The ZIMBABWE Situation Our thoughts and prayers are with Zimbabwe
- may peace, truth and justice prevail.

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Reuters

British media denied accreditation for Zimbabwe
Tue 23 November, 2004 18:40

WINDHOEK, Nov 23 (Reuters) - Zimbabwe's government has turned down
applications by British media organisations to cover England's cricket tour,
a team spokesman said on Tuesday.

However, the decision of the Zimbabwe government will not stop the
much-criticised tour from going ahead, according to the England and Wales
Cricket Board (ECB).

"I expect the tour to proceed despite the very unfortunate situation
regarding media accreditations," said ECB chairman David Morgan. The first
of five one-day internationals takes place in Harare on Friday.

England's media liaison officer Andrew Walpole said he had been told by the
Zimbabwe Cricket Union (ZCU) that representatives of BBC television and
radio; the Times, the Sun, the Daily Telegraph and the Daily Mirror
newspapers; and the Sunday Telegraph, the Sunday Times and the News of the
World newspapers had been denied accreditation.

"I am flabbergasted by this decision," said England captain Michael Vaughan.
There was no information on whether the applications by the Daily Express,
the Daily Mail, the Independent, the Guardian and Reuters had been
successful.

Walpole broke the news to reporters who are in Windhoek to cover two warm-up
matches against Namibia. He said he had not been given reasons for the
government's decision.

ZCU spokesman Lovemore Banda told reporters the Zimbabwe government was not
required to give reasons.

"It is our government's prerogative (not to give a reason)," Banda said.
"The government is not at liberty to disclose the reason."

England's tour of Zimbabwe, comprising five one-day internationals, has
caused much heart-searching among players and officials. Last year England
pulled out of a World Cup one-day match in Zimbabwe because of security
concerns.

Britain has campaigned for Commonwealth sanctions against Zimbabwe President
Robert Mugabe because of his redistribution of white-owned farms to landless
blacks and his 2002 re-election in a poll which international observers said
was flawed.

URGENT TALKS

Morgan is due to arrive in Zimbabwe on Wednesday and said he would pursue
the accreditation issue urgently.

"I find it unfortunate and embarrassing and I will be pursuing it on arrival
there tomorrow morning, initially with the chairman of the ZCU and then with
the appropriate government department having taken the advice of the British
Embassy in Harare," Morgan told BBC radio.

Asked if the tour should go ahead, Morgan said: "The England cricket team is
committed to appear in Zimbabwe, that is well known.

"The board of the ECB has looked at the issue in great detail and has
concluded by a substantial majority that we have to proceed with the tour in
the absence of their being no acceptable non-compliance."

The International Cricket Council (ICC) is also expected to apply pressure
on the Zimbabwe authorities.

In a statement ICC president Ehsan Mani said: "I have spoken with the
president of the ZCU (Peter Chingoka) and David Morgan.

"I have also spoken to the Zimbabwe High Commission in London on this issue
as the ICC looks to get a clear understanding of what has taken place and
the reasons for it.

"At this time, until we have received clarification on this issue, it is
difficult for us to comment further on what has happened today."

The ICC has said any country refusing to tour for anything but security
reasons or at governmental direction would face a $2 million fine and
suspension from the international game.

Vaughan said he thought the decision to deny reporters accreditation was
"totally wrong".

"I don't know how it can be called a cricket tour if our media are not there
to cover it," Vaughan said while stopping short of saying he would withdraw
from the tour.

"I wouldn't pull out because of the decision," he said. (additional
reporting by Martyn Herman in London)
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Daily News online edition

      It*s back to the drawing board for Mnangagwa

      Date: 23-Nov, 2004

      EMMERSON Mnangagwa, the Zanu PF secretary for administration who only
last week expressed his interest to become vice President at the party's
forthcoming Congress, is now out of the race after he lost the nomination to
Water Resources Minister, Joyce Mujuru.

      Analysts yesterday said Mnangagwa, the Speaker of Parliament and
pre-Congress favourite for the post, will have to go back to the drawing
back after only four provinces nominated him, with the rest opting for
Mujuru.

      National Constitutional Assembly (NCA) chairman, Lovemore Madhuku,
says while it is difficult to predict with finality what happens in Zanu PF,
it appeared Mnangagwa would have to bide his time.

      "The man has lost the game for now. He has to go back to the drawing
board but even then, it appears he is trailing behind his arch-rival John
Nkomo in the battle to succeed Mugabe.

      "Mnangagwa was nominated by only four provinces for vice President and
Nkomo by six provinces for the post of national chairman. There are long
odds Nkomo has more support in the provinces than the Honourable Speaker,"
Madhuku said.

      Zanu PF insiders said before his interview in a local weekly recently,
Mnangagwa had used his clout and "money" to win over support in the
provinces and he was assured of support in at least seven provinces.

      "His undoing was President Mugabe's statement that he (Mugabe) was in
support of a woman candidate for Vice-President. Even those provinces that
had hitherto promised him support were swayed by the President's utterances.

      "In other words, Mnangagwa privately believes Mugabe tampered with the
nomination process through his utterances and forced various provinces to
opt for Mujuru," said a Zanu PF insider.

      The Zanu PF insider said Mnangagwa's plight was further worsened by
Mugabe's statements in Bulawayo, where he issued a stern warning to party
cadres who used money to buy votes ahead of next week's Congress.

      "There are crooks in the party who want to get posts at whatever cost.
The names will be revealed because they have been using money from white
capitalists, some of them who even have links to Britain," Mugabe told his
Bulawayo audience.

      Insiders say Mugabe's statements were guided by a report from the
Central intelligence Organisation linking Mnangawa to "dirty money" and vote
buying in the provinces.

      "Mnangagwa has been accused of dealing in blood diamonds in the Congo
and he was mentioned in a United Nations report over those allegations but
an even dirtier report was handed over to the President last week alleging
vote-buying in the Provinces to sway votes in his favour ahead of the
Congress," the Zanu PF insider said.

      "What is still a surprise, however, is how Chinamasa, a blue-eyed boy
of Mnangagwa managed to get nominations from four provinces for the post of
national chairman. There was a lot of under-hand dealings and trade-offs by
the provinces but the greatest loser in the whole process was the Honourable
Speaker," another analyst said.

      It remains to be seen what happens next, but those familiar with the
blood and thunder politics of Zanu PF say it is still too early to rule out
Mnangagwa.

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Daily News online edition

      Chegutu rural council threatens to expel new farmers

      Date: 23-Nov, 2004

      CHEGUTU - The Chegutu Rural District Council (CRDC) has given the
newly resettled A2 farmers until December 15 to either pay their unit tax
charges or face expulsion from their farms.

      Highly placed officials within the Ministry of Lands, Agriculture and
Rural Resettlement yesterday told the Daily News Online that about 800 A2
farmers had failed to pay up the required tax charges amounting to over $30
million.

      The sources said the A2 beneficiaries, mostly Zanu PF supporters and
war veterans had not paid their dues to the council for the past four years.

      Fidelis Mandemwa, the acting chief executive officer for the Chegutu
rural council put up an important notice, published in the State-owned
Herald last Saturday demanding immediate payment by the A2 farmers.

      In the notice, Mandemwa said: "A2 land beneficiaries in Chegutu
District are hereby advised to pay their unit tax charges by December 15,
2004, failure of which the District Lands Committee will recommend automatic
withdrawal of their offer letters and/ or face legal action.

      "Please note that all those allocated land are obliged to pay rates to
council under the Rural District Councils Act (Chapter 29:13). Remember,
best soils are in Chegutu district, please avoid embarrassment by paying
your dues before December 15."

      President Robert Mugabe incited war veterans and landless villagers to
invade white-owned commercial farms in February 2000 immediately after
Zimbabweans overwhelmingly rejected a proposed draft constitution.

      At least 135 000 people, mostly ruling party supporters were resettled
under the A1 fast-track land resettlement programme while another 34 000
were allocated land under the A2 resettlement model.

      But the programme has been dogged by allegations of corruption where
senior ruling party officials have occupied more than one farm against the
government's policy of single farm ownership.
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Daily News online edition

      Gono sets deadline to firms over borrowed funds

      Date: 23-Nov, 2004

      RESERVE Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) governor Gideon Gono has set November
30, 2004 as the cut-off date for companies that borrowed from the Productive
Sector Fund (PSF) to explain how the funds were utilised.

      A total of 14 companies could have declared a dividend to shareholders
before having repaid the RBZ funds borrowed from the PSF.

      Those found guilty and fail to pay their outstanding amounts
equivalent to the dividends paid out would have the loans converted to
market interest rates.

      In its efforts to stimulate a supply side response in the economy,
arrest unemployment and enhance capacity utilisation in the productive
sector, the RBZ had introduced the PSF at an initial 30 percent interest
rate.

      It was later raised to 50 percent. A cumulative total of Z$2.058
trillion was doled out to the productive sector in the first nine months of
2004.

      However, by the end of September 2004, $478 billion had been repaid,
leaving an outstanding balance of $1.58 trillion. The facility is set to
cease in June next year as the central bank feels that by that time the rate
of inflation and corresponding interest rates would have fallen to
manageable levels.

      However, analysts said the list of "transgressors" comprised several
firms that had declared a final dividend from the year ended December 2003,
after obtaining the funds in the first quarter of 2004.

      This was the same time that the final results were published and
observers have said there was a need to clear the air on whether such
companies would also fall within the list of offenders.

      This category is made up of BAT, Bindura Nickel Corporation, Caps
Holdings, Interfresh and National Foods, which had declared dividends of
Z$620, $198, $7, $2 and $42 respectively.

      The remaining firms fall into the most likely alleged group of
violators that declared a dividend with PSF borrowings on their books.

      Astra, Cairns and Tractive Power Holdings (TPH), whose financial year
ended in August 2004, have been identified as possible culprits, and they
declared dividends of $26, $23 and $34.

      Companies whose financial year ended in March 2004 and declared a
dividend include Cottco ($34), Delta ($26) and ZSR ($22).

      Those that had their year ending in October 2004 comprise TSL, which
declared $16 and Phoenix ($3). Murray and Roberts also declared a dividend
of $1 per share for the closing period June 2004.

      In the presentation of the third quarter review of the monetary
policy, RBZ governor Gono, fired a broadside on companies that had rushed to
declare a dividend to shareholders before having cleared their PSF
borrowings with the central bank.

      Gono had said that while the central bank had previously spoken very
strongly against banks and borrowers that had abused funds accessed under
the concessional facilities, it was dispiriting that some firms had taken
the same route.

      Said Gono: "In some instances, corporates are daring to declare the
fanfare dividends barely a few hours after accessing concessional support on
the back of their purported distress calls. Such practices exude the highest
level of corporate immorality, and only serve to undermine policy
effectiveness."

      The central bank said it had a full list of the companies and promised
to deal with them severely. Gono said the incremental penalty revenue on
adjustment to market rates, in the case of errant corporates, would be for
the account of the RBZ and would go into the Productive Sector Penalty Fund.

      The central bank is on record as saying that cheap funds should not be
diverted into non-productive consumptive purposes-including pockets of
shareholders - that fuel inflation.

      The firms, together with their directors, management, shareholders and
financial advisers were warned that "commandeering PFS funds into shoddy
money market deals was illegal and, hence will not be tolerated".

      Board chairpersons were also accused of issuing directives to
management to channel PSF funds into money market placements. In such
instances, the central bank said it had to confiscate the undue interest
income earned, in addition to calling back the funds into the RBZ coffers.

      In its all out endeavour to wipe out the abuse of the cheap funds, RBZ
has been carrying out audits in order to check on the proper usage of all
funds that were disbursed since January 2004. The audits will also encompass
the 2004 winter wheat programme, the irrigation rehabilitation fund, the 160
million kgs fund for the tobacco industry and the agricultural equipment
facility.
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SABC

Mugabe warns associates threatening to split party

November 23, 2004, 14:00

Robert Mugabe, the Zimbabwe president, has accused senior political
associates of threatening to split his ruling Zanu-PF party in a fight over
the vice-presidency, seen as a stepping stone to the top job. The party has
been rocked by a leadership wrangle ahead of a congress next week, expected
to endorse Mugabe as its leader for another five years and to elect a second
vice-president seen as a possible successor when he eventually retires.

The country's first vice president is 81-year-old Joseph Msika, who is not
seen as a serious contender for the top post. Mugabe (80) said at the
weekend that Zanu-PF's leadership had endorsed the nomination of a woman
candidate, Joyce Mujuru, the water resources minister, under its affirmative
action programme.

Political analysts said the move seemed to reduce the chances of Emmerson
Mnangagwa, the Speaker of parliament, long rumoured to be Mugabe's choice
for a successor. Mnangagwa ended up with the votes of the party's regional
branches in only four of the country' 10 provinces, while the remaining six
votes went to Mujuru. The final vote to confirm the appointment is due at
the December 1-5 congress.

State media today quoted Mugabe as saying the ongoing fight for leadership
posts threatened the party ahead of parliamentary polls next March which
will pit it against the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).
"Apart from the MDC that we know is sponsored by (British prime minister)
Tony Blair, there are some elements that are developing within the party and
those are the divisive elements we must take care of," Mugabe said.

"Some are trying to sway you to vote for them using cunning methods. There
are crooks in the party who want to get posts at whatever cost. The names
will be revealed because they have been using money from white capitalists,
some of them who even have links to Britain," he said.

Analysts say Zanu-PF, which led Zimbabwe to independence from Britain in
1980, risks a north-south regional divide. Mujuru was largely supported by
three Mashonaland provinces in the north of Zimbabwe while Mnangagwa got
most of his backing from southern provinces. - Reuters
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Cape Argus

      Zanu-PF to get seat of dead MP
      November 23, 2004

      By Basildon Peta

      Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe is only one seat shy of the two
thirds majority he needs in parliament to entrench his dictatorship after an
opposition party parliamentarian died in a car accident at the weekend.

      The death of Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) MP Stanley Bethel
Makwembere in a head on collision with a lorry has reduced the MDC's
presence in parliament from 51 to 50.

      His seat would automatically go to Mugabe's Zanu-PF after the MDC
confirmed last night that it would not contest a by-election. Zanu-PF will
now have 99 MPs in the 150-member chamber.

      "We will certainly not participate in any by-election because of our
decision to suspend contesting in any elections until the electoral
framework is right. So they can have the seat," said MDC spokesman Paul
Themba Nyathi last night.

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EUobserver

Zimbabwe opposition urges EU pressure ahead of elections
23.11.2004 - 09:43 CET | By Andrew Beatty
EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai has urged the EU
to put pressure on Zimbabwe and its neighbours ahead of presidential
elections.

Mr Tsvangirai, who leads the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, will
visit Brussels later this week in a bid to increase international pressure
on the government of Robert Mugabe.

This comes ahead of elections next March.

After over two years of diplomatic sanctions against Zimbabwe, the EU is
being asked to use its influence to convince regional players such as South
Africa and Nigeria to press for free and fair elections.

"[The EU can] offer diplomatic pressure to the region and to some of the
influential people in the region", Mr Tsvangirai told the EUobserver.

His comments came after a visit to Brussels by South African President Thabo
Mbeki and ahead of a visit to Brussels by Foreign Minister Nkosazana Dlamini
Zuma on Tuesday (23 November).

According to South African diplomats, the issue of Zimbabwe is likely to
come up on Tuesday's agenda.

As the major power in the region, European Parliamentarians have pressed
South Africa to do more to encourage talks between the MDC and Mr Mugabe's
Zanu-PF party.

The EU is also being pressed to punch its weight - as one of South Africa's
biggest trading partners.

Mr Tsvangirai is now calling on the EU to make it clear to neighbours that
more must be done.

"They can help draw the attention of the African leaders that it is not
going to be business as usual" said Mr Tsvangirai.
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SABC

Mugabe accuses party members of being bought

November 23, 2004, 10:15

Robert Mugabe, the Zimbabwe president, has accused members of his Zanu(PF)
party of being "bought" by white capitalists and the British. Speaking at
rural schools in Zimbabwe's western province of Matabeleland yesterday, an
angry Mugabe slated his own ruling elite and repeatedly said: "We are not
for purchase."

"Apart from the (opposition) Movement for Democratic Change that we know is
sponsored by the British, there are some elements that are developing in our
own party and those are the divisive elements we must take care of," said
Mugabe.

"We are going to our Zanu(PF) congress in the next week and we want
delegates to be aware of these clandestine and cunning knaves. There are
crooks in Zanu who want to get posts at whatever cost. Their names will be
revealed because they have been using money from white capitalists, some of
whom even have connections to the British," Mugabe warned.

His statements came a day after Zanu(PF) voted Joyce Mujuru into the
position of second vice president, ousting Emmerson Mnangagwa, presidential
hopeful and parliamentary speaker.

Zimbabwe's ruling Zanu(PF) party has seen widening cracks as divisions
emerge over who will lead the party when Mugabe stands down. The 80 year old
leader last year invited his party to choose a successor, though he now
accuses party members of trying to "oust the old guard" within his party. -
Sapa
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Distressed Firms Seek $344bn

The Herald (Harare)

November 23, 2004
Posted to the web November 23, 2004

Harare

DISTRESSED companies have made applications totalling $344 billion exceed
the $200 billion availed to the Zimbabwe Development Bank (ZDB) for
disbursements.

This comes at a time when the Small Enterprises Development Corporation
(Sedco), which has also been mandated to identify and facilitate the payment
of loans to distressed companies, said it is still inviting small-scale
firms to apply for funds.

ZDB and Sedco are disbursing funds to hard-pressed companies on behalf of
the Government with the later facilitating the payment of funds to small and
medium scale enterprises (SMEs) while the former is looking at larger
entities.

ZDB revealed that the response coming from companies was positive and they
were giving priority to deserving concerns.

"The demand for this financial facility has been overwhelming, but funding
will be provided to the most deserving cases," said ZDB.

ZDB has so far identified 78 projects with 33 of them worth $145 billion
having been approved.

The other 45 projects valued more than $199 billion have been appraised as
at September 30.

Sedco has also announced that loan applications were still ongoing.

Applicants would be asked to supply Sedco with information such as the
reasons for distress.

The facility which was made available by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ),
would go a long way in thawing problems of recapitalisation besetting some
local entities.

The funds would be used for refurbishing equipment, buying of capital goods
as well as providing working capital for the companies.

Those intending to benefit from the facility would have to comply with a
number of requirements such as collateral details, past and present
financial statements, reasons for distress and strategies for resuscitation.

Institutions under judicial curatorship have to provide a detailed analysis
on the status of the troubled firm either from the curator or judicial
manager.

Loans for working capital would be reimbursed over a period of 6 to 12
months, and up to three years for capital expenditure and refurbishment.

The Government, through the central bank and the Ministry of Industry and
International Trade, granted the $200 billion facility for the
revitalisation of distressed companies.

Sectors such as manufacturing, chemical, mining, transport and
agro-processing have all benefited from the facility.
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23 November 2004

President Tsvangirai's Tuesday message to the people of Zimbabwe.

The nature of the crisis in Zimbabwe is now obvious to all influential
African and European leaders.

The two continents are unambiguous as to the cause, effect and the
corrective road map for the restoration of confidence, law and order and
legitimacy to the state of Zimbabwe. They understand your dilemma. The world
shares your dreams. The world is conscious of what you are going through.
The world is prepared to help the people of Zimbabwe. All indications show
that we are near the finishing line.

There is a consensus that the solution lies in a free and fair election in
which all Zimbabweans decide the future; choose leaders of their choice;
enjoy basic freedoms and conduct their affairs in a sovereign and democratic
fashion.

The stance taken by the international community has given us so much hope.
We believe a free and fair election is a must to enable our nation to shed
its pariah status and join the international community.

Throughout my travels -- in the SADC region, in West Africa and now in
Europe - concerns are being raised as to how we can avoid the Zimbabwe
situation from sliding into an open conflict. We have a duty; we have a
responsibility as political leaders to set aside our personal preferences
and to manage our emotions in a manner that retains our resolve to serve our
people and our nation.

The Robert Mugabe regime is feeling the heat. The regime has run out of
options. The ruse they sold to the world and the relentless propaganda they
poured onto the people can no longer hold.

We have dismantled the political sand barrier they erected in the past five
years and exposed the nature of the Zimbabwean crisis for what it is - a
crisis of governance, fertilised by greed, corruption, dictatorship and
tyranny. There is clarity on issues at hand. Governments and civil society
are aware that the crisis has nothing to do with race, land reform,
imperialism or personalities. Our hosts are aware of the source of the
crisis. They are ready to assist the people of Zimbabwe overcome their
predicament.

The regime is severely under pressure at home. Pressure from the people is
creating political victories for a free and fair election; every week these
incremental victories are serving to strengthen our optimism that a free and
fair election may indeed be
possible next year.

Recent events in Parliament show a regime that is panicking to show the
world that there is a semblance of reason within the ranks of the ruling
Zanu PF party. The regime's actions are far from being sufficient to grant
the people their total freedom. Mugabe must realise that piece meal
legislative reforms shall haunt him sooner, as they always fail to bring
about the desired result.

Zimbabweans know that despite the progress that is being made at a political
level on the ground, we need to remain vigilant and cognisant of the fact
that we are still some way from the finishing line; conditions on the ground
do not yet adhere to the standards expected under the new SADC standards.

I am happy to note that several hawkish elements within Zanu PF are losing
political ground paving the way for some measure of understanding within
that discredited party for a patriotic approach to the future.

We are ready to play our part to assist the process of national political
reform in order to allow Zimbabweans to chart their own destiny through free
and fair elections.

In our engagement with various world leaders, we expressed our commitment
and on our willingness to work with Zanu PF to build a national consensus on
the way forward. We desire peace and security. We need to rebuild Zimbabwe.

We seek no revenge; no retribution. We yearn for a fresh start, a new
beginning. That new beginning, that political dispensation everybody is
looking forward to experience shall require the collective effort of all the
political players in our country.

The starting point for such a beginning shall be a free and fair election.
The sooner the regime realises that the better for us all. There is a new
feeling and an acknowledgement that the only solution to the Zimbabwean
crisis lies in the creation of an open political environment for democracy.

A free and fair election shall provide answers to the chronic shortage of
fuel and rising food prices. Such an election can be made possible by the
right political will.

Our collective resolve to restore our basic rights and freedoms will ensure
that we will never be the losers. Backed solidly by the international
community, we are firmly
on the road to victory. We shall meet in early December to review our
decision to suspend participation in all elections. We shall be guided by
the people, using raw facts on the ground on how far the regime has sought
to implement the spirit of Mauritius. As I said before, we desire an entire
package, with measurable outcomes to re-generate confidence in the electoral
process.

Lastly, may I express my deepest sympathies to the Makwembere family, the
residents of Gweru and the entire national membership of the MDC over the
loss, in a car accident, of Bethuel Makwembere, the MP for Mkoba.

Makwembere, a founder member of the MDC, shall be sadly missed by all of us
who worked with him for a long time. It is unfortunate that he died before
witnessing the realisation of our objective to bring about a new Zimbabwe.

Together, we shall win.

Morgan Tsvangirai
President

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Homes now beyond reach of urban dwellers
23 Nov 2004 18:26:17 GMT

Source: IRIN
BULAWAYO, 23 November (IRIN) - High inflation continues to erode household
incomes in Zimbabwe, forcing many people to reconsider the dream of owning
their own home.

Since his parents died a few years ago, 45-year-old Mhleli Ngwenya has lived
with his family in a run-down three-roomed house in Makhokhoba, an old
township in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second largest city.

It has always been his desire to buy a bigger home in one of the city's more
affluent suburbs, but in recent years he has had to confront the fact that,
given his meagre earnings, this may never become a reality.

"I have worked tirelessly for more than 15 years, hoping I would be able to
buy a decent house of my own someday, but this has remained only a dream. I
have also tried doing part-time jobs but it hasn't helped," Ngwenya told
IRIN.

His monthly income, an estimated Zim $670,000 (about US $119), is spent on
food, clothing and tuition fees for his three siblings, leaving very little
to put towards buying a property.

"Besides houses, everything - including food and clothes - has become too
expensive, and life has become a nightmare. At one time I tried to get a
loan from a certain financial institution to buy a house stand in Luveve 5
[a new suburb in Bulawayo] but the interest rate they were charging was just
too much for a burdened and poorly paid worker like me," Ngwenya said.

The effects of Zimbabwe's economic crisis have taken a heavy toll on the
country's labour force, who have seen a steady decline in their monthly
incomes and living standards. Current measures to arrest hyperinflation have
brought some relief, but many households are still unable to afford a
monthly food basket, which stood at Zim $1.4 million for a family of five in
November.

Ntando Nkomo, a truck driver, told IRIN that although he was better off than
most people, he also could not afford to buy his own home. "I don't have a
family of my own to look after as yet, but still I cannot make ends meet. My
home for now is a backyard room in Nguboyenja, where I pay Zim $70,000
(about US $12) every month for rent," he said.

Workers complain that their meagre salaries have failed to match the soaring
costs of property in urban areas, and many families have instead opted to
build cheap pole and mud brick dwellings in rural parts of the country.

At the start of 2004, a four-roomed house in Bulawayo's western townships
cost close to Zim $4 million (US $712) but the price has now increased to a
whopping $30 million (US $5,357), or more. In the affluent eastern suburbs,
a similar house used to cost around US $12,500, but has since trebled in
price.

"Most workers live terrible lives ... that is why we are lobbying for the
improvement of the salaries of workers and stable prices [of goods],"
remarked Wellington Chibhebhe, secretary general of the Zimbabwe Congress of
Trades Union.
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Mail and Guardian

Tutu reads SA the riot act

      Johannesburg

      23 November 2004 10:55

Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu questioned black economic empowerment on
Tuesday, saying it seemed to benefit a small "recycled" elite and called for
action against poverty.

"It will not do to say people did not complain when whites were enriched.
When were the old regime our standards?" asked Tutu in an address at the
Nelson Mandela Foundation in Houghton, Johannesburg.

Imploring the audience to remember the struggle values of "the people shall
share" and the pledge to evolve a caring, compassionate society, he said too
many South Africans were living in "gruelling demeaning, dehumanising
poverty".

"We are sitting on a powder keg. We really must work like mad to eradicate
poverty," he said.

"We should discuss as a nation whether BIG (the proposed basic income grant)
is not really a viable way forward. We should not be browbeaten by
pontificating decrees from on high. We cannot glibly on full stomachs speak
about handouts to those who often go to bed hungry.

"It is cynical in the extreme to speak about handouts when people can become
very rich at the stroke of a pen. If those are not massive handouts, what
are?"

He suggested adopting a family with a monthly gift of R100 or R200 or paying
the school fees of a poor child.

Tutu called government houses "the next generation of slums", telling the
audience that they were known as Unos -- a small Italian car -- and asked
why South Africans were not involved with the Habitat for Humanity project,
which was building 50 new houses a week.

Tutu touched on the most violent and repressive points of apartheid and
compared them with events after 1994.

"We really do have much to celebrate and much for which to be thankful", he
said, marvelling at mixed-race couples who would once have been victimised
by the police and the way the new society was reflected in the demographics
of the school near his home.

He spoke of sporting triumphs and the Nobel peace and literature prizes won
by South Africans, and reminded his audience that in spite of South Africa's
deeply troubled and divided past, the expected racial bloodshed did not
happen.

However, he conceded that the country had problems, the most serious of
which was HIV/Aids.

"Over four million of our people are infected. It is estimated that nearly
400 000 people will die this year from Aids. That is shattering news."

He said it was worth celebrating that while it could have been expected that
whites would say "good riddance" to the mostly black people with the virus,
the most committed workers in the Anti-HIV/Aids campaign were whites.

Tutu also expressed concern about freedom of expression, and said that party
lists (which determine who gets into Parliament), made people reluctant to
question any policies.

"We should not too quickly want to pull rank and demand an uncritical,
sycophantic, obsequious conformity. We need to find ways in which we engage
the hoi polloi, the so-called masses, the people, in public discourse
through indabas, town hall forums, so that no one feels marginalised and
that their point of view matters, it counts.

"We should debate more openly, not using emotive language, issues such as
affirmative action, transformation in sport, racism, xenophobia, security,
crime, violence against women and children.

"What do we want our government to do in Zimbabwe? Are we satisfied with
quiet diplomacy there? Surely human rights violations must be condemned as
such whatever the struggle credentials of the perpetrator. It should be
possible to talk as adults about these issues without engaging in slanging
matches. My father used to say, 'Don't raise your voice; improve your
argument'." - Sapa
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IOL

New Zim courts to alleviate farm backlogs
          November 23 2004 at 01:24PM

      By Peta Thornycroft

      Harare - New courts to speed up the legal confiscation of thousands of
white-owned farms in Zimbabwe are now in operation.

      The brainchild of Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa, they sat for the
first time on Monday.

      The administrative courts have a backlog of up to 5 000 properties
taken by the government since 2000, but not yet processed.

      Now Chinamasa has established four new presidents of administrative
courts to move things along swiftly. These are lawyers from the department
of justice, who will have the same status as judges.

      Under new laws, farmers have only five working days to prepare their
legal defence, collating decades of paperwork of farm accounts which include
complex valuations of equipment and loss of earnings.

      However, the Law Society of Zimbabwe is challenging what it regards as
a "patently unconstitutional" law.

      Individual lawyers handling cases for farmers have already appealed to
the Supreme Court to rule on the constitutionality of the time allowed to
prepare a defence.

      John Worsley Worswick, of Justice for Agriculture, said a court
deadline loomed for about 500 farms on the same court day.

      But there were not enough lawyers in the whole of Zimbabwe to prepare
simultaneous defences for all those properties in a week.

      "This creation of new courts has been expected for some time as the
backlog is enormous. We are looking at yet another fast-track process to
strip people of property," he said.

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