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2007-02-06 issue:

Danisa Ndlovu pleads for help in Zimbabwe

by Ferne Burkhardt

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STRASBOURG, France—“The challenges facing our nation do not seem to want to go away,” Danisa Ndlovu, Bishop of the Brethren in Christ Church in Zimbabwe, told Mennonite World Conference (MWC) officers and executive staff at a California meeting last month. “Each day seems to bring more hardships.”

Ndlovu is asking the MWC global family to continue to pray for his country and his church and to make solidarity visits to Zimbabwe. He also requested financial assistance for the BICC Peace Committee and MWC’s help in creating a peace, social justice and ethics desk to serve Zimbabwe and other African countries.

MWC officers at the California meeting agreed to send a “koinonia team” to visit Zimbabwe in 2007 to build community through presence, prayer and encouragement. Volunteers for the team will be considered along with selected participants.

Ndlovu, vice president and president-elect of MWC, described increasingly devastating political, economic and social conditions. To address the situation, three major Christian church groups in Zimbabwe—the Evangelical Fellowship of Zimbabwe, of which the BICC is a member, the Zimbabwe Council of Churches and the Zimbabwe Catholic Bishops’ Conference—are calling for dialogue among all sectors of Zimbabweans inside and outside the country to construct a national vision for future governance in the country.

The church groups have jointly produced a discussion document, “The Zimbabwe We Want: Towards a National Vision for Zimbabwe,” which the church groups presented to President Robert Mugabe. They are hoping all stakeholders, not only churches, will take ownership of the process.

Under Mugabe’s leadership the country has spun into sharp decline. Professional people continue to leave. The economic situation fuels corruption, unemployment is still at 80 percent, inflation continues at 1,200 percent, the highest in the world, and life expectancy is now about 38 years.

Health delivery is compromised. Hospitals have few if any drugs. The sick are sometimes being asked to hunt for medical prescriptions in the market, then take the medicine to the hospital for their treatment. Although the rate of HIV/AIDS infections is decreasing, the pandemic continues, with an increasing number of orphans as a result.

Many of the thousands of people made homeless by the 2005 “Restore Order/Clean Up” still have no homes. The promised new homes have mostly gone to government employees and friends. New “clean-up” operations have left more people homeless. Ndlovu said that on a December 2006 trip to Harare, the capital city, he saw people “who had piled their belongings, some along the road, praying for transport,” their huts smoldering or in flames. “We are praying that this cup of suffering will go away,” he said.

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