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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Sunrise of currency reform - Index of articles and reports on Zimbabwe's new currency reforms
ZIMBABWE:
Police crackdown on "money hoarders"
IRIN News
August 04, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=54998&SelectRegion=Southern_Africa
HARARE - Zimbabwe's
police are being accused of heavy-handedness after setting up roadblocks
to seize money from people thought to be trading on the black market.
Zimbabweans were thrown into panic on Monday after reserve bank
governor Gideon Gono devalued the currency by 1,000 percent, with
a three-week deadline for the old currency to be exchanged for new
denominations.
Gono also ruled in his mid-term
monetary policy review that individuals could only deposit Z$100
million (US$1,000 at the old official rate) at a time. The deadline
means there are only 16 working days to make deposits, and a maximum
of Z$1.6 billion (US$16,000) can be exchanged.
Inflation has officially reached 1,183 percent - the world's highest
rate - forcing people to carry shopping bags and suitcases full
of money to purchase basic goods.
Gono's ruling was an unexpected shock for parallel market foreign
currency traders, and for the many who have little confidence in
the banking system and choose to keep their money at home or in
the office.
According to the new rules, all individuals holding more than Z$100
million (US$1,000) and companies with more than Z$500 million (US$5,000)
of the old currency would have the money seized unless they could
prove it was acquired legally.
A senior Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) official, speaking on
condition of anonymity, said the roadblocks were being manned by
the police, Zimra, state intelligence operatives and graduates of
the ruling ZANU-PF party's youth training camps.
"Roadblocks are being mounted countrywide but searches are mainly
concentrated at border posts, where most of the youths who have
been recruited have been deployed especially to forfeit large amounts
of money that black market foreign currency dealers are returning
into the country ahead of the 21 August deadline," the official
said.
On major routes into the capital, Harare, there were long traffic
queues as officials searched cars and people carrying large bags.
Other vehicles, including at least one commuter bus, made U-turns
to avoid being searched. At a roadblock about 8km southeast of the
capital, two men were arrested after Z$2 billion (US$20,000) was
found in their car.
The State-owned Herald newspaper reported that so far 125 "cash
hoarders" had been arrested, and more than Z$62 billion (US$62,000)
recovered in countrywide searches.
Steven Matenda, a small businessman, had Z$150 million (US$1,500)
seized at a roadblock when he failed to provide receipts showing
how he had acquired the cash. "The law could now be saying that
cash in excess of Z$100m (US$1,000) should be taken away from individuals
who cannot prove where they obtained it from, but that does not
make any sense," he said.
"For many years, I have been rearing chickens on my plot on a small-scale
basis, and that kind of business does not require that I produce
receipts. Even though I banked some of the money, I kept most of
it at home to buy feed for the chickens, but now it is being taken
away."
Renson Gasela, a former spokesperson for the Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC), the main opposition party, said the roadblocks were
unnecessary and heavy-handed.
"This is a purely civic and monetary issue that requires decent
methods that don't inconvenience people. They [government] could
just have flighted advertisements urging people to surrender their
money rather than criminalise (people)."
He said roadblocks were counter-productive, as those holding large
sums of cash would find illegal ways to dispose of it.
In the rural areas people tended to store money at home because
of expensive transport costs and did not necessarily use receipts
in their day-to-day business dealings. "Information doesn't reach
rural people so fast and, after all, [Z]$100m [US1,000] is not that
much money, given the high inflation, and one tends to wonder how
Gono arrived at that figure," he pointed out.
Zimbabwe's new exchange rate is US$1 to Z$250, after Gono announced
that three zeroes would be struck off the country's temporary currency
of bearer cheques. Last week the official rate was Z$250,000 to
the US dollar, and Z$555,000 on the parallel market.
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