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Mugabe
Army runs out of cash to pay, feed or arm its soldiers
Jan Raath
in Harare, and Sam Coates, Political Correspondent, TheTimes (UK)
May 25, 2007
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article1837730.ece
The Army and the state
youth militia, organisations crucial to President Mugabe's continued
grasp on power in Zimbabwe, are demoralised and fast running out
of money.
The Defence Ministry
has already exhausted its budget of Zim$32 billion for rations this
year, Trust Maphosa, the Secretary for Defence, told a parliamentary
committee this week. The sum was worth £10 million when it
was allocated at the beginning of the year but its value has been
shrunk by hyperinflation and the collapse of the currency to about
£400,000.
A private's monthly pay
in February mounted to Zim$300,000, he said, worth nearly £50.
The figure was the result of a sharp increase in army salaries after
alarming reports of officers resigning and troops going absent without
leave. The 35,000-strong Army is now in a significantly worse position.
A private's pay is equal to about £4.
Mr Maphosa said that
training would have to be suspended. The defence forces were suffering
from a severe shortage of spare parts for vehicles and machinery
and water supplies to several military installations had been cut
off because of nonpayment of bills.
The revelations came
as Conservatives at Westminster called on Margaret Beckett, the
Foreign Secretary, to beef up "woefully inadequate" EU
sanctions on Zimbabawe.
The Army and the youth
militia have been widely used in the past three months of violent
repression as President Mugabe reacted to a new surge of discontent.
Claudius Makova, the
ruling party MP who chairs the parliamentary portfolio committee
on defence, said that the financial situation had severe implications
for national security.
Economists have repeatedly
said that inflation, now running at 3,700 per cent, is President
Mugabe's worst enemy. "The time between each big pay increase
is getting shorter and shorter," a Western diplomat said. "The
day is coming, like it did in any number of South American dictatorships,
when the new pay rise will be worthless as soon as it is awarded."
Another report this week
by a second parliamentary committee revealed the abysmal conditions
at camps for the youth militia, whom President Mugabe in March described
as the "big, hard-knuckled fist" of Zanu (PF).
It described the dormitories
as uninhabitable. The buildings were crowded and filthy, and many
had no doors or windows, and recruits had been fed on an almost
nutritionless diet of boiled cabbage and stiff maizemeal porridge
since January. There were reports of violence and abuse, and women
recruits were constantly in fear of being raped.
At one camp, youths had
risen against soldiers in charge of them over the state of food.
As a result, "one student had his arms broken" the report
said.
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