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ZIMBABWE:
Year in brief 2005: A chronology of key events
IRIN News
Janaury 12, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=51080
JOHANNESBURG
- Over the course of 2005 the Zimbabwean government strengthened
its political grip with landslide victories in parliamentary and
senate elections, and a split in the main opposition party. However,
the country's humanitarian and economic crisis deepened, with worse
expected in 2006.
17 January:
Zimbabwean opposition parties and civic groups warn that unless
the voters' roll is reviewed by an independent body, the credibility
of the 31 March legislative elections could be called into question.
31 January:
Humanitarian workers express concern about the food security situation.
The US-funded Famine Early Warning Systems Network earlier in the
month said 5.8 million Zimbabweans - almost half the population
- were in need of food aid.
2 February:
A 15 member delegation from the Congress of South African Trade
Unions, on a fact-finding mission ahead of the elections, is barred
from entering Zimbabwe.
9 February:
Three Zimbabweans jailed for selling state secrets to South Africa
are convicted of breaching Zimbabwe's Official Secrets Act, and
sentenced to between five and six years in prison.
14 February:
The government announces it will reduce the number of local election
monitors and bar teams from the European Union from observing the
March poll.
18 February:
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) gives Zimbabwe another chance
to prove its commitment to fiscal discipline and meet its debt repayment
obligations.
20 February:
The architect of Zimbabwe's tough media laws, Jonathan Moyo, is
sacked as information minister for his role in organising resistance
to President Robert Mugabe's succession plans.
2 March: The
government announces that it may soon de-register at least 30 NGOs
for failing to provide details of donor funding. The Minister of
Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare, Paul Mangwana, says funds
meant for rural development may have been redirected into supporting
"anti-government activities".
17 March: The
UN Children's Fund appeals to donors to look beyond politics in
Zimbabwe. It says one in five Zimbabwean children are orphans; a
child dies every 15 minutes due to HIV/AIDS; and 160,000 children
will experience the death of a parent in 2005.
2 April: The
ruling ZANU-PF election victory is condemned as a sham by the main
opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC). ZANU-PF wins 78
of the
120 contested
seats, while the MDC slumps to 41 - down from the 58 seats it captured
in 2000 in its maiden election. Jonathan Moyo wins as an independent
candidate.
12 April: A
survey in 10 districts across Zimbabwe reveals alarmingly high levels
of malnutrition among children. Official statistics shows stunting
or chronic malnutrition levels as high as 47 percent among children
aged from six months to 59 months on commercial farms.
14 May: Sixty-two
alleged mercenaries, jailed by Zimbabwean authorities for violating
immigration, aviation, security and firearms regulations, are deported
to South Africa. The 62 were arrested in March 2004 after their
plane made a stop-over in Harare allegedly en-route to Equatorial
Guinea.
19 May 2005:
Reserve bank governor Gideon Gono devalues the Zimbabwean dollar
by 31 percent against the US dollar from Zim $6,200 to Zim $9,000.
Zimbabwe's flourishing parallel market rate is Zim $18,000 to US
$1.
23 May: First
reports of the government's controversial Operation Murambatsvina
(a Shona word for "clean-out the garbage") emerge. Human rights
activists condemn the police for their heavy-handed crackdown on
the informal sector.
30 May 2005:
Thousands of Harare residents flee the capital after armed police
continue demolishing illegal dwellings and traders' stalls. President
Mugabe endorses the crackdown.
31 May 2005:
Aid agencies warn that government's cleanup operation could worsen
food shortages.
1 June: Mugabe
tells visiting UN Special Envoy to Southern Africa, James Morris,
that the country needs food aid. Mugabe had earlier rejected the
need for general feeding programmes saying the country was expecting
a bumper harvest.
9-10 June: Opposition
and civil society groups hold an unsuccessful two-day stay away
to protest Operation Murambatsvina.
14 June: Reports
emerge that around 190,000 homes have been destroyed in the operation.
26 June-8 July:
UN Special Envoy on Human Settlement Issues in Zimbabwe, Anna Tibaijuka,
visits Zimbabwe to assess the impact of the cleanup campaign.
27 June: Miloon
Kothari, Special Rapporteur on the Right to Adequate Housing with
the UN Commission on Human Rights describes the failure of African
leaders to protest the forced eviction of informal settlers as "distressing".
8 July: An African
Union envoy leaves Zimbabwe without completing his mission to evaluate
the impact of Operation Murambatsvina. The official Herald newspaper
reports the envoy's mission had been "unprocedural", as diplomatic
protocol had not been followed.
15 July: Reports
emerge that Zimbabwe is seeking a massive loan from South Africa
to offset chronic food, fuel and electricity shortages. South Africa
demands economic and political reforms.
22 July: Anna
Tibaijuka's report condemns government's programme of forced evictions
and estimates 700,000 people were left homeless and 2.4 million
affected by the operation. The report calls for those responsible
to be held accountable.
22 July: Reserve
Bank Governor Gideon Gono announces that service stations can sell
fuel in hard currency from 1 August. Almost all sectors of the economy
have been hit by a forex shortage.
2 August: Treason
charges against MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai are dropped.
11 August: A
report by the Washington-based Centre for Global Development says
Zimbabwe's economy had contracted to 1953 levels.
16 August: Finance
Minister Herbert Murerwa scraps duty on maize and wheat imports,
and announces that the state-owned Grain Marketing Board would no
longer enjoy a monopoly. Observers say the measure an acknowledgment
that Harare is unable to import sufficient maize to offset shortages.
18 August: The
Central Statistical Office reports that it has recorded the highest
ever increase in prices in July. The price of goods and services
in Zimbabwe rose by at least 47 percent in that month.
22 August: The
UN country team in Zimbabwe asks for unrestricted access to people
affected by Operation Murambatsvina.
29 August: The
government refuses to endorse a US $30 million emergency appeal
to provide food and medicine for 300,000 Zimbabweans hardest hit
by the cleanup campaign. It says the UN's response to the country's
current socioeconomic challenges is inappropriate and misguided.
30 August: Parliament
approves sweeping constitutional amendments which removes a landowner's
right to appeal expropriation and can restrict movement of Zimbabweans
in the name of national security. The draft amendment bill also
seeks to reconstitute parliament as a bicameral legislature, introducing
a 66-seat senate.
1 September:
Zimbabwe pays off US $120 million of the US $295 million owed to
the IMF. The authorities say the funds had been sourced from exporters
and holders of free funds.
9 September:
The IMF grants Zimbabwe a six-month temporary reprieve, but says
the country must implement broader economic reforms to avoid expulsion.
13 October:
First reports of divisions within the opposition MDC over participation
in the senate elections scheduled for 26 November emerge. Tsvangirai
publicly disagrees with the party's spokesman Paul Themba Nyathi
and its national council.
20 October:
Reserve bank governor Gideon Gonon calls for an immediate end to
a recent wave of farm invasions, warning that any further steps
towards forced expropriation would seriously undermine efforts towards
economic recovery.
24 October:
Divisions in the MDC deepen when at least
27 members ignore
an order by Tsvangirai not to register for the senate election.
1 November:
UN Secretary-General expresses concern over the government's rejection
of help to those affected by Operation Murambatsvina, particularly
in terms of shelter needs. The government maintains there is "no
humanitarian crisis".
17 November:
The government does an about-turn and says it is willing to accept
UN assistance to house people affected by the cleanup campaign.
Subject to funding, the UN is to construct 2,500 housing units during
the first phase of the programme, which intends to build 20,000
units at a total cost of US $18 million.
24 November:
MDC's pro-senate faction led by vice-president Gibson Sibanda suspends
Tsvangirai, claiming a disciplinary committee found him guilty of
violating the party's constitution by issuing a call to boycott
the poll.
28 November:
ZANU-PF wins 43 of the 50 directly-elected seats, while MDC bags
seven. Out of the remaining 16 seats, six are nominations by the
president and 10 got to traditional chiefs.
1 December:
The UN launches a US $276 million appeal and warns at least three
million people will need food aid as only an estimated 600,000 mt
of maize had been harvested, compared to a national requirement
of 1.8 million mt.
1 December:
A pro-Tsvangirai national council meeting revokes his suspension
and "disassociates" itself from the pro-senate faction, as the crisis
in the opposition continues.
3-7 December:
UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Jan Egeland visits Zimbabwe and
meets with Mugabe. At the end of his mission he criticises the "disastrous"
eviction campaign, and describes it as "wholly irrational in all
of its aspects".
8 December:
Zimbabwe becomes the first southern African country to register
a decline in HIV prevalence. The rate among pregnant women declined
from 26 percent in 2002 to 21 percent in 2004.
9 December:
A High Court dismisses an application by the MDC 'rebel' faction
seeking to remove Tsvangirai as leader of the party.
13 December:
A South African spy arrested in 2004 for running an espionage ring
in Zimbabwe is deported back to South Africa.
15 December:
Police and officials from the Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe
raid the country's only private radio station, Voice of the People,
and arrest three of its reporters for working without accreditation
for an unlicensed station.
20 December:
The Government criticises a model house built by the UN for those
made homeless by Operation Murambatsvina.
21 December:
The UN Resident Coordinator Agostinho Zacarias expresses surprise
at the government's comments since the model was a joint effort
by the Zimbabwean government and the UN.
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