|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
NGOs
withering under foreign currency shortages
IRIN News
April 23, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=77723
Scores of non
governmental (NGO) and humanitarian organizations are threatened
with collapse after Zimbabwe's central bank failed to release money
required for their operational costs.
Cephas Zinhumwe,
chief executive officer of the National
Association of Non governmental Organisations (NANGO), the national
NGO umbrella body, told IRIN the financial situation for his members
was "desperate".
The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe
(RBZ) in September 2007 demanded that all foreign currency deposits
of foreign funded NGOs and humanitarian organizations were kept
by the central bank on their behalf. The organizations then had
to maintain 'mirror' accounts, which reflected the amount of foreign
currency in their local banks, which was then reconciled by the
central bank.
Zinhumwe said when the
programme was introduced, organizations would apply to the central
bank to access foreign currency. Foreign embassies and United Nations
agencies were excluded from the RBZ's foreign currency management
of accounts.
"Initially, it took
about three days to get foreign currency cleared by the RBZ. As
far as I know, it now takes more than three months before being
cleared to use your money by the RBZ. Some of our member organisations
have not been able to access their money since the beginning of
the year and they say they are facing closure because they have
not been able to pay workers, rentals and to run programmes for
which they are funded," Zinhumwe told IRIN.
He said since last year,
NGOs had tried, without any success, to meet with the RBZ governor
Gideon Gono.
Zinhumwe said the RBZ
strategy to manage the foreign currency had exacerbated the foreign
currency shortage and impacted negatively on an already collapsing
economy.
"Indications are
that since that decision was taken, foreign currency inflows have
reduced dramatically. Some organizations are looking at the option
of opening off shore accounts but there are very stringent requirements
that have to be met in order to get such accounts. But the situation
is very grave. Another month or two of this then NGOs will close
en masse," he said.
Thabani Moyo,
the information officer for Crisis
Coalition, a grouping of pro-democracy organizations, said the
move was a deliberate attempt by the government and the RBZ to financially
throttle NGOs.
"The government
has for years accused the NGO sector of supporting the opposition
MDC. The same government tried two years ago to shut down NGOs through
the proposed NGO Bill which was never signed into law," Moyo
said.
Election
costs
Moyo said
in the run up to the 29 March presidential and parliamentary elections
the ruling ZANU-PF government had used scarce foreign currency reserves
to bribe voters ahead of the poll.
"The RBZ was responsible
for the purchase of farming equipment and buses which were used
by the ruling ZANU-PF to entice and bribe voters. The RBZ cannot
use the people's money to prop up the ruling party."
Vukile Mkushi, a programme
officer for a civic society organization that he declined to name,
told IRIN he had not been paid since the beginning of the 2008.
"By the end of April,
I would have exhausted all my savings because we are now in the
fourth month without receiving a salary. My wife who is paid in
local currency has been keeping the family going and I am getting
frustrated with the RBZ for failing to give us our money,"
he said.
The scarce availability
of foreign currency is also affecting people living with HIV and
AIDS.
Lindiwe Mhunduru, the
spokesperson for the country's largest medical aid service
provider, Cimas, told The Herald, the state owned daily newspaper,
that her organisation had stopped supplying antiretroviral (ARV)
drugs for HIV positive clients.
"The inability to
get hard currency to import ARVs has in part caused the disruption.
Some of the drugs that are manufactured locally were in short supply
and we could not buy the quantities which we required."
Mhunduru said foreign
currency was needed to both import the drugs and to equip local
manufacturers to ensure adequate supplies, while other ARV drug
manufacturers had stopped production because of a government price
control regime that forced companies to sell commodities at unrealistic
prices.
This, according to Mhunduru,
had forced medical aid service providers to approach the government.
"We understand that medical aid societies and service providers
have set up a task force which is preparing a paper detailing foreign
currency requirements for pharmaceutical and other service providers
to be submitted to the government."
Reverend Maxwell Kapachawo,
Zimbabwe's first religious leader to publicly disclose his HIV status,
told IRIN "My salary has not come in as one of the people who
work in the NGO sector because of problems at the Reserve Bank.
"Now I am told that
my medical aid company cannot access foreign currency to provide
the life saving (ARV) drugs. The Reserve Bank should do all in its
power to provide foreign currency so that ARVs are available at
affordable prices."
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|