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Correction -Mashakada not present

Correction to :
What actually happened? ~ Trudy Stevenson
(Posted to www.zimbabwesituation.com : 10/1/06)

Sent: Tuesday, January 10, 2006 3:43 PM
Correction to my report on 12 October meeting - Mashakada was not present at the meeting.  Apologies to Hon Mashakada.
Trudy Stevenson


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Whither Zimbabwe - A failed state?  A "Parliamentary democracy"?

 

(A speech delivered to the symposium organised by Bulawayo Agenda and the Konrad Adenhauer Stiftung at Bulawayo on the 16th November 2005)

 

I have been asked to consider the question as to whether Zimbabwe is now a failed state.  It is hard to define what a failed state is because that is such a relative term.  Somalia is clearly a failed state. Liberia until recently was also a failed state.  In Somalia today there is no functioning bureaucracy and the country appears to be run by a variety of warlords.  The rule of law has broken down completely and the economy of the country has been set back to the dark ages.

 

Clearly Zimbabwe has not reached that stage and if that, namely Somalia, is the standard by which we judge a failed state, Zimbabwe is not one.  Whilst the rule of law has almost totally broken down in Zimbabwe and whilst Zimbabwe does suffer from one of the fastest declining economies in the world there is still a semblance of law and most government institutions are still functioning, albeit badly.  Furthermore Zimbabwe's physical infrastructure is still largely intact.

 

However it would be true to say that by first world standards Zimbabwe may well be considered to be a failed state.  Indeed by international law standards an argument could be made that Zimbabwe is, in some respects, a failed state.  In this regard it is pertinent to refer to be Responsibility to Protect Doctrine which is currently being debated in the United Nations. The essence of this doctrine is the following:

 

A.     State sovereignty implies responsibility, and the primary responsibility for the protection of its people lies with the state itself.

B.     Where a population is suffering serious harm, as a result of internal war or insurgency, repression or state failure, and the state in question is unwilling or unable to halt or avert it, the principle of non intervention yields to the international responsibility to protect.

 

If this standard is applied to address the question of whether Zimbabwe is a failed state then it clearly is in danger of being adjudged a failed state. Given the fact that 5 million Zimbabweans are now suffering serious harm in the form of severe food shortages, given the fact that 1.5 million Zimbabweans are HIV-positive and only a fraction are receiving the necessary medication, given the fact that the Zimbabwean economy is crumbling before our eyes and given the fact that the Zimbabwean government is either unwilling or unable to halt or  avert this crisis, a strong case can be made that the Zimbabwe state is no longer able to fulfil its primary responsibility for the protection of its people. There is no doubt that without some form of peaceful United Nations intervention there is no prospect of Zimbabwe being able to recover from the catastrophe it finds itself in.

 

Furthermore if there is not an urgent invocation of the responsibility to protect doctrine by the United Nations, Zimbabwe is in very grave danger of becoming a failed state akin to Somalia. All the signs are already there.  Fundamentally the failure to respect the rule of law acts like a cancer in any society.  This is no more apparent than in the application of the land reform policy of this government.  In 2000 High Court judgements were ignored with impunity.  In 2002 the Supreme Court "rectified" the situation by legitimising what were patently unlawful acts by the state.  In the last few weeks we have seen that, despite the protestations of the likes of Reserve Bank Governor Gono and Vice President Msika for no further productive lands to be invaded, those calls have fallen on deaf ears and the situation deteriorates by the day. At the very time that the nation is facing its worst food shortages ever many of the remaining productive farms are being looted in certain areas and farmers evicted in others, presumably because the local warlords in those areas have chosen to disregard the saner voices in the present government.

 

In addition the cumulative effect of the brain drain of the last six years is now seriously undermining a whole variety of institutions and professions. Until the present time many have been able to continue their operations on skeleton staffing arrangements but many of these institutions and professions are now facing total collapse. The domino effect of the collapse of institutions and professions on the rest of society is starting to happen. If this collapse continues at its present rate Zimbabwe's bureaucracy, such as it is at present, will also collapse.  When the bureaucracy collapses law-enforcement agencies and the military will become less disciplined than they are at present and when that happens a very serious situation can develop.  For it is at that stage that the current political warlords responsible for the chaos in the agricultural sector may be replaced by military warlords who have the power to pervade every aspect of Society.  It is at that stage that Zimbabwe faces the danger of becoming a failed state similar to Somalia.

 

One of the most important restraints on any state becoming a failed state is if a significant majority of a nation's population retain faith in democratic institutions and hope in the capacity of those institutions to provide a way out of the nightmare. It is important to remember that a collapsed economy per se does not automatically result in a failed state. If a nation, despite a collapsed economy, retains a cohesive society then a state will not fall apart.  In the darkest hours of World War II Britain was isolated and its economy devastated.  At the height of the Blitz London was almost completely destroyed.  However one could never argue that at that point in time Britain was a failed state.  It is in that context that an analysis of the general political environment is so important in deciding whether or not Zimbabwe is in danger of becoming a failed state. In other words what is the state of health of our political institutions?  Do people still retain some faith in those institutions?

 

The current state of Zimbabwe’s political/democratic institutions

 

Zimbabwe’s political institutions are under grave threat and many have been almost totally undermined in the last five years.  One of the principal reasons why  many Zimbabweans retained hope that positive change was possible as late as 1999 was because the judiciary was strong and independent, the police force was reasonably neutral, civil society was strong and the fourth estate, the media, appeared to be growing in strength.  Sadly five years on the same cannot be said of these institutions.

 

The Police

 

In the course of the last five years the police force has become highly politicised and compromised. Since 2000 over 300 opposition activists have been murdered, some in cold blood, some in broad daylight, and some by known perpetrators. Not a single successful investigation of any of these murders has been conducted. During the same period numerous opposition leaders and activists have been arrested by the police and detained on spurious charges. In some of the more high-profile cases, such as the Cain Nkala trial, the police have been accused of partisan behaviour and of deliberately investigating the wrong people.

 

Senior police officers have been undermined through the allocation of land. I have no objection to land being allocated per se. I have no objection to police officers and others being allocated land on their retirement. However no person can do two jobs at once well, especially when one of the jobs is an all-consuming profession such as policing. I do not see how one can be a good police officer and a good farmer at the same time.  Policing demands that one be at once posted 24 hours a day, seven days a week and farming makes similar demands. Through the allocation of farms to senior police officers they have not only been compromised but I think also distracted from doing their jobs as well as they should.

 

As a direct result of this compromise of professionalism the police have increasingly being used to do the dirty work of politicians. In clear breach of the Regional Town and Country Planning Act, the Urban Councils Act and the Housing Standards Act the police were used by politicians in May and June this year to unlawfully evict hundreds of thousands of poor Zimbabweans from their homes and vending sites in Operation Murambatsvina. In June I personally witnessed the police removing billions of dollars of goods lawfully held by informal vendors at Unity Village in Bulawayo.  I am told that those goods were then auctioned by the police and the proceeds never found their way back to the lawful owners. I am not aware that any accounting has been given to the lawful owners of those goods and one can only speculate as to where the proceeds of those goods ended up.  In the process the all-important trust between the people and the police was broken and as an institution the police force has been more undermined by Operation Murambatsvina than anything else that has happened in the last five years.

 

In recent weeks the police have once again been used to further the avaricious desires of greedy politicians who want to lay their hands on as much farming equipment as they can. Under the pretext of using the Farm Equipment Act the police force has been used to unlawfully seize billions of dollars worth of farm equipment which presumably will find its way into the hands of politicians who will not be able to use this equipment to grow much-needed food for Zimbabweans.

 

The Attorney General's office

 

Whilst there are some signs that the new Attorney General is prepared to turn over a new leaf the conduct of his predecessors during the last five years leaves much to be desired.  Just as the police have not adequately investigated the 300 murders referred to above, so too has the Attorney General's office failed to prosecute successfully, or at all, any of these cases. In some instances perpetrators have been identified by High Court judges and yet the Attorney General's office has failed to bring these criminals to justice. In high-profile murders such as the murders of Chaminya and Mabikwa the alleged murderers identified by High Court judges have still not been prosecuted over five years after the murders were committed.

 

In the same period a variety of spurious, and ultimately unsuccessful, prosecutions have been brought against opponents of the regime. The most notorious example concerns the prosecution of Morgan Tsvangirai for treason. Almost equally notorious was the unsuccessful prosecution of Fletcher Dulini Ncube and his colleagues in the Cain Nkala case. In the latter case, despite very strong findings having been made by the presiding judge that the police were responsible for torture, no further investigations or prosecutions have been brought by the Attorney General's office either against the police involved or against the actual perpetrators of the crime.

 

But my concerns do not solely touch on political offences. In the course of the last 10 years Zimbabwe has been devastated by a succession of corruption scandals. To name but a few, Zimbabwe's economy has been undermined by the VIP Housing scandal, the Harare airport scandal, and the War Victims Compensation Act scandal.  Recently we have been subjected to the spectre of Leo Mugabe being arrested on allegations of exporting flour to a neighbouring country. None of these old scandals have been adequately investigated or prosecuted by the Attorney General's office and one is left with little confidence that the recently exposed scandals will be dealt with any differently.

 

The Judiciary

 

Despite the Chief Justice’s defence of the judiciary made recently at a pass out parade, the reality is that our judiciary has been severely compromised in the course of the last six years. Whether or not the allocation of land compromises a judge’s integrity or independence the fact of the matter remains that a judge’s effectiveness is compromised if a judge tries to hold down two jobs at one time.  No one can possibly argue in good faith against the fact that being a judge is a full-time profession. Likewise no one can possibly argue that running a large scale commercial farming enterprise is also a full-time job. Neither can be done competently together. Just as policing requires a 24 hour, seven day a week dedication so does being a good judge.

 

Sadly the proof of this is given in a variety of poor judgements handed down by judges and more particularly by many judgements that have not been handed down at all. It is an absolute disgrace that not one of the 39 electoral challenges brought by the MDC in 2000 were ever finalised.  Whilst there were a variety of reasons why that was the case the dominant reason was the failure of the judiciary to treat the matters with the urgency they deserved and indeed the urgency mandated by the Electoral Act . Tomorrow, on the 17th November 2005, in the Supreme Court the Presidential court challenge first started in April 2002 against the election of Robert Mugabe will take a further step when lawyers argue that the failure by the High Court judge presiding over the matter to deliver his reasons on the legal and constitutional arguments for two years is in breach of section 18 of the Constitution, namely the right of every person to have his or her rights determined by an independent court within a reasonable period of time. I do not intend to prejudge tomorrow's case; suffice it to say that most judiciaries the world over would be ashamed by such a delay in such an important case. After all there can be no more important case than a challenge to the election of a country’s President.

 

All is not lost however and there are some pockets of light. The recent judgement of Mrs Justice Makarau in the March 2005 Makoni North Parliamentary election case is an example. Although the judge failed, wrongly in my view, to set aside the election she did make the important finding that food had been used as a political weapon throughout the constituency. Findings such as these greatly complement the efforts of those who maintain that the present government is guilty of crimes against humanity.  For so long as judgements like these are handed down hope will remain, no matter how small, that the judiciary can still be used to expose human rights abuses even if the judiciary cannot be used to deal effectively with them.

 

The electoral process

 

With a lot of fanfare the Zimbabwe government last year reformed the electoral process through the establishment of the Zimbabwean Electoral Commission and a new Electoral Act.

 

Time does not permit me to critically analyse all the electoral institutions. Suffice it to say that in my view they constitute nothing but an elaborate smokescreen designed to convey the impression that Zimbabwean complies with the SADC electoral standards. However I do not believe that the changes are all bad and if the more independent commissioners on the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission would find some courage to stand up for what is right this institution could be used in future to promote democracy in the same way the Kenyan Electoral Commission, although ostensibly biased, did facilitate the peaceful transfer of power in Kenya recently. As a final word on the subject it must be said that this institution and the electoral law will need radical reform before any meaningful faith can be placed in the electoral process.

 

Civil Society

 

During the last 20 years a plethora of civil society and human rights groups have emerged in Zimbabwe. With the undermining of the formal political opposition in Zimbabwe the role of these groups will become more and more important. However even these groups face great challenges. If the human rights community is honest with itself it must admit that, aside from a few glowing exceptions, it failed to mount a meaningful response to Operation Murambatsvina. It was largely been left to organisations such as Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights, the churches and foreign or underground institutions such as The Solidarity Peace Trust and Sokwanele to mount a meaningful response to these human rights abuses and to expose them. In recent weeks certain human rights organisations have allowed themselves to become partisan in the debate raging within the opposition and have failed to condemn objectively human rights abuses perpetrated within the opposition. In my view a human right’s organisation’s effectiveness in condemning violence perpetrated by the ruling regime is greatly undermined if that organisation does not equally condemn violence perpetrated by people within the opposition.

 

The Media

 

With the recent revelations regarding the alleged takeover of the Financial Gazette and the Daily Mirror by the CIO, and with the continued effective banning of the Daily News, Zimbabwe's fourth estate has been gutted. We are now left with only the Independent and the Standard as relatively objective sources of news. Even those newspapers are undermined by a dearth of investigative and critical journalism. The only independent radio stations are difficult to listen to and even they have fallen into the trap of being partisan in the current debate raging within the opposition. In the calamitous state that Zimbabwe finds itself in journalists would be well advised to remember one of the fundamental principles that underpins their profession - namely the obligation to fairly and objectively present both points of view and to expose the facts.

 

Parliament

 

Parliament has never been a strong institution in Zimbabwe. It was not so during white minority rule and it has certainly not been so in the last 25 years. It has always suffered from the disability that it is not adequately representative of all points of view. That was certainly the case when it only represented the views of the white minority and sadly no honest and objective commentator could say that the current Parliament adequately represents the views of all sectors of the Zimbabwean society.

 

Whilst there were some hopes five years ago that Parliament may become a vibrant institution it has been steadily undermined during this period. It is terribly under funded at present; its debates are no longer communicated to the electorate and most of its members talk past each other. As a result it has not become a forum for the resolution of Zimbabwe's grave problems.

 

Suffice to say that the institution of Parliament needs radical reform. However I would still argue that, like the courts, Parliament is not all bad and that there are aspects of it which have been, and can still be, used to promote a democratic agenda and to expose grave human rights violations.  In the last year we have seen, by way of example, how Parliament was used to expose duplicate land holdings by ZANU PF MPs, to expose the critical state of our food reserves and to expose in detail the effects of Operation Murambatsvina in certain constituencies. For so long as Parliament can be used in this manner I believe that it should still be viewed as a meaningful area of struggle.

 

Zimbabweans at a crossroads

 

From my remarks above it will be apparent that nearly all of Zimbabwe's political/democratic institutions are at best under threat and are at worst totally undermined. As I stated above it is the faith in these institutions that often prevents any nation from becoming a failed state. Accordingly the critical state of these institutions is in itself a grave indicator that Zimbabwe is in danger of becoming a failed state.

 

It is in this context that Zimbabwe has reached a crossroads. In the last few weeks there has been a very heated and acrimonious debate about whether the MDC should participate in the forthcoming Senate elections.  Time does not permit me to go into the various arguments in detail but in my view the debate is not about participation in the Senate per se but rather reflects a fundamental disagreement over the way in which the struggle for democracy is going to be fought in future.

 

I have been greatly disturbed by the intolerance displayed by people on both sides of the debate both within the party and in civil society. I believe that there are very strong arguments to be made both for and against participation which are set out below. In any event my view is that the Senate elections are an irrelevance and whether the MDC is in or out of the elections that will not greatly affect the tide of events in Zimbabwe.

 

Having said that the arguments both for and against that have been made can be summarised as follows:

 

 

Arguments against participation

 

  1. Participation will be hypocritical

 

The MDC vigorously opposed the Constitutional Amendment Bill in Parliament including the provisions relating to the reintroduction of the Senate. Whilst the MDC did not oppose the reintroduction of a Senate per se it disagreed with the manner in which it had been reintroduced and argued that was not right that the nation should be subjected to the cost of such an exercise at this point in time.  It is argued that in light of these points it would be hypocritical for the MDC to put up candidates for election to the Senate.

 

  1. Participation will legitimise the process

 

ZANU PF had no mandate to reintroduce the Senate in the way it has and to that extent what it has done is illegitimate in the minds of the people.  If the MDC does not participate in the election the notion that the Senate is simply a ZANU PF concoction will remain in the minds of the people.  It is argued that if the MDC participates it will legitimise the institution of the Senate.

 

  1. Participation will be costly and will drain the MDC of resources

 

The MDC had not budgeted on having to campaign in another general election within a year of the 2005 Parliamentary general election.  Contesting the election will undoubtedly cost the MDC money it either does not have or money which is desperately needed for other activities such as the Congress which the party is obliged to hold.  Aside from draining financial resources many of the party’s members, staff and supporters are mentally and physically exhausted and it will be difficult to mobilise them to conduct a vigorous and effective campaign.  It is argued that because of this and because of the fact that the elections will be rigged in any event it will not be a wise use of the party's resources to participate in these elections.

 

  1. Participation will draw the party's attention away from the holding of its Congress

 

The MDC is obliged to hold its Congress by the end of January 2006.  The senatorial election will undoubtedly disrupt preparations for the Congress, drain resources needed for the Congress and possibly be held at the very same time that the Congress is due to be held.  It is argued that by participating in the senatorial elections the MDC will subvert its own agenda to that of ZANU PF and accordingly it should continue with its own agenda of holding a Congress and should not be diverted by participating in the senatorial elections.

 

  1. Participation will undermine the party’s relationship with civil society

 

Most civic organisations have strongly opposed the Senate elections. It is argued that the MDC should not jeopardise its relationship with these organisations by participating in the elections.

 

 

Arguments for participation

 

  1. Participation will maintain the MDC's stranglehold on certain areas

 

As demonstrated in the recent Mayoral elections in Bulawayo ZANU PF now enjoys less than 20% of support in urban areas.  ZANU PF has been forced into appointing Governors and commissions so that they can retain some control of major cities and towns.  Aside from these appointed positions they have no means of accessing the electorate in urban areas.  Conversely the MDC dominates the urban areas and through its Members of Parliament tightly controls political discourse in urban areas. It is argued that if the MDC does not participate in the elections ZANU PF will gain important footholds in urban areas which will be used to undermine MDC's control. It is further argued that the regime will undoubtedly use patronage to boost the image of ZANU PF Senators and to undermine MDC Members of Parliament.  It is accordingly argued that the MDC cannot afford to relinquish its control of the urban areas by simply handing seats to ZANU PF.

 

  1. Non-participation will deny the people the right to keep out ZANU PF

 

There are some areas where the electorate does not want any ZANU PF presence at all.  This is particularly demonstrated in Harare and Bulawayo where overwhelming majorities have voted in favour of the MDC in some 6 elections since 2000.  It is argued that if the MDC does not participate it will in fact deny people the right to prevent ZANU PF from having any presence in these areas and because of this fact it has to participate; anything less would be a betrayal of the people.

 

  1. Non-participation will create in the minds of the electorate the notion that the MDC has capitulated

 

Following the banning of the Daily News and the silencing of other media outlets it will be very difficult for the MDC to convey to the electorate its reasoning behind any decision to participate or not to participate.  No matter how laudable a decision not to participate may be the state media will undoubtedly portray any such decision as evidence that the MDC is in a state of terminal decline. In any event there is the danger that the public will interpret a decision not to participate as evidence that the MDC has either capitulated to ZANU PF pressure, or that it has no capacity to oppose the regime. In the absence of a clearly articulated and vigorously executed alternative strategy there is the danger that the electorate will view the MDC as a spent force and look elsewhere. It is argued in the light of these factors that the MDC has no option but to contest the election so that it can clearly and unequivocally demonstrate to the electorate that still has the willingness and ability to confront ZANU PF and that it is still a viable alternative political party.

 

  1. Participation will exacerbate the divisions within ZANU PF

 

Whilst the reintroduction of the Senate has been designed to enable ZANU PF to patch up differences and divisions within itself by the appointment of losing candidates and disaffected members, the senatorial elections could in fact be very divisive. To this extent there is a real possibility that an MDC boycott could play right into the hands of ZANU PF by enabling Robert Mugabe to dispense patronage without having to go to the expense of an election and without him having to pay the price of exacerbating divisions within his own party which will inevitably follow the hype generated by the electoral process. If there is no election at all ZANU PF will be able to appoint 66 Senators in a very painless and cost-effective manner. It is argued that only by contesting an election can it be shown how much support ZANU PF has left. Even a low turn out will show that ZANU PF has lost the support of the majority of the people. It is argued that if the MDC participates that will not only force ZANU PF to spend money it does not have but will also expose serious divisions within ZANU PF. Conversely if the MDC does not participate ZANU PF will be able to perpetuate the myth that it enjoys overwhelming support through the country.

 

 

These were the arguments made by both sides of the debate in the run up to the meeting of the National Council on the 12 th October 2005. No objective commentator can dispute that the arguments made for and against are strong. This is not an issue on which absolutist positions can be taken. However despite these strong arguments, made by people of good faith on both sides, the debate has, since the 12th October 2005, degenerated both within the MDC and in civil society. The debate has been marked by growing intolerance. MDC leaders, some of whom have a long and distinguished human rights record have been called traitors and sell outs. Scurrilous things have been said against MDC leaders on both sides of the debate.

 

This is not a simple decision although it may appear to be so from the outside. It is incredibly complex and is not helped by the unbalanced and ill informed view of those who write from the relative comfort of academia or of civil society or of the US, UK or SA. When I see the vitriol (traitor, sell out, gravy trainer) that has been directed at people like Paul Temba Nyathi (who has spent his entire life fighting for democracy, was detained by the Rhodesians and who spent the 80s and 90s rehabilitating ex-combatants and fighting human rights causes) simply because he happens to believe that we have no choice but to participate, I am appalled. It seems to me that no-one has taken the time to consider that some of the people who are for participation are wise people, of great integrity and are, after all, entitled to a different point of view. Fundamentally we have to ask – are people entitled to a different point of view? Because they happen to take a different point of view does that automatically mean that that point of view is worthless and they are traitors?

 

What has become crystal clear in my mind since the 12th October 2005 is that this debate is in essence all about the strategies that we are to employ in future to bring democracy to Zimbabwe. At the heart of the debate is whether we continue to use non-violent methods as the sole means of bringing about change or whether we abandon that method and embrace violence. It has been argued that the electoral route is now dead and that there is no point in using that route any longer. It has been argued that it is futile to use the courts any longer. Some have argued that there should be a total withdrawal from all institutions, including Parliament. In other words it is argued that confrontation is the only means by which this regime will be removed.

 

Indeed the logical progression of a boycott of the Senate elections should be to pull out from Parliament and to boycott all corrupted institutions such as the courts. No-one can possibly argue that the courts are any fairer these days than the electoral process. Some leaders both within the MDC and civil society have argued that there should be such a withdrawal and that henceforth only overtly confrontational methods should be used to tackle the regime. The language of “non-violence” is thrown in by these leaders but the harsh reality is that the logical result of such tactics could well be violence and possibly civil war. The grave consequence of pulling out of these institutions such as Parliament and the courts is that one may be left with little other than the streets as an arena to confront the regime. When we are left with that then civil war and bloodshed could well become a reality no matter what the original intentions of opposition civic and political leaders were.

 

Common sense dictates that we would be absolutely foolhardy to even contemplate civil war. Although those calling for confrontation do not specifically advocate civil war that is the logical progression of where some of the methods promoted will lead us. When there is talk of “governments in exile”, as some commentators have argued for, there has to be a reason for the government being in exile, and usually it is because young men are dying on the streets. This is not Southern Rhodesia in 1965. We do not have sympathetic neighbouring states that will provide us with bases. China and Russia are not falling over each other to provide us with arms of war. Most of our angry young men are reasonably well employed in South Africa and the UK and aren’t exactly champing at the bit to come and sacrifice their lives in Zimbabwe. The people left in Zimbabwe are overwhelmingly weak – they are being starved out of existence and 1,5 million of our adults (the very group that would normally be on the streets) are HIV positive and very sick.

 

Furthermore it is important never to confront any opponent in the territory it has the most expertise in. The one area of expertise that ZANU PF has is in violence. Robert Mugabe’s boast made in 1998 that he has “many degrees in violence” must not be taken lightly. One of the things that has deeply frustrated this regime in the last 5 years has been the fact that the opposition has resisted the temptation to engage in violent means of struggle. We are up against a regime that is champing at the bit for a fight as it knows that is the only thing that can save it – if it has the distraction of conflict it will then be able to blame the economic collapse on that. At present the regime has no-one to blame but the West and no one believes that. The regime also knows that it will enjoy the absolute support of its neighbours in crushing any violent opposition. But it has been flummoxed by the non-violent methods used to date. Accordingly whilst the use of words like confrontation is seductive we must not fool ourselves and think that the regime does not desire this. Indeed I believe that this method of struggle is precisely what the regime has desired for a long time.

 

In other words aside from the morality of a commitment to use non-violence, the promotion of methods that may result in violent struggle is not even pragmatic. In short the abandonment of non-violent methods may even set back the struggle to bring democracy to Zimbabwe.

 

We must also consider how calls for the withdrawal from institutions will be perceived by the regime. If one withdraws from using Parliament, the courts and other institutions the message sent to the regime is that the opposition has given up on the democratic route as a means of obtaining power. It does not matter whether the opposition remains committed to using non-violent means of struggle, notwithstanding its withdrawal from these institutions, because the regime does not know what is deep down in the hearts and minds of the opposition. It can only surmise what the real intentions are. It is perfectly natural for the regime to assume that the real intention behind the withdrawal from institutions is in fact a new resolve to use force to remove the regime. Once the regime perceives that, violence and bloodshed are inevitable no matter what the intentions of those in opposition were originally.

 

Am I arguing that we must therefore simply curl up our toes and accept the situation? Absolutely not – what I am saying is that a strong argument can be made that we must use ALL non-violent means to oppose and expose this regime, including peaceful civil disobedience, peaceful mass action and participation in processes that expose the regime and therefore weaken it, including Parliament.

 

It has been argued that peaceful, non-violent, forms of mass action have been tried and have failed – the last stayaway in June was a dismal failure. Thousands of our brave compatriots are not even in the country to help plan and participate in such actions. But I believe that the failure of the MDC has not been because we have been in Parliament, but because too much focus has been placed on that and insufficient focus and planning has been devoted to organising effective non-violent mass action. I think we need to employ all possible non-violent and peaceful strategies. I think we need to see these farcical elections as a means to an end not an end in themselves, as I have done since 2002. I was under no illusions regarding the outcome of the March 2005 elections, indeed I was pleasantly surprised having predicted in December 2004 that we would only win 25 seats! But the point is that it was only by participating that we could expose the fraud. No sensible person can argue that the March elections legitimised the regime – indeed it weakened whatever claims to legitimacy they enjoyed before the elections. I think we need to be in Parliament (farcical as it is), we need to be in the courts (biased as they are), I think we need to be demonstrating for a new Constitution, I think we need to be more innovative regarding peaceful, non-violent forms of civil disobedience – but the way forward is not “simple” as many would argue. The position taken by many people in the MDC, who have been fighting for human rights for decades, for participation is not motivated by self interest (it is conceded of course that there inevitably will be those who are solely interested in the gravy train but they are a tiny minority). Their argument is simply premised on the fact that all peaceful, non-violent means must be used to fight the regime. It is founded on the realization that if all formal structures, institutions and processes are abandoned then one is left with precious little other than civil war, which is just what this regime desires, because it is the territory they have great knowledge of and expertise in.

 

It is unfortunate that because the argument for non participation is so strong most commentators have fallen into the trap of dismissing those who take a contrary view as being solely interested in the gravy train and immoral. Having had deep, deep concerns myself for over a year now about the prevalence of intra-party violence within the MDC  I know that there are many good people (who were against participation) who have now been forced into the so called pro participation camp because they are appalled by the threats and intimidation to support a non participatory stance made by the same people responsible for the attempted murder of  MDC Director of Security Peter Guyu in Harvest House last October and the disgusting acts of violence perpetrated against administrative staff in May. Indeed one of the main reasons why Manicaland voted as strongly for participation as it did on the 12 th October 2005 was because  non participation people came and threatened the Province to vote against participation. The Provincial leadership was not prepared to be intimidated, and ironically deliberately did just the opposite of what was intended by the threats and voted 13-3 in favour of participation.

 

I have argued for a long time that the use of violence to achieve political objectives has, more than anything else, been responsible for the chaos we as Zimbabweans find ourselves in now. The colonials used violence to overthrow Lobengula and used violence to maintain their power for decades. Zanu PF and Zapu used violence to wrest power from the white minority. Zanu PF used violence to achieve its goal of a de facto one party state and to suppress the opposition since 1987. I now see violence being used within the MDC to achieve political objectives and have no doubt, from the language being used, that a withdrawal from other legitimate areas of struggle (however pathetic) such as Parliament and the Courts inevitably means a commitment to employ violence. I appreciate that there are just wars – I am not a pacifist – in which one has no option but to employ violence. However in Zimbabwe, although the situation is dire and the regime clearly has no intention of handing over power, we have to question whether the MDC and civil society’s commitment until now to use non-violent methods has failed. Some will say that it has because the regime is still in power. However I take a contrary view. I think one can argue objectively that the regime is dramatically weaker now than it was 5 years ago and is steadily weakening. Whatever happens to the MDC now, its legacy to Zimbabwe will be that it exposed the real Zanu PF to the world, it in so doing isolated Zanu PF and I think history will show that it has fatally wounded Zanu PF. Zanu PF is not dead but it has no solution to the problems it has created and now it is only a matter of time before it crumbles. Can we truly argue that there are grounds for a “just war” in Zimbabwe and even if there are, are there any other options out there?

 

Is it justifiable to deliberately sacrifice the lives of young men and women at this stage of this struggle? Is there not the danger that by going down this route we will in fact play into the hands of the regime by giving it just the excuse it needs?

 

In truth the debate that has raged since the 12 th October 2005s has very little to do with participation and far more to do with the founding principles of the MDC, such as our commitment to pursuing non-violent methods both intra-party and nationally. If the arguments made by those who are against participation are so absolutely morally correct then why does violence have to be used to reinforce them? There are other issues involved but those of us who know all about them have restrained ourselves in our efforts to do everything possible to regain unity. However I can no longer sit back and see colleagues who I admire and respect being trashed as they have been. As a human rights lawyer I have always longed for see truth, objectivity and balance and I see very little of that in this debate at present.

 

 Having said that let me mention the following in closing.

 

I personally would rather not be in these elections. They are farcical, we do not have any money or energy to fight them convincingly and quite frankly I have so much else on my plate that the last thing I need is to be distracted by them. But a process of consultation has been done countrywide and a majority of our members, when the vote was taken on the 12th October, wanted to be in the election. Whether they are still so inclined I do not know given the chaos that has ensued, but that is not the point. Whether it was the right thing to consult on an issue like this or take a vote is also not the point – we have to learn from our mistakes, if that was one and I am not convinced it was. Having consulted and voted do we then just throw our constitution and consultative process in the dustbin? What single civil society organisation has consulted as widely as we did in September and October? Can anyone else provide a definitive view of what people at grassroots level were actually thinking? How can someone sitting in Chicago, Johannesburg or London know what people at grassroots are thinking? How does one explain that Manicaland, after an impassioned plea from Roy Bennett not to participate, voted 13 districts to 3 for participation (and these were not gravy trainers – they were poor rural folk who have no prospect of becoming Senators)? These are hard facts but if we are going to be truthful they simply cannot be ignored. If I consider myself a democrat then I cannot ignore them no matter what my personal preferences may be. I could easily take the fashionable route of calling those so unequivocally for participation traitors etc but that would not sit well with my conscience. I also recognise that there are also some compelling arguments for participation, as compelling as those against. But ultimately it is of no great import in my view whether we are in or whether we are out because these elections are not going to change anything on the ground. Indeed the elections are a complete irrelevance – they will not solve hype-inflation, the collapse of the economy, starvation and crimes against humanity whether we are in them or out of them. They are not going to bestow any legitimacy on this corrupt, bankrupt regime. However from the tone of the articles written recently one would think that the elections are the be all and end all of the struggle. They are not – this struggle will continue whatever happens on the 26th November. The only useful thing in my mind that has emerged from this debate is that we need to redouble our efforts to pursue other non-violent and peaceful means of struggle as well as continuing our struggle through Parliament, the Courts, the media, engaging the international community etc.

 

With Zimbabwe being in such a grave state I believe that the only way in which we can prevent our beloved nation from becoming a failed state is if we all recommit ourselves to adhering to the principles of non-violence.

 

Finally I think these words of Martin Luther King are pertinent to our situation:

 

“I have decided that I'm going to do battle for my philosophy.  You ought to believe something in life, believe that thing so fervently that you will stand up with it till the end of your days.  I can't make myself believe that God wants me to hate.  I'm tired of violence.  And I'm not going to let my oppressor dictate to me what method I must use. We have a power, power that can't be found in Molotov cocktails, but we do have a power.  Power that cannot be found in bullets and guns, but we have a power.  It is a power as old as the insights of Jesus of Nazareth and as modern as the techniques of Mahatma Gandhi.”

 

“I am convinced that if we succumb to the temptation to use violence in our struggle for freedom, unborn generations will be the recipients of a long and desolate night of bitterness, and our chief legacy to them will be a never ending reign of chaos."

 

"Admittedly, non-violence in the true sense is not a strategy that one uses simply because it is expedient at the moment; non-violence is ultimately a way of life that men live by because of the sheer morality of its claim.  But even granting this, the willingness to use non-violence as a technique is a step forward.  For he who goes this far is more likely to adopt non-violence later as a way of life." 

 

"The non-violent approach does not immediately change the heart of the oppressor.  It first does something to the hearts and souls of those committed to it.  It gives them new self-respect; it calls up resources of strength and courage that they did not know they had.  Finally it reaches the opponent and so stirs his conscience that reconciliation becomes a reality."

 

I fear that if we do not use all possible peaceful avenues and all institutions (no matter how flawed they may now be), and if we succumb to the temptation to use violence, then we will guarantee that Zimbabwe does become a failed state. If, however, we jointly determine to follow the principles of Martin Luther King and Mahatma Gandhi we can prevent that from happening.

 

 

The Hon. David Coltart MP

 

Bulawayo 16th November 2005


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End of year letter

Bulawayo South constituency

The Hon David Coltart MP

 

End of year letter                                                                            December 2005

 

Dear Friends,

 

I cannot believe how this year has flown.  In some ways it seems just yesterday that I was honoured and grateful to be re-elected by you as an MDC MP with a 76% majority. However that was in March and eight months have gone by since then. You will recall that in the run up to the election ZANU PF promised that if they were elected back into power they would stop the economic collapse, create more employment, bring an end to fuel queues, bring inflation down, tackle corruption and generally improve the lives of Zimbabweans. As I warned in my campaign, this regime does not have the ability, or the political will, to deal effectively with the many problems our nation is facing. Sadly the crisis created by the regime’s failed policies and incompetence has escalated greatly in the last eight months. Our nation is now facing a catastrophe of unprecedented proportions.

 

It has been as difficult as ever to communicate with you, my constituents. I find it ironic that despite the fact that I have now been your Member of Parliament for almost six years I have never once been invited to be interviewed by ZBC Montrose studios which as you know is right in the centre of the Bulawayo South constituency. The reason for this is obvious-the regime does not want me to be able to communicate with you. Indeed in the last year communications have become even more difficult.  The Chronicle is still hostile. The Daily News remains banned and they are now reports that both the Daily Mirror and the Financial Gazette have been taken over by the CIO. I am not discouraged by these actions of the regime - it is clearly fearful of what will happen if I and my colleagues in the MDC are able to communicate with you freely. For the time being then I will continue to communicate with you through the means of report back meetings (which I continue to have regularly throughout the constituency) and these letters. I ask that you pass this letter around so that as many people as possible generally about what I have been trying to do on your behalf.

 

Projects

 

25 years of ZANU PF rule have subverted many institutions in Zimbabwe. Members of Parliament are primarily meant to be lawmakers not project managers but the regime has subverted this role. Even in the recent Senate election the regime threatened voters saying that if their candidates were not voted for, development would not come to those areas that voted against the regime. ZANU PF MPs have access to state funds for developmental projects, something MDC MPs do not have.

 

In the same 25 years of ZANU PF rule the economy has been devastated; 80% of people are now unemployed and as a result most people are desperate to participate in self-help projects and other projects that uplift their standard of living.  I have recognised that with the regime not being prepared to yield power through the ballot, and with no immediate prospect of being able to restore sanity to the way Zimbabweans are governed, it has been necessary to assist working-class and unemployed people in my constituency to engage in projects pending the transition to democracy.

 

With this in mind I have conducted a fundraising drive to raise relatively limited funds to support self help projects in the constituency. I regret to advise that despite approaches made to several embassies I have not been able to raise funds from that source.  However my approaches to individuals have been relatively successful.  As a result a series of project meetings had been held in the constituency since March and I have now been inundated with over 30 project proposals from individuals and groups which would cost well over Z$3 billion to implement. As I have not been able to raise anything like that amount of money I have, in discussion with members of the constituency, decided to focus the funding we have available on a food growing/farming project. I am pleased to report that the project is on schedule. Land has been identified in Nketa; permission has been obtained from the City Council to use boreholes already on the land; some 20 people have been trained to date to farm the land and we are in the process of purchasing a pump, fencing and the irrigation equipment required for the project. I hope that in the coming weeks the project will get under way and that food can be grown in large quantities to supplement the meagre amount of food available to the people of Bulawayo.  I'm very grateful to the generous individuals who have donated money and a pump (which alone is worth some Z$200 million).

 

When I wrote you last year I spoke about raising money to build Cricket nets. The cricket nets are now a reality thanks to a generous donation made by the English cricket team. In August the Henry Olonga cricket nets were opened next to Nketa Hall and are now being used by many cricket enthusiasts. I am in the process of sourcing cricket equipment for the people of Nketa and I hope that this will be delivered early in the New Year. I have also sourced a donation from the Zattner family which has been used to purchase playground equipment which also will be installed in the near future near to Nketa Hall.

 

I am still working with the Toc H Charity organisation to source funds to construct the aids victim support centre I have mentioned in previous correspondence in Emgwanin.  I have recently been in contact with a South African-based Aids victims support organisation and hope that it may be able to make this project a reality. It is a shocking indictment against this regime that whilst it is prepared to create costly new institutions such as the Senate it is not prepared to provide funding for small projects such as these which are so desperately needed.

 

Parliament

 

Parliament is hardly sat this year since the March elections.  When it does sit its sessions often end early and if the MDC does not debate hardly anything meaningful takes place. The regime has cynically used Parliament to entrench its own position. This is graphically illustrated in Constitutional Amendment Bill 17. This Constitutional Amendment will not create a single new job in Zimbabwe and in many respects takes our Constitution back to the dark ages.

 

I, together with my courageous colleagues in the MDC, fought as hard as we could to oppose the Bill. In conjunction with my colleagues within the MDC and in civil society I helped draft an entirely new Constitution for Zimbabwe which was tabled in Parliament. This constitutional draft was based on an amalgamation of the original Constitutional Commission draft and the NCA draft constitution, both of which were debated and discussed in detail in 2000.  This draft constitution tabled by me in Parliament is in essence a reflection of what the people themselves said they wanted in the run-up to the Constitutional referendum which was held in 2000. There has been a lot of distortion in the press and elsewhere regarding the contents of that draft constitution. This was deliberately done to sow division within the MDC and to divert attention away from Constitutional Amendment Bill 17’s draconian provisions. Our draft constitution is now however a matter of public record and if you would like to read it a copy is available at the constituency office (located at Nketa 6 Housing Office). I encourage you to read the constitutional draft and to let me have your comments. If you would like an electronic copy of the draft constitution please send me an e-mail at byosouth@yahoo.com and I will send you a copy.

 

Because of the subversion of Parliament as an institution by the regime there has been considerable debate as to whether or not we should continue to participate in it. My own view is that we must use all institutions, no matter how flawed they have become, to expose the incompetence, corruption and selfishness of this regime. In the course of this year I and my colleagues have used every opportunity to expose human rights abuses and generally to speak out against the brutal acts perpetrated by this regime.

 

Murambatsvina

 

One of the most brutal acts ever committed by this regime occurred in May and June this year when Operation Murambatsvina was launched. Although Bulawayo South constituency was relatively unscathed, tens of thousands of Bulawayo residents were terribly affected by the destruction of their homes and businesses.  Soon after the operation was launched in Bulawayo I did what I could to expose what was happening. I spoke out in Parliament. I had a lengthy meeting with the UN Special Envoy Mrs Anna Tibaijuka and am pleased to report that many of my concerns and recommendations were included in her final report released in July. Subsequently I have worked with donors to provide assistance to the victims. I have spoken out locally and internationally against what can only be termed a crime against humanity. My belief is that the actions of the regime constitute a clear breach of Article 7 of the Treaty of Rome, which is the statute which governs the work of the International Criminal Court. I will continue to work to get the perpetrators of this atrocity brought to book.

 

MDC legal affairs Department

 

2005 has been a very busy year for the MDC Legal Affairs Department. Soon after the March elections we brought some 15 Parliamentary challenges. They were not brought because we believed that we could get MDC MPs into parliament through the courts. These cases are necessary for two reasons: firstly to demonstrate the MDC's commitment to respect the due process of law even though the regime has totally subverted the rule of law and, secondly, to use the court procedure to substantiate the allegations that we have made that the elections did not comply with the SADC standards and Zimbabwe's electoral Law. Our success in this regard is best illustrated in the recent judgement we obtained in the Makoni North Constituency case. Although we did not win the case the presiding judge found that food had been used as a weapon throughout the constituency by the regime. The finding of this fact alone provides valuable evidence to us for the future in our quest to show that ZANU PF is guilty of yet another crime against humanity, namely withholding food for political purposes.

 

The presidential challenge case first launched in 2002 continues. We finally got the Registrar General to bring all the election materials to court after obtaining a contempt order against him which itself contained the threat of imprisonment against him. Since August we have been examining all the voting materials used in the 2002 election. We will shortly be issuing a report regarding our findings. Whilst it would be improper for me to reveal what those findings are at this stage, suffice it to say that the examination of the voting materials has provided us with valuable evidence that there was widespread electoral fraud in the 2002 presidential election.

 

The Senate elections

 

The Senate elections have come and gone. My own view has always been that they were an irrelevance. It is most unfortunate that they have caused such division within the MDC. I took a deliberate decision not to align myself with either those for or against the elections mainly because I believed that the arguments were equally strong for and against. I have been doing what I can in an attempt to reconcile the opposing sides in this debate and will continue to do so. I still hope that leaders on both sides will remember the tremendous contribution to the struggle for democracy that those opposed to them within the MDC have made and that that reminder will assist in the reconciliation process.

 

January 2006 will see the 23rd anniversary of my return to Zimbabwe. Since my return I have been unrelenting in my work to bring about meaningful democracy to Zimbabwe. Whilst I hope that the present division within the MDC will be healed, even if it cannot I need to remind you of two things. Firstly, I personally am not going to give up on this struggle to bring freedom and democracy to Zimbabwe. In saying this I invite you to make contact with me to let me know your views. You can either write to meet care of the above-mentioned e-mail address or you can drop off a letter at my constituency office. Secondly, I should remind you that there are many good people within the MDC, on both sides of this debate, and in civil society, who are equally determined to bring about democratic change to Zimbabwe. Whatever happens to the MDC in the coming months its legacy is already clear: it has exposed the real ZANU PF to the world, in doing so it has isolated the regime and in isolating the regime it has ensured that democratic change is inevitable.

 

The regime has no solution to the massive crisis that it has created in Zimbabwe. We for our part must remain committed to using non-violent methods to achieve our goals, to respecting the rule of law and to our vision for a new free, democratic and prosperous Zimbabwe. I fear that, given the desperation of so many Zimbabweans, some may be tempted to abandon some of these principles. In this regard I think it is pertinent to remind you of the words of Martin Luther King:

 

"I am convinced that if we succumb to the temptation to use violence in our struggle for freedom, unborn generations will be the recipients of a long and desolate night of bitterness, and our chief legacy to them will be a never ending reign of chaos".

 

In the New Year we need to re-energise ourselves to use all peaceful non-violent strategies to force this regime to come to the negotiation table which in turn will see a new democratic Constitution for Zimbabwe, fresh elections and the restoration of a new Zimbabwe that we can all be proud of.

 

I am always amazed by the resilience, tolerance and good humour of Zimbabweans in the face of oppression and exceptionally difficult circumstances. I have no doubt that these qualities will ultimately win the day; that good will overcome evil and that Zimbabweans will soon be free. Let me remind you of some age-old wisdom from Psalm 37:

 

            “Do not fret because of evil men or be envious of those who do wrong;

            For like the grass they will soon wither, like green plants they will soon die away.

            For evil men will be cut off. A little while, and the wicked will be no more;

            Though you look for them, they will not be found.

            The Lord laughs at the wicked, for he knows their day is coming.”

 

I thank you for your ongoing support and wish you a happy Christmas and a peaceful and prosperous New Year.

 

The Hon David Coltart MP

Bulawayo South

4 December 2005


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Zimbabwe bans fish, meat vending to control cholera

People's Daily

       
The Zimbabwean government has banned public vending of fish and all meat products in a widened move to control the spread of cholera, local media reported on Tuesday.
This came as the fruit and vegetable market at Mbare Musika was closed with immediate effect on Monday.
Health and Child Welfare Minister David Parirenyatwa said on Monday that the prohibition in Harare was imperative to curb the highly infectious disease, which has already claimed three lives in the capital.
On Monday, Sekesayi Makwavarara, an official with the Harare City Council, also recommended the immediate closure of the popular Mbare Musika market to stem the spread of the often fatal water-borne disease.
This comes hardly a week after three family members died in the capital while three more members of the same household and their four lodgers were admitted at Beatrice Road Infectious Diseases Hospital for treatment of the highly infectious disease.
Cholera, an acute intestinal infection caused by ingestion of contaminated water or food, has killed 14 people countrywide in the past three weeks.
Mbare Musika vending market is currently in a sorry state with mounds of uncollected garbage and impassable roads, compounded by an invasion of illegal vendors, being the order of the day.
The ongoing rains have also worsened the situation, resulting in mud and rotting garbage attracting flies threatening the health of not only the retailers in the market, but that of Harare residents in general as well.
Makwavarara said the decision to close the market had been taken in order to halt the further spread of cholera. At least 181 cases have so far been reported.
Source: Xinhua


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Mdladlana to hold imbizo with Zimbabwean minister

sabc

Membathisi Mdladlana, the labour minister

Membathisi Mdladlana and Nicholas Goche, his Zimbabwean counterpart, will hold an imbizo


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Dozens die from water in Zimbabwe

Namibian
 

Tuesday, January 10, 2006 - Web posted at 6:43:14 GMT

* Josiah Mucharowana

HARARE - Last week, a cholera and thpoid epidemic raged through Harare and Chitungwiza claiming lives and left dozens of people hospitalised. Confusion reigned supreme as residents panicked following the outbreak with many households resorting to boiling tap water for drinking.

Others made sure family food was consumed whilst hot to reduce chances of contamination.

The sudden bouts of the twin diseases resulted in over a dozen deaths, most of them children under the age of five.

The outbreaks were not publicised in time leaving the majority of the urban population in the dark and prone to increased infections.

Inasmuch as the city fathers and various health institutions made frantic efforts to contain the diseases of cholera, dysentery and typhoid, the outbreaks laid bare the shortcomings of the Harare City Council and Chitungwiza municipality.

Their preparedness especially in high-density suburbs such as Mbare, Mufakose Mabvuku among others where hygiene conditions are, in most instances highly deplorable, was a far cry from being satisfactory.

In the end City Councils, should give justice to the large sums of money they get from ratepayers each and every month.

They should improve the health delivery system and make it available and affordable to every urban dweller in need.

This comes at a time when the Standards Association of Zimbabwe (SAZ) and the World Health Organisation (WHO) condemned drinking water in Harare saying it was of a low quality with very low concentrations of chlorine that was made worse by high levels of sediment impurities.

The quality of water, it was understood by experts, was compromised by worn out and broken pipes that were exposing water, making it prone to contamination by water borne diseases.

As a result of burst pipes, the quality of also ran the risk of contamination during this rain season when rubbish that is collected from the city's streets and by-ways can percolate through holes in the pipes.

In Harare last week, the climax of the cholera scourge sent shock waves amongst the people when it wiped an entire family at the Beatrice Infectious Diseases Hospital.

So far in less than two weeks since the disease came on the scene, over fifteen people have succumbed due to a combination of lack of medical attention or ignorance of the disease's symptoms.

Amongst the victims were children, mothers, fathers and grandmothers.

Late last year the twin cities were again caught unaware by the sudden bouts of diseases.

They were again rocked by twin infections of dysentery and diarrhoea, which just like cholera claimed more than a dozen lives in a short space of time.

More than 200 people were hospitalised after contracting the deadly Salmonella poisoning that is most notoriously spread through contaminated chicken and eggs including a wide range of other modes of transmission.

Adults usually survive diarrhoea caused by salmonella but children because of their weak and vulnerable immune system; the effects are very swift leaving little time for medical reaction.

According to medical experts, most of them die as a result of severe dehydration.

The diseases together with cholera can spread through infected food and water.

Worse still, cholera can be aggravated by the consumption of fruits such as mangoes that are in abundance during the rain season.

Over the years, people have always been encouraged to clean fruits before eating them but despite the warnings cholera outbreaks have been claiming innumerable victims as a result of negligence.

In Chitungwiza, the dysentery outbreak was attributed to residents fetching water for domestic use from unprotected wells and rivers, which in some instances have been polluted by sewage.

Many people found rivers and makeshift wells alternative sources of water in the wake of erratic and crippling shortages of clean piped water.

This scenario exposed the inefficiencies of Chitungwiza municipality, which over the years has been dogged by the spectre of burst sewerage pipes, unreliable water supply that had become part of daily life for many residents in the country's third largest town.

Dysentery, which is characterised by blood stained stool, can kill if a patient does not quickly seek treatment or can cause some perforation in the intestines, resulting in long term health complications.

- Nampa-Reuters


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New Strategies for the New Year

Sent: Tuesday, January 10, 2006 4:45 PM

Getting Back into Gear.

If that was Christmas, it's over. Now back to the future! After all the
confusion, accusation and counter accusations of the latter part of 2005,
2006 is seeing the slow evolution of a new dispensation within the MDC. We
have been plodding away at preparations for the next Congress of the Party
which will be held on the 18th and 19th of March 2006. This is later than
required by the constitution and the leadership will have to ask Congress to
condone this lapse when it meets. The reasons are obvious to all and there
should be no problems with this issue.

Ten of the 12 Provincial Congresses have now been held - well attended in
all cases by delegates from the Branches, Wards and Provincial structures.
New leadership has been elected and in most cases there is a general
improvement in the quality and character of the leadership that has been
elected. On Saturday we had the first opportunity to meet many of the new
leaders as they attended the National Council meeting. I was impressed.
Bulawayo and Matabeleland South remain for next weekend and once these two
are completed we will then be able to issue invitations to the main Congress
of the Party.

Some 15 000 people will be eligible to attend Congress as delegates and
these together with our guests will mean that we will have a very large
number of people at Congress. This will be our second Congress - the first
being in late 1999 when we met at the National Aquatic Sports Center in
Chitungwiza. This year we go to the National Sports Center in Harare. At
Congress, the process of healing the wounds of the split in our leadership
will finally be dealt with and a full contingent of national leaders
elected.

I am looking forward to Congress - it will be a real celebration of the
democratic spirit in Zimbabwe. A celebration of courage and determination to
stand up to a tyrannical dictatorship in defense of our rights as people. A
celebration of survival; in spite of all that has been thrown at us over the
past 6 years, we are still here, still in good spirit and still determined
to finish what we started out to do in 1997.

The second aspect of the Congress will be to cement the consensus we have
evolved together over the past six years in respect to our philosophy and
ideology as well as the policies that flow from those foundations. We are a
social democratic movement and as such our policies will reflect our
commitment to the welfare of our people and the development of our
country. To facilitate this a full policy review is under way.

The third aspect will be to work out how we are going to achieve our main
goal - that of effecting regime change in Zimbabwe.

There are very few in Zimbabwe today who do not accept that Zanu PF has
completely failed to manage our political and economic affairs. We have seen
the most rapid collapse of an economy in African history - and in a country
that is not at war and has no internal armed struggle. This has been a
self-inflicted collapse and the regime shows no sign of either understanding
what it has done or how to fix the problem. We have no alternative but to
now seek their removal from power and the instillation of a new government
that will tackle our massive and urgent problems and restore our dignity as
a nation.

The question is how? We have tried the democratic route and been frustrated
at every hurdle. The report on the Presidential election in 2002 is now out
in draft form and being examined by Party leaders. It is a completely
damming indictment of the whole electoral process as developed and managed
by Zanu PF since 1980. It reveals a completely manipulated and corrupted
voters roll, a sophisticated system designed distort the roll to accommodate
every sort of electoral fraud. It uncovers the role of the "Command Center"
a sinister body run by the military and security agencies that actually
administers all elections from the headquarters of the CIO in Harare and
that has links to every polling station in the country. It shows how this
body distorted the results - blatantly manipulating the voting figures that
were coming out of the polling stations themselves.

It reinforces our claim that the Registrar Generals Office is totally
partisan and is actually the main agent used for the manipulations and
distortion of voting rights, citizenship and creating the capacity for vote
fraud on a massive scale. This damming report coupled to the already well
established (confirmed by the Courts) use of food and violence as a means of
influencing voter behavior makes the idea of regime change via democratic
means simply a joke.

We have tried the legal route - we took 35 of the June 2000 election results
to Court, as is our right in terms of the law and our constitution. It took
the Courts 5 years to hear 12 cases - award 7 to the MDC and dismiss 5 and
the rest fell away when the next elections took place. In only two cases
were the electoral challenge procedures completed, MDC won both but so late
that our extra Members of Parliament never had a chance to attend even one
session.

Then there was the legal challenge to the election of Mugabe as State
President in 2002. He purportedly won that by a significant margin but we
know that in fact a two-thirds majority defeated him. We took this to the
Courts within 30 days of the election - today, 5 years later, the case has
still not been heard and in desperation we have now appealed to the Supreme
Court. After 4 years of repeated legal appeals we eventually got the papers
from that election into the Courts in Harare and obtained access. It has
taken us many months of hard work to investigate just what went on - with no
cooperation at all from the powers that be in Harare. Now we have the facts
the lawyers tell me they have no confidence that they will ever get the case
into Court.

So no democratic means, no legal means - what next? We ourselves rule out
violence and armed struggle - we have been down that road before and see no
future for anyone there. So what way to go? Well first we have to set our
goals - that is in the process of taking shape in the MDC but I think it is
going to be a new national, peoples driven constitution. Once that is in
place then a normalization period to stabilize the situation on the ground
(food and security) and then fresh elections under international
supervision.

"You will never get Zanu PF to agree to that" - agreed, therefore there will
have to be some use of force and here we will use the methods refined over
the past centuries by similar populations living under tyrannies - civil
disobedience, strikes, stay aways, boycotts and pressure on all associated
with the regime to concede the need for a new beginning.

At rallies over the past weekend the leadership of the MDC spoke to
thousands of its supporters and outlined to them their thinking. There is no
doubt about our need. No doubt about our determination and we have no doubt
about our eventual victory. History is on our side, the people will prevail
and this time Zanu PF will have no place to hide, not even in Pretoria. As
Roy Bennett said at the recent Council meeting "we have won seats in
Parliament, taken control of a majority of the Cities and Towns and what
have we achieved for our people - nothing!" He asked? "In what way can we
say that what we have been doing in the past six years has benefited the
ordinary man in the street?" He said this in support of a call for radical
new strategies to confront Zanu PF in all spheres and for the MDC to abandon
strategies that do not yield change. He is absolutely right.

Eddie Cross
Bulawayo, 9th January 2006


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Funding the Democratic Struggle

Sent: Tuesday, January 10, 2006 4:47 PM
Subject: Funding the Democratic Struggle

Set out below is the name and access codes for a fund set up by friends in
South Africa for the purpose of helping us finance the struggle for
democracy in Zimbabwe. As you know the MDC may not raise funds externally
for itself but we are not prohibited from asking our friends to help with
other aspects of the struggle. Funds deposited into this account are
properly controlled by reliable people and their expenditure is audited.
Should you wish a receipt or an acknowledgement just ask and it will be
provided. In the case of large donors - if you want some sort of report by
the auditors on expenditure then please also let us know.

The one way people who are concerned about the situation in Zimbabwe and who
want to help us resolve the crisis by removing the problem, is by helping us
fund the struggle. The struggle is ours in Zimbabwe but we need finance to
make things work in so many ways. There is lots of money for food aid and
social needs but the political struggle is very difficult to fund.
Governments refuse to fund political parties like the MDC and this
intensifies the need for small donations to funds like Zimfund.

Account Name- Zimfund
Account Number - 1589406079
Branch Code 158952
Bank-Nedbank (South Africa)
Swift Code - NEDSZAJJ

If you have any difficulty in making a contribution  - let me know and I
will get the guys in SA to sort it out.

Eddie Cross


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Mugabe's Computers 'Dead'

ZimDaily

Zimdaily NationalPresident Mugabe's Information and Communication Technology(ICT) drive suffered a major setback after reports that most of the computers that he donated to schools in the run up to 2005 parliamentary elections are dead.

Reports from Chiredzi Government High indicate that almost all Mugabe computers are down. This sparked furore from parents in the remote south-eastern town after they were forced to pay extra computer tutorial fees.

" Zvinorevei izvozvi, kwanzi maZhing zhong ose akauya naMugabe akafa (What is the meaning of all this, all copy-cat computers that Mugabe brought from China are dead)", said the irate Donald Moyo who has a child at the high school.

School authorities declined to comment although they could neither deny nor confirm the reports. Their reservations are largely out of fear of victimisation by a war veterans thug group led by one Mutemachani. It is reported that the Mutemachani-led group has caused mayhem in the high density of Tshovani town ship in Chiredzi.

President Mugabe hit headlines last year after he embarked on a nationwide crusade of donating computers even at schools without electricity and skilled manpower.


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Teachers' Moot Industrial Action Over Salaries

Zimdaily

Zimdaily NationalThe Progressive Teachers' Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) has indicated that the planned strike against low salaries will go ahead as per schedule. Secretary general of the union, Raymond Majongwe said consultations are at an advanced stage before the massive industrial action is unfolded. Majongwe said, teachers have no choice but to scuttle lessons as schools open for the first term of 2006.

"Consultations are at a higher level, anytime from now, we are demonstrating", said Majongwe

PTUZ, late last year demanded an 836% salary increase. Among other things, the union also called on the government to take teachers' issues seriously. Majongwe said, the teaching fraternity has been polarised for long, relegated to pauper-levels with an average teacher taking home Z$3 million.

"Teachers are now pathetic individuals in the society, we can not let this go on", the burly Majongwe.

Teachers have in the past been duped by authorities after unfulfilled promises of salary hikes. President Mugabe, himself, a teacher by profession, in 2003 sarcastically said that 'teachers and nurses will faint with the salary increases'. This was never fulfilled.

In a separate development, many parents have failed to raise the exorbitant school fees now ranging between $4 million to $30 million both for primary and secondary education. One Mbare parent blasted the government for failing to fulfill its 1980s rhetoric of 'Education For All By Year 2000'.

" This is ironic, we can no longer afford to offer our children basic education. Their(ministers) children are overseas, thus the reluctance in solving this problem", said Mr Samuel Bonhi of Mbare.

Education minister, Aeneas Chigwedere's reign has been dominated with more controversy than achievements.


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Zimbabwe Dec inflation quickens to 585.8 pct yr/yr

Reuters

Tue Jan 10, 2006 11:53 AM GMT


HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwe's annual inflation rate quickened to 585.8 percent in December from 502.4 percent in November, fanned mainly by higher prices for haircuts, bicycles and medicine, official data showed on Tuesday.
But for 2005 as a whole, the consumer price index rose by an average 182 percent, slowing sharply from 350 percent in 2004, the Central Statistical Office (CSO) said.
Zimbabwe has suffered rampaging inflation and six years of recession. Severe shortages of foreign currency, fuel and food have been widely blamed on government mismanagement.
Price pressures have been fuelled by a sliding Zimbabwe dollar, which has dramatically boosted the cost of imports.
Prices for bicycles -- a growing form of transport after chronic fuel shortages grounded many vehicles -- rose by an annual rate of more than 2,000 percent in December, as did fees charged by hairdressing salons, the CSO said.
Costs for medicine and postal charges jumped by more than 1,000 percent year-on-year.
On a monthly basis, the consumer price index jumped 18.3 percent from 27 percent the previous month, the data showed.
President Robert Mugabe's government has branded inflation the country's number one enemy.


© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.


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Zimbabwe's inflation approaches record levels

Mail and Guardian


Harare, Zimbabwe

10 January 2006 02:06

Zimbabwe's annual inflation reached 585,8% in December, closing in on the record high levels reached in 2004, the government statistical agency said on Tuesday.

The latest figures mark an increase of 83,4 percentage points from December 2004 and fly in the face of Zimbabwe Reserve Bank Governor Gideon Gono's projections of inflation levels reaching between 280% and 300% by December 2005.

The year-on-year inflation rate has been climbing monthly since March.

"The consumer price index increased by an average of 585,8% between December 2004 and December 2005," the Central Statistical Office said in its monthly report.

Economist Best Doroh, of banking group Zimbabwe Financial Holdings, expects inflation to continue creeping up until May.

"Between now and May, the probability of inflation continuously going up is high," Doroh said. "This is largely because the country will continue importing food. Zimbabwe will only know of its total grain produce probably in May, so this uncertainty will add on to inflationary pressures."

Inflation in Zimbabwe reached its peak in January 2004, hitting 624%.

Zimbabwe's economy has taken a steep dive since the late 1990s, shrinking by 30% over the past six years.

Over four million Zimbabweans in a population of 11,6-million face food shortages, according to United Nations agencies.

The government blames the economic drop on drought and targeted sanctions imposed by the European Union and the United States on President Robert Mugabe, members of his inner circle and their families following the disputed presidential election in 2002.

Critics say the seizure of white-owned farms since 2000 has led to the collapse of agriculture, which was the backbone of the economy. -- Sapa-AFP


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Ease witchcraft restrictions, says top Zim judge

M & G


Angus Shaw | Harare, Zimbabwe


10 January 2006 02:44

A senior High Court judge urged Zimbabwe's government to ease colonial-era restrictions on the practice of witchcraft, state-run radio reported on Tuesday.

Many in the country retain strong beliefs in the healing power of spirit mediums -- known as n'angas, or witchdoctors -- along with the role of ancestral rites in the nation's cultural life, Judge Maphios Cheda said on Monday at the opening of a new judicial year in the second city of Bulawayo.

"The strongly held conviction of belief in witchcraft and traditional healers ... cannot be wished away," Cheda said in the speech quoted on state radio.

He urged amendments to the century-old Witchcraft Suppression Act "in keeping with the popular thinking and beliefs of the majority in this country".

The Zimbabwe National Traditional Healers' Association estimates 80% of Zimbabweans visit traditional healers for treatment or consultations, Cheda said.

Though the Act has not been strictly enforced since independence from Britain in 1980, he said it has forced some rites to be performed in secret. The law prohibits "the throwing of bones" to diagnose problems by traditional healers clad in feathered headdress and animal skins. So, well-to-do Zimbabweans often visit healers under cover of darkness.

Cheda also accused lawyers of decrying the government's human rights record when they ignored colonial-era injustices.

President Robert Mugabe's government faces mounting local and international criticism for its suppression of dissent, including arresting critics, closing down independent newspapers and packing the courts with sympathetic judges. -- Sapa-AP


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ZIMBABWE: Water crisis hits major cities

Sent: Wednesday, January 11, 2006 12:36 AM

ZIMBABWE: Water crisis hits major cities

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]


HARARE, 10 January (IRIN) - Despite an unusual abundance of water after recent heavy rain, taps continue to run dry in several of Zimbabwe's major cities.

Some residents in the capital, Harare, have gone without water for as long as two weeks, while areas of Bulawayo, the country's second city, have experienced water cuts lasting for several days at a time. Old, unreliable water reticulation equipment has been blamed.

The quality of tap water has also become a problem. Harare's water was recently condemned by the municipality's own experts for failing to meet the minimum safety requirements set by the World Health Organisation and the Standards Association of Zimbabwe.

A report by the Harare municipality's Works Department said the city's water had very low concentrations of chlorine, resulting in high levels of bacteria and ideal conditions for disease outbreaks.

"Toxin producing blue-green algae and other impurities are constantly present in the drinking water," read part of the report.

Some industrialists involved in processing milk, ice cream, beer and soft drinks have lodged formal protests with the Harare municipality over the quality of water being supplied, and a few factories have threatened to stop production until the water quality improves.

This week three people in a Harare household died, while seven others were hospitalised, after contracting cholera. Outbreaks of cholera have also occurred in Chitungwiza, the capital's dormitory town, due to persistent water cuts that have lasted several weeks, leading some residents to dig shallow, unprotected wells.

Until recently, most of Zimbabwe's main cities were governed by opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) executive mayors, but a number of them were fired by the central government for alleged poor performance.

Precious Shumba, spokesman for the Combined Harare Residents Association, said they were working on a lawsuit against the government-appointed commission in charge of Harare, the minister of health and the local government minister who fired the mayor.

"Residents have overwhelmingly agreed that there is a clear case against the respondents that they have violated the public health act by failing to create an environment in which residents can live in a healthy city," Shumba told IRIN.

[ENDS]

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Fax: +27 11 784-6759
Email: IRIN-SA@irin.org.za

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[This item comes to you via IRIN, a UN humanitarian news and information service, but may not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies. All IRIN material may be reposted or reprinted free-of-charge; refer to the copyright page (Http://www.irinnews.org/copyright ) for conditions of use. IRIN is a project of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.]


U N I T E D  N A T I O N S
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)
Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN) - 1995-2005 ten years serving the humanitarian community


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SOUTH AFRICA-ZIMBABWE: Govt to regularise Zimbabwean farmworkers



[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]


JOHANNESBURG, 10 January (IRIN) - A government-run facility that will regularise Zimbabwean farmworkers employed in South African farms is to be established next month in a reception and support centre for undocumented immigrants.

"It is not going to be a recruitment agency - but we will provide work permits to Zimbabwean farmworkers [already employed] in the northern South African province of Limpopo, many of whom are currently illegally employed," Mokgadi Pela, a spokesman for the Ministry of Labour told IRIN.

The Nkunzi Development Association, an NGO championing the rights of South African farmworkers in Limpopo, contends that there are tens of thousands of Zimbabweans employed on farms in the province.

According to the Geneva-based International Organisation for Migration (IOM), which is setting up the reception centre in collaboration with the governments of Zimbabwe and South Africa at the Beitbridge border post between the two countries, between 1,000 and 2,000 Zimbabweans are deported via Beitbridge every week. The centre, funded by British government's Department for International Development, will be operational in February.

Nkunzi's Mark Wegerif expressed concern that Zimbabwean workers were being hired by South African farmers to exploit their labour for poor wages and working conditions. "What measures have been placed to ensure that does not continue to happen?"

However, Pela contended that the agency would ensure that "Zimbabwean workers are paid the wages as stipulated by the department and not exploited by some unscrupulous South African farmers". Farmworkers have to be paid a minimum monthly salary ranging between US $106 and $131 but illegal migrant workers sometimes do not get even half that amount.

Migrants with work permits would also have access to healthcare and legal rights, often denied to undocumented migrants, he added. Besides helping farmworkers, the centre will help deported migrants with transportation, food rations, basic healthcare, and information on HIV/AIDS.

Cross-border migration has become a contentious political issue in the region, because of disparities in economic development and consequent gaps in employment opportunities, noted IOM spokeswoman Nicola Simmonds.

Zimbabwe is going through a severe economic crisis and facing serious food shortages after recurring droughts and the government's fast-track land redistribution programme, which began in 2000 and has disrupted agricultural production and slashed export earnings.

[ENDS]

This is non-reply e-mail. Please do not hesitate to contact us at Mail@IRINnews.org.

IRIN-SA
Tel: +27 11 895-1900
Fax: +27 11 784-6759
Email: IRIN-SA@irin.org.za


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Clewlow Urges New Approach On Zimbabwe

allafrica


Business Day (Johannesburg)
January 10, 2006
Posted to the web January 10, 2006
Carli Lourens
Johannesburg
GOVERNMENT should stop its unsuccessful behind-the-scenes attempts to resolve the Zimbabwean crisis and start vociferously condemning what was happening in that country, businessman Warren Clewlow said yesterday.
Clewlow's sentiments, a clear indicator that the private sector is getting increasingly impatient with government's "quiet diplomacy" policy on Zimbabwe, were echoed by Business Unity SA (Busa), the umbrella body for all business organisations in the country.
Clewlow, who serves on the boards of four of the top 10 listed companies in SA, in cluding Old Mutual, Sasol, Nedbank and Barloworld, said the Zimbabwean political and economic crisis was "a monumental tragedy right on our doorstep and an albatross around the neck of an African renaissance".
As the company's chairman, he said in Barlowold's latest annual report that SA's efforts to date were fruitless and that the only means for a solution was for SA "to lead from the front. Our role and responsibility is not just to promote discussion... Our aim must be to achieve meaningful and sustainable change."
He said in an interview yesterday that taking economic steps such as sanctions against the Zimbabwean government would "just make more people suffer".
What SA needed to do was to vociferously condemn the situation in Zimbabwe, he said.
Zimbabwe had probably gained satisfaction from the fact that SA had not done this, he said.
The South African government missed an opportunity to speak out against injustices in Zimbabwe again last week when it declined to comment on a damning African Union commission report on human rights violations in that country.
South African Chamber of Business policy executive Bill Lacey said the "softly-softly" approach clearly did not work and SA "should implement economic measures against the Zimbabwean government".
Busa chief operating officer Vic van Vuuren said government should adopt a proactive role in facilitating a solution, although it was up to Zimbabweans themselves to solve the problem.
Government should be more open about the actions it was taking to resolve the situation, he said.
Van Vuuren, who was in Zimbabwe recently on an official visit, said the mood among businesspeople thre was "very, very despondent" -- and the situation was deteriorating.

"We see no light at the end of the tunnel."
Many South African companies, particularly small and medium-sized businesses, had lost export and import business to and from Zimbabwe.


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Zimbabwe Judge Found Guilty of Corruption

VOA


10 January 2006
Maphosa report - Download 224k audio clip
Listen to Maphosa report audio clip

The Zimbabwe High Court has found a judge guilty of inciting two fellow justices to commit corrupt acts.

Justice Simpson Mutambanengwe found Benjamin Paradza guilty of charges under Zimbabwe's Prevention of Corruption, Criminal Procedure, and Evidence Acts. The court found Paradza not guilty of two further charges of attempting to defeat the course of justice.

The charges state that in early 2003 Paradza asked two fellow judges to change the bail conditions of a business colleague who was facing murder charges. He wanted the judges to release the business colleague's passport so he could travel abroad.

Unknown to Mr. Paradza, one of the judges alerted the police after the initial approach. The second telephone conversation between the two was recorded by the police and was a major part of the evidence against Paradza.

The court said it found the accused to be an evasive witness who contradicted himself.

Justice Mutambanengwe is a Zimbabwean sitting on the Supreme Court bench of neighboring Namibia. He was chosen to hear the case after Zimbabwe Justice Chinembiri Bhunu declined to preside over the trial of his former comrade in arms during Zimbabwe's war of liberation.

There was an international outcry when Paradza was hauled from his chambers in February 2003 and detained by the police. Some Zimbabwean judges also expressed their concern over the treatment of their colleague.

Various legal organizations charged that Paradza's treatment could have been punishment for his handing down judgments not favorable to the government.

The court will pass sentence Friday. Paradza faces jail or a fine.


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Zimbabwe: Aids Treatment Plea At President's Door

allafrica
UN Integrated Regional Information Networks
January 10, 2006
Posted to the web January 10, 2006
Johannesburg
HIV-positive Zimbabweans and AIDS activists have taken their struggle for better treatment to President Robert Mugabe's doorstep.
According to the daily Standard newspaper, this step followed a recent petition for the government to regard the pandemic as a matter of urgency.
Activists also charged they were slighted on World AIDS Day when the government elected to discuss the national budget rather than acknowledging the hurdles encountered by HIV-positive people trying to access antiretroviral drugs.

Mary Sandasi, director of the NGO, Women's AIDS Support Network, noted: "Such actions as to have a major gathering taking place in [the capital], Harare, on such a big day clearly showed a disregard of the plight of people living with AIDS in Zimbabwe."
[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations ]


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Zimbabwe Opposition Factions Now Wrangle Over Party Presidency

voa


10 January 2006
Interview with Gibson Sibanda audio clip
Listen to Interview with Gibson Sibanda audio clip
Interview with Nelson Chamisa audio clip
Listen to Interview with Nelson Chamisa audio clip

Leaders of Zimbabwe’s splintered Movement for Democratic Change found a new bone of contention this week as it emerged that the Bulawayo-based faction led by secretary general Welshman Ncube sought to elevate vice president Gibson Sibanda to acting president after announcing the expulsion of incumbent Morgan Tsvangirai.

Sibanda said his appointment by the so-called pro-senate faction, which participated in November upper house elections in defiance of Tsvangirai’s boycott call, was in line with the party constitution, as was, he held, the faction’s expulsion of Tsvangirai.

Tsvangirai loyalists dismissed the expulsion and Sibanda’s appointment.

Sibanda said he had cut off ties to Tsvangirai going back to when they were president and vice president, respectively, of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions, which gave rise to the Movement for Democratic Change, founded in 1999.

Sibanda told reporter Ndimyake Mwakalyele of VOA’s Studio 7 for Zimbabwe he will remain acting president until the next party congress chooses an executive.

Interim spokesman Nelson Chamisa of the opposing faction said Tsvangirai remains party president despite the resolutions by the pro-senate faction.


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Zimbabwe to delay phaseout of leaded fuel



www.chinaview.cn 2006-01-11 02:53:47

    HARARE, Jan. 10 (Xinhuanet) -- Zimbabwe will not meet the January deadline set by the United Nations to phase out leaded fuel due tologistical problems, an official said on Tuesday.
    "Due to some logistic problems the phasing out of leaded petrol might be delayed," said Energy and Power Development Minister Michael Nyambuya.
    However he said despite the delay, the country was already using unleaded fuel. He said the current stocks of leaded fuel on the market would be sold until they ran out.
    Sub-Saharan Africa is the remaining region to phase out leaded fuel, with South Africa expected to be the last country to switch to unleaded fuel.
    The phaseout follows a pledge made at the World Summit on Sustainable Development by 49 Sub-Saharan African countries in 2002 to phase out leaded fuel by January 1, 2006, as part of a wider objective to improve the continent's health and environment.
    Lead is associated with a wide range of health problems, including damage to the brains of babies and young children.
    More than 30 countries globally are still using leaded petrol and those without plans to phase out lead include Afghanistan, Algeria, Bhutan, Cambodia, Cuba, Iraq, Laos, Mongolia, Myanmar, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. Enditem


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