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Zimbabwe
rejects downgraded economic status
Thalif Deen,
Inter Press Service (IPS)
June 13, 2006
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=33593
UNITED NATIONS, (IPS)
- The government of Zimbabwe, a country in the throes of a major economic
crisis, has rejected a recommendation by a U.N. committee that the cash-starved
African nation be "downgraded" to the status of a least developed country
(LDCs), the poorest of the world's poor.
The recommendation
by the Committee for Development Policy (CDP), comprising 22
U.N.-appointed experts, can be implemented only if the decision is acceptable
to the country concerned.
In a letter to the
CDP, the government of Zimbabwe said it "does not give its consent to
be downgraded to LDC status".
An African diplomat
told IPS that some countries view LDC status -- rightly or wrongly --
as "both a political and economic stigma". "I am not surprised that Zimbabwe
has rejected the recommendation," he added.
Additionally, an LDC
status is considered by some as an admission of failure of a country's
economic policies. And in the case of Zimbabwe, President Robert Mugabe
has refused to accept failure.
Mugabe, who still
commands respect in the African continent, has blamed his country's economic
crisis on sanctions imposed by the European Union (EU) -- and prompted
by Britain -- in retaliation for his land reform policies which transferred
white-owned farms to landless Zimbabweans.
The Zimbabwean president
has defended his policy as necessary "to redress the gross imbalances"
of British colonialism. The EU has also placed a travel ban barring him
from visiting any of the 25 EU member countries.
Currently, there are
50 LDCs, of which 34 are from Africa. Since the General Assembly adopted
a resolution creating the new category of LDCs in the 1970s,
the number of countries has grown from about 22 to 50. So far, the only
country that has graduated from an LDC to a "developing country" is Botswana.
Besides Zimbabwe,
the CDP has recommended that Papua New Guinea also be downgraded to the
status of LDC. A response from the government of the Pacific Island nation
is pending.
As a result of significant
economic improvements, however, four countries are now considered "eligible
for graduation" from LDC to developing country status: Equatorial Guinea,
Kiribati, Tuvalu and Vanuatu.
In a report released
last week, the Brussels-based International Crisis Group (ICG) said that
in April 2006, inflation officially topped 1,000 percent, helped by the
decision to print 230 million dollars worth of Zimbabwean currency to
pay international debts and sustain operations.
"Unemployment is over
85 percent, poverty over 90 percent, and foreign reserves are almost depleted.
Over four million persons are in desperate need of food. HIV/AIDS and
malnutrition kill thousands every month," the report said.
Agriculture, the major
source of foreign currency earnings, has been particularly hard-hit. "There
are severe shortages of basic consumer items, and the prices of fuel and
food are beyond the reach of many," the report added.
Ralph Black of the
Association of Zimbabweans Based Abroad says the CDP recommendation to
the U.N.'s Economic and Social Council to declare Zimbabwe a LDC signals
a renewed effort by the international body to engage in reaching a resolution
to the multilayered crisis that has crippled what was once "Africa's breadbasket".
"Finally the Zimbabwean
crisis is firmly on the U.N. Agenda," Black told IPS. Most noticeable
signs of this fact are the assessments of the U.N. Special Envoy on the
affects of Operation Murambatstvina -- which involved the destruction
of shanties -- and U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan's reported diplomatic
involvement in seeking a political resolution to the current impasse.
Clearly, he said,
the vulnerability of Zimbabwe relevant to its designation as a LDC is
driven on three main fronts.
First, the nation's
domestic national income has decreased rapidly over the past three years,
mainly due to quadruple-digit inflation.
Second, the country's
human assets have been adversely affected by the deterioration of educational
standards and decreased enrollment and increased dropout rates, affecting
literacy rates over the long term.
Further, Zimbabwe
has experienced declining nutrition, adversely affecting mortality rates,
especially amongst the most vulnerable segments of the population -- children
and those affected by HIV/AIDS. Due to economic constraints, the health
delivery sector has collapsed further, exacerbating the national hygiene
and wellness and adversely affecting mortality, he noted.
Third, Zimbabwe's
economic vulnerability has reached alarming proportions due to the disruption
of the agricultural sector's output/production.
Prior to May 2005,
he said, it was estimated that 200,000
people were internally displaced as a result of the farm invasions, a
situation that was worsened by the Zimbabwe governments Operation Murambastvina,
in which it is estimated that 2.4 million people were indirectly affected
while 700,000 people were displaced.
An assessment of the
facts clearly indicates that the inclusion of Zimbabwe on the list of
least developed nations is warranted, he argued.
The challenge in designating
Zimbabwe as a least developed nation (LDC) lies in the ability of the
United Nations to remove the obstacles to development, by engaging the
current government, which is resistant to this development, without upsetting
the internal dynamics at play for democratic change, or marginalising
the democratic forces within the country.
Asked what benefits
would accrue to a country designated LDC, Anwarul Karim Chowdhury, U.N.
Under-Secretary-General for LDCs, told IPS that the main benefits are
duty-free, quota-free market access and special attention for official
development assistance (ODA.)
In addition, he pointed
out, the U.N. system as a whole, in particular its funds and programmes,
provide increased support to LDCs in terms of resource allocation and
technical assistance.
Black said that while
the benefits of the proposed declaration are clear, including duty-free
exports and increased inflow of international aid, the United Nations
must also devise an approach that seeks to encourage the Zimbabwean government
to commit to reform without emboldening its intransigence to engaging
the democratic forces, nor weakening or undermining the political opposition's
road map to reform.
Such a designation,
he said, would enhance the profile and capacity of the suppressed Zimbabwean
civil society to engage in reconstruction and development, increasing
the threat to the current government's grip on power -- hence its reluctance
to readily accept inclusion to this class of the poorest of the poor league,
Black declared.
On the other hand,
the opposition may view this move as undermining their efforts to internationally
isolate the Mugabe government in a bid to force talks and broad-based
reform. There does not seem to be an easy way out of this crisis.
Ultimately, the United
Nations must act decisively to acquit its responsibility to protect the
most vulnerable and affected within Zimbabwe.
The elevation of the
current economic crisis by designating Zimbabwe as an LDC should be viewed
as an encouraging development, Black said.
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