ZIMBABWE: A House Divided
Wednesday, September 08, 2010   12:11 GMT    
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ZIMBABWE
Rural Children with HIV a ‘Lost Cause’
By Fidelis Zvomuya
GURUVE, Zimbabwe - Eleven-year-old Irene Thembo* lies curled like a foetus on a white wooden bench for outpatients at a clinic in rural Zimbabwe. The orphan, whose parents died of HIV-related illnesses, is terribly sick.
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ZIMBABWE
Veggies Dried and Tasted
By Ignatius Banda
BULAWAYO - A resurgence of interest in dried traditional vegetables has opened up a market opportunity for women entrepreneurs in Zimbabwe’s second city, Bulawayo.
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DEVELOPMENT-ZIMBABWE
"Competing With the Dogs for Bones"
By Ignatius Banda
BULAWAYO, Zimbabwe - "People used to mock me, saying that I am competing with dogs for bones, but these taunts do not deter me," says Sibongile Mararike with no sign of rancour.
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DEVELOPMENT-ZIMBABWE
Selling Scrap Metal to Scrape By
By Ignatius Banda
BULAWAYO, Zimbabwe - Gugulethu Mkhwananzi is another one of the many unemployed women who have become features of everyday life in Bulawayo’s poor working class suburbs as she moves from house to house, looking for "rusted gold", or scrap metal.
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Doubts Over Zimbabwe Diamonds
By Busani Bafana & Pierre Klochendler
BULAWAYO and TEL AVIV - Three days of tense deliberations by members of the Kimberley Process have failed to reach consensus on whether diamonds from Zimbabwe's Marange fields should be certified as conflict-free. Zimbabwe has already announced that it intends to resume exports of the precious stones immediately.
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ZIMBABWE
'We Too Want to be Wealthy'
By Stanley Kwenda
CHIADZWA, Zimbabwe - Saddled with debts of more than $7 billion, Zimbabwe is anxious to resume diamond exports, suspended in May amidst international condemnation of alleged human rights violations in the Marange diamond fields. But the treatment of people living in the fields themselves suggests the country's record on rights bears further examination.
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ZIMBABWE
A Chance for Women's Voices to be Heard?
By Ignatius Banda
BULAWAYO - As Zimbabwe embarks on writing a new constitution with the countrywide collection of public submissions starting on Jun. 23, not all women are upbeat about the process.
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Artists Refuse Silence on Zimbabwe Atrocities
By Busani Bafana
BULAWAYO - In a bold attempt to stoke public debate on national healing, an art exhibition is challenging the government to publicly acknowledge one of the most hideous episodes in Zimbabwe's history.
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Broken Promises on Zimbabwe Press Freedom
By Busani Bafana
BULAWAYO - Fourteen months after Zimbabwe's government of national unity was formed, harassment, arbitrary arrest and general intimidation of journalists remains common.
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ZIMBABWE
Women Survive Political Violence Alone
By Vusumuzi Sifile
HARARE - Mary Pamire will never forget the day a group of men took turns to rape her.
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WORLD WATER DAY
Water Everywhere but Not a Drop to Drink
By Ignatius Banda
BULAWAYO - When there are water cuts in Bulawayo, the plants in 59-year-old Ntombizodwa Makati’s vegetable garden are still watered - but she and her family go thirsty.
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ZIMBABWE
Constitution in the Limelight
By Vusumuzi Sifile
HARARE - A new play, Waiting for Constitution has generated great interest among politicians and civil society groups anxious to get consultations over drafting a new constitution under way.
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ZIMBABWE
Informal Sector Lures University Graduates
By Ignatius Banda
BULAWAYO - From the rickety old buses that miraculously make long cross-border journeys to the frustrating red tape at the border post, from fending off sexual advances from bus crews and customs officials to losing goods worth thousands of dollars, 28-year-old Irene Moyo has seen it all.
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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.

 SOUTHERN AFRICA: Adapt or Perish
 ANGOLA: More Mothers Survive Childbirth
 ENVIRONMENT: South Still Battling to Stop North's Biopiracy
 COTE D'IVOIRE: More Births Attended By Skilled Attendants
 /UPDATE*/: Further Victims Identified in DRC Mass Rapes Case
 KENYA: Monitoring Antiretroviral Intake Among Children
 /CORRECTED REPEAT*/AFRICA: Woman Researcher Tackles Aflatoxin Poisoning
 Price Hikes Trigger Mozambique Protests
 EGYPT: Brotherhood Struggles Against Shut Doors
 Revolution in African Agriculture Gathering Momentum
 Uganda Could Become Regional Rice Exporter say Researchers
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Population
Agriculture
Millennium Development Goals
HIV / AIDS
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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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