May 2008
Monthly Archive
Mon 19 May 2008
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ZNU 121 released. In this programme I look at the ‘extension’ to 90 days of the 21 day rule for the second round of the Presidential election - the forced postal ballots of policemen, their spouses and dependents, the release by the RBZ of the 250 and 500 million dollar bearer cheques (including the advent of the agro-cheque), and the diplomatic hoo-haa caused by the ZRP when they stopped a party of diplomats who were returning from a detention camp and a hospital where they had visited injured MDC members who had been beaten…
The programme can be heard using the multiplayers in the right hand sidebar on The Bearded Man blog, here or even played and/or downloaded here.
All historical programmes can be played as required from my Odeo page.
I do appreciate your continued support in my audio adventures…
Take care.
‘debvhu
Sun 18 May 2008
Ban Ki-moon, the United Nations secretary-general, has sought President Thabo Mbeki’s help to get Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe to agree to allow the UN to play a central role in a presidential run-off election on June 27. But diplomatic sources said Ban - who, in fact, wants the UN to run the entire election, in line with a request by the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) - was unlikely to succeed. For the UN to be involved in the election at any level, Mugabe would have to make an official request, which he is not likely to do. His government has made it clear that it will allow observers only from countries that it regards as friendly. Mbeki is also said to be against UN involvement, preferring more engagement by the Southern Africa Development Community and the African Union. “It seems that both Mbeki and Mugabe now share a common hatred of the UN, which they see as being manipulated by the big powers,” said a diplomat.
Ban met Morgan Tsvangirai, the MDC leader, in Ghana last month. The UN boss has since repeatedly spoken to Mbeki by phone. Mbeki seems to have been miffed by the decision to raise the Zimbabwe issue during a meeting of the UN security council that he chaired in New York last month. Britain’s Prime Minister Gordon Brown, supported by Ban, succeeded in getting Zimbabwe discussed. But efforts to get the anarchy and killing in the country put on the agenda and to allow the UN to send a special envoy to investigate the violence since the March 29 elections, were blocked - with South Africa’s help. Mbeki has visited Mugabe several times since November, but his polite calls for a government of national unity and, lately, for a halt to the violence and the creation of an environment conducive to a run-off election, have been futile. “It seems Mugabe never listens to Mbeki, but Mbeki never stops trying,” a well-placed diplomatic source said.
(Source)
Sat 17 May 2008
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ElectionsNo Comments
Zimbabwe’s opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai has delayed his return home because of an apparent assassination plot, it has been reported.
Mr Tsvangirai had been due to return to Zimbabwe today to prepare for the second round of elections.
But a spokesman said his return had been put on hold.
Spokesman George Sibotshiwe says party officials received information from a “credible source” that an attempt would be made Saturday on the life of the Movement for Democratic Change leader.
Mr Tsvangirai has been out of Zimbabwe for over a month and had been due to return from Europe today to campaign for the June 27 run-off.
Mr Tsvangirai beat the country’s president Robert Mugabe in the first round of the election on March 29.
But he did not by enough votes to avoid a second round and has been out of the country since April 8.
The opposition scored a small victory on Friday when a court ordered police not to interfere with the Bulawayo rally.
The March elections were followed by widespread violence, which the MDC says left at least 40 of its supporters dead and scores of others injured.
(Source)
Fri 16 May 2008
Inflation in Zimbabwe surged to 355,000 percent in March as food and non-alcoholic beverage costs jumped, the Zimbabwe Independent reported, citing the Finance Ministry. The inflation rate rose from 164,900 percent in February, the Harare-based newspaper said on its web site. Zimbabwe has the world’s highest inflation rate. The southern African nation is in its 10th year of economic recession and has the fastest-shrinking peace-time economy, according to the World Bank.
(Source)
Thu 15 May 2008
The bail application of two leaders of Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) was deferred in the Harare High Court to the Thursday, the union said in a statement. Spokesperson Last Tarabuku said the state prosecutor told the court on Wednesday that he had nothing to present and that the previous prosecutor could not proceed with the case as he claimed to be related to one of the men. ZCTU president Lovemore Matombo and secretary general Wellington Chibebe are being charged with inciting people to rise against the government. The allegations arise from comments which the two made at this year’s May Day celebrations at the Dzivaresekwa stadium. ZCTU lawyer, Aleck Muchadema denied any relationship between the prosecutor and the accused, saying the lie was meant to delay the legal process.
Tarabuku said the judge then adjourned the court to 11.30am and ordered the state to present its response. The state failed to respond and the judge re-ordered that the state respond by 4.30pm on Wednesday. The application was postponed until Thursday. ZCTU said the state was deliberately delaying the process. The ZCTU’s application to the High Court comes after a Magistrate’s Court on Monday refused to grant the two men bail, claiming they were not suitable for bail and had to remain in custody, in the interest of justice. The Magistrate’s Court remanded the two into custody until May 23.
(Source)
Wed 14 May 2008
Zimbabwe’s ruling ZANU PF has accused Zambian President Levy Mwanawasa of siding with the opposition in its bid to oust President Robert Mugabe, in yet another sign of worsening relations between the two countries.
The ruling party, which is gearing up for a bruising presidential election run-off between Mr Mugabe and opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) leader Mr Morgan Tsvangirai, said it was disappointed with Mr Mwanawasa because he had failed to call for the lifting of sanctions imposed by Western countries.
It said that, as the chairperson of the Southern African Development Community (SADC), Mr Mwanawasa had been tasked to ask the United States and Britain to scrap the “illegal” sanctions.
Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Mr Patrick Chinamasa, who chairs ZANU PF’s media sub-committee, said the sanctions had contributed to Mr Mugabe’s embarrassing defeat in the first round of the elections.
“SADC undertook to call for the lifting of the illegal sanctions but Mr Mwanawasa, as the chairperson, has not done so yet,” he said.
“It is his obligation to implement the resolution issued at the extraordinary summit held in Tanzania last year to remove immediately all forms of the illegal sanctions against Zimbabwe.
“We have not heard him calling for the lifting of the sanctions… we have been adversely affected by the sanctions, as they are creating an uneven playing field.”
Mr Chinamasa’s outbursts were the first direct attacks on Mr Mwanawasa by the government since signs of a breakdown in relations between the two countries started appearing early this year.
Relations between the two countries have been deteriorating since Zimbabwe accused Zambia of trying to block its maize imports in the run-up to the March elections.
The decision by Zambia to call an emergency SADC summit to address a political impasse occasioned by delays in releasing the Zimbabwean presidential election results invited an angry response from the authorities in Harare, who claimed the meeting was the brainchild of its enemies in the West.
Last week, Zambia deported hundreds of Zimbabwean traders operating from its resort town of Livingstone. Zimbabwean state media called for the deportation of Zambians in retaliation.
Mr Mwanawasa has been one of the most outspoken African leaders on the crisis in Zimbabwe, whose effects he fears could spill over in the region.
Botswana has also taken a cue from Zambia and has since banned the export of gasoline to the neighbouring country, dealing a major blow to an economy that has been in recession for close to 10 years.
Meanwhile, Mr Chinamasa says Zimbabwe will not invite international election observers for the presidential election run-off unless sanctions against the country are lifted.
The declaration, coming a few days after Mr Tsvangirai finally confirmed that he would participate in the run-off on condition that international observers were invited, is likely to lead to another political stalemate over the holding of the elections.
Zimbabwe barred Western countries from observing the first round of voting, saying they were biased against the ruling party but following the controversy surrounding the presidential election, pressure has been mounting for a United Nations-led observer mission to be allowed into the country. “We will not allow them (Western countries) because they are players.” Mr Chinamasa said.
The US, Australia, New Zealand, Canada and most members of the European Union (EU) have imposed travel bans and economic sanctions on Mr Mugabe’s inner circle for alleged human rights violations since 2002.
The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission is yet to set a date for the run-off, which should have been held before the end of this month.
(Source)
Tue 13 May 2008
To understand the indifference of Burma’s military rulers to the suffering of cyclone Nargis survivors, look no further than the large gold lettering on the gates of the army’s officer training school. It proclaims the young officers to be ‘the Triumphant Elite of the Future’, which sums up the attitude of the men who have run Burma for 46 years and regard themselves as above the people, with the perpetual right to tell them what to do. It’s much the same in Zimbabwe where Robert Mugabe’s recent campaign slogan was ‘Get behind the fist’ with a picture of his, firmly clenched. Mugabe’s message - that his opponents are traitors to the liberation movement and not true Zimbabweans - was clear and those not behind the fist are liable to be crushed by it. In winning the war against white domination, he regards his ZANU PF party as also having won the right to rule indefinitely.
The two regimes have much in common besides decades in power and a deep-seated paranoia. The crisis in Burma lays bare how both regard their own survival, and enrichment, as paramount, no matter how many of their citizens die along the way. It’s a common trait in authoritarian regimes. The Burmese army doesn’t really think it is better able to deliver aid than the World Food Programme. But the regime is fearful of allowing in hordes of foreigners from countries it blames for Burma’s problems because that would be an admission of its own failings and limitations. General Than Shwe and the rest of the junta know they are deeply unpopular and that only fear and a sense that the army is all-powerful is what keeps the population from rising up. So large numbers of Burmese who survived the cyclone are likely to die because their government, like the regime in Zimbabwe, is really afraid of its own people.
They were dying unnecessarily, through neglect, in Burma even without a cyclone. Health care is dire. Hospitals are ill-equipped and antiquated. Parts of the country were fed by the WFP long before Nargis hit. Burmese live about 15 years less than people in Thailand or Vietnam. Not that the generals show any concern so long as they are building mansions from the profits of Burma’s natural gas. Zimbabweans are dying in vast numbers too, with the lowest life expectancy in the world because of acute shortages of food, medicines and work, while the ZANU PF elite enriches itself. It’s the same callous disregard for life shown by authoritarian regimes from Mobutu Sese Seko’s decades of derelict rule in Zaire to successive Nigerian military juntas that plundered billions of dollars from their nation’s vast oil wealth while its people struggled to survive.
For all that, the regimes in Burma and Zimbabwe feel the need to seek legitimacy through the ballot box. The results might be rigged or coerced, but Robert Mugabe and Than Shwe still want to be able to tell the world they are acting in the name of the people. So Zimbabwe held an election in March, Mugabe sat on the results for weeks and, even after admitting he lost, continues to cling to power by delaying a second round of voting while his forces kill and maim in an effort to break support for the opposition. Burma’s junta pressed ahead yesterday with a referendum on a new constitution effectively designed to extend military rule. Given a free vote, it’s likely that a majority of Burmese would opt to get the soldiers out of government. The army knows that and has resorted to an extensive campaign of intimidation and nationalist propaganda to win and it probably will. But for all claims to be serving the interests of the people, Zimbabweans and Burmese know that their rulers are only serving themselves.
(Source)
Mon 12 May 2008
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ZNU 120 released. In today’s programme I have a look at Mbeki’s admitting that he is a Robert Mugabe/ZANU PF supporter, and a look at the future for Zimbabwe… The programme is available to play using the multiplayers in the right hand sidebar of The Bearded Man blog, here or even downloaded from here.
As usual, the historical programme are available to play on demand from my Odeo page…
My thanks for the continued support of my audio endeavours…
Take care.
‘debvhu
Sun 11 May 2008
Posted by admin under
ElectionsNo Comments
Zimbabwe’s presidential runoff cannot take place in the time allotted by law, the head of the electoral commission said in an interview published Sunday. Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai has insisted the vote should be held within 21 days of the May 2 announcement of the results from the initial vote. However, Zimbabwean government officials have said the electoral commission has up to a year to hold the runoff. “It was ambitious for the legislature to think 21 days would be enough,” George Chiweshe was quoted as saying in the state-run Sunday Mail. Chiweshe said the electoral body was still waiting for funds from the government to hold the poll. It took the commission more than a month to announce results from the March 29 election. Tsvangirai maintains he won the first round outright and that official figures showing a second round was necessary were fraudulent.
Mugabe has been accused of orchestrating violence against the opposition since the first round, raising questions about whether a runoff would be free or fair. Mugabe’s ruling Zanu PF party, meanwhile, has already launched its runoff campaign. Tsvangirai said Saturday at a news conference in South Africa that although another election may bring more violence, he will return shortly to Zimbabwe to face Mugabe. He and other top opposition figures have stayed out of Zimbabwe since the initial voting. Speaking after a meeting with Angolan President Eduardo dos Santos later Saturday, Tsvangirai said he assured regional leaders that if he were to win the presidency, he would respect Mugabe’s place in Zimbabwe’s history. Dos Santos is seen as close to Mugabe and heads the key political, defense and security committee of the Southern African Development Community.
Tsvangirai told reporters in the Angolan capital that he had assured dos Santos Mugabe would be treated as the “father of the nation” in the interest of building peace and stability in Zimbabwe. That position appeared to indicate a softening: Tsvangirai told The Associated Press in an interview last month he believed the Zimbabwean people would press for Mugabe to stand trial for crimes against humanity. Tsvangirai also said he spoke with dos Santos about escalating violence in Zimbabwe, and what needed to be done to improve conditions for the presidential runoff.
The Zimbabwe Association of Doctors for Human Rights has said 22 people have died and 900 have been tortured in postelection violence, while 40,000 farmworkers have been displaced in an effort to prevent them from voting in the runoff. “If this is going to be a successful runoff, opposition leaders and supporters must be able to freely campaign free of violence,” said Gordon Johndroe, a spokesman for the U.S. National Security Council. “We would like to see election monitors - U.N. human rights monitors to ensure we have a safe electoral process there.”
(Source)
Sat 10 May 2008
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Zimbabwe opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai called on Saturday for an end to violence and asked the Southern African Development Community to send peacekeepers to monitor an upcoming presidential run-off. He detailed a series of conditions needed to ensure a fair election against veteran President Robert Mugabe, who lost the first round of disputed elections on March 29. “We have given some conditions to SADC (Southern African Development Community) for the run-off,” he said. “One, total secession of all violence; number two, unfettered access by international observers; number three, the reconstitution of ZEC (Zimbabwe’s electoral commission); number four, media access should be unfettered; number five SADC should provide peacekeeping to curtail violence.”
Tsvangirai criticised the ZEC, which has played a central role in the country’s elections. Results from the first round were delayed by five weeks and no date has been given for the second-round run-off despite a legal requirement for it to take place within 21 days of the first-round results being announced. “ZEC is partisan to ZANU PF,” Tsvangirai said, referring to Mugabe’s party which has ruled the country since independence from Britain in 1980. The SADC is a regional African body that has been traditionally reluctant to criticise Mugabe, but some of its members are losing patience with the 84-year-old.
(Source)
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