A US$367 million health package just died because Zimbabwe's government called it a sovereignty threat, and Washington says that claim is completely baseless.
US denies mineral-grab motives behind aid deal
US denies mineral-grab motives behind aid deal
- A senior US official rejected accusations that the collapsed US$367 million health agreement was secretly targeting Zimbabwe's lithium and platinum reserves.
- Negotiations were strictly about public health, with zero provisions touching critical minerals at any point.
- Zimbabwean negotiators spent weeks in technical discussions without flagging a single political objection.
- Washington got blindsided when Harare suddenly pulled the plug with no stated reason.
- President Emmerson Mnangagwa ordered an immediate halt via a letter from Zimbabwe's Secretary for Foreign Affairs dated December 23.
- His administration branded the memorandum of understanding as lopsided and a threat to national sovereignty.
- Ambassador Pamela Tremont confirmed the breakdown and warned Zimbabwean communities would absorb the fallout.
- Winding down existing health assistance is already underway.
- Roughly 1.2 million Zimbabweans on life-saving HIV treatment through US-backed programs face uncertain futures.
- Five years of funding would have sustained critical health-data sharing, a standard practice since PEPFAR launched in 2006.
- Epidemiological data collection that tracks disease trends is part of what got torpedoed.
- At least 20 other African nations signed similar bilateral health deals without incident.