
The day, set aside by the UN General Assembly in 2008 as a way to recognise those who face acute hazards in their attempts to help others, coincides with the 2003 bombing of the UN headquarters in Baghdad that resulted in the death of 22 members of staff.
This year’s theme “People helping people” draws our attention to the need to step out of our comfort zones to help those in dire need. It is particularly apt for Zimbabwe, whose humanitarian condition is still fragile.
Since 2000, the country has faced an unprecedented political-economic-social crisis marked by human rights abuses and political persecution, property rights violations through the seizure of farms and assets from individuals, and an acute economic meltdown.
These trends had a direct impact on the country’s humanitarian situation. Social services, among them health and education delivery systems, nearly collapsed. Jobs were lost and household income severely dwindled, making Zimbabwe one of the poorest countries in the world – despite being rich in natural, physical and human resources. The height of the crisis was in 2008 when a cholera outbreak swept through the country, killing more than 4,000 people and leaving around 100,000 seeking treatment.
The disease spread so easily because the country, reeling under international isolation, was too broke to contain it. It was broke because the government was pursuing the wrong policies, with politicians going to extreme lengths to enrich themselves. Because it was broke, it lacked the capacity to provide essential social services in order to save lives.
The formation of a coalition government in 2009 gave much hope to Zimbabweans who had remained in the country, as well as the millions who sought economic and political refuge outside.
Despite evidence of recovery, our situation remains precarious, and a lot needs to be done to rescue the country from a complex humanitarian situation. Social services delivery remains in the doldrums, as witnessed, for example, through the creeping resurgence of waterborne diseases like typhoid in Harare, Chitungwiza and other parts of the country, the failure by thousands of children to access basic education, and the inability to provide meaningful safety nets in the wake of food insecurity offset by recurrent droughts, poor farming preparations and the corrupt and badly managed land “reform” programme.
The hungry are forced to adopt desperate measures to survive, while their vulnerability is worsened by politically motivated exclusion from food aid programmes. Hundreds of thousands are living in sub-human conditions, seven years after Operation Murambatsvina robbed them of their homes and livelihoods. Millions, particularly in rural areas, live on less than a dollar a day. The political situation in the country is still tense and the future uncertain.
Post published in: Editor: Wilf Mbanga


These days’ folks can consider its reward in any element of the globe. Alongside with that some men and women want to have advantage of plastic surgical procedure for other purposes like they want to look greater or increase their facial features to get rid of some birth marks. Distinct Types You can alter anything at all in your physique component like shape of your nose, cheek bones, condition of lips and so forth. with the plastic or cosmetic surgical treatment. DM Plastic Medical procedures helps you to guiding all the factors regarding each and every element of the human body you may opt out for plastic surgical treatment and appear diverse from your usual seem.
If you are in business, you want to make sales, period. Not just to one crowd of browser users. I’ve come across websites that could be viewed in Mozilla Firefox, but you could not place an item in the shopping cart and purchase it. More lost sales. I have also seen sites that display correctly in Mozilla Firefox and not in yandex Bowser, and vice versa. There are some little quirks and code issues that require some tweaking to display correctly in both browsers. I don’t try to test every site in every site browser that comes along.