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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Planeloads
of cash prop up Mugabe
Christina
Lamb and Nicoal Smith, The Sunday Times (UK)
March 02, 2008
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article3466861.ece
Money that is
being used to prop up President Robert Mugabe's brutal regime,
keep his military onside and win over voters in the run-up to Zimbabwe's
elections this month is being printed by a German company. With
inflation
topping 100,000% and the highest value 10m Zimbabwe dollar note
worth just 20p, heavily guarded planeloads of banknotes are flying
into Harare almost every day to keep up with the demand. Documents
obtained by The Sunday Times show the Munich company Giesecke &
Devrient (G&D) is receiving more than €500,000 (£382,000)
a week for delivering bank notes at the astonishing rate of Z$170
trillion a week. "The regime is surviving by printing money,"
said Martin Rupiya, professor of war and security studies at the
University of Zimbabwe. "At this stage there is no other way."
According to
a source at the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, G&D delivers 432,000
sheets of banknotes every week to Fidelity printers in Harare, where
they are stamped with the denomination. Each sheet contains 40 notes
and the current production is entirely in Z$10m notes. Last week
some of this money was used to award huge pay rises to the army
in an apparent move to buy their loyalty ahead of the presidential
and parliamentary elections on March 29. Teachers belonging to a
union supportive of the government were also given large sums. Soldiers
received windfalls of between Z$1.2 billion for privates and Z$3
billion for officers, while teachers received Z$500m on average.
Those belonging to the Progressive
Teachers' Union of Zimbabwe, which criticises Mugabe,
were excluded.
"Mugabe is giving
soldiers a lot of money as a way of buying allegiance," said
Raymond Majongwe, the Progressive union's general secretary.
"Mugabe is planning to rig the elections in March because he
must win at all costs. He, however, believes that we teachers do
not deserve increased salaries because he says we are agents of
regime change." Last month Z$1 trillion was set aside for managing
so-called war veterans "for the purpose of elections".
Mugabe has long used the war vets to intimidate voters. "G&D
are literally bankrolling the regime," said a Zimbabwean banker
who could not be named for fear of reprisals. "These notes
are being used to buy votes, to purchase foreign exchange to import
electricity and vehicles to keep their regime going, and to fund
the import of Chinese water cannons and police equipment to keep
us intimidated. They are profiting from evil and should be named
and shamed."
G&D's involvement
is embarrassing for the German government which has been one of
the most vocal supporters of European Union sanctions against members
of the Mugabe regime. Chancellor Angela Merkel has taken a tough
stance on Zimbabwe, speaking out at the EU-Africa summit in Lisbon
last December to insist that the world cannot stand by while "human
rights are trampled underfoot". Asked about the company, a
German foreign ministry spokesman said: "It's their economic
decision. According to current EU sanctions, the government does
not have any legal basis to take action." G&D, the world's
second biggest printer of banknotes, is a secretive company. An
official at the Dubai office, which oversees its sales to Africa,
confirmed that the government of Zimbabwe was a long-standing client
but refused to give details. The headquarters in Munich was no more
forthcoming. "The printing of banknotes is a very confidential
matter," said Daniela Gaigl, a company spokeswoman. "We
don't comment on any issuing authority."
The Sunday Times has
established that G&D has been printing the country's notes
since the breakaway Rhodesian regime of Ian Smith in the 1970s when
Britain declared sanctions. After British officers intercepted a
consignment, G&D secretly shipped three machines to set up a
printing press in the bowels of the Reserve Bank. These have since
been moved to a heavily guarded facility at Msasa in the industrial
area of Harare. The official value of the Zimbabwe dollar is fixed
at 30,000 to the US dollar. But traders, businessmen, fuel vendors
and even nationalised companies such as Air Zimbabwe use black market
rates to set their prices. Last week, within just seven days, the
Zim dollar depreciated from 12m to 24m to the US dollar. Prices
in shops rocketed as traders struggled to make money to cover replacement
costs. In a Spar supermarket in central Harare, sardines rose from
Z$15m per can on Tuesday to Z$30m on Wednesday while the cost of
a single lavatory roll rose from Z$5m to Z$8m. "We have the
world's first million-dollar banana," joked one woman
shopper.
The economic crisis is
not the only reason that the forthcoming elections may be the toughest
faced by Mugabe. The president, who turned 84 on February 21 and
has been in power since 1980, is facing an unexpected challenge
from within his own ruling party, Zanu PF. The candidacy of Simba
Makoni, his former finance minister, has breathed life into a campaign
in which people had been resigned to the likelihood that Mugabe
would once again defeat Morgan Tsvangirai, the leader of the main
opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC). An MDC faction
led by Arthur Mutambara has thrown its support behind Makoni. "Mugabe
goes into these elections the weakest he has ever been," said
Gugulethu Moyo, a Zimbabwean lawyer for the International Bar Association.
"Makoni's candidacy has exposed huge fissures in Zanu
PF."
While Makoni
claims to have widespread support within the ruling party, few well-known
Zanu PF figures have publicly expressed support. But yesterday,
Dumiso Dabengwa, a senior politburo member, threw his weight behind
Makoni. "We urged him to come clean and take the burden and
we will give him the necessary facilitation and support," he
told business leaders. Makoni's supporters are widely believed
to include the powerful former army chief General Solomon Mujuru,
whose wife Joyce is Mugabe's deputy. Zimbabwean media have
reported that Mujuru is under surveillance and his companies under
investigation. Some fear that Makoni may divide the opposition.
A fourth candidate has also emerged in the form of Langton Towungana,
a little-known independent, who is nevertheless receiving widespread
coverage on state television. Few believe the elections will be
free and fair. Negotiations
to try to achieve this, led by Thabo Mbeki, South Africa's
president, have collapsed. In an open letter, James McGee, the US
ambassador to Zimbabwe, warned of "ominous
signs" such as inadequate preparation, voter confusion,
registration irregularities and ongoing violence.
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