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Government suspension of NGO field operations - Index of articles
AIDS
service NGOs allowed to resume operations
PlusNews
June 13, 2008
http://www.plusnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=78746
The Zimbabwe
government has exempted AIDS relief organizations from a ban
on NGOs operating in the country, but advocacy groups have reacted
cautiously to the news.
Nicholas Goche, the social
welfare minister who regulates NGO activity, said on 13 June that
more than 400 organizations working in the HIV/AIDS sector would
be allowed to resume operations - an about-turn on a blanket ban
announced on 4 June.
In the original circular
to civil society, Goche wrote: "It has come to my attention
that a number of NGOs involved in humanitarian operations are breaching
the terms and conditions [by engaging in political activities].
I hereby instruct all NGOs to suspend all field operations until
further notice."
Church-linked organisations
were also affected by the ban, which drew international condemnation.
"This is a deplorable
decision that comes at a critical humanitarian juncture for the
people of Zimbabwe," the UN's Under-Secretary-General for
Humanitarian Affairs John Holmes said on 6 June. "I therefore
strongly urge the government to reconsider and rescind this decision
as soon as possible."
Holmes pointed out that
much of the UN's humanitarian assistance to Zimbabwe was channeled
through NGOs, and that aid for two million Zimbabweans would be
affected. Among the organizations suspended were those "engaged
in vital humanitarian work, fully respecting the principles of impartiality
and neutrality," and he called for them to be allowed to work
and for their safety and security to be guaranteed.
In Goche's new circular
on Friday he explained: "The suspension does not prohibit those
on ARV [antiretroviral] therapy and those benefiting from home-based
care programmes to continue accessing drugs and therapeutic feeding
from clinics and hospitals."
He also exempted organisations
that provide supplementary feeding for children. "Supplementary
feeding is a community-based programme which does not entail community
mobilisation by NGOs, hence it falls outside those affected by the
suspension."
Zimbabwe has an adult
HIV prevalence rate of 15.6 percent. According to the World Health
Organisation, only about 91,000 out of the estimated 321,000 in
need of ARVs - which helps prolong life - receive it. An acute
shortage of foreign currency has made it difficult for the government
and even private pharmacies to import enough ARVs to meet demand.
More
than promises needed
In
green lighting the operations of the AIDS service NGOs, Goche assured
them that they had only been suspended while investigations were
pending, and had not been banned or deregistered.
But the organizations
IRIN spoke to on Friday said that they had halted all their programmes
and were unlikely to resume, despite the assurance from the government.
"A lot of inflammatory
statements have been made against NGOs and in this environment of
political violence, no matter the political assurances, we have
suspended operations. Unfortunately it is the ordinary people who
will be hardest hit by the consequences," said a senior NGO
official whose agency distributed ARVs, food and home-based care.
The opposition Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC) says 66 of its supporters have been
killed by ruling party militants since March. MDC leaders have been
repeatedly arrested, with the party's secretary general currently
facing treason and electoral law infringement charges. On Friday
President Robert Mugabe reportedly told a rally that the country's
war veterans would not accept an MDC victory in the second round
runoff of the presidential ballot due on 27 June.
"They said if this
country goes back into white hands just because we have used a pen
[voted], we will return to the bush to fight," Reuters quoted
Mugabe as saying. He has consistently labeled the MDC as a front
for Britain and the United States.
More
than ARVs needed
Fambai Ngirande, advocacy and communications manager for
the National Association
of Non-Governmental Organizations, an umbrella body for civil
society groups, told IRIN that while they welcomed the partial lifting
of the ban by the government, the suspension needed to be removed
completely.
"There are other
organizations working in the humanitarian and human rights sector
whose operations should be allowed to resume. None of our members
engage in political activity."
Ngirande said that while
HIV/AIDS organizations had been cleared to resume operations, HIV-positive
people did not just need ARVs in isolation.
"People living
with HIV need much more than just ARVs. They need nutrition and
a lot of other things which were being provided by other organizations
who have stopped operating."
Zimbabwe has been in
economic meltdown for the past eight years, with inflation estimated
to have reached 1 million percent, only two in 10 people in formal
employment, and consumers surviving without basic commodities such
as water and fuel.
Harare city council last
year said more than a third of the capital's population, officially
estimated at around 1.3 million, were living on one meal a day and
cases of malnutrition were on the rise.
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