British woman, 74, beaten to death in ‘Wild West’ Zimbabwe

>> Sunday, November 30, 2008

A HOUSEWIFE described as a “nice old lady” was beaten to death and her husband left in critical condition after an “extremely violent” attack highlighted Zimbabwe’s decline into lawlessness.

Mary Austen, a 74-year-old Briton, was murdered on her farm near Kwekwe, in the centre of the country, and her body discovered two days later. By then her husband, Neville a 77-year-old Zimbabwean, could not move or speak.

Brutal as it was, Austen’s death was a mere footnote in a country where lawlessness, hunger, disease and economic collapse define daily life. Police found furniture strewn all over the house after a struggle between the Austens and their attackers. She died from numerous head injuries.

A neighbour, who knew her well, described the attack as “really brutal - she was absolutely bludgeoned to death. She was a nice old lady who grew vegetables and maize for domestic consumption on a small farm.”


It has shocked the tiny band of white farmers who see the Austens as the latest victims of Robert Mugabe’s campaign to hand their farms to his cronies. The news came as the regime faced a severe rebuke from a Southern Africa Development Community (SADC) tribunal, a body with powers greater than those of the local courts.

The tribunal ruled on Friday that the government had racially discriminated against Michael Campbell, a white Zimbabwean farmer, denied him legal redress and prevented him from defending his farm.

John Worsley-Worswick, of the Justice for Agriculture group, said that the killing of Austen, which was sparked by a dispute with domestic staff, was a sign of the hopelessness in rural areas.

“The extreme violence of the attack is something we wouldn’t have seen a few years ago. It’s a reflection of the desperation of ordinary Zimbabweans who can no longer secure food or basic medical attention,” he said.
Zimbabwe, say the farmers, is becoming a “Wild West” state in which hunger and ill-health are rife. In the current epidemic of cholera 9,000 cases have been reported by the United Nations.

Law enforcement is breaking down as police attempt to seize their share of the spoils. In Mutare police units seeking to control the diamond extraction business have fought gun battles, which have left more than a dozen dead in the past week.

Maize planting, which should have been completed by the middle of this month has barely started. Large parts of the country will remain unplanted, as small-scale farmers cannot afford seed or fertiliser. The Commercial Farmers’ Union expects the 2009 harvest to be the worst ever. Despite the exodus of refugees Zimbabwe needs at least 1m tons of maize to feed itself. Next year’s harvest will be no more than 300,000 tons.
International aid agencies expect to cover this deficit by feeding 5m Zimbabweans.


Some farmers have been unwilling to give in without a struggle and, like Campbell, are using the courts to fight back. Kim Birketoft, a Danish farmer, bought his farm in Nyahondo after independence and so cannot be considered a “colonialist” - the description Mugabe applies to all white farmers. The government gave Birketoft a letter confirming it had no interest in the land. His farm earned more than £650,000 a year, generating valuable foreign exchange. He employed 200-300 people.

Birketoft invested £260,000 to produce roses, beef and tobacco. His investment was protected by a bilateral treaty between Zimbabwe and Denmark. Birketoft believes that senior government officials planned the assault on his farm as a lever to remove the treaty protection that allows about 60 farmers, of German, Italian, Dutch and Danish nationality to continue operating. Having shredded its bilateral obligations with these countries Mugabe’s cronies will be able to seize farms and other assets belonging to European Union nationals that are protected by treaty agreements with EU governments.

In June Birketoft was presented with an ultimatum: he was given 90 days to leave as his farm had been offered to a retired army officer. He took legal action and last week the Zimbabwe supreme court ruled against him, but withheld its reasoning. The ruling was unusually swift and appears to have been rushed out to preempt the SADC verdict. Supreme court judges are all appointed by Mugabe.

Birketoft is likely to lose his livelihood and personal possessions. But his farm workers and their dependants face unemployment and eviction from their homes.

Research conducted by the Justice for Agriculture group showed that up to half the 1m farm workers and their dependants, who have been evicted since the beginning of violent land seizures in 2000, have since died.
Worsley-Worswick explained: “The Birketoft verdict was clearly politically motivated and came without any explanation.

“The regime will use that judgment to argue that it is not bound by the SADC tribunal’s ruling, as land ownership is a national security issue . . . this is about personal survival, keeping themselves out of prison, keeping their ill-gotten gains at all costs.”


FROM HERE......

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ZIM PICS.......

>> Saturday, November 29, 2008

Zimbabwean farmer Michael Campbell (R) is hugged by his son-in-law Ben Freeth on November 28, 2008 after the Southern African Development Community (SADC) tribunal in Windhoek ruled that 78 white Zimbabweans could keep their farms because the government's land reform scheme discriminated against them, in a key test of the new court's influence. Judge Luis Mondlane, president of the SADC tribunal, said that Zimbabwe had violated the treaty governing the 15-nation regional bloc by trying to seize the white-owned farms.











Children play with stagnant raw sewage at the Machipisa suburb in Harare November 28 2008. Fast-spreading cholera is "the tip of the iceberg" of what stands to be a major health crisis in Zimbabwe, United Nations agencies said on Friday. Nearly 400 Zimbabweans have died from the disease, which has infected more than 9,400 people and spread to neighbouring South Africa and Botswana.






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CONT MHLANGA WINS ARTVENTURE FREEDOM TO CREAT PRIZE

>> Friday, November 28, 2008



BULAWAYO, November 24 2008 - Cont Mhlanga, nicknamed the 'Wole Soyinka of Zimbabwean arts, has added another feather to his illustrious career by scooping an international award for his satirical play, The Good President.

 
Mhlanga revealed Friday that he has been invited to Indonesia to attend the awards ceremony.

The play, which was banned in the country last year, was chosen as the most creative stage performance from Africa.

"I have won another award and I will be travelling abroad to receive it next week. It is an honour and shows that art is very strong and knows no boundaries," said Mhlanga.

The politically charged satirical play summarises the country’s 30 years against British colonial rule, focusing specifically on events leading to Zimbabwe's independence. It goes on to highlight what has happened in the 27 years since Zimbabwe gained independence from Britain in 1980 - all in one tight hour of compelling action.

The play kicks off with a scene in a police station where two police officers are assaulting the leader of an opposition party, acted by a look-alike of Morgan Tsvangirai, the leader of Movement for Democratic Change.

In addition to beating him up, they search his pockets and steal all his money, leaving him for dead. One of the police officers, Wangu, who had been shown in a previous scene sadly telling his girlfriend that he had no money to meet her demands, is suddenly ready to finance all of her requests.

These events bounce back to haunt Wangu when his grandmother comes to the city for an eye treatment. In one of their many conversations, Wangu is told that his father, himself a former leader of the opposition, was murdered by state agents during the 1983 Gukurahundi, a civil war that erupted in Zimbabwe soon after independence between two ethnic groups - Shona and Ndebele.

This piece of news upsets Wangu, forcing him to resign from the police force as he finds it is pointless to serve a government that killed his father.

The play also touches on the chaos that were generated by the harmonisation of presidential and parliamentary elections held in March. The beating of opposition leaders, the banning of rallies, military imposed curfews in the capital Harare suburbs, all of which are shown as desperate attempts by a government to hold on to power.

It shows how the Mugabe led government is abusing its power by turning entities such as the police and army — that survive on taxpayers’ money — into the ruling Zanu PF party’s campaign material. It shows that instead of protecting and serving civilians, the police and army in Zimbabwe are now being used to serve selfish political ends.

The play attempts to prove that Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe, in power since independence from Britain in 1980, was not part of the founders of Zimbabwe's struggle for independence. Instead, it portrays Mugabeas a man who was roped in because of his eloquence in English – who just happened to be the educated and therefore became “president by design.”

At the end of the play, people who were killed by the government resurrect as ghosts, before attacking and killing the president.



FROM HERE.... 










 CONGRATULATIONS

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HARARE TODAY .....PICS

>> Thursday, November 27, 2008

A cholera patient is wheeled on a handcart to Budiriro Polyclinic in Harare November 27 2008. Zimbabwe, which is battling a serious cholera outbreak amid a worsening economic crisis, is set to get vaccines from China to fight the disease, state media reported on Thursday.







A girl collects drinking water from a stream in Glen Norah, Harare November 27, 2008. 






A vendor sells vegetables near uncollected garbage in Glen-view, Harare November 27, 2008.






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Budiriro Polyclinic on November 26, 2008 and Harare

Cholera patients wait for treatment at Budiriro Polyclinic on November 26, 2008 in Harare. At least 300 people have died of cholera across the country since the first outbreak nearly two months ago. The problem has been exacerbated by the closure of major state hospitals because of shortages of staff and drugs.






Patients suffering from cholera rest inside the male ward of Budiriro Polyclinic in Harare November 26, 2008. The United Nations said on Tuesday the death toll from the cholera outbreak in Zimbabwe had risen to 366 out of 8,887 known cases since August.







Patients suffering from cholera rest in a tent ward at Budiriro Polyclinic in Harare November 26, 2008.







A man scoops water from a well in a Harare suburb Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2008. Zimbabwe's Doctors for Human Rights say that due to the outbreak of cholera, hundreds more Zimbabweans are dying at home, uncounted and untreated as the country's health system has collapsed. It estimates that 10 percent of those who contract the easily treatable disease are dying and accuses the government of doing too little to contain the epidemic. Cholera is spread by contaminated water and food.






Members of civil society's National Constitutional Association march through Harare, Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2008 calling for a change to the country's constitution. Zimbabwe has been in limbo most of the year over disputed presidential elections. In September President Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe's leader since independence in 1980, and opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai agreed to share power but they have since been unable to agree on how to divide up cabinet posts.


 
A man wearing a tee-shirt with a portrait of president Robert Mugabe, waits with others to scoop water from a well in a Harare suburb Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2008.






A Zimbabwean woman fetches water from an un protected well on November 26, 2008 in Harare.





Zimbabwean women and children fetch water from an un protected well on November 26, 2008 in Harare.






A woman unblocks raw sewage in front of her home in Gazaland suburb in Highfield, Harare, November 26, 2008.







And this is the country and the people that the West is wanting to put more sanctions against...... what the hell do you think these so called sanctions are going to achieve....they haven't achieved a damn thing as of yet except of course the destruction of the country and the suffering and dieing of the people......and of course given ''mugabe'' a beautiful bright soapbox to stand on and vomit out his properganda on the people while he continues to loot and slaughter the people and blames everything on the sanctions.....

If those sanctions had never been there zanu pf and mugabe would be history by now as the people would have seen it is their government that is robbing them blind........







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US Tsy's OFAC Designates 4 Linked To Zimbabwe's Mugabe Regime

>> Tuesday, November 25, 2008

THIS IS NOW JUST PURE AND UTTER CHILDISHNESS ........HEY SOME PEOPLE HAVE KAK FOR BRAINS.....

Tell me exactly what this kind of crap is going to do to ''mugabe''.......????

Up until now these damn crap ''sanctions'' have done nothing to stop ''mugabe'' from doing exactly what he wants......

It certainly wont stop him from slaughtering the people and looting the country in fact it will just make him slaughter more people and loot more....

''bush'' and his ''mental brigade'' are no better than ''mugabe'' and zanu pf......they know sweet stuff all about Zimbabwe and the people...they don't even understand what is going on and why it is going on......

All that this ''bush'' crap is going to do is destroy more people and destroy the country even more


WASHINGTON -(Dow Jones)- The U.S. Treasury Department is cracking down on four people alleged to have supported the regime of Zimbabwe leader Robert Mugabe.

The designations Tuesday by the Office of Foreign Assets Control, or OFAC, included Zimbabwean businessman Muller Conrad Rautenbach, Thai businesswoman Nalinee Joy Taveesin and Malaysian eurologist Mahmood Awang Kechik. OFAC also named John Bredenkamp, whom the agency referred to as a well-known Mugabe insider.

"The financial and logistical support they have provided to the regime has enabled Robert Mugabe to pursue policies that seriously undermine democratic processes and institutions in Zimbabwe," OFAC said.
As a result of Treasury's action, any of their assets within U.S. jurisdiction must be frozen.

"The Mugabe regime continues to resist the call of the Zimbabwean people to loosen its corrupt and violent hold on power," OFAC Director Adam J. Szubin said. "The United States supports the people of Zimbabwe in their struggle to achieve a political and economic system built on fairness and transparency rather than patronage and self-dealing."




FROM HERE.....


TARGETED SANCTIONS DIDN'T STOP MUGABE AND THE GENERALS DOING THIS......




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Zimbabwean Health Workers Call for Crisis Response...SIGN THE PETITION..

>> Monday, November 24, 2008

PHR's colleagues in Zimbabwe have appealed to the outside world to respond to the alarming deterioration of their health system. Medical and public health workers in Zimbabwe report the following:

  • HOSPITAL CLOSINGS: Public health workers in Harare report that due to lack of medicine, equipment, services, and staff, public hospitals and clinics are essentially closed, resulting in preventable deaths. There is no access to care for those who cannot afford private clinics. The only maternity hospital in the capital is also closed. Patients with fractures, meningitis and other acute and dangerous conditions are being sent home, according to another medical source.
  • CHOLERA EPIDEMIC: A cholera epidemic is spreading throughout the country and daily death tolls are on the rise. Fresh water is no longer pumped into urban areas, which will only exacerbate the spread of this infectious disease caused by contaminated water. An unnamed doctor at Harare hospital described the situation as a "disaster of unimaginable proportions".
  • DISRUPTION OF MEDICINE: Essential medicines are unavailable to treat the very diseases that the government's gross negligence has exacerbated. Anti-retroviral therapy for HIV/AIDS patients and TB treatment for chronically ill patients has been severely disrupted.
  • FOOD INSECURITY: The government's recent suspension of the delivery of vital humanitarian assistance severely threatens access to a population of 2 million Zimbabweans who depend on assistance from the World Food Programme (WFP). By the end of this year, the number could double, according to the Programme.
  • VIOLENT POLICE CRACK-DOWN ON DEMONSTRATION BY HEALTH PROFESSIONALS: Riot police forcefully dispersed hundreds of doctors, nurses and other health workers who assembled at the Parirenyatwa Hospital in Harare to protest poor salaries and working conditions.
  • MEDICAL SCHOOL CLOSINGS: Early this week, authorities closed indefinitely the country's most prominent medical school and sent students away.
Diplomatic isolation and economic sanctions against the Mugabe regime have thus far failed to curtail widespread and systematic human rights violations including willful denial of health care and obstruction of humanitarian aid as well as mass killing, forced displacement, torture and arbitrary arrest. The current government has acted with impunity and must be held to account.
A letter from PHR's Frank Donaghue on the emergent situation in Zimbabwe can be found at the Physicians for Human Rights web site, http://physiciansforhumanrights.org/library/letter-09-30-2008-frank.html



Health Emergency in Zimbabwe: Act Now
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Zimbabwe is in the midst of a devastating health emergency, and PHR needs your help to urge the US and the international community to take action.
Public health workers in Harare report that due to lack of medicine, equipment, services, and staff, public hospitals and clinics are essentially closed, resulting in preventable deaths and the destruction of families and communities. A cholera epidemic is spreading throughout the country and daily death tolls are on the rise. Fresh water is no longer pumped into urban areas, which will only exacerbate the spread of this infectious disease caused by contaminated water. A doctor at Harare hospital described the situation as a "disaster of unimaginable proportions".
Your colleagues—doctors, nurses, public health leaders, medical students, and human rights activists in Zimbabwe—are fighting for their patients. Hundreds held a protest this week to call for more medicine and supplies for their patients, but were violent disbursed by riot police. Also this week, the government closed the medical school in Harare indefinitely, leaving hundreds of students on the street—and millions of Zimbabweans without the next generation of health leadership.
The health situation in Zimbabwe, which has been declining for years, is now untenable. The international community must take urgent action to save lives. Sign the petition below and urge Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to take decisive action TODAY to stop needless deaths in Zimbabwe.

Full Petition Text:

Dear Secretary of State Rice,

We, the undersigned, ask you to take decisive action to address the collapse of the Zimbabwean public health system. Just as a cholera outbreak is sweeping through Harare, public hospitals and clinics across the country, including Zimbabwe's two main national referral hospitals, have closed for lack of drugs, supplies and health workers. The health situation in Zimbabwe, which has been declining for years, is now untenable. Urgent action by the US and the international community is needed to save lives.

Earlier this week, doctors, nurses and medical students tried to stage a protest to call for government action but were dispersed by riot police. The convergence of hospital closings, disruption of water and electricity, a major cholera epidemic spreading throughout the country, and a breakdown in delivery of medications for HIV-AIDS, TB, malaria and chronic illness will lead to massive loss of life if individual governments and the United Nations do not provide a robust and immediate response.

Given the continued gross negligence of the government of Zimbabwe and the callous disregard for the safety and wellbeing of its citizens, together with the dire signs of impending lethal epidemic disease, we the undersigned call on the United States government to immediately rally the international community and UN to take decisive action to:

A. Assure that a responsive, legitimate government is in place that can protect the lives and health of the people of Zimbabwe.

B. Deliver immediate, robust humanitarian aid and medicine into the country, demanding that the government remove all obstructions to this assistance.

C. Intervene to re-open and support the hospitals and medical school, and assure vital infrastructure, supplies, safety and support so that health workers can care for their patients.



SIGN THE PETITION HERE PLEASE

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UNCONFIRMED REPORT OF MASS MURDER IN MANICALAND.....

>> Saturday, November 22, 2008

I have just been made aware of this.......here is what is going on right now.....


First they beat the ZRP officers who tried to intervene, then they told them to leave or die. Thats the actions of the great members of the ZDF.

Then these great defenders of the liberation struggle herded men women and children into ambush zones using helicopters and motorcycles.....and killed them all. And they did this day in and day out for three days in Manicaland this week.

I have just returned from Mutare, numbed by the slaughter I have seen. When contacted with the news of these events, I packed a truck with food and blankets and went down with my staff to see what help we could offer. I could not imagine what I was about to see.

Bullets whistling across main roads, people screaming and running as bullets punched holes through their homes, bodies being dumped into army trucks to move to Mutare.

I eventually placed the food and blankets with a church group for distribution and headed to Muatre to see if I could get help sent South to Marange. Everyone, ZRP included are too scared to move.

Helping a family look for two missing relatives at the Mutare morgue has left me with visions of horror that will haunt me to my death day. I estimate over 200 bodies lies in rotting piles at Mutare morgue, grotesque heaps of what were human beings until a few days ago. They are unknown persons, families are scared to come forward to claim them, fearing the same fate... The stench is indescribable, power is off in Mutare for between 12 and 18 hours per day.....

You may ask what this is all about..... simple. The dead are SUSPECTED by the military bosses to be illegal diamond panners. No due process, no presumption of innocence, no right to defend ones self in a court of law, just instant summary execution by the defenders of this great liberation.

Top businessmen in Mutare have been picked up by the army, and taken away, tortured for a few days, realesed, no charges, no crimes, just a "suspicion" that "maybe you know something". They are also robbed of any forex they have on them/in their homes. I met two of them at at attorney's office, one is a 70 year old man, his back and buttocks beaten for 3 days, until he begged them to kill him, then they realized he actually did not know anything. Another, Ari Badhella (family of Badhella Traders) bought his way out of the torture sessions.

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HARARE THIS WEEK.......PICS

>> Friday, November 21, 2008

A man suffering from cholera is taken in a cart to a nearby clinic in the high density suburb of Budiriro, Harare, Thursday, Nov. 20, 2008. About 160 people have died of the disease in recent weeks, independent groups say. The lack of clean water and poorly maintained sewage systems have seen the waterborne disease thrive.








Zimbabwean woman carrying her on her back walks over stagnant sewage water at Mbare in Harare, Zimbabwe, Friday Nov. 21, 2008. About 160 people have died of disease because of bad sanitation in recent weeks, independent groups say. The lack of clean water and poorly maintained sewage systems have seen the water borne disease thrive.



A boy sits around an area affected with stagnant sewage water, in Mbarein Harare, Zimbabwe, Friday Nov. 21, 2008.


A Zimbabwean policeman walks in front of doctors and nurses who are demonstrating over the deteriorating health system, outside Parirenyatwa group of hospitals in Harare November 18, 2008 promising to stay away from work until a recent pandemic of cholera is controlled. They also requested that the government review their salaries.

















And the death toll has risen to 300+.......these are the people that are suffering from the ''targeted sanctions'' not ''mugabe and the generals''.........

I pray that all your ''sanction supporters'' sleep the sleep of the devil.......

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FOOD SCARCE IN DOMA......HYPED UP DAMN MISMANAGED REPORTING

>> Thursday, November 20, 2008

Map locates Mhangura in the Doma district of Zimbabwe;





Vhukani Sibanda catapults a bird for food for the pot in Doma, Zimbabwe, Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2008. Zimbabwe's economy is in crisis, and a political deadlock has left the nation without a functioning government since disputed elections in March.
Vhukani Sibanda with his catapult and his catch for the pot in Doma, Zimbabwe, Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2008.
Vhukani Sibanda snaps the neck of a bird he caught to eat in Doma, Zimbabwe, Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2008.



Vhukani Sibanda with his dogs hunts for birds for food in Doma, Zimbabwe, Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2008.
Tendai Mutevera looks for food in a birds nest in Doma, Zimbabwe, Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2008.



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JOURNALISTS TAKE NOTE.....YOU HAVE MADE A HUGE BLUNDER WITH THESE PICS....




This kind of journalism piss's me off in a huge way.......they to me are actually making a mockery of the hunger of the people in Zimbabwe......


And here is why.......people in Zim have been killing and eating birds since time began......it is what we do and not because we are hungry but because that is part of our culture......so what might be shocking and unnatural to others isn't to me so the very thing that they are trying to prove which is that people are damn hungry,people are even dying in Zim has just been neutralized completely.......

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Sign in the loo at Beitbridge border post - S.A. side - Nov 2008

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OX CART HI-JACKING ...LOL

>> Tuesday, November 18, 2008

AN Epworth police officer and two neighbourhood watch committee members were arrested last week on allegations of soliciting and getting bribes from two theft suspects they had arrested in order to release them with their loot.

Police sources say the three demanded

$4 million, 50 rand and US$5 in order to release the suspects and give them back the stolen goods while one of the officers extorted a colour television set and a DVD player from the suspects.

The sources said the suspects were arrested while transporting various goods, among them electrical gadgets, blankets and cellphones, valued at more than $2 billion, from a house in Mandara to Epworth on Thursday night.

The suspects, according to the sources, were using a scotch cart to transport the goods when they were confronted by one of the neighbourhood watch committee members.

They were taken to Epworth Overspill police base where a plan to release them was hatched by the police officer and the two neighbourhood watch committee members.

It is further alleged that the three demanded the cash and foreign currency from the suspects before giving back part of the loot.The case came to light when detectives from Highlands Police Station arrested two suspected thieves on Saturday in Epworth.

The suspects revealed that they were released on Thursday after paying bribes to the policeman and the two neighbourhood watch committee members.

Further investigations led to the arrest of the three, who are expected to appear in court soon.







THE HERALD...


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EXCLUSIVE: MUGABE'S LETTER TO BARRACK!

This was posted on a Zimbabwe forum that I belong to........HERE........go and have a look at the responses by the zanu pf supporters that we on the forum call ''zanoids'' or ''zandroids''......

It originally came from HERE



It is with great joy that I write this letter to congratulate you on your massive victory in the United States Presidential elections.

On behalf of my first lady, Grace, my daughter, Bona -- who absolutely adores you (and swoons every time you come on television) as well as our three sons, I congratulate you on this great victory, which has made me as an elderly African statesman very proud.

I never thought in my heart of hearts I would live to see this glorious day when one of our own would win the highest seat in the US. I thank the spirits of the Gushungo clan and the spirit of my dearly departed mum, Bona (after whom my beloved daughter is named), who have kept me alive just so I could see this day. Those in the winds surely knew the objective of my continued existence on earth and in Zimbabwe's State House. Our ancestors, yours and mine, knew that we have a joint mission.

I send my congratulations on behalf of my entire country, Zimbabwe. We are all indeed proud -- barring of course the few misguided elements among us who think that only white people are capable of ruling nations. You know who they are. I don't have to spell it out for you, my son. I am happy you proved them wrong, like I did.

I hope you don't mind me calling you my son? I don't mean to be disrespectful. But as you will know from the lessons learned at your father's knee -- albeit for that short time -- this is the way of our people. Some people might even say I shouldn't call you my son, as you and Grace are practically the same age! But that doesn't make you less my son.

It makes you more so. In case you are wondering, Grace also loves you. I think. She hasn't exactly said so in so many words, but I see the knowing looks she and Bona trade when we are watching you on the BBC. (Yes I thrive on watching the Beeb; don't believe all that crazy stuff you read that I believe in so-called "100% local content" which my former minister of information thought was a good idea. Honestly! A serious man such as myself should have one's hangovers. Mine is all things British. Oh I do miss my visits to Buckingham Palace, the shopping in Sainsbury and those dainty cucumber sandwiches that Number 10 Downing serves. But please don't repeat this to Gordon Brown.)

A husband always knows when his wife's heart is straying. Even an old one. In fact the other day I overheard Grace on her cellphone, saying to one of her friends, "that BHO is bho sha (that Barack Hussein Obama is great my friend)". She also said you were hot! I asked one of my youngish security details what "hot" means, as I am out of touch with such language. Enough of this chit-chat.

I am writing this letter post-haste because I want to make sure you and I are on the same page. I want to share with you some lessons on leadership, which I have honed in my 28 years in power.

I want to prevent our enemies from getting to you with their side of the story first. And believe me they are already on their way to you. Passport or no passport, I am sure that cowboy in the White House will facilitate you-know-who's entry into Washington soon.  
I must say though I am rather frustrated remembering that you won't be inaugurated until next year! You Americans are a funny breed. What is the point of winning if you don't claim your prize instantly? Where is the gratification in that? Seriously, some of us can't wait a whole quarter of a year before we take office. Who knows what strange things they will do to your office in these last few days? Watch and learn; I was inaugurated within 24 hours. My Zambian colleague, President Rupiah Banda bettered that; he was inaugurated in two hours and even better His Excellency Mwai Kibaki did it within 30 minutes flat! There is a Kenyan worth emulating my son.

One of the first things you must do is distance yourself from that lily-livered fellow Luo of yours, Raila Odinga. He just doesn't think like us good African statesmen. You must change those constitutional rules of yours. A president must quickly take power. Three months is a long time to waste.

It is a great pity that my dear Comrade Eddison Zvobgo, who understood constitution-making so well and who of course knew the American system inside out, died many years ago. I would gladly have sent him over to you. The man was a genius. If it wasn't for him I wouldn't have survived in office for this long. The man assumed that he was doing it for himself.

Can you imagine that he actually wanted to remove me from office before the good Lord that I pray to recalls me to his side? The Lord removed him instead.

You are so young; I am envious. You have at least about 40 years ahead of you in office. And if you listen to elders like us, you will stay until the White House is repainted maroon. Start working on fail-safe constitutional changes that will ensure your longevity in office. This business of being "recalled" out of power à la ANC is just totally unacceptable. People must wait their turn. And in some cases accept that their turn will never come.

When you choose your Cabinet ensure absolute loyalty. Plus fear. Look at my lot. None of them dares to say pwe (say a word) as we say in Shona, in my presence.

When they get too clever, demote them, humiliate them. Seal their loyalty with patronage, a soft loan here, kickbacks there, turn a blind eye to mistakes sometimes. They will stay on side and on message. You may even learn some lessons from your predecessor on how he used the wars he is waging to buy loyalty from those who got contracts. Unluckily you can't just kill your opponents over there, your laws being what they are, but hey, there's always a way around these things. Let's strategise once you settle down.

Now let's move on to my problem. As I lamented earlier it's a pity you won't be in office soon. I need you to weigh in on this so-called crisis in Zimbabwe. As you can see our brother Thabo Mbeki is now out of his depth. So here is what you can do in the meantime. Start talking about Zimbabwe. Remind everyone about the armed struggle that I waged for independence. Then tell them that I am simply here to complete the mission of liberating our people. You, my son, understand history. I don't need to remind you that both of us have a mission to accomplish. Comrade Obama, you are our new hope. You are the perfect person to make the connections with what I have been championing all along.

I will be happy to organise a celebratory event where you can meet many of my colleagues with whom I share these ideas.Just say when and it shall be done. We can use the event to talk at greater length about how we can work together for our continent's benefit and I can share more lessons with you.

Please do not hesitate to contact me to chat very soon, because the task ahead of you is a heavy one. Your young shoulders need all the help they can get. Consider me the African father that you didn't really have for long.

God speed and take care of yourself, my son.

R.G. Mugabe

P.S. Your Michelle is "hot" too by the way! I will link Grace up with her so she can share lessons on how to be a beautiful and quiet wife. She needs reining in now. You will have enough problems to deal with in the world. Managing smart, educated women is quite a chore! I had that with Sally. Yikes! As you Americans would say.

To be continued over cucumber sandwiches once you put in a good word for me with Gordon. He seems a more sober fellow than that one named after our local ablutions.
RGM .......

 

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Mutoko...kids collecting crickets....

>> Monday, November 17, 2008

Kudakwashe Chiveura digs for crickets to eat in Mutoko about 250 kilometres, (155 miles) north east of Harare, Saturday, Nov. 15, 2008. Grazing land has been razed by poachers burning the bush to scare rock rabbits, rodents and small animals for the cooking pot into traps and nets as people look for food. .Jackals, baboons and goats also compete with villagers for roots and wild fruits according to witness accounts. The United Nations has forecast a full scale humanitarian crisis and estimates more than 5 million people, about half the population will need food aid by the beginning of next year. Inflation in Zimbabwe, the highest in the world, pegged at over 213 million percent has spiraled out of control at a time when health and education services have collapsed.











 
  
Two men show their catch of crickets in Mutoko about 250 kilometres north east of Harare,Saturday, November, 15, 2008.

 
  
Kudakwashe Chiveura and his brother James prepare the crickets they have caught before cooking them.

 
Nyasha Chinake, right and his two sisters, Rebeca, left and Janet, centre enjoy a meal including crickets.

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WOZA (Women of Zimbabwe Arise)

>> Sunday, November 16, 2008

Bokani Nleya (L-R), Jenni Williams, Tracy Leigh Doig and Magodonga Mahlangu from WOZA (Women of Zimbabwe Arise) pose with their prize before the Amnesty International 5th Human Rights Award ceremony in Berlin November 16, 2008.


 
Delphine Djiraibe, founder and former president of the Association for the Promotion and Defense of Human Rights in Chad (C) poses with the prize winners Bokani Nleya (L-R), Jenni Williams, Tracy Leigh Doig and Magodonga Mahlangu from WOZA (Women of Zimbabwe Arise) before the Amnesty International 5th Human Rights Award ceremony in Berlin November 16, 2008.

 
WELL DONE TO WOZA.....CONGRATULATIONS AND THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR ALL YOU ARE DOING IN ZIMBABWE......ZIMBABWEAN WOMEN ARE FEARLESS.......

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Brilliant way to get news to Zimbabwe

Via radio, text messaging and the web, Brilliant Pongo ensures precious information reaches his homeland




 
Brilliant Pongo at the University of Wolverhampton
Zimbabwean refugee Brilliant Pongo is putting his PhD into practice, communicating vital news to people in his information-starved homeland.
"Information is power, and this is what Zimbabweans are being denied. It is really, really restricted in Zimbabwe and people need to know what's going on – without that they are controlled by the government and can't react," he says.
Pongo is researching Zimbabwe's media repression for a PhD, after completing a media and communication degree and a postgraduate certificate in education at the University of Wolverhampton.
In his home country, he worked for the Weekend Tribune newspaper before it was shut down by the government in 2004 for being too negative, and as a producer and presenter for the Zimbabwe Broadcast Corporation.
"I was invited to be on a panel on the radio. The manager liked my voice and gave me a job," he says. "I was writing on newspapers and doing radio programmes while things were changing in Zimbabwe. Tensions were rising.
"I was talking about what people were saying about the government, but hadn't envisaged the problems I ended up having. I thought we had freedom of speech and this was a general commentary on what was happening in the country."
Pongo had, however, put himself in danger. Colleagues were being arrested and tortured, and Pongo fled to the UK four years ago. He cannot return for fear of imprisonment and now lives with his wife and three-year-old son in Wolverhampton after being granted political asylum.
But the 31-year-old is determined to reach people in Zimbabwe and keep them informed through news updates, despite the government's efforts to block them.
He hosts shows on the London-based SW Radio Africa, broadcasting to Zimbabwe and takes calls from "citizen journalists" about what's going on in the country.
The Zimbabwean government jams the signal in certain areas, but Pongo and the rest of the team text the latest news updates to thousands of their listeners.
The education system in Zimbabwe has become "dilapidated" he says. "Only 20% of the workforce is still in place, and schools are not functional. Children go to school to play but aren't learning anything - 2008 might be a forgotten year in terms of education."
"Almost half the population have left Zimbabwe. It's a huge brain drain, because most of the people who leave are qualified, educated, highly skilled people who can afford to do so. If we want to try to reconstruct Zimbabwe, we need to involve these people in the diaspora," Pongo says.
He has set up an online entertainment website to keep exiled Zimbabweans all over the world in touch with the country's culture, music and films, to celebrate these things rather than focus purely on the political situation.
"I want to show the positive side of Zimbabwe," he says. "Sometimes we tend to get mixed up and think it's a bad country but it's not, it just has bad leaders. It is a beautiful country, and I hope to return one day. Like so many who have left, I am getting an education that will benefit us all in the future."
Brilliant is one of more than 200 students from Zimbabwe studying at Wolverhampton.


FROM HERE.....

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Murehwa Zimbabwe....12/11/08 PICS....

>> Friday, November 14, 2008

A young boy throws fruits to his sister while sitting in a tree in Murehwa Zimbabwe, about 120 kilometers (75 miles) north of Harare, Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2008. Jackals, baboons and goats also compete with villagers for roots and wild fruits according to witness accounts. The United Nations has forecast a full scale humanitarian crisis and estimates more than five million people, about half the population will need food aid by the beginning of next year. Zimbabwe's inflation, the highest in the world pegged at over 213 million percent has spiraled out of control at a time when health and education services have collapsed.


Children from Murehwa, Zimbabwe, about 120 kilometers (75 miles) north of Harare, help themselves to wild fruits in the area, Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2008.  




A young boy uses a stick to get wild fruits from a tree in Murehwa Zimbabwe, about 120 kilometers (75 miles) north of Harare, Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2008.




A child perched in a tree eats wild fruit in Murehwa, Zimbabwe.
 
 
A young boy shows fruit he has collected from the trees in Murehwa Zimbabwe.
 
A young girl picks up fruit fallen from a tree in Murehwa Zimbabwe.
Thokozani Khupe, deputy president of the main opposition party in Zimbabwe, the MDC, addresses a press conference in Harare, Friday, Nov. 14, 2008. Khupe announced that his party was not going to be part of President Robert Mugabe's government despite a directive by SADC, Southern African Development Community that both Zanu pf and the MDC form a government of National Unity.
Zimbabwe opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) vice-president Thokozani Khupe addresses media in Harare on November 14, 2008 after the party leadership rejected a proposal by regional leaders that the MDC form an inclusive government with President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF and sharing the home affairs ministry. She also criticised the leaders of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) regional bloc for insisting that Zimbabwe form a unity government immediately. 
 
  

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Maggots crawling out of Tsholotsho mortuary

>> Thursday, November 13, 2008

AN UNDISCLOSED number of bodies have reached a deplorable state of decomposition at the Tsholotsho District Hospital mortuary following the breakdown of the morgue’s compressor leaving the refrigerators not functioning a fortnight ago, Sunday News can reveal.

This paper’s news crew that was in the area on Thursday witnessed fully-grown maggots rolling out of the morgue through door holes.


The already “sorry situation’ is reported to have been exacerbated by unscheduled power load shedding by Zesa over a prolonged period of time which saw the bodies turning bad before relatives collected them.
There was a terrible stench emanating from the mortuary and green flies were in droves and the unbearable hot weather condition further exacerbated this unfortunate state of affairs. 


Tsholotsho centre residents and villagers are not happy with this development and are calling upon relevant authorities to move in swiftly to avert a health catastrophe at the area.


The District Medical officer (DMO), Dr Claudius Verenga said the sorry sight was a result of a non-functioning morgue’s compressor and the rampant load shedding by the power utility.


“The compressor has been giving problems for the past week or so and there is also the issue of load shedding as well, as electricity goes for more than two days at times.


But just like meat goes bad when it is in a non functioning fridge and emits a bad smell so do the bodies at the mortuary that is the situation we can relate to the state of the mortuary,” said Dr Verenga.


The DMO further explained that the situation was due to the excessive shortage of staff at the mortuary as they were also failing to release bodies, as post mortems were not being done.


The Minister of Health and Child Welfare, Dr David Parirenyatwa and his Deputy, Dr Edwin Muguti could not be reached on their phones late yesterday.


Several mortuaries in the country have been facing similar or worse situations including overloading of bodies like at the Gweru General Hospital. The morgue, which only had a capacity to accommodate 24 bodies at a time, was reportedly holding over 100 bodies.


Private mortuaries are very expensive and relatives of the deceased people usually have no choice, but to leave their relatives to rot and those who can afford move them to other hospitals where the mortuaries are working.


Zimbabwe’s health delivery system suffered a major knock because of the illegal economic sanctions imposed on the country by the west. There are no drugs in hospitals and doctors and nurses are leaving the country in droves to greener pastures as the over stretched Government cannot afford to pay them in hard currency.


Several Government schemes have been put in place to cushion senior civil servants but the efforts go down the drain due to hyperinflationary environment existing in the country. The people living with HIV and AIDS are the most affected as the cost of the life serving Anti Retroviral Drugs are even beyond the people in the middle class level. 



MY SAY....
Does any one see the weapon that these supposedly ''targeted sanctions'' have given ''zanu pf,mugabe and the generals'' to use as the excuse for their ''looting'' the crap out of the country.....these guys are going to ''loot'' the crap out of the country whether there are ''targeted sanctions'' or not and the people will think it is the ''targeted sanctions'' that have and are causing the mess that is there now......

''mugabe'' allowed all the corruption,violence,abuse and killings that his zanu pf elite squad have and are committing for the soul purpose of being able to keep a firm desperate grasp on their ''loyalties'' to him.....

All these ''zanu pf elite fat cats'' owe everything that they have to the ''looting program'' ....even the food that they eat is bought with money from ''the looting fund'' so they will move heaven.earth and hell to keep mugabe in power......their lives depend on it....

Once again I ask the ''put more sanctions on Zimbabwe'' squealing brigade ....just what have your ''targeted sanctions'' stopped any of the ''zanu pf fat cat elite brigade'' from doing......they still travel,shop and holiday all over the world.....Grace Mugabe still gets food etc from Harods in the UK.....she still flys all over the world to do her designer shopping or she has the stuff flown into Zimbabwe for her......

SO WHO AND WHAT HAVE YOU LOT OF SQUEALERS STOPPED THEM DOING......?????



Remember this...... 









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LEO MUGABE.....

>> Saturday, November 8, 2008

Profile: Sheltered by R.G. Mugabe's cronyism, nepotism, corruption and other "activities of the dark," Leo Mugabe, self proclaimed prophet, spews nonsense.

 

 
Comrade Mugabe leans forward, eyes popping behind glinting spectacles. To him it's obvious: The global financial meltdown, coming after endless Western ridicule of Zimbabwe's economy, is no coincidence.
It's an act of God.

"The world is tumbling, but ours is going on. Doesn't that surprise you?" he says, with a meaningful glance. "What is happening in Wall Street - what relationship does it have with this little country called Zimbabwe? It's divine intervention. Absolutely."

This Mugabe is not the man who has ruled Zimbabwe for 28 years. It is his nephew, Leo Mugabe: businessman, farmer, former lawmaker, channel surfer of religious programs and, like his uncle, target of international sanctions.

He notes, with a smile of satisfaction, that the Western financial mess makes Zimbabwe look good by comparison. The country may have inflation of 231 million percent, but the U.S. bank bailout has even more zeros.

Leo Mugabe is the son of President Robert G. Mugabe's sister Sabina and is described as the president's favorite nephew. He runs an engineering company called Integrated Contracting Engineers, which is powerful by virtue of his connections and has won several big government infrastructure projects.

The 51-year-old sees Zimbabwe almost as a chosen country. Any other would have crumbled with just half Zimbabwe's inflation, yet it still somehow struggles along, he says.

"I know how to communicate with God"
 
 
Leo Mugabe

Expansive and relaxed, he offers a fervid defense of the government, reflecting the view of his uncle's ZANU-PF party that the entire crisis boils down to the West's determination to use sanctions to oust a plucky regime that thwarted colonial exploitation on the continent. "God has answered. But he has not finished answering them for the illegal sanctions. I believe you'll see more floods, cyclones, fires and economic woes, just by us kneeling down and asking God to rescue us from them."

Leo Mugabe's name was added to the list of individuals facing U.S. sanctions early this year. He also faces European Union sanctions as director of Zimbabwe's state-owned arms-dealing company, Zimbabwe Defense Industries. The sanctions freeze assets in Europe and the United States, ban travel in those places and bar U.S. firms from doing business with him and Europeans from trading with the arms company.

A Roman Catholic, he attends Mass regularly and claims to be able to tell which TV preachers are crooks and which ones are pure, because, he says: "I know how to communicate with God."

His wife, Veronica, sued him for divorce this year, accusing him of womanizing. The divorce writ led to a flurry of scandal in the news media. Demanding a half-share in his property, she asserted that he owned three farms - a claim he denied.

Leo Mugabe was arrested and briefly jailed in 2005, accused of smuggling flour into Mozambique; the case was dropped for lack of evidence. He used to serve as chairman of the national soccer governing body, the Zimbabwe Football Association, until late 2002, when there was a vote of no confidence in his leadership over an accusation of misappropriation of a $61,000 grant, a charge he also denied.

ZANU-PF has ruled Zimbabwe since independence in 1980, but disputed elections this year led to a power-sharing deal with the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, a deal now in doubt with the parties quarreling over Cabinet posts.

Leo Mugabe said the regime's willingness to give the posts to the opposition was a magnanimous gesture based on the interests of the country but warned that if opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai failed to take the deal soon, he'd end up with nothing. "We are an economy under siege, and obviously we are experiencing challenges which have resulted in this political settlement so we can create a political environment conducive to better economic performance, because all political parties have their country at heart," he said.

But he said the deal was not a power transfer. "We share what we have. It comes from he who holds it. He's sharing."

Optimism is rare in Zimbabwe these days, but Leo Mugabe exudes it: It will rain. There will be a good harvest. "And our life will begin to be the way it should be. Don't forget - God is here in Zimbabwe now."

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This is one of the guys that has these so called ''targeted sanctions'' on them.....hasn't stopped him from doing a damn thing......but it has ruined the country and hit the ordinary person so hard....the very poor have been hit the hardest and are suffering the worst.,.....so your fantastic ''targeted sanctions'' havent and aren't working against the people that you wanted them to.....

GET RID OF THE DAMN THINGS......

 

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AN APPEAL FOR HELP

>> Friday, November 7, 2008

Hi there all…….I have  hell of a problem with my nephew back home in Zim……he is on Phenobarbital 90 mgs a day…..he has Epilepsy which he got when he was a baby and involved in a car smash that killed his Dad……anyway about 2 weeks ago when he went to pick up his meds for the month they were told that the Phenobarbital  was not available in Zim anymore and put him onto some other meds which are not controling the fits properly and his Mom has not slept at night as she is sitting up watching to see that he does not fit during the night……

I have tried everything that I can to find some one to help me get the meds for him here in Cape Town and then send them through to Zim but no one wants to help…..


PLEASE I AM BEGGING ANYONE THAT CAN HELP ME THIS IS REALLY URGENT AND MY LAST RESORT…….I DON’T KNOW WHAT ELSE TO DO……


If anyone can help please e-mail me at sallyspencer@yahoo.com

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LATEST PICS OUT OF ZIM......MORE SANCTIONS ARE NEEDED...

>> Thursday, November 6, 2008

A woman suspected of cholera is brought in a pushcart to a clinic in Harare November 4, 2008. Zimbabwe state media reported the troubled southern African country was battling a cholera outbreak that has killed nine people in Harare, as residents grapple with acute water shortages and burst sewers.






A woman suspected of cholera is helped to stand upon arrival at a clinic in Harare November 4, 2008.





In this photo supplied by Four Paws the carcass of an elephant lies in the Hwange National Park in Zimbabwe Sunday Oct. 19, 2008. Once known for its natural beauty and wealth of wildlife, Zimbabwe's economic crisis and lack of drinking water for the elephants has left authorities battling to maintain the reserve. Poaching is increasing as hungry Zimbabweans look for alternative sources of food.







A Zimbabwean holds a new one million dollar note, introduced by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe in Harare, Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2008. Zimbabwe is battling with the worlds highest inflation currently estimated at over 300 million percent.


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COME ON ''SANCTIONS FOR ZIMBABWE'' SQUEALERS YOU AREN'T DOING YOUR JOB VERY WELL THERE ARE STILL PEOPLE ALIVE IN ZIM.........

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