|
Back to Index
Cleric
hammers Mbeki on Zimbabwe crisis
Dumisani
Muleya, Business Day (SA)
November 23, 2006
http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/topstories.aspx?ID=BD4A324588
ZIMBABWE’s outspoken
Roman Catholic Archbishop Pius Ncube of Bulawayo said yesterday
in London that the humanitarian emergency in Zimbabwe was critical.
He lambasted President Thabo Mbeki for his inaction when urgent
measures were needed.
Ncube, one of
President Robert Mugabe’s most outspoken critics, told a media conference
in London that the political and economic crisis in Zimbabwe was
intensifying.
He said he was
baffled by Mbeki’s inability to tackle the Zimbabwe crisis when
the effects of collapse in his neighbourhood had created problems
for SA.
"Mbeki
has his own agendas, he knows there is a crisis in Zimbabwe, yet
he continues to support Mugabe," Ncube said.
He said at least
2-million Zimbabweans, mostly illegal immigrants, were eking out
a living in SA after fleeing economic problems back home.
More than 4-million
Zimbabweans are out of the country largely due to mass unemployment,
poverty and political instability. Mbeki has said in the past there
were 3-million Zimbabweans in SA.
Ncube said the
humanitarian situation in the country was fast deteriorating and
that the international community "must do something urgently".
About 3500 Zimbabweans
die weekly from a combination of malnutrition, poverty and HIV/AIDS
— suggesting more die in Zimbabwe each week than in Darfur.
World Health
Organisation figures released this year place life expectancy in
Zimbabwe at 34 years for women and 37 for men — the lowest in the
world. In comparison, life expectancy in Iraq for men is 51 and
for women it is 61.
Ncube said that
although Zimbabwe had one of the highest HIV infection rates globally,
with more than 24% of the population infected, life expectancy figures
could not be blamed only on AIDS. Zimbabwe’s neighbouring countries
have the same or greater levels of AIDS prevalence, but their life
expectancy figures are better. Life expectancy in SA is 47 for men
and 49 for women.
The Uited Nations
recently warned that 6,1-million Zimbabweans face starvation. Ncube
said half the population, roughly 6-million people, were experiencing
food shortages in one way or another. He said Zimbabwe had never
before been in such a dire socio-economic or political crisis.
Reports in Zimbabwe’s
state-controlled Herald newspaper said yesterday that Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad told Mugabe, who is on a four-day state visit
to Iran, that western states were "bullying" economically
challenged Zimbabwe.
He promised
to support Mugabe’s government in the face of mounting global pressure.
Ahmadinejad
told Mugabe that Iran backed Zimbabwe’s controversial programme
of seizing land owned by whites.
The Zimbabwean
president — under fire from many in the west for human rights abuses
and the chaotic redistribution of farms — has already witnessed
the signing of a number of agreements to "foster co-operation"
between Zimbabwe and Iran in the fields of agriculture, aid, education,
politics and oil, the Herald said.
On Tuesday Mugabe
met Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and yesterday
visited a tractor factory. With DPA
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|