
A pregnant woman stands in her empty kitchen, rural Gwanda, October 2011. “No food, no work, no money. If only I could get cattle to help me plough.”
SPT Report
Nationally, Zimbabwe is more food secure at the end of 2011 than it has been for several years. However, parts of Zimbabwe suffered serious crop failure earlier this year and a million people are still predicted to need supplementary feeding. In Gwanda, Matabeleland South, the authors found that almost half of households indicated a day without food in the recent past.[1] Only 17% of families reported eating three meals a day, meaning that 83% of households were, weeks before the onset of the official “hungry season in October”, already making food compromises daily. Grazing is critical, and people are traveling further to find water. This has been one of the hottest Octobers on record. Several families reported that baboons were killing and eating young goats and chickens, as the hunger now affects all living creatures in this area. Several families had no livestock left at all, not even one chicken.
Of concern by the end of October, is that supplementary feeding has not yet started, nor has the distribution of seed, yet the first rains have arrived. If people are to avoid yet another season of crop failure, there is an urgent need for free agricultural inputs to roll out now. Furthermore, many families are in desperate need of food now.
Deindustrialization in Bulawayo
This hunger – already so extreme ahead of the recognized “peak hunger season” that officially lasts from October to February – is taking place at a time when Bulawayo, traditionally the source of employment and resources for Matabeleland, has seen a cataclysmic loss of jobs in industry in the last two years. This means that part of the greater support system for rural Matabeleland is highly compromised. The report traces...Read more
Wed, November 2 2011 » Human rights, Reports » Leave a comment

Zimbabwe lawyers fail to gain access to their clients, accused of treason: Harare High Court, February 2011.
Since the signing and initiation of the Global Political Agreement in Zimbabwe in September 2008 and February 2009 respectively, the politics of the country has been convulsed with a recurring set of problems even as it has allowed for a certain political and economic stabilization. The agreement, with its attendant Inclusive Government, was set up to establish the conditions for a free and fair election. However it was always clear that, in a more determinate sense, it would provide the site for intense struggles over the state between the contending parties, with Zanu PF always in an advantageous position because of its control of the coercive arms of the state. It is thus not surprising that the Mugabe regime has used its control of the police, security and military sectors to contain the constrained promise of the GPA to open up democratic spaces. It is also clear that both MDCs have made strategic mistakes that have added to the already difficult challenges that confronted them at the outset of the process. Moreover the problems of the GPA have, on occasion, been compounded by the different roles of SADC and the West.
In recent months the Zimbabwean crisis has been somewhat overshadowed by the uprisings in North Africa and the Middle East, as well as the violence that has broken out over the contested election in the Ivory Coast. Both events, but particularly the developments in North Africa, have predictably forced comparisons with the Zimbabwe situation. This has often lead to over-optimistic hopes for an ‘Egypt moment’ in Zimbabwe, that are based less on a concrete analysis of the conditions in the country, than a desperate yearning that Zimbabwe’s authoritarian state face such a reckoning. The complex politics of the GPA in the context of the particularities of Zimbabwe’s history make any simple comparisons with North Africa difficult to sustain. This report thus sets out...Read more
Wed, April 13 2011 » Global Political Agreement, Reports » 1 Comment

In May 2005, the Zimbabwean government embarked on a massive, highly systematic programme of demolitions of all informal [...]
Published: Fri, July 30 2010

There is a general consensus that the Global Political Agreement (GPA), signed in September 2008 and initiated in [...]
Published: Wed, March 31 2010

The largest mass movement of people into South Africa in its history is continuing into its seventh year, [...]
Published: Wed, March 31 2010

The Global Political Agreement signed on 15th September 2008 was an uneasy compromise between the two MDCs and [...]
Published: Tue, June 30 2009

There is not much likelihood that the formal economy in Zimbabwe will recover any time soon. It is [...]
Published: Tue, June 30 2009

In its report on the March 29th 2008 Harmonised Election the Solidarity Peace Trust recorded the widespread state-led [...]
Published: Tue, July 29 2008

The 2008 Harmonised Election in Zimbabwe was arguably the most historic of the post-independence elections, as for the [...]
Published: Wed, May 21 2008

Since the onset of the Zimbabwean crisis, the role of South Africa, as both a help and hindrance, [...]
Published: Tue, October 23 2007

The violence of 11 March and the months following in Zimbabwe indicated increased levels of state repression against [...]
Published: Tue, July 10 2007

The Solidarity Peace Trust condemns the brutal assault on opposition forces and the arrests of more than 50 [...]
Published: Sat, March 24 2007

“Policing the State” highlights the growth of police brutality in Zimbabwe since 2000, which has coincided with the [...]
Published: Thu, December 14 2006

Between 1991 and 2003, urban poverty trebled in Zimbabwe. It was against this background of escalating economic collapse [...]
Published: Wed, August 30 2006

Command agriculture has to be contextualised against a background of the collapse of agriculture since 2000, and of [...]
Published: Sat, April 15 2006

The July UN report on the demolitions in Zimbabwe has become the definitive report on events between May [...]
Published: Wed, October 19 2005

On 19 May 2005, the Government of Zimbabwe began an operation labelled “Operation Murambatsvina” (OM). While Government has [...]
Published: Mon, June 27 2005

Two teams of Church observers from South Africa entered Zimbabwe ahead of the Election 2005, to observe the [...]
Published: Sun, May 15 2005

Five years ago this June, parliamentary elections were held in Zimbabwe. Both the ruling Zimbabwe African National Union [...]
Published: Tue, March 15 2005

Zimbabweans are now the second biggest group of foreign Africans in South Africa. Yet there is little formal [...]
Published: Mon, November 15 2004

The last four years have seen a relentless clampdown on all those who are perceived as opposing the [...]
Published: Thu, July 15 2004

In association with The Zimbabwe Institute Zimbabwe is on the eve of an election year: the nation is [...]
Published: Mon, March 15 2004

The Solidarity Peace Trust has a Board consisting of church leaders of Southern Africa and is dedicated to [...]
Published: Mon, December 15 2003

In the last two years, Zimbabwe has seen a new national youth service training programme moving rapidly from [...]
Published: Fri, September 5 2003

Previous reports compiled by the same authors in conjunction with Physicians For Human Rights Denmark (PHR-DK), detailed cases [...]
Published: Thu, April 17 2003

In association with Physicians for Human Rights, Denmark The intention of this report, as with the two previous [...]
Published: Wed, November 20 2002

In association with Physicians for Human Rights, Denmark The Presidential election in Zimbabwe took place on 9th – [...]
Published: Tue, May 21 2002

In association with Physicians for Human Rights, Denmark The Presidential Election in Zimbabwe will take place on 9 [...]
Published: Thu, January 24 2002