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UN
plea to Zimbabwe on food aid
BBC News
August 15, 2008
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7562776.stm
UN chief Ban Ki-moon
has called on the Zimbabwean government to lift restrictions on
aid deliveries, to stop "a catastrophic humanitarian crisis".
He said curbs on aid
agencies imposed in June meant that less than 20% of 1.5m people
in need had received help.
His comments came as
Botswana warned it would boycott this weekend's regional summit
if a power-sharing deal was not reached to end the post-poll crisis.
Negotiations were adjourned
on Tuesday without agreement.
South African
President Thabo Mbeki, who will host the summit of the Southern
African Development Community (SADC), has been mediating in the
talks.
They have involved President
Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF, Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) and a breakaway MDC faction led by Arthur Mutambara.
The BBC's Letlhogile
Lucas in Botswana's capital, Gaborone, says the government took
the decision because it did not recognise President Robert Mugabe
as the legitimate president of Zimbabwe following his victory in
an election that was widely condemned as a sham.
Mr Tsvangirai won the
first presidential round in March, before pulling out of a June
run-off citing a campaign of violence against his supporters.
Impact
on neighbors
"I
call on the government of Zimbabwe to fully respect humanitarian
principles and the impartiality and neutrality of voluntary and
non-governmental organisations, allowing them to operate freely
and with unrestricted access to those in need," Mr Ban said
in a statement.
Basic foodstuffs, including
maize meal and bread, are often in short supply in Zimbabwe, which
was once one of Africa's leading agricultural producers.
About 80% of the country's
12.3m people are unemployed and many depend on food aid.
Prior to the food aid
ban, many Zimbabweans were already suffering from food shortages
and rampant inflation, a situation made worse by the election violence,
the UN said.
The government had accused
aid agencies of campaigning for the opposition.
Many aid agencies have
pulled staff out of rural areas since field operations were frozen
by the government.
Earlier this week, Mr
Mbeki spoke about Zimbabwe's economic crisis.
"I know the suffering
that the people of Zimbabwe are experiencing," he said.
Hundreds of thousands
of Zimbabweans have fled the worsening political and economic situation,
many crossing over the borders into neighboring South Africa, Zambia
and Botswana.
Mr Mbeki said he was
determined to reach a deal and promised to stay in Zimbabwe for
six months to get one if he had to.
Mr Mugabe has blamed
the crisis on a Western conspiracy to remove him from power.
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