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Zimbabwe
civil society differs on debt relief for Harare
Carole
Gombakomba, VOA News
July 06, 2005
http://www.voanews.com/english/Africa/Zimbabwe/2005-07-06-voa64.cfm
Russian President
Vladimir Putin told his Group of Eight partners Wednesday that the
government of Zimbabwe should be deprived of aid, and described
President Robert Mugabe a "dictator." Zimbabwe opposition
leader Morgan Tsvangirai meanwhile was asking the G-8 leaders to
put out a strong message on Zimbabwe.
Yet some Zimbabwean
civil society groups have come together under the umbrella of the
Global Call to Action Against Poverty to say Harare should halt
debt repayments and that G-8 nations are immoral to press for debt
service from the poor.
A leader of
the advocacy group, Thomas Deve, notes that Zimbabwe has slid into
the category of a Least Developed Country over the past five years,
and that now 80% of its people live on less than one U.S. dollar
a day, versus 50 percent in 2000.
Spokesperson
Fambai Ngirande of the National Association of Non-Governmental
Organisations makes the case for debt relief for Zimbabwe to reporter
Carole Gombakomba of VOA’s Studio 7 for Zimbabwe.
But a very different
view is held by Dr. Lovemore Madhuku, the chairman of the National
Constitutional Assembly and organizer of the Broad Coalition of
civic and political groups opposing the government’s ongoing demolition
operations.
Dr. Madhuku
told Carole Gombakomba why the Group of Eight in his opinion should
not extend debt relief to Harare.
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