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Mugabe
continues to haunt Zimbabwe's quest for aid
Karin
Brulliard, Washington Post
June 08, 2009
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/06/08/AR2009060803931.html
Zimbabwean Prime
Minister Morgan Tsvangirai is on his first official visit in Washington
this week with a decidedly difficult sales pitch. He is expected
to request funding for a nation that he recently said remains so
unfree and unstable that it is "not a country where I can be
confident about the future of all our children."
The former opposition
leader joined forces in February with his nemesis, autocratic President
Robert Mugabe, in a marriage of convenience that Tsvangirai's party
hopes will help build its control and rescue Zimbabwe's shattered
economy. But progress has been hampered by disagreements and continued
human rights abuses by Mugabe allies and, most observers agree,
because Zimbabwe is broke.
The arrangement
has put Tsvangirai and his party, the Movement for Democratic Change,
in the difficult position of assuring investors and donors that
coffers long looted by Mugabe are safe despite the rocky coalition.
It has also posed a predicament for wary donors, including the United
States, which are so far unwilling to offer economic aid even though
officials in Tsvangirai's party insist money is vital to help redirect
the collapsed nation toward a democratic future.
"The international
community has a duty to invest in Zimbabwe," said Finance Minister
Tendai Biti, an MDC member who has won praise for keeping tight
reins on a small state budget that barely manages to pay civil servants.
"We truly want this transitional government to work. There
will be catastrophe if it fails."
Tsvangirai is
scheduled to meet President Obama on Friday, the White House announced
Monday. Press secretary Robert Gibbs said the two leaders "will
discuss the difficult road ahead in Zimbabwe" during their
Oval Office meeting.
Tsvangirai's
trip carries echoes of one made 29 years ago by Mugabe, then the
new leader of a recently liberated Zimbabwe. The Carter administration
greeted him with a warm welcome and pledged millions in economic
assistance. But relations soured over decades, as Mugabe ruined
Zimbabwe's economy, violently repressed its people and refused to
give up power.
In recent months,
Zimbabwe's pleas have won it more than $1 billion in credit lines
from African nations, boosts in humanitarian aid from Western donors
and warmer relations with the World Bank and the International Monetary
Fund, which cut ties with Zimbabwe years ago because of $1.24 billion
in unpaid debts.
The nation has
also received delegations from Western nations, including the United
States. U.S. Rep. Donald M. Payne (D-N.J.), who met Mugabe and Tsvangirai
in Zimbabwe last month, said an in interview that the United States
should expand aid to reach more Zimbabweans, noting that "we
have more relations with Sudan," a country whose leader is
accused of overseeing genocide.
But Zimbabwe
is far from raising the $8.5 billion it says it needs. The United
States, like other Western donors, channels humanitarian aid to
Zimbabwe through charities but withholds developmental aid. Secretary
of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said in a recent television interview
that she thought it "would be in the best interests of everyone"
for Mugabe to step down. She said the United States, which last
year gave $260 million in humanitarian assistance, is reviewing
but "not yet ready to change" its policy.
"Is doing
so rewarding ZANU?" asked a Western diplomat in Harare, the
capital, referring to Mugabe's party, the Zimbabwe African National
Union-Patriotic Front. "We're looking for real, true, irreversible
change. We're not rewarding a ploy by ZANU to look good for six
months."
MDC officials
insist they have made progress. Now in control of the Finance Ministry,
the party has stabilized the previously astronomical inflation rate.
Store shelves are stocked, gas stations have fuel and public teachers
and health workers are back on duty, thanks to new a $100 monthly
stipend.
But much remains
unchanged. The media cannot report freely, though Tsvangirai has
said restrictions would be scrapped. The attorney general and the
central bank governor are still in their jobs even though Mugabe
appointed them in violation of the power-sharing agreement
and MDC leaders have called for their ouster.
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