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Post imported post - 16-03-07, 12:44 PM

Mugabe tells West to 'go and hang'

http://www.newzimbabwe.com/pages/mdc61.16118.html

By Staff Reporters
Last updated: 03/15/2007 11:30:17

ZIMBABWE'S President Robert Mugabe on Thursday told Western critics of his
government they could "go and hang" in his first comments on the recent
crackdown on the opposition.

"When they criticise the government when it tries to prevent violence and
punish perpetrators of that violence, we take the position that they can go
hang," Mugabe said after talks with Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete.

Mugabe blamed the opposition Movement for Democratic Change for the
violence, which has seen police shoot dead one opposition supporter and
badly beat Morgan Tsvangirai and dozens of others.

Mugabe blasted: "Here are groups of people who went out of their way to
effect acts of violence.

"We hear no criticism to this campaign from Western governments."

The United States said Thursday it is considering fresh sanctions against
Zimbabwe's government, a senior official said Wednesday.

"The US has a number of sanctions in place against those responsible for
repressing democratic activities in Zimbabwe and we do need to take a look
at what other measures might be appropriate," said State Department deputy
spokesman Tom Casey.

He would not elaborate on what sanctions could be added to current US
measures, which primarily involve travel bans and financial restrictions on
individual officials and a suspension of direct aid to the Harare
government.

"There's always other tools in the toolbox and I certainly expect we'll look
at those," he said.

A senior State Department human rights official, Barry Lowenkron, will also
raise the Zimbabwe issue with the African Union during a visit to its Addis
Ababa headquarters on Thursday, he said.

"We're also going to be consulting with a number of other like-minded
countries, including some of our European allies ... to see what other kinds
of things we might be able to do," he said.

The action came after Zimbabwe police broke up an opposition rally on
Sunday, arresting dozens of politicians and severely beating several,
including Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the opposition Movement for
Democratic Change.

Tsvangirai was hospitalised in intensive care on Wednesday amid an
international uproar over the incident that included condemnations from US,
British, European and African leaders.

Casey called on the UN Human Rights Council, which is currently in session
in Geneva, to join in condemning Mugabe's government for having "so
blatantly and so violently taken actions against the principle leaders of
the opposition."

"Frankly, with the council meeting right now in Geneva it would be hard to
understand how they wouldn't want to turn their attention to serious cases
of human rights abuse and violations as is occurring in Zimbabwe," he said.

Current US sanctions against Zimbabwe, imposed in 2002 and 2003, include
financial and visa restrictions against selected officials, a ban on
transfers of defense items and services and a suspension of non-humanitarian
government-to-government assistance.

JOIN THE DEBATE ON THIS ARTICLE ON THE NEWZIMBABWE.COM FORUMS
http://newzim.proboards29.com/index.cgi?


To understand what is really happening in Zimbabwe now please read the following links.
http://www1.chronicle.co.zw/inside.aspx?sectid=1500&cat=1

http://www1.chronicle.co.zw/inside.aspx?sectid=1499&cat=1

http://www.newzimbabwe.com/pages/mdc59.16116.html

http://www.newzimbabwe.com/pages/mdc58.16113.html

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Post imported post - 16-03-07, 08:36 PM

Mugabe may be a tyrant, but I just dont like the look of the opposition.


calling justine Adegor & Jeniece Adegor from Woolwich, South London..where are ya?
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Some wouldn't say hes a tyrant, did I post up the one about the opposition? Article said they were backed by the US and looking to oust Mugabe ''illegally'' what ever that means... thought that the US and Uk were already embargoing Zimz without UN approval. :?



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¤º°`º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤º°°º¤ø¤º°`¤ø,¸ ¸,ø¤º°`°º¤ø¤º°`°º¤ø,¸¸,ø¤






This type of colonialist propagand should be stopped. Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) the chief opposition party in Zimbabwe has stated publicly that it wants to illegally overthrow the present democratically elected government. MDC is a western tool to put Zimbabwe back under the oppressive force of Britain, and the western world. God fearing people who serve a justice loving God would never support black lackeys who are being used by white colonialist governments to take back the land from its legitimate Black owners. Shame, shame, shame on the MDC for being a black tool against black people for white people's oppressive interests. SHAME!!!!

Rev. Mmoja Ajabu






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Post imported post - 17-03-07, 05:35 PM


The Guardian



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Among the many signs of a country sliding into chaos, one has gone largely unnoticed: Zimbabwe's morgues are filling up. It's not only that more people are dying, but also that the families of those who are cannot afford to pay their medical bills any longer. To escape them, relatives are registering the sick under false names. When they die, the bodies cannot be claimed.The practice is just one of the increasingly desperate measures Zimbabweans are taking to survive in a collapsing economy where inflation runs at 1,700% a year and the value of local currency can plummet in a few hours.

Most of those who can have left the country in search of a means of survival, or at least made plans to do so. Typical of the estimated 3m Zimbabweans who have left - two-thirds of the country's working-age population from doctors and teachers to farm labourers and soldiers - are Mbongani Ntzombane's sons.They headed south across the Limpopo river, bribing their way into South Africa, and then sent word to their siblings that Johannesburg might not be the promised land but it at least offered hope.
Soon the able-bodied began to empty out of Mandluntsha in southern Zimbabwe. Today, 13 of the 25-strong Ntzombane family have decamped from the village to Johannesburg in an effort to help the very young and old left struggling at home.
"My children send 50 or 100 rand a time, or sugar or rice," said Mr Ntzombane in his three-roomed home set among the parched maize fields of Matabeleland. A pile of car batteries in the living room provide the only electricity.
"It is hard for them to find work when they get there so they do not have a lot to give. But it is better than staying here with no food and no job and Robert Mugabe."
The bulk of those who leave slip into South Africa, posing as tourists and traders if they have passports and jumping the border if they do not. But anywhere that holds out the prospect of a job is a destination: Namibia, Botswana, London.
What these exiles send back in remittances to their families in Zimbabwe is staving off the total collapse of an economy subjected to the world's highest inflation rate and starved of hard currency to keep basic services afloat.
Even some of Mugabe's most trusted allies are warning that his attempts to paint Zimbabwe as thriving and flush with food is a delusion as inflation wipes out the middle class and malnutrition claims the lives of children in what were once some of the country's wealthiest cities.
The brutal reality of what the exiles have left behind was laid bare this week as opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, and others were severely beaten by the police and arrested on their way to a mass protest against the government. The US and South Africa condemned the assaults as pictures of Mr Tsvangirai's smashed and swollen head prompted outrage overseas. The opposition described the beatings as a turning point in the struggle to force Mr Mugabe from power.
Many ordinary Zimbabweans are not so sure. Their president still looks firmly entrenched to them and popular confidence in the opposition has been sapped over the years since it failed to capitalise on widespread anger when Mr Mugabe stole the 2002 presidential election.
Today, in villages such as Mandluntsha, daily life is instead consumed by the struggle to eat and finding the money for medicines and to keep the children in school. With it there is a growing fear that diminishing food supplies will soon again be used as a political weapon by Mr Mugabe's Zanu-PF party against his most vulnerable opponents.
It is not only the poor who rely on money from abroad. Even in some of Zimbabwe's larger cities, such as Bulawayo, a once prosperous middle class has largely been eradicated by the fastest shrinking economy in the world.
A couple of years ago the supermarket shelves were bare but the problem today is not so much supply as the cash to afford what is available.
Vulnerable opponents
Felix Mafa, a 60 year-old former college lecturer in Bulawayo, has sold his cars and relies on a son who is a doctor in the US and another who is a shop manager in Namibia to send money to feed the rest of the family. "Instead of being independent I am sustained by my children. It's deplorable. It lowers my esteem as a father. I feel sorry that they have to look after me and my wife," he said.
"I'm a professional. I had cars and two houses. I sold my cars to pay for my other children to go to school. I gave one of my houses to my eldest son. He married and cannot afford a bed let alone a house."
"No matter how educated we are, there's no middle class. I cannot invite people to my house because what will they eat? There's the rich and the poor, and the rich are a few people connected to Zanu-PF who got it through corruption."
Many people are afraid to accuse Mr Mugabe directly, fearing retaliation. Among the recent curbs on freedom of speech is a law effectively barring criticism of the president, and it is used by the police. But people make it clear who they hold responsible.
Mr Mafa has a particular grievance. His son was among about 20,000 people killed when Mr Mugabe unleashed the army on Matabeleland in the 1980s to suppress opposition. "I think things have to be done non-violently, through negotiation between Zanu-PF and the opposition. If not, then sooner or later things will go to a civil war which will be terrible. But sometimes I wonder if that's what some of our leaders want," he said.
Mr Mugabe has hailed the violent seizure of white-owned farms that were once crucial to feeding the country, and their redistribution to small scale black farmers and the ruling party elite, as "completed successfully". He declared that the farmers have produced a "bumper harvest". Zimbabwe's president has also boasted that the economy is being wrestled from foreign control and his finance minister predicted economic growth this year.
But the reality was described by Mr Mugabe's ally, the reserve bank governor, Gideon Gono, who told parliament he is struggling to keep electricity on. He said there is no money to keep air force planes in the air, or to put unserviceable police cars back on the road. And 300,000 people are waiting for passports because there is no paper or ink to issue them.
Mr Gono warned that inflation could drive Zimbabwe's economy down "to levels never dreamt before". The International Monetary Fund predicts that prices could rise by 4,000% this year.
The reserve bank governor said he received constant pleas from food and petrol distributors, the national airline and the railways for foreign currency that has all but dried up because tobacco exports, once Zimbabwe's biggest source of US dollars, have fallen to a fifth of what they were before the land seizures. The other big earner, tourism, has also collapsed.
Mr Gono said the power company warned him: "If you don't give us money the nation will be in darkness."
But the money is not there and the bank's first priority is to use hard currency to buy maize because famine is looming. Drought and mismanagement has left Zimbabwe with less than half of the maize it needs to feed the country.
"If we were talking about local currency, I would say, 'Don't worry, in the next 30 minutes we will print money,'" said Mr Gono. But he said he is not in a position to print American dollars or British pounds.
Officially the Zimbabwe dollar is pegged at a steady 250 to the US dollar. But on the black market it is in freefall, diving from Z$3,000 to $1 in early February to about Z$12,000 yesterday.
Savings were long ago wiped out but now even salaries are frequently worthless. It often costs more to pay the bus fare to work than people earn.
Zimbabwe's doctors went on strike for weeks because their salaries eroded to the value of seven cans of baked beans a month. They returned to work only after their pay was increased to about £110 a month - while two-thirds of the population survives on 60p or less a day.
Many hospitals have lost more than half their doctors, and nurses often report to work no more than twice a week because they cannot afford the bus fares.
Bulawayo's main hospital, the UBH, has such a shortage of medicines that patients are required to bring their own. "There are patients dying of dehydration for want of a drip," said a doctor. "We can't treat diabetes any more. The nurses are unhappy because there are no gloves when they are handling patients with Aids."
Doctors say that all that is keeping the hospitals going are the junior doctors who need to stay to complete their qualifications and a few senior staff who remain out of humanitarian considerations.
Salaries worthless
Many have made their way to South Africa or Britain where their qualifications are valued. It is the same with teachers. One school near Bulawayo reported that 10 teachers left in a single week. All are assumed to have gone to South Africa where there is a teacher shortage.
The poorly-educated are not so lucky. Nobuhle Mpala's two room house in Makokoba township on the edge of Bulawayo is shared by 12 people, three generations, all living off the meagre earnings of the street trader. They include her sister's two children after their mother died of Aids last year. Ms Mpala has a four-year-old whose father left before he was born.
Where the family used to eat meat a few times a week, it now survives almost entirely on one main meal of vegetables a day. "I sell maize when I can get it, and tomatoes. It makes me about 80,000 dollars a month. Maybe 300,000 dollars a month would be enough to live. There are loan clubs so I borrow from them. At the end of the month you have to pay them back with 50%. If we can't then they charge more interest.
"We are not living softly because of the party that is ruling us. It is not a fair government. They get rich while we get poor. They should go. People want them to go," said Ms Mpala.
The governors of Matabeleland's two provinces have appealed to the government to declare them disaster areas because the crop has failed.
Drought has wiped out almost all the maize in the southern province and badly hit the crop in the north. But Mr Gono also blames those who took over formerly white-owned farms for a broader national food crisis which is expected to leave Zimbabwe with less than half of the maize it needs for this year. Already 1.4m people are dependent on food aid.
In Mandluntsha village, there is no crop at all this year. The headman, Ludidi Ntzombane, an 88-year-old who seeks protection from the relentless sun under a white pith helmet, endured 11 years in Ian Smith's prison for political agitation against white rule. Robert Mugabe jailed him for another four during the 1980s assault on Matabeleland.
None of that has broken Mr Ntzombane's defiance but he knows that the coming year will be difficult. Without food, the village will have to sell its only asset, the precious livestock.
Theoretically, maize donated by the World Food Programme is distributed without political favour but in Mandluntsha they have a different experience. A Zimbabwean state organisation hands out the food.
"The lorry comes and it doesn't have enough so they say they are giving it to the people with Aids," said Mr Ntzombane. "But we look at who gets it and we know it is political. They want to punish us for not supporting Mugabe."
The Zanu-PF party has tried to pressure the headmen and chiefs in the area into backing the party and getting their villagers to vote for it.
"The party is trying to force the chiefs and the headmen to work with the government. They are forcing us to go to meetings where they tell the chiefs and the headmen what to tell the people. They tell us to tell people to back the party or they will have problems," he said.
"The threats are tied to food. They threaten not to give food to anyone who doesn't support Zanu-PF. That's the pressure; somebody who is not a member of Zanu-PF is regarded as an enemy of the government."
The headman says that the local Zanu-PF councillor, Thomas Nyilika, arrives periodically to pile on the pressure. Sometimes the party youth militia, the "green bombers", turn up in an attempt to intimidate the villagers, particularly when there is an election in the offing.
"People here are afraid to say what they think. They are beaten up for criticising the government. They are not free," said Mr Ntzombane.
Facts of life
37 Life expectancy at birth in Zimbabwe
60 Average life expectancy in 1990
81 The infant mortality rate (deaths per 1,000 live births), compared with 53 in 1990
$340 The national income, per person, compared with $4,960 in South Africa
5.5m Zimbabweans live with HIV
1.1 m Children have been orphaned by Aids
6 People out of every 100 have a phone, compared with 47 in South Africa
56% Of the population earn less than $1 a day, compared with 11% of South Africans
· Source: Unicef



http://www.guardian.co.uk/zimbabwe/a...036161,00.html



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U.S. and Britain are Fueling Violence in Zimbabwe By Ayinde


The latest negative media blitz on Zimbabwe manipulates what appear to be injuries sustained by Morgan Tsvangirai following a clash he had with the police after taking part in an MDC organized protest.

Apparently, once any group is aligned with the White settlers they can do no wrong in the eyes of the U.S. and Europe. These opposition forces can break any law and be protected by these Western-controlled media. What they want is for President Mugabe and the Government of Zimbabwe to allow these opposition groups, which are being funded and promoted by the U.S. and Britain, to overthrow the democratically elected government of Zimbabwe.

Morgan Tsvangirai, in alliance with Britain and the White settlers, regularly calls on the international community to impose comprehensive sanctions against the Zimbabwe government and President Robert Mugabe. Tsvangirai is the leader of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) - one of the opposition parties in Zimbabwe that lost in Zimbabwe's 2005 Parliamentary Elections.
"In the 2000 parliamentary elections MDC won 57 seats compared to Zanu PF's 62. In the recent 2005 elections the MDC has dropped to 41 and Zanu PF increased to 78." (Zimbabwe 2005 Parliamentary Elections).
Barrie Collins in the article 'This time, Bob, it's personal' (2002) stated:
Zimbabwe's leading opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), is an opportunistic alliance of white farmers, trade unionists and urban commercial interests. Its track record reveals that it is more concerned with having good relations with the international community than with presenting the Zimbabwean electorate with a convincing alternative.
Since Morgan Tsvangirai lost in the 2005 elections there have been calls for him to step down (Call for Tsvangirai to resign after poll). Morgan Tsvangirai has not stepped down and it appears that he is bent on showing the U.S., European nations and White settlers that he can lead an uprising to overthrow the democratically elected government in Zimbabwe (Zimbabwe elections free and fair, says Tonchi).

To understand the current increase in U.S. and European hostilities surrounding Zimbabwe, one must look at the U.S. instigated Ethiopian invasion of Somalia - an invasion that did not bring a resounding condemnation from the global African community. This lack of widespread African condemnation has emboldened the U.S. and Britain - the enemies of African liberation - in their aggression towards President Robert Mugabe and the government of Zimbabwe.

Many Africans held on to their anti-Islamic biases and did not see the bigger issue of an illegal U.S./Ethiopia invasion of Somalia. The U.S. may now feel it has the green light to invade other African nations in a similar manner. The Islamic governing body was removed from Somalia without much condemnation because the U.S. was able to capitalize on the anti-Islamic feelings of many. (See: Somalia's Crisis)

Now that Africans have remained relatively quiet about the illegal Somalia invasion, the U.S. and Europe have intensified efforts to force the overthrow of the government in Zimbabwe. They may now be shopping for African nations to do the dirty work in toppling the Zimbabwe government, similar to Ethiopia's willingness to invade Somalia at the behest of the U.S.

In the article 'Zimbabwe: State Warns MDC Against Lawlessness' copied from the Zimbabwe government's website, and another article from the BBC's website 'Eyewitness: Harare's brutal clash' that purports to be an eyewitness account of what happened, one gets that the opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, among others, were deliberately defying the law and provoking a violent confrontation with the police and the government. As the so-called eyewitness said:
"All in all there were only about 30 police and there were more than 1,000 - we were too many for them. They could not control what was happening."
and,
"We picked up their [police] discarded sticks and used them to beat their left-behind colleagues"
From that BBC article 'Eyewitness: Harare's brutal clash', there is no way we can deduce that the police and the government were to blame for the clash between over a thousand protesters, mostly youths, and thirty police officers. The small number of police officers who were eventually overpowered by the protesters clearly showed that the police did not come out in huge numbers prepared for a violent confrontation.

From the article 'Zimbabwe: State Warns MDC Against Lawlessness' this is another account:
"Cde Mohadi said last weekend's planned gathering was not a prayer meeting, as the opposition had claimed under the so-called Save Zimbabwe Campaign coordinated by the MDC's purported Democratic Resistance Committees (DRC) and other anti-Government civic organisations.

'It was not a prayer meeting because there are flyers which said it was an MDC defiance campaign and they were coercing people to attend the rally,' said Cde Mohadi.

"As police, we could not just stand by and see the country go on fire. So we deployed and managed to quell the disturbances. The leaders of the opposition (Morgan) Tsvangirai and (Arthur) Mutambara were actually commanding (hooligans) using children as shields.

"The flyers read: 'Save Zimbabwe Rally. MDC Defiance Campaign. MDC joins other democratic forces under the auspices of the Save Zimbabwe Campaign for the rally to be held on 11 March 2007 at Zimbabwe Grounds in Highfield, starting at 10am. 'It is defiance or death'.'

"Spokesperson of the Save Zimbabwe Campaign, Jacob Mafume, told reporters at a press conference yesterday that they would continue to defy the law.

'We are not going to stop,' he said."
Complicit in provoking this confrontation, the mainstream, White-owned media does not give the circumstances surrounding the confrontation. Instead they are continuing their demonizing campaign against the President of Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe that intensified when he started reclaiming lands from the White minority elite settlers and returned the land to Black Africans. (See: Zimbabwe Under Siege and Holding On to Ill-Gotten Gains)

Rosemary Ekosso, in the article 'Zimbabwe: White Lies, Black Victims' gives a fair analysis of the U.S. and Europe's interest in Zimbabwe.

She wrote:
"Despite their pious claims, Britain and the others are not angry because Mugabe is a corrupt dictator. They sponsor corrupt dictators when it suits them. They are not angry because ordinary Zimbabweans are suffering under Mugabe. They don't care about ordinary Zimbabweans. They were quite happy to herd them into reserves when it suited them.

No, what they care about is the expropriation of white farmers. They express indignation at Mugabe's cronies acquiring the land. That is a bad thing, of course. I myself come from an area where government or government-affiliated bigwigs are buying up all the prime sea-front locations because they can afford them. But in the case of Zimbabwe only 0.3% of people settled on land have acquired it through undue influence or corruption. So 99.7% of Zimbabweans got their land fair and square."
The U.S., UK and their allies have done all in their power to ensure Zimbabwe's economy is ruined to create hardship on the people in the hope of forcing a rebellion to overthrow the elected government in Zimbabwe.

Their aim is to ensure that Zimbabwe collapses under President Robert Mugabe and that this collapse serves as a deterrent to other African leaders and nations from reclaiming lands that were seized from Black Africans during colonial rule.

Stephen Gowans puts it quite nicely in his article titled 'Whose Rights?' (February 25, 2007).

He said:
"ZANU-PF was a leading force in the armed struggle of the Black majority to wrest political control from the White minority Rhodesian settler regime. While the Black majority achieved a kind of formal political independence, de facto independence has always been limited by the reality that the White minority remains economically dominant. The land seizures were a way of carrying forward the revolution to its logical conclusion in the absence of Harare having the wherewithal to buy out the White settlers and absentee British landowners. While the confiscation of land was, on the one hand, a denial of the previous owners' rights to make a profit, it was, on the other, a reclamation of a right to land that had been stolen by colonial plunder -- a war of right against right (with the soft Left in the West, sadly, though predictably, aligning itself in the war with the landowners.) Zimbabwe is not, however, a one-party state, and nor is it a country in which those with money power are prohibited from buying mass media or funding opposition political parties to oppose the government. For this, Zimbabwe too, along with Venezuela, can be criticized for failing to be repressive enough, and yet it is revolutionary and national liberation movements that fail to repress their enemies with sufficient zeal and that allow ample opportunity for their enemies to marshal a counter-strike, that are often the most vigorously reviled by the soft Left (and perhaps because part of the counterstrike is PR campaigns mounted in the West to discredit the regime in question - campaigns the soft Left has always shown a particular vulnerability to.) Whatever repressive measures ZANU-PF takes toward its opposition must be understood in the context of the history of the struggle for national liberation and of the alliance of the main opposition party, the MDC, with Britain and the White settlers."

http://www.africaspeaks.com/articles/2007/1503.html


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Thanks. niceone.gif



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Post imported post - 18-03-07, 03:27 PM

ApedemakI wouldn't quote Newzimbabwe or the Chroncile for any news on Zimbabwe those are all government owned propaganda outlets.
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Nightz wrote:
Quote:
Apedemak wrote:
Quote:
This type of colonialist propagand should be stopped. Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) the chief opposition party in Zimbabwe has stated publicly that it wants to illegally overthrow the present democratically elected government. MDC is a western tool to put Z