| |
Zimbabwe rewards soccer heroes with
cleared land
Members of Zimbabwe's football team are being rewarded for winning a
regional tournament with plots of land cleared of township homes.
The team, known as the Warriors, won the Confederation of Southern
African Football Associations (Cosafa) Cup on Sunday with a surprise
1-0 victory over Zambia in Mabatho, South Africa.
As a token of appreciation, the government will hand over 18
residential plots, the deputy minister of urban development, Morris
Sakabuya, said.
The plots were cleared during June and July as part of Operation
Murambatsvina (Shona for Operation Drive Out Rubbish) in which the
government demolished the homes of thousands of poor Zimbabweans.
Ironically, several members of the team were affected by the
demolitions.
A UN report charges that
700,000 people lost their homes or jobs as a result of the campaign.
Jonathan Mashingaidze, the Zimbabwean Football Association's chief
executive, said he hoped more land would be made available for other
squad members if the team qualified for next year's African Nations
Cup finals in Egypt."We can't have our ambassadors living in slums
and shacks," he said.
The announcement came ahead of a visit starting on Monday by an
International Monetary Fund team which will report to a board
meeting next month during which Zimbabwe could be expelled for
falling £164m behind in its debt payments.
The Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono announced the visit in the
state-controlled Herald newspaper yesterday amid warnings of a stock
market crash and a big fall in the value of the Zimbabwe dollar.
"The nation should rededicate itself to responsible behaviour,
particularly when it comes to the setting or review of prices of
goods and services in the economy," he said.
President Robert Mugabe has blamed sanctions and boycotts for his
country's troubles, along with drought.
South Africa agreed in principle earlier this month to a bailout to
Zimbabwe and indicated it would consider taking over the country's
debt to the IMF to prevent expulsion. President Thabo Mbeki is under
pressure to insist on economic and political reforms as a condition
for the loan.
President Mugabe dashed hopes of political reforms on Thursday by
pressing ahead with a 22-clause bill to amend the constitution that
the opposition has denounced.
The changes would strengthen his 25-year hold on power with the
creation of a senate expected to be dominated by his Zanu-PF party.
The bill proposes cancelling freehold title to real estate and
barring those stripped of their land from appealing to the courts.
Government opponents risk being stripped of the right to travel.
"This is either a snub to Mbeki or an indication the South Africans
are complicit," said David Coltart, a legal affairs spokesman for
the opposition Movement for Democratic Change.
Andrew Meldrum and agencies in Pretoria
Saturday August 20, 2005
The Guardian |
|