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One person is murdered in political violence in February
2001.
3 February - Riot police break up a peaceful demonstration by
journalists in Harare
protesting the bombing of the Daily News.
9 February - Police have still made no arrests in connection
with Daily News bombing
Government begins to pressurise Supreme Court Chief Justice
Gubbay to resign.
14 February - Armed men in army uniform storm the house of MDC MP Job
Sikhala and assault him and his pregnant wife.
16 February - War
veterans arrive en mass in Masvingo ahead of mayoral elections.
22 February - Foreign journalist Mercedes Sayagues and BBC Correspondent Joseph Winter, both resident in Zimbabwe, are declared
prohibited immigrants and ordered to leave the country
People suspected to be war veterans attempt to break into the
home of journalist Joseph Winter
CIO agents attempt to
break into the home of Loice Matanda-Moyo, an officer in the
Attorney General's Office who had granted an order extending the
departure date of journalist Joseph Winter.
27 February - Senior Police Assistant Commissioner Solomon
Ncube resigns from the force.
March
Five people are murdered in political violence in March
2001.
1 March - In an annual report, figures show that tourist
arrivals have shrunk by 60 per cent and over 5000 people have been
made redundant in the sector in the past year.
2 March - Soldiers are unleashed in Chitungwiza and other high-density suburbs
around Harare; numerous
civilians are severely assaulted over a number of days
War veteran shareholders of ZEXCOM call for the arrest of Chenjerai
Hunzvi over fraud allegations amounting to Z$50 million.
4 March - Commercial farmer Gloria Olds, aged 72, is shot 15
times at her gate shortly after dawn, her dogs are killed and her
car is used as a getaway vehicle.
6 March - Inyathi farmer Denis Streak is abducted and held for a
number of hours by war veterans.
7 March - Armed men claiming to be war veterans shoot and
seriously injure Trust Moyo and David Mota in Epworth outside Harare
Police have still made no arrests in connection with the
bombing of the Daily News printing presses and have released no
information on the matter.
8 March - Zanu PF-supporting judge, Godfrey
Chidyausiku, is appointed Acting Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court
Zanu PF MP Eddison Zvobgo accuses Zanu PF of
introducing unconstitutional and irrational laws governing
broadcasting in Zimbabwe
Armed war veterans invade an Harare estate agency and assault
the managing director
High Court hears sworn testimony that Olivia Muchena (MP for Mutoko South) told
people at a rally that anyone who supported the MDC would be
killed.
9 March - The Midlands Chamber of Zimbabwe Industries
(CZI)reports that 1000 workers have been retrenched in the last two
months in the Midlands.
19 March - Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP)
promote 300 war veterans to rank of Sergeant & Assistant
Inspector.
20 March - A delegation from the Committee to Protect
Journalists meets with Zimbabwe's ambassador to the USA.
22 March - Exiled Ethiopian dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam and his
family are given permanent resident status in Zimbabwe
Inflation hits 57.7 per cent.
23 March - War veterans storm the Harare Children's Home,
shout, threaten and demand to see the supervisor; they also invade
more than a dozen other Harare businesses under the guise of
resolving labour disputes
95 farms are listed for compulsory acquisition.
26 March - War veterans and Zanu PF supporters close down
Bulawayo textile company Dezign Inc.
28 March - 500,000 people register for food aid in the Masvingo province
War veterans and Zanu PF supporters invade companies in Kadoma.
29 March - Masvingo Provincial Governor Josiah Hungwe threatens
Masvingo residents with death if they do not vote for Zanu PF in
mayoral elections.
31 March - Harare Hospital reports that it has run out of
essential drugs; nine infant deaths are being recorded per week at
the hospital; 80 per cent of children admitted are suffering from
malnutrition.
April
2 April - Nurses and health workers in Nkayi,
suspected of supporting the MDC, are dismissed and replaced by army
personnel.
4 April - Chenjerai Hunzvi announces that war
veterans will set up base centres in all urban centres
Teachers are forced to pay protection money to war veterans in
Mashonaland East.
9 April - Zimbabwean lawyers petition Police Commissioner Augustine
Chihuri to stop police harassment of lawyers
University of Zimbabwe (UZ)
first-year student Batanai Hadzizi dies after being assaulted by
riot police.
10 April - Riot police fire shrapnel-loaded tear gas at
University of Zimbabwe students who march in peaceful protest
through Harare
War veterans and Zanu PF supporters invade and close the Chipinge
branch of Farm and City Centre.
12 April - War veterans and Zanu PF supporters assault five
senior officials at the Cotton Company of Zimbabwe's
Gokwe branch
Hundreds of villagers from the Kezi district flee to the mountains to escape
rampaging war veterans and government supporters incensed at the
locals' support of an MDC rally.
18 April - President Mugabe threatens to nationalise mines and
manufacturing companies that are closing down due to economic
collapse.
20 April - Two Pakistani Businessmen who have invested Z$200
million in Zimbabwe flee the country after repeated attacks by war
veterans on their city businesses and homes
137 farms are listed for compulsory acquisition by the
government.
24 April - War veterans and Zanu PF supporters invade the
Harare Avenues Clinic, Macsteel Zimbabwe, Meikels department store
and the Forestry Commission; they also
force the Dental Clinic to pay out Z$7 million, and the company
closes completely.
25 April - War veterans and Zanu PF supporters invade Mechman
Engineering and successfully demand pay-outs to employees of Z$7
million; they also invade Resource Drilling, Trinidad Industries,
Lobels Bakery, Scotco, Omnia Fertilizer, Leno Trading, Willdale
Bricks, Madel Training Centre, Craster and Phillips.
26 April - South Africa summons the Zimbabwe High Commissioner
and protests the violent attacks on its business in Harare
Chenjerai Hunzvi warns that war veterans will target foreign
embassies and NGOs in the ongoing company invasions; the EU protests to the
Zimbabwe government about war veterans who raid and steal Z$1
million worth of food aid given to victims of Cyclone Eline
The Law Society urges Justice Minister Chinamasa to end attacks
against lawyers
A seven member panel of international jurists releases a report
criticising attacks against Zimbabwe's judiciary.
27 April - Agriculture Minister Joseph Made insists that there will be no
food shortages in Zimbabwe and no need to import any wheat or maize
374 farms are listed for compulsory acquisition by the
government - included are the country's major tea and coffee
estates.
28 April - Still no arrests three months after Daily News press
bombings
Minister of Youth, Border Gezi, dies in a car crash.
30 April - Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
move their seven expatriate families out of Zimbabwe, fearing for
their safety.
May
Three people are murdered in political violence in May
2001.
1 May - War veteran Joseph Chinotimba invades May Day celebrations and takes
over the proceedings, says companies in Bulawayo will be named for
invasions by his colleagues.
4 May - Economists predict that Z$8.5 billion will be needed to
import grain into Zimbabwe; 40 farms are listed for compulsory
acquisition by the government; MDC activists are kidnapped and
beaten in Masvingo.
6 May - Riot police seal off high-density suburbs in Masvingo
as political violence breaks out. MDC supporters are arrested and
have their car impounded.
8 May - Agriculture Minister Joseph Made announces that all wheat
exports have immediately been suspended. Made continues to insist
that wheat stocks are adequate and no grain will have to be
imported; violent clashes take place in Masvingo between MDC and
Zanu PF supporters led by Chenjerai Hunzvi, and 13 people are
injured.
10 May - The British Council closes its Library and
Information Department Offices in Harare for safety reasons; the
World Press Freedom Campaign urges the Zimbabwean government to
ensure the safety of journalists; Information Minister Jonathon
Moyo says government will not order a halt to company invasions by
war veterans.
11 May - Eighty-one farms are listed for compulsory acquisition
by the government; the world-famous Gonarezhou National Park,
which is state-owned land, is demarcated into plots for
agricultural resettlement; the French ambassador to Zimbabwe
publicly condemns invasions of companies by war veterans.
14 May - Mayoral elections in Masvingo are won by the MDC
candidate.
16 May - War veterans invade Speciss College in Harare.
18 May - Some war veterans are arrested on charges of invading
companies, but their leaders are not touched, in what is seen as a
cover up operation; on of those arrested, Mike Moyo, says
Chinotimba and Hunzvi have benefited financially from the
invasions and threatens to reveal them; Mike Moyo is released from
police custody; 19 farms are listed for compulsory acquisition by
the government.
23 May - The house of Willias Madzimure, politician, is attacked by war veterans. The
youth of the Movement for
Democratic Change move into the area to protect the house
24 May - The Danish embassy suspends Z$100 million aid for
private sector partnerships in Zimbabwe; Chenjerai Hunzvi is said
to be recovering in hospital after collapsing in Bulawayo; the war veterans
association denies reports that Hunzvi has died.
25 May - Chenjerai Hunzvi is transferred to Parirenyatwa Hospital in Harare
and said to be suffering from malaria.
26 May - Defence Minister Moven Mahachi dies in a car crash near Nyanga; five other people in the
car at the time only sustain minor injuries.
27 May - MDC council election candidate is kidnapped and
assaulted by Zanu PF supporters; he still wins the election in Plumtree
for the MDC.
29 May - Zanu PF supporters attack six homes, burn possessions
and assault people they suspect of supporting the MDC in Bindura; the CFU says maize
production has dropped by 43 per cent and predicts a deficit of 600
000 tonnes.
30 May - US Secretary of State, Colin Powell, speaks out strongly against
President Mugabe and urges South Africa to do likewise.
31 May - Government officials including police, CIO and municipal
workers are implicated in a land scam in which resettled people
paid them Z$10 million in order to be allocated plots of land in Matabeleland; the CFU
withdraws all litigation against the government and announces the
formation of the Zimbabwe Joint Resettlement Initiative with Z$1
billion offered in aid for resettled people.
June
One person is murdered in political violence in June 2001.
7 June - War veterans invade the property of black commercial
farmer Philemon Matibe who was the MDC candidate for Chegutu and whose contesting of
the 2000 parliamentary election results in court is due to commence
within days; Mr Matibe is forced to vacate the farm and dismiss his
workers.
8 June - Twenty-seven farms in Macheke are not operating due to war veterans
enforcing work stoppages.
9 June - War veterans invade the Beatrice Country Club. Farmers
holding a cricket match are accused of celebrating the death of
Chenjerai Hunzvi. War veterans chase all patrons away, consume all
the food and alcohol and rename the premises the Chenjerai Hitler
Hunzvi Club.
12 June - The Bulawayo
branch of the CZI reports that 400 companies have closed and 100000
people have been made jobless due to continuing economic
decline.
13 June - War veterans vandalise Z$50 million of property on
farms in Masvingo.
14 June - Petrol, diesel, paraffin and aviation fuel prices
rise by 70 per cent.
15 June - A 50-year-old female Australian aid worker is
assaulted by war veterans for walking past the house where mourners
of Chenjerai Hunzvi were gathered; the Agricultural Workers Union
reports that only three out of every 500 people being resettled on
seized farms are farm workers and says many thousands face
destitution.
17 June - Farm worker Zondiwa Dumukani is beaten to death with
golf clubs by government supporters in front of numerous
eyewitnesses and a ZBC television
camera crew; war veterans burn tobacco seed beds on seven
properties, one of which reports loss to the value of Z$42 million.
The Tobacco Association reports that 80 tobacco farms have been
prevented from planting a crop, representing a loss of 19 per cent
of the country's total harvest.
18 June - BBC documentary
producer Sean Langan
is ordered out of the country; eight headmen, 25 teachers and two
headmasters are fired by way veterans in Buhera and ordered to leave
the area.
19 June - A BBC TV crew (Simon Finch, John Sweeney and James Miller) are ordered out
of Zimbabwe by Information Minister Jonathon Moyo.
20 June - Ministry of Education officials tell teachers fired
by war veterans in Buhera that if they do not resolve their
political differences with war veterans they will be struck off the
payroll.
22 June - 421 farms are listed for compulsory acquisition by
government. Included is the farm belonging to murdered farmers
Martin and Gloria Olds. Also listed are missions owned by the Catholic
Church, land owned by the Cold Storage Company and the National Railways.
26 June - 35 people are injured when government supporters
descend on a gold mine in Shamva, beat people and destroy property,
accusing the mine owners of allowing NCA (Constitutional Assembly)
meetings to be held there; scores of villagers, MDC activists and
NCA members flee their homes in Guruve after being attacked by government
supporters who accuse them of supporting the MDC.
28 June - The EU gives the Zimbabwe government 60 days to end
violence and farm occupations, abolish curbs on media and uphold
court rulings, or face tough penalties.
29 June - An 18-page supplement to the Herald newspaper lists another 2030
farms which have been gazetted for compulsory acquisition by the
government: 90 per cent of farming properties in the country are
now listed for seizure; UK Daily
Telegraph journalist David Blair is ordered to
leave Zimbabwe.
30 June - Sixty war veterans armed with axes and broken bottles
barricade the Marondera Hotel and prevent an NCA meeting from being
held there.
July
2 July - Armed war veterans evict a family from their home in
Waterfalls in Harare, saying they
are going to settle on the premises; the Supreme Court rules four
to one that the government's Fast Track Land Resettlement Scheme is
illegal and that no more Section 5 or 8 letters should be
issued.
5 July - Author George Mujajati is severely assaulted in his
home by armed men in army uniform for not going to work due to the
nationwide stayaway called by ZCTU; armed soldiers beat people indiscriminately
in five Harare high-density suburbs for the same reason; farming
industry experts say that farm output will decline by 90 per cent
and 300,000 farm workers will become destitute if the government
goes ahead with the seizure of all farms listed for
acquisition.
6 July - New Chief Justice Chidyausiku says that previous
Supreme Court rulings against the government's land reform
programme was incorrect, four judges in the Supreme Court disagree
with the judgement; legislation is gazetted barring dual
nationality in Zimbabwe: people who were born in Zimbabwe but whose
parents were not are required to renounce any claims to citizenship
by ancestry of any other country; 20,000 war veterans are given
backdated allowances by the government for their role in land
seizures after representation was made by Joseph Chinotimba to Zanu
PF.
December
4 December - The Supreme Court rules that Robert Mugabe's
controversial land reform programme is legal my name is nqobile
dube and i was there as well
Births
Deaths
April - Border
Gezi, Youth and Employment Creation Minister dies in a car
accident.
May - Moven
Mahachi, Minister of Defence is killed in a car crash.