Cholera Epidemic/Starvation in Zimbabwe

lesbiaphrodite

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As we approach the Thanksgiving season, I find myself looking far beyond our borders at the kinds of problems people are experiencing with finding any source of edible food. In Zimbabwe, cholera is killing hundreds of people and the nation is starving to death. Somehow, all our national "concerns" pale in comparison.


Jimmy Carter says Zimbabwe crisis is 'much worse' than imagined
by Robyn Dixon, L.A. Times, Nov. 25, 2008

An estimated 4.9 million people in Zimbabwe are desperately in need of food aid, and there is said to be no seed for planting.
Carter, part of a delegation that includes former U.N. chief Kofi Annan and which was denied access to Zimbabwe, says Robert Mugabe continues to deny his nation food and other aid.

Reporting from Johannesburg, South Africa -- Former President Jimmy Carter on Monday said Zimbabwe's humanitarian crisis was far worse than he could have imagined and expressed dismay that Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe and his government refused to acknowledge the problem even existed.

"The entire basic structure in education, healthcare, feeding people, social services and sanitation has broken down," Carter said at a news conference in Johannesburg, South Africa. "These are all indications that the crisis in Zimbabwe is much greater, much worse than we had ever imagined."

Carter was part of a delegation denied entry into Zimbabwe last week to assess the crisis. The delegation also included U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan and Graça Machel, the wife of former South African President Nelson Mandela.

An estimated 4.9 million people in Zimbabwe are desperately in need of food aid and 300 have died in a cholera epidemic.

The delegates are from a group of prominent public figures known as The Elders, set up by Mandela to address serious crises around the world. Instead of traveling to Zimbabwe, they held meetings in neighboring South Africa with Zimbabwean refugees and opposition leaders, South African government officials, diplomats, humanitarian agencies and nongovernmental organizations.


Citing those briefings, Carter said Mugabe and his government had refused to meet with the United Nations and charitable organizations as well as ambassadors from the major donor countries for the last year.

"I think it's the established policy of the Mugabe government that there's no crisis in Zimbabwe," he said.

Carter said this year's planting season had been squandered because there was no seed available. The earliest possible harvest now is April 2010; farmers would need to be planting now to catch the rains for next spring's harvest. "Meanwhile people are suffering from lack of food, which is the most critical need at this time."

He said none of the four main hospitals in Zimbabwe was working and only 20% of children were attending school, compared with 80% last year. The main reason was that teachers stopped showing up because salaries, about $1 a month, did not even cover their transportation costs.

South African President Kgalema Motlanthe said the crisis was so serious that Zimbabwe could implode and collapse. He said the root cause was the lack of a legitimate government.

Mugabe, opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai and the leader of a small opposition group, Arthur Mutambara, agreed in September to share power following disputed elections, but soon after, Mugabe allocated the most powerful Cabinet jobs to his party, ZANU-PF. South African leaders have been putting intense pressure on Tsvangirai's party to accept those appointments, which would leave the Zimbabwean leader in control of the military and intelligence services while sharing police with the opposition.

Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change, or MDC, argues that it would not be able to solve the humanitarian crisis with Mugabe and his security forces still dominating the nation.

Annan said regional leaders, who belong to the Southern African Development Community, had been slow to act as the crisis unfolded, particularly after African observers condemned elections in June.

But he also ratcheted up the pressure on Tsvangirai, saying that if Zimbabwe's leaders put the interests of the people first, they'd draw the right conclusions on what was most important.

"We have indicated to [the opposition leaders] that the most important issue is the lives and suffering of the people and that must be paramount," Annan said. "I'm sure we would have given the same message to President Mugabe if we'd met him."

Tsvangirai's spokesman, George Sibotshiwe, said it was wrong to blame the MDC for Zimbabwe's crisis.

"The person who's responsible for the mess is Robert Mugabe," he said. "He's been in power for 28 years."

"We have to approach the problem in a sober and realistic way with due consideration of the long term," he added.

"If the MDC rushes into government and they're unable to provide solutions, the humanitarian situation will get worse."
 
It is a grim situation indeed, lesbiaphrodite and the number dead we heard reported this morning is up from 300 to over 600. But the real problem is there will be no end in sight until someone takes Mad Bob Mugabe out. He's a tyrant of note, and he seems to be able to get away with all kinds of human right abuses, and murder. And I mean that literally. Zimbabwe used to be a country that exported food to other parts of Africa. Now it lies in ruins. People starving, dying from HIV AIDS, lack of any kind of working infrastructure. And the " leaders" of the surrounding African states are quite happy to pay lip service to "democracy" while condoning all that Mugabe does. It makes me sick!

But you know, it's got to the stage now where Zimbabweans will have to resort to radical means to sort this mess out for themselves or die trying. Mugabe has to go ( Read into that the insane fucker has to be taken out) and sure as hell no amount of quiet diplomacy, sanctions, urgings by the "elders" or democratic process is going to unseat him. Ever.
 
Anthony Daniels, MD was a physician in Zimbabwe when Mugabe took over. Daniels predicted whats happening many years ago.

The problem is kinship.

When the British ran things bureacrats with expertise administered the government. When Mugabe took over the bureaucrats were replaced with his relatives and people allied with his tribe. Talented whites and blacks were suddenly unemployed, impoverished, and homeless...and they fled the country for Britain, etc.

"The People" spent all their time squabbling over control of small farms. That is, those who got 40 acres and a mule spent all their time protecting the farm from the people who got nothing from Mugabe.

Doctors and nurses were replaced with...inlaws.
 


As has been noted, prior to Mugabe, Zimbabwe was "Africa's Breadbasket," a highly productive and prosperous agricultural success story.

The country has been wrecked by a dictatorial thug who initially attained power by donning the sheep's wool of populist demagogue. Mugabe's racist expropriations directly, undeniably and indisputably caused the country's collapse into economic chaos and anarchy.

https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/zi.html



...the largest insurer in Africa, said it is delaying dividend payments to Zimbabweans because the country’s banking system cannot process the zeroes involved in the transaction.

“The banking system in general is having difficulties with the size of the numbers involved...,”

***​

...Zimbabwe has the world’s highest inflation rate, estimated at 231 million percent, spawned by a decade of economic recession that caused shortages of food, fuel and other basic commodities.

The Zimbabwe dollar traded at 48.484 per U.S. dollar on the interbank market yesterday. On the black market, where most Zimbabweans buy their foreign exchange, the rate is 230 trillion against the U.S. currency. The Old Mutual Implied Rate, used as a guide by businesses in Zimbabwe, today valued the currency at 13 quintillion to one U.S. dollar.
 
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What Jimmy Carter really ought to be alarmed about is that his "diplomacy" in "assisting Rhodesia's transition to democracy" is directly responsible for Mugabe. Mad Bob gets away with everything because he's a Liberator. If you don't believe that, just ask him. He must be. All the rest of Africa seems to . . .
 
No. I suspect the rest of Africa doesn't want Zimbabwe to become another Congo. Everybody and his dog tried 'to do something' about the Congo.

And it's in worse shape than Zimbabwe.
 
Mugabe isn't the only problem.

Those who support him, and those who have benefitted from the destruction of Zimbabwe, are afraid that if Mugabe gives up power they will be the first on the death list for revenge. They can't afford to let Mugabe stand aside. He is the fall-guy for all of them.

Og
 
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