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Corruption
"destroyed" the country
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Meshack Ndodana (AR No. 148, 23-Dec-07)
December 23, 2007
http://iwpr.net/index.php?apc_state=hen&s=o&o=l=EN&p=acr&s=f&o=341587
Corruption has now been
officially acknowledged as one of the greatest cancers abetting
Zimbabwe's sharp economic decline. At the ruling ZANU-PF party's
Extraordinary Congress last week, Reserve Bank Governor Gideon Gono
named it as one of several factors responsible for the nation's
economic woes.
Analysts say, however,
that in spite of this official recognition of the problem, the government
is not expected to try to stem the scourge of corruption as so many
officials are themselves involved.
At the congress, which
ran from December 11 to 14, Gono said there were "cash barons"
in the ruling party and government who were keeping huge quantities
of money for speculative purposes and trade in the illegal foreign
currency market.
Zimbabwe has been in
the grip of a serious currency shortage which has seen people spending
days queuing outside banking halls to withdraw their salaries. This
has badly affected production as man hours are wasted while people
move from bank to bank in search of cash.
The official exchange
rate is 285,000 Zimbabwe dollars to one US dollar. On the parallel
market, one US dollar fetches 1.6 million ZWD.
Opposition parties and
business have in the past accused the central bank of stoking the
country's inflation of over 8,000 per cent by printing paper money
and introducing other quasi-fiscal activities into the economy.
This week, the central
bank was expected to introduce new currency to ease the cash shortage.
Gono revealed at the
ZANU-PF congress that while the central bank had injected 67 trillion
ZWD into the market, only 2 trillion ZWD could be accounted for
by the close of business last week.
"Our question is:
who has all the other money? That is also the reason the central
bank has taken its time to respond to the cash crisis," said
Gono. "We cannot keep on printing money before we account for
the other 65 trillion ZWD.
"Corruption, corruption,
corruption has destroyed this country," Gono told last week's
congress, which was also addressed by President Robert Mugabe among
other senior government officials.
Analysts said the official
would not have made such a bold claim without the knowledge and
tacit approval of the president.
However, his claim is
contrary to the official party line, which blames most of the nation's
economic woes on western sanctions imposed on Mugabe and his top
officials, and on this year's drought.
Gono's
claim was along the same line as that taken by the country's corruption
watchdog, Transparency
International Zimbabwe - which has also blamed the nation's
problems on misconduct, as well as Mugabe's intricate patronage
system.
Last year, Industry and
International Trade Minister Obert Mpofu told a parliamentary committee
that senior government and party officials were deeply involved
in the wholesale looting of resources at the Zimbabwe Iron and Steel
Company.
While he later retracted
the claim, some thought that this was done under pressure.
Mpofu was charged with
perjury for lying to parliament - a charge likely to fall away after
parliament is dissolved to make way for the harmonised presidential,
parliamentary and local government elections scheduled for March.
A number of party and
government officials have been implicated in the smuggling of precious
minerals since the discovery last year of diamonds in the Chiadzwa
district of Manicaland Province.
While Mugabe had warned
that corruption would not be tolerated, neither he nor anyone else
has dared name names.
Last week, Gono said
an average of 15 tonnes of gold worth 400 million dollars was smuggled
out of Zimbabwe every year.
"Diamonds worth
over 800 million dollars have been smuggled out of the country,"
he said. "Other minerals have either been smuggled or under-invoiced
to the tune of about 200 million dollars per year.
"In total, therefore
this economy is losing on average not less than 1,7 billion dollars
per year through economic sabotage perpetrated by a few of us with
the knowledge and/or complicity of many seated in this hall,"
he said to deafening applause from the public gallery.
"We are now aware
of the massive syndicates of cash barons who are hoarding cash and
consequently creating shortages."
However, Gono immediately
beat a retreat.
"I will not disclose
what we are going to do and we want to see the congress express
itself on what is causing the shortages," he warned darkly.
His challenge was immediately
taken up by Mashonaland East provincial chairman Ray Kaukonde, who
called on Gono to produce this list of cash barons.
Kaukonde then asked the
question on everybody's lips, "On behalf of provinces, I would
want to ask what it is that is causing these people not to be arrested?"
Gono said by speaking
his mind, he was making many enemies for himself. "I will be
the focal point of attack and worse smear campaigns than ever before,"
he said.
A senior official with
Transparency International said he was sceptical that any action
would be taken by the authorities.
"Gono is saying
all the right things. Unfortunately, corruption thrives in ZANU-PF
and government itself," he said.
A political
analyst at the University
of Zimbabwe said that nothing would come of Gono's self-righteous
protests and that ZANU-PF was well known for protecting its own.
"We have become
hostage to the culture of secrecy," said the analyst. "Nobody
wants to name and shame because none of them is clean. Not even
the president seems to have the courage to name corrupt officials
in his administration.
"The same people
accused of hoarding cash have been implicated in black-market foreign
currency deals, the illegal sale of state-subsidised fuel, fertiliser,
maize seed and other farm inputs.
"It is the same
people implicated in the smuggling of precious minerals. Once in
while there are token arrests but the real culprits are beyond the
reach of the law.
"Corruption has
become a cancer in Zimbabwean society, and unfortunately the pain
is felt mostly by you and me - the poor."
Meshack Ndodana is the
pseudonym of an IWPR journalist in Zimbabwe.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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