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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Withdrawal of businesses from Zimbabwe - Index of articles, opinion and arguments
The
big firms that prop up Zim
Percy
Zvomuya, Mail & Guardian, (SA)
July 06, 2008
http://www.mg.co.za/article/2008-07-06-the-big-firms-that-prop-up-zim
The demand for
full-blown sanctions against Zimbabwe grew louder this week with
the announcement by a
Munich-based company, Giesecke & Devrient, that it would stop
supplying blank paper to make the country's bank notes after coming
under pressure from the German government.
The decision
followed hard on the heels of the decision
by British supermarket group Tesco to stop buying produce from Zimbabwe
"while the political crisis exists".
To date, "smart"
sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe by the European Union and the United
States have taken the form of travel bans and of freezing the foreign
bank accounts of about 130 members of the ruling elite.
Moves to isolate the
country may now be extended to sport. The International Cricket
Council is set to discuss whether to exclude Zimbabwe from international
competitions.
This week the United
States was preparing to propose the imposition of international
sanctions at the UN, including an arms embargo. A draft resolution,
formulated by the American authorities, says the financial assets
held abroad by Mugabe and 11 other Zimbabwean officials should be
frozen.
If the resolution is
adopted by the UN Security Council Mugabe and his associates will
also be banned from travelling anywhere in the world.
Late last month British
Prime Minister Gordon Brown urged British companies to stop investing
in Zimbabwe and said his government was preparing "intensified
sanctions" against individual members of Mugabe's government.
This statement followed
news that Anglo American would invest $400-million in a platinum
mine in Zimbabwe. The investment is equivalent to the total foreign
direct investment Zimbabwe received in 1998, during relatively more
peaceful days.
"Businesses and
individuals who have any dealing with Zimbabwe must examine their
own responsibilities and must not make investments that prop up
the regime," Brown toldthe House of Commons, where some Tory
MPs are known to have shares in Zimbabwe-based companies.
Brown's Minister for
Africa, Lord Malloch Brown, warned companies active in Zimbabwe
to "look very carefully at their investment portfolio".
Despite Mugabe's ranting
about British imperialist designs on Zimbabwe, British companies
still control vast swathes of the country's economy, with interests
ranging from petroleum to banking.
Standard Chartered and
Barclays Bank are among the biggest British-owned banks. British
American Tobacco has cornered what remains of the tobacco crop,
while BP has a large slice of the fuel retail sector and Rio Tinto
and Falgold are involved in gold mining.
US companies Chevron
and Coca Cola also have a presence, as does the Canadian-owned Bata
shoe company.
South African capital
is another big player in Zimbabwe, with many continuing to do business
there while no longer reflecting the performances of their Zimbabwean
operations on their books.
These include AngloAmerican
Corporation, which has interests in agro-industry and mining; Standard
Bank, whose Zimbabwean subsidiary is Stanbic; Old Mutual, which
is involved in real estate and insurance; PPC Cement; Murray and
Roberts; Truworths; Edcon, which owns the Edgars clothes retail
chain;
Hulett-Tongaat, which
has a stake in Hippo Valley Sugar Estates; grocery chain Spar; and
SAB Miller, which has a stake in Zimbabwe's Delta Beverages.
The country's mining
sector is dominated by foreign companies that include South Africa's
Impala Platinum and Mzi Khumalo's Metallon Gold.
Mugabe has in the past
threatened to nationalise British-owned companies. He has also passed
a law compelling foreign-owned companies to cede 51% of their shares
to Zimbabweans.
Zimbabwe's total export
revenue last year was $1,7-billion, to which mining contributed
$850-million and agriculture $500-million, tobacco exports accounting
for half of this.
Metallon Gold, which
owns five gold mines in the country, produced more than 50% of the
country's revenue from gold production.
In the last six months
of last year, Zimplats, the Zimbabwean arm of South Africa's Impala
Platinum, recorded revenues of $99-million (about R750-million).
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