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Anti-sanctions
campaign kicks off
IRIN News
March 03, 2011
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=92090
Thousands of Zimbabweans
attended a rally organized by President Robert Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF
party on 3 March in the capital, Harare, to mark the launch of an
anti-sanctions campaign.
The aim is to collect
at least two million signatures on a petition against the sanctions,
which Mugabe has blamed for the country's dire economic situation
and prolonged food insecurity.
Targeted sanctions imposed
in 2001 and 2002 by the United States and the European Union (EU)
banned travel and froze the bank accounts of individuals and companies
linked to Mugabe and his party.
International financial
institutions, including the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and
the World Bank, have also restricted financial assistance to Zimbabwe.
The United Nations Security
Council Sanctions Committee has noted that "a great number
of States and humanitarian organizations have expressed concerns
at the possible adverse impact of sanctions on the most vulnerable
segments of the population" and recommended that sanctions
are "targeted at specific actors".
The EU has described
the measures as targeting solely those judged responsible for violations
of human rights and preventing the holding of free and fair elections.
The sanctions were recently extended because of a lack of progress
in democratic reforms despite a power-sharing agreement between
ZANU-PF and the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC),
which has been in effect since 2009.
Most commentators blame
Mugabe's controversial policies, including the fast-track land reform
programme, for the steep economic decline over the last 10 years
and the hardship many Zimbabweans have suffered, but some argue
that the sanctions have also played a role.
Brian Tengwa, 44, from
Harare, believes he was retrenched from his job at a car assembly
company in 2005 as a result of the sanctions. "We were told
that the company was failing to import necessary parts for the assembling
of cars because it was linked to influential people in ZANU-PF,"
he told IRIN.
"Even though I had worked for the company for almost 15 years,
the money that I got was not enough to buy a plough to take to my
rural home."
Tengwa and his family
now live in a backyard shack in Mabvuku, a township east of the
city. He has lost hope of finding another job "unless the government
does the right thing in order for the sanctions to be removed"
and in the meantime struggles to make ends meet by tending other
people's gardens.
"Many problems that
Zimbabweans have suffered and still experience are direct and indirect
offshoots of the sanctions," said Innocent Makwiramiti, a Harare-based
economist and former chief executive officer of the Zimbabwe National
Chamber of Commerce (ZNCC).
He noted that restrictions
on the operations of some local businesses and the withholding of
financial aid had contributed to the collapse of Zimbabwe's economy
after 2001, which was followed by a collapse in social services
and severe food insecurity.
Abertina Mutsago,
a vegetable vendor in a low-income suburb of Chitungwiza, a satellite
town about 35km south of Harare, lost two children in a cholera
outbreak in 2008 linked to a lack of government funds to maintain
sewage systems and health facilities.
"Mugabe
and his colleagues in ZANU-PF should take all the blame and stop
blaming others for the problems that we are having today,"
she told IRIN. "The sanctions have caused untold suffering,
but these politicians should see what they can do to have them removed
[by meeting the conditions] without bothering us."
Mutsago said government
militias had forced her onto a bus that took her to the rally on
Wednesday, where she was told to sign the anti-sanctions petition.
Truckloads of militias
escorted by army and police trucks descended on market stalls in
the city and forced vendors to stop doing business. Some alleged
they were beaten and ordered onto buses that transported them to
the rally.
David Chimhini,
former president of the Zimbabwe
Civic Education Trust and a member of parliament, worried that
the anti-sanctions campaign would lead to further politically motivated
violence.
In recent weeks, there
have been increasing reports of political violence following a call
by Mugabe to hold national elections in 2011.
On 19 February,
46 union leaders, students and human rights activists were arrested
for attending a meeting to discuss the uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia.
They have since been charged
with treason, which can carry a life sentence or the death penalty.
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