The Ongoing Tragedy of Zimbabwe
November 22nd, 2008
By MARK DANIELS
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After losing a presidential election but declaring victory, Mugabe et al entered into a power-sharing standoff with actual winner Morgan Tsvangirai.
Since then, a major new Zimbabwean humanitarian crisis has been brewing. The BBC reports that “nearly half the population” will need food by early next year. The report goes on:
a cholera outbreak in Zimbabwe, which has killed nearly 300 people, has created a new sense of urgency.
A “group of Elders,” including former President Jimmy Carter, former United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan, and Graca Machel, wife of Nelson Mandela, has been trying to get into Zimbabwe with the purpose of measuring the breadth of the impending crisis for international aid agencies. Such a measurement could be an important first-step in helping the world community address the crisis in a targeted, successful way.
But the Mugabe government, still in control, has denied visas to these three, known as the “Elders.” It seems that the Mugabe government is willing, like despots throughout history, to preside over the unnecessary suffering and death of their countrymen so long as they continue to avoid the privilege of presiding. It’s a tragedy.
To learn more about Zimbabwe, go here.
[This has been crossposted at my personal blog.]
This entry was posted on Saturday, November 22nd, 2008 at 5:02 am and is filed under Famine, Food Shortages, Zimbabwe, Mass Murder, Jimmy Carter, Society, Health, Africa, Foreign Affairs. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.










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