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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Withdrawal of businesses from Zimbabwe - Index of articles, opinion and arguments
Pressure
on Barclays Bank to pull out of Zimbabwe
Alex
Bell, SW Radio Africa
July 08, 2008
http://www.swradioafrica.com/news080708/barclays080708.htm
A member of the Welsh
Assembly in the UK has written to senior executives at Barclays
Bank, calling on them to "make a stand" against Robert
Mugabe's brutal and violent regime and suspend its operations
in Zimbabwe.
Lesley Griffiths, who
has campaigned against the violation of trade union rights and the
wrongful arrest and imprisonment of three prominent trade union
leaders by Mugabe's regime, has written to the Barclays Bank
Chairman, Marcus Agius and Chief Executive John Varley, urging them
to pull the business out of Zimbabwe until the political crisis
there is resolved and democracy restored.
Griffiths told Newsreel
on Tuesday that Barclays UK, which has a 67% controlling share in
Barclays Bank of Zimbabwe, "provides loans and invests in
government bonds that indirectly enable Mugabe to finance his regime
of terror".
Mugabe made it law that
any commercial bank operating in the country - such as Barclays
- must reinvest 40 per cent of its profits in Zimbabwean Government
bonds. The result of Barclays' continued presence in Zimbabwe, therefore
enables the Zimbabwean Government to have access to vital foreign
exchange.
Griffiths said: "For
a UK high street bank to be seen giving any kind of support - indirect
or otherwise - to the heinous regime of Robert Mugabe is, I believe,
extremely damaging to company's reputation." Griffiths added
that Barclays must take heed of the criticisms it is facing and
realize that "any company doing business in Zimbabwe is keeping
the regime alive". She said Barclays must do the "honourable
thing by suspending its presence and help the ordinary people of
Zimbabwe make a stand against the tyrant Mugabe".
Pressure is
growing on international business to halt their operations in Zimbabwe
following last month's sham election run off. Last week British
supermarket group Tesco announced
it would stop sourcing products from Zimbabwe, until the crisis
has ended and peace has been restored.
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