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  • 1,300 arrested in Zimbabwe prices crackdown

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070709...weeconomyprice


    1,300 arrested in Zimbabwe prices crackdown
    by Godfrey Marawanyika
    1 hour, 27 minutes ago



    HARARE (AFP) - More than 1,300 shop owners and business managers have been arrested in Zimbabwe as part of a crackdown on firms accused of flouting government-imposed price controls, police said Monday.

    Most of the 1,328 bosses had been fined but the number also includes around two dozen company executives arrested since Friday who are due to appear before magistrates, said police spokesman Chief Superintendent Oliver Mandipaka.

    Among those who were taken into custody were executives from leading firms operating in Zimbabwe including the local franchise owner of the Nando's restaurant chain and the Spar supermarket company, the spokesman added.

    "We will continue to arrest anyone who will defy the government imposed controls on basic food commodities," said Mandipaka.
    "We will not stop until there is order in the business community," he added.

    Zimbabwe's Industry Minister Obert Mpofu ordered businesses a fortnight ago to halve the prices of all goods and services in a bid to curb spiralling inflation but the edict has been widely ignored.
    Many manufacturers say the government-set prices mean they cannot cover their costs and have stopped production, leading to widespread shortages of basics such as cooking oil and salt.

    President Robert Mugabe, unable to stem the rise of what is the world's highest rate of inflation, warned last week that his government would seize and nationalise firms found to be profiteering.

    The inflation rate was last announced surreptitiously in a newspaper report at 3,714 percent in April and is now believed to be well beyond 5,000 percent.

    Mandipaka also revealed that police had thwarted a major plot to smuggle tobacco out of Zimbabwe across the border into South Africa where shop owners can expect to receive a much better price for their products than with the government-imposed prices in Zimbabwe.

    "We have just busted a major syndicate that was trying to smuggle Remington Gold (a brand of cigarettes) that was hidden inside ironing boards," he said.

    "We have so far recovered 17 of these ironing boards."

    On Saturday opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai called the price controls and subsequent crackdown "crooked economics" and "an election gimmick" ahead of parliamentary and presidential polls due to be held next year.

    While economists have warned that the price controls will only lead to further empty shelves, the move has won backing in rural areas.

    State television broadcast footage in bulletins on Monday from the western farming area of Mhondoro of people who had been complaining that shops were still overcharging and had not slashed their prices.

    Mugabe has portrayed critics of the pricing controls as nothing more than puppets of former colonial Britain who are determined to topple his regime.

    "What we have seen is that some were growing greedy at the expense of the majority while some had been recruited by the British and agreed to cause turmoil," Mugabe said in a speech last Friday.
    LOL, can you all believe this?!

  • #2
    Zimbabwe price cuts spark gas shortages, taxi impoundments, shopper stampedes

    http://www.brandonsun.com/story.php?story_id=62760

    Saturday, July 14th, 2007
    Zimbabwe price cuts spark gas shortages, taxi impoundments, shopper stampedes
    Canadian Press
    HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) - Police impounded taxis that had not complied with government orders to cut fares, stranding commuters, state media reported, while shoppers stampeded stores as cornmeal, bread, meat and other staples vanished from groceries.

    At least 100 taxis had been impounded since Wednesday, state radio said, in the latest crackdown since the government ordered price cuts of about 50 per cent in response to the country's rampant inflation. Since the June 25 order, consumers have wrestled over sudden bargains, and chief executives have been hauled into court for failing to cut prices.

    Minibus taxi drivers have been taken to court and fined.

    Police spokesman Oliver Mandipaka said drivers argued they were still buying gasoline at inflated prices on the illegal black market.

    "That, of course, is not a defence, " Mandipaka said.

    Drivers interviewed on state television said they could not get state-subsidized fuel. Gas stations designated to sell cheap fuel to licensed transporters either ran out of subsidized gasoline or were besieged by long, chaotic lines of minibuses.

    Workers at one bus terminus said the wait for a routine 30-minute trip into the city took up to four hours. Many hitched rides on trucks and in private cars, while traffic diminished as acute gas shortages took a toll.

    Riot police were called Thursday to a wholesale store to control a stampede of shoppers gathering up reduced goods. Extra police were posted at downtown clothing and shoe stores.

    Earlier in the week, the government withdrew the licences of all private slaughterhouses, accusing them of refusing to reduce meat prices.

    Restaurants and fast food outlets were also ordered to slash their prices. Police told one restaurant owner to "redesign the menu," to eliminate more expensive gourmet dishes.

    In several restaurants, steak was out of stock, waiters said.

    Police even shut down the canteen at the Harare law courts, used by court officials, magistrates and police, for failing to comply with the price order, state media reported Friday.

    Butcheries, stores, factories and gas stations were unable to replace materials sold at below the original cost since the prices edict.

    The Zimbabwe Independent newspaper, a respected privately owned business and political weekly, on Friday reported that central bank governor Gideon Gono expressed concerns over the prices crackdown, saying it likely would lead to widespread closures of businesses.

    State radio on Friday quoted Simon Khaya Moyo, Zimbabwe's ambassador in neighbouring South Africa, dismissing media reports there predicting the collapse of the economy, ending President Robert Mugabe's long reign.

    Official inflation is 4,500 per cent, the highest in the world, though independent financial institutions estimate real inflation is closer to 9,000 per cent.

    The opposition Movement for Democratic Change described the price cuts as a political gimmick to shore up support for Mugabe's party.
    This is the epitome of stupidity! The Zimbabwean Government is telling their business people to commit economic suicide!

    All the while it is the Zimbabwean Government who is murdering and robbing their own people with the compelled use of fiat currency. Ugh!!!

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