Zimbabwe runs out of bread

younggiftedandblack

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http://www.guardian.co.uk/zimbabwe/article/0,,2181086,00.html

Zimbabwe's bakeries have shut and supermarkets have warned there will be no bread for the foreseeable future as the government admitted that wheat production had collapsed following the seizure of white-owned farms.
The agricultural ministry announcement that the wheat harvest is only about a third of what is required, and that imports are held up by lack of hard currency, came as a deadline passed today for the last white farmers to leave their land or face prosecution for trespass.

The maize harvest is expected to be equally dire and price controls to contain hyperinflation have emptied the stores of most other foodstuffs. The World Food Programme says at least 3 million people - one in four of the population - will need food aid in the coming months. It describes hunger in some parts of the country, which used to be a food exporter, as "acutely serious".
Last week, the government said it plans to import 100,000 tonnes of wheat but acknowledged that a shipment of 35,000 tonnes was held up in Mozambique because of a shortage of hard currency to pay for it.

The agriculture minister, Rugare Gumbo, has blamed the food shortages on black farmers who have taken over formerly white-owned land.

"I am painfully aware of the widespread theft of stock, farm produce, irrigation equipment and the general vandalism of infrastructure by our new farmers," he said.

"I am disappointed that our new farmers have proved to be failures since the start of the land reform programme in 2000. In spite of all the support government has been pouring into the agricultural sector, productivity and under-utilisation of land remain issues of concern."

The ministry of agriculture has also blamed electricity shortages for the wheat shortfall, saying that power cuts have affected irrigation and halved crop yields per acre.

The power shortages are likely to continue. Mozambique has reduced electricity supplies to Zimbabwe because of a $35m (£17.1m) unpaid bill. Shortages of coal and spares for power stations and mining equipment have also hit electricity production and power cuts are now a regular feature of daily life.

Zimbabwe, once the world's second largest exporter of tobacco, has also seen production of its main cash crop nosedive, further undermining its ability to buy food from abroad. This year's crop is not likely to be much better than recent harvests, with many farmers saying that their seedlings have died for lack of irrigation.

Cigarettes are only available on the black market at many times the official price, and now cost more than marijuana - a cash crop that does not appear to have been severely affected by the crisis.

The government's admission that the land redistribution has failed to deliver the promised boost to food production coincides with a deadline for the last white farmers to vacate their land. The farms were nationalised last year and the handover to the state was set for today.

Any farmer remaining on their former land faces prosecution for trespassing on state property. About 50 farmers have already been summonsed by the courts.

White farmers say that senior ruling party, military and intelligence officials have been touring their former properties to lay a claim and that they have little confidence the land will be distributed among the poor as the government claims.

Zimbabwe's economic problems are likely to be compounded by a law passed last week that compels many publicly owned companies, including foreign firms, to sell a majority of their equity to black Zimbabweans.

Critics say the legislation amounts to expropriation because it effectively forces the companies to hand over half of their value by taxing them to raise the money to "buy" the 51% stake for black investors approved by the government.

The government has ignored the protests of some foreign investors, including South African banks and mining houses. With the collapse of tobacco production, mining is now the country's largest source of foreign currency.

Zimbabwe's minister of indigenisation, Paul Mangwana, said those companies that do not like it can "pack their bags and go".

"If they feel that we went into the bush [to fight against white rule] for them to enjoy our wealth then they can leave. We are talking about the total liberation of this country. I have no apologies for that," he said.

Last week, the International Monetary Fund said that it would not renew assistance to Zimbabwe until it adopts economic policies rooted in "reality". The IMF suspended dealings with Harare late last year.

President Robert Mugabe continues to blame his country's financial problems on what he calls British-led economic sanctions. The UK says that the sanctions, imposed by the EU and the US, target leading Zimbabwe officials and have no impact on the economy.
 
These honkeys love picking on Zimbabwe.

All these nations in Africa, and yet the news only finds time to talk about Darfur, blood diamonds, and Mugabe.

It seems whitey (IMF, World Bank, US, UK, etc.) has an axe to grind because they weren't treated like holy honkeys like in other countries around the world.
 
These honkeys love picking on Zimbabwe.

All these nations in Africa, and yet the news only finds time to talk about Darfur, blood diamonds, and Mugabe.

It seems whitey (IMF, World Bank, US, UK, etc.) has an axe to grind because they weren't treated like holy honkeys like in other countries around the world.

" These honkeys "

" It seems whitey "

NOW LOOK WHAT HAPENS WHEN WE USE YOURE TERMINOLAGY TO VOICE ARE GRIEVANCES WITH THE WORLD!

IT SEEMS BLACKEY COULDNT WATER HIS LAWN THAT HE SAID WAS HIS THEY GAVE IT TO HIM AND LOOK AT WHAT A WASTELAND HE HAS CREATED FOR HIMSELF ! BET THEY WISHED THOSE HONKEYS WAS BACK ON THE FARM NOW!

BE CAREFUL WHAT TOU WISH FOR!
 
These honkeys love picking on Zimbabwe.

All these nations in Africa, and yet the news only finds time to talk about Darfur, blood diamonds, and Mugabe.

It seems whitey (IMF, World Bank, US, UK, etc.) has an axe to grind because they weren't treated like holy honkeys like in other countries around the world.

The government fucked up, period. Own that shit and move on. It seems like the "blame whitey for everything" camp wants it both ways. In "western" (read: free market) societies, they decry large corporations being so involved in policy making, but they say that Zimbabwe is being "punished" for trying to merge business with government. And then, Zimbabwe says it's going to privitize in the near future. Puh-leeze. That means that Mugabe's homies will get sweet contracts. But when Bush does the same thing, he is lambasted as the Anti-Christ (as he should be).
 
The government fucked up, period. Own that shit and move on. It seems like the "blame whitey for everything" camp wants it both ways. In "western" (read: free market) societies, they decry large corporations being so involved in policy making, but they say that Zimbabwe is being "punished" for trying to merge business with government. And then, Zimbabwe says it's going to privitize in the near future. Puh-leeze. That means that Mugabe's homies will get sweet contracts. But when Bush does the same thing, he is lambasted as the Anti-Christ (as he should be).

Governments make mistakes everywhere.

Why does the honkey media fixate on Zimbabwe like it's some special case.

It's because their white card got revoked.

==========
It's funny how they said the marijuana crop was unaffected.
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Nigeria has a corrupt government, but the holy honkeys don't want to promote this because they are making a killing from lopsided oil contracts.

When you try to excuse/pardon/defend the honkey, you become their tool.

There is more to Africa than Zimbabwe, why doesn't USA/UK media ever cover it in the news (other than some negative garbage, as if the whole continent is full of screw-ups)??????
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As long as honkeys stay out of Zimbabwe, and Mugabe doesn't start turning the country over to white companies or interests, then you have to be patient.

All countries have growing pains when throwing off the shackles of the shallow/pale/ghost ass****s. It usually takes decades. This is just 1 (or a few) bad years.
 
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I get sick of seeing people always giving honkeys a pass.

Governments make mistakes everywhere.

Why does the honkey media fixate on Zimbabwe like it's some special case.

It's because their white card got revoked.

==========
Nigeria has a corrupt government, but the holy honkeys don't want to promote this because they are making a killing from lopsided oil contracts.

When you try to excuse/pardon/defend the honkey, you become their tool.

There is more to Africa than Zimbabwe, why doesn't USA/UK media ever cover it in the news (other than some negative garbage, as if the whole continent is full of screw-ups)??????
==========
As long as honkeys stay out of Zimbabwe, and Mugabe doesn't start turning the country for white companies, then all is good.

All countries have growing pains when throwing off the shackles shallow/pale/ghost ass*****. It usually takes decades. This is just 1 (or a few) bad years.

Your off six ways from Sunday

1. South Africa and the other Southern African states are the ones really pissed because thier food has become much more expensive because of Mugabe's fuckup, as Zimbabwe was the breadbasket of Sub-Saharan Africa (did you even know that?) and they are the primary protestors. Do you see much of this in the mainstream media ? because I don't. Mainstream media is actually downplaying this currently, as it has yet to cause widespread war (so far).

2. Mugabe HIMSELF stated that the land grab was a failure, not "Honkey" media.

3. Your statement regarding growing pains is horrendously dismissive to those who are actually suffering. Let your ass starve, or your family, and see if "just one (or a few)bad years" fills you stomach.

4. You seem to have the notion that non-whites can do no bad. That is just as de-humanizing as saying that non-whites can do no good. Think about it.
 
Your off six ways from Sunday

1. South Africa and the other Southern African states are the ones really pissed because thier food has become much more expensive because of Mugabe's fuckup, as Zimbabwe was the breadbasket of Sub-Saharan Africa (did you even know that?) and they are the primary protestors. Do you see much of this in the mainstream media ? because I don't. Mainstream media is actually downplaying this currently, as it has yet to cause widespread war (so far).

I don't see honkey (you call it mainstream) media doing anything but screaming about how honkeys got their land took.

Did you know South Africa is having the same problems with its whitey farmers?

My point is not that there is a food problem, but it's that honkeys have this sense of entitlement their skin color gives them preferential treatment everywhere.

And, when it's not the case, they whine about it in the media.

Besides, wars rarely start over economic problems. Most of the time it's religion.

2. Mugabe HIMSELF stated that the land grab was a failure, not "Honkey" media.

I agree with you. But why do the honkeys fixate on this issue to the exclusion of anything positive.

What, nothing good ever comes out of Africa? At least from the white boy mindset.

3. Your statement regarding growing pains is horrendously dismissive to those who are actually suffering. Let your ass starve, or your family, and see if "just one (or a few)bad years" fills you stomach.

This is funny considering your screenname.

So, you're saying there is starvation in Zimbabwe????

I haven't heard that and didn't see it in the article.

4. You seem to have the notion that non-whites can do no bad. That is just as de-humanizing as saying that non-whites can do no good. Think about it.

So you're saying because I hate the honkey power structure, it means I think everyone else is perfect.

You are jumping to conclusions with facts not yet evident.

I do know honkeys are no good.

Why call yourself white unless you are taking sides?????
 
I don't see honkey (you call it mainstream) media doing anything but screaming about how honkeys got their land took.
So they shouldn't report the story ? Or should they do what you seem to want "Mugabe kicks honkey out on his honkey heiney" & ignore the repercussions that occur to MOSTLY AFRICANS !! It seems that you hate "honkey" so much that you are willing to ignore the suffering of your own.

I agree with you. But why do the honkeys fixate on this issue to the exclusion of anything positive.

What, nothing good ever comes out of Africa? At least from the white boy mindset.
That is such bullshit. It is acknowleged that Africa is the birthplace of man, also being indescribably beautiful. Also, much as bewen made of good things in Africa, like the pluimmeting AIDS rate in Ghana (which happened due to changes in behavior, not reliance on outside assistance)

This is funny considering your screenname.

So, you're saying there is starvation in Zimbabwe????

I haven't heard that and didn't see it in the article.

My screen name has to do with the fact that I have my own thought process, and make my ow decisions.

Also, if there is no bread, what the fuck do you think is happening ? Also, don't you read ?

Read this (from 2002)
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=health&res=9F03E7DE1431F932A2575AC0A9649C8B63

And this

http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=320278&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/

And this:

http://www.alertnet.org/db/crisisprofiles/ZW_HUN.htm?v=at_a_glance



So you're saying because I hate the honkey power structure, it means I think everyone else is perfect.

You are jumping to conclusions with facts not yet evident.

I do know honkeys are no good.
It's called reading comprehension. Even when you admitted that Mugabe himself called his own policies a failure, you did nothing but continue to lambaste "whitey". And your last sentance sums it up.

BTW, if you think "honkey" is so bad, never:

Use the computer he invented

Wear the clothing he made

Speak the language he created

Live in a land he owns

don't trade with his currency.

Let me know how it goes.
 
So they shouldn't report the story ? Or should they do what you seem to want "Mugabe kicks honkey out on his honkey heiney" & ignore the repercussions that occur to MOSTLY AFRICANS !! It seems that you hate "honkey" so much that you are willing to ignore the suffering of your own.


That is such bullshit. It is acknowleged that Africa is the birthplace of man, also being indescribably beautiful. Also, much as bewen made of good things in Africa, like the pluimmeting AIDS rate in Ghana (which happened due to changes in behavior, not reliance on outside assistance)



My screen name has to do with the fact that I have my own thought process, and make my ow decisions.

Also, if there is no bread, what the fuck do you think is happening ? Also, don't you read ?

Read this (from 2002)
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=health&res=9F03E7DE1431F932A2575AC0A9649C8B63

And this

http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=320278&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/

And this:

http://www.alertnet.org/db/crisisprofiles/ZW_HUN.htm?v=at_a_glance




It's called reading comprehension. Even when you admitted that Mugabe himself called his own policies a failure, you did nothing but continue to lambaste "whitey". And your last sentance sums it up.

Every single one of those articles talks about the poor honkies and how the big brother man took away their stuff.

How can you swallow this garbage?????

I'm not saying Mugabe is some great leader, but if honkeys don't like him, maybe there's more to the situation than what appears at first glance.

BTW, if you think "honkey" is so bad, never:

Use the computer he invented

Wear the clothing he made

Speak the language he created

Live in a land he owns

don't trade with his currency.

Let me know how it goes.

I didn't know there are honkey computers.
I didn't know there are honkey clothes.
I didn't know there is honkey currency.
I didn't know there is honkey land.

BUT, you seem to love you some honkey! :lol:

I will lambast whitey as long as he talks about the problem and never does a DAMN thing to fix it (despite having the means, motive, and opportunity to do it)!!!!!

As long as they act like they're better than the brother man...

As long as they expect you to worship them...

As long as they expect you to die for them...
 
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Every single one of those articles talks about the poor honkies and how the big brother man took away their stuff.

How can you swallow this garbage?????

I'm not saying Mugabe is some great leader, but if honkeys don't like him, maybe there's more to the situation than what appears at first glance.



I didn't know there are honkey computers.
I didn't know there are honkey clothes.
I didn't know there is honkey currency.
I didn't know there is honkey land.

BUT, you seem to love you some honkey! :lol:

I will lambast whitey as long as he talks about the problem and never does a DAMN thing to fix it (despite having the means, motive, and opportunity to do it)!!!!!

As long as they act like they're better than the brother man...

As long as they expect you to worship them...

As long as they expect you to die for them...

You are dead wrong about the articles.
All of those examples I gave you are true.
And you got me very wrong.
But keep thinking the way you do, that is what is best to keep black people down.
 
China builds African empire

I know some of you will think this is a good thing sense it pisses off the West. But think about it for a minute are the Chinese any different or better than their white counterparts who did the same thing years ago?

FROM giant state corporations to a host of small businesses, Chinese companies have opened up a new frontier in Africa that is expanding so fast it is already altering commodity markets and manufacturing from Cairo to Cape Town.

Last week, China released figures showing that its trade with Africa is growing by more than 20% a year. Western companies face fierce competition from Chinese firms to buy Africa’s natural resources and sell goods and services back to the continent.

China’s drive into Africa marks a historic shift from its traditional role as a politically motivated aid donor to a hardheaded commercial partner.

This was underlined last February when eight African nations rolled out red carpets for President Hu Jintao on a 12-day tour of the continent, his second in nine months.

It is vital for China to secure sources of oil and raw materials, but the expansion of trade goes far beyond commodities. So crucial is Africa to Chinese energy needs that Beijing is willing to be condemned by world opinion for its deals with dictators and its refusal to tie trade to improvements in governance or human rights.

Although international attention focuses on China’s quest for oil in Sudan and other troublespots, the China Business Daily has reported that more than 500,000 Chinese businessmen and merchants have set up shop in Africa.

A few days ago, officials in Beijing disclosed that trade between China and Africa would probably be worth more than £34 billion this year, compared with £27 billion last year.

China has emerged as Africa’s largest trading partner after America and has cancelled the debts of 33 poor African countries as a gesture of goodwill. Last July, the Chinese also cut import tariffs on 454 items from 32 “least-developed countries”. Since then, more than £200m of duty-free imports have flowed into the Chinese market.

“The favourable tariffs are expected to cover more categories according to market demand,” said China’s vice-min-ister of commerce, Wei Jianguo.

Outbound Chinese investment to Africa was only £487m in the first nine months of this year, but this is expected to grow. “Chinese enterprises . . . envisage enormous business potential on the continent,” said the China Daily newspaper.

China’s big players are already there, generating controversy as well as profits. The Shanghai Business Daily recently published a revealing account of Chinese business interests in Africa, quoting commerce minister Bo Xilai in defence of the state-run China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC), the biggest foreign investor in Sudan.

“Its investment has made a big contribution to the African people,” said Bo. “It has provided 4,000 local jobs, built hospitals and schools, and constructed an oil refinery with an output of 5m tonnes a year.”

Sudanese oil is mainly light, sweet crude, which is easy to refine, and China takes more than 60% of Sudan’s production.

The link has drawn bitter criticism because China has consistently used its diplomatic influence at the United Nations to protect the Sudanese regime against international pressure over starvation and mass killings in the province of Darfur.

Berkshire Hathaway, the investment vehicle controlled by Warren Buffett, recently sold its stake in Petro China, a CNOOC subsidiary traded in New York, amid an outcry over Darfur from celebrities like Mia Farrow, who dubbed next year’s games in China “the genocide Olympics”.

Buffett testily maintained that he sold the stock because he considered it fully valued and had realised an elevenfold gain on the holding. Nonetheless, the affair exemplified the risks and rewards of playing China’s great game of commerce in Africa.

A background report for the US Council on Foreign Relations noted that: “By 2045 China is projected to depend on imported oil for 45% of its energy needs. China is actively trying to diversify its supply lines away from Middle Eastern crude. Experts say China has adopted an aid-for-oil strategy that has resulted in increasing supplies of oil from African countries.”

CNOOC is to buy a 45% stake in an offshore oilfield in Nigeria, while its oil buyers are competing aggressively for supplies from Angola, Equatorial Guinea, Chad, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon and Algeria.

The Chinese quest for resources goes beyond energy. “China’s manufacturing sector has created enormous demand for aluminium, copper, nickel and iron ore,” said the report for the Council on Foreign Relations. It concluded: “The strategy is working. China has gained access to key resources around the world.”

Few foreign investors have grasped the speed and extent of Chinese exploration and development in Africa.

China is engaged in mining in 13 African countries, singling out deposits of gold, copper, diamonds, titanium and manganese. Prospectors from the government’s geological and mining bureau are active in Namibia, Ghana, Congo and Mali.

The telecommunications flagship Zhongxing Communications, which began investing in Africa in 1995, has ploughed in more than £3 billion and now employs 1,100 people across the continent. In Egypt, Brother Shoes, a company based in east China’s Zhejiang province, claims to have captured 70% of the local market since it set up in 2001 and now sells 12m pairs of shoes a year.

In agriculture, the Chinese have carved out deals from Zimbabwe to Zambia and Kenya. The China Agricultural Cultivation group claims to have transformed grain production in Zambia and saved the country a fortune in transport costs by reducing the need to import grain from South Africa.

When a Chinese businessman gets off the plane in Africa � the number of flights is multiplying every year � he can count on full diplomatic support and state-directed financing.

One example cited by the Council on Foreign Relations paper is Angola, where China takes 25% of Angolan oil exports, and Beijing has a stake in future oil production, thanks to a £1 billion commitment of loans and direct aid. The package will fund Chinese companies to build railways, schools, roads, hospitals, bridges and offices, while technicians are installing a fibre-optic network and training local staff.

The boldest stroke so far came last month, when the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) agreed to pay £2.7 billion for a 20% stake in Africa’s largest bank, Standard Bank, which is based in Johannesburg.

The investment gives ICBC an interest in a continent-wide banking network with more than 200 branches in 18 African nations.

Investment analysts noted that unlike a western investor, ICBC did not appear to be linking its money to management changes or a shift in financial strategy.

The pursuit of disinterested commercial gain is nothing new. China calls it “noninterference” in countries’ internal affairs, and makes a virtue of its refusal to link trade with human rights or democracy.

China’s state-controlled arms merchants have followed the lucrative trail of African conflict to weapons-hungry regimes denied overt supplies by more easily embarrassed munitions makers in the West.

The US Congressional Research Service estimates that China got only 10% of the conventional arms market in Africa between 1996 and 2003. But its customer base is distinctive. Sudan’s Islamic regime bought £50m worth of Shenyang combat aircraft, including 12 F-7 jets, plus helicopter gunships that were used in the Darfur conflict.

Zimbabwe, which has hailed China’s noninterference policy as a defeat for colonialism, reached a deal in 2004 to buy 12 fighter jets and 100 armoured vehicles. Chinese technicians have set up sophisticated jamming devices at a base near Harare to block critical news broadcasts from abroad.

But China’s foray into economic empire-building has not been cost-free. There is resentment among small traders in Africa over the inflow of cheap Chinese goods. Campaigners against corruption claim some Chinese firms have no hesitation in paying bribes, underbid local firms and fail to employ enough Africans.

A reading of China’s own media shows that in the corporate cultural-sensitivity department, Chinese managers may have a way to go.

In an interview with Jiefang Ribao, the Shanghai communist party daily, one pharmaceuticals manager said: “African people’s rhythm of life is very slow and they also treasure their lives very much and enjoy entertainment, so they do not want to work overtime. So we don’t ask them to work at night or do overtime.”

Huang Zequan, the vice-chair-man of the Sino-African People’s Friendship Association, had this advice for Chinese businessmen in an interview with the China Business Daily: “Although African countries lag behind in manufacturing � some of them can’t even make needles and rely on imports � you should never believe Africa lacks consumers. There are a lot of rich men. And since African people, generally speaking, have little idea of finance, they like to spend all the money they have and therefore there’s a very good market for Chinese products there.”

The vice-chairman went on to give the example of a Chinese washing machine, sold for £86 at home, which he saw on sale in an Angolan market for £533.
 
Re: China builds African empire

Africans should employ the same standards the CHINESE themselves employ on people who invest in China. Basically, make sure the investments do the following a) creates jobs b) transfers technology and c) creates a viable network of LOCAL suppliers. If an investment doesn't do the 3 things above, it's value to the local economy ain't shit.
 
<center>China ships food aid to Zimbabwe </center>

_44100996_shelves_203x152.jpg

Empty shelves are a common
sight in Zimbabwean supermarkets

BBC News
January 3, 2007


China is sending 5,000 metric tons of food aid to Zimbabwe, official media reports, to help the African nation cope with dire food shortages.

China's deputy ambassador to Zimbabwe made the announcement, adding that the two countries wanted to increase trade to $500m (£253m) in 2008.

More than 3m Zimbabweans, 25% of the population, depend on UN food aid.

An official crop assessment after last year's harvest in May estimated the country had about a 1m ton shortfall.

The UN World Food Programme said last year that a poor harvest and the country's worsening economic situation meant hundreds of thousands of Zimbabweans were running out of food.

It said the crisis was set to peak between November and March.

China has been expanding its presence in southern Africa.

'Reliable friend'

Deputy Chinese ambassador Ma Deyun said the food aid "will soon arrive", Zimbabwe's official Herald newspaper reported.

She was speaking at a ceremony marking the delivery of 97 Chinese-made trucks, fulfilling an order from the Zimbabwean government.

"The Chinese people will be an equal, sincere and reliable friend... of the Zimbabwean people," Ms Deyun said.

China has expanded its economic relationship with Zimbabwe as the West enforces strict sanctions on the government of President Robert Mugabe.

The country is suffering from the world's highest rate of inflation, mass unemployment and shortages of fuel and basic goods.

The United States and European Union accuse Mr Mugabe of running the economy into the ground and disregarding human rights.

Zimbabwe accuses the West of seeking the overthrow of the government.



http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/7170374.stm
 
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