Farai Dziva|Zimbabwean soccer players have struck a rich vein of form in Europe.
According to Soccer 24, in England England, Marvellous Nakamba’s Aston Villa scored a last minute winner to beat Brighton and Hove Albion at Villa Park.
The midfielder was impressive throughout the entire 90 minutes as Dean Smith’s side registered back-to-back wins in the Premier League for the first time since May 2015.
In the English second tier, the Championship, Macauley Bonne opened the scoring for Charlton Athletic in their 3-0 win over Derby County. The striker’s goalscoring form continued after he also netted against Fulham before the international break.
In France, Marshall Munetsi came on as a second half substitute in Stade de Reims’ 1-0 over Montpellier.
Still in the Western Europe country, Tino Kadewere scored a penalty for Le Havre in their 2-2 draw at home to Lorient. This was Kadewere’s 11th goal of the seaon in the French Ligue 2.
Alec Mudimu scored for his Welsh Premier League side Cefn Druids in their 3-1 win over Caernarfon Town.
Mudimu’s Warriors central defence patner Teenage Hadebe’s Yeni Malatyaspor returned to winning ways with a comfortable 2-0 win over ten-men Konyaspor. Hadebe played the entire game.
A Few days ago Zanu PF was generously helping Mozambicans in Zimbabwe to vote.
Many people alleged that the Zanu PF government was an accomplice in vote rigging for that country ‘s ruling party.
The debate here is not about if Zanu PF had a helping hand in vote rigging in the Mozambican elections but about diaspora voting rights.
Mnangagwa was not even ashamed to help the people of Mozambique to exercise their democratic political right to vote as diasporans while he is denying his own people the same.
It is estimated that 3-4 millions potential voters are living in the diaspora.
These people’s rights are not recognized by this regime.
Zanu PF must understand that for Zimbabwe to continue to tick ,its the role diasporans play.Zimbabwe’s biggest industry is “DIASPORA.
The foreign currency in circulation in the country is mainly contributed by the diasporans as they send to friends and relatives.
Diasporans are responsible for payment of medical bills,help during funerals,pay school fees,buy groceries and many other .This they are doing because the Zanu PF government has destroyed the economy. Our industries are operating below 20% due lack of electricity,water , fuel and many other ZanuPF induced challenges.
The Zimbabwean Constitution is very clear that it allows the diaspora vote but the Zanu PF thinks otherwise.
The Zanu PF government is clearly violating the constitution on diaspora vote.
The Zanu PF government has imposed political sanctions against its own people in the diaspora .
SADC which is foolishly supporting Zanu PF government on the 25 October Anti-santions march has never voiced against Zanu PF.
Zimbabweans living in diaspora must stage democratic demonstrations at Zimbabwean Foreign Mission Offices and respective Parliament building demanding that Zanu PF to unconditionally lift the political voting sanctions against its own people in the diaspora.
” SADC and ZanuPF Kuda kuona kauswa kari muziso romumwe asi mako mune zitsiga
Charity begins at home.SADC must call their colleague to order before they try ” kuda kuita hweTower light rinoona zviri kure kure asi muzasi maro riri rima chete chete”
Diasporans the best opportunity to demand the Zimbabwean ZanuPF government to lift the political voting sanctions it imposed on you is on 25 October.
“Hatide munhu who is known for marriage counselling but iye muchato wake asingaugone!”
Farai Dziva|ZANU PF leader Emmerson Mnangagwa cancelled a rally he was supposed to address in Bindura, due to poor coordination, party sources have claimed.
Mnangagwa reportedly cancelled the rally “fearing low figures.”
Zanu PF supporters in Bindura vowed not go to the rally on empty stomachs.
Mnangagwa was supposed to address a rally in Bindura before officiating at a graduation ceremony at Bindura University of Science Education.
“Things are very difficult these days so we will be busy hustling to have food on the table, we cannot go to rallies on empty bellies,” a party supporter told a daily publication.
Farai Dziva|ZANU PF supporters in Bindura snubbed Emmerson Mnangagwa’s rally in Bindura, party sources have claimed.
Mnangagwa reportedly cancelled the rally as a result of poor coordination.
Zanu PF supporters Bindura vowed not go to the rally on empty stomachs.
Mnangagwa was supposed to address a rally in Bindura before officiating at a graduation ceremony at Bindura University of Science Education.
“Things are very difficult these days so we will be busy hustling to have food on the table, we cannot go to rallies on empty bellies,” a party supporter told a daily publication.
Zimbabwe national healing; reconciliation; integration and peace building agenda, requires leadership with clear conscience, with political will; who are sincere, and not the type of leadership who are part to perpetrators of human rights violations.
The nation and its citizens continue to witness human rights violations; democratic suppression; the unabated grand state assets stripping/corruption; the abductions of innocent people, and poor economic policies which are all a threat to the emancipation and safety of the citizens. All these breeds discontent among the citizens and are a proof of the level of the regime’s insincerity to heal the wounds of the past atrocities and to prevent recurrences.
What is worrying the MDC, the people’s party, is that the violence and torture in the country is perpetrated mainly by state agents and their ancillaries. Yet state authorities have a duty to ensure people’s safety, and rights to freedom of expression. It is the state’s obligation to facilitate and protect the right of the citizens. Zimbabwe’s problem is however further compounded by what has been seen by many as the government’s unwillingness to engage honestly and genuinely with the past, possibly because a good number of past and current serving senior government officials fear implication.
Indeed it is a hurdle to ensure effective national healing agenda when the perpetrators are the ones in the driving of the healing policies and programmes…
We ought to build confidence, through demonstrated practical political will, and sincerity. The constitutional institutions for healing and human rights’ independence should be strengthened and adequately resourced. You cannot give people confidence, or expect concerted efforts in implementation when the successive political appointed heads of organs for national healing have serious negative human rights records of human rights violations, and abused of their high offices and are implicated in past political violence, such as the case of the immediate past Vice President Mpoko, and the current incumbent, as heads of the institutions for healing and peace. The former’s efforts to convince the nation that events of the Matabeleland and the Midlands massacre was a product of Western conspiracy and nothing that could be blamed on anyone in our own country was a mockery of the people, while the latter’s alleged involvement in cases of political assaults and violence compromise their appointment and trust as heads of organ for healing and peace. It amounts to an attempt to forge national unity and reconciliation through the suppression of truth and constant denial and victim blaming on the part of perpetrators.
Hence the whole agenda lacks political will, and makes people angry and stakeholders, including victims of violence and interested organisations, would not agree to have alleged perpetrators of violence lead the process of healing. True to that, this position is logical and clear as accepting these people is tantamount to expect a criminal to preside over his own trial.
Thus for four decades since independence, Peace continues to elude the nation. And the so called new dispensation Just like its predecessor, have failed the nation and citizens as regards implementation of the Agenda meant to heal the wounds from the past atrocities, and the prevention of further human rights violations, prevention of the state instigated violence, prevention of grand corruption by cartels made up of the ruling elite, and the need to ensure of enabling environment for citizens to choose national leadership freely. All these are major sources of discontent, disharmony among the citizens, and breeds leadership legitimacy crisis that affect peace and national development. Regarding ‘Corruption’ it is both a source of, and consequence of instability and conflict and a factor in exacerbating them
ZIMBABWE needs a meaningful culture of peace.”
Investing in National peace gives the impetus of development. A nation at war with itself/citizens will never enjoy meaningful development
Concerted collective efforts are needed to continue to engage issues around past human rights violations, including the liberation war period. The starting point would be to address the past atrocities in Ernest, with sufficient political will, and in a manner that permanently heals the wounds from past atrocities: reconcile differences; Integrates communities: and prevent future recurrences.
Because, of both the pre and post-colonial state’s failure to uphold the rule of law and guarantee civil and political liberties, Zimbabwe has experienced nine distinct periods of gross human rights violations in pre and post-colonial period 1970 to 2019.
These includes:-
The 1970s gross injustices during the Liberation Struggle
The Ghukurahundi campaign between 1983 and 1987 that left more than 20 000 people dead, dislocated the lives of millions and was associated with the deliberate denial of identity documents: humanitarian services: and the general destruction of livelihoods, and instilled perpetual fear.
Violent farm invasions in year 2000. The invasions resulted in the displacement of 400 000 farm workers and displacement of 1.8 million members of farm worker families and the deaths of many farm workers. The violent invasions also resulted in the displacement of over 4000 white farmers of which several were killed.
State-sponsored violence during successive campaigns for national elections beginning 1985 resulting in the death of hundreds of people mainly opposition supporters. Injuries, loss of property, loss of livelihoods, and internally displaced people.
Operation Murambatsvina in May, June and July 2005 that displaced more than 700 000 people, loss of livelihoods and destruction of property.
The brutal 27 June, 2008 Presidential run-off campaign in which more than 300 people were killed, more than 10 000 injured, 20 000 homes were destroyed and more than 200 000 people were displaced.
The 1st August 2018 Harare shooting and killing of civilians by armed soldiers during protest on perceived delay and rigging of Presidential elections, now the source of leadership legitimacy crisis.
The 14 January 2019 shooting and killing of civilians by armed soldiers during protests on fuel and other commodity skyrocketing price.
The wave of unprecedented abductions during 2019
There is therefore need for ‘Case Specific Taskforce/teams’ to be established for each of the Past atrocity, with clear Terms of References, and timelines, and working within the constitutional framework and with the institutions for peace as enshrined under Section 251 to 253 of the constitution, and supported with clear, sincere state funding. Reports of the previous but concealed reports of inquiries by state established commissions of inquiry, such as the Chihambwakwe, Chidyausiku, Dumbujena etc commissions, as well as those of independent commissions of inquiry, such as the CCJP, the ZimRights etc should be made available for the Task Teams, whose mandates; inter-alia will be to bring closure to the issues.
That said, the MDC’s ideal, realistic and sincere position on national peace are clearly enunciated in its policy documents, the Sustainable and Modernisation Agenda for Real Transformation Partnership (SMART), and the Zimbabwe’s Roadmap to Economic Recovery, Legitimacy, Openness and Democracy (RELOAD) www.mdc.co.zw, and backed by a leadership that is God fearing, and unlike the 4 decade regime, the MDC leadership have no human blood on its hands.
Thus the MDC’s position is to prioritise the importance of national peace and stability to sustainable development and is committed to facilitating and instituting a national healing, reconciliation, integration and due care program for the victims as a pre-requisite for nation building and sustainable democracy and development.
As a people’s party, with a visionary leadership, the vision for peace based agenda is to create a just, free, peaceful, transparent, integrative, transformative, developmental nation at peace with itself, with every citizen, and with all other nations and peoples.
The party mission is to champion the process of national healing, through correcting past injustices, healing the wounds, preventing recurrences; ushering comprehensive, inclusive, consultative participation of all stakeholders, particularly survivors victims, religious and traditional and cultural leadership: ensuring just, non-vindictive, nation building and integration.
The party is cognisant that, conflict, attrition and intolerance have contributed to the erosion of the Zimbabwean economy.
To reclaim Zimbabwe, mechanisms must be created that eradicate political violence. The wounds of the so many injustices over the years have never healed. The ‘top-down approaches’ have suppressed the voices of survivors and victims. In order to move forward, wrongs of the past must be corrected, but in an inclusive, just and non-vindictive way. The future must not be a prisoner of the past, but equally so, past grievances must not be sacrificed at the altar of future dreams
The legacy of impunity must be addressed, with the view to ensure the non-recurrence of violations of human rights. A comprehensive programme of transitional justice will have to be formulated and implemented. Under this programme, the following principles will apply:
Victim-centred approach.
Comprehensive, inclusive, consultative participation of all stakeholders, particularly survivors, victims, religious and traditional and community leaders.
The duty and obligation on the State to apologise for all atrocities.
The establishment of confessions, truth telling and truth seeking.
Acknowledgement of wrong doing.
Justice, compensation and reparations.
National healing and reconciliation.
Non-repetition (NEVER AGAIN).
Gender equity and gender sensitivities.
Transparency and accountability.
Nation building and reintegration.
As can be seen, the programme combines elements of restorative justice to balance the delicate attainment of both reconciliation and justice in line with transformative agenda. An integral vehicle of the transitional justice programme will be to strengthen the independence of the National Peace and Reconciliation Commission as enshrined under Section 251 to 253 of the constitution.
It would be suffice to cap the effective Policy Interventions and Peace Initiatives with the following committees operating under the umbrella of an adequately equiped National Peace and Reconciliation Commission:
Truth Committee : to conduct individual hearings from perpetrators and victims. Victims of human rights violations will be entitled to give their individual testimonies. A comprehensive process of truth telling by perpetrators as an incentive to amnesty should complement this. It should also be the duty of the Truth Committee to provide legal assistance to victims. Individual testimonies, truth-telling sessions and event-specific hearings should be open to the public except in exceptional circumstances as determined by the Commission
Justice and Amnesty Committee (JAC): responsible for recommending whether or not to grant amnesty to perpetrators of human rights violations on a case-by-case basis. A criterion should be set to determine the legibility for amnesty such as the context and circumstances of the offense and the nature of the act. The hybrid system recognizes that to facilitate a new, stable and democratic Zimbabwe some amnesty is necessary but the people’s party led administration will not support a blanket amnesty.
The Commission should determine which human rights atrocities are capable of receiving amnesty. The position is that perpetrators should be categorized depending on the gravity and circumstances of human rights crimes committed. JAC should then refer what it considers unpardonable cases to be transferred to the state’s criminal justice department.
Compensation and Healing Committee (CACH) : to determine the need for compensation, the nature of compensation and implementation measures to facilitate access to government services. The position is adoption of three broad modes of compensation outlined below:
Individual Compensation Grants : entail financial compensation to individuals. Although one cannot put monetary value to suffering and pain experienced, this is a way of acknowledging the suffering endured. This compensation will also cover loss of property.
Symbolic Compensation : include helping families to exhume and provide decent burials for loved ones; erection of tombstones; cleansing rituals and ceremonies; expedition in provision of civil documents such as death certificates; legal, medical and psycho-social support for trauma and grief stricken families.
Economic Compensation : The livelihoods of the affected victims potentially suffered significant decline. In addition to politically motivated human rights violations, the administration will be equally committed to redress socio-economic and property rights violations during the identified times. Broadly this will be anchored on macro-economic stabilization and growth in ways that allow equal opportunities to participate in the economic activity as substantiated in the economic blueprints.
Underlying philosophy is that peace will not be durable without economic stability and rebuilding of people’s livelihoods.
Conflict Prevention Committee (CPC) : The role of the CPC is to put in place post-conflict mechanisms that will prevent the recurrence of hostilities and encourage peaceful co-existence. The CPC would seek to make the gains irreversible and ensure that future grievances are solved through institutional and peaceful means.
It will come up with comprehensive programs for government and community interventions to foster a civic political culture. This might be through memorialisation and ritualisation among other initiatives.
Stakeholder Involvement
As already enunciated, the national healing and peace agenda will entail the Commission working in collaboration with civil society, churches, police, army, courts, churches, traditional leaders and other commissions for rights. This is to ensure that people affected at the grassroots level will effectively participate. Citizen participation will be crucial to lend legitimacy to the national healing, reconciliation and integration programme. National consensus and legitimacy are nurtured when all stakeholders’ work together.
National Peace as Tool for Development: as a recognized key component in ensuring lasting peace will be mainstreamed in the national peace agenda in the various reform platform undertaken to rebuilt the nation, includes on: legal reforms, land rationalization, institutional reforms: security reforms: political reforms: social and cultural agenda: economic agenda.
Conclusion
Overally, and centrally to lasting peace is reconciliation, which involves dealing with the past, taking responsibility and acknowledging wrong doing, and the critical first step in reconciliation is this recognition of guilt, with the acceptance of responsibility for atrocities or other events symbolising inter communal and interpersonal relations Hence the people’s administration’s commitment to programme that promote healing, reconciliation and integration of Zimbabwe polarized for more than 4 decades by gross human rights violations. The MDC administration is committed that the approach will encapsulate both justice and reconciliation ends.
Preservation of peace is a foundation to build a stable and democratic society bonded by the common spirit of national belonging. Ultimately the State will foster a culture of social dialogue as a means to resolve differences and conflict.
Hon Blessing Chebundo
National Secretary : MDC Policy Organ for National Healing: Peace: Reconciliation and Integration (NHPRI)
Farai Dziva| A senior MDC official has said Zanu PF is deeply reluctant to facilitate the national healing process.
Below is MDC Secretary for National Healing, Peace, Reconciliation and Integration, Blessing Chebundo’s statement:
Zimbabwe national healing; reconciliation; integration and peace building agenda, requires leadership with clear conscience, with political will; who are sincere, and not the type of leadership who are part of perpetrators of human rights violations.
The nation and its citizens continue to witness human rights violations; democratic suppression; the unabated grand state assets stripping/corruption; the abductions of innocent people, and poor economic policies which are all a threat to the emancipation and safety of the citizens. All these breeds discontent among the citizens and are a proof of the level of the regime’s insincerity to heal the wounds of the past atrocities and to prevent recurrences.
What is worrying the MDC, the people’s party, is that the violence and torture in the country is perpetrated mainly by state agents and their ancillaries. Yet state authorities have a duty to ensure people’s safety, and rights to freedom of expression. It is the state’s obligation to facilitate and protect the right of the citizens. Zimbabwe’s problem is however further compounded by what has been seen by many as the government’s unwillingness to engage honestly and genuinely with the past, possibly because a good number of past and current serving senior government officials fear implication.
Indeed it is a hurdle to ensure effective national healing agenda when the perpetrators are the ones in the driving of the healing policies and programmes…
We ought to build confidence, through demonstrated practical political will, and sincerity. The constitutional institutions for healing and human rights’ independence should be strengthened and adequately resourced. You cannot give people confidence, or expect concerted efforts in implementation when the successive political appointed heads of organs for national healing have serious negative human rights records of human rights violations, and abused of their high offices and are implicated in past political violence, such as the case of the immediate past Vice President Mpoko, and the current incumbent, as heads of the institutions for healing and peace. The former’s efforts to convince the nation that events of the Matabeleland and the Midlands massacre was a product of Western conspiracy and nothing that could be blamed on anyone in our own country was a mockery of the people, while the latter’s alleged involvement in cases of political assaults and violence compromise their appointment and trust as heads of organ for healing and peace. It amounts to an attempt to forge national unity and reconciliation through the suppression of truth and constant denial and victim blaming on the part of perpetrators.
Hence the whole agenda lacks political will, and makes people angry and stakeholders, including victims of violence and interested organisations, would not agree to have alleged perpetrators of violence lead the process of healing. True to that, this position is logical and clear as accepting these people is tantamount to expect a criminal to preside over his own trial.
Thus for four decades since independence, Peace continues to elude the nation. And the so called new dispensation Just like its predecessor, have failed the nation and citizens as regards implementation of the Agenda meant to heal the wounds from the past atrocities, and the prevention of further human rights violations, prevention of the state instigated violence, prevention of grand corruption by cartels made up of the ruling elite, and the need to ensure of enabling environment for citizens to choose national leadership freely. All these are major sources of discontent, disharmony among the citizens, and breeds leadership legitimacy crisis that affect peace and national development. Regarding ‘Corruption’ it is both a source of, and consequence of instability and conflict and a factor in exacerbating them
ZIMBABWE needs a meaningful culture of peace.”
Investing in National peace gives the impetus of development. A nation at war with itself/citizens will never enjoy meaningful development
Concerted collective efforts are needed to continue to engage issues around past human rights violations, including the liberation war period. The starting point would be to address the past atrocities in Ernest, with sufficient political will, and in a manner that permanently heals the wounds from past atrocities: reconcile differences; Integrates communities: and prevent future recurrences.
Because, of both the pre and post-colonial state’s failure to uphold the rule of law and guarantee civil and political liberties, Zimbabwe has experienced nine distinct periods of gross human rights violations in pre and post-colonial period 1970 to 2019.
These includes:-
The 1970s gross injustices during the Liberation Struggle
The Gukurahundi campaign between 1983 and 1987 that left more than 20 000 people dead, dislocated the lives of millions and was associated with the deliberate denial of identity documents: humanitarian services: and the general destruction of livelihoods, and instilled perpetual fear.
Violent farm invasions in year 2000. The invasions resulted in the displacement of 400 000 farm workers and displacement of 1.8 million members of farm worker families and the deaths of many farm workers. The violent invasions also resulted in the displacement of over 4000 white farmers of which several were killed.
State-sponsored violence during successive campaigns for national elections beginning 1985 resulting in the death of hundreds of people mainly opposition supporters. Injuries, loss of property, loss of livelihoods, and internally displaced people.
Operation Murambatsvina in May, June and July 2005 that displaced more than 700 000 people, loss of livelihoods and destruction of property.
The brutal 27 June, 2008 Presidential run-off campaign in which more than 300 people were killed, more than 10 000 injured, 20 000 homes were destroyed and more than 200 000 people were displaced.
The 1st August 2018 Harare shooting and killing of civilians by armed soldiers during protest on perceived delay and rigging of Presidential elections, now the source of leadership legitimacy crisis.
The 14 January 2019 shooting and killing of civilians by armed soldiers during protests on fuel and other commodity skyrocketing price.
The wave of unprecedented abductions during 2019
There is therefore need for ‘Case Specific Taskforce/teams’ to be established for each of the Past atrocity, with clear Terms of References, and timelines, and working within the constitutional framework and with the institutions for peace as enshrined under Section 251 to 253 of the constitution, and supported with clear, sincere state funding. Reports of the previous but concealed reports of inquiries by state established commissions of inquiry, such as the Chihambwakwe, Chidyausiku, Dumbujena etc commissions, as well as those of independent commissions of inquiry, such as the CCJP, the ZimRights etc should be made available for the Task Teams, whose mandates; inter-alia will be to bring closure to the issues.
That said, the MDC’s ideal, realistic and sincere position on national peace are clearly enunciated in its policy documents, the Sustainable and Modernisation Agenda for Real Transformation Partnership (SMART), and the Zimbabwe’s Roadmap to Economic Recovery, Legitimacy, Openness and Democracy (RELOAD) www.mdc.co.zw, and backed by a leadership that is God fearing, and unlike the 4 decade regime, the MDC leadership have no human blood on its hands.
Thus the MDC’s position is to prioritise the importance of national peace and stability to sustainable development and is committed to facilitating and instituting a national healing, reconciliation, integration and due care program for the victims as a pre-requisite for nation building and sustainable democracy and development.
As a people’s party, with a visionary leadership, the vision for peace based agenda is to create a just, free, peaceful, transparent, integrative, transformative, developmental nation at peace with itself, with every citizen, and with all other nations and peoples.
The party mission is to champion the process of national healing, through correcting past injustices, healing the wounds, preventing recurrences; ushering comprehensive, inclusive, consultative participation of all stakeholders, particularly survivors victims, religious and traditional and cultural leadership: ensuring just, non-vindictive, nation building and integration.
The party is cognisant that, conflict, attrition and intolerance have contributed to the erosion of the Zimbabwean economy.
To reclaim Zimbabwe, mechanisms must be created that eradicate political violence. The wounds of the so many injustices over the years have never healed. The ‘top-down approaches’ have suppressed the voices of survivors and victims. In order to move forward, wrongs of the past must be corrected, but in an inclusive, just and non-vindictive way. The future must not be a prisoner of the past, but equally so, past grievances must not be sacrificed at the altar of future dreams
The legacy of impunity must be addressed, with the view to ensure the non-recurrence of violations of human rights. A comprehensive programme of transitional justice will have to be formulated and implemented. Under this programme, the following principles will apply:
Victim-centred approach.
Comprehensive, inclusive, consultative participation of all stakeholders, particularly survivors, victims, religious and traditional and community leaders.
The duty and obligation on the State to apologise for all atrocities.
The establishment of confessions, truth telling and truth seeking.
Acknowledgement of wrong doing.
Justice, compensation and reparations.
National healing and reconciliation.
Non-repetition (NEVER AGAIN).
Gender equity and gender sensitivities.
Transparency and accountability.
Nation building and reintegration.
As can be seen, the programme combines elements of restorative justice to balance the delicate attainment of both reconciliation and justice in line with transformative agenda. An integral vehicle of the transitional justice programme will be to strengthen the independence of the National Peace and Reconciliation Commission as enshrined under Section 251 to 253 of the constitution.
It would be suffice to cap the effective Policy Interventions and Peace Initiatives with the following committees operating under the umbrella of an adequately equiped National Peace and Reconciliation Commission:
Truth Committee : to conduct individual hearings from perpetrators and victims. Victims of human rights violations will be entitled to give their individual testimonies. A comprehensive process of truth telling by perpetrators as an incentive to amnesty should complement this. It should also be the duty of the Truth Committee to provide legal assistance to victims. Individual testimonies, truth-telling sessions and event-specific hearings should be open to the public except in exceptional circumstances as determined by the Commission
Justice and Amnesty Committee (JAC): responsible for recommending whether or not to grant amnesty to perpetrators of human rights violations on a case-by-case basis. A criterion should be set to determine the legibility for amnesty such as the context and circumstances of the offense and the nature of the act. The hybrid system recognizes that to facilitate a new, stable and democratic Zimbabwe some amnesty is necessary but the people’s party led administration will not support a blanket amnesty.
The Commission should determine which human rights atrocities are capable of receiving amnesty. The position is that perpetrators should be categorized depending on the gravity and circumstances of human rights crimes committed. JAC should then refer what it considers unpardonable cases to be transferred to the state’s criminal justice department.
Compensation and Healing Committee (CACH) : to determine the need for compensation, the nature of compensation and implementation measures to facilitate access to government services. The position is adoption of three broad modes of compensation outlined below:
Individual Compensation Grants : entail financial compensation to individuals. Although one cannot put monetary value to suffering and pain experienced, this is a way of acknowledging the suffering endured. This compensation will also cover loss of property.
Symbolic Compensation : include helping families to exhume and provide decent burials for loved ones; erection of tombstones; cleansing rituals and ceremonies; expedition in provision of civil documents such as death certificates; legal, medical and psycho-social support for trauma and grief stricken families.
Economic Compensation : The livelihoods of the affected victims potentially suffered significant decline. In addition to politically motivated human rights violations, the administration will be equally committed to redress socio-economic and property rights violations during the identified times. Broadly this will be anchored on macro-economic stabilization and growth in ways that allow equal opportunities to participate in the economic activity as substantiated in the economic blueprints.
Underlying philosophy is that peace will not be durable without economic stability and rebuilding of people’s livelihoods.
Conflict Prevention Committee (CPC) : The role of the CPC is to put in place post-conflict mechanisms that will prevent the recurrence of hostilities and encourage peaceful co-existence. The CPC would seek to make the gains irreversible and ensure that future grievances are solved through institutional and peaceful means.
It will come up with comprehensive programs for government and community interventions to foster a civic political culture. This might be through memorialisation and ritualisation among other initiatives.
Stakeholder Involvement
As already enunciated, the national healing and peace agenda will entail the Commission working in collaboration with civil society, churches, police, army, courts, churches, traditional leaders and other commissions for rights. This is to ensure that people affected at the grassroots level will effectively participate. Citizen participation will be crucial to lend legitimacy to the national healing, reconciliation and integration programme. National consensus and legitimacy are nurtured when all stakeholders’ work together.
National Peace as Tool for Development: as a recognized key component in ensuring lasting peace will be mainstreamed in the national peace agenda in the various reform platform undertaken to rebuilt the nation, includes on: legal reforms, land rationalization, institutional reforms: security reforms: political reforms: social and cultural agenda: economic agenda.
Conclusion
Overally, and centrally to lasting peace is reconciliation, which involves dealing with the past, taking responsibility and acknowledging wrong doing, and the critical first step in reconciliation is this recognition of guilt, with the acceptance of responsibility for atrocities or other events symbolising inter communal and interpersonal relations Hence the people’s administration’s commitment to programme that promote healing, reconciliation and integration of Zimbabwe polarized for more than 4 decades by gross human rights violations. The MDC administration is committed that the approach will encapsulate both justice and reconciliation ends.
Preservation of peace is a foundation to build a stable and democratic society bonded by the common spirit of national belonging. Ultimately the State will foster a culture of social dialogue as a means to resolve differences and conflict.
Hon Blessing Chebundo
National Secretary : MDC Policy Organ for National Healing: Peace: Reconciliation and Integration (NHPRI)
The legendary Athletics ace Artwell Mandaza who died yesterday died an extremely bitter man accusing Former Vice President Joice Mujuru for stealing his gold medals.
Mandaza who passed on at 73, was the first African as well as the first black man to run the 100m dash in under 10 seconds clocking 9.9 seconds in 1970.
Journalist Farayi Muchemwa who once wrote a very detailed life and accolades of Mandaza, revealed in a Twitter post that Joice Mujuru who was the Sports Minister in 1980 took Mandaza’s Gold medals claiming that she was taking them to then Prime Minister Robert Mugabe and never brought them back.
Mandaza is said to have made the the claims to Muchemwa in 2012 but asked him not to divulge the information in fear of reprisals.
Muchemwa wrote on Twitter, “I promised Mandaza I would not write the story of his greatest pain as he feared reprisal. He told me how he lost his medals to a Government official in 1980.”
“The Sports minister asked for my medals to show president Mugabe. They were real gold. I never got them back.” Mandaza is quoted as having said.
I promised Mandaza I would not write the story of his greatest pain as he feared reprisal.
He told me how he lost his medals to a Gvt official in 1980
“Th Sport minister asked for my medals to show president Mugabe. They were real gold. I never got them back.” RIP Sonofthewind! pic.twitter.com/HqsHdFCM1E
By A Correspondent- There was chaos at the late Mugodhi Apostolic sect leader Tandewu Mugodhi’s burial in Wedza on Saturday after two factions clashed over the burial site and the appointment of his son as heir apparent.
Three police officers, who were at the site, had a torrid time quelling the chaos as sect members exchanged harsh words, while some shouted unprintable words as the leadership wrangle within one of the biggest apostolic sects in the country escalated.
A faction opposed to the elevation of Mugodhi’s son Washington was left seething with anger after he was ordained sect leader against a High Court ruling which recognised vice-bishop Tonnie Sigauke as the bona fide successor.
High Court judge Justice Owen Tagu made the determination on September 4, 2019, after sect members petitioned the court, seeking an order to interdict Tandewu from appointing Washington the acting vice-bishop and to act on his behalf.
Justice Tagu further said Tandewu’s move was a breach of the sect’s constitution.
In his ruling, Justice Tagu said: “The first respondent (Tandewu) be and is hereby interdicted from carrying out his duties until he has been cleansed in terms of the applicant’s constitution.
“The first, second, third and fourth respondents (Tandewu, Washington, Innocent and Enock Mugodhi) together with their families be and are hereby interdicted from interfering in the operations of the applicant (Sigauke).
“The pronouncement by the first respondent that the second respondent is now the acting vice-bishop be and is hereby declared unlawful. The vice-bishop Tonnie Sigauke be and is hereby confirmed as acting bishop.”
There were also frantic efforts to bar Tandewu from being buried at the sect’s headquarters. The disgruntled sect members tried to use traditional leadership in the area to stop the burial without success.
Tandewu was buried at the sect headquarters where his father Elijah Mugodhi, who died in 1971 is buried.
Giving a speech during the burial ceremony, one of the leaders revealed that all was not well within the sect as some members were jostling for top posts.
A family member, who preferred anonymity, told a local publication that there had been efforts by the anti-Tandewu faction to take over the leadership long before his death.
“There have been efforts to seize leadership from the Mugodhi family. This is why there was chaos at the funeral wake. They tried to bar him from being buried at the sect headquarters despite other bishops being buried there. Some of the members feel that the family should not be involved in the church leadership, which is wrong.
They are against the elevation of Washington and it is not looking good. When Tandewu was no longer feeling well, some of his enemies changed the constitution without his knowledge as they were trying to stage a coup,” the family member said.
Tandewu died last week after a long battle with cancer.
Farai Dziva| A senior MDC official has said Zanu PF is deeply reluctant to facilitate the national healing process.
Below is MDC Secretary for National Healing, Peace, Reconciliation and Integration, Blessing Chebundo’s statement:
Zimbabwe national healing; reconciliation; integration and peace building agenda, requires leadership with clear conscience, with political will; who are sincere, and not the type of leadership who are part of perpetrators of human rights violations.
The nation and its citizens continue to witness human rights violations; democratic suppression; the unabated grand state assets stripping/corruption; the abductions of innocent people, and poor economic policies which are all a threat to the emancipation and safety of the citizens. All these breeds discontent among the citizens and are a proof of the level of the regime’s insincerity to heal the wounds of the past atrocities and to prevent recurrences.
What is worrying the MDC, the people’s party, is that the violence and torture in the country is perpetrated mainly by state agents and their ancillaries. Yet state authorities have a duty to ensure people’s safety, and rights to freedom of expression. It is the state’s obligation to facilitate and protect the right of the citizens. Zimbabwe’s problem is however further compounded by what has been seen by many as the government’s unwillingness to engage honestly and genuinely with the past, possibly because a good number of past and current serving senior government officials fear implication.
Indeed it is a hurdle to ensure effective national healing agenda when the perpetrators are the ones in the driving of the healing policies and programmes…
We ought to build confidence, through demonstrated practical political will, and sincerity. The constitutional institutions for healing and human rights’ independence should be strengthened and adequately resourced. You cannot give people confidence, or expect concerted efforts in implementation when the successive political appointed heads of organs for national healing have serious negative human rights records of human rights violations, and abused of their high offices and are implicated in past political violence, such as the case of the immediate past Vice President Mpoko, and the current incumbent, as heads of the institutions for healing and peace. The former’s efforts to convince the nation that events of the Matabeleland and the Midlands massacre was a product of Western conspiracy and nothing that could be blamed on anyone in our own country was a mockery of the people, while the latter’s alleged involvement in cases of political assaults and violence compromise their appointment and trust as heads of organ for healing and peace. It amounts to an attempt to forge national unity and reconciliation through the suppression of truth and constant denial and victim blaming on the part of perpetrators.
Hence the whole agenda lacks political will, and makes people angry and stakeholders, including victims of violence and interested organisations, would not agree to have alleged perpetrators of violence lead the process of healing. True to that, this position is logical and clear as accepting these people is tantamount to expect a criminal to preside over his own trial.
Thus for four decades since independence, Peace continues to elude the nation. And the so called new dispensation Just like its predecessor, have failed the nation and citizens as regards implementation of the Agenda meant to heal the wounds from the past atrocities, and the prevention of further human rights violations, prevention of the state instigated violence, prevention of grand corruption by cartels made up of the ruling elite, and the need to ensure of enabling environment for citizens to choose national leadership freely. All these are major sources of discontent, disharmony among the citizens, and breeds leadership legitimacy crisis that affect peace and national development. Regarding ‘Corruption’ it is both a source of, and consequence of instability and conflict and a factor in exacerbating them
ZIMBABWE needs a meaningful culture of peace.”
Investing in National peace gives the impetus of development. A nation at war with itself/citizens will never enjoy meaningful development
Concerted collective efforts are needed to continue to engage issues around past human rights violations, including the liberation war period. The starting point would be to address the past atrocities in Ernest, with sufficient political will, and in a manner that permanently heals the wounds from past atrocities: reconcile differences; Integrates communities: and prevent future recurrences.
Because, of both the pre and post-colonial state’s failure to uphold the rule of law and guarantee civil and political liberties, Zimbabwe has experienced nine distinct periods of gross human rights violations in pre and post-colonial period 1970 to 2019.
These includes:-
The 1970s gross injustices during the Liberation Struggle
The Gukurahundi campaign between 1983 and 1987 that left more than 20 000 people dead, dislocated the lives of millions and was associated with the deliberate denial of identity documents: humanitarian services: and the general destruction of livelihoods, and instilled perpetual fear.
Violent farm invasions in year 2000. The invasions resulted in the displacement of 400 000 farm workers and displacement of 1.8 million members of farm worker families and the deaths of many farm workers. The violent invasions also resulted in the displacement of over 4000 white farmers of which several were killed.
State-sponsored violence during successive campaigns for national elections beginning 1985 resulting in the death of hundreds of people mainly opposition supporters. Injuries, loss of property, loss of livelihoods, and internally displaced people.
Operation Murambatsvina in May, June and July 2005 that displaced more than 700 000 people, loss of livelihoods and destruction of property.
The brutal 27 June, 2008 Presidential run-off campaign in which more than 300 people were killed, more than 10 000 injured, 20 000 homes were destroyed and more than 200 000 people were displaced.
The 1st August 2018 Harare shooting and killing of civilians by armed soldiers during protest on perceived delay and rigging of Presidential elections, now the source of leadership legitimacy crisis.
The 14 January 2019 shooting and killing of civilians by armed soldiers during protests on fuel and other commodity skyrocketing price.
The wave of unprecedented abductions during 2019
There is therefore need for ‘Case Specific Taskforce/teams’ to be established for each of the Past atrocity, with clear Terms of References, and timelines, and working within the constitutional framework and with the institutions for peace as enshrined under Section 251 to 253 of the constitution, and supported with clear, sincere state funding. Reports of the previous but concealed reports of inquiries by state established commissions of inquiry, such as the Chihambwakwe, Chidyausiku, Dumbujena etc commissions, as well as those of independent commissions of inquiry, such as the CCJP, the ZimRights etc should be made available for the Task Teams, whose mandates; inter-alia will be to bring closure to the issues.
That said, the MDC’s ideal, realistic and sincere position on national peace are clearly enunciated in its policy documents, the Sustainable and Modernisation Agenda for Real Transformation Partnership (SMART), and the Zimbabwe’s Roadmap to Economic Recovery, Legitimacy, Openness and Democracy (RELOAD) www.mdc.co.zw, and backed by a leadership that is God fearing, and unlike the 4 decade regime, the MDC leadership have no human blood on its hands.
Thus the MDC’s position is to prioritise the importance of national peace and stability to sustainable development and is committed to facilitating and instituting a national healing, reconciliation, integration and due care program for the victims as a pre-requisite for nation building and sustainable democracy and development.
As a people’s party, with a visionary leadership, the vision for peace based agenda is to create a just, free, peaceful, transparent, integrative, transformative, developmental nation at peace with itself, with every citizen, and with all other nations and peoples.
The party mission is to champion the process of national healing, through correcting past injustices, healing the wounds, preventing recurrences; ushering comprehensive, inclusive, consultative participation of all stakeholders, particularly survivors victims, religious and traditional and cultural leadership: ensuring just, non-vindictive, nation building and integration.
The party is cognisant that, conflict, attrition and intolerance have contributed to the erosion of the Zimbabwean economy.
To reclaim Zimbabwe, mechanisms must be created that eradicate political violence. The wounds of the so many injustices over the years have never healed. The ‘top-down approaches’ have suppressed the voices of survivors and victims. In order to move forward, wrongs of the past must be corrected, but in an inclusive, just and non-vindictive way. The future must not be a prisoner of the past, but equally so, past grievances must not be sacrificed at the altar of future dreams
The legacy of impunity must be addressed, with the view to ensure the non-recurrence of violations of human rights. A comprehensive programme of transitional justice will have to be formulated and implemented. Under this programme, the following principles will apply:
Victim-centred approach.
Comprehensive, inclusive, consultative participation of all stakeholders, particularly survivors, victims, religious and traditional and community leaders.
The duty and obligation on the State to apologise for all atrocities.
The establishment of confessions, truth telling and truth seeking.
Acknowledgement of wrong doing.
Justice, compensation and reparations.
National healing and reconciliation.
Non-repetition (NEVER AGAIN).
Gender equity and gender sensitivities.
Transparency and accountability.
Nation building and reintegration.
As can be seen, the programme combines elements of restorative justice to balance the delicate attainment of both reconciliation and justice in line with transformative agenda. An integral vehicle of the transitional justice programme will be to strengthen the independence of the National Peace and Reconciliation Commission as enshrined under Section 251 to 253 of the constitution.
It would be suffice to cap the effective Policy Interventions and Peace Initiatives with the following committees operating under the umbrella of an adequately equiped National Peace and Reconciliation Commission:
Truth Committee : to conduct individual hearings from perpetrators and victims. Victims of human rights violations will be entitled to give their individual testimonies. A comprehensive process of truth telling by perpetrators as an incentive to amnesty should complement this. It should also be the duty of the Truth Committee to provide legal assistance to victims. Individual testimonies, truth-telling sessions and event-specific hearings should be open to the public except in exceptional circumstances as determined by the Commission
Justice and Amnesty Committee (JAC): responsible for recommending whether or not to grant amnesty to perpetrators of human rights violations on a case-by-case basis. A criterion should be set to determine the legibility for amnesty such as the context and circumstances of the offense and the nature of the act. The hybrid system recognizes that to facilitate a new, stable and democratic Zimbabwe some amnesty is necessary but the people’s party led administration will not support a blanket amnesty.
The Commission should determine which human rights atrocities are capable of receiving amnesty. The position is that perpetrators should be categorized depending on the gravity and circumstances of human rights crimes committed. JAC should then refer what it considers unpardonable cases to be transferred to the state’s criminal justice department.
Compensation and Healing Committee (CACH) : to determine the need for compensation, the nature of compensation and implementation measures to facilitate access to government services. The position is adoption of three broad modes of compensation outlined below:
Individual Compensation Grants : entail financial compensation to individuals. Although one cannot put monetary value to suffering and pain experienced, this is a way of acknowledging the suffering endured. This compensation will also cover loss of property.
Symbolic Compensation : include helping families to exhume and provide decent burials for loved ones; erection of tombstones; cleansing rituals and ceremonies; expedition in provision of civil documents such as death certificates; legal, medical and psycho-social support for trauma and grief stricken families.
Economic Compensation : The livelihoods of the affected victims potentially suffered significant decline. In addition to politically motivated human rights violations, the administration will be equally committed to redress socio-economic and property rights violations during the identified times. Broadly this will be anchored on macro-economic stabilization and growth in ways that allow equal opportunities to participate in the economic activity as substantiated in the economic blueprints.
Underlying philosophy is that peace will not be durable without economic stability and rebuilding of people’s livelihoods.
Conflict Prevention Committee (CPC) : The role of the CPC is to put in place post-conflict mechanisms that will prevent the recurrence of hostilities and encourage peaceful co-existence. The CPC would seek to make the gains irreversible and ensure that future grievances are solved through institutional and peaceful means.
It will come up with comprehensive programs for government and community interventions to foster a civic political culture. This might be through memorialisation and ritualisation among other initiatives.
Stakeholder Involvement
As already enunciated, the national healing and peace agenda will entail the Commission working in collaboration with civil society, churches, police, army, courts, churches, traditional leaders and other commissions for rights. This is to ensure that people affected at the grassroots level will effectively participate. Citizen participation will be crucial to lend legitimacy to the national healing, reconciliation and integration programme. National consensus and legitimacy are nurtured when all stakeholders’ work together.
National Peace as Tool for Development: as a recognized key component in ensuring lasting peace will be mainstreamed in the national peace agenda in the various reform platform undertaken to rebuilt the nation, includes on: legal reforms, land rationalization, institutional reforms: security reforms: political reforms: social and cultural agenda: economic agenda.
Conclusion
Overally, and centrally to lasting peace is reconciliation, which involves dealing with the past, taking responsibility and acknowledging wrong doing, and the critical first step in reconciliation is this recognition of guilt, with the acceptance of responsibility for atrocities or other events symbolising inter communal and interpersonal relations Hence the people’s administration’s commitment to programme that promote healing, reconciliation and integration of Zimbabwe polarized for more than 4 decades by gross human rights violations. The MDC administration is committed that the approach will encapsulate both justice and reconciliation ends.
Preservation of peace is a foundation to build a stable and democratic society bonded by the common spirit of national belonging. Ultimately the State will foster a culture of social dialogue as a means to resolve differences and conflict.
Hon Blessing Chebundo
National Secretary : MDC Policy Organ for National Healing: Peace: Reconciliation and Integration (NHPRI)
By A Correspondent| Zanu PF supporters who snubbed President Emmerson Mnangagwa and First Lady Auxillia separate rallies in Bindura recently said they could not go to rallies on empty stomachs.
Mnangagwa was supposed to address a rally in Bindura before officiating at a graduation ceremony at Bindura University of Science Education while the First Lady was hosting a family fun day at Chipadze Stadium, which residents snubbed.
“Things are very difficult these days so we will be busy hustling to have food on the table, we cannot go to rallies on empty bellies,” a party supporter who preferred anonymity said.
According to provincial social welfare offices, 70 080 people in all the Mashonaland Central’s eight districts are in need of food aid following last season’s poor harvests.
The opposition MDC claimed that the snub was a sign people in the Zanu PF stronghold were fed up with the ruling party, which has presided over a failing economy.
Zanu PF scooped all the 18 parliamentary seats in the province in the 2018 polls.
MDC provincial chairperson George Gwarada said the snub on Mnangagwa and First Lady was telling.
“People in the province are tired of the Mnangagwa regime. This is clearly shown by poor attendance at their functions, despite trying to bus people from all the districts. In short, Mash Central is just fed up with Zanu PF,” he said.
Gwarada implored Mnangagwa to save himself further humiliation by accepting dialogue with MDC leader Nelson Chamisa.
“There is only one way to save Mnangagwa from further humiliation, that is dialogue with Chamisa, but he (Mnangagwa) has to be sincere in saving the people of Zimbabwe, not selfish gains.”
The First Family’s programmes allegedly flopped because of factionalism rocking the Zanu PF provincial leadership ahead of the district co-ordinating committee elections.
Zanu PF politburo member and Bindura North legislator Kenneth Musanhi, who had organised the flopped rally, said Zanu PF was still solid and people were just trying to portray a picture of a divided provincial leadership, but on the ground, the leadership wasunited.
“The province is solidly behind President Mnangagwa and the reports of factionalism are just being spread to tarnish the provincial leadership,” Musanhi said.
Government has declared Friday, October 25, a public holiday to allow people to attend the Sadc-initiated regional day of solidarity against sanctions on Zimbabwe, whose main event is slated for the National Sports Stadium in Harare.
The public holiday was announced last night by Acting Minister of Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services Professor Amon Murwira while addressing journalists on the 37th Cabinet decision matrix yesterday.
“Cabinet received an update on the Friday October 25, 2019 SADC Anti-Sanctions Day from Honourable Vice President Kembo Mohadi. The marchers are expected to assemble at Robert Mugabe Square by 6am, from where they will proceed to the National Sports Stadium at 8am. Highlights of events scheduled to take place at the National Sports Stadium will include entertainment; solidarity messages by various national and international presenters; presentation of research findings on the background and impact of the illegal sanctions; a soccer match between Dynamos and Highlanders football clubs; and the anti-sanctions gala to run from 6pm on the same day till the following morning,” said Minister Murwira, who is also Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Development Minister.
“Similar activities are expected to take place in various provincial and district centres throughout the country. To further amplify the importance of this day to the economic emancipation and well-being of Zimbabwe, Friday October 25, 2019 shall be declared an official public holiday.
“The general public will be advised of more details of logistical arrangements in the build-up to the occasion. We, therefore, wish to appeal to all Zimbabweans across the board to come in their numbers and to actively participate towards the success of this grand and noble initiative.”
Acting Minister of Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services Professor Amon Murwira
State Media|Cabinet yesterday approved constitutional amendments that will result in the scrapping of the concept of running mates in Presidential elections and extend the women’s quota system by another 10 years to 2023.
The envisaged changes will also create 10 parliamentary seats for the youths, among other issues.
This was disclosed by Acting Minister of Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services Professor Amon Murwira while addressing journalists on the 37th Cabinet decision matrix.
“Cabinet considered and approved Principles for the Amendment of the Constitution of Zimbabwe (No. 20 Act, 2013) which was presented by the Minister of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs. The principles have been prompted by the need to amend provisions that are perceived to be contradictory or conflicting, thereby rendering implementation of the Constitution inherently problematic.
“The principles will also add entirely new provisions as well as amend the Constitution as follows: to amend the constitutional provision for Provincial Councils in order to exclude Members of Parliament in light of the oversight role of Parliament,” said Prof Murwira, who is Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Development Minister.
“The proposals will extend by another 10 years the provision for the election of the 60 women members in Parliament under proportional representation following which a further review shall be conducted, remove provisions of Section 92 of the Constitution relating to the issue of running mates in accordance with the practice prevailing in the SADC region; provide for the setting aside of one constituency per province, to be contested for by the youth on the basis of proportional representation.”
Explaining the rationale of removing running mates, Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi said the concept had the effect of creating parallel centres of power.
“You all remember that it was one of the contentious issues when we had our Constitution and it was deferred for 10 years because it is a borrowed concept from America. It is not even an international best practice where you have a President given executive authority, we do not ordinarily want to create a parallel centre of power.
“We believe it is not desirable in our constitutional dispensation to create separate centres of power. We would rather have a President elected by the people and then appoints his team, Vice President and Cabinet; that is the thinking, that is what is practised in Southern Africa and several countries,” said Minister Ziyambi.
“On the youth quota, the proposal is to increase our seats by 10 and have each province get one youth representative, so parties will submit their names of candidates and depending on the votes in the province the party with the majority will have its candidate in Parliament, so we are not cutting down on anything.”
Earlier on Prof Murwira said the Government sought to amend Section 161 of the Constitution to de-link the delimitation of electoral boundaries from population censuses, provide for the inclusion of the office of the Chief Secretary to the President and Cabinet in the Constitution, provide for the appointment of the Prosecutor-General by the President, and for the establishment of the Office of the Public Protector; and amend the heading of Section 271 of the Constitution by the inclusion of “and Metropolitan Councils.”
Prof Murwira said Cabinet considered and approved the Principles of the Proposed Judicial Laws Amendment Bill which was presented Minister Ziyambi.
He said the Bill seek to amend the Magistrates Court, Labour and High Court Acts.
Some of the issues related to increasing the jurisdiction of Magistrates in civil cases to those involving monetary values of $300 000 in the first instance.
Other issues are to amend the Labour Act to afford Judges of the Labour Court powers to execute their own judgements, amendment of Section 93(5)(a) of the Labour Act to include a proviso requiring the joinder of an employee to an application for the confirmation of a Labour Officer’s ruling; and amendment of the Magistrates Court Act to increase the power of review of Regional Magistrates.
By A Correspondent| MDC politician and prominent Zimbabwean lawyer Fadzayi Mahere has scoffed at first lady Auxilia Mnangagwa’s crocodile tears over sanctions who reportedly broke down last weekend at an anti sanctions prayer meeting at State house.
Mahere said it was baffling to note that the first lady never shed a tear when police murder vendors, army shoot innocent civilians, people suffer from hunger, pupils cannot afford to pay fees and hospitals lack medication.
Mahere’s sentiments comes amid revelations that the first lady cried at a churches’ anti sanctions prayer meeting last weekend at State House in Harare.
She said:
Vendor killed by police: No tears.
Army shoots civilians: No tears.
People face hunger: No tears.
Hospitals lack meds: No tears.
Pupils can’t pay fees: No tears.
Sanctions that bar arms trade in Europe & ban elites from travelling to the US: breaks down uncontrollably.
By Own Correspondent| Spokesperson of the National Patriotic Front (NPF), Jealousy Mawarire, said that the anti-sanctions march will not change anything as long as the Zanu PF-led government continues to violate the constitution.
Speaking to a local publication ahead of the anti-sanctions march to be conducted on 25 October this year, Mawarire said:
For sanctions to go, the government has to respect the Constitution. They have to stop abducting their own people and allow freedom of expression, freedom to demonstrate and to stop this rule by the gun. The marches will not help change anything.
The Southern African Development Community (SADC) has thrown its weight behind the government of Zimbabwe for the Anti-sanctions march.
-Newsday
However, political commentators have argued that the sanctions will not be revoked since the people targeted have continued to violate citizens’ fundamental human rights with impunity.
In Harare, @PoliceZimbabwe deploys water canons to camp at Harare Magistrates Court ahead of the appearance in court of 3 pro-democracy campaigners @MakomboreroH Denford Ngadziore&John Toratora represented by @ZLHRLawyers &arrested Monday&charged with disorderly conduct. pic.twitter.com/UuVlH6rUnH
By Own Correspondent| Zanu PF secretary for legal affairs, Munyaradzi Paul Mangwana’s claim to a Glen Lorne property, which he had bought through the Sheriff of the High Court, has now come under scrutiny after Justice Clement Phiri cancelled the sale and allowed the property owners to lodge their objection to the sale in terms of the law.
According to court papers, Mangwana and his wife Pauline bought stand number 2157 Glen Lorne Township 30 of Lot 30 of Glen Lorne held under deed of transfer number 2280/2016 following a private treaty sale that was conducted by the Sheriff and paid US$260 000.
“The fourth respondent’s (sheriff) decision to declare first and second respondents (Munyaradzi and Pauline Mangwana) as purchasers and subsequent confirmation of the sale for stand number 2157 Glen Lorne Township 30 of Lot 30 of Glen Lorne is hereby set aside,” Justice Phiri ruled before cancelling the deed of transfer.
Prior to the sale, the house belonged to David and Kumbula Chiweza whose company, Watson Investments (Pvt) Ltd, had loan issues with CBZ Bank Limited amounting to US$207 203. However, when the bank took the Chiwezas to court, judgment was entered against the couple leading to the property being surrendered to the Sheriff for sale.
However, when the sheriff conducted the sale, Chiweza and his wife were not informed that their house was being put under the hammer and the couple did not have the chance to lodge an objection to it. It was only after the house had been sold that the couple became aware of what had transpired.
“The fourth respondent once again purported to notify and serve the applicants (David and Kumbula Chiweza) through Watson Investments to another different non-existent address being 13 Bargate Close Glen Lorne, Harare.
Consequently, the applicants were never made aware of all these developments and they remained in the dark and helpless as events unfolded,” the Chiweza couple said.
“Also, of importance is that the property was sold by private treaty and not by way of forced public auction and the reason was for it to fetch a higher price… according to third respondent (CBZ Bank) valuation, the market value of the property was pegged at US$470 000 and forced sale value was US$307 000.
In light of these valuation reports, the price of US$260 000 which was the price confirmed by the fourth respondent is not nearer to any of the above figures of actual valuations.”
The Chiwezas said it was clear there was a glaring irregularity in the way the sale was conducted.
By A Correspondent- Addressing delegates at the International Day of the Girl Child in Harare recently, Women’s Advocacy Project Director Constance Mugari called for greater investments aimed at improving girls’ education, skills, and job prospects.
Mugari said this at an event attended by hundreds of girls from Harare held under the theme ” GirlForce: Unscripted and Unstoppable.”
She said:
“We stress the importance of creating opportunities and safe spaces for girls’ voices to be heard and listened to in decisions that affect them.
More attention should be given to girls’ education and providing them with the relevant job skills and training. :
According to UNICEF, UNFPA and the Zimbabwe National Family Planning Council (ZNFPC) one third of all girls in Zimbabwe marry before the age of 18.
Statistics show that approximately 500,000 teenagers fall pregnant every year in Zimbabwe, with 19 percent of the pregnancies in this group a result of child marriages. 48 percent of adolescents confirmed that the pregnancies were unplanned.”
Mugari said adolescent pregnancy remained a major challenge and contributor to maternal and child mortality and the vicious circle of ill-health and poverty particularly in Zimbabwe.
She said:
“Poverty remains a key driver of child marriage, and girls from poor families are more likely to become child brides than those from wealthier households.
If we really want to tackle poverty and end child marriage we must give all girls the tools they need to invest in themselves.
That means providing them with the quality education and training they need to earn an income and create a better future for themselves and their family.”
She said evidence showed that girls who attend secondary school are three times less likely to be child brides.
“They also have better economic prospects, fewer and healthier children, and are more likely to ensure that their own children are not married before 18,” added Mugari.
Speaking at the same event, the Provincial head in the ministry of women affairs, Ernest Chimboza said government prioritised the elimination of all forms of gender based violence against women and girls as a way of ensuring the realisation of sustainable development goals 3 and 5.
He said;
“Violence against women and girls is one of the most pervasive and hidden human rights violation in Zimbabwe. It has hindered them from realising their full potential and to have a voice, choice and control over their lives.
The elimination of all forms of GBV is essential for Zimbabwe to achieve two of its prioritised SDGs 3 and 5 which speak to achieving gender equality, empowerment and the promotion of a health life and their well being.
The ministry and its partners believe that promoting girls access to education, primary health care and basic human needs is critical for their empowerment and for the achievement of gender equality and eduity.. Promoting girls access to education is vital because they have been sidelined with preference being given to boys in some families.”
WAP is a non governmental not for profit making trust which was established by a group of women from different communities in Harare.
The organisation aims at promoting and projecting the rights of vulnerable and marginalised women and girls from communities in and around Harare.
Zimbabwe Ezekiel Guti University pro-vice chancellor Gift Mugano has said Zimbabwe risks going back to dollarisation in the first quarter of 2020 due to failure by the local currency to boost public confidence.
Presenting at a pre-budget briefing seminar in Harare yesterday, Mugano blamed government for putting in place reactionary policies to deal with the high levels of inflation without looking at their impact on the people, which he said had further plummeted public confidence in the local currency.
“Statutory instruments (SI) are a reactionary way of dealing with the situation; it just lessens the confidence in the currency by local people,” Mugano said.
“We cannot burn the house to deal with a rat, but we have to set traps to deal with it. In order to stop the black market, there is need to set traps to deal with them without necessarily affecting everyone else.”
He added: “We end up having an economy that is speculative than productive because of this form of reactionary policies that want to deal with problems. The policies are formed from a good basis, but they are affecting everyone even those who are not trading in foreign currency on the black market. We run the risk of going full dollarisation in the first quarter of 2020, which is not a good thing for Zimbabwe.”
Zimbabwe banned the 10-year multi-currency system in June this year after government workers demanded salaries in United States dollars which government could not afford. Since then, the country has been in a hyperinflation mode; with prices skyrocketing against stagnant salaries, a feat that has forced citizens to the wall.
Mugano said the recently introduced policies, including the SI 142 that introduced the Zimdollar, caused businesses to act in ways that protected their business investments.
Also presenting before MPs, economist Persistence Gwanyanya said: “Our major problem is that Zimbabwe is not producing. We are a consumptive economy which consumes up to 80% of our gross domestic product. We are eating into the country’s future. Currently, people have to buy their own hard-earned money, so we really cannot establish confidence in our local currency.”
Police have warned members of the public to be wary of a syndicate of criminals that is swindling people of their hard-earned cash through card cloning and online banking.
This comes after several people lost their money after either receiving a call or an SMS from people purporting to be employees from their banks.
Most of the victims received a call from phone line number +263864479973.
National police spokesperson Assistant Commissioner Paul Nyathi confirmed the increase in such cases.
“There is an increase in the number of fraud cases through card cloning and online banking,” he said.
“Criminals are targeting pensioners or people with large sums of money in their accounts.”
Asst Comm Nyathi said, recently, a Victoria Falls man lost $19 685,05 after he received a call from +263864479973 with the caller claiming to be a bank employee.
“The caller was armed with all information concerning the man and he requested his PIN number and asked him to confirm through SMSs on his cellphone,” he said. “Within a short space of time, the money had been withdrawn from his account.
“We encourage the public not to respond to SMS from unknown bank officials or divulge their passwords over the phone.”
In another case, a man recently received a call from the same number with the unknown caller purporting to be an official from a local bank.
“The caller informed the unsuspecting complainant that he was fixing his account so that he could receive instant messages after every transaction from the bank,” said Asst Comm Nyathi.
“He went on to request the complainant to supply their PIN number and the complainant complied. A few minutes thereafter, the complainant received a message advising him that some money had been withdrawn from his account.
“On checking with the bank, he discovered that the money had been stolen. This is a growing phenomenon. We urge the public not to be lured to change their PIN numbers on the phone, but should personally do so at their banks.”
Last year, police warned members of the public to be wary of such criminals and over 154 cases have been reported countrywide.
Card cloning involves the production of counterfeit bank debit cards by criminals after fraudulently acquiring bank debit/credit card information contained in the magnetic strip of the bank debit card.
The criminals are acquiring bank debit card information through gadgets known as skimmers. The skimmers are able to extract debit card information and the said devices are similar to Point of Sale (POS) machines.
Some criminals also steal POS machines from shops and service stations for the purpose of uploading data which they use to clone debit cards.
Cabinet yesterday approved constitutional amendments that will result in the scrapping of the concept of running mates in Presidential elections and extend the women’s quota system by another 10 years to 2023.
The envisaged changes will also create 10 parliamentary seats for the youths, among other issues.
This was disclosed by Acting Minister of Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services Professor Amon Murwira while addressing journalists on the 37th Cabinet decision matrix.
“Cabinet considered and approved Principles for the Amendment of the Constitution of Zimbabwe (No. 20 Act, 2013) which was presented by the Minister of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs. The principles have been prompted by the need to amend provisions that are perceived to be contradictory or conflicting, thereby rendering implementation of the Constitution inherently problematic.
“The principles will also add entirely new provisions as well as amend the Constitution as follows: to amend the constitutional provision for Provincial Councils in order to exclude Members of Parliament in light of the oversight role of Parliament,” said Prof Murwira, who is Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Development Minister.
“The proposals will extend by another 10 years the provision for the election of the 60 women members in Parliament under proportional representation following which a further review shall be conducted, remove provisions of Section 92 of the Constitution relating to the issue of running mates in accordance with the practice prevailing in the SADC region; provide for the setting aside of one constituency per province, to be contested for by the youth on the basis of proportional representation.”
Explaining the rationale of removing running mates, Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi said the concept had the effect of creating parallel centres of power.
“You all remember that it was one of the contentious issues when we had our Constitution and it was deferred for 10 years because it is a borrowed concept from America. It is not even an international best practice where you have a President given executive authority, we do not ordinarily want to create a parallel centre of power.
“We believe it is not desirable in our constitutional dispensation to create separate centres of power. We would rather have a President elected by the people and then appoints his team, Vice President and Cabinet; that is the thinking, that is what is practised in Southern Africa and several countries,” said Minister Ziyambi.
“On the youth quota, the proposal is to increase our seats by 10 and have each province get one youth representative, so parties will submit their names of candidates and depending on the votes in the province the party with the majority will have its candidate in Parliament, so we are not cutting down on anything.”
Earlier on Prof Murwira said the Government sought to amend Section 161 of the Constitution to de-link the delimitation of electoral boundaries from population censuses, provide for the inclusion of the office of the Chief Secretary to the President and Cabinet in the Constitution, provide for the appointment of the Prosecutor-General by the President, and for the establishment of the Office of the Public Protector; and amend the heading of Section 271 of the Constitution by the inclusion of “and Metropolitan Councils.”
Prof Murwira said Cabinet considered and approved the Principles of the Proposed Judicial Laws Amendment Bill which was presented Minister Ziyambi.
He said the Bill seek to amend the Magistrates Court, Labour and High Court Acts.
Some of the issues related to increasing the jurisdiction of Magistrates in civil cases to those involving monetary values of $300 000 in the first instance.
Other issues are to amend the Labour Act to afford Judges of the Labour Court powers to execute their own judgements, amendment of Section 93(5)(a) of the Labour Act to include a proviso requiring the joinder of an employee to an application for the confirmation of a Labour Officer’s ruling; and amendment of the Magistrates Court Act to increase the power of review of Regional Magistrates.
Striking doctors risk losing their monthly salaries should they continue defying calls to return to work as Government is now invoking the Labour Court ruling allowing it to institute disciplinary measures against them.
This was said by Health and Child Care Minister Dr Obadiah Moyo while fielding questions from journalists during the 37th Cabinet decision matrix held yesterday.
“As you are aware, we requested the doctors to come back to work. The Labour Court disposal order said Government should take disciplinary action against those not coming to work. Government has taken a decision as recommended by the Health Service Board who are following that disposal order by the Labour Court, the disciplinary action will be done by HSB where doctors not coming to work are disciplined, the first thing is whoever is not coming to work will not be paid, secondly since they are not coming to work action related to those not coming to work will be taken. The HSB has all the statutes and they will follow them,” said Dr Moyo.
Questions had also been raised that some striking doctors who rejected the 100 percent salary increment had indicated that they were not willing to receive the money if it did not meet their expectations.
“That is sacred information you are telling us. From our side we know that if someone is not at work they are not paid, it is that simple,” said Dr Moyo.
Earlier, Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services Acting Minister Professor Amon Murwira had said Government had taken a decision to take disciplinary action against striking doctors.
“Government has indeed gone out of its way to try and find an amicable solution by addressing the concerns by the medical doctors through constructive dialogue. However, given the uncompromising stance adopted by the medical doctors which seems to be driven by other hidden interests, Government through the Health Service Board remains committed to following the dictates of the country’s laws and has come to the point where it has to commence disciplinary proceedings for the striking doctors as from October 21, 2019,” said Prof Murwira.State media
ALL roads will on Friday lead to the National Sports Stadium in Harare for the Anti-Sanctions Gala where a number of local musicians will sing against illegal sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe by the West.
People from across the country will march against the illegal sanctions, with the rest of Sadc countries having committed to the same cause.
Dubbed the Anti-Sanctions Gala, the event will see local artistes drawn from all the country’s provinces taking to the stage from 6pm until the following morning.
The day will also see various activities being carried out around the country calling on the West to remove the illegal sanctions.
Jah Prayzah and his Third Generation Band are among the stellar list of musicians headlining the all-night music fiesta.
ZORA music star, Leonard Zhakata will also perform at the gala, which is expected to attract thousands of people from all corners of the country.
Sulumani Chimbetu and his Orchestra Dendera Kings will sample new music from his yet to be named forthcoming album when he takes to the stage.
The Zimbabwe Prisons and Correctional Service (ZPCS) ambassador, who is basking in the glory of massive reception of his track “Ndunge”, hinted that he will be releasing new music before the end of this year.
Progress Chipfumo, who is also busy making videos for some of his popular tracks, is also expected to perform at the gala.
Baba Machanic Manyeruke, Agatha Murudzwa and Mathias Mhere will add a gospel flavour to the gala. Songstress Tariro NeGitare will also entertain people on the night.
Killer T, Seh Calaz and Freeman, who is basking in the glory of his duet with Alick Macheso on “Ngaibake”, will represent the Zimdancehall family when they take to the stage to chant their hits.
Bulawayo-based Sandra Ndebele and Iyasa will travel from the City of Kings and Queens to sing against sanctions that have affected the country’s economy.
Urban grooves singer Roki will also rejuvenate his waning music batteries at the gala, revisiting his yesteryear hits like “Chidzoka”. Mbare Chimurenga Choir and other groups are expected to showcase their energetic dances on stage during the all-night muisc extravaganza.State media
Government has declared Friday, October 25, a public holiday to allow people to attend the Sadc-initiated regional day of solidarity against sanctions on Zimbabwe, whose main event is slated for the National Sports Stadium in Harare.
This follows a decision by the Sadc summit held in Tanzania in August this year to set the day aside for solidarity marches across the region to denounce illegal sanctions imposed by the United States (US) and the European Union (EU).
The public holiday was announced last night by Acting Minister of Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services Professor Amon Murwira while addressing journalists on the 37th Cabinet decision matrix yesterday.
“Cabinet received an update on the Friday October 25, 2019 SADC Anti-Sanctions Day from Honourable Vice President Kembo Mohadi. The marchers are expected to assemble at Robert Mugabe Square by 6am, from where they will proceed to the National Sports Stadium at 8am.
Highlights of events scheduled to take place at the National Sports Stadium will include entertainment; solidarity messages by various national and international presenters; presentation of research findings on the background and impact of the illegal sanctions; a soccer match between Dynamos and Highlanders football clubs; and the anti-sanctions gala to run from 6pm on the same day till the following morning,” said Minister Murwira, who is also Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Development Minister.
“Similar activities are expected to take place in various provincial and district centres throughout the country. To further amplify the importance of this day to the economic emancipation and well-being of Zimbabwe, Friday October 25, 2019 shall be declared an official public holiday.State media
Harare City Council has urged residents to be patient with them since they were implementing measures to reduce the impact of water shortages.
The measures include the drilling of boreholes and the carting of water using bowsers.
Councillor Elvis Ruzani said water should be used sparingly in the interim while long term solutions are implemented.
Speaking at a residents meeting convened by Council and Combined Harare Residents Association (CHRA), Councillor Ruzani said, “As a city for our short term solutions on water we will continue to drill boreholes in Hatcliffe using support from CDF fund.”
The residents called on council to quickly rehabilitate water infrastructure networks for water to be readily available.
“We do not have a borehole in our area in Harare North, we are buying under the difficult circumstances we are living in,” said another resident Patrine Chikwindi.
Council is working on various projects to address the water situation.
It has engaged Chinese companies, SynoHydro-$237 425 804 for sewer treatment plants, China Gezhouba Group Company -$351 072 913 for water distribution and China Machinery and Engineering Company $280 000 000 for installation of four water pumps. — HMetro
LONDON. — Jose Mourinho claims Manchester United’s tactics skewered Liverpool as he bizarrely claimed Jurgen Klopp “liked meat but got fish”.
Kop boss Klopp certainly looked crabby as VAR decisions went against his English Premier League football leaders in Sunday’s 1-1 draw at Old Trafford.
But former United boss Mourinho believes Klopp’s biggest beef will be Liverpool failing to cope with United’s “solid” defensive tactics.
Klopp’s men floundered in the first half, Marcus Rashford’s opener for United being awarded after video replays, just before VAR ruled out a Sadio Mane equaliser. But midfielders Adam Lallana and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain came off the bench to get Liverpool out of a stew.
And it was fit-again Lallana who tapped home to put Klopp’s men six points clear of Manchester City, albeit the first time Liverpool have failed to win in their nine Premiership games this season.
And noting Liverpool’s poultry first-half display, Mourinho said of Klopp: “He likes meat and he got fish. “United, with the limitations they have at the moment, they played with five at the back, were solid and didn’t give the chance of transition.
“Jurgen Klopp didn’t like the menu.” United’s improved display still leaves their manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer with plenty on his plate.
But Mourinho focused more on Klopp’s potential problems. Ex-Chelsea chief Mourinho ribbed the Champions League winners by saying: “They missed quality to play against a team with a low block. “— The Sun.
Popular actor Lazarus Boora of “Gringo” fame has been discharged from hospital and is now recovering at home.
The comedian went under the knife last week after suffering from appendix rapture.
The actor, who had to ask for help to pay medical bills, thanked those who came to his rescue.
Socialites Pokello Nare and Jackie Ngarande were the major contributors to the hospital bill. Gringo blamed piracy for his financial misfortunes.
“If it wasn’t for piracy, with ‘Gringo Troublemaker’ I would have had made enough to cover my own medical bills,” he said.
Gringo is not the only actor who has struggled with medical expenses with the late Lawrence Simbarashe, popularly known as “Bhonzo” from his role in local comedy “Timmy naBhonzo” having suffered the same predicament.State media
A MAN from Hwange died allegedly after being attacked by elephants while herding cattle on Friday bringing to 22 the number of people killed by wildlife countrywide since January this year.
Zimbabwe National Parks and Wildlife Management Authority (Zimparks) spokesperson Mr Tinashe Farawo attributed the attack on humans by wildlife to the escalating human-wildlife conflict caused by drought.
He said 55 elephants have died in Hwange National Park alone in the past two months because of drought and animals were now invading human settlements in search of food and water.
“We confirm that we received a report about a man who was killed by elephants in Lukosi area of Hwange and that becomes the 22nd incident of people killed by wildlife since January.
Elephants account for 40 percent of these deaths,” said Mr Farawo.
He said Zimparks desperately needs investment into water sources to prevent death of wildlife and ultimately protect humans from animals, especially elephants that invade communities in search of water, food and habitat.
“We’re mourning as an authority that unfortunately another life has been lost. If you look at the bigger picture you see that we need to invest into conservation so we have more water sources and security among other things.
“Since two months ago 55 elephants, excluding other species, have died in Hwange National Park alone due to starvation as there is no water and food.
Animals are travelling long distances looking for water and are dying within 50 metres of water sources. Initially we suspected that it was anthrax or poisoning but investigations showed that they are dying because of drought,” said Mr Farawo.
He said the carcasses were found with their tusks and trophies intact as poaching has gone down due to measures put in place by Government to curb illegal hunting.
There are fears that more animals will die before the rainy season due to excessive heat and drought, added Mr Farawo.
“The biggest threat is loss of habitat because of the huge destruction caused by wildlife. We are trying our best to de-silt some of the water sources but the challenge is that these are the hottest months before the onset of the rains.
“Our appeal goes to those who always make a lot of noise claiming to love wildlife more than we do, to have a look at the crisis we are facing because of lack of water. Animals migrate to human settlements where they kill people as they compete for food and water,” said Mr Farawo.NewsDay
The death of Hilton Tafadzwa Tamangani, who was brutally assaulted by the police and died while in prison, last Friday, is testimony to the fact that the real crisis in Zimbabwe is State-sanctioned human rights abuses on innocent Zimbabweans under the Mnangagwa regime.
Since the stolen election of July 2018, 25 people have died in State sanctioned murders at the hands of rogue elements in the police and the army while hundreds others have been assaulted, tortured and abducted by State security agents.
Tamangani, a vendor was part of a group of 11 vendors arrested last week in a choreographed case involving the purported discovery of helmets at a building in Harare, which the police are strangely trying to link to the MDC.
Tamangani died on Friday night at Harare Remand Prison after the State denied his application for treatment at a private hospital. In a week where the illegitimate Zanu PF regime is trying to create some drama on the issue of sanctions, Tamangani’s brutal assault and resultant death while in custody is the clearest evidence that State-sanctioned human rights abuses are at the centre of the crisis in Zimbabwe.
His murder comes at a time when the police have proscribed the MDC from exercising its Constitutional right to hold peaceful protests against the deteriorating situation in the country while selectively allowing Zanu PF supporters to demonstrate.
Tamangani’s murder adds to the long list of innocent citizens who have lost their lives since the Mnangagwa regime stole last year’s elections. Barely hours after the stolen election in July 2018, the Mnangagwa regime killed six people and a further 19 people lost their lives at the hands of State security agents in January 2019.
Tamangani’s death brings to the fore the facts that it is State-sanctioned human rights abuses, and not sanctions, that are the centre of the crisis in Zimbabwe.
Farai Dziva|Zanu PF secretary for administration, Obert Mpofu has sensationally claimed he amassed wealth through hard work.
Mpofu dismissed allegations that he looted State resources during his time as a Cabinet minister.
Mpofu told Daily News he feels insulted by “people who have never run a tuckshop.”
Mpofu told Daily News on Sunday during an interview that his wealth was clean and hard-won.
“I am clean, I have invited investigations. I have never and will never take anything from anybody. What I have, I worked for and it is an insult, especially to be told by a nonentity, someone who has never managed a tuck-shop that I am corrupt. What do I need to corrupt anybody? If anything, I would be corrupting people,” Mpofu told the paper.
“I think that is the best time that the country ever had, between 2009 and 2013. But people who want to see us fail think of the negative, look at the economic growth, it shot to two-figure digits, I am proud.
I don’t regret it and I am waiting to see someone surpass what I achieved. Before 2009, there was nothing in mining and after 2013 it just went down.
The graph is going down, but when I was minister, the graph was going up and I don’t see us achieving that in the near future. When you achieve something in Zimbabwe, you become a target, an enemy of the reactionaries,” he added.
Farai Dziva|Zanu PF secretary for administration, Obert Mpofu has challenged his accusers to bring evidence to prove that he looted state resources.
Mpofu dismissed allegations that he looted State resources during his time as a Cabinet minister.
Mpofu told Daily News he feels insulted by “people who have never run a tuckshop.”
Mpofu told Daily News on Sunday during an interview that his wealth was clean and hard-won.
“I am clean, I have invited investigations. I have never and will never take anything from anybody. What I have, I worked for and it is an insult, especially to be told by a nonentity, someone who has never managed a tuck-shop that I am corrupt. What do I need to corrupt anybody? If anything, I would be corrupting people,” Mpofu told the paper.
“I think that is the best time that the country ever had, between 2009 and 2013. But people who want to see us fail think of the negative, look at the economic growth, it shot to two-figure digits, I am proud.
I don’t regret it and I am waiting to see someone surpass what I achieved. Before 2009, there was nothing in mining and after 2013 it just went down.
The graph is going down, but when I was minister, the graph was going up and I don’t see us achieving that in the near future. When you achieve something in Zimbabwe, you become a target, an enemy of the reactionaries,” he added.
Her Excellency the First Lady of Zimbabwe Amai Auxillia Mnangagwa takes to the dance floor as she leads Zimbabweans in prayer for the country’s economic recovery. See video: pic.twitter.com/BuXxAz2vzB
Labour Economists and African Democrats (LEAD) president Ms Linda Masarira-Kaingidza yesterday joined the anti-sanctions drive and pledged to mobilise communities and fellow citizens against the illegal embargo ahead of the Sadc-initiated solidarity day this Friday.
The regional bloc’s 39th summit comprising Heads of State and Government set aside October 25, to conduct various activities in their countries aimed at denouncing illegal sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe.
Several countries have used different platforms including last month’s United Nations General Assembly in New York to call for the removal of illegal sanctions.
In a statement, Ms Masarira-Kaingidza said her party had joined the fight against sanctions because they were aware that the embargo was a form of economic warfare against Zimbabwe that had brought immense suffering on the masses.
“As LEAD, we are engaging with local communities and grassroots citizens having meetings discussing the effects of sanctions and the importance of speaking with one voice to push for sanctions to be lifted,” she said.
Ms Masarira-Kaingidza said the most important ways to fight sanctions were to create a national campaign to educate people on the adverse effects of sanctions.
“We also inform people and make it clear that the sanctions which were deployed by a national emergency by the American president are war and defence measures that can be escalated to a military invasion by an instruction by the same president if the Americans do not neutralise that threat that they believe Zimbabwe poses to their national, economic and security interest,” she said.
“We are also teaching them to love the nation and each other to be willing to die for the nation as the first step to fight sanctions. We are making them get to unite as countrymen who understand that they need each other to progress.
“We can’t fix Zimbabwe’s problems if we are divided.”
Ms Masarira-Kaingidza called upon progressive political parties and civic organisations to work with them as they sought to define, establish and build a national interest, identity and common interest to galvanise us to work towards a transformative developmental state.
“We need to address previous pains and divisions that polarised us to build reconciliation through traditional and spiritual means using our traditional leaders, elders and not politicians.
“We should create trust, responsibility and accountability for each other and our nation,” she said.
She implored the Government to call for a national emergency against sanctions.State media
Labour Economists and African Democrats (LEAD) president Ms Linda Masarira-Kaingidza yesterday joined the anti-sanctions drive and pledged to mobilise communities and fellow citizens against the illegal embargo ahead of the Sadc-initiated solidarity day this Friday.
The regional bloc’s 39th summit comprising Heads of State and Government set aside October 25, to conduct various activities in their countries aimed at denouncing illegal sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe.
Several countries have used different platforms including last month’s United Nations General Assembly in New York to call for the removal of illegal sanctions.
In a statement, Ms Masarira-Kaingidza said her party had joined the fight against sanctions because they were aware that the embargo was a form of economic warfare against Zimbabwe that had brought immense suffering on the masses.
“As LEAD, we are engaging with local communities and grassroots citizens having meetings discussing the effects of sanctions and the importance of speaking with one voice to push for sanctions to be lifted,” she said.
Ms Masarira-Kaingidza said the most important ways to fight sanctions were to create a national campaign to educate people on the adverse effects of sanctions.
“We also inform people and make it clear that the sanctions which were deployed by a national emergency by the American president are war and defence measures that can be escalated to a military invasion by an instruction by the same president if the Americans do not neutralise that threat that they believe Zimbabwe poses to their national, economic and security interest,” she said.
“We are also teaching them to love the nation and each other to be willing to die for the nation as the first step to fight sanctions. We are making them get to unite as countrymen who understand that they need each other to progress.
“We can’t fix Zimbabwe’s problems if we are divided.”
Ms Masarira-Kaingidza called upon progressive political parties and civic organisations to work with them as they sought to define, establish and build a national interest, identity and common interest to galvanise us to work towards a transformative developmental state.
“We need to address previous pains and divisions that polarised us to build reconciliation through traditional and spiritual means using our traditional leaders, elders and not politicians.
“We should create trust, responsibility and accountability for each other and our nation,” she said.
She implored the Government to call for a national emergency against sanctions.State media
Harare – As the world celebrates International Day of the Girl which is normally observed on 11 October, the Women Advocacy Project is calling for greater investments to improve girls’ education, skills, and job prospects in Zimbabwe.
We stress the importance of creating opportunities and safe spaces for girls’ voices to be heard and listened to in decisions that affect them.
Constance Mugari
Constance Mugari, the founder and Executive Director of the Women Advocacy Project, said more attention should be given to girls’ education and providing them with the relevant job skills and training. She said such an investment also enables them to participate in the workforce and to move from dreaming to achieving their dreams.
Said Mugari in a statement:
According to UNICEF, UNFPA and the Zimbabwe National Family Planning Council (ZNFPC) one third of all girls in Zimbabwe marry before the age of 18.
Statistics show that approximately 500,000 teenagers fall pregnant every year in Zimbabwe, with 19 percent of the pregnancies in this group a result of child marriages. 48 percent of adolescents confirmed that the pregnancies were unplanned.
Adolescent pregnancy remains a major challenge and contributor to maternal and child mortality and the vicious circle of ill-health and poverty particularly in Zimbabwe.
Poverty remains a key driver of child marriage, and girls from poor families are more likely to become child brides than those from wealthier households.
If we really want to tackle poverty and end child marriage we must give all girls the tools they need to invest in themselves.
That means providing them with the quality education and training they need to earn an income and create a better future for themselves and their family.
Every year, 12 million girls are married globally before the age of 18, depriving them of their rights to education, health and a life of their choice.
Evidence shows that girls who attend secondary school are three times less likely to be child brides. They also have better economic prospects, fewer and healthier children, and are more likely to ensure that their own children are not married before 18.”
A Chiredzi manager has been dragged to court by his wife after he allegedly refused to pay for welfare of a child that she conceived through a sperm donor.
The defendant agreed for his wife to have a child through a sperm donor after the doctor told him he had a low sperm count.
The couple’s names have been withheld for ethical reasons.
The defendant and his wife went to South Africa where they got a sperm from an unknown donor and there was artificial insemination resulting in the woman conceiving.
According to The Mirror the baby was born sometime in November 2018
The court was told that the defendant is now neglecting the child, accusing his wife of adultery.
However the defendant later denied the authenticity of the papers. He also distanced himself from the signature on the papers saying he only went abroad on business trips.
The court dismissed the defendant`s claims and said evidence brought by his wife to the court was consistent and the papers from laboratories abroad were genuine since they had contact addresses and the defendant’s signature which he failed to dispute.
The presiding magistrate granted the wife maintenance of $800 per month.
Johannesburg Mayor Herman Mashaba is expected to vacate office on 27 November 2019.
JOHANNESBURG – The Democratic Alliance (DA) on Monday said it would hold an urgent federal committee meeting to discuss operations in the City of Johannesburg following the resignation of Mayor Herman Mashaba.
Mashaba said one of the reasons he resigned from the party was because he could not reconcile with a group of people who believed race was irrelevant in the discussion of inequality and poverty in South Africa.
He is expected to vacate office on 27 November 2019.
Mashaba resigned less than 24 hours after former DA and Western Cape Premier Helen Zille was appointed party Federal Council chair on Sunday – a move that has divided the official opposition. The mayor had threatened to resign last week if the party was taken over by what he called “right-wing elements”.
Following this year’s general elections, Zille joined the Institute of Race Relations (IRR) as a senior policy fellow, a position she stepped down from after a nomination for the Federal Council chair. Some members of the DA have disagreed sharply with the role of the IRR in the DA.
A SELF-PROCLAIMED prophet from Bulawayo has been sentenced to 12 months in prison for stealing a passport from a church member under the guise that he was praying for it.
Shepherd Mbili (27) from Emakhandeni suburb duped Mr Tagarira Godknows of his passport and used it to travel to South Africa.
Mbili pleaded guilty before Western Commonage magistrate Ms Gladmore Mushove. The magistrate sentenced him to 12 months in prison and six months suspended on condition that he does not commit a similar offence within the next three years.
Mbili said: “I do admit to the allegations levelled against me. I wanted to go to South Africa and I was in desperate need of a passport.”
Prosecuting, Mr Kenneth Shava said last month, Mbili asked Mr Godknows to bring his passport and academic certificates for anointing.
“Mbili took the envelope that had Mr Godknows’ documents and prayed for it. He advised the complainant not to open the envelope fully knowing that he had stolen his passport,” he said.
Mr Godknows said Mbili promised to get him a job in South Africa.
“I went to his house with my academic certificates and my passport. He took an envelope from his bedroom and told me not to open the envelope until I’m ready to use it,” he said.
“On the 6th of October I opened the envelope to check the last date I went to Zambia and I found out that my passport was missing.”
Mr Godknows said he tried to locate the prophet at his home but could not find him.
“I went to look for Prophet Mbili and his wife told me that he had travelled to South Africa with my passport and would be back soon,” he said.
The matter was reported to the police leading to Mbili’s arrest.
A popular pastor has waded unto the ongoing debate of whether it’s compulsory for Christians to be paying their tithes or not.
The preacher identified as Sam Adeyemi who is the Senior Pastor of Day Star Christian Centre has asked that no Christian anywhere should pay tithe to any pastor or church.
According to him, he has conducted a comprehensive and unbiased research into this controversial topic and has never come across anything that suggests that God would be angry with people who fail to pay tithe and curse them.
He said,
“I have been following the tithe debate. I discovered that it has been an age-long debate and it will be on for a long time. My first observation is that church people are behaving as if we own the word tithe.
“We don’t own the word. It is an English word. I want to say clearly that tithe, as practiced under the law of Moses, has expired. The death and resurrection of Jesus have put paid to it. It has expired.
“All the requirements of the law were satisfied under Christ. It is a gamble to say Jesus never paid tithe. The fact that it was not written that Jesus paid tithe does not mean he did not do it.
“I can also claim that Jesus did not go to the toilet because it is not written. 18 years of his life were not recorded in the Bible. When he was born his parents satisfied the requirements of the law. John 21v25 says there are many things he did that were not recorded. Jesus did not say it was wrong to pay tithe in his day.”
Pastor Adeyemi further quoted Romans 8, saying the chapter “clearly tells us that we are free. No Christian should feel guilty for not paying tithe”.
He said ;
“The law of the spirit of life in Christ has made us free. Romans 8 clearly tells us that we are free. No Christian should feel guilty for not paying tithe. There is nothing you can add to what Jesus did to be qualified before God. When Jesus said it is finished it was finished. Gal 3v13 says Christ has redeemed us from the curse of the law.
“A Christian is not cursed because he or she did not pay tithe. A Christian should not give out of fear. A Christian should give out of love. We are free from guilt, from fear. We are in a dispensation of grace.
If you commit murder, you realize what you did and you repent God will forgive you. But bear in mind that Police will arrest you and prosecute you. The forgiveness of God does not remove the consequences of our actions.
You are free to decide what to give. But if you sow sparingly you will reap sparingly. Tithing as practised under the law has expired but tithing as a general principle cannot expire. A Christian is free to give any percentage of his money. But just bear in mind that 10 percent is still part of the number. If somebody chooses to give 10 percent he should not be condemned and if he gives less or more than that he has a right to decide on what to do”
A clique within the ruling Zanu-PF is pushing for the resignation of Vice President Constantino Chiwenga on health grounds.
Chiwenga, the former army general who orchestrated a coup to depose former President Robert Mugabe who died in September, has been away from office since the beginning of the year due to ill health.
Presently, Chiwenga is admitted to a Chinese military health facility receiving treatment over a yet to be disclosed illness.
Insiders however, claim that Chiwenga was poisoned by his opponents in the deadly Zanu-PF succession politics.
Chiwenga’s absence, sources claim, has resulted in calls by some party members for him to step down and an “able” candidate is appointed to replace him.
“There are calls within the party for Chiwenga to step down and another person is appointed in his place because it is unhelpful to have a such a senior person away from work for almost a year. He must just resign and the President appoints an able person,” said a Zanu-PF deep throat.
The source said the Chiwenga issue had given the opposition ammunition to attack both Zanu-PF and Mnangagwa for retaining Chiwenga when it was clear that he is no longer fit to hold office.
“There are whispers in the party that a delegation will soon be dispatched to China to convince Chiwenga to step down from his position. This is meat to manage the critical relations between Mnangagwa and the military because firing Chiwenga might affect those relations,” said the source.
Zanu-PF spokesperson Simon Khaya Moyo was not available for comment.-byo24
Former First Lady, Grace Mugabe’s sister, Junior Shuvai Gumbochuma has been ordered to pay $136 638.04 to the Zimbabwe Electricity Transmission and distribution Company (Pvt) Ltd (ZETDC) being charges for electricity supplied to her by the power company.
In his ruling, High Court judge, justice David Mangota said Gumbochuma must pay the outstanding balance in terms of a Deed of Settlement which was made and entered into by the two parties.
“The defendant (Junior Shuvai Gumbochuma) shall pay the sum of $136 638.04 to the plaintiff (ZETDC) together with interest thereon at the prescribed rate of interest calculated from the date of issue of summons, to date of payment both dates inclusive.
“The amount shall be made in terms of the Deed of Settlement made and entered into by and between the parties. The defendant shall pay the plaintiff’s cost of suit,” he said.
Reports indicate that the Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) on Monday morning deployed an anti-riot unit at the Rotten Rowcourt as activists protested the killing of a vendor, Hilton Tafadzwa Mangani whilst in custody.
Zimbabwe Defense Forces Commander Philip Valerio Sibanda is set to succeed President Emmerson Mnangagwa a prominent clergyman Pastor Ian Ndlovu has said.
In a veiled message to Mnangagwa Ndlovu said the lion (a description for General Sibanda) will be loyal to Mnangagwa so that he learns the art of ruling.
Kingdom Embassy church leader, Prophet Passion Java was reportedly forced to abandon his birthday celebrations held at Alexandra Park in Harare on Saturday, early, after angry merrymakers ran riot.
NewsDay reports that the prophet Passion Java’s ‘free for all’ braai and birthday bash ended in chaos after violence erupted, which saw the prophet being rushed to his Jaguar XI vehicle for safety.
His convoy, made up of fancy cars, was forced to leave soon after the angry mob had dispersed.
During the chaos, which lasted for about 10 minutes, some people who were backstage allegedly stole fresh meat meant for the after-party braai.
Artistes from the Mbare based recording stable, Chillspot, who included Enzo Ishall, Bazooker and Pumako entertained hundreds of people who had come to celebrate.
The flamboyant prophet made headlines last week after revealing that he had set aside $320K for his month-long birthday celebrations, spanning 3 continents.
The birthday celebrations which started in Washington D.C, USA will continue to Johannesburg, Cape Town, Los Angeles and Dubai after the Zimbabwean edition.
Passion Java showing off his watch
Prophet Passion Java has offered a reward to anyone who finds his lost expensive Rolex watch.
The prophet’s team claim the watch was lost during the stampede at Alex Sports Club where the prophet threw a free for all braai to celebrate his birthday.
Hello, This is an important update:
In the midst of a stampede the Prophet lost his $20k Rolex Watch. Whoever finds it will get a reward.
King Mswati III, the absolute monarch of Swaziland (eSwatini), was snubbed by 20 heads of state who failed to accept his invitation to attend a trade launch.
The Swazi Government, which is not elected but picked by the King, was so confident they would attend it hired 18 top-of-the range cars to transport them while they were in Swaziland.
Media in the undemocratic kingdom revealed that many of the heads of state (sitting presidents and prime ministers) had at first accepted the invitation to the opening of an eTrade regional office but did not show.
The Sunday edition of the Times of eSwatini reported those who at first accepted included Zambia’s President Lungu and Guinea President Alpha Condé. It said, ‘Government went all out to ensure that these very important people would receive dignified treatment once they arrived in the kingdom.’
No heads of state attended and the only ‘VIPs’ who actually attended were former Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn and Chief Executive Officer of the Africa eTrade Group, Mulualem Syoum, it reported.
The Times reported Minister of Commerce, Industry and Trade Manqoba Khumalo, ‘confirmed that 20 heads of state had been invited but those that either eventually arrived or sent representatives were five.’ He said they were not heads of states, but ministers.
Khumalo said 18 cars had been hired for the dignitaries. They included Lexus SUVs and BMW 5 series vehicles.
The King received another snub in February 2019 when it was announced Swaziland had missed out to South Africa on the chance to host the 2020 African Union summit. Media in South Africa said this was because Swaziland did not have the resources to fulfil the role.
It is no secret that Swaziland is broke. Hospitals have run out of vital drugs and schools have been forced to close because the government has not paid its suppliers. In his budget speech in March 2018 Finance Minister Martin Dlamini said government owed E3.1bn (US$230 million) in total to its suppliers for goods and services.
Public servants have been striking for a 7.8 percent cost-of-living pay rise but the government says it does not have the money and has offered zero percent. Police brutally attacked workers during legal protests.
In 2016, when King Mswati was Chair of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) he took about E40m, mostly from public funds, to host a lavish Heads of State summit at a time when his government was so poor it could release only E22m of the E305m earmarked for drought relief in that year’s national budget.
The Times of Swaziland reported in 2017 that the Swaziland Government spent E29 million (US$2.4 million) on 14 BMW cars and 80 motorbikes for the SADC summit. The vehicles were left idle after the summit ended.
Zanu-PF bought its fleet of luxury vehicles and colourful regalia used during last year’s election campaign through a company that was recently blacklisted by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) for allegedly fuelling the illegal trade in foreign currency, it has been revealed.
According to a leaked document authored by Spartan Security protesting the freezing of its bank accounts by the RBZ last month, the firm helped raise as much as US$20 million for Zanu-PF to buy cars in 2017 and last year.
Spartan said it facilitated large payments for Zanu-PF to suppliers in South Africa, China and Dubai. The document was reportedly authored by Spartan director Luka Fabris. President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s nephew David Mnangagwa, who was one ofSpartan’s founders, is said to have resigned in 2016, but still had close links with the company that has interests in mining and security.
“In May 2017 Spartan began facilitating large payments for Zanu-PF party through the then secretary (the late Robert Mugabe),” reads part of the documents in our possession.
“As much as US$20 million worth of predominantely vehicles were paid for in South Africa, through swapping Spartan sourced US dollars cash in Zimbabwe for free funds in South Africa, which was paid to ACH Trading and Lifehouse investments, who in turn supplied 250 vehicles to Zanu-PF party.
“Even the governor of the Reserve Bank was aware of our services at the time.”
Spartan said in 2018 it also provided Zanu-PF with millions of dollars in foreign currency to buy cars from South Africa. The company also supplied the army, police and government departments with foreign currency.
“In 2018, as the RBZ became less and less able to make foreign payments, the volume of payments facilitated by Spartan Security for government increased further as Spartan took several deals emanating from the Zanu-PF party, Zimbabwe Defence Forces and both vice-presidents’ offices,” the document revealed.
Last month, the RBZ froze bank accounts of several companies that were accused of dealing in foreign currency, including Kuda Tagwirei’s Sakunda.
Tagwirei is one of the businessmen that were said to have bought the luxury cars for Zanu-PF.
Zanu-PF treasurer at the time Obert Mpofu, referred questions to his successor Patrick Chinamasa.
“I am not the treasurer of the party, you have to talk to Cde Chinamasa, he is the one in charge of the books,” he said.
Chinamasa, however, said he was not in a position to comment as he was currently in Botswana where he is part of Zimbabwe’s delegation observing the neighbouring country’s forthcoming elections.
RBZ governor John Mangudya said he was not aware of any deals between the central bank and Spartan.
“The bank is not aware of their transactions. Monitoring of transactions is done by the financial intelligence unit that froze their accounts,” he said.
“They are the best ones to deal with their complaints. The Reserve Bank has never dealt with that company.”
Fabris did not respond to calls yesterday. David Mnangagwa is now part of the president’s close security.
“David Mnangagwa although he resigned as director of Spartan in 2016, remains a lifelong friend,” Fabris said in the document. “He is not the son of President Mnangagwa, but a nephew who currently serves in the president’s personal security detail.”
Mangagwa has in the past decribed people that illegally deal in foreign currency as saboteurs.
The informal trade in foreign currency has been cited by the government and Zanu-PF as the reason behind the country’s economic collapse.
IN HAPPIER TIMES . . . Artwell Mandaza proudly displays some of the many medals he won during his time while flanked by his late wife (right) daughter (left) and grandson at their Bindura home
Zimbabwe’s athletics legend, Artwell Mandaza has died.
He was 73.
Mandaza shot to fame in the 1970s winning several accolades as the first black to attain several feats at a time the white minority held monopoly over the sport. Mandaza is regarded as one of Zimbabwe’s greatest athletes and will be remembered more for his 1970 record time of 9,90 seconds in the 100m dash.
Tragically, he never competed in the Olympic Games because his incredible 10,3 to 9,9 second searing sprints were performed when the pariah “state” of Rhodesia was barred from the Olympic Games. The family is still working on the funeral arrangements.
BERLIN – Spendthrift President Emmerson Mnangagwa, has reportedly bought an exquisite massive beachfront villa in Dubai, where he intends to retire or alternatively use the opulent property as an exile bolthole should he be forced out of power by another unavoidable military coup, Spotlight Zimbabwe reported. Mnangagwa, is allegedly plotting to disappear from the country into exile once toppled from power by the army or his own ruling Zanu PF party by June 2020, high level sources in the Office of the President and Cabinet (OPC) have revealed.
The multi-million villa, whose actual price has been kept a close guarded secret is situated in Palm Jumeirah island, which is the world’s largest man-made island comprising of a two kilometre long trunk, a crown made up of 17 fronds and a surrounding crescent.
The Palm Jumeirah is an artificial archipelago in Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), created using land reclamation by Nakheel which extends into the Persian Gulf. It is part of a larger series of developments called the Palm Islands, including Palm Jebel Ali and Palm Deira, which, when completed, will together increase Dubai’s shoreline by a total of 520 kilometres.
“Shumba Murambwi (Mnangagwa’s totem) has been offered State protection in the UAE should the need arise, hence the acquisition of the villa through an unnamed third party,” said a senior official at OPC last week.
“His personal friendship with the Crown Prince of the Emirate of Abu Dhabi, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, now makes the UAE his preferred destination for retirement or exile. A lot is taking place and the president’s inner circle are planning ahead for any eventuality. They also think that his money will be safe there, because the UAE’s banking system is very secure.”
Another OPC source told Spotlight Zimbabwe, that there was strong suspicion that Mnangagwa’s Dubai villa, could have been purchased for him as a gift by his business and mining associates in the UAE, amid reports that Mnangagwa is reportedly facilitating for investors in that country to come into Zimbabwe to establish new gold mines.
Bloomberg News reported last week, that Harare was in advanced talks with a “key” foreign investor over the establishment of a gold mine that would be triple the size of the largest gold operation currently in the country. Government has not provided any further details about the origins of the foreign investor.
The gold mine will produce 6 metric tons of gold a year, according to the mines ministry.
“The indigenization law, which requires 51 percent control by locals in the major sectors of the economy has been amended. Who do you think is going to benefit from this?” said the OPC source.
“The amendment means only platinum and diamonds remain nationalised. So in essence, foreign nationals are free to come in and engage in gold mining, and can own stakes as high as 100 percent. Investors from Dubai are clearly going to receive preferential treatment in gold, and believe it or not the West is contemplating to remove sanctions against this administration, because they’re losing out big time.”
A recent Reuters analysis, found that ‘billions of dollars’ worth of gold are being smuggled out of Africa every year through the UAE in the Middle East, which has become a gateway to markets in Europe, the United States and beyond.
Customs data gathered by the news agency shows that the UAE imported $15.1 billion worth of gold from Africa in 2016, more than any other country and up from $1.3 billion in 2006.
The customs data provided by governments to Comtrade, a United Nations database, shows the UAE has been a prime destination for gold from many African states for some years. In 2015, China “the world’s biggest gold consumer “imported more gold from Africa than the UAE. But during 2016, the latest year for which data is available, the UAE imported almost double the value taken by China. With African gold imports worth $8.5 billion that year, China came a distant second. Switzerland, the world’s gold refining hub, came third with $7.5 billion worth.
Most of the gold is traded in Dubai, home to the UAE’s gold industry.
According to Luxhabitat, a high-end real estate brokerage company in Dubai, Palm Jumeirah, is a self-declared eighth wonder of the world, it is a man-made palm shaped island.
“The area around the signature villas in Palm Jumeirah is a very interesting place to live and work. This includes a dazzling five-star resort such as the Atlantis hotel and other luxury dining facilities, as well as sophisticated beach clubs. The 4,000 villas and apartments have beautiful sea views and amazing facilities for its residents,” the company’s website states.
“The various amenities available to residents include, but are not restricted to, restaurants, cafes, beaches and a variety of retail outlets. The exterior facades are very diverse with Arabic, Mediterranean, European, Contemporary, Spanish, Balinese and Italian. This allows for its residents with different architectural tastes to choose from a wide breadth of styles. The villas have spacious rooms, high ceilings, cool deep balconies, large gardens and traditional arabesque design mixed in with contemporary style.”
Some of the amenities of the villa, include: Garage, Private elevators, Package room, Security gate, Doorman, Driver’s quarters, High-speed internet and Video security.
The revelations of the Dubai villa, come at a time when there is growing speculation, that Mnangagwa owns a private jet from Dubai, which he charters every time and again to attend international engagements.
Mnangagwa has sought to deny ownership of the jet, maintaining that it is being provided for him and fully paid by the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi.
“The Crown Prince sent us a huge plane to carry us and it returned us (home). I told him that we have a challenge of planes so every time I want to travel I will just call and he will send us the plane. So those who don’t know were just parroting what they don’t know and I just laughed it off,” said Mnangagwa upon his return from a visit to the UAE in March.
Mnangagwa is the country’s richest man, according to Wikileaks cables wrote in 2001 by a US ambassador, although he did not divulge the wealth in figures.
Sources that comprise of the international community, military and business associates suggest that Mnangagwa is worth about US$10.3 Billion. Mnangagwa has held ministerial positions including security and defence under the late President Robert Mugabe administration since 1980 and currently earns a basic monthly salary of US$18 666 excluding personal and family allowances.
Furthermore he owns a rural mansion built for him by the Chinese in Zvishavane, and is currently building a new costly mansion in Borrowdale, said to include a state of the art underground vault. Mnangagwa already has a home in Borrowdale, which he barely resides.
Image result for Mnangagwa Zvishavane mansion
Mnangagwa’s Zvishavane rural mansion
Mnangagwa’s Borrowdale home
Satellite image of Mnangagwa’s new massive 3.69 hectare Borrowdale mansion
Dubai is increasingly becoming popular with Southern African leaders, as a safe haven to a new life in the aftermath of their presidency. Former South African president, Jacob Zuma, was reported to have purchased a R330 million mansion in Dubai in 2016, allegedly bought for him by the Gupta brothers.
President Mugabe also rented a villa on the same street next to Zuma for his son Robert Junior who was studying in Dubai around 2015, on Lailak Street in Emirates Hills.
The MDC march which was scheduled on the 24th of October to counter the anti-sanctions march has been banned by the ZRP.
In a letter addressed to the MDC, the ZRP acknowledged receipt of the MDC application but stated that it didn’t satisfy the requirements of the Public Order and Security Act.
The ZRP didn’t precisely state the specific requirements which were not met.
MDC Secretary-General Charlton Hwende dismissed this as a selective application of the law as the Zanu Pf is allowed to demonstrate without notice.
The ZRP is on record of denying MDC led demonstrations throughout the country.
Farai Dziva| The Zimbabwe Warriors are among the three teams from the Cosafa Region that have qualified for the CHAN finals set for Cameroon next year.
The Warriors cruised past Lesotho in the third round of the qualifiers, winning 3-1 on aggregate. The triumph marked their return to the tournament after missing the 2018 edition.
The Joey Antipas’ team is joined by Zambia and Namibia from the Southern Zone.
Togo eliminated Nigeria in their Western regional tie to seal their first-ever qualification to the competition.
Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, DRC and reigning champions Morocco also qualified over the weekend.
The tournament is restricted to footballers who play in their country of birth. Initially scheduled for Ethiopia, the East African country admitted it was not ready to host this competition and Cameroon were given the rights.
List of the 16 qualified teams:
Cameroon (hosts)
Morocco
Tunisia
Mali
Guinea
Togo
Niger
Burkina Faso
DRC
Congo
Uganda
Rwanda
Tanzania
Zambia
Namibia
Zimbabwe.
Farai Dziva|The Warriors of Zimbabwe have qualified to the 2020 CHAN finals set for Cameroon after beating Lesotho 3-1 on aggregate.
The Warriors carried a 3-1 lead into the game and managed to preserve their advantage following a goalless draw in the second leg of the final round qualifier played in Maseru on Sunday.
The triumph, meanwhile, marks the return of Zimbabwe to the tournament after missing the previous edition.
Farai Dziva|Tswane Giants Mamelodi Sundowns progressed to the Telkom Knock Out last eight after thrashing Amazulu 5-0 at the Lucas Moripe Stadium.
The game looked to be competitive after Pitso Mosimane’s side went into the interval leading 1-0 but a brilliant second half display saw them put 4 past a wretched Usuthu.
Man-of-the-match Gaston Sirino scored a brace and inspired the Pretoria-based side side to the quater finals with ease.
Dear Editor-Masvingo MDC MP, councillors and women’s assembly took heed of President Nelson Chamisa’s call that all elected officials should keep in touch with the grassroots.
MDC led by charismatic and visionary leader President Nelson Chamisa derives its popularity in staying and consulting with their constituencies.
Below is a summary of events that unfold in the past two weeks:
This week, 17 October 2019, youthful Masvingo urban MPJacob Nyokanhete together with MDC Councillor Vhembo addressed residents of Ward 3 concerning issues of Service delivery and how 2018 CDF was used.
This meeting was organised by largest residents association- Masvingo United Residence Association. More so, the mp and councillor engaged residents through question and answer session.
In addition, Yesterday 19 October 2019, the residents in ward 3 requested a follow up meeting and honourable Nyokanhete and councillor Vembo attended the meeting.
Councillor Vembo gave feedback on what the council has been doing and it’s future plans. On the other hand, honourable Nyokanhete, gave feedback on Parliamentary bills which are currently at different stages and also made a summary presentation on Education bill.
Honourable Jacob Nyokanhete has started to make 2019 CDF consultations. The first CDF consultation was held in ward 3 and more meetings will be done in other wards. Honourable Nyokanhete stated that CDF usage is determined by Masvingo urban residents. He encourage all residents to participate in determing the use of CDF. 2019 CDF is $175 238 (bond). Last year’s CDF was $50 000, this money was used to buy cements that were distributed to both primary and secondary schools in Masvingo urban as recommended by Masvingo residents. Honourable Nyokanhete gave full account of the use of CDF money in full. He believes in full transparence in using public funds. Honourable Nyokanhete is a qualified chartered accountant and he is in the Parliamentary committe on public accounts. 2019 CDF funds will be accounted for and will be publicly published.
Last week honourable Nyokanhete visited Jairos Jiri Association in Masvingo urban. Jairosi Jiri Association plays a crucial role in advancing the emancipation and inclusivity of people with disabilities in all spheres of society. MDC led by President Chamisa is pro- people with disabilities. To enhance the advocacy work of people with disabilities, MDC has an active desk that deals with issues that deal with disabilities. Jairosi Jiri Association needs financial, material and any form of support from the Government and community at large. The concerned Mp honourable Jacob Nyokanhete kindly request all stakeholders to help Jairos Jiri.
Again, this week honourable Nyokanhete also visited Hillside Government Primary School on Friday, 17 October 2019.
This school was recently established, it faces the following challenges: the only goverment school without any computer in Masvingo urban, facing great water challenges and they are facing financial problems to complete the admin block they are building
Lastly, honourable Nyokanhete visited Ratidzo Trust school popularly known as Zimcare. This school cater for mentally challenged learners. The school management took honourable Nyokanhete on school tour. He was informed that, the school needs continous support of foodstuffs and blankets for their learners.
In ward 4, councillor Godfrey Kuraone held a consultative meeting with residents and addressed water challenges and other issues. He also responded to the questions posed by residents. The meeting was organised by Masvingo Urban Residents Association (MURRA).
Yesterday, Masvingo Provincial women assembly led by Masvingo provincial chair lady and Proportional Representative honourable Mago held a rally in Gutu South. The event was highly subcribed. Guest of honour honourable Mugidho, the MDC vice chair National women assembly articulated that MDC women assembly encouraged women and girls to recruit and mobilise votes for President Nelson Chamisa and MDC at large. Some of the speakers at this rally where Masvingo provincial chairperson honourable James Chafungamoyo Gumbi, Senator Rwambiwa Masvingo provincial chairlady honourable Mago.
Senator Rwambiwa, honourable Mago, Honourable Nyokanhete, Honourable Mugidho and others provided fuel and transport to ferry women and girls who attended this rally.
In Chiredzi, MDC will battle it out in council by election with Zanu PF. The election will be held on the 26th October 2019. The MDC Chiredzi cadres have be campaigning vigorously. MDC candidate is Mr Mazhata. The award winning Chiredzi Mayor Hwende and others contributed $700 towards ward 12 by election campaign. Honourable Mugidho, National youth leader Tsungi Rungwave and many MDC cadres are contributing towards ward 12 campaigns.
Labour Economists and African Democrats (LEAD) president Ms Linda Masarira-Kaingidza yesterday joined the anti-sanctions drive and pledged to mobilise communities and fellow citizens against the illegal embargo ahead of the Sadc-initiated solidarity day this Friday.
The regional bloc’s 39th summit comprising Heads of State and Government set aside October 25, to conduct various activities in their countries aimed at denouncing illegal sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe.
Several countries have used different platforms including last month’s United Nations General Assembly in New York to call for the removal of illegal sanctions.
In a statement, Ms Masarira-Kaingidza said her party had joined the fight against sanctions because they were aware that the embargo was a form of economic warfare against Zimbabwe that had brought immense suffering on the masses.
“As LEAD, we are engaging with local communities and grassroots citizens having meetings discussing the effects of sanctions and the importance of speaking with one voice to push for sanctions to be lifted,” she said.
Ms Masarira-Kaingidza said the most important ways to fight sanctions were to create a national campaign to educate people on the adverse effects of sanctions.
“We also inform people and make it clear that the sanctions which were deployed by a national emergency by the American president are war and defence measures that can be escalated to a military invasion by an instruction by the same president if the Americans do not neutralise that threat that they believe Zimbabwe poses to their national, economic and security interest,” she said.
“We are also teaching them to love the nation and each other to be willing to die for the nation as the first step to fight sanctions. We are making them get to unite as countrymen who understand that they need each other to progress.
“We can’t fix Zimbabwe’s problems if we are divided.”
Ms Masarira-Kaingidza called upon progressive political parties and civic organisations to work with them as they sought to define, establish and build a national interest, identity and common interest to galvanise us to work towards a transformative developmental state.
“We need to address previous pains and divisions that polarised us to build reconciliation through traditional and spiritual means using our traditional leaders, elders and not politicians.
“We should create trust, responsibility and accountability for each other and our nation,” she said.
She implored the Government to call for a national emergency against sanctions.State media
Labour Economists and African Democrats (LEAD) president Ms Linda Masarira-Kaingidza yesterday joined the anti-sanctions drive and pledged to mobilise communities and fellow citizens against the illegal embargo ahead of the Sadc-initiated solidarity day this Friday.
The regional bloc’s 39th summit comprising Heads of State and Government set aside October 25, to conduct various activities in their countries aimed at denouncing illegal sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe.
Several countries have used different platforms including last month’s United Nations General Assembly in New York to call for the removal of illegal sanctions.
In a statement, Ms Masarira-Kaingidza said her party had joined the fight against sanctions because they were aware that the embargo was a form of economic warfare against Zimbabwe that had brought immense suffering on the masses.
“As LEAD, we are engaging with local communities and grassroots citizens having meetings discussing the effects of sanctions and the importance of speaking with one voice to push for sanctions to be lifted,” she said.
Ms Masarira-Kaingidza said the most important ways to fight sanctions were to create a national campaign to educate people on the adverse effects of sanctions.
“We also inform people and make it clear that the sanctions which were deployed by a national emergency by the American president are war and defence measures that can be escalated to a military invasion by an instruction by the same president if the Americans do not neutralise that threat that they believe Zimbabwe poses to their national, economic and security interest,” she said.
“We are also teaching them to love the nation and each other to be willing to die for the nation as the first step to fight sanctions. We are making them get to unite as countrymen who understand that they need each other to progress.
“We can’t fix Zimbabwe’s problems if we are divided.”
Ms Masarira-Kaingidza called upon progressive political parties and civic organisations to work with them as they sought to define, establish and build a national interest, identity and common interest to galvanise us to work towards a transformative developmental state.
“We need to address previous pains and divisions that polarised us to build reconciliation through traditional and spiritual means using our traditional leaders, elders and not politicians.
“We should create trust, responsibility and accountability for each other and our nation,” she said.
She implored the Government to call for a national emergency against sanctions.State media
By A Correspondent- The Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education is investigating a possible case of child abuse at Lukosi Secondary in Hwange where a deputy headmistress allegedly forced a Form One girl to strip naked in the presence of other pupils and teachers.
Mrs Posenta Kwidini, who is also a senior Mathematics teacher at the school, was reportedly punishing the 15-year-old girl for dressing improperly.
She allegedly forced her to remove her skirt in the Fashion and Fabrics class where there were some Form Two pupils and two female teachers.
The incident happened last week and the girl, who cannot be named for ethical reasons, filed a report at Hwange Police Station on Friday.
The school authorities had reportedly concealed the matter.
Hwange District Schools Inspector (DSI) Mr Germination Moyo said he had ordered the school head to investigate the matter and submit a report today.
“I received an informal report about the issue late on Friday and I immediately told the school head to institute an investigation of what actually happened and prepare a report. Since the matter involves a deputy head who reports to the head, it’s ideal that we ask the head to investigate and submit a report before we do anything. So I am expecting a report from the head hopefully by Monday,” said Mr Moyo.
He said while there can be many ways of disciplining a child in school, the teacher might be “charged and called to defend herself” if the investigations establish that what she did constitutes an act of misconduct.
Acting Matabeleland North police spokesperson Sergeant Namatirai Mashona could not be reached on her mobile phone yesterday.
The girl was accompanied by her paternal uncle and some community members to file a police report.
Police visited the school on Friday and some pupils told them that they were used to such treatment by the deputy head.
In an interview, the girl narrated how she spent more than five minutes naked.
“I was walking towards the Agriculture block while fixing my skirt as I was coming from the toilet. The deputy head called me to the Fashion and Fabrics laboratory where she was with other teachers. She asked why I was opening my skirt and I explained to her that I was tucking in my blouse,” said the girl.
She said Mrs Kwidini ordered her to remove her skirt and she refused.
The girl finally complied after Mrs Kwidini allegedly threatened to beat her up.
“I unzipped my skirt and it dropped to the floor. I remained naked for more than five minutes,” said the girl.
She allegedly dressed up when one of the teachers told her to do so after Mrs Kwidini’s phone rang and she started talking on the phone.
With tears running down her cheeks, the girl walked to her class where she was swarmed by sympathetic classmates who witnessed the incident.
Contacted for comment, Mrs Kwidini said she could not comment on the issue since it’s in the hands of the police.
A gender activist, Mrs Anna Mandizha-Ncube, who is director of Buwalo Matilikilo Trust (BMT), said the girl’s dignity had been impaired. “We are worried because there is nowhere in the Education Act where a child should be disciplined in that manner. That’s a violation of her right to privacy and dignity in terms of the Child Protection Act, and it’s a case which we will follow with keen interest,” she said.
Her Excellency the First Lady of Zimbabwe Amai Auxillia Mnangagwa takes to the dance floor as she leads Zimbabweans in prayer for the country’s economic recovery. See video: pic.twitter.com/BuXxAz2vzB
The death of Hilton Tafadzwa Tamangani, who was brutally assaulted by the police and died while in prison, last Friday, is testimony to the fact that the real crisis in Zimbabwe is State-sanctioned human rights abuses on innocent Zimbabweans under the Mnangagwa regime.
Since the stolen election of July 2018, 25 people have died in State sanctioned murders at the hands of rogue elements in the police and the army while hundreds others have been assaulted, tortured and abducted by State security agents.
Tamangani, a vendor was part of a group of 11 vendors arrested last week in a choreographed case involving the purported discovery of helmets at a building in Harare, which the police are strangely trying to link to the MDC.
Tamangani died on Friday night at Harare Remand Prison after the State denied his application for treatment at a private hospital. In a week where the illegitimate Zanu PF regime is trying to create some drama on the issue of sanctions, Tamangani’s brutal assault and resultant death while in custody is the clearest evidence that State-sanctioned human rights abuses are at the centre of the crisis in Zimbabwe.
His murder comes at a time when the police have proscribed the MDC from exercising its Constitutional right to hold peaceful protests against the deteriorating situation in the country while selectively allowing Zanu PF supporters to demonstrate.
Tamangani’s murder adds to the long list of innocent citizens who have lost their lives since the Mnangagwa regime stole last year’s elections. Barely hours after the stolen election in July 2018, the Mnangagwa regime killed six people and a further 19 people lost their lives at the hands of State security agents in January 2019.
Tamangani’s death brings to the fore the facts that it is State-sanctioned human rights abuses, and not sanctions, that are the centre of the crisis in Zimbabwe.
Farai Dziva|The MDC has said the crisis in Zimbabwe is a direct result of state-sanctioned terror.
See full statement:
The death of Hilton Tafadzwa Tamangani, who was brutally assaulted by the police and died while in prison, last Friday, is testimony to the fact that the real crisis in Zimbabwe is State-sanctioned human rights abuses on innocent Zimbabweans under the Mnangagwa regime.
Since the stolen election of July 2018, 25 people have died in State sanctioned murders at the hands of rogue elements in the police and the army while hundreds others have been assaulted, tortured and abducted by State security agents.
Tamangani, a vendor was part of a group of 11 vendors arrested last week in a choreographed case involving the purported discovery of helmets at a building in Harare, which the police are strangely trying to link to the MDC.
Tamangani died on Friday night at Harare Remand Prison after the State denied his application for treatment at a private hospital. In a week where the illegitimate Zanu PF regime is trying to create some drama on the issue of sanctions, Tamangani’s brutal assault and resultant death while in custody is the clearest evidence that State-sanctioned human rights abuses are at the centre of the crisis in Zimbabwe.
His murder comes at a time when the police have proscribed the MDC from exercising its Constitutional right to hold peaceful protests against the deteriorating situation in the country while selectively allowing Zanu PF supporters to demonstrate.
Tamangani’s murder adds to the long list of innocent citizens who have lost their lives since the Mnangagwa regime stole last year’s elections. Barely hours after the stolen election in July 2018, the Mnangagwa regime killed six people and a further 19 people lost their lives at the hands of State security agents in January 2019.
Tamangani’s death brings to the fore the facts that it is State-sanctioned human rights abuses, and not sanctions, that are the centre of the crisis in Zimbabwe.
Farai Dziva|Zanu PF secretary for administration, Obert Mpofu has challenged his accusers to bring evidence to prove that he looted state resources.
Mpofu dismissed allegations that he looted State resources during his time as a Cabinet minister.
Mpofu told Daily News he feels insulted by “people who have never run a tuckshop.”
Mpofu told Daily News on Sunday during an interview that his wealth was clean and hard-won.
“I am clean, I have invited investigations. I have never and will never take anything from anybody. What I have, I worked for and it is an insult, especially to be told by a nonentity, someone who has never managed a tuck-shop that I am corrupt. What do I need to corrupt anybody? If anything, I would be corrupting people,” Mpofu told the paper.
“I think that is the best time that the country ever had, between 2009 and 2013. But people who want to see us fail think of the negative, look at the economic growth, it shot to two-figure digits, I am proud.
I don’t regret it and I am waiting to see someone surpass what I achieved. Before 2009, there was nothing in mining and after 2013 it just went down.
The graph is going down, but when I was minister, the graph was going up and I don’t see us achieving that in the near future. When you achieve something in Zimbabwe, you become a target, an enemy of the reactionaries,” he added.
Farai Dziva|Zanu PF secretary for administration, Obert Mpofu has sensationally claimed he is being insulted by “people who have never run a tuckshop.”
Mpofu dismissed allegations that he looted State resources during his time as a Cabinet minister.
Mpofu told Daily News he feels insulted by “people who have never run a tuckshop.”
Mpofu told Daily News on Sunday during an interview that his wealth was clean and hard-won.
“I am clean, I have invited investigations. I have never and will never take anything from anybody. What I have, I worked for and it is an insult, especially to be told by a nonentity, someone who has never managed a tuck-shop that I am corrupt. What do I need to corrupt anybody? If anything, I would be corrupting people,” Mpofu told the paper.
“I think that is the best time that the country ever had, between 2009 and 2013. But people who want to see us fail think of the negative, look at the economic growth, it shot to two-figure digits, I am proud.
I don’t regret it and I am waiting to see someone surpass what I achieved. Before 2009, there was nothing in mining and after 2013 it just went down.
The graph is going down, but when I was minister, the graph was going up and I don’t see us achieving that in the near future. When you achieve something in Zimbabwe, you become a target, an enemy of the reactionaries,” he added.
Farai Dziva|Zanu PF secretary for administration, Obert Mpofu has sensationally claimed he amassed wealth through hard work.
Mpofu dismissed allegations that he looted State resources during his time as a Cabinet minister.
Mpofu told Daily News he feels insulted by “people who have never run a tuckshop.”
Mpofu told Daily News on Sunday during an interview that his wealth was clean and hard-won.
“I am clean, I have invited investigations. I have never and will never take anything from anybody. What I have, I worked for and it is an insult, especially to be told by a nonentity, someone who has never managed a tuck-shop that I am corrupt. What do I need to corrupt anybody? If anything, I would be corrupting people,” Mpofu told the paper.
“I think that is the best time that the country ever had, between 2009 and 2013. But people who want to see us fail think of the negative, look at the economic growth, it shot to two-figure digits, I am proud.
I don’t regret it and I am waiting to see someone surpass what I achieved. Before 2009, there was nothing in mining and after 2013 it just went down.
The graph is going down, but when I was minister, the graph was going up and I don’t see us achieving that in the near future. When you achieve something in Zimbabwe, you become a target, an enemy of the reactionaries,” he added.
By A Correspondent- Harare City Council has urged residents to be patient with them since they were implementing measures to reduce the impact of water shortages.
The measures include the drilling of boreholes and the carting of water using bowsers.
Councillor Elvis Ruzani said water should be used sparingly in the interim while long term solutions are implemented.
Speaking at a residents meeting convened by Council and Combined Harare Residents Association (CHRA), Councillor Ruzani said, “As a city for our short term solutions on water we will continue to drill boreholes in Hatcliffe using support from CDF fund.”
The residents called on council to quickly rehabilitate water infrastructure networks for water to be readily available.
“We do not have a borehole in our area in Harare North, we are buying under the difficult circumstances we are living in,” said another resident Patrine Chikwindi.
Council is working on various projects to address the water situation.
It has engaged Chinese companies, SynoHydro-$237 425 804 for sewer treatment plants, China Gezhouba Group Company -$351 072 913 for water distribution and China Machinery and Engineering Company $280 000 000 for installation of four water pumps.
A Soweto man has allegedly confessed to hiring hitmen to kill his wife for R70,000.
From this amount, he would pay them R30,000 for the job, according to a confession statement seen by Sowetan.
Thabo Lehloibi, 32, will appear at the Protea magistrate’s court on charges of murder and robbery in connection with the killing of his wife, Matumelo Lehloibi, 30. Matumelo was killed in their rented room in Dlamini.
In the confession statement, Lehloibi allegedly confessed to hiring Thabang Kwena to do the job. The pair were denied bail last week and the case was postponed to this week for further investigation.
In the statement, Lehloibi detailed how Kwena and an accomplice knocked on their door after the couple’s two children had left for school on October 10.
“I heard a knock on our door and I opened it and saw Jabu who I later came to know that his real name is Thabang. I knew him as I arranged with him to kill my wife two weeks ago and he told me he will get someone to assist him,” the statement reads.
He claims Matumelo was a prophet and was hiding money from him and no longer engaged him in her finances.
“Jabu was in the presence of another black man. Jabu pretended he was fighting with me and the other guy went to my wife and strangled her on the bed and demanded money from her,” reads the statement.
Lehloibi said the struggle led to Matumelo falling to the floor and she stopped breathing.
“After that they asked me where were they going to get the money and I told them that I don’t know where she was hiding the money and I gave them R130 and two cellphones.
“I became confused as to how I was going to give them the money because she was dead having not shown [me] where she kept the money and the banking cards.”
He said he instructed the pair of robbers to tie his hands behind his back and to also tie his feet and gag his mouth before they left.
Lehloibi said Matumelo was killed with the same rope that was used to tie his hands.
“After a while, I shouted for help and the landlord came and he untied me,” reads the statement.
Lehloibi said he confessed to his wife’s murder two days after the incident while he was being questioned by the police.
A Bulawayo Magistrate Gladmore Mushowe has acquitted five Lupane State University (LSU) students who had been on trial on charges of defeating or obstructing the course of justice after they allegedly staged a protest at the campus.
Said the ZLHR in a statement:
The five Lupane State University students namely Ayanda Nkomo, Emkela Ngwenga, Wiston Mukombe, Marble Ndlovu, Nhloniphani Sibanda were arrested at college on 4 March 2019 by Zimbabwe Republic Police officers, who charged them with defeating or obstructing the course of justice as defined in section 184(1)(g) of the Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act.
During trial at Western Commonage Magistrates Court, prosecutors claimed that Nkomo, Ngwenya, Mukombe, Ndlovu and Sibanda, who were represented by Jabulani Mhlanga of Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights had defeated or obstructed the course of justice after they allegedly protested against the university authorities’ decision to bar the leader of their Student Representative Council from entering the university premises and attending a students’ meeting, where they wanted to raise their grievances to their student representative body.
However Magistrate Mushowe on Thursday 17 October 2019 acquitted the five LSU students of the charges of defeating or obstructing the course of justice after ruling that the State failed to discharge its burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the students committed the alleged offence.
The Magistrate also ruled that the State case including the testimony of State witnesses who testified during trial was fraught with irreconcilable inconsistencies and irregularities that rendered it fatal.
By A Correspondent- In a rather bizarre case, a Dzivarasekwa man was dragged to the courts by his wife after he allegedly threatened to kill her.
The wife, Mitchell Nyoni, applied for a peace order at the Harare Civil Court after her husband Life Nyoni threatened to kill her after she stopped him from watching por_no_graphic movies in her presence.
In her application, Mitchel said,
“My husband is threatening to kill me after I told him not to watch his videos in my presence. He is in the habit of assaulting me when the children are around.
On 1 October, my 17-year-old son saw me naked when he was trying to rescue me. My husband assaulted me saying I should not stop him to do what he wants since he is the head of the house.
He is in the habit of insulting me when he comes back from his girlfriend. I have no problem with him going to see his girlfriends but let him not call me names.
In his defence, however, Life claimed that he was actually a romantic movie when his wife mistook it for an explicit movie.
I have no problem with the protection order being granted but I was v romantic movie and she said I was watching por_no. It was a misunderstanding between us which led me to assault her.
Presiding magistrate Noah Gwatidzo issued a peace order against Life. He ordered him not to insult, assault, harass or to make death threats to Mitchel.
By A Correspondent- 10 vendors who were arrested in Harare last week were this morning granted $100 bail each.
The 10 were among the 11 vendors that were arrested near the MDC headquarters in central Harare during a police crackdown that followed the recent discovery of old police helmets at a nearby building.
One of the incarcerated vendors Hilton Tamangani died due to injuries sustained from torture by the police.
Tamangani’s lawyer Marufu Mandevere said the vendor appeared in court last Monday in blood soaked clothes and could hardly walk.
Mandevere said they requested to take Tamangani to a private doctor after they discovered that he was injured but they were turned down.
He revealed that the late vendor was in a bad state when he appeared in court on Monday for initial remand hearing and the state was opposed to bail.
“His shirt was full of blood and he could hardly walk,” said the lawyer.
“Late on Friday, we received a distress call that he was seriously ill and that is when we wrote a letter to the prisons requesting that he be allowed to be treated by a doctor of his own choice.”
According to a letter to the Zimbabwe Prisons and Correctional Services dated October 18, Tamangani had developed a “fatal infection.”
In a joint statement released recently, police and the ZPCS said they were investigating Tamangani’s death.
The statement said the outcome of the investigation would be made public once results of the post-mortem are released.
This is a developing story. Refresh this page for latest updates.
By A Correspondent- MDC Councilor who is also the secretary for Harare province, Denford Ngadziore and activist Makomborero Haruzivishe were this morning arrested outside Harare magistrates court.
Details of their charge were still sketchy by the time of writing.
Confirmed Cecilia Chimbiri, who is the MDC Youth Assembly Vice Chairperson:
“After court, 10 vendors were granted $100 bail each. Police took Councillor Denford Ngadziore Secretary Harare Province and Makomborero Haruzivishe.
These people are determined to kill and you are here on Facebook and not offering solidarity.”
By Muchie Shamuyarira – As highlighted in my previous article, experiencing bullying and harassment in the workplace can be devastating, but you do not have to put up with it.
What is bullying at work?
Bullying at work can take many forms. Are you on the receiving end of intimidating, malicious, offensive or insulting treatment, or behaviour designed to denigrate, injure, undermine or humiliate you? Bullying and harassment can be hard to define, is sometimes subtle, and may come from individuals or groups of people.
Bullying and harassment in the workplace can include: • Being humiliated in front of customers or colleagues • Receiving physical or verbal abuse, unwelcome teasing, practical jokes and banter • Being blamed for issues and problems caused by others • Excessively unfair criticisms, removal of responsibilities • Being unfairly blocked from promotions or denied holiday and training opportunities • Being excluded from team activities, meetings or relevant emails • Receiving baseless threats about your job security or regularly being threatened with the sack • Being routinely overworked and having unrealistic expectations placed on you, which are impossible to achieve
What is discriminatory harassment at work?
Harassment describes unwanted conduct that violates your dignity in the workplace, or makes it a hostile, degrading or offensive environment for you. Harassment is also a form of discrimination under the Equality Act 2010, when it relates to certain ‘protected characteristics’. These include bullying connected to: • Disability
• Age
• Sex
• Race
• Sexual orientation
• Pregnancy or Maternity Leave
• Marriage or civil partnership
• Gender reassignment
• Religion or belief
Examples of harassment
Examples of harassment and discrimination in the workplace can include: • Being treated unfairly because of your sexuality, gender, race or beliefs, Receiving unwanted sexual advances from a colleague • Being subjected to homophobic comments • Being teased about a disability • Receiving offensive materials, such as emails with sexual content.
Behaviour doesn’t have to be directed towards you to qualify as harassment. For example, if your colleagues make discriminatory comments or jokes within your earshot, this can count as harassment.
Bullying and harassment doesn’t have to happen face-to-face
It’s important to be aware that bullying and harassment don’t necessarily occur to face-to-face. Communications in writing, including emails, and phone calls are just as relevant.
Not all examples of bullying and harassment are obvious, others are much more subtle – but no less devastating for victims. This means it’s vital that you understand your rights at work and when unfair treatment goes past the limit, so that you are able to respond appropriately.
Anxiety and stress
If you are forced to endure bullying and harassment at work, this can have major implications in terms of your health and wellbeing. It can make you anxious and stressed, and it might also leave you feeling angry or humiliated.
In turn, this could cause your self-esteem and confidence to suffer. Your ability to do your job effectively might also be compromised and you may find that you’re more prone to illness and absences from work. You might even feel forced to resign from your role, with major implications for your career.
What responsibilities does my employer have?
You should never feel as though you simply have to accept bullying or harassment as part of your job. Your employer has a duty of care to prevent you from facing this behaviour in their
3
workplace. They have responsibilities to protect your welfare, and they must take action against unlawful harassment.
What should I do if I am being bullied or harassed?
Sadly, many people do experience bullying and harassment in the workplace at the hands of colleagues or managers. Unfortunately, because it is such a horrible experience, many people simply put up with the abuse or in some cases leave their roles without being aware of their legal rights to take action about it.
To ensure this doesn’t happen to you, if you think you are being bullied or harassed, take steps to protect your rights and prove your complaint. It’s a good idea to keep a record of the dates, times and locations of any incidents of negative behaviour.
Document what is said or done and make a note of any witnesses who can back up your claims. It’s also useful to find out if other workers have experienced similar problems.
Make a note of how the bullying or harassment made you feel, including any effects it has had on your work and your health and wellbeing.
If it is safe, ask the harasser to stop
If you think it’s safe to do so, consider speaking to the person who is harassing you and asking them to stop. Make it clear that you don’t like what they are doing, you find it offensive and you will have to take further action if they don’t stop.
One way to do this is to ask the harasser to have an informal discussion with you – and invite a colleague who you trust to be there when the discussion takes place. Make sure you know what you want to say before these exchanges take place, and try to stay calm and polite. Keep a detailed note of the discussion in a safe place.
If you don’t feel able to speak to the harasser, another option is to write to them or to ask someone else to write to them on your behalf. Make sure you keep a copy of all correspondence if you do this.
Speak to your manager
Another approach is to talk to your manager. If your immediate manager is the person who is bullying you, approach a more senior member of staff, or go to the human resources department instead.
Your employer should investigate your complaint and may be able to take a number of actions,
such as requiring the harasser to apologise and stop their behaviour or moving them to another workplace. If you are offered another role within your organisation, this could also be a solution, provided it’s no less favourable than your current job and you are happy to move teams.
Take legal action
Unfortunately, speaking to harassers or escalating these concerns to senior members of staff or HR departments does not always resolve the problem. If your employer fails to take your complaint seriously or the harassment doesn’t stop, you may need to make a formal complaint.
If this doesn’t have the desired effect, you should consider legal action. There are a range of claims which may be available to you, depending on the full circumstances.
Take legal advice as soon as possible since it can be important to act fast. Please be aware that time limits are very tight in the UK Employment tribunal cases, usually requiring you to issue a claim three months less one day from the date on which the detrimental treatment or dismissal occurred.
If you are thinking about bringing forward an employment tribunal claim, note that you will first have to inform the Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service (ACAS), providing it with details of your case. The organisation will offer early conciliation in a bid to resolve the dispute. This period of conciliation can last for up to a month.
If the claim isn’t settled within this time, ACAS will provide a certificate stating that the mandatory process of conciliation has concluded – and you can then proceed with your legal claim.
This mandatory period of conciliation doesn’t count for the calculation of the time limit in which you have to bring your legal case.
If you have experienced harassment and bullying that has caused you a psychiatric injury, you may be able to make a claim in the County Court for the damage to your health. If employment law doesn’t apply to your situation or you are out of time to bring a claim, this may also then be a potential alternative option(the County Court).
What if you resign as a result of bullying or harassment? If you have to resign because of the way you are being treated at work, you might have a case for unfair constructive dismissal. This is when a worker is forced to resign from their position against their will because of the conduct of their employer.
5
Think carefully before you take the step of leaving your job though. Not everyone has the right to claim constructive dismissal, so it’s important to check your legal position before you resign.
Legal advice
The law exists to protect employees and people in a workplace.
Don’t suffer in silence. If you need help and you are not sure about what to do, you are encouraged to seek employment law advice if faced with such situations before things escalate. What usually starts like ‘banter’ may escalate to unwanted conduct and becomes a norm. You can seek legal advice from your Trade Union, Solicitors, Citizens Advice Bureau, Employment Law Consultants etc or contact us.
Muchie Shamuyarira (Chartered Member of CIPD – UK) HR & Industrial Relations Director and also Employment Law Consultant in the UK
Disclaimer: This article is written in a personal capacity. It is not intended either as a substitute for professional advice or judgment or to provide legal or other advice with respect to particular circumstances.
By A Correspondent- A form 4 student at Msiteli High School in Bulawayo was found hanging from the roof of a beerhall on Friday in a suspected case of foul play.
A local publication reports that there are strong indications however, that Nhlanhla Radasa (17) may have been killed by his friends who then staged the suicide.
A source who spoke to the publication said that Nhlanhla’s friends ganged up on him and beat him up until he became unconscious after he kept on winning at gambling. The situation got out of hand after the deceased fell unconscious during the attack after the friends had refused to pay Nhlanhla his winnings resulting in the fistfight.
The source added,
We suspect that the friends tried to stage a suicide after realising that they had killed him. He may have been still alive but they must have panicked and hanged him there, thinking that he was dead.
I can confirm that we are dealing with a case where a 17-year-old male from Tshabalala suburb in Bulawayo was found hanging from roof trusses at a beer garden in the suburb. We are still carrying out our investigations.
“The deceased was found hanging there by workers at the beer hall and patrons who notified residents. The beer hall is very close to his home, therefore most of the people that gathered could recognise him and therefore his family was notified and police were called to the scene.
By A Correspondent- A prison officer based at Khami Prison Complex has been arrested with two other accomplices for allegedly stealing household goods worth $14 000 after breaking into a house in Mbundane.
Zimbabwe Prison and Correctional Service (ZPCS) officer Cephas Chikutye (34), Caustin Moyo (35) and Thabani Moyo (32) allegedly broke into Ms Limgcineni Sibanda (45)’s home and got away with her property while she was at work.
Chikutye, Moyo and Thabani pleaded not guilty to unlawful entry and theft charges before Western Commonage magistrate Ms Tancy Dube.
The magistrate remanded the three out of custody on $100 bail to today.
For the State, Mr Tapiwa Solani said between September 21 and October 7 last year, Moyo, Thabani and Chikutye allegedly broke an iron padlock to gain entry into Ms Sibanda’s home while she was away.
“The accused persons stole six wooden doors, two washing basins, five 30 Amp circuit breakers, electric meter box, six silver water tapes, six three-way switches, six electric plugs and a cooker socket and loaded it in their vehicle,” he said.
Mr Solani said Moyo and Thabani fingered Chikutye as their ring leader.
“During investigations information was gathered through an informer to the effect that the accused persons stole the property and gave it to Chikutye,” he said.
“Ms Sibanda was alerted by her neighbours that her house had been raided by thieves.”
The matter was reported to police leading to the arrest of the trio.
The total value of goods stolen was $14 000 and nothing was recovered.
By A Correspondent- A self-proclaimed Bulawayo Prophet will spend half a year in prison after he stole his congregant’s passport and used it to travel to South Africa under the guise that he was praying for it.
Shepherd Mbili was convicted by a Bulawayo Magistrate after he pleaded guilty to the charges levelled against him.
It is the state’s case that Mbili:
Asked Mr Godknows to bring his passport and academic certificates for anointing. Mbili took the envelope that had Mr Godknows’ documents and prayed for it. He advised the complainant not to open the envelope fully knowing that he had stolen his passport.
“He told me not to open the envelope until I’m ready to use it On the 6th of October I opened the envelope to check the last date I went to Zambia and I found out that my passport was missing.I went to look for Prophet Mbili and his wife told me that he had travelled to South Africa with my passport and would be back soon” said the congregant whose passport was stolen.
Obtaining a passport nowadays has become an uphill task as the government battles to clear a backlog of 370000 passports. The Minister of Home Affairs is on record saying those with expired passports with blank pages clearly don’t need the passports because they don’t use them.
By A Correspondent- South Africa based Zimbabwe businessman Uncle Roland Muchegwa has opened up on the videos and pictures that have gone viral on social media and even mainstream news sites this week.
Muchegwa who is reported to be a truck operator and fuel dealer says he has been getting numerous positive feedback after the images went viral.
Read the unedited thread below:
“I’m receiving numerous calls from girls in SA, Zim, Nigeria and some from as far as Kenya, asking to hook up with me. Whoever gave them my number want to get me in trouble with their broke boyfriends.
“Until the lion learns how to read and write, every story will glorify the hunter.” Social media people are not concerned about the facts of a story, they only take that part which satisfies their egos. If you don’t have a platform to speak for yourself, they fabricate, fabricate
I’m receiving requests from corporates, clubs, resorts and influential people who want me to help market their products but those same people are calling me names on this social media. I’m not a basher, I really appreciate woman. Let bygones be bygones.
So someone wanted to tarnish my personality by sharing some pictures which are part of my past but it didn’t end well. Now your Uncle is trending
Thank you Twitter family for the love. Love conquers every evil. You’re awesome.”