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Zimbabwe: Us Government
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The Zimbabwe dollar, denoted by ZWD or Z$, is the legal tender currency of Zimbabwe. The currency was formerly known as the Rhodesian dollar (R$), which was established in 1970 following the replacement of the Pound. At the time of Zimbabwe's independence in 1980, the dollar was worth approximately the same amount as the Pound Sterling; ... with much inflation and the collapse of the economy, the currency devalued significantly. By August 2005, the currency had devalued to Z$17,694.15 per US dollar at the official rate. The black market rate at this time was around double the official rate. The largest standard issue banknote in circulation is currently Z$1,000.
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USAID assistance to Zimbabwe since 2002 has focused on family planning, HIV/AIDS prevention, democracy and governance programs, emergency food aid, and assistance to internally displaced persons. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) began a direct assistance program in August 2000. CDC's program consists of prevention of HIV transmission; improved care of persons with HIV/AIDS; surveillance, monitoring, and evaluation of the epidemic; and health sector infrastructure support.
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Zimbabwe is currently experiencing hyperinflation standing at somewhere above 150 000% as of March 2008. The Consumer Price index is around 1 000 000 000% (yes, that is 1 billion), so the price of goods may increase substantially over even the course of a single day. The official exchange rate, where US$1 buys Z$30,000 is ridiculous; as of January 2008, the black market rate is around Z$3 million.
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Finding your ideal house, home, apartment, villa, land, office, vacation rentalor, indeed, any type of real estate for sale in Zimbabwe is straightfoward. Just use the Property Search button above to select from properties listed by the thousands of avdvertisers on PropertyWorld.com. A sample of properties available in Zimbabwe is shown below.
The Lipopo and Zambesi rivers outline the border of Zimbabwe and supply the soil with moisture and nutrients needed to grow crops. These crops, such as squash, corn, yams, pumpkins, peanuts, and mapopo (papaya), flourish during the summer and autumn months, but can be destroyed in the dry winter months. To preserve food for consumption during the winter months, Zimbabweans dry various produce and meats after the rainy season. Tiny dried fish called kapenta are a common snack. Another dried specialty is biltong, which is sun-dried, salted meat cut into strips similar to beef jerky. Beef or game, such as kudo and springbok (both members of the antelope family), may be used.
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According to human rights organisations such as Amnesty International[41] and Human Rights Watch[42] the government of Zimbabwe violates the rights to shelter, food, freedom of movement and residence, freedom of assembly and the protection of the law. There are assaults on the media, the political opposition, civil society activists, and human rights defenders.
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