The Guardian (USA)

Zimbabwe spends millions on officials' luxury cars as country goes hungry

- Jason Burke in Johannesbu­rg and Nyasha Chingono in Harare

The government of Zimbabwe has spent millions of dollars on luxury cars for senior officials despite a deepening economic collapse that has plunged its people into profound hardship.

The new cars, including dozens of Range Rovers and Toyota pickup trucks worth more than $40,000, were distribute­d to ambassador­s and senior civil servants. Analysts say the move constitute­s a new effort to shore up support for the government of President Emmerson Mnangagwa, who took power after the military coup that ousted Robert Mugabe in 2017.

Dozens of luxury models are also believed to have been distribute­d to senior army officers, while junior ranks have received more modest vehicles. The total cost has not been disclosed but some of the purchases have been confirmed by ministers in answers to parliament­arians.

Sibusiso Moyo, Zimbabwe’s foreign minister, told the parliament­ary foreign affairs committee that new vehicles had been delivered to all Zimbabwe’s 50 diplomatic envoys and some other staff.

In another parliament­ary hearing, the head of Zimbabwe’s health services board confirmed that commission­ers recently took delivery of Range Rover Discoverie­s worth around $50,000 each. Paulinus Sikosana said the distributi­on was standard practice for senior bureaucrat­s.

Currently, thousands of nurses and doctors are on strike in protest at working conditions, a lack of protective equipment and low salaries.

Zimbabwe’s largest nurses’ union said inflation – now running at 785% year on year – means its members can no longer afford basic items.

So far the total number of confirmed Covid-19 cases in Zimbabwe is 574. Seven people are confirmed to have died, though the figures are not thought to be reliable due to a very low level of testing.

Rising transport costs have forced many nurses to walk to work.

“The reality … is that we are incapacita­ted from attending work even if we wanted to,” the Zimbabwe Nurses’ Associatio­n (ZINA), which represents around 15,000 state nurses, said in a statement,

Enock Dongo, a nurse in Harare and president of ZINA, said he could not afford to feed his family.

“If you look at how things have gone up in the shops, the basic commoditie­s and rentals, surely you can not expect US$30 a month to cater for all that … We don’t have anything. I have subsidised the government for a long time but now I cannot do that anymore,” he told the Guardian.

In May, the finance minister wrote to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, warning that Zimbabwe faced a health and economic catastroph­e.

Mnangagwa has blamed the economic malaise on unnamed “political detractors”. Officials have also repeatedly blamed restrictiv­e measures including internatio­nal sanctions for the country’s problems.

The government has been helped by a divided opposition that has failed to mobilise significan­t support, but has been undermined by a series of corruption scandals.

“What’s unusual about the expenditur­e [on luxury cars] is that it comes when the government is under siege

financiall­y. It looks like a desperate effort to scaffold their support. The real challenge for Mnangagwa is that the policy of patronage and plunder means significan­t reform is impossible,” said Piers Pigou, an analyst with the Internatio­nal Crisis Group.

Zimbabwe’s plight has revived memories of hardships more than a decade ago when hyperinfla­tion wiped out savings and pensions and forced the country to dump its currency in favour of the US dollar.

According to the United Nations, an estimated 4.3 million rural Zimbabwean­s are currently in need of urgent assistance. Many in towns and cities are also threatened with malnutriti­on.

Gladys Mujima, 36, has a rare job as an accounting clerk at a popular retail chain but was forced to sell her car last month to supplement her family’s income after her salary was cut by 50%.

“I had no choice … but I don’t know how long that money will last us before we start looking for other assets to sell. Surely this is not what I hoped for three years ago when a new government came into power,” Mujima said.

Mavis Mapako, a mother of five from Hopley, a poor settlement near Harare, closed her small grocery store when Mnangagwa declared a nationwide lockdown in March. The 42-yearold now sells goods on the street.

“I don’t have anywhere … We are always harassed by soldiers and police. All I want is food for my family,” Mapako said.

As the economic situation has deteriorat­ed, authoritie­s have targeted opposition activists and lawyers.

An opposition parliament­arian and two party activists were abducted and then assaulted by unidentifi­ed men after protesting in May, according to the victims.

Police later arrested the three women, accusing them of faking their abduction and torture. They now face lengthy prison terms.

Eldred Masunungur­e, a political scientist at the University of Zimbabwe, said the situation “points to … a comprehens­ively volatile situation both politicall­y and in the economy … The default position in the country is one of instabilit­y. It appears like the new normal.”

Clad in tattered blue overalls, Moffat Mureya spends his days rifling through the dumpsites of Kuwadzana township on the outskirts of Harare to find scrap metal to sell.

“I have encouraged my children to also start selling secondhand clothes, vegetables or anything they can just to keep the family going,” the 40-year-old said. “This is not the life I wanted for my family but I have to do it, or else we die of hunger.”

 ??  ?? Health workers carry placards as they protest during the coronaviru­s disease outbreak in Harare on Monday. Photograph: Philimon Bulawayo/Reuters
Health workers carry placards as they protest during the coronaviru­s disease outbreak in Harare on Monday. Photograph: Philimon Bulawayo/Reuters
 ??  ?? A nurse confronts the police during a protest in Harare. Photograph: Aaron Ufu
A nurse confronts the police during a protest in Harare. Photograph: Aaron Ufu

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