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Eye on Zimbabwe

At independence, Zimbabwe was touted as one of Africa's most promising countries. Early investments into health, education and agriculture meant that by the 1990s, Zimbabwe boasted one of the region's highest literacy rates, a robust health system and was poised to become a regional breadbasket. This potential was quickly squandered of autocratic rule and gross economic mismanagement under President Robert Mugabe. By the early 2000s, controversial land reform policies and inflation in the millions of percentages had driven the economy into the ground, a growing proportion of the population was dependent on emergency food aid, and health indicators had plummeted.

The situation in Zimbabwe took a turn for the worse in March 2008 when violent, fraudulent elections hurled the country into nearly a year of even deeper economic and political turmoil. On top of a surge in political repression and violence, a cholera epidemic resulting from the collapse of the water and sanitation system left nearly 4,000 people dead, teacher strikes closed school doors for months, and a spiraling economy left more than half the population in need of food aid. By February 2009, international outcry over the emergency helped ratchet up pressure for a resolution to the political crisis. On February 11th, a power-sharing agreement was formalized with opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai sworn in as Prime Minister, Mugabe remaining President, and Cabinet positions split between the ruling party and the opposition.

It is too early to determine how this power sharing agreement will work. Robert Mugabe remains at the helm and some have speculated he only agreed to "share" power with Tsvangirai in order to appease the international community and open the door for donor assistance. Only time will tell if the state of democracy in Zimbabwe truly changes, but if it does, Zimbabwe will have the potential to regain some of its lost years of development.

The cholera epidemic is slowing and teachers have ended a year-long strike, reopening schools across the country. But this progress is fragile, and real change will not happen until the government is functioning enough to deal with the development crises that have stunted life in Zimbabwe for the past year. Zimbabwe needs strong support from its neighbors, the African Union (AU) and the rest of the international community to keep things moving forward and eventually win back some of the success it achieved in its early years of independence.

 

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Briefing Center

  • Crisis in Zimbabwe

    Feb. 19 2009

    Only time will tell if the state of democracy in Zimbabwe truly changes, but if it does, Zimbabwe will have the potential to regain some of its lost years of development.
    MORE

One Blog

News & Analysis from the ONE BLOG

Nov 5 2009

Trying to go to school in Zimbabwe

Posted by Chris Scott

At the start of the year, Nora Coghlan from our policy team wrote about the education crisis in Zimbabwe. After a heated conflict between school teachers and the Zimbabwean government, it was feared that "2009 will be another lost year for education in Zimbabwe."Today, CNN.com has an article ... More

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Oct 16 2009

Breaking news out of Zimbabwe

Posted by Chris Scott

The New York Times and other media outlets are reporting that Zimbabwe Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai is openly boycotting cabinet meetings as a means of protesting President Robert Mugabe's party. NYT characterizes this as the "biggest breach yet in the new transitional government."More details below, read the full ... More

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Jul 13 2009

The State of Human Rights in Zimbabwe

Posted by Margaret McDonnell

Check out this update on what’s happening in Zimbabwe from our friends at Amnesty International USA.-Margaret McDonnellZimbabwe is locked in an increasingly downward spiral of diminishing civil rights, decaying infrastructure, violent farm seizures, food insecurity and mass displacement of persons through government destruction of property and those escaping ... More

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Jun 25 2009

Zimbabwe still hungry despite increase in crop production

Posted by Beth Adler

Thanks to good rainfall, Zimbabwe has been able to increase production of maize—the staple crop in the country—by 130% to 1.1 million tons. Despite this increase, however, 2.8 million people will still face food shortages this year, as the UN Food and Agriculture Orgaization (FAO) and ... More

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Apr 2 2009

WOZA at ONE

Posted by Chris Scott

Thanks to Amnesty International USA, last week I and some other ONE staff got the chance to meet with two extraordinary women from the organization Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA). Formed in 2003 by Jenni Williams, WOZA now has a membership of over 70,000 women (and men) and has ... More

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Mar 19 2009

A Must-See From Zimbabwe

Posted by Aaron Banks

Zimbabwean political leader, nominee to be Deputy Agriculture Secretary and activist Roy Bennett will be joining political commentator and consultant Joe Trippi for a rare television appearance on the MSNBC show 1600: Penn Ave tonight at 6:00pm.Bennett has been a leading voice for reform and action to end ... More

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