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UK: Barclays bank funds Mugabe with $1 billion

WARNING: This is Version 1 of my old archive, so Photos will NOT work and many links will NOT work. But you can find articles by searching on the Titles. There is a lot of information in this archive. Use the SEARCH BAR at the top right. Prior to December 2012; I was a pro-Christian type of Conservative. I was unaware of the mass of Jewish lies in history, especially the lies regarding WW2 and Hitler. So in here you will find pro-Jewish and pro-Israel material. I was definitely WRONG about the Boeremag and Janusz Walus. They were for real.

Original Post Date: 2007-01-30  Posted By: Jan

From the News Archives of: WWW.AfricanCrisis.Org
Date & Time Posted: 1/30/2007
UK: Barclays bank funds Mugabe with $1 billion
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UK: Barclays bank funds Mugabe with $1 billion

From the News Archives of: WWW.AfricanCrisis.Org


Date & Time Posted: 1/30/2007

UK: Barclays bank funds Mugabe with $1 billion

[This is very interesting. Barclays does have a long history of banking in S.Africa and in Zimbabwe. We used to bank with Barclays in Zim.

I think that perhaps things are working differently to what people think. The British and American Intelligence Services – with their Liberal strategy – do not want war in southern Africa. They need to protect their biggest investment – S.Africa. It could be that the British Govt has quietly asked/suggested to Barclays and the other British Financial institutions that they “assist” Mugabe so as to prevent a complete meltdown. There might even be secret horsetrading going on between those Govts and Mugabe – or attempts to do horsetrading (which might later fail).

That is my guess as to what is going on. I am quite convinced that they don’t want Mugabe to just collapse, and that behind this money – are secret deals/promises/Western arm-twisting or attempts at arm-twisting. Jan]

You will find this link interesting:

What do you think of that? It may be a plan of the MI6 to keep Mugabe in power? It may explain why no armed struggle took place to get rid of him.

Barclays’ millions help to prop up Mugabe regime

Three British firms provide key finance, allowing the Zimbabwe leader to defy world condemnation

Antony Barnett and Christopher Thompson
Sunday January 28, 2007
The Observer

Barclays bank is helping to bankroll President Robert Mugabe’s regime in Zimbabwe, providing millions of pounds of support for his vilified land reforms, The Observer can reveal. Mugabe’s opponents describe the bank’s activities as a ‘disgrace’ and an ‘insult’ to the millions who have suffered human rights abuses.

Barclays is the most high-profile of three British-based financial institutions, which, in total, have provided more than $1bn in direct and indirect funding to Mugabe’s administration. The other two companies are Standard Chartered Bank and the insurance firm Old Mutual. According to influential newsletter Africa Confidential, that first disclosed the Barclays’ loans, the British organisations provide an economic lifeline keeping Mugabe’s regime afloat.

A spokesman for Zimbabwe’s main opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change, likened the bank’s actions to its support of South Africa’s apartheid regime and urged a boycott.

One of the most controversial of Barclays’ Zimbabwe loans is the (194)Â(163)£30m it provides to a state-sponsored agricultural ‘facility’ aiming to sustain land reforms that saw Mugabe seize white-owned farmland and drive more than 100,000 black workers from their homes. The government has expelled more than a million opposition supporters from Harare and Bulawayo, dumping them in the countryside.

Britain backs targeted international sanctions against the regime – although there are no economic sanctions – which prevent Mugabe or his political associates travelling to Europe or the US. It is estimated that Barclays, Standard Chartered Bank and Old Mutual have lent the Mugabe regime about (194)Â(163)£100m by purchasing treasury bills and government bonds.

Speaking to The Observer from South Africa, Tendai Biti, MDC secretary- general, reacted angrily: ‘It is immoral and it is criminal. Barclays defended their immoral actions in supporting the apartheid government in South Africa and they seem intent on repeating history in Zimbabwe.’

Liberal Democrat chief whip Norman Lamb said: ‘By going along with the rules provided by the Zimbabwe regime [the companies] become complicit with the actions of Zimbabwe’s government and complicit with a corrupt regime … I struggle to see a justification.’

Any commercial bank operating in Zimbabwe must reinvest 40 per cent of its profits in government bonds. Barclays has arranged finance facilities worth $110m to Zimbabwean companies involved in tobacco, mining, sugar, manufacturing and the horticultural sectors. Last year Barclays bought South Africa’s Absa bank for more than (194)Â(163)£2bn, making it one of the Mugabe government’s biggest private financiers. Zimbabwe has one of the world’s lowest life expectancy rates and the highest inflation, expected to hit more than 4,000 per cent this year.

Barclays says it has had customers in Zimbabwe for decades and abandoning them now would make matters worse. A spokesman said: ‘We have been in Zimbabwe since 1912 and have 1,000 employees serving 150,000 retail, business and corporate customers in the country. We are committed to continuing to provide a service to those customers in what is clearly a difficult operating environment. As with all other banks and businesses, Barclays is required to comply with the regulations of the Reserve Bank. This involves participating from time to time in the purchase of treasury bills and government bonds.’

Old Mutual, the London insurance firm, holds investments on the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange worth about 16 per cent of the market and has a stake in Zimbabwe Newspapers, which publishes the Herald and the Chronicle. Nobody from Old Mutual was available for comment.

A spokesman for Standard Chartered Bank confirmed his institution had lent Mugabe money through purchase of government bonds. He said: ‘This is part of doing business in Zimbabwe.’

Source: Guardian Unlimited
URL: http://observer.guardian.co.uk/world/story/0,…/p>


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