ZIMBABWE: A House Divided
Tuesday, February 09, 2010   21:32 GMT    
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ZIMBABWE: One Million Casualties of Land Reform
By Ann Hellman
JOHANNESBURG and CAPE TOWN - The seizure of large commercial farms - almost all white-owned - has continued despite the formation of a unity government in Zimbabwe. The country's farm workers say they are the biggest losers.
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ZIMBABWE: Water Scarcity No Obstacle To Bulawayo Farmers
By Busani Bafana
BULAWAYO - A project in Zimbabwe's second city, Bulawayo, is creatively using "marginal water" to ease water scarcity while helping residents provide food and earn a living.
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RIGHTS-ZIMBABWE: New Threats to Media Freedom
By Ephraim Nsingo
HARARE - Death threats allegedly made by a senior police officer to a journalist and the arrest of a photographer, all in the space of a few days, have heightened fears of a new onslaught on the country’s media.
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ZIMBABWE: Training Teachers to Cope with HIV-positive Students
By Vusumuzi Sifile
HARARE - Eleven-year-old Memory’s grandmother wanted her to drop out of school because she is not going to live long enough to complete her studies. And the ridicule and stigma Memory endures at school because of her HIV status does not make her education seem worthwhile. Especially since this ridicule comes from her teacher.
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ZIMBABWE: Constitutional Reform Resumes
By Vusumuzi Sifile
HARARE - Months of delays may prove to have strengthened the process of producing a new constitution for Zimbabwe. When a 65-day public consultation finally begins, citizens will be primed and ready.
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ZIMBABWE: Economy Crippled By Political Uncertainty
By Stanley Kwenda
HARARE - The Zimbabwean government has been working hard to attract international investors to revive the country’s failing economy. Success on this front in 2010 may hinge on the coalition government convincing investors their capital will be secure.
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POVERTY-ZIMBABWE: Multiple Appeals to Support Zimbabweans
By Busani Bafana
BULAWAYO - While food is readily available in shops and some political and economic stability is returning in Zimbabwe, vulnerable groups such as children and people living with HIV and AIDS still face a shortage of food.
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RIGHTS-ZIMBABWE: Mugabe Orchestrated Rape - AIDS-Free World report
By Sholain Govender-Bateman
JOHANNESBURG - "When the tenth man finished raping me they said they were going to rape my daughter. I cried out but I could not even stand up at this time...they raped my daughter (while) I was there and I couldn’t do anything to stop them. My daughter was five years old..."
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ZIMBABWE: Watchdog Groups Urge Ban on Diamond Exports
By Eli Clifton
WASHINGTON - The past week brought new scrutiny of Zimbabwe's human rights record with the deportation of a senior U.N. official sent to investigate torture there, and demands by a coalition of civil society groups that the international community address human rights violations stemming from Zimbabwe's lucrative diamond industry.
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POLITICS-ZIMBABWE: Unity Govt In Chaos
By Ephraim Nsingo
HARARE - Zimbabwe's eight-month-old inclusive government suffered its biggest setback to date, when Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai announced that his Movement for Democratic Change (MDC-T) was partly disengaging from the government.
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WATER-ZIMBABWE
: New Wells Protect Environment, Build Peace
By 
Vusumuzi Sifile
SHAMVA, Zimbabwe
 - Twenty years ago, Isaac Chidavaenzi would worry when his neighbours set up vegetable gardens on river banks, trying to get closer to water sources. The number of gardens on the rivers' banks has now decreased, but Chidavaenzi is even more worried.
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EDUCATION-ZIMBABWE: Students Quit Classes - and Country - As Crisis Deepens
By Ignatius Banda
BULAWAYO - Schooling is increasingly becoming a privilege of the rich, , Zimbabwean parents and teachers' unions complain.
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US-ZIMBABWE: Yearlong Sanctions Bring Few Reforms
By Zach Rosenberg
WASHINGTON - More than a year after the signing of an agreement to bring democracy to Zimbabwe, the United States continues to maintain sanctions against the southern African nation.
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Women's in RSS How far Zimbabwe has fallen from being one of Africa’s most productive countries and a frontline state in the struggle against apartheid in the 1980s. Following the chaotic implementation of structural adjustment and violent and ill-executed land reform in the late 90s, President Robert Mugabe - an icon of African liberation – now presides over widespread hunger, idle farmland and a cholera epidemic that serves to highlight collapsing infrastructure, economy and social services. Life expectancy for a Zimbabwean woman has fallen to just 34.

IPS examines political paralysis and the best local and regional efforts to stem the slide, survive the crisis, and eventually rebuild the nation.

 BIODIVERSITY: Companies Push Hard to Halt Tuna Collapse
 ETHIOPIA: Dam Critics Won't Go Away
 ENVIRONMENT: Keeping Wetlands from Becoming Wastelands
 UGANDA: Early Diagnosis of HIV Still Elusive
 KENYA: Insuring Pastoralists Against Increasing Risks
 EGYPT: Minimum Wage Not Enough
 SUDAN: Bashir May Face Genocide Charges
 KENYA: Victory for Anti-Abortion Lobby
 POLITICS-SUDAN: Security Essential to Ensure Peaceful Elections
 NIGERIA: No Oil Company Will Know Peace in the Creeks
 RIGHTS-UGANDA: Fugitives in Their Own Country
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REALITIES OF THE ZIMBABWEAN POWER-SHARING AGREEMENT
Kumi Naidoo
Zimbabwe's new political pact, though a 180-degree turn from violence and deadlock to cooperation and progress, is unlikely to create sustainable change for the country, writes Kumi Naidoo, Honourary President of CIVICUS.

  Blog - This Is Zimbabwe
  SW RADIO AFRICA - The Independent Voice of Zimbabwe

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