The impoverished Zimbabwe's voting rights restored by IMF after seven years

The impoverished Zimbabwe's voting rights restored by IMF after seven yearsSeven years after suspending its voting rights over a failure to pay back loans, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Friday elected to make Zimbabwe a full voting member.

But still Zimbabwe will be given only a limited access to the IMF's lending facilities. The impoverished African country still owes the IMF about $140 million though Zimbabwe paid back some of its outstanding loans in 2006.

Since long-time President Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF party entered into an uneasy coalition with the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) in February 2009, Zimbabwe has been trying to repair its image abroad.

As Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, the former opposition leader, has repeatedly accused Mugabe of refusing to appoint MDC officials to senior government posts, the coalition has been fraught with difficulties.This week's raids on current Chief Minister Shibu Soren's aide M. L. Pal, which reportedly unearthed undisclosed assets worth Rs. 65 crore has further cemented the belief that becoming a private secretary to a chief minister is an easy route to riches in Jharkhand.

Vivek, another ex-personal secretary of Soren, still moves around with the chief minister carrying files, though he does not have any official post as Pal continues in his post as the chief minister's personal secretary.

When Koda was being investigated for the Rs. 2,500-crore scam for which he is now in jail awaiting trial, income tax (IT) officials raided house of Harendra Singh, personal secretary of former chief minister Madhu Koda last October and found documents related to investment and assets worth of crores of rupees.

Personal secretaries of other ministers are also not far behind.

After raiding home of Manoj Kumar Singh, an aide of Chandra Prakash Chaudhary, water resources minister in the Koda government last year, IT officials said they had found documents related to investments and assets worth Rs. 12 crore.

An official of the Jharkhand vigilance bureau, on condition of anonymity, told IANS," It seems that personal secretaries are more powerful than senior government officials. It also appears that these aides and ministers connived in corruption and helped both in making fortunes in a short span of time."

Pal used to work in a Coal India Limited (CIL) subsidiary in Ranchi but was sacked because he had got his job with a fake certificate. He became Shibu Soren's personal secretary in August 2008, in an earlier stint by Soren in the chief minister's post. (With Input from Agencies)