Movement for Democratic Change secretary-general Tendai Biti and legislator Eric Matinenga were released on bail a day before the presidential elections run-off but Women of Zimbabwe Arise leaders Jenni Williams and Magodonga Mahlangu remained at Chikurubi Prison pending their High Court hearing.
Biti was arrested on 12 June and was to face four charges including treason.
MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai had insisted that the release of Biti was a prerequisite for negotiations.
Williams and Mahlangu were arrested while marching to the Zambian embassy in protest against the increasing violence in the run-up to the presidential elections run-off.
They also wanted to thank Zambia for speaking out on the Zimbabwe crisis.
Full cable:
Viewing cable 08HARARE554, ZIM NOTES June 27, 2008
If you are new to these pages, please read an introduction on the structure of a cable as well as how to discuss them with others. See also the FAQs
Reference ID |
Created |
Released |
Classification |
Origin |
VZCZCXRO5194
RR RUEHBZ RUEHDU RUEHJO RUEHMR RUEHRN
DE RUEHSB #0554/01 1791502
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 271502Z JUN 08
FM AMEMBASSY HARARE
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 3099
INFO RUCNSAD/SOUTHERN AF DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITY COLLECTIVE
RUEHUJA/AMEMBASSY ABUJA 2004
RUEHAR/AMEMBASSY ACCRA 2099
RUEHDS/AMEMBASSY ADDIS ABABA 2219
RUEHRL/AMEMBASSY BERLIN 0757
RUEHBY/AMEMBASSY CANBERRA 1496
RUEHDK/AMEMBASSY DAKAR 1854
RUEHKM/AMEMBASSY KAMPALA 2275
RUEHNR/AMEMBASSY NAIROBI 4706
RHEHAAA/NSC WASHDC
RHMFISS/EUCOM POLAD VAIHINGEN GE
RUEHGV/USMISSION GENEVA 1365
RUZEJAA/JAC MOLESWORTH RAF MOLESWORTH UK
RHEFDIA/DIA WASHDC
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 HARARE 000554
SIPDIS
AF/S FOR S.HILL
ADDIS ABABA FOR USAU
ADDIS ABABA FOR ACSS
NSC FOR SENIOR AFRICA DIRECTOR B.PITTMAN
TREASURY FOR D.PETERS AND T.RAND
STATE PASS TO USAID FOR L.DOBBINS AND E.LOKEN
COMMERCE FOR BECKY ERKUL
E.O.12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV PREL ASEC PHUM ECON EAGR EFIN EMIN ZI
SUBJECT: ZIM NOTES June 27, 2008
—————
¶1. SUMMARY
—————
Topics of the week:
– MDC Pulls Out of Election Run-Off
– Tsvangirai Takes Refuge in Dutch Embassy
– Fallout from Raid on Opposition IDPs
– Biti and Matinenga Released from Jail
– As Abductions, Beatings, and Unlawful DetenQQ s@f62Qx
– Mining Sector Top Forex Earner
——————————————— ———-
¶2. Price Movements-Exchange Rate and Selected Products
——————————————— ———-
Parallel rate for cash more than doubled again to Z$18 billion:US$1
against inter-bank average of Z$10.6 billion:US$1
Bank transfer rate doubled to Z$3.9 trillion:US$1; official rate:
Z$$30,000: US$1
Bread more than doubled on the parallel market to Z$8 billion vs.
controlled price of Z$400 million
Sugar trebled to Z$25 billion/2kg vs. controlled price of Z$8
million/2kg
Cooking oil doubled to Z$15 billion/750ml vs. controlled price of
Z$9.3 million/750ml
Petrol and diesel climbed to Z$17 billion/liter vs. controlled price
of Z$60,000/liter
—————————–
On the Political/Social Front
—————————–
¶3. MDC Pulls Out of Election Run-Off… MDC president Morgan
Tsvangirai announced on June 20 that he would not participate in the
run-off election due to ongoing violence which made an election
impossible. Nevertheless, the GOZ decided to proceed with the June
27 election.
¶4. Tsvangirai Takes Refuge in Dutch QmQp>cn}of the chancery. See Harare
¶548.
¶5. Fallout from Raid on Opposition IDPs… MDC supporters and
their families displaced by political violence remain homeless in
Harare following the June 23 raid on opposition headquarters’
Harvest House in which 30 people were seized by police and over
2,000 fled. Hundreds of IDPs have since sought refuge at NGO
offices, churches, and the U.S. and South African embassies. On
June 25, an estimated 300 IDPs were allowed onto the South African
Embassy grounds after armed riot police arrived outside the mission.
They were allowed to spend the night and remain on the site today.
¶6. Despite the ban on NGO operations, informal networks amongst
civil society actors, UN organizations and diplomatic missions are
attempting to provide aid to the many IDPs requesting shelter, food
HARARE 00000554 002 OF 003
and supplies. However, formalized, systematic and coordinated
assistance, including a lead UN agency and a centralized reception
center, remains unavailable, severely impacting those who are still
in danger of seizure by GOZ security forces. International
organizations appear to fear the repercussions of publicly assisting
opposition aligned IDPs. See Harare 533.
¶7. Biti and Matinenga Released from Jail… The high court granted
MDC Secretary General Tendai Biti bail on June 26 after his arrest
on June 12 on four counts, including treason. Tsvangirai had said
on June 25 that Biti’s release was a prerequisite to negotiations.
MDC MP-elect Eric Matinenga was also released on bail on the same
day. WOZA’s Jenni Williams and Magodonga Mahlangu, however, remain
in Chikurubi women’s prison pending their high court hearing on July
¶3. See Harare 512 and 532.
¶8. …As Abductions, Beatings, and Unlawful Detentions Continue…
Mayemureyi Munhuri, the MDC Senator-elect for Chimanimani, and her
husband were abducted at gunpoint from their home on June 24. She
was one of 33 abducted in Manicaland province that day. Abednico
Bhebhe, MP-elect for Nkayi, and Robert Rabson, Senator-elect for
Nkayi, have been detained without charges in Nkayi since June 18, as
police ignore a court order demanding they be brought to court.
Lawyer Ernest Jena, who represents MDC activists, was abducted from
his office in Bindura by suspected ZANU- PF members on the morning
of June 23; his whereabouts are unknown. Magistrate Felix Mawadza
was beaten up by youths in ZANU- PF garb as he walked out of a
supermarket in Bindura on June 23. His “crime” was to have granted
bail to MDC supporters charged with politically motivated violence.
A local NGO has released two reports documenting post-election
violence: http://www.kubatana.net/html/archive/hr/
080519zpp.asp?sector=HR
and
http://www.kubatana.net/html/archive/hr/
080625zpp.asp?sector=HR
¶9. Criticism of Zimbabwe Grows… The SADC troika of Tanzania,
Angola, and Swaziland met on June 25 and issued a communique
criticizing the GOZ’s plans to proceed with the June 27 election.
At his 90th birthday party in London, Nelson Mandela condemned the
“tragic failure of leadership” in Zimbabwe. The British Foreign
Office took the unusual step of revoking the knighthood Mugabe had
received in 1994. In another symbolically important move, Cricket
South Africa, a long time defender of Zimbabwe, finally broke ties
with the Zimbabwe Cricket Union on June 23. The England and Wales
Cricket Board also broke ties and canceled a tour by the Zimbabwean
team set for next year.
¶10. Making Ends Meet (or not) as a Civil Servant… A ministry
director with a doctoral degree in his highly technical agricultural
specialty and decades of work experience allowed us a peek at his
June pay stub: He took home Z$23 billioQ|7Q&+|hicle for Z$700
million, which was less than US$1 dollar at the time. He survives
on consultancy work in South Africa and Zambia but admitted that his
greatest regret was not having emigrated years ago.
————————–
Economic and Business News
————————–
¶11. Manufacturing Sector Totters On As Conditions Worsen…
Zimbabwe’s manufacturing sector is gasping to keep afloat in the
face of foreign exchange shortages, hyperinflation and constant
power outages. Although exporting firms benefited from the partial
liberalization of the foreign exchange market, complementary
measures to sustain the reform effort have not followed. Indeed,
HARARE 00000554 003 OF 003
firms have raised concerns over their inability to increase prices
in line with rising costs; the National Incomes and Pricing
Commission (NIPC) refuses to entertain any requests for price
reviews. In fact, it made several new entries this week to the list
of price-controlled items. A contact at the Confederation of
Zimbabwe Industries told us that some firms, strategizing over their
future, had taken a wait-and-see attitude, hoping for an improvement
after the election. The bottom line is how much longer firms are
prepared to produce at a loss.
¶12. Stock Exchange Roars… The Zimbabwe Stock Exchange (ZSE)
continues to defy the gloom that otherwise characterizes the
economy, as investors hunt for bargains in the face of little or no
other viable investment opportunities. The precipitous fall in the
external value of the Zimbabwe dollar has also spurred the market.
Moreover, money market rates yield ludicrously negative real
returns, and the poor macroeconomic environment has made it
virtually impossible to engage in capital investment. The ZSE is
the only place where returns have outpaced the rate of inflation.
The benchmark industrial index has risen by 767,687 percent since
the beginning of this year and by a whopping 36,396,356.9 percent on
a y-o-y basis to June 25, 2008. The mining index’s y-o-y rate of
growth is even higher at 77,919,460.8 percent. These rates are well
above estimates of around 4 million percent inflation for mid-June
¶2008. As long as macroeconomic fundamentals remain weak, activity
on the ZSE will continue pushing the local bourse into uncharted
territory.
¶13. Mining Sector Top Forex Earner… Mining earned Zimbabwe US$1
billion in 2007 and contributed about 6 percent to GDP; it is the
source of more than 30 percent of all foreign currency inflow. The
six largest earners from 2001-2007 were, in descend)Mm>QOjSQS.
¶14. Zimplats Shuts Down… After a gang of youth militia last week
forced its way onto the mine grounds and compelled workers to march
and chant ZANU-PF slogans, Zimbabwe Platinum Mines shut down its
operations at Ngezi in the run-up to the election. Its Selous
metallurgical plant remains open. A member of the Board of
Directors told us that the company was reviewing its multi-million
dollar expansion plan.
MCGEE
(13 VIEWS)