Friday, September 17, 2010

AMERICAN DOCTORS GO TO COURT IN HARARE....PICS

American doctors who were arrested in Zimbabwe for allegedly operating a clinic without a licence in the capital Harare arrive at a Magistrate Court in Harare on September 13, 2010. Zimbabwe's public health sector is still recovering from the country's decade-long political and economic crisis, which saw most hospitals and clinics close.










New Zealand doctor, Reid Andrew John, left and American doctors, David Greenburg,Anthony Eugene Jones, Gregory Reinard and Gloria Cox Cronwell, appear at the magistrates courts in Harare, Monday, Sept. 13, 2010. A Zimbabwean court has freed on bail four Americans arrested and accused of treating AIDS patients without proper medical licenses. A magistrate ordered the six health workers, who included a New Zealand national and a Zimbabwean, to pay a $200 bail and to reappear in court on Sept. 27. They could face a fine and deportation. The court ordered them to surrender their passports and live at their Mother of Peace Orphanage outside Harare until their trial.





Zimbabwean doctor Tembinkosi Nkomanza, left, American doctors, David Greenburg, , Anthony Eugene Jones, New Zealand doctor Reid Andrew John Cheyne, American doctor, Gregory Reinard and far right Gloria Cox Cronwell outside the magistrates courts in Harare, where they appeared Monday, Sept. 13, 2010. The six were charged under Zimbabwean laws for practicing medicine and selling drugs without a licence. They were released on bail after paying $200 each







American doctors, from left, Gregory Reinard, David Greenburg, Gloria Cox Cronwell and New Zealand doctor Reid Andrew John appear at the magistrates courts in Harare, Monday, September, 13, 2010. A Zimbabwean court has freed on bail four Americans arrested and accused of treating AIDS patients without proper medical licenses. A magistrate ordered the six health workers, who included a New Zealand national and a Zimbabwean, to pay a $200 bail and to reappear in court on Sept. 27. They could face a fine and deportation. The court ordered them to surrender their passports and live at their Mother of Peace Orphanage outside Harare until their trial.




Beer vendors count their money while selling beer at a street corner in Harare, Thursday, September, 9, 2010. Sales of beer in the country have surged by 50 percent in the past year and the biggest formal brewer and soft drink maker reported a sevenfold jump in its income as Zimbabweans dig into their savings and even risk their lives to drink more.







A woman makes a delivery of new stocks of beer at a street corner in Harare, Thursday, Sept. 9, 2010.




Senegalese-American singer Akon performs during a concert at the National Sports Stadium in Zimbabwe's capital, Harare, September 5, 2010. Picture taken September 5, 2010.







 Senegalese born American artiste Akon performs in a balloon moving around thousands of fans at the National Sports Stadium in Harare, Sunday, Sept. 5, 2010. Akon and Jamaican artiste Sean Paul performed in Zimbabwe in what promoters said was one of the biggest entertainment events in the country.




 A man takes a drink beer in Harare, Thursday, Sept, 9, 2010. Sales of beer have surged by 50 percent in Zimbabwe over the past year amid the misery of daily power and water outages and ongoing economic woes.






Zimbabweans buy beer from a counter at a beer stall in Harare, Thursday, Sept. 9, 2010.




West Indies cricket Legend, Brian Lara, right and his girl friend Susan Gossage upon their arrival in Harare, Thursday, Sept. , 2, 2010. The Trindad and Tobago born cricketer is in Zimbabwe as a guest honour at the annual cricket awards.







Senegalese-American singer Akon performs during a concert at the National Sports Stadium in Zimbabwe's capital, Harare, Septermber 5, 2010. Picture taken September 5, 2010.


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