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Zim charges two white farmers, orders 50 others to leave

Zim Online

                 Wednesday 27 September 2006

      HARARE - President Robert Mugabe's government will next week prosecute
two white farmers for defying orders to vacate their farms while it has also
ordered another 50 white landowners across the country to surrender their
properties, a top official of the white Commercial Farmers Union said.

      Only about 600 out of an estimated 4 000 large-scale producing white
commercial farmers remain in Zimbabwe after Mugabe drove the majority off
the land and gave their farms to landless blacks in a chaotic and often
violent campaign he said was meant to correct racial imbalances in land
ownership.

      CFU vice-president Trevor Gifford declined to disclose the names of
the two farmers but said they will next Tuesday appear in the magistrate's
court in the farming town of Karoi in Mashonaland West province.

      ZimOnline was unable to independently establish the identity of the
farmers set to become the first to be tried for defying government eviction
orders since the beginning of farm seizures six years ago.

      Gifford said: "Two farmers have been issued with summons to appear in
court on Tuesday at 8am. They are being accused of ignoring eviction notices
that were served on them.

      "But the tragedy is that the two are some of the best in tobacco and
cereals. One of them had just delivered 1 000 tonnes of maize to the Grain
Marketing Board (sole grain procurer owned by the State) and now he is going
to be prosecuted for doing that."

      State Security, Lands and Land Reform Minister Didymus Mutasa
confirmed that the government would be bringing charges against some white
farmers he accused of attempting to slow down land reform by ignoring
eviction orders.

      He said: "Yes the process has started. Those who refuse to comply with
eviction orders are slowing down our land reform programme and will face the
music. They will go to court and face charges."

      It however remains unclear exactly what charges the state will bring
against the white farmers or what punishment the court can impose.

      The government is still in the process of pushing legislation to make
it an offence - for which one could be jailed for seven years among other
sanctions - for one to defy state orders to vacate a piece of land.

      Mugabe's government - which had announced it had ended farm seizures
to focus on raising production on land already acquired from whites - has in
the last three weeks renewed land grabs, with scores of farmers, especially
in the provinces of Manicaland, Masvingo and Mashonaland West, ordered to
leave and make way for blacks.

      There have also been reports that government militias and veterans of
Zimbabwe's 1970s independence war have been sent out to pressure farmers to
give up their properties.

      The war veterans and militias are accused of human rights violations
including murder against white farmers during the first phase of government
farm seizures.

      The farm seizures that began in 2000 and which Mugabe says were meant
to correct an unjust land tenure system that reserved 75 percent of the best
arable land for minority whites while the majority blacks were cramped on
poor soils have been blamed for plunging Zimbabwe into severe food
shortages.

      The southern African country that was once a regional breadbasket has
largely survived on food handouts from international relief agencies for the
past six years and will this year require more food aid for at least three
quarters of its 12 million people. - ZimOnline


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Why Zimbabweans do not rebel: Part 2

Zim Online

                 Wednesday 27 September 2006

      HARARE - In Part 1 of my contribution to the mystery of why
Zimbabweans do not rebel, I anchored my argument in the proposition that
Zimbabweans do not rebel largely (but not solely) because of a specific
existential reality: that the Zimbabwean masses are a risk-averse people
ruled by a risk-taking political elite.

      I further advanced the idea that unless the Zimbabwean demos are
transformed, through an arduous and sustained but long-yielding process of
mobilisation, from a risk-evading orientation to one of risk-taking (or at
least risk-neutrality), an organised mass action of the type envisaged by
the ZCTU, the NCA, ZINASU and other civic movements, will continue to
attract disappointing support.

      In so arguing, I sought neither to praise nor condemn but to describe
the reality as I see it. How this situation arose is the subject of this
instalment.
      Zimbabweans are not congenitally risk-averse; they were made
risk-averse through a process of conditioning over time. The risk-averseness
has made them politically passive and inert.

      Since Ian Smith captured power from the rather risk-averse Winston
Field in 1964, Zimbabwe has been ruled by a risk-taking elite. It was not
until a critical mass of a risk-taking Black Nationalist elite emerged to
counter the White risk-taking elite and to mobilise the masses that mass
action took place in the manner of the liberation struggle in its variegated
forms.

      The risk-evading masses became either risk-takers or at the very
least, risk-neutrals. It is my contention though that the liberation
struggle (specifically its most active phase from 1972 to 1979) was not
sufficiently long to transform the orientations of the masses on a permanent
basis.

      The process of transforming a risk-averse people into risk-takers was
not completed. The 1979 Lancaster House process culminating in the Lancaster
House Agreement short-circuited the transformative process. Therefore, at
the psycho-political level, the liberation struggle was an incomplete
revolution.

      Those who most actively and directly participated in the armed
struggle are invariably and understandably the most risk-taking segment of
our society. These are of course the war vets and the war collaborators who,
unsurprisingly, are the ruling party's storm troopers.

      But this is also a generation that is on its way out, following the
laws of nature. Once this political generation is out of the equation, ZANU
PF will never be the same again, in character, composition and philosophical
outlook.

      Perhaps mindful of this inevitability, the ZANU PF leadership agonised
over the reproduction of the risk-taking class of war vets, and, in my view,
the controversial youth training programme is an instrument to this end.

      It is designed towards political regeneration.

      After independence, Zimbabweans suffered what the learned people (the
lawyers) call recidivism. Zimbabweans recoiled into their shells like
tortoises and have by and large remained in this situation since then, only
occasionally and hesitatingly popping out their heads in a typical risk-shy
fashion.

       In short, the risk-taking behaviour displayed by Zimbabweans during
the liberation war was a transient phenomenon and this transitory character
serves to prove the fundamental and underlying political character of the
average Zimbabwean; his/her subject orientation to authority, any authority.

      This is amply and daily displayed in virtually every organisational or
associational setting: in churches, schools - including institutions of
higher learning, firms, homes, political parties, etc. In short, this
authority-worshipping tendency is manifest in all organisations, micro and
macro.

      Moreover, this attitude is deeply embedded in the Zimbabwean psyche
and it will take a painfully long time to unwind. And it is a product of
more than a century of uninterrupted authoritarianism.

      One does not have to be a Marxist to agree with Karl Marx's acute
observation that "the tradition of all the dead generations weighs like a
nightmare on the brain of the living."

      The most critical agents in the transmission of this risk-evading
behaviour among Zimbabweans and over decades have been the churches, schools
and, for adults, the media.

      The media has been particularly effective to the point where one
recent study explained the political subjecthood among Zimbabweans in terms
of the "power of propaganda."

      And the power of propaganda - in its various forms - has given birth
to a peculiar mindset that my former colleague Professor Jonathan Moyo
creatively and brilliantly referred to as "normalising the abnormal."

      Briefly stated, the notion of "normalising the abnormal" starts from
the premise that there are some things or situations that are manifestly
abnormal. For instance, that it is abnormal to queue for food items as a
result of shortages of say, sugar, cooking oil, maize meal, bread or for
other commodities like fuel, water and for other services like health care.

      And yet people have over time been led to believe that it is in fact
normal to queue for such basic survival commodities and services. They even
joke and heartily laugh about it. This creates and inculcate fatalistic or
defeatist values in our society, presently and for future generations.

      The agency for transmitting such values is the public media, which,
through its propaganda leads otherwise rational people to begin to accept
bad things or situations as inherently good just because the government or
the ruling party says so.

      The notion of "normalising the abnormal" provides a paradigm for
analysing our acceptance of the dire conditions in which we find ourselves.
It is a framework not only for rationalising our situation, but also for
immobilising ourselves.

      Before his foray into the turbulent world of politics, Moyo had
correctly argued that ZANU PF was conditioning Zimbabweans to expect the
abnormal as normal. He had proceeded to warn us against the tendency of
accepting this aberration as normal, and that unless we resisted accepting
the abnormal as normal, the abnormal would become part of our culture.

      In fact, the process did not start with ZANU PF; ZANU PF simply
perfected this stratagem. And of course, Moyo later had the rare opportunity
to test this thesis in the world of practical politics.

      Because we accept aberrations as normal, we see no need to correct
them because we may even see them as intrinsically good. Moreover, when and
where people accept the abnormal as normal, they have developed creative
coping mechanisms rather than seeking to deal with the source of the
abnormality.

      Maggie Makanza's lamentation in her "The Anatomy of the Zimbabwean
Problem" (see my last instalment) is essentially another way of lamenting
the normalisation of the abnormal.

      She asks: "Why has there been no eruption in Zimbabwe?"

      The simple answer is that people what are supposed to erupt see no
basis for such an eruption because they have been so conditioned. Further,
"normalising the abnormal" reinforces the risk-averseness among Zimbabweans.

      This combination is completely fatal to any strategy of organised mass
action for the simple reason that action-oriented masses are not there. To
'mass act' there must be the masses who are so inclined.

      Another tendency, flowing from both the risk-averseness of the masses
and their tendency to disengage from any confrontation with the state is the
atomisation of public reactions to grievances.

      People react to a public problem not by organising other citizens in a
similar situation to collectively protest an injustice or agitate for
redress. Instead, people would rather deal with the problem individually and
as best as they can and evading the source of the problem.

      I will give live examples we can all easily relate to. ZESA daily
abuses us by "load shedding" us causing all sorts of miseries to our lives
but what is our reaction? Nothing collective!

      Those with the means buy generators and quietly and individually deal
with this nuisance. The less endowed quietly and individually buy firewood
for cooking and candles for lighting.

      The Harare City Council and ZINWA collude to deny us our daily water
and what do Harare residents do? Those who are privileged sink boreholes and
quietly and individually deal with the problem. The povo go to fetch water
from unprotected wells and streams with all the attendant health hazards.

      And those who can not afford transport fare to work simply walk to
work, even from Chitungwiza! These actions are clearly abnormal but flow
from the normalisation of the abnormal.

      And risk-averseness keeps the aggrieved masses from questioning the
perpetrators of these injustices. We are witnessing the individualisation of
action and an aversion or at the very least, indifference to collective
action.

      Now, can one reasonably expect Zimbabweans to rebel? I have my grave
reservations.

      My contention is that rebelliousness to authority (any authority!) is
not an integral part of the political psyche of the Zimbabwean demos. This
is despite the Second Chimurenga. There is really no deep-seated tradition
of resistance to authority or speaking truth to power.

      Our agents of socialisation reinforce this. This is why Zimbabweans
can tolerate abuse more than any other people in southern Africa. Those who
cannot tolerate the abuse would rather take the exit option.

      It is for this reason that Zimbabweans are the people easiest to
govern - in politics and indeed in any other social arena - than any other
group of citizens in the region, and probably beyond.

      In short, the road to organised mass action is blocked because it has
few takers.

      * Eldred V Masunungure is a lecturer in the Department of Political &
Administrative Studies at the University of Zimbabwe


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Zimbabwe: International action is required to end impunity

NEWS RELEASE

INTERNATIONAL BAR ASSOCIATION

the global voice of the legal profession

[For Immediate Release: Tuesday, 26 September 2006]

The Human Rights Institute of the International Bar Association (IBA) today
urged the United Nations and African Union to take decisive and immediate
action to end impunity for serious violations of international law in
Zimbabwe.

Responding to a report in Zimbabwe's Herald on 25 September 2006 that
President Robert Mugabe recently endorsed the unlawful actions of the
Zimbabwe Republic Police against leaders of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade
Unions last week, the IBA's Executive Director Mark Ellis said, 'Mugabe's
statements add to the weight of evidence that torture and other serious
violations of international law are sanctioned at the highest level in
Zimbabwe. This underscores the urgent need for international and regional
action to hold the Zimbabwean Government to account.'

He added that "the torture of the trade union activists is not an isolated
incident, but part of a dangerous and illegal system of repression which
constitutes crimes against humanity in international law.  Decisive action
is required by both the United Nations and the African Union to end impunity
and violence in Zimbabwe.''

Fifteen Zimbabwean trade union leaders sustained severe injuries after they
were assaulted while in police custody on 13 September 2006. The trade
unionists were arrested during peaceful protests. Credible reports from
several local sources contend that the trade union leaders were brutally
tortured.  In an article published in the Herald article of 25 September
2006, Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe is reported to have said,'We cannot
have a revolt to the system. Vamwe vaakuchema kuti takarohwa, ehe
unodashurwa [others are crying that we were beaten up, yes you would be
beaten up]. When the police say move, move. If you don't move, you invite
the police to use force.' ENDS

For further information, please contact:

Romana St Matthew - Daniel

Press Office

International Bar Association

10th Floor,1 Stephen Street

London W1T 1AT

United Kingdom

Tel: + 44 (0)20 7691 6868

Fax: + 44 (0)20 7691 6544

E-mail: romana.daniel@int-bar.org

Website: www.ibanet.org

About the International Bar Association

- the global voice of the legal profession

In its role as a dual membership organisation, comprising 30,000 lawyer
members and over 195 bar associations and law societies, the International
Bar Association (IBA) influences the development of international law reform
and shapes the future of the legal profession. Its Member Organisations
cover all continents and include the American Bar Association, the German
Federal Bar, the Japan Federation of Bar Associations, the Law Society of
Zimbabwe and the Mexican Bar Association.

Grouped into two Divisions - the Legal Practice Division and the Public and
Professional Interest Division - the Association covers all practice areas
and professional interests. It provides members with access to leading
experts and up-to-date information as well as top-level professional
development and network-building opportunities through high quality
publications and world-class conferences. The IBA's Bar Issues Commission
provides its Member Organisations with substantive programmes and social
activities in and between meetings and the IBA's Human Rights Institute
works across the Association, helping to promote, protect and enforce human
rights under a just rule of law, and to preserve the independence of the
judiciary and the legal profession worldwide.

Aims and Objectives

The principal aims and objectives of the IBA are:

·        To promote an exchange of information between legal associations
worldwide.

·        To support the independence of the judiciary and the right of
lawyers to practise their profession without interference.

·        The support of human rights for lawyers worldwide through its Human
Rights Institute.

International Bar Association

10th Floor

1 Stephen Street

London W1T 1AT

United Kingdom

Tel: + 44 (0)20 7691 6868

Fax: + 44 (0)20 7691 6544

E-mail: member@int-bar.org

Website: www.ibanet.org

About the Human Rights Institute

In 1995, the International Bar Association (IBA) established the Human
Rights Institute (HRI) under the Honorary Presidency of Nelson Mandela. The
HRI is now a leading voice in the promotion of the rule of law worldwide.

The HRI works across the IBA, helping to promote, protect and enforce human
rights under a just rule of law, and to preserve the independence of the
judiciary and the legal profession worldwide.

The HRI:

·                    undertakes fact-finding missions leading to long-term
technical assistance

programmes;

·                    develops capacity-building programmes to assist bar
associations and

law societies;

·                    sends trial observers to monitor the extent to which
trials adhere to

regional and international fair trial standards;

·                    organises human rights training for lawyers and judges;

·                    liaises closely with international and regional human
rights organisations;

and

·                    produces newsletters and other publications.

Human Rights Institute

International Bar Association

10th Floor, 1 Stephen Street

London W1T 1AT, United Kingdom

Tel: + 44 (0)20 7691 6868

Fax: + 44 (0)20 7691 6544

E-mail: hri@int-bar.org

Website: www.ibanet.org


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Bread price goes up as clampdown forces bakers underground



      By Lance Guma
      26 September 2006

      A government attempt to fix the price of bread has backfired miserably
with reports that the country's bakers are now shunning the formal market
and selling to black market vendors. Six directors from several leading
companies, including bread maker Lobels, were arrested over what the
authorities called 'unsanctioned' price increases. Lemmy Chikomo, Lobels
Operations Director, was arrested after the company increased the price of
bread from Z$200 to Z$335 for a loaf. To circumvent further crackdowns the
bakers are now supplying a few thousand loafs to the formal chain, before
selling the majority of their bread to vendors.

      Simon Muchemwa in Harare reports that the bakers are selling at
between Z$300 to Z$335 per loaf to the vendors who in turn sell at over
Z$350 to the consumers. Supermarket shelves have no bread and the little
that is being supplied is being snapped up by shop employees, leaving
desperate shoppers to resort to buying from the black market. Muchemwa says
instead of the consumers benefiting from governments clampdown they are now
at the mercy of the vendors who can charge whatever they want depending on
demand.

      September has been a bad month for the country with a decline in the
value of the Zimbabwe dollar coupled with inflation at over 1,200 percent,
forcing prices to shoot up. The state controlled newspapers also reported an
increase in the price of anti-retroviral drugs by almost 100 percent over 3
months. From July to September the cost of imported ARV 's rose from Z$10
000 to Z$20 000 while the locally manufactured ones shot up to Z$25 000. The
increases are set to affect a considerable portion of the population who are
HIV positive and rely on the drugs. Cabinet ministers and other senior Zanu
PF officials have often been accused of hijacking donated ARV's for their
own use and leaving poor people vulnerable.

      NB: Exchange rates on the parallel markets as at 26/09/06

      1 Rand= Z$150
      1 Pula= Z$200
      1USD= Z$950-1200
      1 Pound= Z$1950

      SW Radio Africa Zimbabwe news


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Zimbabwe implosion 'may put region at risk'

IOL

          September 26 2006 at 12:12AM

      Berlin - An economic meltdown in Zimbabwe would send shock waves
throughout southern Africa and jeopardise regional peace, a parliamentarian
from the opposition Movement for Democratic Change said on Monday.

      "If Zimbabwe implodes, it will be a threat to the stability of South
Africa and the region," MDC lawmaker David Coltart told reporters in Berlin
during a European tour.

      "The problem of Zimbabwe is linked with South Africa and there is a
growing understanding that Zimbabwe could harm South Africa with a flood of
poor people. Then it (would) be a threat to foreign direct investments. It
is a vicious circle," he said.

      Coltart urged the international community to stay engaged in the
region, warning that Middle East flare-ups had distracted the world's
attention.

      "I'm here to keep Europe focused on Zimbabwe because it has gone off
the radar screen," he said.

      The southern African country has been beset by unemployment running at
80 percent, and the annual inflation rate hit a world record level of more
than 1 200 percent last month. There are also serious shortages of food and
fuel.

      Zimbabwe's relations with the West have been tense since President
Robert Mugabe's government launched controversial land reforms six years
ago, seizing farms from around 4 000 white farmers for redistribution to
landless blacks, often with no agricultural expertise or equipment.

      Coltart acknowledged that recent efforts by South African President
Thabo Mbeki to resolve the political crisis "are not working", calling
Mugabe's government "paranoid".

      "Its back is up against the wall," he said.

      He said Zimbabwe needed the help of its neighbours and international
backing to emerge from the current crisis, citing in particular the Southern
African Development Community (SADC) as a potential force for change.

      "The SADC could lead to a new constitution, fresh elections, the
legitimation of a new power and stabilisation of the economy," he argued. -
Sapa-AFP


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Made says monkey sabotaged farming season

New Zimbabwe

By Lebo Nkatazo
Last updated: 09/26/2006 10:19:39
THE Zimbabwe government on Monday finally fingered the cause of the dramatic
collapse of the country's agricultural sector -- a monkey.

While the world has been fixated with a state-sanctioned land grab of
commercial farms by veterans of the country's liberation war, the Zimbabwe
government has nailed what it believes to be the main saboteur of the
country's agricultural production -- a velvet monkey.

Agriculture Minister Joseph Made told parliament that damage caused by a
monkey to a transformer at the country's largest fertiliser supplier had
effectively crippled the country's production capacity, creating a food
deficit.

Made said "investigations" revealed that a monkey was responsible for the
extensive damage caused to one of the only two transformers at fertiliser
manufacturer, Sables Chemicals. The company is based in the Midlands.

Made told MPs: "Our investigations have shown that a monkey caused damage to
a transformer thereby sabotaging our preparations for the coming season. If
it was not for that monkey, the situation was not going to be as bad.

"We now have to import a huge chunk of our fertiliser requirements from
neighbouring South Africa. Repairs to the transformer take about six
 months."

Made told MPs that the monkey "tampered" with the transformer and was
electrocuted in the process.

According to Made, the damage to the transformer could be a blessing in
disguise for other Zimbabweans as Sables Chemicals is officially the
country's largest consumer of electricity, followed by mining giant,
Zimplants which is
situated in Mashonaland West.

As a result, the Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority (Zesa) has reduced
blackouts and load shedding across the country.

The problems at Sables have forced the price of fertiliser to shoot through
the roof by over 100 percent. A 50kg bag of ammonium nitrate doubled in
price to $4 400, and on the parallel market is going for more than $5 000.

The Zimbabwe government has been warned that the country faces a severe food
deficit, largely due to lack of productivity on the country's farms
following an often violent government-sanctioned take-over of commercial
farms from white land owners.

Faced with the crisis, President Robert Mugabe's government has deployed
soldiers, police and intelligence officials to take over the food security
to shore up falling production.

Critics say the black farmers have been hamstrung by shortages of inputs
such as fuel, seed and fertiliser while the majority lack the skills to
produce on a commercial scale.

In the past year, the army has been involved in low-key production of the
staple maize and wheat but Made said on Monday the police and air force had
also joined in and would plant 300,000 hectares of grain crops this season,
which starts in six weeks.

Writing on New Zimbabnwe.com in June, opposition MDC agriculture secretary
Renson Gasela warned that the country faced a serious food deficit with only
30 percent seed of the national requirement available to farmers.

Gasela fears there is a deliberate policy by the government to sabotage food
production and then turn around and use food aid in political campaigns.

He said: "No-one can convince me the government is willing but unable to
plan properly and get the country out of the food deficit. Visit Grain
Marketing Board depots and see how rural district councillors are daily
coming to get either mealie meal, seed or fertilisers, which products are
sold to Zanu PF councillors only.

"It is therefore the permanent interest of the government to be in control
of the people."

Agriculture Minister Joseph Made has in the past been slated for claiming
the country has enough food reserves, only to turn around in time of crisis
and say the country needs food aid.

The United Nations estimates that close to half the country's population may
need food aid by the end of the year, although the government still insists
that it will not beg for food.


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Police Brutality Victim Speaks Out

Institute for War and Peace Reporting

Female trade union leader severely beaten in recent anti-government protest
recounts ordeal.

By Dzikamai Chidyausike in Harare

The first vice president of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions, ZCTU, has
spoken to IWPR about the appalling injuries she said she received at the
hands of the police after an attempt to lead an anti-government protest
earlier this month.

Lucia Matibenga said she was among 15 ZCTU leaders who were arrested and
tortured by police when they tried to attend a rally against low wages and
the authorities' inaction on the HIV/AIDS epidemic, at a time when some 500
Zimbabweans are dying daily from AIDS-related infections.

Matibenga, the only woman in the group, suffered a fractured arm, perforated
eardrum and bruised kidneys. Matibenga, who has received treatment at
Johannesburg's Milpark Hopsital, spoke by cell phone to IWPR's Dzikamai
Chidyausike in Harare.

IWPR: Mrs Matibenga you were one of fifteen ZCTU leaders arrested during
nationwide demonstrations against the policies of the ZANU PF government on
September 13. Press reports said you were severely beaten by the police. Can
you take us through the events leading to your arrest?

MATIBENGA: We had barely marched 100 metres from our offices in Harare as
planned when police stopped us. They told us to sit on the tarmac - which we
did - then they crammed the fifteen of us into a police vehicle and took us
to Matapi police station. There they took our cell phones and handcuffed us
in pairs.

Each pair would be force-marched into an empty room at the station, and then
six police officers would use truncheons to beat them. Sometimes they used
clenched fists and their police boots.

IWPR: What were the police saying during these beatings?

MATIBENGA: They accused us of trying to take back the country to the British
(Zimbabwe's former colonial power). They told me that they were going to put
me in my right place as a woman. They said they were beating me so I could
learn to concentrate on raising my family instead of demonstrating. One of
the police officers even boasted that he had been trained to kill traitors
like us.

IWPR: You said they were beating you with batons and clenched fists. Can you
tell us where specifically they hit you?

MATIBENGA: They beat me all over the body but they particularly targeted my
back and buttocks. During the torture I hit my head against the wall three
times and I was bleeding but the officers told me to stand up because they
had not yet finished with me.

IWPR: Are you still in pain?

MATIBENGA: As I speak right now, my face is swollen. I can't hear anything
with my right ear; the doctor told me that my eardrum is perforated because
of the impact of the claps from two of the officers.

IWPR: What other injuries did you sustain?

MATIBENGA: My left hand is swollen; I have an arm in a sling. One of the
police officers hit me just under the breast and I have difficulties
breathing.

IWPR: What did the police do after assaulting you?

MATIBENGA: They locked my fourteen colleagues, all men, in a private office.
I was made to sit at the reception area because I was the only woman there
and they did not have a cell for me. I could hear my colleagues whining in
pain. Most of them had broken arms and limbs and they were bleeding. I was
later told that three of them fainted. They were forced to sit under a table
for hours.

IWPR: Did they take you to the hospital?

MATIBENGA: Not until the next day. Our lawyers were not allowed to see us.
For hours our lawyer was told that we were not at that station. It was only
after a struggle that they allowed him to speak to us. He is the one who
negotiated with the police to take us to the hospital. They only took us to
[Harare's] Parirenyatwa Hospital [from where Matibenga was later flown to
Johannesburg for advanced care] around 10 pm about 25 hours after the
beating but not before they had transferred us to the Central police station
to charge us under the Public Order and Security Act [a draconian catch-all
law which bans gatherings of more than two people without police permission,
and which outlaws the making of statements "prejudicial to the State" or
which "insult the President"]. During that time none of us was allowed to
take a bath.

Up to now, I am shocked by the level of aggression displayed by the police.
I can imagine how many people go through these things everyday, especially
women.

IWPR: Will you go back into the streets to protest after the torture.

MATIBENGA: This government is dangerous. I am afraid they will come back for
me, but there is no going back. We will continue with the demonstrations
because we have realised that is the only language that the [President
Robert] Mugabe government can only understand.

IWPR: Do you consider the demonstration to have been successful?

MATIBENGA: The fact that they had to resort to arresting and torturing us is
a clear sign that the government is aware of the concerns of the workers.
This government is scared. So, yes, they can arrest us but they have got the
message. It's loud and clear.

Dzikamai Chidyausike is the pseudonym of an IWPR contributor in Zimbabwe.


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Dissident makes his voice heard

chron.com

Sept. 26, 2006, 2:36AM
CRISIS IN ZIMBABWE
Archbishop Pius Ncube is a powerful critic of a ruler who he says has brought his nation to the brink of collapse

By TONY FREEMANTLE
Copyright 2006 Houston Chronicle
It is Archbishop Pius Ncube's fervently held belief that the precipitous decline of his native Zimbabwe from one of sub-Sahara Africa's most prosperous countries to a basket case can be traced to one man's stubborn, suicidal desire to stay in power.
There was, therefore, little reason for optimism Monday when Ncube learned that the man, Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe's 82-year-old president, planned to extend his rule another four years before holding elections.
But it did not surprise him. Nor did it surprise him that Mugabe's police were reportedly beating trade union protesters Monday. Violence, brutal oppression, economic hardship and Mugabe's refusal to share authority are part of daily life in Zimbabwe, he said.
Ncube, the Roman Catholic archbishop of Bulawayo, who is arguably Mugabe's most powerful and vocal critic, was in Houston to deliver a speech at the University of St. Thomas.
In a wide-ranging interview Monday, Ncube accused Mugabe's government and his ruling ZANU-PF party of destroying Zimbabwe's once thriving economy and driving the nation of 12.2 million to the brink of collapse.
"When it comes to African dictators like Mugabe, they will break every law, they will smash up everything, everything can go to pieces as long as they remain supreme," Ncube said.
In 1980, when Mugabe led the country to independence from British colonial rule, there was hope that Zimbabwe would set an example to other emerging African democracies. By the 1990s it appeared those hopes were well founded, Ncube said.
But faced with growing opposition, Mugabe embarked on a series of disastrous campaigns — seizing land from white farmers and uprooting about 700,000 poor city dwellers and demolishing their houses — that have all but destroyed the economy.
The rate of inflation is about 1,000 percent, 80 percent of the workforce is unemployed, and the urban poverty rate has trebled.
"Hunger, illness and desperation stalk our land," Ncube wrote in the text of his speech.
Ncube is a slight, unimposing man with wire-rimmed glasses who wears the simple black clothes of a parish priest without a trace of pretense. But he is widely viewed as the Tutu of Zimbabwe, a comparison to South Africa's Archbishop Desmond Tutu who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts in combating apartheid. It's a flattering comparison, but not one Ncube sees as cause for celebration.
"It's difficult to rejoice in anything of the sort because we are still in an absolute mess," he said. "At least in South Africa, they are over the hump. In Zimbabwe, it is an absolute mess."
Brutally frank in criticism
In a country where dissent is brutally suppressed, Ncube is as brutally frank. He calls Mugabe evil. He says he is a liar and a cheat, that the word dictator is too good for him, that he is a murderer.
The archbishop has received death threats, but so far Mugabe's response to his nemesis has been mostly verbal, calling Ncube an "unholy man" and describing him as satanic.
Ncube said he is not sure why he gets away with it. Being a man of the cloth, wearing the white collar of a priest could have something to do with it.
"I don't know," he said. "But I'm not speaking because of the collar. I'm speaking because Mugabe is driving the whole nation to ruin and causing so much suffering.
"Even if I was not a priest, I would still speak up, and perhaps by now they would have got rid of me."
Ncube said Mugabe has succeeded so well in stifling opposition to his rule that the only real challenge to it, which emerged in 2000 in the form of the Movement for Democratic Change, or MDC, is in disarray — split along ethnic lines and without good leadership.
Mugabe's tolerance of the MDC, Ncube said, dissolved when it began acquiring more power. The white farmers began participating more avidly, and the party was receiving more and more support from the poor in the cities — reasons, he said, Mugabe eventually cracked down on them.
A case of life and death
Paradoxically, the people of Zimbabwe would have been been better off if Mugabe had simply banned any form of opposition.
"Economically, he would have been much cleverer if he had banned the MDC," Ncube said. "The people would be better off economically right now. But he wanted to appear as if he was a democrat in the eyes of the world. Banning the MDC would have done less harm economically than what he has foolishly done up to now."
For now, Ncube said, the situation for ordinary Zimbabweans is so dire, it is literally a case, for many of them, of life and death.
"Things must change in Zimbabwe, because as things are, we face death," he said. "There is no way you are going to manage if a loaf of bread right now costs 400,000 Zimbabwe dollars, in two weeks' time it costs 800,000, in three weeks' time it is 1.6 million.
"There is no way we can survive if it continues this way."
tony.freemantle@chron.com


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Zimbabwe urged to increase rates for international calls

People's Daily

      The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwean governor Gideon Gono on Monday urged
the country's telephone providers to increase the terminal rates for
international calls.

      He told the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Transport and
Communications that the central bank had once again come to the rescue of
fixed telephone provider, TelOne, by availing the 710, 000 U.S. dollars it
required to pay Intelsat for Internet and voice link for the period April to
June this year.

      On August 29, 2006, Intelsat disconnected TelOne for non- payment of
the debt, resulting in a near collapse of Internet services in the country.

      Gono said TelOne had failed to pay the debt because it charged low
rates for international telephone traffic that terminated in Zimbabwe.

      The company charged 3 U.S. cents per minute for every international
call terminating in the country, compared to an average 20 U.S. cents other
countries in the region charge.

      With more than three million Zimbabweans living in the Diaspora, Gono
said, the country could be earning large amounts of foreign currency if the
phone company were to charge the correct terminal rates.

      Zimbabwe is the second country after South Africa with the largest
inward volume of telephone in the region, he said. The international
community is interested in knowing latest political developments in the
country while Zimbabweans in the Diaspora want to know the situation back
home.

      Gono said he had advised the Ministry of Transport and Communications
to increase the terminal rates as far back as 2003 when he first came into
office, but to date nothing had been done.

      He noted that four months ago the Postal and Telecommunication
Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe (POTRAZ) had started moving to address the
situation although the figures it was proposing were still too low.

      The POTRAZ had suggested increasing the rates to 15 U.S. cents for
mobile phones and 7 U.S. cents for fixed telephones.

      Source: Xinhua


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ARVs price up in Zimbabwe



      September 26, 2006

      By Mabutho Michael Ngcobo

      Johannesburg (AND) The price of anti-retroviral drugs in Zimbabwe has
gone up by between 50 and 65 percent in the last three and half months, the
Herald newspaper reported.

      The price of a monthly course of imported ARVs at pharmacies went up
from Z$10 000 to Z$12 000in July while in August they rose to Z$16 000.

      On Friday the price went up to between Z$18 000 and Z$20 000, the
Herald reported. With the economic situation deteriorating in the southern
African state, further price increases are likely in the near future.

      They are more than half million people in Zimbabwe who are believe to
be in serious need of antiretroviral drugs, which is in sharp contrast with
42 000 people who are on the government ARV programme.

      The figure only represented 30 percent of the HIV positive population,
leaving the rest dependent on ARVs from the pharmacies, the Herald reported.

      The country's head of the National Aids Council, Amon Mpofu, was
quoted by the Herald as saying that his organisation has come up with a new
strategic framework to focus on the need to increase supply of ARVs, but he
did not elaborate on how they are going to make with the current economic
crisis in Zimbabwe.

      Johannesburg bureau, AND


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Mugabe tells Britain, U.S. to stay out of Zimbabwe politics

People's Daily

      Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe on Monday urged U.S. and Britain to
stay out of Zimbabwe's politics and to allow its people to exercise their
democratic right to choose their own government.

      Mugabe said this while addressing hundreds of the ruling party Zanu PF
supporters and government officials who thronged the Harare International
Airport to welcome him from his trip to Cuba, United States and Egypt where
he attended various summits and meetings.

      "Leave our politics to the people of Zimbabwe. Bush and Blair should
keep out of Zimbabwe. The right to choose the government is the right of the
people of Zimbabwe," he said.

      He castigated Britain and United States' interference in domestic
affairs of other countries, saying this was in violation of the Charter of
the United Nations.

      He also took a swipe at the main opposition party, the Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC) for trying to use unorthodox means to enter into
power.

      "The road to power is to go to the people," he said, adding that MDC
should outline its policies to the people and be voted for through the
ballot.

      The people were reminded of how they got their independence after a
bitter struggle and that as blacks they should always know where they stand,
their dignity and totem regardless of the current economic hardships.

      Source: Xinhua


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Mugabe Warns Off Protesters

Institute for War and Peace Reporting

Assaults on Zimbabwe's trade union leaders are undermining the political
opposition's plans for mass demonstrations.

By Albert Kwangware in Harare

Press images of Wellington Chibebe, secretary-general of the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions, in a hospital bed with a fractured arm, two broken
fingers and a bandaged head are chilling testimony to the ruthlessness of
Robert Mugabe's security forces and the Zimbabwe president's resolve to
suppress any dissent against his rule.

In the wake of the September assaults on Chibebe and other top leaders of
the trade union organisation, the opposition Movement for Democratic Change,
MDC, now faces an uphill task to bring about its own promised mass protests
against the Mugabe government. People are more afraid than ever to
participate in public demonstrations, having witnessed the extent of the
injuries inflicted on the trade unionists.

Chibebe, 42, was so badly injured at the notorious Matapi police station in
the Harare suburb of Mbare that he was unable to appear in court to answer
charges of inciting protesters. A hearing was instead held at the state
Parirenyatwa Hospital where Chibebe's extensive injuries are being treated.
The trade union chief was bailed to appear in court some time in October.

Matapi police station is well known among Zimbabweans as one of the Mugabe
administration's main torture centres. Its cells have been condemned by the
country's Supreme Court as "unfit for human habitation".

The ZCTU leaders were detained and savagely beaten when they tried on
September 13 to lead lunchtime protests by workers against worsening
economic hardships and harsh political conditions.

Their protest ended before it began when militiamen and riot police moved in
to crush the demonstration amid government threats to act mercilessly
against any workers who joined in.

The failed protest was just the latest of many fruitless efforts by the ZCTU
and the MDC to rally ordinary people against the increasing totalitarianism
of Mugabe and his ZANU PF government. Although Zimbabwe's economy has
collapsed, with the International Monetary Fund predicting inflation will
average 4,300 per cent next year and unemployment running at 80 per cent,
there has been no significant public protest for more than three years.

Although MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai endorsed the ZCTU's planned
demonstration, he did not join it, reinforcing popular perceptions that
opposition politicians want "to lead from the back" and reap the potential
political rewards of ordinary people's broken heads.

The ZCTU demonstration was meant to conclude with the delivery of a petition
to the government demanding salary increases indexed to increases in minimum
income levels deemed necessary for family survival; free drugs for the
millions of people living with HIV/AIDS; the restoration of democratic
freedoms; and an end to crackdowns on informal street traders, most of them
people rendered jobless in a country with the world's fastest declining
economy.

Riot police sealed off all routes into Harare, Zimbabwe's capital, quickly
arrested more than 180 people and dispersed tentative crowds by wading into
them with heavy wooden batons while firing teargas.

The 82-year-old Mugabe, who has indicated he intends extending his reign to
2010, which will mean he has been in office for thirty years, has declared
war, saying he will clamp down on opposition and attempted uprisings by
civil society.

He had warned that the trade union demonstration would be "at the ZCTU's
peril", denouncing Chibebe's ultimately crushed protest as an attempt "to
create public disorder to achieve regime change". Mugabe - in an echo of his
notoriously proud declaration "We have degrees in violence" - added, "We
have armed men who can pull the trigger."

A western diplomat who witnessed the crushing of the ZCTU demonstration told
The Times of London, "It was carried out as a deliberate, premeditated
warning, from the highest level, to anyone else who tries mass protest that
this is what will happen to them."

Mugabe has warned Tsvangirai that if he follows the ZCTU's example he will
be "dicing with death". The president, in Clint Eastwood style, added, "If
you want an excuse for being killed, be my guest. Go into the streets and
demonstrate."

Dr Reginald Matchaba-Hove, of Zimbabwe Doctors for Human Rights, who
attended to the injured trade unionists, said of the attacks, "As a case of
police brutality on a group, it is the worst I've ever seen. It was really
terrible and really brutal."

According to informal poverty indexes, a family of five in Zimbabwe now
needs more than 100,000 Zimbabwe dollars (400 US dollars) a month to buy
basic commodities but few earn anything near that figure. Most get less than
a fifth of that.

Despite their dire poverty, the majority of people are too afraid to
protest. Violence and intimidation by Mugabe and the security forces has
worked, as demonstrated by the thin support for the ZCTU protesters.

Edward Chakanyuka, a Harare worker, told IWPR that he decided he would never
again participate in an anti-government demonstration after he was beaten up
by soldiers seven years ago in Mabvuku, a Harare working class suburb. "I
can never erase memories of the way those soldiers hammered me," he said. "I
still have nightmares. So I keep away from things like mass demonstrations,
mass action and boycotts.

"On the day of the ZCTU demonstrations, I tried to take a day off work. I
didn't want to be anywhere near the city centre. I can tell you that the
element of fear is not exaggerated. We are afraid. With what happened to the
ZCTU guys, I can guarantee you that the MDC will not be able to pull the
huge crowds for its demonstration."

With the southern hemisphere winter now over, the MDC, which promised a
series of major demonstrations through a "winter of discontent", has yet to
announce when Tsvangirai and other top brass will lead people on to the
streets to defy Mugabe. The party publicity secretary Nelson Chamisa said
mass protests are still scheduled, but he declined to say when.

With critics accusing the MDC of mass dithering, Chamisa said, "We are not
so naïve and parochial as to fix a time and a rigid timetable for the
people's struggle.

"We didn't say that the protests would be held in winter. The winter being
referred to is what people would go through. It was a metaphorical
statement. The struggle has a timetable and we will be able to do it at that
time."

The MDC's secetary-general Tendai Bitai said, "Mass protests are coming at
our own pace. People who criticise have never demonstrated, been tortured,
harassed or slept in a cell. These are armchair people who will say anything
and just criticise."

But a top MDC official, requesting anonymity, told IWPR that some of her
colleagues had developed cold feet following the beatings of the ZCTU
protesters. They fear that the assaults would be even worse on the leaders
of the MDC, the only party since independence to have posed a serious threat
to ZANU PF hegemony.

"People are now very scared," she said. "Mugabe has instilled fear not only
in ordinary Zimbabweans but also in the MDC leadership. Some have second
thoughts, and are already divided on, mass protests. Those MDC activists
arguing the need for sustained protest are seriously worried they will not
be able to mobilise the essential large crowds.

"There are whole issues of fear and of heavy handedness of the state. With
the future of the country so precarious, people tend to protect their little
spaces and are becoming extra cautious about their safety and security."

The official said that because Zimbabwe is now a de facto "politico-military
junta" a popular uprising like the Orange Revolution in Ukraine, or
Kyrgystan's Tulip Revolution or the Rose Revolution of Georgia simply cannot
be replicated.

"The numbers game will not work here,"said the official. "Rather, a more
qualitative assessment of the effort against the odds should be the right
approach.

"Government must realise that there is going to be an eye of the storm, so
action will be incremental. Dynamite comes in small packages. People, inside
and outside the country, must not confuse caution with fear."

Albert Kwangware is the pseudonym of an IWPR journalist in Zimbabwe.


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No Arrests But Beatings Alleged As Zimbabwe's NCA Returns To Streets

VOA

      By Patience Rusere
      Washington
      25 September 2006

Members of Zimbabwe's National Constitutional Assembly, outmaneuvered by
police last week when the civic group tried to stage a demonstration in
Harare, organized a protest march today in Harare with some 300 members
taking to the streets.

NCA chairman Lovemore Madhuku said police beat many demonstrators and
seriously injured 27 of them. However, police did not arrest any of the NCA
demonstrators.

Madhuku said protesters marched through the capital from Chinhoyi Street to
Sam Nujoma Street, where police ordered them to disperse. When they did not
obey the order to disperse, police commenced to beat them but arrested no
one, he said.

Police spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena declined to confirm or comment on the
reported NCA protest.

Madhuku told reporter Patience Rusere of VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe he
believes the decision not to arrest demonstrators reflects a shift in police
strategy.

Elsewhere, about 30 officials of the Movement for Democratic Change remained
under arrested in the northern city of Kariba pending transfer to Karoi for
arraignment. They included Kwekwe member of parliament Blessing Chebundo and
Kariba Executive Mayor John Houghton, who is the only white mayor in the
country.

The MDC officials, members of the opposition faction led by Morgan
TsvangiraI, were arrested on charges of meeting without authorization. Their
lawyer says they were to be moved to Karoi because there is at present no
resident magistrate in Kariba.


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Zimbabwe churches in joint appeal to solve national crisis -26/09/06

ekklesia.co.uk

Churches in Zimbabwe want a national debate to secure the future of the
southern African nation, which is blighted by its worst economic and
political crisis since it gained independence from Britain 26 years ago -
writes a correspondent for Ecumenical News International.

"Our nation is desperately in need of a physician, and that physician is
none other than us the people of Zimbabwe," Roman Catholic, Protestant and
Evangelical leaders stated in a recent document that examines the crisis and
offers proposals on the way forward.

Prepared jointly by the Zimbabwe Catholic Bishops Conference, the Zimbabwe
Council of Churches and the Evangelical Fellowship of Zimbabwe, the document
is entitled 'The Zimbabwe We Want: Towards A National Vision For Zimbabwe'.

The church leaders have acknowledged their own failure to speak up on behalf
of the people during the crisis, which they say has been worsening for the
last 11 years. The period has seen a forced land reform campaign that has
undermined the state of the economy and led to hunger in the country.

"As churches, we confess we have failed the nation because we have not been
able to speak with one voice. We have often not been the salt and the light
that the Gospel calls us to be. We, therefore, confess our failure and ask
for God's forgiveness," they state.

The group said: "We will therefore never tire or give up until our goal is
achieved. We are not interested in forming a political party as some are
suggesting."

Zimbabwe faces a battery of political and economic crises including high
inflation peaking at 1000 per cent in August, massive joblessness,
increasing poverty, tensions between the main political parties, and
suppression of those reporting what happens in the country. Thousands have
left the country for neighbouring Botswana and South Africa as well as the
United States, the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand in search for
jobs.

With acknowledgements to ENI. Ecumenical News International is jointly
sponsored by the World Council of Churches, the Lutheran World Federation,
the World Alliance of Reformed Churches, and the Conference of European
Churches.


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Desperate Zimbabweans Resort to "Transactional" Sex

Institute for War and Peace Reporting

Catastrophic decline of country's economy fuels changing sexual habits.

By Hativagone Mushonga in Harare

Deep poverty, fuelled in part by runaway inflation, has pushed great numbers
of vulnerable Zimbabwean women living in the country's towns and cities to
enter commercial sex work or "transactional" sexual relationships. The
exchange of gifts or money for sex is now common among women aged between 15
and 45 years.

It is less gifts like perfumes, dresses, haute cuisine dining and
jewellery - as in richer and more sophisticated societies - than cash for
basics like groceries, rent and school fees for the children of single
mothers. Some have dared to demand cars in exchange for sex.

The phenomenon, in a culture where all social indicators indicate
catastrophic decline, reflects something that Uganda's minister of youth and
children's affairs Jimmy Kinobe has said about transactional sex - affection
and warmth between the sexes has become "something for something love" and a
threat to Uganda's battle with HIV/Aids.

The desire to obtain luxury items, such as designer clothing, jewellery,
fashionable hairstyles, accessories and make-up, has always motivated many
women in Africa to engage in transactional sex. But in Zimbabwe, because of
the dramatic economic decline since 1999/2000, which has caused extensive
extreme poverty, some parents have pressurised their own children to engage
in transactional sex to finance their education and the family's household
necessities.

Innumerable families are being sustained by groceries and money provided by
their children's "sugar daddies".

A prominent Harare lawyer told IWPR, "How do you think women are surviving
in the high density areas like Mbare, Mabvuku and Epworth [poverty-stricken
working class suburbs of Harare]. It is guys who sell foodstuffs, the combi
taxi drivers and touts, the guys who get stuff, who are getting the sex in
exchange for food. The situation has worsened and life is just unaffordable
even for professional people like me."

Poverty and HIV/AIDS infection are deeply intertwined. With the burden of
caring for the sick, the dying and the orphaned forcing thousands of
Zimbabwean women deeper into poverty and draining their energy and
self-esteem, so it increases the pressure to resort to high risk
transactional sex, with older sugar daddies offering the daydream of
material security.

One single mother of a 16-year old girl told IWPR that she expects her
sixth-form daughter to supplement her parent's income. "What do you want me
to do?" said the mother sorrowfully. "I am an unemployed, single mother and
my two children need to go to school. How do you expect me to raise the
money for school fees, groceries, uniforms, clothes and other basics? My
only income comes from renting out the main part of my house.

"So my daughter has been helping me. I don't ask where she gets the money
from, as long as she brings something home."

But, the mother then admitted, she knows her daughter's income comes from
selling sex.

The woman's husband died from an AIDS-related illness and she also tested
HIV-positive. She knows that her daughter is exposed to HIV infection from
her chosen method of raising money for the family.

The mother allows men to pick up her daughter from her home at night and has
also been pushing her to have a sexual relationship with a pastor at her
church. "I don't ask where she goes and what she does," she said. "I am just
happy that she is able to bring something to the table. How did you think I
could afford expensive clothes for her and her brother and the mountain bike
my son has?"

Rentals now range between 30,000 and 250,000 Zimbabwe dollars [121 to 995 US
dollars] a month for a bed-sitter or two-bedroom flat, while three-bedroom
houses range from 100,000 to 300,000 Zimbabwe dollars in middle-class
suburbs. Rents and other prices increase almost daily, with the
International Monetary Fund predicting that Zimbabwe's current inflation
rate of 1,200 per cent will top 4,000 per cent next year.

The increasing demands by women for material rewards in exchange for sex is
beginning to have another social impact. Married men interviewed by IWPR
said it was becoming prohibitively expensive to engage in extra-marital
affairs. "Women, especially those we refer to as the 'youth policy', are
unmanageable, even for the so-called rich," said one financial executive.
"The other day a 17-year-old girl whom I had just started dating asked me
for 200,000 Zimbabwe dollars to buy her grandmother drugs.

"I automatically dumped her and told her that I was not there to look after
her grandmother. I know this was just a way to ask me for money for other
things."

A top civil servant said women expected a lot from him because of his post
in government. He said the highest amount a woman paramour had asked him for
was 500,000 Zimbabwe dollars - on top of three trolley-loads of groceries.

"Women have gone mad," he said. "They take you to a supermarket and ask you
to pay. A friend of mine was shocked when his girlfriend asked him for 100
000 Zimbabwe dollars to pay rent and deposit for a one-bedroom flat, and
when I showed him the demands I received from a woman I had just dated he
almost fainted.

"Before the introduction of the new currency, a lot of men had to move
around with travel bags full of money just to meet their girlfriends'
demands. Our biggest problem is what we call 'youth policy'. These young
girls want money - it's understandable because hairstyles, clothes and
everything else are now expensive."

In a cosmetic exercise which did nothing to slow inflation, but reduced the
weight of banknotes Zimbabweans carry with them in bags and boxes, Central
Bank Governor Gideon Gono knocked three zeros off the currency last month
and issued new notes.

One struggling married businessman who keeps a mistress said, "When a text
message appears saying 'I need a huge favour', you just know the issue is
about money. These women are draining us and those days of having
girlfriends are over because you will just work for them and be stressed for
life."

One man asked to buy groceries for his youth policy said that when he
brought two small carrier bags containing single items of basics, the woman
threw them out of her flat window, saying that when she asked for
"groceries" she expected to be given things she cannot normally afford.

A young secretary for an insurance company told IWPR that her days of having
sexual relationships for nothing with men, especially married men, were
over. Looks do not matter, she said, as long as he has a nice car and a fat
bank account. "You want me to have sex with a man for nothing?" she said.
"The man has to show me what he can do in terms of providing for me, and my
children, before I can even consider sleeping with him. Age is not a
factor - it's how fat his pockets are."

This fast developing social trend also flows in the opposite sexual
direction. Young men are having transactional sexual relationships with rich
married women, some of whom refer to their young lovers as "painkillers".

One young man clashed with his parents and decided to move in to his
friend's up-market flat, unaware that the rent was being paid by a "sugar
mommy". He was shocked when
his friend told him to leave because the "big mama" did not want visitors
sleeping there who might disturb her visits when she sneaks out of her
matrimonial home.

"Some of these guys you see driving fancy cars and staying in flats are
being looked after by older women," said the young man. "The older women who
feel deprived by their husbands but also believe in a youth policy of their
own are now very aggressive and will do everything to get a younger man."

The consequences of transactional sex, bolstered by a culture in which male
infidelity has often been explicitly or implicitly sanctioned, are
catastrophic. Zimbabwean women now have the shortest lifespan in the world,
according to the World Health Organisation. Largely as a result of HIV/AIDS,
Zimbabwean women now have a life expectancy of 34 years and men of 37, said
WHO in its annual report for 2006. According to the United Nations
Children's Fund, three babies in Zimbabwe become infected with HIV every
hour.

"But Zimbabwe needs support more than outrage," commented UNICEF spokesman
James Elder. "It is constantly inspiring the way Zimbabweans continue to
support each other amid desperate economic times, and 90 per cent of the
country's 1.5 million [AIDS] orphans are still cared for by extended family.
But the stress that a Zimbabwe family is under is becoming unbearable."

Hativagone Mushonga is the pseudonym of an IWPR journalist in Zimbabwe.


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Chibhebhe out of hospital but expected to appear in court soon



      By Tichaona Sibanda
      26 September 2006

      Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions secretary-general Wellington
Chibhebhe is now recuperating at home after being released from hospital
over the weekend.

      Chibhebhe was in a Harare hospital recovering from multiple injuries
suffered when he and 12 other ZCTU officials were tortured while in police
detention in the capital. Two other ZCTU officials, Moses Ngondo and James
Gumbi, were also released from hospital over the weekend.

      The ZCTU secretary-general had his initial bail hearing held at his
hospital bedside. He is out of custody on police bail and is expected to
appear in court on October 3rd to answer charges of organising an illegal
gathering.

      Chibhebhe and the two other officials were part of a group that was
arrested two weeks ago after staging a peaceful protest in Harare calling
for decent wages, action on the country's 1,200 percent inflation rate and
better access to life-saving anti-viral drugs for AIDS sufferers.

      Acting secretary-general of the ZCTU Japhet Moyo said all the ZCTU
members out on bail are still having to report to the police every Friday of
each week as part of their bail conditions.

      Moyo also described as 'pure madness' government's refusal to allow a
delegation from the American labour union entry into Zimbabwe last week
Friday. The ZCTU has been informed that the group, from the American Centre
for International Solidarity in the AFL-CIO union federation, is back in the
United States following their deportation last week.

      'It was an unfortunate situation. Its pure madness on the part of
government to tarnish it's image in that manner. If the government wasn't
hiding anything, why would they refuse people to come and visit other
workers,' asked Moyo.

      SW Radio Africa Zimbabwe news


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Zimbabwe To Import Fertilizer From China

Playfuls.com, Romania

September 26th 2006

Zimbabwe is importing nearly 400,000 tonnes of desperately-needed fertilizer
from its eastern ally China in a bid to boost falling agricultural yields,
it was reported Tuesday.

Zimbabwe's new black farmers who were given land under President Robert
Mugabe's controversial land reform scheme often blame lack of fertilizer and
other vital imports for their failure to produce substantial crops.

"We are certainly going to see an improvement this season in terms of
availability of fertilizer, especially ammonium nitrate," a senior
government official told the state-controlled Herald newspaper.

The official, who was unnamed, said at least 387,000 tonnes of fertilizer
had been ordered and was already on its way to Zimbabwe.

There are local fertilizer-manufacturing companies, but they are struggling
to produce the commodity because of a lack of vital foreign currency needed
to import raw materials.

Two officials from fertilizer companies Windmill and Zimbabwe Fertiliser
Company (ZFC) were arrested last week for hiking their prices without
government consent, putting further strain on local production of the
commodity.

The fertilizer deal is part of a 200 million US dollars agricultural loan
facility recently brokered between China and Zimbabwe, said the Herald.

Mugabe is desperate to see agricultural production increase to prove wrong
critics of his land reforms. Production is down by at least 40 per cent
since 2000, when large-scale white farm seizures were officially launched.

China and cheap Chinese products are becoming increasingly prominent in
Zimbabwean life. Mugabe has urged businesses to turn away from traditional
Western markets and look East for business and now Chinese cars, clothes and
other products are becoming a permanent fixture.

Even the state-controlled Herald appears to prefer to run news copy on
international affairs from Chinese news agency Xinhua, rather than
traditional Western news agencies.

© 2006 DPA


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NCA Members Released In Mutare

Zimbabwejournalists.com

      By Dennis Rekayi

      MUTARE - Police here have released from custody about 170 members of
the National Constitutional Assembly (NCA) who were arrested after they
marched through the main street of this eastern border city protesting
against the ill-treatment of labour leaders by security agents last week.

      Trust Maanda, a human rights lawyer, who represented the NCA members,
said they were released after paying admission of guilty fines.

      Maanda said the NCA members were charged under the Criminal Law
(Codification and Reform) Act section 4.

      "The police said their conduct was likely to cause breach of peace,"
Maanda said. "They were made to pay $250 00 and released."

      The number of those arrested rose from 150 to 170 after police
launched a blitz on all known NCA members in Mutare.

      Last Wednesday, the demonstrators, numbering over 300 marched from
down town and were intercepted by riot police in the city centre, along
Herbert Chitepo Street.

      The police, armed with baton sticks, severely beat up the
demonstrators who included elderly women before taking them to Mutare
Central police station where they are detained.

      A zimbabwejournalists.com correspondent witnessed the beatings and the
subsequent arrests of the NCA members.

      The NCA demonstration was in solidarity with the leaders of the
Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) who were arrested and severely
assaulted by riot police as they protested workers' poor working conditions,
wages and related issues.

      Some of the unionists were hospitalised due to the serious injuries
they incurred at the hands of the police.


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Mayor, MP freed on bail

Zim Online

                 Wednesday 27 September 2006

      KARIBA -A magistrate's court yesterday freed jailed opposition
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) party legislator for Kwekwe
constituency Blessing Chebundo, Kariba Executive Mayor John Houghton and
about 28 other party officials on Z$10 000 bail each.

      The 30 activists, who all belong to the main faction of the MDC led by
Morgan Tsvangirai, were arrested last weekend for allegedly holding meetings
with supporters in Kariba without permission from the police.

      Their lawyers said they were all facing charges under the government's
draconian Public Order and Security Act, which bars Zimbabweans from meeting
in public in groups of three or more to discuss politics without permission
from the police.

      The MDC accuses the police of using the law selectively to prevent the
opposition party from meeting Zimbabweans to market its programmes and
policies.

      The police, who have used the security Act to ban several MDC rallies
but have never banned meetings by President Robert Mugabe's ruling ZANU PF
party, deny using the law to cripple the opposition. - ZimOnline


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Opposition says Mugabe personally liable for torture

Zim Online

                 Wednesday 27 September 2006

      HARARE - Zimbabwe's main opposition party on Tuesday said President
Robert Mugabe should be held personally liable for human rights violations
and torture of civilians by state security forces after he publicly
applauded the police for torturing union leaders two weeks ago.

      Mugabe earlier this week told journalists in Harare that Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Union (ZCTU) leaders severely tortured by the police
following their arrest while attempting to stage demonstrations against
declining economic conditions in the country deserved their treatment.

      Fifteen of the more than 100 ZCTU officials rounded up by the police
on September 13 suffered serious injuries including broken ribs, arms and
legs after being assaulted by the police, who also barred doctors from
seeing the injured unionists for several hours.

      In a statement, the main wing of the splintered opposition Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC) party that is led by Morgan Tsvangirai said
Mugabe's backing of the police action was confirmation that torture of the
ZCTU leaders was "sanctioned from State House (Mugabe's presidential
 palace)".

      "The MDC holds Mugabe personally responsible for the broken limbs and
the fractured skulls inflicted on innocent Zimbabweans peacefully exercising
their democratic right to assemble and express themselves," said the MDC,
which itself has promised mass protests to force Mugabe to accept sweeping
political reforms.

      The MDC said Mugabe's government was "drenched in the blood of
innocent of people" but the statement signed by party spokesman Nelson
Chamisa did not say what punishment should be meted on the Zimbabwean leader
for the crimes it accuses him of committing.

      Mugabe's spokesman George Charamba was not immediately available for
comment on the matter.

      Addressing the media on his arrival at Harare International from
Egypt, Mugabe said the police were right in the heavy-handed way they
stifled the ZCTU-led protests, which he said had nothing to do with worker
grievances but were part of a Western-backed plot to topple his government.

      Mugabe, accused by the ZCTU and the MDC of ruining Zimbabwe's once
brilliant economy through repression and wrong policies, routinely accuses
the West of pushing for his overthrow.

      The Zimbabwean leader vowed more punishment for anyone engaging in
anti-government demonstrations in future and specifically warned Tsvangirai
that protests by the MDC would bring trouble for him as that party's leader.

      Zimbabwe is grappling with its worst ever economic crisis marked by
the world's highest inflation rate at 1 204.6 percent, shortages of food,
fuel, electricity, essential medicines, hard cash and just about every basic
survival commodity. - ZimOnline


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MDC says political violence on the rise in Zimbabwe

Zim Online

                 Wednesday 27 September 2006

      HARARE - A faction of Zimbabwe's splintered opposition Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC) party on Tuesday accused the ruling ZANU PF party of
stepping up political violence ahead of rural district council elections
scheduled for next month.

      Nelson Chamisa, the spokesman of the MDC faction led by Morgan
Tsvangirai told ZimOnline that there has been an escalation in cases of
political violence around the country over the past few weeks.

      Chamisa said the worst cases of political violence had been recorded
in Wedza in Mashonaland East province as well as in Buhera district in
Manicaland province.

      "In Marondera, our candidates who were filing nomination papers for
rural district council elections were harassed and assaulted. This
government is trying to use force to cow the nation into submission," said
Chamisa.

      The MDC spokesman also said ZANU PF supporters in Buhera South last
weekend set on fire a house belonging to the party's women's assembly
chairperson in the district, Veronica Bingwiza.

      Property worth millions of dollars was lost in the blaze.

      ZANU PF spokesman, Nathan Shamuyarira could not be reached for comment
on the matter last night.

      But the ruling party has in the past rejected charges of violence by
the MDC and human rights groups saying such charges are only meant to
tarnish its image and that of its leader, President Robert Mugabe. -
ZimOnline


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Politics not need determines govt aid - rights NGO



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

JOHANNESBURG, 26 Sep 2006 (IRIN) - Distribution of government aid is being
politicised by the ruling party in Zimbabwe's eastern province of
Manicaland, according to a faith-based rights organisation.

The Zimbabwe Peace Project (ZPP), in a new research report, said most of the
victims were members of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC),
but did record instances of ruling ZANU-PF supporters being sidelined.

Lists of beneficiaries for government assistance, like subsidised
fertiliser, antiretroviral AIDS drugs, aid to orphans and some food support,
are drawn up by local authorities, most of whom back ZANU-PF.

"The victims were ... asked to produce a ZANU-PF card in order to benefit
from food and agricultural inputs. In some instances they were simply denied
registration for aid and were blatantly told that the food belonged to
members of the ruling party," ZPP said in its report, 'Politicisation of
Food and Other Forms of Aid'.

Christine Kwangwari, ZPP's acting national director, told IRIN the survey in
August was part of a pilot project to monitor allegations of abuse of aid
for political influence. "We had heard of claims of politicisation of aid in
many provinces; we decided to study Manicaland as a test case."

The group has documented 83 cases of abuse of aid based on political
affiliation, which included not only denying food but also antiretrovirals,
and exclusion from the Basic Education Assistance Module (BEAM), a national
plan to help orphans get better healthcare and schooling.

"Children are sometimes arbitrarily withdrawn from the BEAM project on the
basis that their parents are supporters of the opposition ... The main
perpetrators of this type of violence are school heads who sympathise with
the ruling party," claimed the report. "The complete disregard for
children's rights, particularly those of orphans, is major drawback to the
attainment of justice in Zimbabwe".

According to ZPP, the internationally recognised principles of aid
distribution, such as neutrality, impartiality, independence and
universality, "are rarely respected because the beneficiation from food aid
is highly politicised".

They, however, did not record cases of the diversion of international food
relief, which is distributed by respected nongovernmental organisations
(NGOs).

"We did not find instances of politicisation of aid at the hands of NGOs
like World Vision, GOAL and Christian Care, who also disburse food aid in
the province," Kwangwari said. The food-aid NGOs follow strict international
guidelines, which stipulate the registration of beneficiaries in public
meetings.

Political analyst John Makumbe said beneficiaries of state-sponsored
food-aid and agricultural inputs were listed by traditional leaders, and
"the chiefs prefer to include people who have ZANU-PF [membership] cards in
their lists over MDC card-holders, and this is common place across the
country."

Food has tremendous influence in Zimbabwe. Independent estimates suggest
only 800,000 mt of maize was produced this year, or about two-thirds of the
country's annual requirement; the government has insisted the harvest was
around 1.8 million mt.

Zimbabwe has one of the world's highest rates of HIV infection. ZPP recorded
instances of people being denied treatment on the basis of their political
affiliation, and pointed out that food is also a critical element in
ameliorating the effects of HIV/AIDS.

Zimbabwean Minister of Agriculture Joseph Made slammed the ZPP report as
"ridiculous" and "nonsensical". "I control the GMB [Grain Marketing Board] -
I should know. The Zimbabwean government has made a commitment to ensure
that no Zimbabwean will starve, so this cannot be true. Even in the urban
areas, which we do not control, we have moved a large amount of maize to
ensure that everyone has food."

He questioned the claim that ZANU-PF needed to use food to win over
Zimbabweans, pointing out that it was the ruling party and enjoyed
widespread support, winning every election since independence in 1980.


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Cosatu outraged at violence against Zim unions

Mail and Guardian

      Johannesburg, South Africa

      26 September 2006 05:10

            The Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) expressed
its outrage on Tuesday at violence against Zimbabwe trade unions.

            Cosatu spokesperson Patrick Craven said a statement by
Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe -- reported on Monday -- condoned the use
of violence by police against Zimbabwean trade unions.

            Craven said Mugabe was happy with police dealing sternly with
Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) leaders during their September 13
protests.

            "This is nothing less than a justification of brutality and
torture against workers who were peacefully exercising their right to
demonstrate," said Craven.

            Members of the ZCTU were protesting against high unemployment
rates and poverty.

            Organisers of the ZCTU protests were beaten and arrested while
gathering for a march in the streets of Harare.

            ZCTU secretary general Wellington Chibebe's arm was broken while
other labour leaders were assaulted in police custody.

            The South African Broadcasting Corporation reported that Mugabe
has made no apologies to the ZCTU leadership.

            An investigation into police conduct is expected later this
week. -- Sapa


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Zimbabwe internet link restored

BBC

      Zimbabwe's internet services have been fully restored after a $700,000
debt was paid to restore the satellite link.
      Zimbabwe's Reserve Bank bailed out telephone operator TelOne, which
owed the sum to Intelsat.

      The disconnection earlier this month cut surfing and e-mail activities
by 90%, Zimbabwe's ISP association said.

      But TelOne is warning that they remain saddled with other debts and
face severe shortages of foreign currency so problems could reoccur.

      The firm wants diplomatic missions and internet service providers to
pay their monthly subscriptions in foreign currency.

      Zimbabwe is in the midst of an economic crisis, with 1,200% inflation,
70% unemployment rates and shortages of basic goods like fuel and maize.

      Earlier this year, Zimbabwe knocked three zeros off the denomination
of its banknotes in an effort to contain inflation.

      The opposition says President Robert Mugabe has destroyed one of
Africa's most developed economies through his policies.

      He blames the problems on a western plot to remove him from power.


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Zim Not Bothered By US, EU Noise - President



The Herald (Harare)

September 26, 2006
Posted to the web September 26, 2006

Harare

THE United States and the European Union can make noise about the beating-up
of Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) leaders by police but the
Government is not bothered and has no apologies to make, President Mugabe
said yesterday.

The President also blasted the US-based Coalition of Black Trade Unionists
(CBTU), saying they were agents of imperialism.

He said the CBTU members were rightly deported after trying to enter
Zimbabwe in solidarity with the ZCTU leaders.

US Ambassador to Zimbabwe Mr Christopher Dell last week criticised the
deportation of the six-member CBTU delegation.

Washington also lamented the beatings of the ZCTU leaders.

In a statement from its headquarters in Brussels last week, the EU said the
Government should "stop intimidation and assaults and to respect human
rights and fundamental freedoms of its citizens".

Swedish Ambassador to Zimbabwe Mr Sten Rylander, in a statement endorsed by
his EU counterparts in Harare, said the assaults were an abuse of human
rights.

But addressing Zanu-PF supporters from Harare Province gathered at the
Harare International Airport to welcome him and his entourage, Cde Mugabe
said if the labour leaders break the law and disregard police orders, they
would be beaten up.

Zimbabwe is unmoved by the criticisms by the US and the EU because as an
independent country it brooks no interference in its internal affairs, he
said.

"There are some who think that we are not independent, who think that they
can organise demonstrations and look for pot-bellied people like (ZCTU
secretary general Wellington) Chibebe to demonstrate. The police must do
their work. Anyone who resists (police orders) is actually inviting police
to use force. Anorova mapurisa," President Mugabe said.

The police will do their work and should not be bothered that the
demonstrators would have invited journalists and non-governmental
organisations to get the attention of the US, Britain and the EU, he said.

"Kana zvasvika ikoko, mogodiiko? What will you do? Nothing! AnaUnited States
vanoshaudha kuti vanoroverwei asi ivo vachiuraya vanhu zuva-nezuva kuIraq
nevamwe vavakauraya kuAfghanistan neLebanon. Keep your noses out of
Zimbabwe. Leave our politics to the people of Zimbabwe.

"You Mr Bush, you Mr Blair should keep out of Zimbabwe. Vanorohwaka (those
who want to effect regime change through illegal means), saka there is no
apology for that," Cde Mugabe said, warning MDC faction leader Mr Morgan
Tsvangirai against organising illegal protests.

The abortive ZCTU demonstration had the support of the Tsvangirai-led MDC
faction.

The President said the deported black Americans were a misguided lot who
were serving imperialists.

"Those poor black Americans, they forget that Zimbabwe, like all African
countries, went through colonisation, suppression of human rights and
democratic rights and had to fight for independence.

"They also forget that we here are the source of what they are. They must
support us fight against imperialism and neo-colonialism. So if they come in
the name of imperialism we say no."

Cde Mugabe urged the Zanu-PF supporters to remain behind the party and not
to be intimidated by the ZCTU and the opposition.

"Musatyisidzirwe nanaChibebe vane mazitumbu; rizere mweya hamuna zvirimo."

President Mugabe briefed the gathering about the G15 and Non-Aligned
Movement (NAM) summits he attended in Cuba and the 61st session of the
United Nations General Assembly in New York.

Addressing the same gathering, Vice President Joice Mujuru said the ZCTU
demonstrations and the attempts by some manufacturers to wantonly increase
prices of their products were meant to portray a state of crisis in Zimbabwe
and embarrass the President while he attended the G15, NAM and UN General
Assembly summits.

Cde Mugabe said unjustified price increases fuelled inflation, urging
businesses, including bakers, to be ethical and desist from corrupt
practices and profiteering.

He said manufacturers should not create artificial shortages of basic food.

Cde Mugabe said if bakers run out of wheat they should approach the
Government, which would make it available.

Cde Mujuru, Cabinet ministers, senior Government officials, service chiefs
and diplomats welcomed President Mugabe and his delegation who arrived just
before midday from Cairo, Egypt, where they had made a stop-over from New
York to connect an Air Zimbabwe flight to Harare.

Accompanying the President was the First Lady Cde Grace Mugabe and several
senior Government officials.


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Gono Slams Ministries



The Herald (Harare)

September 26, 2006
Posted to the web September 26, 2006

Harare

GROSS interference by some permanent secretaries heading various ministries
is scuttling efforts by parastatals to meaningfully contribute to economic
turnaround, Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Governor Dr Gideon Gono said yesterday.

"There is no role clarity between parastatals and the line ministries. In
some cases, permanent secretaries are acting as chief executives of
parastatals and the boards are sidelined.

"When boards are appointed they should be given room to deliver and if they
don't, fire them. This business of doing it half-heartedly is a recipe for
disaster," he said.

Dr Gono was giving oral evidence before the Parliamentary Portfolio
Committee on Transport and Communications on the interventionist policies of
the central bank in relation to public utilities.

Line ministries, Dr Gono said, should shoulder much of the blame for the rot
in most parastatals.

He said parastatals were critical, hence their poor performance had a direct
bearing to the efforts to turn around the economy.

Dr Gono suggested that since the issue of public utilities cut across all
sectors of the economy, it was prudent to have a meeting with all
parliamentary committees, senior ministry officials and board members of
parastatals on the way forward.

"It should be a no-holds-barred meeting and I am even prepared to have such
a meeting tomorrow," he said.

Dr Gono pointed out that problems affecting parastatals should be dealt with
in their totality and not through piecemeal approaches.

He said the game of blaming each other over the economic challenges was over
as what was needed were solutions.

Chairperson of the committee and Makonde lawmaker Cde Leo Mugabe (Zanu-PF)
said he would liaise with other portfolio committee chairpersons on the
suggestion by Dr Gono to hold an all-inclusive meeting on challenges facing
parastatals.

He said the meeting could be held under the auspices of the Liaison and
Coordinating Committee that comprises committee chairpersons.

Parliament, Dr Gono said, should make ministries accountable for their
actions, pointing out that they were in the habit of ignoring sound advice
from the central bank.

"Ninety-five percent of the policy advice that has been given has either not
been implemented or considered; and 80 percent of the advice does not need
any money but commitment. We are wondering whether this is just a culture of
not wanting to implement advice," Dr Gono said.

The central bank boss said he had advised the Ministry of Transport and
Communications in 2003 to ensure that the TelOne landing termination rates
for international calls to Zimbabwe be reviewed as they were the lowest in
the world but nothing had been done to date.

He said currently, the termination rates were pegged at US$0,3 per minute
against a world average rate of about US$0,20.

Dr Gono said with break-even termination rates, TelOne would be in a sound
financial position as this would guarantee significant inflows of the
much-needed foreign currency.

The RBZ recently intervened after the fixed telephone provider had been
disconnected from Intelsat link owing to non-payment of US$710 000 in
arrears.

The disconnection affected Internet service providers in the country as
service to the customers was slowed down.

Dr Gono wondered why proposals by the Post and Telecommunications Regulatory
Authority of Zimbabwe (Potraz) for an increase of the termination rates for
TelOne to US$0,15 and US$0,20 for other providers were not implemented.

He said there was need to put in place statutory regulations enforcing the
review of such rates.

The central bank chief said while he could understand the rationale of not
increasing prices of basic commodities, he was at a loss as to why the
termination rates were not being reviewed as they would generate foreign
currency.

Dr Gono then tabled before the committee the matrix of the recommendations
that had been made to various line ministries and parastatals in which no
decision was made.

Cde Mugabe said the committee would do everything possible to ensure that
sound advice in regard to parastatals given by the RBZ was implemented.

"We also realise that we are also to blame for the bad performance of the
economy by not taking line ministries to task," he said.

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