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Africa Subsaharan
Genocide by any other name
2009-03-19
The first half-century of black Africa's independence was especially notorious for three reasons: coups, corrupt dictatorships and genocides.

Just seven years after Nigeria's independence in 1960, more than a million Igbos died of starvation or were slaughtered in the Biafran war in Nigeria; in the 1980s a million people died of starvation in Ethiopia as the government was busy buying weapons, and more than 20 000 Ndebele were slaughtered by the Zimbabwean army's Fifth Brigade.

In 1994, in just three months, a million Tutsis died in Rwanda at the hands of their Hutu compatriots and, more recently, up to four million Congolese people have died as an indirect result of 10 years of war in the Democratic Republic of Congo. And in the Sudanese provinces of Darfur, massacres have claimed up to 300 000 people, a conflict for which the country's president Omar al-Bashir has been indicted by the International Criminal Court.

So many millions gone, deaths that could easily fill an encyclopedia, which is precisely the project that Abebe Zegeye, professor and chair of genocide and holocaust studies at Unisa, and Maurice Vambe, a professor at Unisa's English studies department, have undertaken. The two academics are writing the first African encyclopedia of genocide, a 600-page tome that is due to come out next year.

The pair's working definition of genocide is not the one the UN arrived at in 1948, which defines genocide as what happens when one ethnic group seeks to destroy another in part or in whole. "While this definition provides a broad framework within which to understand mass murder, it has to be expanded to accommodate the peculiarities of present-day crimes related to mass murder in Africa." They argue that "genocide must be explained first in terms of the number of bodies that lie dead, but also most importantly, in terms of the conditions that result directly or indirectly [in] the death of masses of people".

Vambe said rogue governments now know that killing 100 people, for example, will ignite the interest of the international community, so what governments do instead is create conditions that make it impossible for people to live or learn.

"These conditions could be hunger, choleraor failure to go school. We shouldn't focus on the outcome, but on the process of consciously denying people their rights."

Using this definition, the two scholars argue that the lives lost in Operation Murambatsvina, the Zimbabwean government'sbrutal 2005 crackdown on inhabitants of informal settlements, and the electoral violence of last year could be defined as genocide.
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Africa Subsaharan
Chinese to market Zimbabwe
2006-12-16
A Chinese delegation visited Zimbabwe earlier this week in a bid to shoot a documentary that will help advertise Zimbabwe around the world, especially in Asia. According to the Minister of Tourism, Cde Francis Nhema, the visit by the delegation was a very positive development as it would go a long way in marketing Zimbabwe as a safe tourist destination. He went on to say the visit was a clear sign of the growing relations and co-operation between Zimbabwe and China.

It is time Zimbabwe learns from its mistakes. Let us not tolerate other people’s rubbish just because we are desperate. Zimbabwe wasted billions of dollars on Chinese tractors which did not last a season. Most of the tractors broke down during first use and could not be repaired.

They know that they are the ones who are benefiting from Zimbabwe and that is why they keep patronising us. On the other hand, the Zimbabwe government wants to be seen as having international friends, hence the shoddy deals with China and the Middle East.

In terms of tourism, the Chinese are very stingy and we must not expect to get a lot of tourists from that side of the world. They like to visit Zimbabwe only to make deals with our government and to exploit us. The said documentary is just another Chinese Circus and will not yield any good results.

The Chinese are known to be good at running corner shops where they sell poor quality goods from China. They do not employ many local people, and if they do, they don’t pay them well. At the moment they are busy taking over companies in Zimbabwe but there is no reasonable production that has been witnessed yet. This move is not going to benefit millions of unemployed people as the Chinese will bring labour from China. We don’t want our country to be taken over by people who helped to destroy the livelihood of millions of Zimbabweans.

After the evil Operation Murambatsvina which saw the destruction of flea markets countrywide, the Chinese flooded the market with their goods.

We don’t want them- they are evil.
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Africa Subsaharan
Zimbabwe plans fresh home demolitions
2006-11-08
The Zimbabwe government is planning fresh home demolitions, just a little over a year after a similar campaign to destroy shantytowns and city backyard cottages left at least 700 000 people without shelter or means of livelihood.

The government in May last year and weeks after controversially winning a key general election, ordered the police and army to demolish thousands of backyard cottages, shantytowns and informal business kiosks,
Chombo confirmed the government was planning new home demolitions but said these would be on a much smaller scale than Murambatsvina. He said: “It is not Murambatsvina. But the spirit of Murambatsvina should not die. To ensure that we don’t reverse the gains of Murambatsvina we will do regular follow-ups. We cannot just watch while chaos prevails and people build wherever they want.”
in a campaign President Robert Mugabe said was necessary to smash crime and to restore the beauty of Zimbabwe’s cities.

In addition to those left homeless, another 2.4 million people were indirectly affected by the military-style demolition exercise to bring the total number of victims to about three million or a quarter of Zimbabwe’s 12 million people.

Authoritative sources told our sources that Local Government Minister Ignatius Chombo, who oversaw last year’s widely-condemned demolition exercise, had set up a task force comprising officials from his department and the police to lay out the groundwork for a new offensive against slum dwellers and informal traders.

“There is some kind of a brigade that is being set up within the police specifically for that mission (to carry out demolitions),” said a senior official in the Ministry of Local Government, who did not want to be named because he did not have clearance from Chombo to speak to the Press.

“New illegal structures have come up since Operation Murambatsvina (the official codename for last year’s clean-up campaign. We will target these structures that have sprouted up and others that somehow survived the first Murambatsvina,” said the official.

Chombo confirmed the government was planning new home demolitions but said these would be on a much smaller scale than Murambatsvina.

He said: “It is not Murambatsvina. But the spirit of Murambatsvina should not die. To ensure that we don’t reverse the gains of Murambatsvina we will do regular follow-ups. We cannot just watch while chaos prevails and people build wherever they want.”
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Africa Subsaharan
ZIMBob looks to the Allmighty.
2006-06-27
[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations ..... and those are? ]

JOHANNESBURG, 26 Jun 2006 (IRIN) - Zimbabwe's political divisions now extend to church pulpits, with an alliance of spiritual leaders backing President Robert Mugabe, and a rival group of priests protesting the government's human rights record. At a prayer meeting which attracted thousands at a stadium outside the capital Harare on Sunday, Mugabe said: "Let the church come in and point out where there are shortcomings, sins of commission or omission. We must combine our strengths in rebuilding our economy." But in what was seen as a not-so veiled reference to his arch-critic, Roman Catholic Archbishop Pius Ncube, Mugabe warned: "When the church leaders start being political we regard them as political creatures and we are vicious in that area."

The prayer meeting was organised by the Ecumenical Peace Initiative (EPI), a newly formed alliance of churches seen as broadly pro-government. They include the Anglican Church led by controversial Archbishop Nolbert Kunonga, sections of the Zimbabwe Catholic Bishops Conference and various indigenous and evangelical faiths. The EPI was born out of a meeting last month between Mugabe and invited church leaders to discuss Zimbabwe's crippling political and economic crisis. "We know we have a government that we must support, interact with and draw attention to our concerns," Anglican Bishop of Harare Patson Nempare was quoted as saying after the talks.

While the new initiative seeks to work with the government, another ecumenical group the Christian Alliance has a radically different calling. A league of protestant and Pentecostal churches formed last year to help the victims of Operation Murambatsvina (Drive Out Trash), it has staged anti-government protests in Zimbabwe and neighbouring countries. According to secretary-general Jonah Gokova, the alliance was created in response to pressure from congregations that questioned the silence of churches over Murambatsvina, a three-month urban cleanup campaign which smashed illegal settlements and affected an estimated 700,000 people.

Catholic archbishop Ncube, who has clashed repeatedly with Mugabe, told IRIN by telephone from Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second city, that church leaders who had aligned themselves with the government were compromised. "The church should be a safe haven for the tortured and abandoned. This government continues to abuse people's rights and church leaders should be warned that their solidarity with those who have caused so much suffering leaves the victims feeling betrayed," he said.

However, head of the Christian Denominations and Evangelical Fellowship of Zimbabwe, Bishop Manhanga, said some church leaders recognised that working with the government was the best way to heal the country and find a lasting solution to its political and economic trauma. "We refuse to join our detractors and short-sighted citizens who do not see anything good about the country," said Manhanga.

University of Zimbabwe political analyst John Makumbe said Sunday's prayer event demonstrated the government's success in driving a wedge between the churches - a key constituency as Zimbabweans, worn down by six straight years of recession, increasingly turn to religion for salvation. The ruling ZANU-PF party blames the economic crisis on western "sanctions" following controversial presidential polls in 2002, which were marred by pro-government violence. More than 80 percent of Zimbabweans live below the poverty line, while inflation has soared to 1,200 percent.
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Africa Subsaharan
Mugabe's obliteration of township exposed
2006-05-31
LONDON: Satellite images have been released for the first time showing the destruction caused in Zimbabwe by the Government's policy of forceful shanty town demolitions last year. Amnesty International yesterday released images of the rubble of a housing settlement that had been home to 30,000 of Zimbabwe's poorest people. The human rights group said the photos were proof that communities were destroyed.

The images of Zimbabwe's Porta Farm settlement show the result of President Robert Mugabe's Operation Murambatsvina (Restore Order), which demolished townships to force people back to rural areas. The UN estimates that 700,000 of Zimbabwe's poorest residents have lost their homes or livelihoods, or both. "These satellite images are irrefutable evidence - if further evidence is even needed - that the Zimbabwean Government has obliterated entire communities, completely erased them from the map, as if they never existed," Africa Program director Kolawole Olaniyan said.

The organisation commissioned the satellite images to demonstrate the destruction of Porta Farm, a large, informal settlement that was established 16 years ago and had schools, a children's centre and a mosque. Where Porta Farm formerly stood, the images show a desolate landscape of rubble and trees. On June 28, as part of Operation Murambatsvina, police destroyed the homes of Porta Farm residents, forcing thousands to sleep outdoors in the middle of winter.

The Zimbabwean Government embarked on the operation in May last year, saying informal settlements were not desirable and that residents should return to rural areas. The communities affected by Operation Murambatsvina were among the poorest and most vulnerable in Zimbabwe. In several cases, such as Porta Farm, they had been the victims of previous forced evictions. They were given almost no notice before their homes were demolished and no alternative accommodation was provided.
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International-UN-NGOs
PARADE’s Annual List Of The World’s 10 Worst Dictators, annotated
2006-01-23
A "dictator" is a head of state who exercises arbitrary authority over the lives of his citizens and who cannot be removed from power through legal means. The worst commit terrible human-rights abuses. This present list draws in part on reports by global human-rights organizations, including Human Rights Watch, Freedom House, Reporters Without Borders and Amnesty International. While the three worst from 2005 have retained their places, two on last year's list (Muammar al-Qaddafi of Libya and Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan) have slipped out of the Top 10—not because their conduct has improved but because other dictators have gotten worse.

1) Omar al-Bashir, Sudan. Age 62. In power since 1989. Last year's rank: 1
Since February 2003, Bashir's campaign of ethnic and religious persecution has killed at least 180,000 civilians in Darfur in western Sudan and driven 2 million people from their homes. The good news is that Bashir's army and the Janjaweed militia that he supports have all but stopped burning down villages in Darfur. The bad news is why they've stopped: There are few villages left to burn. The attacks now are aimed at refugee camps. While the media have called these actions "a humanitarian tragedy," Bashir himself has escaped major condemnation. In 2005, Bashir signed a peace agreement with the largest rebel group in non-Islamic southern Sudan and allowed its leader, John Garang, to become the nation's vice president. But Garang died in July in a helicopter crash, and Bashir's troops still occupy the south.
Duplicitous, brutal, and evil to the core, Omar is my choice for Number 3 worst dictator in the entire world. Sudan misses being cited as the classic failed state only because it is next door to Somalia. Omar will probably manage to split Sudan into its component parts, but the process will take a long time, and the end result may look more like Somalia than even we expect here.

2) Kim Jong-il, North Korea. Age 63. In power since 1994. Last year's rank: 2
While the outside world focuses on Kim Jong-il's nuclear weapons program, domestically he runs the world's most tightly controlled society. North Korea continues to rank last in the index of press freedom compiled by Reporters Without Borders, and for the 34th straight year it earned the worst possible score on political rights and civil liberties from Freedom House. An estimated 250,000 people are confined in "reeducation camps." Malnourishment is widespread: According to the United Nations World Food Program, the average 7-year-old boy in North Korea is almost 8 inches shorter than a South Korean boy the same age and more than 20 pounds lighter.
An hereditary dictator, Kimmie has no contact with the commons except for the occasional dancing girl. Rantburg rank: Numbah 2, but only because Bob Mugabe goes out of his way to be even worse.

3) Than Shwe, Burma (Myanmar). Age 72. In power since 1992. Last year's rank: 3
In November 2005, without warning, Than Shwe moved his entire government from Rangoon (Yangon), the capital for the last 120 years, to Pyinmana, a remote area 245 miles away. Civil servants were given two days' notice and are forbidden from resigning. Burma leads the world in the use of children as soldiers, and the regime is notorious for using forced labor on construction projects and as porters for the army in war zones. The long-standing house arrest of Aung San Suu Kyi, winner of the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize and Than Shwe's most feared opponent, recently was extended for six months. Just to drive near her heavily guarded home is to risk arrest.
An insignificant pipsqueak of a dictator. Doesn't even merit inclusion in the top ten. Just another general, one of many who've ruled Burma since, I believe, 1962, during which time the army's great victories have been against its own people.

4) Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe. Age 81. In power since 1980. Last year's rank: 9
Life in Zimbabwe has gone from bad to worse: It has the world's highest inflation rate, 80% unemployment and an HIV/AIDS rate of more than 20%. Life expectancy has declined since 1988 from 62 to 38 years. Farming has collapsed since 2000, when Mugabe began seizing white-owned farms, giving most of them to political allies with no background in agriculture. In 2005, Mugabe launched Operation Murambatsvina (Clean the Filth), the forcible eviction of some 700,000 people from their homes or businesses—"to restore order and sanity," says the government. But locals say the reason was to forestall demonstrations as the economy deteriorates.
The prototypical "dictator's dictator." Brutal, rapacious, and corrupt, Bob has taken the former Breadbasket of Africa and made it into a begger state. His policies of plunder and disregard for the common folk place him at the top of my list. Rantburg rank: Numbah 1.

5) Islam Karimov, Uzbekistan. Age 67. In power since 1990. Last year's rank: 15
Until 2005, the worst excesses of Karimov's regime had taken place in the torture rooms of his prisons. But on May 13, he ordered a mass killing that could not be concealed. In the city of Andijan, 23 businessmen, held in prison and awaiting a verdict, were freed by their supporters, who then held an open meeting in the town square. An estimated 10,000 people gathered, expecting government officials to come and listen to their grievances. Instead, Karimov sent the army, which massacred hundreds of men, women and children. A 2003 law made Karimov and all members of his family immune from prosecution forever.
Karimov's harmless to the rest of the world. He's courteous enough to keep his atrocities within his own borders. Barely makes the "B" list.

6) Hu Jintao, China. Age 63. In power since 2002. Last year's rank: 4
Although some Chinese have taken advantage of economic liberalization to become rich, up to 150 million Chinese live on $1 a day or less in this nation with no minimum wage. Between 250,000 and 300,000 political dissidents are held in "reeducation-through-labor" camps without trial. Less than 5% of criminal trials include witnesses, and the conviction rate is 99.7%. There are no privately owned TV or radio stations. The government opens and censors mail and monitors phone calls, faxes, e-mails and text messages. In preparation for the 2008 Olympics, at least 400,000 residents of Beijing have been forcibly evicted from their homes.
Just another Emperor Chairman. Not a patch on Mao. 500 years from now he's just another name on a dynastic list.

7) King Abdullah, Saudi Arabia. Age 82. In power since 1995. Last year's rank: 5
Although Abdullah did not become king until 2005, he has ruled Saudi Arabia since his half-brother, Fahd, suffered a stroke 10 years earlier. In Saudi Arabia, phone calls are recorded and mobile phones with cameras are banned. It is illegal for public employees "to engage in dialogue with local and foreign media." By law, all Saudi citizens must be Muslims. According to Amnesty International, police in Saudi Arabia routinely use torture to extract "confessions." Saudi women may not appear in public with a man who isn't a relative, must cover their bodies and faces in public and may not drive. The strict suppression of women is not voluntary, and Saudi women who would like to live a freer life are not allowed to do so.
The Soddy elite aren't dictators, any more than Merwig and Chilperic were dictators, or Phillip the Fair was. Except for lopping people's heads off and gouging out an occasional eye they don't fit in the same category as Bob or Omar.

8) Saparmurat Niyazov, Turkmenistan. Age 65. In power since 1990. Last year's rank: 8
Niyazov has created the world's most pervasive personality cult, and criticism of any of his policies is considered treason. The latest examples of his government-by-whim include bans on car radios, lip-synching and playing recorded music on TV or at weddings. Niyazov also has closed all national parks and shut down rural libraries. He launched an attack on his nation's health-care system, firing 15,000 health-care workers and replacing most of them with untrained military conscripts. He announced the closing of all hospitals outside the capital and ordered Turkmenistan's physicians to give up the Hippocratic Oath and to swear allegiance to him instead.
A classical lunatic dictator with delusions of grandeur, Turmenbashi is my choice for Number 4 worst dictator in the entire world. He's got it all: 20 foot posters, a book everyone's required to read, and he named a month after his Mom. Destined to be one of the great laughingstocks of history, once the bodies have cooled.

9) Seyed Ali Khamenei, Iran. Age 66. In power since 1989. Last year's rank: 18
Over the past four years, the rulers of Iran have undone the reforms that were emerging in the nation. The hardliners completed this reversal by winning the parliamentary elections in 2004 —after disqualifying 44% of the candidates—and with the presidential election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in June 2005. Ultimately, however, the country is run by the 12-man Guardian Council, overseen by the Ayatollah Khamane'i, which has the right to veto any law that the elected government passes. Khamane'i has shut down the free press, tortured journalists and ordered the execution of homosexual males.

10) Teodoro Obiang Nguema, Equatorial Guinea. Age 63. In power since 1979. Last year's rank: 10
Obiang took power in this tiny West African nation by overthrowing his uncle more than 25 years ago. According to a United Nations inspector, torture "is the normal means of investigation" in Equatorial Guinea. There is no freedom of speech, and there are no bookstores or newsstands. The one private radio station is owned by Obiang's son. Since major oil reserves were discovered in Equatorial Guinea in 1995, Obiang has deposited more than $700 million into special accounts in U.S. banks. Meanwhile, most of his people live on less than $1 a day.
Merits inclusion only as a prototype African kleptocrat. Has the advantage of keeping the corpses mostly within his own borders.

Meet the Contenders: Dictators 11 to 20

11. Muammar al-Qaddafi, Libya Age 63. In power since 1969. Last year's rank: 6
Qaddafi has made his peace with the outside world by renouncing his quest for weapons of mass destruction and opening his oil fields to foreign companies. But domestically he continues to operate a brutal regime. According to the U.S. Department of State, at least 10% of the population is engaged in surveillance of the other 90%. Libyan law provides for collective punishment in which the relatives, friends and even neighbors of someone found guilty of a crime can also be punished. Criticizing Qaddafi is considered a crime punishable by death.
Another old favorite. Col. Qaddhafi took power in 1969 and hasn't managed to get promoted since. I'll give him the Number 7 position. Muammar's smart enough to realize when he's on the wrong side of history, as long as he has 20 or 30 years to figure which way to jump. He took all the money from his oil-rich kingdom and pissed it away on foreign adventurism while the common folk became impoverished. Gets the prize for the most self-awarded medals and for his comely corps of dancing girls body guards.

12. King Mswati III, Swaziland Age 37. In power since 1986. Last year's rank: 11
Africa's last remaining absolute monarch, Mswati III took power at the age of 18. Since then he has allowed his country to slide into extreme poverty, with 69% of the Swazi people living on less than $1 a day. Swaziland has the highest HIV/AIDS rate in the world: almost 40%. The country has operated without a constitution for 30 years. Mswati has agreed to implement a new one in 2006, however, it bans political parties, gives Mswati the right to reject any laws passed by the legislature and grants him immunity against all possible crimes.
Mswati is not a dictator. He is a clown. His chief characteristic is not cruelty, which a good dictator needs to be effective, but horniness. He is merely diddling while the country goes to pot. Doesn't even deserve a place on the list.

13. Isayas Afewerki, Eritrea Age 59. In power since 1993. Last year's rank: 17
A popular leader of Eritrea's 30-year war of liberation against Ethiopia, Afewerki became its first president in 1993. Since then he has cancelled all national elections. He also suspended the constitution, shut down all privately owned media and restricted the use of cell phones because, he says, they are a threat to national security. He recently expelled all American and European members of the United Nations peacekeeping force that is trying to stop the outbreak of a border war with neighboring Ethiopia.

14. Aleksandr Lukashenko, Belarus Age 51. In power since 1994. Last year's rank: 12
Europe's last dictator, Aleksandr Lukashenko was elected Belarus' first president after the break-up of the Soviet Union. Since then he has rewritten the constitution to allow him to appoint all 110 members of the upper house of the legislature, and he has harassed his opponents, sometimes having them arrested on live television. He also has mandated a return to Communist-style "mutual surveillance," encouraging workers to use "trouble telephones" to inform on one another. It is against the law to criticize him.
An idea whose time has gone. As a matter of fact, it was gone when he took power. The results show in the country's ecnomic performance. Maybe Number 8, but even that's stretching things.

15. Fidel Castro, Cuba Age 79. In power since 1959. Last year's rank: 13
Fidel Castro moved into his 47th year as the leader of Cuba, continuing his record as the longest-reigning dictator in the world. He seems to be telling his people that two generations have passed and no one in Cuba is worthy of taking his place. Cuba had one of the worst scores on Reporters Without Borders' international index of press freedom.
Fidel is everyone's favorite commie dictator, who's managed to take Cuba and make it into an economic and social backwater. His primary talents consist of the ability to give 12 hours speeches and make American leftists swoon. I'd put him at Number 5 on the list.

16. Bashar al-Assad, Syria Age 40. In power since 2000. Last year's rank: 14
A former ophthamology student, in 2000 Bashar inherited power from his father, who had ruled Syria for 29 years. Recently the Syrian government has received international condemnation for its presumed involvement in the assassination of the ex-prime minister of neighboring Lebanon. In Syria itself, "emergency rule" has been in effect since 1963. Amnesty International has documented 38 different types of torture that have been used in Syria in recent years.
I'll give Pencilneck the Number 6 position. He's not the man his father was, and in fact may not even be the man he used to be. An inept puppet, better suited for another line of work, he's busy presiding over the demise of his regime. Gone by 9-11-06.

17. Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan Age 62. In power since 1999. Last year's rank: 7
General Pervez Musharraf seized power in a military coup that overthrew an elected government. He appointed himself president of Pakistan in 2001 and then attempted to legitimize his rule by staging an election in 2002. However, the election did not come close to meeting international standards. Musharraf agreed to step down as head of the military but then changed his mind, claiming that the nation needed to unify its political and military elements and that he could provide this unity. He justified his decision by stating, "I think the country is more important than democracy." Prior to September 11, 2001, Musharraf was an ardent supporter of Afghanistan's Taliban regime.

18. Meles Zenawi, Ethiopia Age 50. In power since 1995. Last year's rank: unranked
Following a disputed election in May 2005, Zenawi's forces shot to death several dozen unarmed demonstrators and detained more than 10,000 political opponents. Zenawi had agreed to a mediated solution to his border dispute with Eritrea. But when the United Nations boundary commission ruled against him, he refused to comply with its decision.

19. Boungnang Vorachith, Laos Age 68. In power since 2001. Last year's rank: 20
Laos is run by the communist Lao People's Revolutionary Party. Freedom of expression, assembly and religion are almost nonexistent. Three quarters of Laotians live on less than $2 a day.

20. Tran Duc Luong, Vietnam Age 68. In power since 1997. Last year's rank: 19
A geology technician, Luong oversees a classic communist regime that forbids public criticism of the Communist Party, strictly controls all media and heavily censors the Internet. Political trials are closed to the public and 29 different crimes are punishable by the death penalty—including fraud, corruption and drug trafficking. In November, 2005, the U.S. State Department's International Religious Freedom Report designated Vietnam as one of eight "countries of particular concern."

Contributing Editor David Wallechinsky has reported on world figures for PARADE, including an interview with Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi. For more on the worst dictators, visit parade.com on the Web.
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Africa Subsaharan
Zimbabwe: Sinking into the Past
2005-12-03
In Chitungwiza, a dormitory town home to more than one million black Zimbabweans, a breeze is a curse. It shifts the rotting rubbish in front of the tiny houses. And it laces the air with the stench of human waste, which drifts in thin dark rivers in the streets.

“We are sitting on a time bomb,” Misheck Shoko, the Mayor of Chitungwiza, said as he gestured towards a concrete pipe spewing thick brown effluent into a stream outside the town’s main sewerage treatment plant. The stream feeds the Manyame Dam, which supplies the capital, Harare, with its water. “It’s a miracle there have not been more outbreaks of disease.”

Across Zimbabwe the scene is the same: townships that were once models for Africa have become stinking health hazards. The big cities are not much better. Zimbabwe is fast sinking into the past. The meltdown of one of the continent’s best infrastructures has been years in the making, the result of underinvestment and mismanagement. But the speed of the decline over the past few months has been astonishing. It has been driven by a crippling shortage of foreign currency. Since the seizure of white-owned commercial farms began in earnest nearly six years ago, agricultural output — the mainstay of the economy — has dropped 80 per cent. Without dollars the Government cannot buy the £70,000 worth of parts it needs to fix the sewerage plant in Chitungwiza, where dozens of people have already contracted dysentery.

It also cannot buy fuel. Service stations have not had petrol or diesel for months. Fuel can only be bought on the black market — at more than four times the official pump price. Air Zimbabwe cancelled all its flights for a day last week because of a lack of jet fuel. Only 15 of the country’s 175 railway locomotives are in running order. The state-owned Zimbabwe United Passenger Company, which runs Harare’s bus services, is broke with debts of £410,000. Demand for bicycles has soared. At Zacks Cycles, opposite the railway station in downtown Harare, Yossi Tal, the manager, said that he had sold thousands of heavy, Chinese-made single-speed bicycles this year to companies such as British American Tobacco. “Considering the situation here, it’s been a good year,” said Mr Tal, one of the few businessmen who can afford to smile.

The IMF has refused credit unless urgent economic reform takes place. Donor countries have long closed their wallets. Even China, to whom President Mugabe has turned with his Look East policy, has refused to bail Zimbabwe out. South Africa, which does not want its neighbour to collapse, will only loan money if there is political reform.

Hospitals, receiving an increasing number of patients suffering from malnutrition, are creaking under the strain. Harare Central Hospital said that it may have to close because so many nurses were leaving — 30 over the past two weeks — because of poor wages and a lack of medical equipment. No more AIDS patients are being accepted for treatment because of a shortage of drugs. Thousands of soldiers have been sent on compulsory leave because there is not enough food and money.

A shortage of seed and fertiliser — and money to buy them — mean next year’s harvest could be one of the worst. Aid agencies believe that more than three million people will need feeding by March. The Government, in denial over the scale of the problem, is reluctant to let food relief in. The hardship is tearing at the social fabric of a country where the life expectancy is now just 37.

The brutal police operation, known as Operation Murambatsvina (Sweep out the rubbish), left 700,000 without homes or work. Operation Hlalani Kuhle (Live well), meant to provide legal homes and formal markets, has barely begun, and the ban on vending is still being ruthlessly enforced. Newspaper boys selling mobile telephone charge cards are frisked and their stock is confiscated; women selling a few tomatoes and eggs are hauled off to police stations.

In the state media — which now include the Daily Mirror, furtively purchased with public money by the Central Intelligence Organisation — the ruling Zanu (PF) party leaks stories of hope: that recent uranium finds will help to boost the rural electrification programme, that Zimbabwe can host the 2010 African Nations Cup, that a Stalin-type command agriculture will help to utilise idle land, that petrol will arrive “within days”. Most ordinary Zimbabweans, beaten down, despondent and dismayed by the infighting in the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, seem to have accepted their miserable fate.

Near Chivhu, a government stronghold in central Zimbabwe, Nicodimus Joni, 43, a farmworker in tattered blue overalls and sandals made of old car tyres, waited for a lift to work. Closing his eyes, and slowly moving his head from side to side, he tried to find words to describe what was happening in his country.

“Ah, Zimbabwe,” he eventually sighed. “Zimbabwe is dead.”
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Africa: Subsaharan
Mugabe pulls the strings to stop plotters
2005-10-31
ZIMBABWE’S president, Robert Mugabe, has ordered his ministers to disclose all their assets in a move aimed at blocking any plots against him as the country descends into economic collapse. “Mugabe has files on everyone,” said a source close to the 81-year-old leader. “He encourages those around him to stick their hands in the till so the moment anyone gets cold feet about what he’s [Mugabe’s] doing and wants to quit — or starts thinking he’s a liability — he pulls out their file.”

The order has left ministers scrambling to divest themselves of assets such as apartments in Johannesburg, houses in Cape Town and diamond holdings in Congo. Some properties, such as farms in Zimbabwe itself, have simply been grabbed. Others have been acquired with the aid of a differential in exchange rates that allows government and ruling party officials to buy US dollars at less than a quarter of the market rate. However, sources of foreign exchange are drying up. The country’s main foreign exchange earners — tobacco, agriculture and tourism — have been largely wiped out by a government land grab that began five years ago and has left only about 200 of 4,500 commercial farmers operating.

With few foreign heads of state willing to be linked with a brutal dictatorship, Mugabe is rapidly running out of friends. Even his closest allies were horrified by Operation Murambatsvina (drive out the filth), which saw the demolition of at least 700,000 homes and livelihoods last summer and has resulted in mothers and babies squatting in cardboard shelters. South Africa has refused to give a $1 billion bailout unless conditions aimed at restoring democratic government are met. China, which has provided buses, passenger planes and fighter jets in the past year, gave only $30m after it received warning telephone calls from the presidents of Nigeria and South Africa.

Some companies have been forced to make “donations” to the ruling Zanu-PF party to continue operating. Those which fail to do so are well aware of their likely fate. In the past two years seven private banks have been “specified” — closed down and their assets seized. “Mugabe is willing to downsize the whole economy just to feed the political elite, a few hundred thousand at most,” said a European diplomat. “It’s a mafia state.”

During his 25 years in power Mugabe has become extremely skilled at drawing people from all sectors into his web of patronage. Among those handed farms that had been seized were High Court judges, police chiefs, military officers and the Anglican bishop of Harare. However, Mugabe is now running out of the means to do this. According to Zimbabwean bankers, the Central Bank has had no foreign exchange available for weeks.

Mugabe’s lieutenants are increasingly resorting to criminality in the scramble for the country’s remaining assets. Apart from extortion, many have launched get-rich-quick schemes. Residents of Harare were astonished when signs suddenly appeared all over the city earlier this month threatening fines of 1m Zimbabwe dollars for parking illegally. A government minister had apparently acquired a tow-truck and hundreds of people have since had their cars clamped. Other forms of profiteering include buying fuel or flour at the official low price and then re-exporting it to Congo, Zambia or Mozambique, where prices are much higher. Leo Mugabe, the president’s nephew, was caught smuggling flour into neighbouring countries earlier this month. Shortages of fuel are so severe that the top prize in the national lottery is a tank of petrol while the plummeting Zimbabwe dollar — now standing at almost 200,000 to the pound, makes spiralling school fees of Z$17m a term almost unattainable. Teachers and civil servants earn Z$3m a month.

Mugabe’s recent announcement that he will not stand for re-election when his term ends in 2008 has seen bitter jostling for position within the ruling party, with many ministers already referring to this as a transitional period. Last month Patrick Chinamasa, the minister of justice, revealed that the government was considering changing the constitution to synchronise presidential and parliamentary elections. This could extend Mugabe’s term to 2010 or beyond.
When he'd be 86 or thereabouts. He's making the assumption he's immortal. So are his henchmen...
Even if he were to step down, that would not be the end of Zimbabwe’s problems. “This is not just about Mugabe any more,” said Roy Bennett, a former white farmer and leading member of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change. “There are many people with blood on their hands, including military and intelligence officers who know that as long as Mugabe is there, they are protected. The moment he’s gone, they start being exposed and accountable for what they have done. You are talking about an entire cabal with an interest in this continuing.”
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Africa: Subsaharan
Zimbabwe is facing mass hunger, says archbishop
2005-10-24
Roman Catholic Archbishop Pius Ncube of Bulawayo has warned that 200,000 Zimbabweans could die of hunger over the next few months because of food shortages resulting from government policies.

Speaking at the launch of a new film on Operation Murambatsvina, the regime’s recent massive demolition programme, he declared: “I think Mugabe should just be banished, like [Liberian president] Charles Taylor.”

The archbishop claimed that food security in Zimbabwe was now so precarious that he estimated unless there was a dramatic change of policy malnutrition could contribute to tens of thousands of premature deaths by February 2006. Ncube said that this was a personal estimate based on his estimate of the effect of severe food shortages on a population ravaged by HIV/Aids and extreme poverty at a time of hyperinflation and mass unemployment.

According to Independent Catholic News the archbishop added that 700 people a day were already dying of Aids in Zimbabwe and the present rate would certainly increase with malnutrition.

The Rt Rev Rubin Phillip, Anglican bishop of KwaZulu Natal Province in South Africa and the co-chairperson of the Solidarity Peace Trust, a group of church leaders committed to human rights and democracy, said Zimbabweans “were living lives of desperation with no glimmer of hope”.

In May 2005, the government destroyed informal settlements and the kiosks of traders without warning. The United Nations says at least 700,000 people lost their homes or livelihoods in the campaign – one it called a clear violation of international law.

The new film, ‘Hide and Seek’ shows President Mugabe saying that the slum clearance operation would move people into new and better homes built by the government. But church and human rights activists say the reality is that tens of thousands of people have simply been dumped in rural areas where they are unknown and unwanted. Nearly all those impacted have no jobs and no money. Eighty percent of the children have not been able to return to school. "The amount of suffering is beyond imagination," commented Archbishop Ncube.
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Africa: Subsaharan
Minister vows to rid Zimbabwe of 'filth'
2005-09-19
A leading Zimbabwean cabinet minister vowed at the weekend to rid the country of the "filth" of white farmers. Didymus Mutasa, the minister for state security and land reform, said all remaining white farmers must be "cleared out".
That has a rather ominous sound about it
About 400 slow to learn white families are still farming in Zimbabwe, following the seizure by President Robert Mugabe's government of more than 4,000 farms.

Mr Mutasa, one of Mr Mugabe's closest advisers, referred to Operation Murambatsvina ("Clean out the trash" in the Shona language) - the campaign in which the government destroyed the homes of hundreds of thousands of urban poor. "Operation Murambatsvina should also be applied to the land reform programme to clean the commercial farms that are still in the hands of white farmers. White farmers are dirty and should be cleared out. They are similar to the filth that was in the streets before Murambatsvina," said Mr Mutasa, according to the state-controlled Sunday Mail newspaper.
"Abyss dead ahead! Signal all engines full speed!"
The government also announced it had annulled more than 4,000 court challenges by farmers to the expropriation of their farms. Last week Mr Mugabe signed a constitutional amendment taking away the farmers' rights to legally challenge land seizures. "All the challenges are now useless - they are all being nullified," said the chief law officer in the attorney general's office, Nelson Mutsonziwa.
Must be one of those "Living Constitutions" I keep hearing about
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Africa: Subsaharan
British officials ask ICC to consider banning Zimbabwe
2005-08-22
No, not that ICC.
LONDON - Britain’s Foreign Secretary Jack Straw and another senior official asked the International Cricket Council to consider banning Zimbabwe from the sport as punishment for increasing human rights abuses, a British newspaper reported on Sunday.
And if that doesn't work, they'll lobby to ban Zimbabwe from water tennis.
Straw and Tessa Jowell, head of the Culture, Media and Sport ministry, said an urgent review was needed to decide whether it is “appropriate” for Zimbabwe to participate in the sport, said The Observer newspaper, citing a copy of the letter. The Foreign Office refused to comment on Sunday, and no one could immediately be reached at the International Cricket Council.

In the letter, Straw and Jowell said the Zimbabwe government’s latest campaign, dubbed Operation Murambatsvina, or Drive Out Trash, has led to the deterioration of “an already grave human rights and humanitarian situation,” the newspaper said. The ministers asked the council to not only consider banning Zimbabwe, but also to waive fines now levied against countries who refuse to play Zimbabwe.
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Africa: Subsaharan
U.S. Ambassador Criticizes Zimbabwe
2005-08-15
HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) - A U.S. diplomat barred from meeting victims of President Robert Mugabe's mass eviction campaign, criticized the Zimbabwe government Saturday for interfering with aid efforts and warned of outrage in Congress over the worsening humanitarian crisis.

Tony Hall, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N. World Food Program and Food and Agriculture Organization, said the United States would donate $51.8 million worth of food for Zimbabwe and the neighboring drought-stricken countries of Zambia, Malawi, Lesotho and Swaziland.
The 73,500 tons will be sufficient to feed 5 million to 6 million people for a month, he told reporters at Harare airport. "Despite our differences with the government, the United States will stand by the people of Zimbabwe because there is no place for politics when it comes to feeding hungry people," Hall said at the end of a three-day visit.
Now we have to find ways to keep Bob from pilfering the aid.
But he warned that the U.S. donation "only scratched the surface of an essentially political problem."

The World Food Program says up to a third of Zimbabwe's 12 million people may suffer from food shortages, even though Mugabe's government has played down the need for outside help. Hall said Zimbabwean bureaucracy was keeping 10,000 tons of food aid from U.S. relief groups "bottled up" in the South African port of Durban, over alleged lack of import licenses. He said another group had not been given permission to distribute 15,000 tons already here.
An aid convoy from the South African Council of Churches has also been held up for nearly a week as the Zimbabwe government insists on certificates to prove it contains no genetically modified food.
Must be taking lessons from Col. Mengistu, who conveniently resides in Harare.
Hall said he would speak with U.S. officials about what he had seen. "Don't forget I have a lot of friends in the U.S. Congress, and they are going to be outraged," said Hall, who was a congressman for 24 years.

Security officers prevented Hall and his entourage from making a scheduled visit to Hopley Farm, on the capital's outskirts, to investigate claims that 700,000 urban poor were left homeless or without jobs by the eight-week "Operation Murambatsvina" - "Drive Out Filth." Many were evicted into midwinter cold from May to July. Opposition groups contend Mugabe's government is trying to drive disaffected city voters into rural areas where they can be intimidated by denial of access to food.

Hall said the official reason for blocking his stop at Hopley was that the delegation needed a special visitors permit since the site is run by the military. But, he added, "I was told in a hushed tone that the government doesn't want me to see this place because old people are dying."

Mugabe, in power since independence in 1980, has said he is prepared to show progress in rehousing those evicted by Operation Murambatsvina. But human rights lawyers last week dismissed claims of improved conditions at Hopley, saying it was "nothing but a new transit camp."

Hall said he was distressed by conditions in Hatcliff township outside Harare, which he visited Friday. "I had several people come up to me and ask me for blankets and food. They don't have enough to keep themselves warm ... their children are hungry," he said. "One gentleman spoke of the night he was evicted - police arrived with no notice, driving him and others out with dogs. He was forced to sleep outside for a week during the coldest time of winter."
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