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Cholera: The word that leaves even Mugabe fearful

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Published Date: 22 November 2008
ZIMBABWEANS are dying on the streets as a cholera epidemic, raging unchecked because of the total collapse of hospitals and sewage systems, sweeps through nine out of ten provinces.
The disease has claimed hundreds of lives of people already ravaged by famine or Aids, with the number of cholera victims crossing the Limpopo River, which forms the South Africa-Zimbabwe frontier, increasing by the hour. Many are dying on South African soil.

James McGee, the US ambassador to Zimbabwe, put the number of confirmed cholera deaths at a minimum of 294, and warned that the true toll was greater. "The overall health and food situation is frankly intolerable," he said. "Clinics in the countryside are unable to operate and are turning patients away. In some places, police have been stationed outside clinics to ensure that no-one can enter."

Mike Dziruni, who lives in the Harare township of Glen Norah, watched his nieces, Maria and Bridget Dziruni, 24 and 21, die from cholera.

He said: "It is the water we drink and the raw sewage that flows like rivers in our streets that made them sick. We don't have clean water. The government is failing us. It says we should eat hot food and boil water, but we don't have electricity and firewood is too expensive to heat food or water."

Médecins Sans Frontières, one of the few international non-governmental organisations still operating in Zimbabwe, said 1.5 million people were at risk of cholera.

The Zimbabwean Association of Doctors for Human Rights (ZADHR), blaming the Mugabe government for the catastrophe, appealed for international intervention and aid.

There are no precise statistics for the epidemic: government offices are not functioning and there is no-one to collect figures or to register births and deaths, because the infrastructure has collapsed.

Primrose Matambanadzo, the ZADHR co-ordinator, said: "We cannot continue to watch helplessly while patients die in thousands."

State hospitals in Harare, the capital, have closed after staff walked off the job over abysmal pay, horrendous working conditions and a chronic lack of essential drugs and medical materials. Most hospitals have been turning people away and most local clinics are closed.

Some wonder if this may be the disaster that finally brings down Robert Mugabe, the president. He cannot counteract the epidemic because he has presided over the total collapse of Zimbabwe's infrastructure, and has chosen international isolation over rescue bids.

Three high-profile members of Nelson Mandela's group, the Elders, will today visit Zimbabwe to assess the escalating humanitarian crisis. However, Mr Mugabe said yesterday that the Elders would not be welcome and he would not meet them.

"I wonder if they'll even get into the country," one observer commented.


Termites for teas as Zimbabwe suffers

CHILDREN near Murehwa prod sticks into a termite mound to draw out insects to eat, sweeping them into a bag for their family's evening meal.

Famine is taking hold as Zimbabwe's economy is in crisis, and a political deadlock has left the nation without a functioning government since disputed elections in March.

A power-sharing deal signed two months ago has stalled over the allocation of ministries between Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF party and the opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change.

Meanwhile, the people find other ways to stave off hunger pains, such as picking up single corn kernels spilled from trucks that ferry the harvest to market. Shingirayi Chiyamite is a trader from Harare who brings household goods to the countryside to barter for crops. A 12in bar of laundry soap is exchanged for 22lb of corn.

He crisscrosses the land in search of the few villages that have corn to spare, hauls his purchases to the highway and hitchhikes back to the city. Some of the corn will feed his family, the rest he sells. He is constantly on the move. "If you rest, you starve," he says.

In a school in Doma where the class size has dwindled from 20 to four, parents pay those teachers still willing to work in corn, cooking oil, goats or chickens. One trip by bus to the nearest bank to draw their government salaries costs more than teachers earn in a month.

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  • Last Updated: 21 November 2008 11:32 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Zimbabwe
 
1

Rob Bennett,

Point Piper Australia 22/11/2008 02:28:08
Here we have yet another sickening example of the dire situation in parts of Africa that could spread across the world if unimpeded. All that wasted money spent on the illegal destruction of Iraq and their civilians, all that depleted uranium that will one day cause terrible deformities, the global warming that has been ignored. The Bush administration has been a dismal failure, a wasted opportunity to advance forward and do something constructive and positive about the poverty and plight of people in Africa. The republican administration with it's bellicose attitude has helped to create all of these problems and has now left Obama with an incredibly difficult job of righting the wrongs and getting the world back on track.
2

Trade-wind,

Usa 22/11/2008 04:29:44
To Rob Bennett,Point Piper Australia.

What would you know but what the press has told you. You are in one part of the world and don't have a clue what happens here. If
you believe the hacks that write with a bias you are a fool. Bush is not responcible for all the worlds ills no matter how much you would like to believe it. Comment on your own country there is plenty to talk about over there. Soon you can kiss the backside of the next president and them blame all of his failings on Bush as well. Your comments are childish at best and moronic at worst. Get involved, get informed and start acting like someone who knows that what happens in ZIM couldn't possibly have anything to do with the US.
If we were to start getting involved over there you would blame us for trying to steal the countries natural resources. To late for that though because MUGs has already done that. It could just be Mugs is responcible for Zims tragic state. 28 years of that fool has been just about all it took to shatter what was a shining example of good government. The people of Zim have only themselves to blame for putting that stupid prat in charge to begin with.

Hope you are well!
3

james 1st,

hamilton nz 22/11/2008 07:40:01
bush has been a terrible president who has done more harm to the usa reputation than perhaps any other, but i agree with #2 i dont think he can be blamed for zimbabwe
mugabe is the problem together with the incompetence of the other african states in not removing him from power. south africa has showed n leadership whatsoever in this crisis
it appears that africa will do nothing, but if europe or the usa take action the africans will complain about their colonial attitude
the african states would rather see zimbabweans die than help
4

oder,

Scotland 22/11/2008 07:40:28
Rob Bennett,Point Piper Australia

I remember well when Zimbabwe was Rhodesia it was a first world country then, the education system for Africans was one of the best in Africa! one child in six had schooling as compared to the worst 1 in 116(Ethiopia) 20% on the national budget was spent on education,few countries in the world and certainly none in Africa spend that amount!just because the tribal chief can read does not he makes a good minister of education!
you criticize the Americans yet they are the biggest aid donors to Africa almost in every African country there are dictators, murderers,despots and they are supported by the so called "African leaders" who have in fact betrayed their own people! more Africans have died in the last 50 years than the preceding 100 under white rule! we in the have played the political correctness game "all men are equal" then looked the other way when the likes of Mugabe goes on murder and killing spree! Africa's problems are a created by Africans leaders who don't know and don't care! and of course the old rallying call its the "white man fault" always handy to fall back on! many African countries have had independence and equality for 50/60 years and they are in a far precarious state now than they have ever been!
suggest you get a reality check, go and spend some time in Africa!
5

fife runner,

22/11/2008 08:09:48
I am far from being a Bush suporter or of USA foreign policy but what has Bush to do with the issues in Zimbabwe. As far as I know Mugabe has blamed the UK. If you play Mugabes blame game then you fall inot his trap. Mugabe and no one esle is to blame. As for the rest of Africa and its problems this has to be sorted out by Africa. Lets not hark back to the old colonial powers being to blame. Perhaps it was during this time at least Africa had some stabilty.

India and China for example have done well and not become basket cases. Perhaps Africa has used excuses for too long and not looked at itself. Its like criminals who keep blaming society and only until they begin to accept they need to do something will a change be seen. Same goes for Africa.
6

Draco Was a Wimp,

Edinburgh 22/11/2008 08:10:32
That Ian Smith chap was a shocking despot.
7

oder,

Scotland 22/11/2008 08:19:27
6 Draco Was a Wimp,

your correct he`s the only African leader who made sure the was enough food to eat, unlike today's leaders who require American food aid.
8

Draco Was a Wimp,

Edinburgh 22/11/2008 09:01:47
#8 Rules

On the contrary. Smith was a very efficient white African running an overwhelmingly black country. He may well have been a racist but he wasn't nasty and vindictive like Mugabe, who, to me, appears just as racist. Depends what's your biggest priority in life I suppose, a vote or food, clean water and a reasonable chance of living past 40.....
9

media 01,

cape town 22/11/2008 10:20:41
The disease has now crossed the border, although in SA we are equipped with a European infrastructure, not an African one, thus we will manage the situation.
We also have a new minister of health, a white woman Barbara Hogan who was a real thorn in the side of the old apartheid government. She unlike her predecessor is intelligent and competent, so that is also a bonus.
Mugabe is a racist, he hates whites and believes that black people must rule Africa - I agree that black people must rule Arica, but only once they have the minds to do so - this continent does not look the way it does because of good governance now does it?
10

L. Bannerman,

The Bronx 22/11/2008 12:18:48
With global warming growing worse by the day and our economy going down the drain we could all end up in the midst of a cholera epidemic or something similar
11

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 22/11/2008 12:37:08
Discouraging news but didn't we see it coming?

At least THIS cannot be blamed on Bush but only on the insane rule of Mugabe and his coterie of murderers, rapists, thugs, and lying "ministers".
12

Griffe,

22/11/2008 13:12:19
Lets hope Mugabe and his cronies catch cholera. Justice at last for the people.
13

Symon,

USA 22/11/2008 15:00:46
it's a very sad situation over there in Zimbabwe and those neighboring countries. The war the hunger and diseases are really shocking
14

Bele's bane,

Scotland 22/11/2008 15:59:54
Post #2 Trade Wind USA

How gullible could the people of the US be to have believed Bush lie that a third rate, tin pot dictator like Saddam ruling a fourth rate country like Iraq could launch a fleet of rowing boats, the last one of which towing an imaginary H bomb behind it in a washing tub to invade the USA?

Did you not even collectively question the fact that the Iraqi rowers would simply be too exhausted to initiate an attack on the USA after all the rowing accross the Atlantic in open rowing boats??

Bush has sown the seeds for retalliation in some unconventional way, unfortunately the rest of the Western Worlad will also be paying the price of America's gullibility and folly!

The pirates of Somalia, the problems of Zimbabwe and the Congo could do with some attention, they after all pose potential future problems for the world, you were so keen to "liberate" oil rich Iraq, install a compliant American Puppet Government and invade another country that could not defend itself, Afganistan.

Saddam's imaginary H Bomb did not present such a problem per se for the rest of the world as the Somalian Piracy. Now if America wanted to do something constructive it could divert a few ships from their being assigned by Bush to harass Iran and go chase a few pirates around instead!
15

It's life but not as we know it,

The Oort Clouds 22/11/2008 16:52:36
and why is this our problem? They can go fix themselves now that they have expelled the white man. That's what independence is all about. Good luck.
16

Dragonhead,

Dalian,China 23/11/2008 11:02:46
Southern Rhodesia to Zimbabwe. Bread basket to Basket case, it is called Africanization.#1 Rob Bennett,you are a certifiable basket case, with the mental acumen of an aborigine caterpillar lunch.Sort your own problems out in Ockerland sport! My brother was a resident of QueQue, been there too have you? Then follow your own advice and put wood int hole!
Tribalism is alive and well in Africa, the 'Aid Black Hole of the planet'. Leave them to sort out their own well deserved mess.
17

Rob Bennett,

Point Piper Australia 24/11/2008 00:52:54
#17 Dragonhead
"Rob Bennett,you are a certifiable basket case"
That's not a very nice thing to say buddy, where's your manners? The answer to your question is no, I haven't been to Zimbabwe. As far as Africa is concerned I've only been to South Africa, Kenya, Morocco and Egypt. I still hope to travel all across Africa one day. I spent 5 years of my life traveling non stop around the globe staying in scores of countries. I still have that travel bug inside me so I tend to visit a new country whenever I have the time. I seem to recall you commenting on another thread about providing aid for Africa: “Homeless,and without food etc. All the usual ingredients to make westerners put their hands in their pockets to support yet another disaster, not of their making. When Oh! when are the oil rich nations of Africa going to step in with massive amounts of aid?”
The sooner the UN does something positive and constructive the better. Your little American mate Carolyn mouths off about every country in the world and I doubt very much whether she's ever stepped off US soil.

 

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