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This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Government suspension of NGO field operations - Index of articles
Mugabe
uses food as weapon in election race -group
Paul Simao, Reuters
June 04, 2008
http://www.reuters.com/article/homepageCrisis/idUSL0444355._CH_.2400
President Robert
Mugabe's government is using food as a weapon ahead of Zimbabwe's
June 27 presidential run-off election, U.S.-based group Human Rights
Watch said on Wednesday.
The accusation
came a day after CARE International said the government had ordered
it to suspend
its operations in Zimbabwe over allegations it was backing opposition
leader Morgan Tsvangirai's presidential campaign. It denies
the charge.
The government has declined
to comment on the suspension of work by CARE or the accusation of
using food as a political weapon.
"The decision to
let people go hungry is yet another attempt to use food as a political
tool to intimidate voters ahead of an election," Tiseke Kasambala,
the rights group's researcher for Zimbabwe.
"President Mugabe's
government has a long history of using food to control the election
outcome."
Zimbabwe's once prosperous
agricultural sector has collapsed since 2000, when Mugabe's government
began seizing thousands of white-owned farms as part of a land redistribution
policy designed to help poor blacks.
Many of the farms have
ended up in the hands of senior officials with Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF
party and other supporters, while others have been tilled by farmers
who lack experience and capital.
Zimbabwe now suffers
chronic shortages of meat, milk, bread and other basic foodstuffs
and relies on imports and handouts from foreign governments and
relief agencies to feed its people.
Mugabe blames the country's
economic collapse on sanctions imposed by foes in the West.
CARE had planned to start
a food distribution programme in Zimbabwe before it was suspended
last week, said Ken Walker, the group's communications manager for
Africa. He said CARE had 300 people working on various projects
in Zimbabwe.
Mugabe faces a tough
battle in the election run-off against Tsvangirai, who defeated
the veteran ruler in the March 29 presidential poll, but did not
win enough votes to avoid a second round.
The opposition
accuses Mugabe's supporters of a campaign of violence and says more
than 50 people have been killed since the first round vote. Mugabe
and his ZANU-PF say the opposition is responsible for violence.
*Editing
by Matthew Tostevin
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