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Zimbabwe
scraps fuel scheme as crisis deepens
Cris Chinaka, Reuters
July 19, 2007
http://www.sabcnews.com/africa/southern_africa/0,2172,152837,00.html
HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwe
has scrapped a scheme allowing fuel purchases with foreign currency,
removing one of the few remaining ways for people to acquire petrol
in a country struggling with a crumbling economy.
The facility is also
used by foreign diplomats and officials working for international
aid organisations, and the move, along with the government's hostile
reaction to a new offer of U.S. food aid, underlined President Robert
Mugabe's hardline stance.
Zimbabwe has experienced
several years of acute fuel shortages as an economic crisis many
blame on Mugabe's government has left the country with no foreign
currency reserves and the highest inflation rate in the world.
Three weeks ago, Mugabe
ordered a blitz to slash prices by half after the cost of some basic
foodstuffs rose three-fold within a week, saying businesses were
doing this as part of a Western-sponsored plot to oust his government.
The price freeze has
sparked a wave of panic buying that has emptied Zimbabwean shops
of basic commodities, and critics say the formal economy is tottering
on the brink of total collapse.
In a statement broadcast
by state media on Thursday, a committee enforcing the price cuts
said the government had banned foreign currency coupons allowing
people to get scarce fuel from private oil companies or individual
importers.
"The Task Force
is giving all coupon holders two weeks from today, within which
to acquit their coupons. No new fuel coupon sales should be made
forthwith," it said.
No reasons were given
for the move, and both government and private oil companies were
not immediately available for comment. In the past the government
has accused fuel coupon holders of selling fuel on the black market
at highly inflated prices.
Walk
to work
Fuel costs about $1 a
litre through the foreign currency coupons, but the equivalent of
about $4.50 on a black market thriving on lack of consistent fuel
supplies in the economy.
Zimbabwe's chronic fuel
shortages have at times spurred public transport operators to pull
vehicles off the road, forcing thousands of urban commuters to walk
to work.
Mugabe, who has been
isolated by the West over his policies, has also failed to secure
concrete fuel supply deals from "friendly" countries such
as Libya and Equatorial Guinea.
The veteran leader, in
power since independence from Britain in 1980 and seeking victory
in elections due in March next year, rejects criticism he has run
down a once-vibrant economy.
He says Zimbabwe has
been sabotaged by opponents of his seizures of white-owned commercial
farms for landless blacks and charges that opposition figures have
been trying to overthrow his ZANU-PF government for years.
On Thursday Zimbabwe's
main labour movement said its Secretary-General Wellington Chibebe
had been summoned by the police for questioning over a public statement
he made on Labour Day suggesting he wanted to see a "regime
change". Chibebe and police officials were not available for
further comment.
On Thursday, state media
also reported that Mugabe's Information Minister Sikhanyiso Ndlovu
had branded Washington's offer of 47,400 tonnes of food aid to Zimbabwe
"reparations" for what Harare sees as American sins towards
the country.
"That they are giving
us food to last until the next harvest is just a gimmick to support
the opposition as far as we are concerned," Ndlovu said. "This
is a measure to soothe themselves of their guilt."
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