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Nestle Zimbabwe Conveniently Dumps Grace Mugabe Farm as Supplier

By Katherine Glover | Oct 5, 2009

Nestle’s Zimbabwe subsidiary will no longer be buying milk from Gushungo Dairy Estate — a farm which was confiscated from white farmers as part of Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe’s widely condemned land reform program and given to the president’s wife, Grace Mugabe. Nestle ended its dealings with Gushungo on Friday because of all of the negative attention and boycott threats Nestle received when the business relationship came to light earlier in the week.

Well, and because the relationship is no longer necessary. Apparently for a time the Dairy Board of Zimbabwe was broke and unable to purchase milk from Gushungo, and the local dairy market was more or less in shambles, so Nestle’s Zimbabwe subsidiary took matters into its own hands. Several of Nestle Zimbabwe’s other suppliers had gone out of business, and if Nestle hadn’t bought from Gushungo milk, the company says, that milk would have just been wasted.

But now the Dairy Board of Zimbabwe is back on its feet and Nestle has found alternative sources of milk (which do not include the Dairy Board; Nestle told the BBC it sources exclusively from individual farms).

Nestle said its temporary relationship with Gushungo was necessary because the alternative would have hurt the local economy and caused losses in both the job market and the food supply. I really don’t know enough about the economic situation in Zimbabwe to comment on whether or not dealing with Gushungo was the right thing to do under the circumstances, but from a public relations standpoint, it was potentially disastrous. I guess it’s lucky for Nestle the market stabilized a bit before the Mugabe connection hit the news.

Katherine Glover is a Minneapolis-based print, radio and online journalist. She's written for Salon.com, Sierra Magazine and many others, and she does a weekly blog on immigration issues for MinnPost.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Nestle to stop Mugabe milk deal

    BBC - 53 days 22 hours 5 minutes ago

    Swiss multinational Nestle says it will stop buying milk from a farm owned by the wife of Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe. Nestle said it had bought milk from farms including Grace Mugabe's Gushungo Dairy Estate to help the country as its dairy industry neared collapse. The move comes after human rights activists had called for a boycott of...

  • ZIMBABWE: Nestlé ends Mugabe milk contract

    Just Food - 53 days 16 hours 25 minutes ago

    Nestlé Zimbabwe will no longer receive milk from farms owned by the wife of President Robert Mugabe

  • UPDATE: ZIMBABWE: Nestle to continue sourcing Mugabe milk

    Just Food - 57 days 13 hours 44 minutes ago

    Nestle, the Swiss food behemoth, has insisted the "crisis" in Zimbabwe's dairy sector means it will continue to source milk from a farm owned by the wife of President Robert Mugabe "for the forseeable future

  • Nestle Zimbabwe's Mugabe Ties Get Company In Trouble

    BNET Food - 56 days 14 hours 8 minutes ago

    Oops. It just came out that Nestle Zimbabwe sources 15 percent of its milk from a farm owned by the dictator-president’s wife, Grace Mugabe

  • ZIMBABWE: Nestle admits to sourcing milk from Mugabe's wife

    Just Food - 57 days 15 hours 37 minutes ago

    Nestle today (28 September) revealed that it sources up to 15% of its milk supply in Zimbabwe from a farm owned by the wife of President Robert Mugabe

 

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