Zimbabwe crisis
Last reviewed: 19-02-2009
AGRICULTURAL COLLAPSE RUINS ECONOMY

Maidei Chimbwe, a resident of squatter camp Porta Farm, Harare, July 2005.
REUTERS
REUTERS
ELECTIONS AND VIOLENCE
For the last decade the main opposition in Zimbabwe has been the Movement for Democratic Change. Its leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, has blamed Mugabe for the country's collapse. Mugabe in turn says Tsvangirai is a puppet of the West. The country's crisis deepened in March 2008 when the two men stood for president. Official results showed Tsvangirai beat Mugabe, but not by enough votes to win outright, forcing a run-off. Mugabe's ZANU-PF party also lost its parliamentary majority. Violence escalated ahead of the presidential run-off vote in June. The MDC said Mugabe's party deployed security forces, veterans of the independence struggle and youth militia in a campaign of violence and dirty tricks to cripple Tsvangirai's chances of victory. Scores of MDC supporters were killed and thousands more beaten up, according to the opposition. Police detained Tsvangirai numerous times and arrested opposition legislators, officials, activists, union leaders and journalists. Tsvangirai pulled out of the race, saying a free and fair poll was impossible and that his supporters would be risking their lives if they voted. African countries joined Mugabe's Western critics in voicing anger over the bloodshed. The U.N. Security Council also condemned the violence against opposition supporters, although it did not explicitly blame Mugabe's government. Mugabe denied his supporters were responsible for the bloodshed. Foreign aid agencies were banned from working ahead of the election despite widespread food shortages. The opposition and human rights groups accused the government of using access to food as a weapon to try to sway the vote. The government for its part said the aid agencies were using food to persuade people to vote against Mugabe - an allegation they denied. The ban was lifted in August. Mugabe, Tsvangirai and the leader of a breakaway MDC faction, Arthur Mutambara, eventually signed a power-sharing deal in September. Talks over the allocation of key ministries were deadlocked for months but a final agreement was reached in January 2009 under strong international pressure. Tsvangirai was sworn in as prime minister in February 2009. Mugabe remains president with control over security services. But he has relinquished some powers for the first time in nearly three decades of rule - including the health, education and finance ministries. Zimbabwe's humanitarian crisis has meanwhile been compounded by a cholera epidemic. The outbreak which started at the end of 2008 has killed thousands and left tens of thousands ill. It follows the collapse of the water system, which has forced residents to drink from contaminated wells and streams. The country's decimated health care services are struggling to cope - Zimbabwe does not have the funds to pay doctors and nurses or buy medicine. Aid agency Oxfam says at least 300,000 people weakened by hunger are in danger from the epidemic.
LAND REDISTRIBUTION

Mugabe at an election rally in 2005.
REUTERS/Howard Burditt
FOOD SHORTAGES

Children collect maize fallen from trucks in Esigodini, southwest Zimbabwe, in 2005.
REUTERS/Howard Burditt
REUTERS/Howard Burditt
HIV/AIDS RATE FALLS
Zimbabwe has historically had one of the highest HIV/AIDS rates in the world, but in recent years has been hailed for its success in reducing its infection rates. The estimated HIV prevalence rate among people aged 15-49 was 15.6 percent in 2006-2007, according to a survey cited by UNAIDS, the lead U.N. agency fighting the global pandemic. This represents a significant drop from almost 34 percent in 2001, and is thought to be partly due to preventative programmes changing sexual behaviour. It's a success story that has been eagerly promoted by the Zimbabwean government. Mugabe's government was one of the first to take the pandemic seriously, setting up the National Aids Control Programme in 1987 to lead the national response. In 1999 Zimbabwe became the first country in the world to introduce a 3 percent levy on taxable income in order to pay for preventative measures and treatment. By the end of 2007, 38 percent of eligible Zimbabweans were receiving anti-retroviral drugs. However, the government has been criticised by Human Rights Watch for restricting people's access to treatment. Aid agencies say deaths caused by HIV/AIDS have created hundreds of thousands of orphans.
MIGRATION AND DISPLACEMENT
Millions of Zimbabweans have left to seek a living abroad. Many of those inside the country have been displaced. Up to 700,000 people were made homeless or lost their jobs in the 2005 crackdown on illegal traders and shantytowns. Another 2.4 million people were affected in some way by the operation, according to the United Nations. Police bulldozed homes and market stalls in cities across the country in what the government said was an attempt to flush out blackmarket traders and clean up cities. Mugabe said the operation was part of a plan to build up to 1.2 million new housing units and help small and medium-sized businesses expand. But months after the operation, most of those who had been displaced were still homeless, living in resettlement camps or struggling to survive without food, safe water or sanitation. Tens of thousands of former farm workers have also been displaced as a result of land seizures. Some of the workers had been violently evicted by war veterans who seized some of the white-owned farms. About 150,000 labourers were uprooted in 2004 alone, according to Refugees International. In September 2007, the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC) said in a report that the plight of those displaced by continuing evictions and violent farm seizures was virtually impossible to assess given the lack of access. "It is clear that sustainable international humanitarian assistance will be impossible unless accompanied by a political process which addresses the broader questions of governance and democracy," the report said.
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