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ZIMBABWE: NGOs to discuss restrictions with govt
IRIN News
August 04, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48456
JOHANNESBURG - Nongovernmental
organisations in Zimbabwe are expected to meet with senior government
officials at the end of August to focus on the immense challenges facing
civil rights groups.
The meeting is being
coordinated by the National Association of Non-Governmental Organisations
(NANGO), an umbrella body whose 400 members are involved in various activities,
including civic and voter education, drought relief operations and HIV/AIDS
prevention and awareness programmes.
NANGO spokesman Jonah
Mudehwe told IRIN that restrictive regulations contained in the Non-Governmental
Organisations Bill of 2004 was a chief concern.
The controversial
Bill was passed by parliament late last year but President Robert Mugabe
refused to sign it into law and referred it back to parliament for further
discussion.
If it comes into force,
the legislation will bar NGOs from receiving foreign funding for governance
programmes. Most NGOs depend on foreign funding for the majority of their
programmes.
However, since 2000
the government has ordered the closure of a number of NGOs and banned
others from operating in the country after accusing them of acting as
fronts and conduits for Western governments and the main opposition, the
Movement for Democratic Change.
"Political factors
in the form of the harsh NGO Bill of 2004 have also complicated our operations
and created a feeling of fear and uncertainty," said Mudehwe. "Some
organisations do not know if they will be allowed to operate from the
day the Bill becomes law. We therefore seek to interact with the leadership,
so that we can bring them to appreciate our operating conditions".
The meeting has been
called in the wake of sharp increases in the number of Zimbabweans needing
all sorts of assistance. The international community estimates that up
to four million people across the country will need food aid this year
and NGOs have already taken the lead in assisting over 700,000 people
made homeless by the government's controversial urban cleanup operation.
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