23 May 2012
 
New Zimbabwe Header
PM draws fire over China delegation size
No vacancy for Zanu PF leader: Gumbo
UN envoy gets Mugabe history lesson
Chitungwiza councillor 'sold 388 stands'
MORE NEWS
Mimosa loses 75,000t ore to mine fire
Mpofu, Ncube meet over ZISCO chaos
MORE BUSINESS
'Unpatriotic' Roki gets axe warning
Roki and Maneta: how 'stuff hit the fan'
MORE SHOWBIZ
H'landers stretch lead as Dynamos held
Frimpong joins great trek to Harare
MORE SPORTS
Why Zuma's Spear should stay up
Zuma painting an attack on blacks
MORE OPINION
 
Facebook: reward for innovation
MORE COLUMNISTS
 

Branson sets up Enterprise Zimbabwe

20/09/2010 00:00:00
by Reuters
 
Taking a risk ... Richard Branson
 
RELATED STORIES
Investors maintain Zimbabwe doubts
Ncube shoots down Mnangagwa proposal
Mnangagwa threatens foreign firms
Group takes over Plastique Industries
LonZim posts US$8m loss
Botswana mulls US$76m credit line
Firm brushes aside Zim concerns
Masawara snaps up BP, Shell
Embrace equity law or stay out: Mugabe
Zim seeks R3,25bn SA overdraft
Engen to expand Zim operations
Government invites new ZISCO bids
Big Mac plans Zim foray
Masawara lists on London’s AIM
UK fund manager's £25m Zim gamble

BILLIONAIRE Richard Branson urged people on Monday to invest in Zimbabwe, saying the world was wrong to wait instead of helping the politically volatile, impoverished southern African nation revive itself.

Virgin Unite, the philanthropic arm of Branson's Virgin Group, has helped create Enterprise Zimbabwe, a nonprofit group connecting philanthropists and commercial investors with business and social development opportunities.

Zimbabwe has struggled to attract foreign aid and investment because of President Robert Mugabe's policies, which include a plan for local blacks to acquire 51 percent shares in foreign-owned firms, including mines and banks.

Talks to improve Zimbabwe's ties with the European Union have stalled over slow political reforms in Harare while U.S. President Barack Obama said last month he was "heartbroken" by Zimbabwe's decline.

"Zimbabwe is a magnificent country that has had a really rough few years and either the world can continue to wait and see and not invest ... or the world can help (Prime Minister) Morgan Tsvangirai and the coalition government get Zimbabwe back on its feet," Branson told Reuters in an interview.

"The idea of Enterprise Zimbabwe is to have a sort of safe haven for people to invest through," said Branson, whom Forbes magazine estimates is worth $4 billion.

Zimbabwe's once-vibrant economy has been shattered by Mugabe's policies, particularly the seizure of white-owned farms for the resettlement of landless blacks. Mugagbe has been in power since the country's independence from Britain in 1980.

A unity government by Mugabe and his political rival Tsvangirai appears to have halted the economy's decade-long free-fall, but the country is struggling to restore productivity, feed its people and repair its ruined infrastructure. Unemployment is estimated at over 90 percent.

"In life, people have got to take risks. If everybody waits on the sidelines it will be the people who suffer," said Branson. "The present state of politics in Zimbabwe is by no means perfect, but it's a great deal better."

"Zimbabwe, of all the African countries, it's got the best chance of getting back ... it just needs a bit of help being kick-started," he said.

About 85 percent of Zimbabwe's 12.5 million people live on less than a $1 a day and annual per capita income is less than $400.



Advertisement

Enterprise Zimbabwe, established by Virgin Unite, Humanity United -- run by Pam Omidyar, wife of eBay founder Pierre Omidyar -- and The Nduna Foundation, will be officially launched this week at former U.S. President Bill Clinton's philanthropic summit.

Branson said the three day Clinton Global Initiative in New York was a great place for fundraising.

"We're hoping to bring in other partners into Enterprise Zimbabwe this week and I'm sure that we will," he said. "You can get a lot done ... it's a good time to twist arms and get other people sold on your ideas."


 
Email this to a friend Printable Version Discuss This Story
 
Share this article:

Digg it

Del.icio.us

Reddit

Newsvine

Nowpublic

Stumbleupon

Face Book

Myspace

Fark
 
 
 
 
 
RSS NewsTicker