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Zimbabwean Government Bank Balance Down to $217 The Guardian Two hundred and seventeen US dollars – the equivalent of £138. That is all that remains in the public account of the Zimbabwean government, a bewildered finance minister has announced. The paltry amount cast doubt over claims of a slow economic recovery and raised fresh questions about the fate of the country's diamond revenues – officials say almost $685m worth were sold last year. "Last week when we paid civil servants there was $217 [left] in government coffers," Tendai Biti, the finance minster, told journalists in the capital, Harare, on Tuesday, noting that some of them have healthier bank balances than the state. "The government finances are in a paralysis state at the present moment. We are failing to meet our targets." Zimbabwe's elections agency has said it needs $104m to organise polls this year. Biti added: "The government has no money for elections … We will be approaching the international community to assist us in this regard, but it's important that government should also do something." Zimbabwe's economy boomed after independence in 1980 but took a hit in 1997 when the president, Robert Mugabe, gave in to pressure from war veterans waging violent protests for pensions. From 2000 the seizure of white-owned farms led to chaos in the agriculture sector and the economy shrank by half. In 2008 hyperinflation of 231,000,000% broke the national currency and left millions of people hungry. But the adoption of the US dollar and South African rand appeared to have brought a measure of stability. The government's national budget for this year stands at $3.8bn and the economy is projected to grow 5%. The headline figures are not necessarily reflected on the ground, however. The UN has said Zimbabwe will require at least $131m in aid this year, the bulk for food assistance after a failed farming season left nearly 1.7 million people facing hunger. "There have been some assertions that the economy is getting better but as ordinary people we have not been seeing it," said McDonald Lewanika, director of the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition. "Without foreign direct investment coming in and with some companies leaving because of uncertainty, I wonder where these assertions come from. "The minister's statement is indicative of the very difficult situation in the country. It shows the economy really is in the intensive care unit. We have a very small formal economy so the space where minister Biti can raise resources is limited. And we should ask where certain revenues are going." The Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) claims that income from lucrative diamond sales is being expropriated by 88-year-old Mugabe's Zanu-PF party to boost its campaign for votes. Biti, who is also MDC secretary general, has claimed the treasury received only $40m from diamonds last year. The MDC spokesman Douglas Mwonzora said: "The government has no money. The most important thing is that money from diamonds is not being remitted to government coffers. As a result, after payments were made last week, there was only $217 left." He added: "The diamond wealth is going to Zanu-PF machinery and its war chest. There is likely to be an economic crash because of the uncertainty of the elections and the possibility of a Zanu-PF victory. Investors really have to pray for an MDC victory." The watchdog Partnership Africa Canada said last November that at least $2bn of diamonds from the Marange fields had been stolen by Mugabe's ruling elite, international dealers and criminals in "perhaps the biggest single plunder of diamonds the world has seen since Cecil Rhodes". READ FULL SOURCE ARTICLE: 01/30/2013 Editor's Note: And let's not forget that Mr. Mugabe was warmly welcomed by the United Nations' World Tourism Organisation to join its prestigious ‘Leaders for Tourism’ group...Anyone still think the UN is worth being a part of?... The BasicsProject.org informational and educational pamphlet series is now available for Kindle and iPad. Click here to find out more... The New Media Journal and BasicsProject.org are not funded by outside sources. We exist exclusively on tax deductible donations from our readers and contributors. Please make a tax deductible donation today.
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