great and noble struggle will translate into positive and value adding
realities.

ZINASU also takes this opportunity to reiterate its position as fighters for
justice. We will continue to speak out against arbitrary arrests and
torture, we will continue to speak out against state-sponsored violence
aimed at innocent civilians, we will continue to demand the repeal of unjust
and repressive laws such as the Public Order and Security Act, we will
continue to demand an efficient justice delivery system, we will continue to
speak out against the deliberate impoverishment of the masses by a
gluttonous handful of looters and power-hungry men and women who constitute
the current regime . We will continue to demand affordable and good quality
education and skills development for all.


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Howard hospital in Chiweshe appeal


via MZ and Ve'ahavta

In Kind Donations for the Howard Hospital

Dear friends,
Warm Greetings! It is indeed the season of abundant giving and sharing
with those less fortunate than us.
Please find attached an appeal for donations in kind from Ve'ahavta for
the Howard Hospital in Zimbabwe. As you may recall, Howard Hospital is
where Tinashe and Tinotenda, the Zimbabwean co-joined twins were first
discovered by Dr. Paul Thistle, a Canadian who highlighted their
situation and they subsequently ended up coming to Canada for the
delicate surgery to separate them. A huge amount of work and selfless
dedication from various quarters like medical personnel at The Hospital
for Sick Children in Toronto, Ve'ahavta, ordinary individuals,
institutions and well-wishers went into this project. We as a Zimbabwean
Community in Canada and many friends of Zimbabwe contributed towards
their surgery by hosting the "Any Child is My Child" dinner/dance in
honor of Tinashe and Tinotenda in Toronto in May 2005. Thank you for
all your support.

I am confident that we can do it again by making donations in kind to
Howard Hospital and thus contribute towards the well-being of our
countrymen and women who continue to endure untold suffering. It is our
responsibility to lead and seize this rare opportunity to assist and do
good. The attached list gives the items being solicited. Your
contributions will be most welcome. This is not any appeal for cash but
medical supplies. Every little bit counts.
Please do your part by spreading the word. I will send more details on
the logistics soon so stay connected.
Thank you in advance for your generosity and kindness. May you all have
a joyful and peaceful holiday season. Please pray and continue to hope
for a better Zimbabwe.

Sincerely,

_______________________________________________________

Hello,
I hope you are doing well. As you may know, Ve'ahavta has been
focusing
on facilitating large scale shipments of medical supplies to the
Howard
Hospital. Over the past 18 months, we have financed and shipped a
twenty foot container of supplies, as well as several large shipments
of donations from Beckson Dickenson and Health Partners International of
Canada. We have also shipped numerous skids of supplies in a 20 foot
container shipped through Trillium Hospital in Mississauga, and have
been asked to contribute supplies to an upcoming container scheduled
to be shipped in February.
Zimbabwe has been in a downspiral, and the Howard Hospital is in
crisis mode, looking for donations of basic supplies to keep the hospital
functioning through the forseeable future. We would like to approach
Ve'ahavta's volunteers and partners in our long-time work with the
Howard (a partnership that has been in place since 1998) for
assistance in gathering supplies for this upcoming shipment. We have
officially
been asked to provide 4 skids (1/4 of the container), but likely will
be able to squeeze in even more. We hope to continue shipping supplies
to the Howard on an ongoing basis, so any surplus supplies that are
collected through this appeal will be reserved for the next shipment.
Attached is a wishlist from the Howard. Please let us know if you can
be of assistance by indicating whether you would be able to provide or
solicit any of the items on this list.
With best wishes,
Sarah

Sarah Zelcer
Director of International Programs & Education
Ve'ahavta: The Canadian Jewish Humanitarian & Relief Committee
2221 Yonge Street, Suite LL12
Toronto, ON
M4S 2B4
416 964 7698 x 15
Fax 416 964 6582
sarah@veahavta.org

The Salvation Army

ZIMBABWE TERRITORY

Territorial Commander:

Commissioner Stanslous C. Mutewera

Chief Secretary: Lieut-Colonel Peter Dali

William Booth – Founder

HOWARD HOSPITAL

P.O. BOX 190

Glendale, ZIMBABWE

Telephone (0)758-2433

Pharmaceutical, Surgical and Laboratory Needs, Howard Hospital

October 2007

HOWARD HOSPITAL DEPARTMENTAL REQUIREMENTS

MEDICAL SUPPLIES: ANNUAL Requirements

¢ Bandages large quantities

¢ Gauze large quantities

¢ Adhesive Tape 2400 rolls

¢ Tensor Bandages 2400

¢ Latex Gloves 3600 boxes

¢ Surgical Gloves 4800 pair

¢ Skin Traction Kits for Leg Fractures 75

¢ Urinary/ Foley Catheters and bags 1200

¢ Glucose testing strips (eg,"Bayer GlucoElite") 2500 tests

¢ 10 ml Syringes with needle 6000

¢ IV Cannula #18/20/22/24 and Giving Sets 6000

¢ Drainage tubes 500

¢ Ultrasound Gel/ Lubricant 60 liter

BASIC PHARMACEUTICALS:

¢ NSAIDS ( eg, Ibuprofen, Indocid, Naprosyn) 600,000 tabs

¢ Tylenol 1,200,000 tabs

¢ Antihistamine (eg, Gravol, Benadryl) 300,000 tabs

¢ Antibiotics, broad spectrum, IV and PO 200,000 tabs/ 5,000 vials

¢ Intravenous fluids 5,000 liters

¢ Antibiotic cream for burns 100 liters

¢ Antihypertensives 500,000 tabs

¢ Diabetes treatment 500,000 tabs

¢ Antiscabies medicine, eg, Lindane 100 liters

¢ Aqueous cream / Zinc oxide 25 liter

¢ Steroid cream 15 liter

¢ Antifungal cream 15 liter

¢ Anifungal tablets 100,000 tabs

¢ Multiivitamins 1,000,000 tabs

¢ Iron 500,000 tabs

¢ Folic acid 250,000 tabs

PHARMACY:

¢ Refrigerator

¢ Counting trays

¢ Measuring jugs

¢ Kettles

¢ Scissors

¢ Big Buckets

¢ Wheel trolleys

¢ Large dishes for soaking.

X-RAY DEPARTMENT:

¢ Wall Faces

¢ Chairs

¢ Computer & Printer

¢ Trolley

¢ Refrigerator

LABORATORY DEPARTMENT:

¢ CD4 Machine (Cytometer)

Facscalibur ( E5301)

Software: Multiset V1.1.2 + Reagents

¢ Microscope Bulbs

¢ Microscope Slides

¢ Microscope Glasses

¢ EDTA and Plain Tubes

¢ Centrifuge Tubes (conical 15ml) glasses

¢ Countdown Timer

¢ Water Bath

¢ Micropipettes 100-1000, 50-200, 0-50ml

¢ RPR Reagents

¢ Diamond Markers (Glass Writing)

¢ Pregnancy Test Kits

¢ Micropipette Tips (Yellow and Blue)

¢ Microscope Immersion Oil 100ml

¢ Indian Ink 10ml

¢ Vacutainer Needles 21 G1

¢ Blood Grouping Reagents: Anti-A, Anti-B, Anti-AB, Anti-D

¢ Compatibility reagents: Anti-Human Globulin & Liss or Liga

¢ Laboratory Coats

THEATRE DEPARTMENT:

¢ Surgical Blades, sizes 20, 21 & 22

¢ Surgical instruments, all kinds, especially scissors, and large crushing
clamps

¢ O/1 Vicryl and Dexon on large curved needles

¢ Sensitive Tape

HOSPITAL KITCHEN:

¢ Digital scale which weighs up to 100kg (Platform)

¢ 20 liters Aluminum pots

¢ Large Kettles

¢ Double door Industrial Oven

¢ Large Tea pots

¢ Dough mixer or liquidizer

¢ Bread Slicer

¢ Griller

¢ Double Deep fat frying pan

¢ China/Steel Ware plates

¢ Wheeled buckets with gargets or mop squeezers

¢ Soft brooms or broom heads

¢ 2 Liters Jugs

¢ Large buckets

¢ Vegetable knives

¢ Large stainless steel dishes

¢ Large frying pans

¢ Large colanders

¢ Medium size scone cutters

¢ Electrical potato peeler

¢ Trolleys

BUSINESS OFFICE:

¢ Heavy Duty Photocopier

¢ Computers and Printers

¢ Cartridges (13619 HC, C8727A, c8728a, 414836 ooHC)

¢ Bond Papers and Envelopes

¢ Pens, Pencils and Markers

¢ Fluorescent lights

¢ Calculator

¢ Fax Machine

¢ Telephone Answering Machine

REHABILITATION:

¢ Treadmill

¢ Infra Red Lamps

¢ Cycling Exercise Bike

¢ Static Electric Bike

¢ Home Gym

¢ Tilt Table

¢ Physio Balls (different types)

¢ Digi-Flexors (different types)

¢ Pulley System

¢ Wrist Incisors

¢ Message Machine

¢ Nerve stimulator, Tens machines

GENERAL:

¢ Linen

¢ Mattresses and Pillows 500

¢ Bicycles 50

¢ Computers 25

¢ Handheld Computers 10

¢ Sewing Machines (220 V or manual) 10

¢ Electrical Irons 4

¢ Soap large quantity

¢ Bleach large quantity

¢ Tissue Paper 3,000 rolls

¢ Toothpaste and Brushes 5,000

¢ AAA Batteries 5,000

¢ Soccer Outfits and Soccer Balls 2 teams

¢ Soccer Shoes 25 pair

¢ Food Supplements

5 or 10 Tonne Lorry

Thank you for your consideration of this list.

Yours sincerely,

Paul

Paul Thistle BSc (Hon), MD, FRCSC (Ob/Gyn)

Chief Medical Officer

The Salvation Army Howard Hospital

PO Box 190

Glendale, Zimbabwe

e-mail PThistle@healthnet.zw

075-8-2433/ 023-317826

WELCOME

TO

HOWARD HOSPITAL

Founded in 1923, Howard Hospital is a Salvation Army institution situated in
the Chiweshe communal land of rural Zimbabwe. Eighty kilometers north of the
capital of Harare, the hospital is the referral centre for the Mazowe
district of Mashonaland Central Province and has a catchment of greater than
270,000 people.

A variety of medical and social services are provided for all ages, from the
newborn to the elderly and terminally ill. There are in-patient and
out-patient departments seeing 115,000 patients a year, an operating
theatre, pharmacy, laboratory, and facilities for Xray, ultrasound and
rehabilitation. The nurses' training school offers a certificate for primary
care nurses and complete training in the practice of midwifery.

Family Child Health

In the department of obstetrics, known as Family Child Health (FCH), there
are 2500 deliveries each year. Pediatric and obstetric care, immunizations,
family planning, cervical cancer screening are combined under one roof as
‘one stop shopping’. On the hospital grounds an ante-natal shelter offers
accommodation to expectant mothers, to prevent problems arising from delays
in transportation from remote villages of the district.

Maternal mortality is high in Zimbabwe, 600/100,000 live births. One in
sixteen mothers have a lifetime risk of dying from a pregnancy-related
cause. Cervical cancer is the number one cancer in women, its increased
incidence attributed to the HIV/AIDS pandemic.

HIV/AIDS

HIV/AIDS remains the single largest challenge to health care delivery at
Howard. In Zimbabwe, 1.3 million are living with HIV. The life expectancy
for a woman is 34 years, the lowest in the world. The good news is that we
know what works to mitigate the pandemic. Progress has been made in
preventing the transmission of HIV from a mother to her infant, commonly
referred to as Maternal to Child Transmission (MTCT). Since 1999, Howard
Hospital has witnessed the introduction of short courses of antiretrovirals
such as zidovudine and nevirapine to decrease the risk of the infant
contracting HIV. Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) is now offered
to all expectant mothers.

Our fight against AIDS is not limited to mothers and infants. In our
district we estimate that 25,000 people of all ages are HIV positive and
5,000 are in urgent need of treatment and support. In response, our HIV/TB
treatment centre, Tariro (Hope) Clinic was launched, now a place of
counseling, treatment and care for 900 adults and children on HAART and over
5,000 on co-trimoxazole prophylaxis, that reduces the risk of HIV related
infections. It is our goal that all persons living with HIV will access
these services, be restored to full health and return to become productive
members of our community.

The Community

We’ve commenced a mobile HIV treatment clinic at 16 sites across our
district to provide ongoing care to people living well with HIV, but who can
no longer afford the escalating transportation costs of follow-up at Howard
Hospital. In addition, support groups of people living with HIV have sprung
up in the villages. A supplemental feeding program provides for children
with malnutrition and there is child sponsorship for orphans who could
otherwise not afford to go to school. In the Home Based Care program, there
are over 5,000 patients living with AIDS or other chronic disease enrolled
in this palliative care service, being visited by a network of 400
volunteers, nurses and chaplains.

The expectant mother, the sick, the dying and their relatives and friends
are exposed to the benefits of AIDS awareness and health education at Howard
Hospital. Our education team, called ‘Gypsy Joe’, reaches the schools,
churches, farms and mines with the message of AIDS prevention using song,
art and puppetry. Peer education through youth clubs have been established
in the schools. It is our goal that individuals will take note, and adopt
healthy, life-preserving behavior - one by one.

Prevention, treatment and care, and a message of hope ... this is the
message that we deliver to our patients, their families and to the community
at large.

MISSION STATEMENT

The Salvation Army, as an international movement, is an evangelical branch
of the Christian church.

Its message is based on the Bible. Its ministry is motivated by love of God
and a practical concern for the needs of humanity. Its mission is to preach
the Gospel of Jesus Christ and supply basic human needs without
discrimination.

Howard Hospital ascribes to this mission statement. We are committed to
meeting human needs in a compassionate manner to all those seeking medical
care.

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