* Business hotels up to 90 percent full
* Tourism hotels only 40 pct
* Business leaders expect unity govt to hobble along
By Ed Cropley
JOHANNESBURG, Nov 16 (Reuters) - Occupancy rates at hotels in Zimbabwe, especially those for businessmen, have trebled since last year, pointing to signs of life in the battered African economy, the country's industry chief said on Monday.
The improvement supports the claims of Zimbabwe's troubled power-sharing government that business and investment activity has mushroomed since the worthless Zimbabwe dollar was scrapped nine months ago.
"Rates were below 30 percent but already in the last months -- most notably in city-centre hotels -- they're up to 90 percent," Zimbabwe Council of Tourism president Emmanuel Fundira told Reuters.
"Much of this is business travellers coming in to look at investments and things like that," he said on the sidelines of an investment conference in South Africa. "That level of interest in Zimbabwe is extremely encouraging."
President Robert Mugabe and his arch rival, Morgan Tsvangirai, agreed to the unity government in September 2008 after disputed elections, but the deal has yet to be implemented in full and disputes over economic policy continue to unnerve potential outside investors.
Despite this, the government this month projected economic growth for this year of 3.7 percent, jumping to 12.5 percent next year and 15 percent on average for the period 2010-2015.
Occupancy rates at tourist-focused hotels, such as those near the Victoria Falls in the northwest border with Zambia, had not fared so well, currently enjoying only 40 percent occupancy, Fundira said.
However, he said the government was still projecting tourism revenues of $100 million for 2009, compared to just $40 million last year when the country was riven by political violence.
Shingi Munyeza, chief executive of Zimbabwe-based hotel firm African Sun Limited, backed Fundira's view, saying some of his hotels in the country were 70 percent full.
Despite its problems, all the signs pointed to the Mugabe-Tsvangirai power-sharing deal muddling through, Munyeza said, providing a modicum of stability that has helped stop the economic rot of the last decade.
"We don't gloss over the issues. But we also are very clear what is the worst-case scenario from here. Will the guys pick up guns and start fighting? We think that if that was possible, it would have happened a year ago," Munyeza said.
"The very fact that the parties that fought viciously with each other are able to sit in parliament for nine months and come up with productive policies, is a miracle." (Editing by Giles Elgood) (For more Reuters Africa coverage and to have your say on the top issues, visit: http://af.reuters.com)