Over 400 activists from the National Constitutional Assembly took to the streets of Harare for the second day in a row, protesting constitutional Amendment 18. On the day South African president Thabo Mbeki arrived in the country riot police reportedly moved swiftly to disperse the protestors.
The marchers led by chairperson Lovemore Madhuku had wanted to march near Mbeki’s motorcade and denounce the compromise agreement between Zanu PF and the MDC which led to the bill that harmonised elections.
An NCA statement said their members arrived at the main post office from the Copacabana bus terminus, when Mbeki was less than 400 metres away along Julius Nyerere Way. The group say they whistled and chanted songs denouncing the constitution making process, including Amendment 18. No arrests were made on Thursday in stark contrast to Wednesday when 5 were arrested and 7 injured in skirmishes.
A defiant Madhuku said, ‘As long as Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment (Number 18) Act is there, we will continue to show our displeasure over it. We want this Act repealed and then have a people-driven and democratic constitution.’
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New health report on Zimbabwe paints bleak picture
By Tererai Karimakwenda
19 November, 2007
A recent report by the International Federation of Health and Human Rights Organisations, has revealed the tragic extent to which Zimbabwe’s health sector has deteriorated. Representatives from 24 countries met at the group’s annual meeting in Harare October and looked at ways to attain a high standard of health in Zimbabwe and the rest of the world.
Given the worsening political, economic and human rights crisis in the country, it is not surprising that they raised serious concerns about human rights abuses and linked the economy to the destruction of the health infrastructure and declining access to medical care for most Zimbabweans.
The representatives heard presentations and met with community members and health providers in both public and private sectors and non-governmental organizations. Also participating at the event were the Zimbabwe Medical Association, the Ministry of Health and Child Welfare and the Zimbabwe Association of Doctors for Human Rights, who hosted the event.
The report compiled after the meeting concluded that the people in Zimbabwe are suffering from the effects of widespread poverty and deprivation. This has created high rates of malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/Aids, a very high maternal mortality rate and many infectious diseases. State-sponsored violence also featured in the report. It said there were more than 1200 cases of unlawful arrests and detentions by police, military and security forces between January and August of 2007. 750 assaults and more than 500 instances of torture inflicted by the government were documented.
Food shortages and poor salaries are also depriving people of access to health care. Salaries for civil servants, including teachers, nurses, and doctors in the public sector,have dropped to less than US$20 a month. There were stories about nurses who sleep in the parks because they could not afford to pay for transport to work. Qualified medical staff continue to leave the country in large numbers.
The report said the lack of safe drinking water and constant power cuts contribute to the health crisis. The blood bank in Harare had to destroy its entire supply when power outages affected their refrigeration. The participants heard of one young woman in labour, who died at Harare Hospital after arriving to find there was no power, no water and no doctor. The report confirmed cases of dysentery in all suburbs of Harare. Unsafe water has increased the risk of diarrhoeal diseases. Also of great concern were the long waiting lists reported for anti-retroviral treatment.
Operation Murambatsvina, the government’s so-called clean up exercise which displaced nearly a million people, featured large at the conference. The report said the victims have received no form of justice or compensation. Many still sleep in the open, even during the rainy season which is approaching. Displaced individuals who are living with HIV/AIDS had their treatment disrupted and may develop strains resistant to their usual medication.
The health organisations urged the government of Zimbabwe to stop the use of violence, respect freedom of expression, fulfil the right to health for all members of the community, provide quality training of health professionals and ensure sustainable agricultural production.
They called upon regional and world leaders and their governments to condemn the actions of the government of Zimbabwe that violate the human rights of their citizens, and ensure that claims of sovereignty are not used as an excuse for escaping accountability for imposing suffering on the people.
The full report can be found on our website at www.swradioafrica.com
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Malawi faces grain shortages after giving Mugabe maize
By Henry Makiwa
22 November 2007
Malawi faces severe food shortages after the government of President Bingu wa Mutharika gave thousands of tonnes of maize to the Mugabe regime, which are yet to be paid for.
Our investigations reveal that maize has become scarce on the Malawian market and where it can be found, prices have increased three-fold despite last year’s good crop yield. Last year Malawi declared a bumper harvest but now people are angry with Mutharika for emptying the country’s grain reserves by giving the food to Zimbabwe.
But grain shortages have brought increases in maize prices. A 50 kilogram bag of maize has shot up in price from 600 kwacha ($US 4) to
2 800 kwacha ($US 17) in the past two months.
Details of the maize deal are shrouded in secrecy, as Zimbabwe is not listed on the debtors’ records of the body responsible for grain provisions, the Malawi National Food Reserves Agency. This is despite obvious evidence that grain was exported to Zimbabwe.
The development has sown much public resentment for Mutharika, after further revelations that he was secretly supplying fuel to Mugabe. The fuel deal has reportedly led to severe diesel shortages in the midlands and northern parts of Malawi. The price of fuel has also recently risen by 20% with subsequent similar increases in public transport fares.
Most of Malawi’s 11.9 million people earn less than $US 1 a day.
Public opinion is swelling against Mutharika, after revelations that oil tankers destined for Malawi are being diverted to Zimbabwe in a top-level deal between the two leaders. The arrangement is meant to provide a cushion to Zimbabwe’s acute fuel shortages. Mugabe’s poor economic and political policies have meant that the country faces serious food and fuel shortages.
Kamlepo Kalua of the Malawi Demcratic Party accused Mutharika of jeopardising the welfare of his countryman in support of the tyrannical dictatorship of Mugabe.
Kalua said: “If all the progressive forces of democracy in the world are opposing Mugabe’s corrupt governance, abuse of power and disregard of human rights, what duty is it for a poor little country like Malawi to support him.
“The people here are starving and suffering from fuel shortages because their leader has taken it upon himself to aid a pariah state. We are obviously angry especially because this is being done in secrecy without the knowledge of parliament or the public at large, so the people need answers from Mutharika.”
Mutharika’s late wife was Zimbabwean and the couple owned a farm in Zimbabwe. A known ally of Mugabe, Mutharika launched an anti-corruption drive when he came into power in 2004 but the opposition in Malawi now accuse him of being as crooked as Bakili Muluzi and Kamuzu Banda before him.
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Mbeki flies into Harare to attempt to revive stalled negotiations
By Tichaona Sibanda
22 November 2007
South African President Thabo Mbeki flew into Harare Thursday on a mission to break the stalemate surrounding the SADC sponsored talks between the MDC and Zanu PF.
MDC Secretary for International Affairs Professor Elphas Mukonoweshuro confirmed that Mbeki plunged directly into the negotiations by heading straight into consultations with the political leadership in the country, both from Zanu-PF and the two factions of the MDC.
Mukonoweshuro said Mbeki’s visit was part of an attempt to provide a kiss of life to the seemingly endless mediation talks. Amid concern that only weeks are left to save the talks, the MDC chief of Foreign Affairs told us he believed Mbeki’s stopover mission was to put pressure on the main protagonists to settle their differences, before he headed off to the Commonwealth summit in Uganda.
Despite intense negotiations in the last month, the negotiators from both parties have failed to reach a concrete outcome on electoral rules, security legislation, and the overall political climate.
With pressure mounting on Mbeki to push the two sides to reach a settlement before next month, the negotiating teams now have a matter of weeks to agree on the modalities that would meet the standards required for a free and fair election in 2008.
Later at a press conference Mbeki said he was confident the mediation efforts between Zanu-PF and the MDC would produce a solution to the country’s political crisis.
He said the talks went well despite the differences between the two parties. Tendai Biti the secretary-general of the Tsvangirai MDC said they told Mbeki Zanu-PF were not serious in coming up with a solution to the country’s crisis.
In a separate press conference Biti said; ‘We told him Zanu-PF is in denial about the need for change in the country and that they have not bothered to reign in their supporters in so far as violence is concerned.’
MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai revealed in Kampala, Uganda on Wednesday that the talks had stalled over the ruling party’s reluctance to repeal repressive laws like POSA and AIPPA. The opposition in turn threatened that its participation in next year’s elections would be subject to the repealing and implementation of key agreements concerning the voters’ roll and the reform of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC).
Other key demands by the opposition include international monitoring and observation of the elections by SADC, the African Union and the United Nations and a transparent delimitation exercise of all constituencies.
The SADC process, already five months behind schedule because of the continued intransigence of the Zanu-PF negotiators, has forced the South African President to become directly engaged in the talks.
Eddie Cross, the MDC’s policy co-coordinator, believes Mbeki is anxious to try and get a final agreement before the European Union-Africa Summit in Lisbon, Portugal next month. Sources say Mbeki wants to attend the December EU-Africa with a comprehensive and positive report on the talks.
‘This is a very strategic moment in the whole process, any further delays will put the March election date in jeopardy,’ Cross said.
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UK tribunal to decide fate of failed asylum seekers
By Lance Guma
22 November 2007
The Asylum and Immigration Tribunal in the UK will on Friday decide the fate of thousands of failed Zimbabwean asylum seekers who argue they risk persecution if deported back home. A temporary ban on deportations is in place, pending finalisation of the case which has dragged on for a long time. Initially called the AA test case the matter has now been renamed HS following on the initials of a new applicant. The only deportations taking place are targeting those who have over-stayed their visas, plus failed asylum seekers on voluntary return schemes and people who entered the country using foreign passports.
Rumbidzai Bvunzawabaya, an immigration lawyer with RBM solicitors, told our Behind the Headlines program that the tribunal will look at the deteriorating situation in Zimbabwe since last summer and use that to deal with the refugee status of Zimbabweans. The circumstances surrounding HS and his case are considered more appropriate for use as a test case. This is because the initial AA case involved old country guidance criteria and events in Zimbabwe have since changed. In September this year judgment in the long running matter was reserved, adding to the frustration of countless appeals and counter-appeals by both the UK Home Office and the applicants.
Any judgment on Friday will determine new country guidance criteria for Zimbabwe and will be used to assess the vulnerability of deported failed asylum seekers. The UK Home Office has argued against blanket immunity for everyone, saying it should be allowed to decide each case on its own merits. Campaigners however say returnees, irrespective of background, are classed as agents of regime change and face possible arrest, torture and other forms of ill treatment.
Meanwhile the body of asylum seeker Adonis Musati is still stuck in South Africa. The former policeman died of hunger after spending 5 months in Cape Town trying to appeal to the Home Affairs Department for asylum. Most of that time was spent in a queue. His friends and relatives now need to raise over 19 000 rand in order to repatriate his body back to Zimbabwe. His death was covered extensively by the South African media but observers say despite the shock felt by many people over the welfare of asylum seekers not much has changed. Many have nothing more than a piece of cardboard as a shield as they queue in all weathers, sleeping on the ground and desperate not to lose their place in the endless queues that hardly move.
NB: For the full interview between Lance Guma and Rumbidzai Bvunzawabaya tune in to Thursday’s Behind the Headlines programme.
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Behind the Headlines Promo
As thousands of failed Zimbabwean asylum seekers await the determination of the AA (now called HS case) by the Asylum and Immigration Tribunal in the UK this week, Lance Guma speaks to immigration lawyer Rumbidzi Bvunzawabaya and asks what the implications of the case are. A solicitor with RBM Solicitors in Coventry (UK) Bvunzawabaya answers the questions raised by concerned Zimbabweans.
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Callback
Mandisa chats to Chipo, a young Zimbabwean woman who discusses the difficulties of day-to-day life for young people, especially young women. She describes how some young women are being forced to rely on sexual favours to survive.
Then John catches up with Manu who chats about the ill-preparedness of government to plan for successive drought seasons, and the disturbing indication that some of this may have been deliberate, as punishment against perceived pockets of opposition. This comes at a time when the rains may have started falling, but it is still very sporadic.
Richard - SW Radio Africa
+44 0208 3871417
http://www.swradioafrica.com
In Cathy Buckle’s Letter from Zimbabwe she describes the nightmare of living with runaway inflation where “people are being forced to juggle with priorities” to consider what can they do without for another day. Join Lance as he teams up with journalists Mduduzi Mathuthu, Itayi Garande and Brilliant Pongo for Reporters’ Forum. The top stories in the week are previewed and analysed in depth. This is no holds barred commentary where the journalists get the chance to air their views and offer professional assessments of coverage done by other media.
In The Balance this week Tererai talks to Geoff Hill, writer and correspondent for the Washington Times in South Africa, who was the last journalist to interview Ian Smith when he visited him in hospital last Friday. He died in Cape Town on Tuesday, aged 88. Hill said Smith had lost a lot of weight and looked like a shadow of his former self.
Richard - SW Radio Africa
+44 0208 3871417
http://www.swradioafrica.com
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Cash shortage worsens despite increase in cheque withdrawal limit
By Henry Makiwa
7 November 2007
The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe on Tuesday raised the cheque limit that can be accepted for clearing by 150 percent to a maximum Z$500 million in its latest bid to tackle the cash shortages.
The move is the latest in a series of measures by the Zimbabwean authorities to alleviate the cash crisis, which many blame on President Mugabe’s controversial policies.
In his latest attempt to curb the world’s highest inflation, Reserve Bank chief Gideon Gono announced the new measures which analysts and economists swiftly rubbished as cosmetic. The country has been experiencing a widespread cash shortage that the government has attempted to curtail by printing more bank notes to no avail.
Daily cash withdrawals have been limited to Z$20 million for individuals and Z$40 million for companies which, to many, is too little for business.
Proposals by Gono to introduce higher note denominations or introduce a new currency in the past months have been scrapped demonstrating the government’s indecision at addressing the crisis.
Economist Daniel Ndlela said the government had run out of ideas.
He said: “The new cheque limit will not change much because in itself it is very little. It is worth some US$415 on the black market rate and that is what many are using these days. It cannot buy you much if you are a businessman.
“Gono cannot change much until the politics change. The cash shortage is because the deposit base has rapidly declined even when the central bank is disbursing cash into the banking system. We have a situation where deposits are failing to satisfy withdrawals because very little deposits are taking place,” said Ndlela.
Gono has been printing trillions of dollars and pumping them into the manufacturing sector in an effort to revive the supply side of the economy. His intentions, observers have noted, have been to reverse the damage done by the government since June when it imposed price cuts across every economic sector, resulting in the shortage of essential goods, and many company closures.
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Post-mortem results on MDC activist reveal he was also beaten
By Tichaona Sibanda
5 November 2007
A post-mortem carried out by a police pathologist in Bulawayo on the late MDC activist Clemence Takaendesa revealed that his body showed signs of physical beating, his family claimed on Wednesday.
Takaendesa, who will be buried in Gokwe on Thursday, was shot dead last week Wednesday by retired army Brigadier Benjamin Mabenge on his KweKwe farm that he grabbed in 2001. Although the post-mortem confirmed that Takaendesa died from wounds caused by a single gunshot, his family said they were shocked by revelations that he had signs of beatings on his body.
John Mupfura, a family spokesman said they have been able to piece together minute-by-minute events leading to and after the fatal shooting but have not found anything suspicious.
‘We know for sure he was not assaulted before the fatal shooting. We also know that for a while after the shooting there were people next to him tending to his brother who was injured in the same incident. Whatever happened to him, must have been during the period when the now deceased Takaendesa was left on the spot until the following day,’ Mupfura said.
He advised the family would not be drawn to speculate on the post-mortem results amid suggestions Takaendesa may have been ‘finished off’ after surviving the initial shooting.
This theory is seemingly supported by the fact that he was certified dead 16 hours after the shooting. His friends, who left him on the scene of the shooting, may have mistaken him for dead when he may have fallen unconscious and regained it later on.
Meanwhile there are unconfirmed reports that the retired army officer charged with Takaendesa’s murder was granted bail on Tuesday by a Gweru magistrate. Mabenge would be requested to report to the police once every week.
‘If this is true then it confirms our fears that someone high in government will do everything possible to protect him from prosecution,’ Mupfura said.
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Over 90 WOZA activists arrested and released in Tuesday demo
By Lance Guma
07 November 2007
Over 90 activists from women’s pressure group WOZA and its male wing MOZA were arrested on Tuesday in Harare before being released the same day in the evening. The group was protesting over a variety of issues including unaffordable school fees, power and water shortages and escalating state sponsored violence against pro-democracy activists. Human rights lawyer Alec Muchadehama confirmed the arrest of at least 98 activists by lunchtime on the day. The protesters marched from First Street along Nkwame Nkrumah until police intercepted them at the corner of Nelson Mandela and Sam Nujoma avenues.
The protesters held up placards and distributed fliers to motorists and pedestrians in the city centre. Anti-riot police then converged on the marchers and ordered them to sit on the pavement outside Standard Chartered Bank, which is opposite the Anglican Cathedral.
Some of the placards had quotes from Steve Biko, ‘You can put out a candle light, but once the light becomes a blaze it is difficult to extinguish.’
Our correspondent Simon Muchemwa reports that only two protesters a man and a woman were assaulted for protesting alone after their friends had been arrested. The male protester was immediately whisked away with 17 others in a B18 police truck leaving the rest seated. The others who included WOZA leader Jenni Williams walked all the way to Harare Central Police station under the watchful eye of the police. By 1400hrs Aleck Muchadehama a member of Zimbabwe Lawyers For Human Rights was at the station trying to ascertain the condition of the arrested.
In a surprising development however a Chief superintendent Madzingo (Acting Officer Commanding CID Law and order) at Harare Central police station ordered the release of the activists saying they had a right to demonstrate. Madzingo is said to have angrily reprimanded his officers in front of the WOZA/MOZA activists branding them overzealous. Muchadehama also confirmed to Newsreel that Madzingo said the women had genuine grievances, which merited attention. Madzingo however told WOZA leader Jenni Williams to seek permission from the police the next time they intended to protest.
This defence lawyer Muchadehama says is the problem. Under the Public Order and Security Act (POSA) political parties are required to seek permission from the police whereas WOZA and its MOZA wing were not a political party. The group has in the past vowed to ignore repressive laws and demonstrate all the same.
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In the Balance
Lawyer Sternford Moyo from the Law Society of Zimbabwe joins guest presenter Tererai Karimakwenda on the programme In The Balance to explain the court case that the Society, along with the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights, have brought against the Police and the Minister of Home Affairs. On numerous occasions lawyers have been blocked from seeing their clients by police officials. A group of lawyers was also assaulted by police officers after they tried to deliver a petition at parliament. Because the case is still subjudice, Mr Moyo was not at liberty to give too much detail, but you can the hear the basics In The Balance.
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Reporters’ Forum Promo
With Itayi Garande and Mduduzi Mathuthu locked in various engagements this week, Lance Guma looks at the top stories in the week with journalist Brilliant Pongo on Reporters’ Forum. The forum looks at the murder of an MDC activist in Kwekwe, the reported postponement of elections next year from March to June and the flopped show by reggae artist Luciano. Government was banking on Luciano’s backing of its controversial land reform programme to try and pull off a propaganda coup. In the end they were left with egg on their face.
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