ZIMBABWE: A House Divided
Sunday, November 22, 2009   03:03 GMT    
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Women's in RSS How far Zimbabwe has fallen from being one of Africa’s most productive countries and a frontline state in the struggle against apartheid in the 1980s. Following the chaotic implementation of structural adjustment and violent and ill-executed land reform in the late 90s, President Robert Mugabe - an icon of African liberation – now presides over widespread hunger, idle farmland and a cholera epidemic that serves to highlight collapsing infrastructure, economy and social services. Life expectancy for a Zimbabwean woman has fallen to just 34.

IPS examines political paralysis and the best local and regional efforts to stem the slide, survive the crisis, and eventually rebuild the nation.

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 GENDER-AFRICA: Some Progress Amidst Continuing Challenges
 POLITICS-BOTSWANA: I Lost the Election, But I Am a Winner
 ENERGY-TANZANIA: Charcoal a Dirty Trade-Off
 AFRICA: Growing Use of Cellphones for Family Planning
 Q&A: Recognise the Benefits of Slowing Population Growth
 SOUTH SUDAN: Media Give Us a Fair Deal - Women
 CLIMATE CHANGE: Women Central to Adaptation, Mitigation
 CORRUPTION-SIERRA LEONE: Song Sparks Governance Debate
 DEVELOPMENT: Climate Change Likely to Increase African Hunger Woes
 Q&A: Women Should Be More Than Window Dressing
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REALITIES OF THE ZIMBABWEAN POWER-SHARING AGREEMENT
Kumi Naidoo
Zimbabwe's new political pact, though a 180-degree turn from violence and deadlock to cooperation and progress, is unlikely to create sustainable change for the country, writes Kumi Naidoo, Honourary President of CIVICUS.

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