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-- Who Cares About Ahmadinejad When You Have This Guy
Who Cares About Ahmadinejad When You Have This Guy
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| Robert Mugabe Meets Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Village Voice posted: 2:19 PM, September 25, 2007 by Michael Clancy By Chris Thompson Village Voice Staff Writer Now that everyone's finished live-blogging and hyperventilating over Iranian strongman Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's Columbia address, maybe New Yorkers can finally notice that a gen-yoo-wine, Pol-Pot-ain't-got-shit-on-me monster is walking the streets of our fair city. Zimbabwean dictator Robert Mugabe, who has spearheaded a genocidal starvation campaign against his political opponents and murders tens of thousands of his own people every year, has arrived in the city and plans to address the United Nations General Assembly tomorrow. The aging, cynical despot, whose wife shopped for shoes in European capitals while his soldiers forced 1 million people to flee Harare and starve in the countryside, will reportedly argue that American and European sanctions are illegal and have-get this-caused terrible deprivation in Zimbabwe. But so far, only the New Republic's James Kirchick has noticed that one of the worst human beings on the planet is browsing the aisles at Bloomingdales. "What's going on in Zimbabwe, in genocidal proportions, is worse than Darfur," says Kirchick. "It's unfortunate that people don't care about it. But that's the way it's always been." In fact, New York has a sordid history of accommodating Mugabe, thanks to everyone's favorite race-baiter, City Councilman Charles Barron. Four years ago, Barron led a "fact-finding mission" to Zimbabwe and returned with a report that exonerated Mugabe as much as the English language will allow. ("Zimbabwe remains one of the most stable countries in Africa," read the report's conclusion.) Barron even invited Mugabe to speak at City Hall, where roughly a dozen councilmembers applauded and fawned over Africa's worst dictator. Pundits around the country have filled their gullets with the easy satisfaction that comes with denouncing a Holocaust-denyin', terrorist-financin' demogogue like Ahmadinejad. But when it comes to confronting people who have refined the art of deliberate mass tarvation, no one seems terribly interested. When Bill Bennett learned that President Bush planned to use his time at the General Assembly to denounce Myanmar-which rivals only Zimbabwe and North Korea as the worst place on Earth-he went on his radio show and sighed, "I'm for democracy in Burma, but do we have to talk about that today?" National Review Online editor Kathryn Jean Lopez echoed Bennett's sentiment, as if presiding over a regime of fifty million slaves was somehow less odious than a Persian nutjob trying to lay a wreath at Ground Zero. Fortunately, Mugabe has finally done something every American pundit will find truly monstrous-he met with Ahmadinejad this morning. |
Agreed. Hope more action is taken against him ASAP.
As if Zimbawe didnt have enough problems before this guy 
Great article, thanks Mr. Lebezniatnikov! I definitely agree that the publicity of Iranian leader's visit to USA is nowhere as relevant and important as the terrible, gruesome situations in Zimbabwe, North Korea and Myanmar. But those countries dont have significant deposits of oil/gas/whatever, so who cares, right?
Out of a population of nearly 13 million, half are now refugees. Where is the coverage? South Africa has really got to be sweating right now - Zimbabwe (was) their largest trading partner on the continent. If South Africa starts to falter, that could definitely ripple through Europe and the US.
From the Zimbabwe Times:
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| Total destruction of the economy now looms October 1, 2007 By Eddie Cross THIS past week the government rammed through long awaited legislation that will require companies to sell 51 per cent of their equity to black Zimbabweans nominated by the regime. The companies are required to fund this exercise themselves through a levy that is to be introduced by the State and which will be applied on a compulsory basis to all firms in the economy. This development comes on top of the price control operation mounted by the Joint Operations Command and the subsequent publication of regulations that will enable to State to take over any firm that closes its doors as a consequence. As no company can produce and sell its products for half its cost and expect to survive for very long we can only assume that this was the real object of the exercise and it had little or nothing to do with trying to curb inflation. Just this past week we have seen further evidence that government is recklessly printing money to pay its bills and even to buy what little foreign exchange is available on the market. In Bulawayo we heard reports this week of a Reserve Bank truck delivering hundreds of millions of dollars of currency in large denominations to local dealers. The rate of exchange on the market has slumped to record lows as a result, with a pound now fetches over a million Zimbabwe dollars. No foreign firm is likely to allow its local subsidiaries to be taken over via either route and we face a scenario where they must either fight the system through the courts or abandon their assets and leave the country or try to dispose of 100 percent of their assets at a half decent price. It is now clear that Mobil, Anglo American and the Heinz Corporation have effectively dumped the equity they held here in some local companies. The international banks have already made their views known - Barclays, Standard Chartered, Stanbic and the MBCA have all said that they will not allow the loss of a controlling stake in the local companies, they would not allow the companies to use their brand names or systems and would dispose of 100 per cent of their local assets, closing down the banks if necessary. The minister responsible responded to this statement by saying that "they can go". He emphasized that the regime would not back down on this operation. I already know of several companies in different fields who have been approached by Zanu-PF linked people with an offer to take over a major or controlling interest in their companies. The private abattoirs that were denied licenses to operate two months ago are being licensed but on condition that they sell a controlling stake to a nominated shareholder and on top of that they are being forced to buy and sell under State direction. So what does this mean? Are they serious? What they are trying to do is implement a strategy for the next elections that will reduce current urban populations by a third or more in twelve months. The price control operation was designed to achieve this and as a result of the enforcement of this campaign, the cities are without food or water. Hundreds of thousands of jobs are at stake and tens of thousands are fleeing to South Africa on a weekly basis. By my estimate they are well on their way to achieving this objective. Every worker who loses his job or just gets fed up with the situation and leaves is one less MDC vote in the election next year. When this is over, they will pick up the pieces and resume normal commercial operations funded by an endless stream of resources from the Reserve Bank. They will then be able to go into the elections in 2008 with a sharply reduced urban vote, the remaining voters will mainly come under the control of Zanu-PF directed entities and all basic needs will be tightly controlled by the regime. Vote for Zanu-PF or else will be the threat. I am just waiting to see when they will attack urban property rights. I fully expect GDP to decline sharply this year as a consequence of this operation. This will reduce our GDP to US$4 billion or less. Exports will also fall and money transfers rise as Zimbabweans in the Diaspora respond to the needs of their families at home. All investment has stopped and only the Chinese seem to have the stomach for this - probably because they know they will be given special treatment, in fact they are participating in this exercise and are picking up long-term assets for a fraction of their true value. The question is will the strategy work in terms of the elections and what are the consequences of this situation and the deliberate destruction of a functioning economy that it represents? The domestic answers are difficult to give; I hope Zanu PF thinks that their strategy will work for them in the election, as this is the only way we are going to get them to participate in that event. The economic consequences are catastrophic. We will now have to plan for a stabilisation and recovery programme that embraces the whole economy and not just agriculture and its support industries. The departure of international firms like Heinz will not be easily reversed and securing the kind of investment we need to kick start the recovery is going to be that much more difficult. But it is the regional implications that I think need to be scrutinized closely. I was told last week by a prominent South African analyst that South Africa had "discounted" the threat to the South African economy of any further contraction in Zimbabwe. This may be true, but it does not disguise the fact that foreign investors, already wary of Africa from a risk point of view, may just find this wholesale grab of assets by a greedy elite that seems to have the support of much of Africa, is a portent of things to come - perhaps even in South Africa itself. Our trade with South Africa ten years ago was R2 billion a month. We were South Africa�s largest trading partner in Africa and its largest single market for manufactured goods in the world. Two thirds of that trade has gone and instead we export hundreds of thousands of impoverished men and women to South Africa each month. Once in the South African system they join criminal gangs, rob banks and stores and engage in petty crime and trading. Cape Town last year had more murders than Britain. No state can build a stable society on such foundations. Time is running out on us - if Zanu-PF is allowed by inertia on the part of the SADC States to get away with this destructive and suicidal activity, they will have to deal with a real failed State when finally the political implosion takes place or see Zimbabwe spiral downwards into a Somalia style situation of lawlessness and poverty. Free and fair elections are impossible if the national crisis is not dealt with and dealt with in a decisive and holistic manner. We all agree that this is the only way out of this crisis - it is time to act to ensure that we can in fact vote in a free and fair manner when the time comes. Allowing the continued delinquency of the Zanu-PF regime is simply not an option for any of us. |
I must admit that I had no idea the situation in Zimbawe was this dire until I read about it on this forum this past week.
Truly, truly sad. I don't really know what to say or write here to be perfectly honest. I'm speechless.
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| Originally posted by CHRles I must admit that I had no idea the situation in Zimbawe was this dire until I read about it on this forum this past week. Truly, truly sad. I don't really know what to say or write here to be perfectly honest. I'm speechless. |
Why cant Bush take his wonderful democracy to Zimbabwe?
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| Originally posted by Lebezniatnikov Yeah, it's really crazy to me how little attention Zimbabwe is getting... but then again, that's par for the course with Africa it seems. Inflation in Harare has topped 10,000% - the highest in the world of course. The second highest inflation? In Rangoon, Burma where it's 40%. Just goes to show just how dire things in Zimbabwe really are. It's the worst economic collapse since the Weimar Republic in 1930's Germany. |
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| Originally posted by CHRles Damn, I'm genuinely close to tears. |
It's hard to find this in the news. Instead this just popped up:
http://www.cnn.com/2007/SHOWBIZ/Mov...d.ap/index.html
Nothing against miss moneypenny, may she rest in peace, but it's sad that this is what is likely more interesting to the general public then the enormous problems in Africa.
www.allafrica.com
http://www.irinnews.org/IRIN-Africa.aspx
or the BBC. CNN and other American conglomerates are bad sources for anything international these days.
Bump to the top!
Desperate times call for desperate measures, but if I was a Zimbabwean, I don't know if I would trust this guy:
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| Harare - The state central bank announced measures Monday that it said would help to restock empty store shelves by the end of the month. Among the planned programs were cheap loans to manufacturers to restore productivity, and hard currency payments to farmers to keep them in business. �I leave you with a promise most basic goods should and will return to the shelves in the next three weeks,� Reserve Bank Governor Gideon Gono said on state television. Gono said the bank also planned to change the nation's currency, striking more zeros off bank notes for the second time since August of last year. In June, the government issued an edict to slash prices on all goods and services by about half. This included a crackdown on overcharging in which more than 7,000 corporate executives, business managers, traders and bus drivers were arrested, jailed and fined for price violations. The price cuts were meant to tame the world's highest official inflation of nearly 7,000 percent. Instead, the effect was to worsen already acute shortages of food and basic goods in the crumbling economy. Under a new central bank loan program, producers and rural stores hard hit by supply shortages would be able to borrow funds to restore their businesses at the country's lowest interest rate of 25 percent over nine months. To boost production of staple foods, the bank would help the government pay the world parity price of around US$200 (�145) a ton for corn and wheat, half in local currency and half in hard currency that could be used by farmers to buy their own gasoline, fertilizer and imported materials, Gono said. He said the price crackdown had caused fear and mistrust between the government and businesses and called for what he called for �a spirit of reconciliation and healing� in the economy. He said many of the nation's economic difficulties were self-inflicted, including the price cuts and a program to seize control of white and foreign-owned businesses. In August last year, the central bank slashed three zeros from the currency and issued new denominations of notes after basic transactions became unmanageable and calculators and accounting systems could no longer cope with amounts traded. Independent estimates put real inflation closer to 25,000 percent and the International Monetary Fund has forecast it reaching 100,000 percent by the end of the year. Bundles of bank notes are again common in basic purchases. Gono said the zeros had now returned, again making transactions unwieldy. He said a new currency would be issued possibly in the next two weeks but gave no further details. �It's a process that could turn into a hurricane for those who keep cash outside the banking system,� Gono said. In the rampant black market, �cash barons and dealers are in the habit of creating mini central banks in their homes.� Gono said the printing of extra money, now a routine practice, contributed to inflation and was against �basic textbook economics�. �We are living in extraordinary times and extraordinary measures are needed. Once we are out of the corner, we will have no problem formulating policy playing by the book. But for now, the game is one of survival,� he said. |
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