Join us in praying for the people of Zimbabwe. Take a minute to read the stories and learn more about the government, the people and the churches of Zimbabwe. Contact the Lead Team if you are interested in helping out!
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As we go forward, may the peace of God be with you; and may we pray for that peace to be found throughout the great nation of Zimbabwe.
Pastors released on bail: January 30, 2007
By a Correspondent
HARARE - Eight Zimbabwean church leaders have been released on bail after being detained for allegedly holding an illegal political meeting in a church on the evening of 26 January 2007, said officials siad today.
The church leaders were charged with breaching a section of the criminal law codification act outlawing political gatherings without police permission, for the meeting held in the town of Kadoma, southwest of the capital, Harare - as previously reported on Ekklesia.
Pastor Lucky Moyo, a spokesperson for the Christian Alliance, a coalition of mainly Pentecostal churches campaigning for good governance, said: “The pastors have been finally released today on 100,000 dollars bail each.”
Magistrate Remigius Jemwa remanded the case to 5 March 2007. Pastor Moyo said: “The Christian Alliance had organised the meeting … to launch a chapter in Kadoma. It was attended by scores of Christians from across denominations. The meeting was for Christians who felt they cannot remain silent while the country burns with companies closing, inflation hitting everyone hard and the majority of the people are suffering.”
The cleric added: “We are not aligned to any political party and we don’t mind who rules this country as long as they are accountable and respect the rights of all citizens. We are just against the prevailing situation characterised by looting and misgovernance.”
Meanwhile, leading civil rights activist Lovemore Madhuku, chair of the National Constitutional Assembly (NCA), was arrested in Harare over a brief protest last week against plans by the ruling party to extend President Robert Mugabe’s term by another two years in 2008.
The NCA said: “Madhuku is currently detained at Harare central police station, where he is being interrogated by police assistant commissioner Bothwell Mugariri.”
Zimbabwe is in the throes of chronic economic crises with four-digit inflation, massive joblessness and at least 80 per cent of the population living below the poverty threshold.
Rob lives in Richmond, Virginia and is currently finishing college at Virginia Commonwealth University. He has been active on the Student Government Association and has worked with Virginia21, a student lobbying organization, as well as the Pre-Law Society and the University Hearing Board, an honor council for upper level offenses. His research has dealt with regional economic cooperation and integration in southern Africa, particularly dealing with the independent policy decisions made by South Africa and how they affect local trade agreements with Front-Line States such as Zimbabwe and Mozambique. Rob is interested in law, politics, and intelligence, and had a recent internship with the Supreme Court of Virginia. In his spare time he likes to surf, play guitar, read, and spend time with his friends.
PZ Graphic Designer
My name is Karl. I am a sophomore Studio Art major at the University of Mary Hardin-Baylor, and my dream is to get a masters of art in Africa, and hopefully teach and live in Africa indefinitely. I am also the president of an organization called Waypoint that promotes awareness for social issues both locally and globally. My prayer is that we can reach as many people as possible to educate them on what is happening in Africa and the world.
Zimbabwe, the land of dying children: January 7, 2007
By RW Johnson
Harare — Suffer the little children is a phrase never far from your mind in today’s Zimbabwe. The horde of painfully thin street kids milling around you at traffic lights is almost the least of it: in a population now down to 11million or less, there are an estimated 1.3 million orphans.
Go to one of the overflowing cemeteries in Bulawayo or Beit Bridge, and you are struck by the long lines of tiny graves for babies and toddlers. Hyena attacks on humans, previously unheard of, are increasingly common.
“So many babies, not all of them dead, are being dumped in the bush that hyenas have developed a taste for human flesh,” a game ranger said.
A staggering 42,000 women died in childbirth last year, compared with fewer than 1000 a decade ago.
A vast human cull is under way in Zimbabwe, and the majority of deaths are a direct result of government policies.
Ignored by the UN, it is a genocide perhaps 10 times greater than Darfur’s and more than twice as large as Rwanda’s.
The situation is as described in the UN Convention on genocide, which defines it as “deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part”.
Reckoning the death toll is difficult. Had demographic growth continued normally, Zimbabwe’s population would have passed 18million by the end of last year. But people have fled in large numbers, with 3million heading for South Africa and an estimated further 1million scattered around the world.
This would suggest a current population of 14million. But even the Government, which tries to make light of the issue, says only 12million are left in Zimbabwe.
Social scientists estimate the population at between 8million and 11million. But even if you accepted the Government figure, 2million people are “missing”, and the real number is probably 3million or more.
The number is escalating as the effects of years of malnutrition and abuse take their toll. And all this is happening in what was until recently one of Africa’s most prosperous states and a member of the Commonwealth.
Such comfort abruptly vanished after 2000, when President Robert Mugabe launched farm transfers and a political terror campaign to counter a rising tide of opposition.
Bulawayo, capital of Matabeleland, is a virtual ghost town, for emigration and starvation have drained its lifeblood.
Matabeleland, the centre of opposition to Mugabe, was the first to experience his iron fist in the mid-1980s and has taken more punishment in recent years.
Last year, in common with the rest of the country, it was the target of Operation Murambatsvina (Shona for “drive out the filth”) in which the police and army destroyed shanty towns and cracked down on unlicensed traders after Mugabe decreed that they needed to be forcibly “re-ruralised” to regain their peasant roots. About 2 million people were affected.
Just what that meant becomes clear from the study carried out by the Reverend Albert Chatindo, whose parish, Killarney, lies on Bulawayo’s northern side.
Here, 217 families (1300 people) whose houses had been demolished crowded into his church hall - only for the army to load them into trucks and dump them in the middle of the bush without food or shelter. A few made it back to Killarney, but half are dead, the children from exposure and malnutrition.
Others tell me in hushed tones of the latest atrocity, Operation Maguta (live well), prompted by a shortfall in maize production since the whites’ commercial farms were destroyed.
Under Maguta, the army descends on villagers on communal land to compel them to grow maize and sorghum, which they must then sell to the army-run Grain Marketing Board.
In Matabeleland, where maize does not grow well, the army has gone in hard, beating peasants who resist, raping women chopping down orchards and tearing up vegetable patches.
The outspoken views of Pius Ncube, the Catholic Archbishop of Matabeleland, have earned him several death threats. But he refuses to stay quiet. “I am perfectly willing to die,” he said.
I ask him about the infamous statement by Mugabe’s henchman (and boss of the secret police), Didymus Mutasa, in 2002, that “we would be better off with only 6million people, with our own people who support the liberation struggle. We don’t want all these extra people”.
Is the Government trying to reduce the population? Ncube shakes his head slowly. “What is going on is truly evil but I do not think they set out to kill people, it is just that they do not care.
“Their only concern is to stay in power and enrich themselves and to turn people into terrified, compliant subjects … Mugabe is a murderer and also a traitor - he is selling the country to the Chinese. It is lonely to be the only one to say that.”
Harare’s northern suburbs are as beautiful as ever - tall trees, wonderful plants and flowers and luxuriant birdlife.
But death is all around. As I drive through the suburbs I see inert bodies lying on the kerb and in the grass, bodies which have not changed position when I come back half an hour later.
Harare, being the capital, you also see the luxurious Mercedes and SUVs of the ruling Zanu-PF elite and their business allies.
Despite the horrendous death toll, the Archbishop is right. This is not a genocide like that in Rwanda, where about 900,000 people were butchered in an orgy of tribal hatred. Instead, the regime’s key motive at every stage has been its own maintenance in power.
From 2000 on, it destroyed commercial agriculture because it saw the white farmers and their workers as support for the opposition to Mugabe.
The evictions had the effect of collapsing the economy and cutting the food supply far below subsistence level in every subsequent year.
About 29 per cent of sexually active Zimbabweans are reckoned to be HIV-positive and the economic collapse has devastated the health system and stopped the distribution of anti-AIDS drugs.
World Health Organisation figures show life expectancy in Zimbabwe, which was 62 in 1990, had plummeted to 37 for men and 34 for women by 2004. These are by far the worst such figures in the world.
Yet Zimbabwe does not even get on to the UN agenda: South Africa’s President Thabo Mbeki, who has covered for Mugabe, uses his leverage to prevent discussion. How long this can go on is anyone’s guess.
Mugabe - and, to a considerable extent, Mbeki - have already been responsible for far more deaths than Rwanda suffered, and the number is fast heading into realms previously explored only by Stalin, Mao and Adolf Eichmann.
The Sunday Times
My name is Kiki, and my husband Doug and I serve as directors of a college ministry in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. I was born in Zimbabwe and grew up in Sesame, Sanyati, and Gweru.
Over the Christmas break, I went back for the first time since college. It was so good to be home, and yet life has become so difficult for our friends and family there in Zimbabwe. It hurt to see those who had poured into and mentored me in my life struggling simply to make it from one day to the next. I am praying that God will soon restore the dignity, honor and respect that they are due, and that Zimbabwe would once again be re-established as a proud and beautiful land.
“I will lift up my eyes to the mountains; From where shall my help come? My help comes from the LORD, Who made heaven and earth.” (Psalm 121:1-2)