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Blogs written by Zimbabwe Watch bloggers.


Southern African Development Community members this week threw their weight behind Zimbabwe’s US$8 billion aid appeal. Unsurprisingly, they did not commit any of their own money to the desperately-needed financial package required to lift their neighbour out of the economic quagmire resulting from three decades of corruption and misrule by Robert Mugabe and his thievocracy.

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Last week, President Robert Mugabe appealed to the international community - read Britain, the European Union and the United States - to give financial support to the new inclusive government in Harare. This was backed up by South Africa’s minister of finance, Trevor Manuel, who said the donor community should inject cash urgently into Zimbabwe’s treasury rather than giving it to humanitarian agencies.

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As at the day of the swearing in of the Prime Minister, education lay on its death bed. Most government schools were closed due to the teachers’ strike. Parents were faced with the task of raising the required money in foreign currency to pay for school fees. All ZIMSEC results were not yet released, forcing many students to opt to register for Cambridge June 2009 examinations, , a path that a few could afford to take as the majority of the parents could not afford the 37 pounds required per subject.

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As the so-called inclusive government enters its third week it is becoming increasingly apparent that the aged dictator Robert Mugabe and his henchmen are totally unwilling to share power in any way and have no intention of giving up without a fight. They are making things absolutely impossible for the MDC ministers to function. This was expected from the top echelons of Mugabe’s patronage system – as they have everything to lose and nothing to gain.

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Zimbabwe’s new minister of finance Tendai Biti told the press this week he had the worst job in the world. I could not agree with him more. The poor chap has to balance the books of the Zimbabwe government after more than a decade utter chaos and wholesale theft, not to mention carefree looting of state coffers and profligate patronage spending to buy the support of the army, police, war vets and youth militias.All this, together with massive spending on weapons and the maintenance of an inflated cabinet, was done with borrowed money. Hyperinflation of millions of percent made the situation even more unmanageable. Mugabe’s solution was simply to print more and more money.

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By the end of this week Zimbabwe will have what was impossible to imagine just a few months ago – Robert Mugabe and Morgan Tsvangirai sitting down together with their joint cabinet and discussing, hopefully in a civilized manner, how to tackle the man-made disaster that has all but destroyed my country.The mistrust runs deep – with justification. Mugabe’s Zanu (PF) has never played fair. Even at this stage, they are still trying to trick and crook their way to holding on to absolute power - and the enormous financial gains that have resulted from it over the past three decades.

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Like many millions around the world I watched the inauguration this week of Barack Obama. The contrast between him and the man who rules my country with a rod of iron and a heart of stone could not have been greater.

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The Zimbabwe Government is behaving like a terrorist organisation. It admitted in the high court last week that its police force kidnaps innocent civilians and holds them incommunicado for weeks, while lawyers and relatives search for them – fearing the worst.

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A day earmarked by labour rights activists as a day for peaceful protests against a dictatorship illegitimate govt, a day for the cash stranded masses to stand up and demand what is rightfully theirs, turned into a black day as prominent human rights activists were either beaten, arrested or abducted.

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The last month has been one of the worst Zimbabwe has seen in recent years. Whilst leaders fidgeted and bickered around who gets what and how, ordinary Zimbabweans were at the war front facing death from a serious outbreak of cholera, famine and hopelessness. The cholera scourge is reported to have officially claimed more than 300 people in Zimbabwean hospitals but reports have it that thousands more have perished in rural areas after failing to access medication.

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Columnisten

Wilf Mbanga

I write as I please

Wilf Mbanga is the founder of the independent weekly newspaper "The Zimbabwean". He restarted his bi-weekly column for the Zimbabwe Watch homepage in January 2009. He lives in the UK.


Garikai Chimuka

The struggle continues unabated!

Garikai Chimuka is a former student leader at the University of Zimbabwe. He is currently studying at Wageningen University in Holland. He is also currently the board member for Education in the Wageningen Students Organisation(WSO).


Collen Chibango

Collen Chibango is a former student leader with the University of Zimbabwe SRC and Zimbabwe National Student Union (ZINASU) and founder President of the Zimbabwe Youth Movement (ZYM). He is now studying in the Netherlands after failing to complete his studies in Zimbabwe.


Francisca Midzi

Towards reconstruction

Francisca Onai Midzi is the gender and human rights officer for the Zimbabwe National Students Union (ZINASU).She writes in her personal capacity.


Pascal Richard

Zimbabwe solidarity

Pascal Richard is the coordinator of Zimbabwe Watch, linking human rights activists and causes between Zimbabwe, Southern Africa and Europe. He contributes whenever compelled to by developments around Zimbabwe.


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