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seemslikeadream Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-22-04 10:44 AM
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Zimbabwe: Increase in Malnourished Children At Clinics
Before we were estimating there were 1 million needy people in urban areas. The assessment quantified the number of people, stating that there were 2.5 million," Walker noted.

The increase in the number of malnourished children attending clinics in the two major cities "shows the great impact has had in urban areas, as the most vulnerable people, when there is a crisis, are of course children and women".

WFP and its implementing partners are working with 40 clinics to prevent a deterioration in the condition of malnourished children between the ages of six months and six years. "Over 80,000 children received food aid under the programme during February," the aid agency said.


Walker added that the programme has been running for a year now. "It started as a pilot programme in Harare and then extended to Bulawayo and covers most of the clinics in the cities. WFP is working with the NGO, Help Germany, and the children are referred to this programme through the clinics once they are registered as 'growth faltering'," she explained.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200403220094.html


Emaciated 8-year old boy recovers from severe malnutrition at Nambuma Nutrition Centre, Zimbabwe
Photo: Ellen Pieterse, Concern
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seemslikeadream Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-22-04 11:05 AM
Response to Original message
1. Fury over mansion for one of Mugabe's men
Edited on Mon Mar-22-04 11:16 AM by seemslikeadream
The Zimbabwean finance minister is not welcome in one of Cape Town's most expensive suburbs.

This was the verdict of Llandudno residents, who are up in arms over Christopher Kuruneri's apparent plans to move into a R30-million mansion.

"The stereo system in the house was imported from the United States and will cost R1,5-million."

He added that construction of the house would cost about R17-million, "but with all the accessories and stuff, like the hi-fi, the final cost will probably be in the region of R30-million, if not more".

When completed in November, it will have eight bedrooms, eight bathrooms, a large dining area and a massive outdoor swimming pool.

http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?click_id=84&art_id=vn20040322031943896C523938&set_id=1



how some others live in Zimbabwe
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AP Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-22-04 11:19 AM
Response to Reply #1
3. I wondered why the article didn't convert the currency. It converts to
US$4,621,001.00.

Perhaps that doesn't sound sufficiently exhorbitant.
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AP Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-22-04 11:16 AM
Response to Original message
2. Putting the pieces together.
Edited on Mon Mar-22-04 11:28 AM by AP
I took a look through that site and found something interesting. It looks like Zimbabwe has been trying to break the hold of foreign banks on the economy. They underwent a program of 'indigenization' of the financial markets. There are something like 17 banks in Zimbabwe now, and most of them are black-owned, and recently incorporated.

Two banks have failed. Well, it looks like that has freaked out the IMF, althought, 'freaked out' is an exaggeration. The IMF was probably more freaked out by the fact that there were suddenly 17 banks in Zimbabwe, rather than by the fact that 2 failed.

In any event, the failure of the two banks has given the IMF an excuse to argue that Zimbabwe needs to get rid of all the banks except 7, because 17 is too many. Now, I wonder which banks the IMF thinks Zimbabwe should keep open and which ones they should close.

Now, this web site seems to be fairly hostile to the Zimbabwe government, so it's hard to get the full story. However, if we've learned anything about how the world works, we've learned that the real story in Zimbabwe probably has more to do with what's going on in the banking sector, than anything else.

I'd love to know more details.
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NickB79 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-22-04 11:38 AM
Response to Original message
4. I see the land redistribution Mugabe campaigned on is working fine
I recall a lot of people predicting starvation and malnutrition if the land were forcibly taken from the established farmers and "redistributed" to people loyal to Mugabe. His supporters get land and the food it provides, his detractors starve. How convenient, eh?
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seemslikeadream Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-22-04 11:52 AM
Response to Reply #4
5. Zimbabwe to 'tighten' election laws
22 March 2004 12:51


The Zimbabwe government plans to tighten electoral laws ahead of next year's parliamentary polls, the state-run Herald newspaper reported Monday.

The announcement comes at a time when the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) has threatened to boycott next year's polls unless certain conditions, including an independent electoral commission, are met.

The opposition, which won 57 out of 120 contested seats in parliamentary elections in 2000, claims President Robert Mugabe's ruling Zanu-PF stole victory from it through violence and intimidation.

It has demanded that more than a dozen conditions be met before it is willing to participate in next year's elections, including that the poll be held in accordance with standards set for the region, and the repeal of strict press and security laws. - Sapa-AFP

http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.asp?ao=32998
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AP Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-22-04 11:56 AM
Response to Reply #5
6. The west has turned its back on the MDC and they're falling apart.
The west's new project is to infiltrate Zanu-PF. They want Mugabe's successor to be more friendly to western banks.

A couple weeks ago Morgan Tsvengarai castigated the MDC becasuase they're totally falling apaprt. They're splintering. Why? Because western money is no longer holding them together.
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seemslikeadream Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-22-04 12:16 PM
Response to Reply #6
8. Bankers Now Call for an Amnesty
Edited on Mon Mar-22-04 12:16 PM by seemslikeadream

March 21, 2004
Posted to the web March 22, 2004

Rangarirai Mberi


ZIMBABWEAN bankers, stunned cold by the closure of two banks within four days, are calling for an "amnesty" period from central bank Governor Gideon Gono. Senior bank executives last week began raising white flags to the Governor, proposing that he temporarily let up on his campaign to shut down illiquid banks.

"I think lessons have been learnt. It's now time for us - all of us - to step back and say let us have a period in which to clean things up," a leading bank executive said last week, requesting anonymity.


Kingdom Financial Holdings founder and deputy chairman Nigel Chanakira confirmed to StandardBusiness on Wednesday that bankers were indeed seeking reprieve.

Within a frantic three months, Gono's policies have seen management changes at Trust - the country's largest bank by assets - Century and Intermarket, the closure of the Intermarket divisions and Barbican. The RBZ has also shut down ENG Capital's Century Discount House.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200403220397.html
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AP Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-22-04 12:19 PM
Response to Reply #8
9. You do agree that it's a good thing to have more black/Zimbabwean-owned
banks in Zimbabwe, and not to let European and American banks have a tight grip on the financial industry, right?

Even if they have a few short term problems separating out the good from the bad, long term, they're better off (which should be obvious, given the IMF has told them to cut down to seven banks today -- I thought the IMF liked free markets and competition???).
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seemslikeadream Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-22-04 11:58 AM
Response to Original message
7. Zimbabwe: Quiet diplomacy has 'clearly failed'
But his approach has come under fire from political detractors, who say he is taking far too soft a line on his Zimbabwean counterpart Robert Mugabe.

Zimbabwe was plunged into crisis after presidential elections in March 2002 that returned Mugabe to office, the results of which international observers and MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai alleged were rigged.

The country is now in the grip of its worst economic crisis, with inflation at more than 622%, 70% unemployment and severe shortages of fuel, medicine and food.

The report says 90% of MDC deputies have been directly targeted, and that in half the cases, the perpetrators were members of the Zimbabwean police, army of intelligence services.

http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.asp?ao=32968
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AP Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-22-04 12:23 PM
Response to Reply #7
10. Zimbabwe Under Siege
Edited on Mon Mar-22-04 12:24 PM by AP
 As Zimbabwe descends into anarchy and chaos, land is irrationally seized from productive farmers, we are told. President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe is portrayed as a dictator bent on driving his nation into starvation and economic disaster while benevolent U.S. and British leaders call for democracy and human rights. These are the images presented by Western news reports, intended to persuade the public to support an interventionist policy. As always when the West targets a foreign leader for removal, news reports ignore complexity and context, while the real motivations for intervention remain hidden. Concern for democracy and human rights is selective and it is always the nation that displays too much independence that evokes concern, even in cases of a functioning multiparty system and wide ranging media. On the other hand, no one calls for democracy and human rights in oppressive nations as long as the political environment is conducive to Western investment. Saudi Arabia, for example, holds no elections and imposes an abusive oppression on the lives of its women. The pattern is consistent. Any nation that embarks on a path diverging from Western corporate interests and places the needs of its people over the demands of Western capital finds itself the target of destabilization, sanctions and intervention. History and context are essential for understanding political events, and it is precisely these aspects that are lacking in Western news reports.
...

Passage of the Land Acquisition Act in 1992 finally permitted a more flexible approach to land reform, but progress continued to be constrained by outside pressure. Despite real progress, by the time the latest round of land reform was launched, 70 percent of the richest and most productive land still remained in the hands of a mere 4,500 white commercial farm owners. Meanwhile, six million African peasants eke out a precarious existence on small farms averaging 3 hectares <1 hectare = 2.47 acres> in the "communal areas," formerly native reserves. Due to the historically imposed overcrowding in the communal areas, the already barren land was further depleted by deforestation and over-grazing. (4) Over one million landless blacks were engaged as hired labor on white commercial farms, condemned to work for low wages on the land their ancestors once owned. (5) Agriculture is the most significant sector of Zimbabwe's economy. Western news reports encourage the view that land reform is harming economic performance, implying that efficient farming is best left in the hands of 4,500 wealthy white farmers, while ignoring the millions of blacks barely able to survive. The unspoken assumption is that only white farmers are capable of efficiency. The concern expressed in the West for "efficiency" is in reality a mask for the preservation of white privilege. Temporary economic dislocation is an unavoidable byproduct of land reform, but genuine and lasting progress can only be achieved through land redistribution. In the West, the gross imbalance imposed by colonial theft is accepted as the natural order in Zimbabwe, with the indigenous population lacking any claim to the land. Fast track land reform is intended to rectify historical injustices and to ensure a more equitable division of the land.

...
There was a time when the management of the economy in Zimbabwe was highly regarded in Western circles. Throughout its first decade of independence, Zimbabwe's economy grew at an average of 4 percent per year, and substantial gains were made in education and health. Zimbabwe was handling its finances well, and between 1985 and 1989 had cut its debt-service ratio in half. (6) However, the demise of socialism in Europe resulted in an inhospitable environment for nations charting an independent course, and Zimbabwe felt compelled by Western demands to liberalize its economy. In January 1991, Zimbabwe adopted its Economic Structural Adjustment Program (ESAP), designed primarily by the World Bank. The program called for the usual prescription of actions advocated by Western financial institutions, including privatization, deregulation, a reduction of government expenditures on social needs, and deficit cutting. User fees were instituted for health and education, and food subsidies were eliminated. Measures protecting local industry from foreign competition were also withdraw

The impact was immediate. While pleasing for Western investors, the result was a disaster for the people of Zimbabwe. According to one study, the poorest households in Harare saw their income drop over 12 percent in the year from 1991 to 1992 alone, while real wages in the country plunged by a third over the life of the program. Falling income levels forced people to spend a greater percentage of their income on food, and second-hand clothes were imported to compensate for the inability of most of Zimbabwe's citizens to purchase new clothing. A 1994 survey in Harare found that 90 percent of those interviewed felt that ESAP had adversely affected their lives. The rise in food prices was seen as a major problem by 64 percent of respondents, while many indicated that they were forced to reduce their food intake. ESAP resulted in mass layoffs and crippled the job market so that many were unable to find any employment at all. In the communal areas, the rise in fertilizer prices meant that subsistence farmers were no longer able to fertilize their land, resulting in lower yields. ESAP also mandated the elimination of price controls, allowing those shop owners in communal area who were free of competition to mark prices up dramatically. In 1995, the IMF cut funding to the program when it felt that Zimbabwe wasn't cutting its budget and laying off civil service employees fast enough. Furthermore, the IMF complained, the pace of privatization wasn't rapid enough. But implementation of ESAP was quite fast enough for the people of Zimbabwe. By 1995, over one third of Zimbabwe's citizens could not afford a basic food basket, shelter and clothing. From 1991 to 1995, Zimbabwe experienced a sharp deindustrialization, as manufacturing output fell 40 percent. (7) According to an economic writer from the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF), "There is a general consensus among the people of Zimbabwe that ESAP has driven many families into poverty. The program only benefited a privileged minority at the expense of the underprivileged majority." (8) As intended by Western financial institutions, one could argue.

...

The government of Zimbabwe felt it could no longer endure this debacle, and by the end of the 1990's, started moving away from the neoliberal program. Finally, in October 2001, the abandonment of ESAP was officially announced. "Enough is enough," declared President Mugabe. "ESAP is no more." A press release issued by the governing ZANU-PF declared, "The termination of ESAP brings to an end the era of control of our economy by the IMF and the World Bank. While we must continue to work with these organizations on agreed projects, they will no longer dictate the direction of policy and the country." Price controls were implemented for basic commodities that soaring prices had made all but unattainable for many poor Zimbabweans, including bread, maize meal, flour, sugar, cooking oil, beef, chicken, pork, milk, soap and generic drugs. To counter the threat of companies closing in protest against price controls, President Mugabe announced, "The State will take over any businesses that are closed. We will reorganize them with workers, and at last that socialism we wanted can start again." Mugabe dismissed claims that government should not interfere with the market as "absolute nonsense," and stated that the nearly hourly price increases for goods and commodities had been unjustified. (9) The 1997 launch of a new phase in the land reform program, in which 1,471 farms were listed for compulsory purchase, triggered British intervention in Zimbabwe. The jettisoning of ESAP four years later, coupled with the statement that sectors of the economy would be placed on a socialist path, only increased the sense of outrage among Western leaders.

     The establishment of a new opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), in September 1999, found instant support from Western leaders. Significant funding from Western sources enabled the party to rapidly grow to the point where it won 57 out of 120 seats in the June 24-25 2000 parliamentary election, less than one year after its creation. Ostensibly based in the labor movement, the program of MDC reads like a call for a return to ESAP. A policy paper issued by the party spelled out its plans for privatization. Upon taking power, the party plans to appoint a "fund manager to dispose of government-owned shares in publicly quoted companies." The boards of all public enterprises would be "reconstituted," and the new boards would be "required to privatize their enterprises within specified timetables...with an overall target of privatizing all designated parastatals within two years." The interests of Western capital would not be ignored. "In areas where a high level of technical skill is required, foreign strategic investors will be encouraged to bid for a majority stake in the enterprises being privatized." A primary principle of the program would be that "all sales of major state assets will be conducted through open, international , competitive bidding." In order to counter opposition from workers made redundant, the National Privatization and Procurement Agency would be instructed to "carry out public awareness campaigns regarding the privatization program in order to generate public awareness and support for the exercise." Implementation of its program, the MDC feels, will mean "that foreign direct investment will take place on a substantial scale." (10) As a further incentive for Western investors, the MDC plans to review income and corporate tax levels "for regional competitiveness." (11)

...

http://www.swans.com/library/art8/elich004.html
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