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Post-election violence 2008 - Index of articles & images
Government suspension of NGO field operations - Index of articles
Mugabe
bans aid group from feeding hungry villagers
Tinotenda
Kandi, ZimOnline
June 03, 2008
http://www.zimonline.co.za/Article.aspx?ArticleId=3249
Harare - President Robert
Mugabe's government has banned an international aid group
from feeding hungry villagers as Britain and Australia - regular
food donors to Zimbabwe - protested his presence at a global
food summit starting on Tuesday in Rome. Social Welfare Minister
Nicholas Goche on Monday told Zim Online that the government had
banned Care International from giving further assistance to needy
communities in Masvingo province while the Harare administration
probes the humanitarian organisation for allegedly using aid to
campaign for the opposition. Campaigning is in full swing for a
second round presidential election that could see opposition leader
Morgan Tsvangirai end Mugabe's 28-year rule after he defeated
the veteran leader in the first round vote in March but failed to
secure the margin required to takeover the presidency. "The
government is launching an investigation into Care International.
In the meantime, that organization cannot continue with its programmes,"
said Goche, one of the hawks in Mugabe's government. He added:
"Several other non-governmental organizations involved in food
distribution in Manicaland province will also be asked to cease
operations while we investigate them...there is a crucial runoff
coming and our information indicates that NGOs are involved in plans
to undermine our candidate."
Zim Online was
yesterday unable to get immediate comment on the matter from Care
International. But a Care official, who did not want to be named
because he did not have permission from the group to speak to the
media, said Goche issued the ban last Friday. The official said:
"Care International has never supported the opposition, neither
have we supported the ruling party through any of our programmes.
What could have angered the government is our insistence on assisting
people across the political divide . . . our assistance is non-political
and non-religious." Mugabe's government has in recent
weeks stepped up pressure against NGOs that it accuses of using
aid distribution as a pretext to campaign for Tsvangirai. Justice
Minister Patrick Chinamasa told national television last week that
Care International and another aid group, Plan International, were
to blame for Mugabe's poor showing in the March polls in Manicaland
and Masvingo provinces. But the National
Association of NGOs on Monday rejected charges that relief agencies
were campaigning for the opposition ahead of the June 27 run-off
presidential election. Fambai Ngirande, spokesman for the NGO association,
instead accused the government of "moving to stop assistance
reaching even those who had been receiving aid before the elections."
Zimbabwe, once a regional
breadbasket, has grappled with severe food shortages since 2000
when Mugabe launched his haphazard fast-track land reform exercise
that displaced established white commercial farmers and replaced
them with either incompetent or inadequately funded black farmers.
A shortage of seed and fertilizer hampered planting while erratic
rains for most of the 2007/2008 farming season has meant yields
will be much lower again this year and international relief agencies
will have to step in with food aid. An economic recession marked
by the world's highest inflation rate of more than 165 000
percent has exacerbated the food crisis, with the government out
of cash to import food, while many families that would normally
be able to buy their own food supplies are unable to do so because
of an increasingly worthless currency. Political violence, which
broke out immediately it became clear that Tsvangirai and his Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC) party had defeated Mugabe and his ruling
Zanu PF in the March polls, has added a new crisis as thousands
of opposition supporters have been displaced by the violence and
require food and other humanitarian assistance. The MDC says at
least 50 of its members have died while more than 25 000 have been
displaced in the violence that it says is sponsored by Mugabe's
government in a bid to intimidate Zimbabweans to back him in the
June 27 run-off election. Ngirande accused Zanu PF militias of blocking
aid to victims of political violence.
Meanwhile, the British
and Australian governments criticized Mugabe's presence at
a United Nations summit on food security in Rome, describing it
as "unfortunate" and "obscene" that the Zimbabwean
leader could be part of such a gathering when he was responsible
for the collapse of his won country's agriculture. A spokesman
for British Premier Gordon Brown told journalists: "We think
it's particularly unfortunate that he's decided to attend this meeting
given what he's done in relation to contributing to the difficulties
with food supplies." Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith
was more blunt against Mugabe, telling the media, "Robert Mugabe
turning up to a conference dealing with food security or food issues
is, in my view, frankly obscene." Mugabe, who denies ruining
Zimbabwe's agriculture and blames food shortages on poor weather
and Western sanctions, is banned from travelling to the European
Union under sanctions imposed after he allegedly rigged his re-election
in 2002. The United States, New Zealand, Switzerland and Australia
have imposed a similar travel ban on Mugabe and top officials of
his government. But the Zimbabwean leader can visit the Western
countries on UN business. The UN's Food and Agriculture Organization
organized the Rome summit.
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