By Sebastien Berger in Bulawayo
Zimbabweans are starving to death on a scale equivalent to genocide, a top opposition MP claimed yesterday. Four million people will need food aid by the end of the year, the World Food Programme said earlier this month, as President Robert Mugabe's Zanu PF government oversees the fastest-shrinking economy in the world. David Coltart, a senior member of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, said there was "no doubt" Zimbabweans were already starving to death. "Arguably this is the world's greatest humanitarian crisis," he told The Daily Telegraph. "Zimbabwe has the lowest life expectancy in the world: 34 for women and 37 for men. To use a legal term, I would say this amounts to genocide with constructive intent. In terms of a complete disregard for the plight of people, not caring whether there is wholesale loss of life, it amounts to genocide."
Zanu PF officials never miss an opportunity to denounce what they call the West's "illegal sanctions", blaming them for the country's turmoil - even though they only amount to a visa ban and asset freezes on named individuals. (...)
Zimbabwe has "safety valves" in South Africa and Botswana, he added. "Young people can vent their anger by going south. So you don't have the people who would be the vanguard of any uprising." But probably the main factor in Mr Mugabe's survival is, ironically, the very people who have fled his rule. With unemployment around 80 per cent, by some estimates three-quarters of Zimbabweans earning a living are doing so abroad, and their families survive on the money they send home. The funds also support the remains of the economy. (...)
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