/ 29 May 2005

Harare calm after food price increases

Major increases in the price of the staple diet of bread and maize meal went into effect on Saturday in Harare, but the Zimbabwean capital was reported quiet after a weeklong blitz on street traders and shack dwellers that saw ten of thousands arrested or left homeless in the midwinter cold.

State radio announced that the price of maize meal would increase, effective immediately, to Z$19 000 (R13) for a 10kg bag, while the price of a standard loaf of bread would increase by 29% to Z$4 500 (R3,28).

Similar price rises in 1998 triggered riots in which at least seven people died after President Robert Mugabe deployed troops backed by tanks and helicopters to townships.

Saturday’s price hikes were accepted with apparent resignation in Harare, where residents had fought running battles with police last week as paramilitary squads torched and bulldozed roadside kiosks, known as tuck shops, and hundreds of homes.

”Things are really calm now,” said Lovemore Machingedzi, an official of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) in the capital’s southern suburbs, which bore the brunt of the unrest of the past few days.

Machingedzi warned, however, of an explosive mood among former guerrillas, powerful supporters of Mugabe’s government over the past five years who face the demolition of settlements they established after seizing white-owned farms with official encouragement.

”My understanding is that the situation where they are is very, very tense because they thought they could do what they want,” he said.

MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai accused Mugabe of launching what was described as a nationwide ”clean-up campaign” to punish the urban poor for voting against his ruling Zanu-PF in March 31 parliamentary elections, and to deter protests as economic catastrophe looms.

At a meeting of his ruling-party central committee on Friday, Mugabe publicly backed the crackdown on street traders and shack dwellers, officially code named ”Operation Murambatsvina” or ”Operation Drive Out Trash”.

”Our towns and cities, including the capital, had become havens for illicit and criminal practices which just could not be allowed to go on,” he said.

His government has blamed speculators, black-market dealers and alleged Western economic sanctions for the current crisis. He promised compensation for those who had ”wrongly suffered damage”.

Many arrested traders had vending licences, while those left homeless had official lease agreements for sites developed with World Bank and United States aid. One such project was in Harare’s northern Hatcliffe area, where opposition legislator Trudi Stevenson said on Saturday that 500 evicted families have been left shivering in winter frosts.

”We need plastic for shelter and some food packs,” she said in an appeal. Zimbabwean relief organisations said the task is ”nationwide, too big for them”, while the International Committee of the Red Cross ”reports they only deal with war situations”, she said.

Mugabe appeared at the party meeting despite recent reports in independent newspapers saying the 81-year-old leader is in ill health, including a serious heart condition.

After predicting a ”bumper” 2,5-million-tonne maize harvest and scorning aid offers, Mugabe now admits the country urgently needs more than 1,2-million tonnes to save four million Zimbabweans from famine.

His fiercest critic, Roman Catholic Archbishop Pius Ncube of Bulawayo, has accused Mugabe of using access to food to intimidate rural voters, while the MDC alleges a plan to drive the urban poor back to the countryside, ”where they can be more easily controlled”.

James Morris, head of the World Food Programme and personal emissary of United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan, is due in Harare on June 1 for talks on the humanitarian crisis with Mugabe. — Sapa-AP