“Zanu Pf Is Disappointing”

PSL Round Up: CAPS Maintain Lead At The Top

As the season slowly coming to an end, so is the tittle race slowly deciding the eventual winners after log leaders Caps United opened a 5 point lead following a 2:1 victory against Mushowani at Trojan Mine on Sunday.

Caps got their two crucial goals from young Kelvin Ndebele and stocky striker Dominic Chungwa while the home side got a consolation in the last minutes of regulation time.

The result meant Caps are on 47 points with nine games remaining while second and third placed teams Chicken Inn and FC Platinum are tied up on 42 points.

ZPC Kariba are also within the reach of top post with 41 points.

Black Rhinos who started the season so well are slowly fading away after another disappointing outcome at the Colliery.

The game finished 0:0 against Hwange.

Triangle based side, Triangle FC , though they massacred Harare based side Harare City by 3:1, they remained on 6th position with 36 points.

Former Premier Soccer League champions Dynamos who of late had found the right formula for rubbing shoulders with top teams are slowly losing the momentum after another disappointing result against struggling Bulawayo Chiefs.

The game ended 1:1.

Highlanders under the new coach, could not maintain their winning streak after Herentals held them to a 1 all draw.

TelOne sponsored team TelOne FC got three crucial points against Manicaland based side Manica Diamonds at Ascot stadium.

The 1:0 victory has increased the WiFi Boys survival chances under the tutelage of Rahman Gumbo and Lloyd Mutasa.

Here are the full MatchDay 25 Results

Dynamos 1-1 Bulawayo Chiefs
Herentals 1-1 Highlanders
Hwange 0-0 Black Rhinos
Triangle United 3-1 Harare City
Telone 1-0 Manica Diamonds
Mushowani 1-2 Caps United
ZPC Kariba 0:0 FC Platinum
Chapungu FC 1:1 Chicken Inn
Yadah 1:0 Ngezi Platinum Stars

A Mountain Of Mediocrity Can Never Be A Hill Of Wisdom

This week on a day like Sunday when most Zimbabweans seek mental and soul purity, a whole deputy Minister by the name Energy Mutodi chose to misdirect his energy on a wrong cause.

While the majority of ordinary citizens are grappling with astronomical prices of basic commodities, a misdirected bundle of Energy chose to sink so low by equating a generational success (Nelson Chamisa) to a hill while plummeting a heap of hubris (Emmerson Mnangagwa) to a mountain.

When one takes into account that Mutodi is just but a failed Ndombolo musician and not a politician, it becomes easier to see a desert of deep thoughts in Mnangagwa’s disastrous Deputy Minister.

Surely it does not need a political scientist to differentiate a mountain of mediocrity that Emmerson Mnangagwa has become and a hill of excellence that Nelson Chamisa is gravitating towards!

That a whole deputy minister can equate a failure who has successfully presided over shortages in electricity, water and food a success and mountain glaringly exposes the deficiencies of leadership running the affairs of our motherland!

At this point in time Zimbabweans across the political divide are yearning and craving for excellence in service delivery and not some cheap bootlicking to please political godfathers.

Stephen Sarkozy Chuma
MDC Youth Assembly National Spokesperson

Stephen Chuma

MDC Wants To Wrestle Midlands Seats Back From ZANU PF

OPPOSITION MDC’s structures in the Midlands province have resolved to start preparations for the harmonised elections constitutionally set for 2023 with the view of wresting rural seats from the ruling Zanu-PF
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MDC Midlands provincial spokesperson Takavafira Zhou told Sunday Southern Eye that the party’s main objective was to grab all 28 constituencies in the province.

In the July 2018 polls, the MDC won only four parliamentary seats in the Midlands, which are Mbizo, Redcliff, Mkoba and Gweru Urban while Zanu-PF took the lion’s share of 24.

“The majority of the 28 constituencies are rural and in preparation for the 2023 elections, the province would roll out outreach programmes starting this month into rural district constituencies,” he said.

“The strategy involves inter alia: Revitalising branch leadership and structures in order to foster supremacy of branches.

Zhou said one of the reasons why people in rural areas have been snubbing the MDC in elections is fear caused by intimidation by State apparatus and Zanu-PF activists.

“We will be taking stock of victims of recent violence particularly in Gokwe, Kwekwe and Mberengwa, and identifying the culprits, and police accomplices with the intention to name and shame them, let alone consider litigation against such thuggery,” he added.

“We have had cases of thuggery that saw our provincial youth leader (Sekai Marasha) assaulted in Kwekwe, while Prince Paradza was assaulted in Gokwe and lost three teeth in the process, while many other activists suffered abductions, attempted abductions and assaults.”

Zhou said the MDC will also tackle partisan food aid distribution where its supporters in rural areas have been allegedly denied access to drought relief, a development he said cost the opposition party votes in past elections.

“The MDC Midlands province would also compile evidence of partisan distribution of inputs in rural areas of Midlands and deliberate discrimination of MDC activists from State food assistance and agricultural inputs,” he added.

“The intention will be to challenge this through Parliament and ensure fair distribution of government food aid and inputs in a non-partisan manner.

“If need be, we could also build a critical force to peacefully demonstrate against partisan food and input distribution in rural areas.”

As part of the 2023 elections preparations, Zhou said the MDC would also initiate self-help projects for villagers in order to sway them out of “politics of the stomach”.

“The leadership would also engage grassroots structures in order to identify low cost programmes that can be done in rural areas to benefit party members,” he added.

“Leadership is, therefore, ready to grow the party in the rural areas and thus make inroads in Zanu-PF-dominated areas, and at the same time take stock of challenges faced in both rural and urban areas so as to proffer alternative solutions,” he said.

S.A. Top Soccer Star Hides His Son’s Death To Feature In Cup Final And Walks Out Man Of The Match

Gabuza’s son passed away on Monday and the striker decided not to tell his teammates and his coach about his son’s death. ,

When SuperSport United coach Kaitano Tembo walked into the press conference auditorium at the Orlando Stadium after winning the MTN8 title at the expense of Highlands Park, reporters expected him to be in a celebratory and jubilee mood, but that was not the case.

Tembo, with a very somber tone, grabbed everyone’s attention when he uttered his first words and revealed that he was “feeling a little bit emotional” about the news of the passing away of striker Thamsanqa Gabuza’s son.

Gabuza’s late offspring passed away on Monday, Tembo revealed, and the on-form striker decided not to tell anyone of his teammates or coach because he did not want to change the mood in the team leading to the MTN8 final which they won 1-0 against Highlands Park and Gabuza was named Man-of-the-Match.

“It is something which he did and I did not even expect him to do that. I won’t even encourage him to do that but I think he did what he did for the badge,” said Tembo.

“He had to go through that and still play the way he did. He gave a Man-of-the-Match performance at the back of what happened. I dedicate this win and the cup to him because he really deserves,” Tembo added.

The Matsatsantsa A Pitori mentor continued:  “He lost his so on Monday and he never told anyone and the funeral was on Thursday and he did not attend because he only told us in the dressing room that this is what happened. He did not want to upset the camp because we were facing a very crucial game. It hit me that someone can do that for me and for the team. I appreciate that but at the same time I am still hurting.”

“MPs Had Initially Agreed To A Hilux Twin Cab,” Mthuli Ncube – Hansard Extract

Extracted from Parliament Hansard:

Committee of Supply

Main estimates of expenditure

First Order read: Committee of Supply 2019: Main Estimates of Expenditure.

House in Committee

Vote 1 – Office of the President and Cabinet – US$294 700 000 put and agreed to

On Vote 2 – Parliament of Zimbabwe – US$101 013 000:

HON. CHIKWINYA: Thank you, Chairperson. I rise to make submissions on Vote 2 – Parliament. The first critical issue is that this Vote does not support the capacitation of Parliament in the first manner that number one, if you look at the justification from secretariat itself, in conjunction with the work plans that have been submitted by all the Committees – including the latest documents that we received from the Speaker which is the national strategic document.  They speak to capacitation of Parliament in as far as 1) workshops are concerned.  We are having an issue whereby Committees are having to heavily rely upon technical partners, civil society organisation for capacity building.  That is unsustainable and that is not correct.  It puts Parliamentarians under the control of those civil society organisations.

Parliament must be able to stand alone and capacitate its own members alone for them to be able to carry effective inquiries.  Some of the civil society organisations have got a conflicting mandate and mission with Parliament.  How then are we able to superintend and perform our oversight duties when we are being sponsored by the same civil society organisations?  In as far as capacitating members for them to be able to go through all the planned efforts, we need this Budget to be increased.  That is number 1.

Number 2 is the issue of Constituency Information Centres, only yesterday we received portraits of the President.  I did not take that portrait and that was not out of disrespect, but where do I put it.  Where do I hang it?  Are you going to be happy to see a parliamentarian hanging the portrait of the President under a tree because this is what the Minister is entailing and implying that I must hang the portrait of the President under a tree because he did not support the establishment of Parliamentary Constituency Information Centres – [HON. MEMBERS:  Hear, hear.] –

THE HON. CHAIRPERSON: Order in the House Hon. Members.  Can the Hon. Member be heard in silence, please?

HON. CHIKWINYA:  Hon. Chair, only today – the 20th of December, the Minister announced a new board for ZIMRA.  On that board is the permanent secretary for the Ministry of Finance.  I was seated across to understand his wisdom on why he put a permanent secretary to sit in the board.  His reasoning is why I did not stand up to raise a point of order because I could understand that they need a technical person who interlinks between the Ministry and the Board. The very same principle must be applied for Members of Parliament.  We need researchers to interface between the Constituency and the parliamentarians – [HON. MEMBERS:  Hear, hear.] –  The very principle of having a technical mind interfacing with politicians because board members are policy makers and like politicians, we also need researchers to be able to understand the technical input from the Constituency to the parliamentarians who then present as a matter of policy to Parliament.

The $2 380.00 allocated under the PCIC is not enough to employ even one individual at the minimum Government rate of $400 for even three months.  At that rate, we are going to be employing our personal assistants at $94 and this is on the assumption that it is a one as to one in terms of the regime.

My third and last point under Parliament is that you would recall that three weeks ago, heavy rains befell this city and affected Parliament.  It was an embarrassment to see water locked in Parliament.  There is need to support our secretariat to carry out the mandatory repairs in  this Parliament.  Our secretariat cannot even function.  I have not even touched on issues of welfare because I want to believe that he has totally ignored that.

Therefore I move that the Vote 2 be restored to where it was in terms of the proposal and where do we get the money?  In the Budget, there is $70 million which he allocated to himself and did not qualify how it is going to be used and it has got a special name.  I therefore propose that the Budget of Parliament takes away a chunk from that $70 million and present it to Vote 2 for us to be able to have a way forward.  I thank you.

Minister Everly Ndlovu

HON. E. NDLOVU:  Mr. Speaker Sir, I stand here to acknowledge the presentation by my learned friend…

THE CHAIRPERSON:  Hon. Member can you address the Chair.

HON. E. NDLOVU:  Hon. Chair, I would like to respond to the issues raised by my learned friend from Kwekwe – [HON. MEMBERS:  Inaudible interjections.] –

THE CHAIRPERSON:  Can we have order in the House.  Less noise in the House Hon. Members!

HON. E. NDLOVU:  I appreciate that we, as the Government of Zimbabwe have limited resources. Our envelop is limited and our money is limited.  We do not have enough money to allocate Parliament.

THE CHAIRPERSON: Hon. Member can you approach the Chair?

Hon. E. Ndlovu approached the Chair – [HON. MEMBERS:  Inaudible interjections.] –

THE CHAIRPERSON: Less noise in the House Hon. Members please.

HON. T. MLISWA:  Thank you Chairman.  I do not blame the Hon. Minister Ndlovu for wanting to debate the budget because she is in the Executive.  She is not a Member of Parliament.  She has two cars, she has bodyguards and many allowances – [HON. MEMBERS:  Inaudible interjections.] –   I really understand.

We now go back to the three pillars of the state and we ask ourselves we are supposed to be equal.  The Member of Parliament are entitled to one car for five years.  Ministers are entitled to two cars plus those of the subsidiary that they have.  They have allowances.  They have everything that they want.  This is one pillar of the state which is the executive.  We have got the judiciary as well, the judges, magistrates….

THE CHAIRPERSON: Hon. Mliswa, would you be guided to concentrate your debate on the – [HON. MEMBERS:  Inaudible interjections.] –

HON. T. MLISWA:  The issue is that we are trying to understand the relevance of Parliament but you cannot talk about the relevance of Parliament without talking about the three pillars of the state and then say, what role does Parliament pay?  The Executive has got a role that they play but we are supposed to be equal. This is the point.  But if we look at it, we are not equal in any way because others are capacitated more than the others, yet this Parliament here is the one that is responsible for oversight over everyone but it is paid less.  How then do we expect this country to move forward when we have those who are supposed to be exercising oversight are less capacitated?  Because of that, the relevance of Vote 2 being there is that Parliament having the role of oversight must be able to do it in a manner where they are not compromised.  Members of Parliament here are looked down upon because of the welfare issue more than anybody else.

We are all Members of Parliament with the Ministers who are also appointed by the President but the moment that they are appointed to the Executive, we are different because of what they have.  Members of Parliament spend more time in the Ministers’ offices begging for coupons because Ministers have a full book of coupons per month/week.  If you look at it, how then do you expect Members of Parliament to also exercise their role?  So, you have a situation where you will have one of the cousins who is poor and as a result, they also get allowances on the cars that they have.  If I am not mistaken, I think they get cars every two years and they buy those cars at book value.  A Range Rover costing $120 000, they get it for around $6 000 book value.

If you want to see the difference, go to any Minister’s house today and see how many cars are parked there. This is out of order yet in terms of performance as Ministers, they have failed to move this country forward.  So, it is only important that we are all equal and being equal is also about the resource which is given to us.

The Hon. Minister of Finance and Economic Development is very much aware that the budget that he is going to allocate to the Members of Parliament have oversight over it and for them to be effectively capacitated, we talk about the researchers and the Clerks in Parliament.  We have a situation where one Clerk serves three Committees and one researcher serves three Committees.  So, how then do you expect us to be able to be discharging our duties in a professional manner when we are handicapped in terms of research and human capital? That is glaring and we do not have the time because we are not full time and we do not have the time to be doing research.  The research for us is done by the Parliament staff which is critical in ensuring that this Parliament is mandated to do its job accordingly.

I want to talk about the aspect of the community information centres and the constituencies as well.  There is no way that you expect a constituency to function without being resourced and it is that one car again that goes around.  The cars that we get are not too hard for the terrain.  We are talking about a land cruiser which is the only car which is able to make sure that these Members here are able to do a job because the Toyotas that you give us are not able to do the job.  You need a 4X4 Land Cruiser, V8 with chrome – those new ones.  Those are the ones that we want.  Members of Parliament who are seated here, the only thing that they own is a car and if they are not given a car which has value and which gets them to do the job, they will not be able to do their jobs.  We can no longer have a situation where when a Member of Parliament ceases to be a Member of Parliament, he or she is a destitute.  It is sad.

This is the only Parliament in the world where you regret not being a Member of Parliament.  If you want to see how poor they are out there, the pension is not good enough, the allowances are not good enough yet they would have served this country.  This is the time this year this budget must address the welfare of the Members of Parliament.  As Members of Parliament, we have been labelled in a bad way because of our welfare.  People look at our welfare and already they judge us and say Members of Parliament are not able to do A, B, C, D because of our welfare and that perception can only go away if this issue is addressed.

I want to talk about the role of the Members of Parliament on the ICT.  Today we are in the ICT world – Ipads are not here, they do not have the computers yet we are expected to follow.  You can see even at times Parliament does not even give us this Order Paper on time but, if we all have Ipads, we are able to take notes.  This is the world that we are faced with at the end of the day and it is important that Parliament is capacitated in that way.

I want to also talk about the sitting allowances.  They mean absolutely nothing.  The Committee that I chair can sit from 8 to 8 in the evening working for this country but what they get is a pittance $75, not US dollar.  Bond cash is better than RTGS and these are people who are working tirelessly for this country in those Committees.  Those Committees have a risk on their own because you are exposing people who have money and who have the ability to even put a mafia together for you but what do we get – $75.  That has to be reviewed because you want Members of Parliament to be able to execute their duties in a professional manner and that can only happen when they are sitting there and they are able to be given an allowance which is conducive.  We meet on Mondays where the kitchen is closed and they are hungry – they do not eat.

You expect people to work yet they do not even get lunch when they are here and this budget must address the welfare of the players from even eating well.

We are talking about wanting to be a world class Parliament but we only have a one course meal and the dessert is an apple/banana yet when we go out to other areas we get trifle, a nice fruit salad, custard, ice cream and all that.  But, look at what we get here – a mere banana and apple.  There is no soup.  The diet of Members of Parliament is important.  Nutrition is important because when Members do not eat well, they do not function well.  So, it is important that the nutrition of the Members of Parliament is maintained in order that they are able to discharge their duties.

Mr. Chairman, the Hon. Minister must understand that there is a programme called wellness.  Wellness is the wellbeing of the Members of Parliament.  They do not even have a gym where they can go to.  They do not even have a sports club where they can go to and recreation is important for the mind.  They are stressed in here.  We have Members of Parliament dying because of blood pressure and stress that you know.  So, how many more are going to die before we rescue the situation.  We must have a recreation club where we play golf or choose any sport that we want to partake in.  We must be able to have world class gyms where we are able to train because when you are strong physically, mentally, it equally helps you.

So, this is the world class Parliament that we are talking about.  I want to talk about the issue of fuel coupons given to Members.  Already, Parliament has actually cut down what Members are supposed to get.  What we used to get in the Eighth Parliament is not what we get now.  So, now you are saying to yourself, even the coupons that we got in the Eighth Parliament were not enough.  Members of Parliament are people with integrity and dignity.  Trust them and give them a whole book and let them have a book and not be scrounging around for coupons.  We queue up like little children for coupons which are not even enough.

So, when are we going to have integrity and dignity left for the Members of Parliament?  Members of Parliament, because their welfare is not enough end up selling fuel coupons.  We are known for selling fuel coupons.  Whenever it is a Thursday, all the service stations know that Members of Parliament are coming to sell fuel coupons because of the welfare that we have.  It is a situation which is unattainable and a situation which cannot be allowed to happen.  The role of Parliamentarians cannot be underestimated.

THE DEPUTY CHAIRPERSON OF COMMITTEES: Hon. Member, you are reminded of your time.

HON. T. MLISWA: Ok, I am going to summarise now. I talk about the allowances that we get when we leave this country.  The allowances that we get are US$50 leaving Zimbabwe.  It is not enough.  The foreign currency that we get is not enough at all and it has to be looked into and the Hon. Minister of Finance and Economic Development must be able to also increase that allowance we get when we leave the country.  Parliament must be able to give us a credit card which you use and you account for it because when I do not have my money, it is parliamentary work that I am doing.  There must be a credit card which is given to Members of Parliament when they travel and what they must do is to account for it when they come back, not a situation where the money that we get is not enough even for you want to buy meals when you leave the country.  It does not represent the country well.

Lastly Mr. Chairman, Members of Parliament cannot be divided.  They are all entitled to diplomatic passports and it is important that that money also goes towards Members of Parliament being given diplomatic passports.  We cannot be divided. If I have a diplomatic passport and when I am travelling with my team, they do not have a diplomatic passport, they use the other route.  How can we be divided over a mere issue that just needs capital injection?  So, may I propose again that the Hon. Minister of Finance and Economic Development ensures that Members of Parliament are all issued with diplomatic passports so that we are the same and no different.  Thank you.

*HON. KWARAMBA:  Thank you Mr. Speaker Sir.  I rise to make my contribution on the welfare of Members of Parliament regarding the cars which are allocated to us.  Being a Member of Parliament is a very tough task, especially for Members of Parliament who come from rural constituencies.  The car which is given to the MP is a service vehicle which is used in the constituency.  Even when there is a funeral, that car is used at that funeral and yet servicing the car is a very expensive exercise.  At times we are not able to service that car because of the expenses involved and using your salary, it is not enough.

You will notice that because of the situation you are forced to use commuter omnibuses to conduct your business and we are now using public transport.  We are saying, may you please expedite the process of allocating us vehicles for moving around because as stated before, the car given to the MP is a service vehicle.  It is a universal car for the constituency.  Whatever assignment has to be done in the constituency, the electorate expect that car to carry out those duties.  I am pleading with you to increase allowances for better cars so that the MP can maintain the integrity and status expected of him.   I thank you.

Hon. Job Sikhala

HON. SIKHALA:  Thank you Mr. Chairman.  Hon. Members, I want to remind you of a very important statement which our Speaker told us during the day of our induction at Pandari Lodge.  The Speaker said, the powers belong to the Members of Parliament for them to see the votes to pass in Parliament.  I have had a number of debates by Hon. Members on this vote, Mr. Chairman, which is up to the Members of Parliament today to see whether they are going to exercise their powers as the third arm of Government.  The Legislature is part of the three arms of Government, Mr. Chairman, including the Judiciary and the Executive.  Overlooking the interest of this Legislature where we are taken as kindergarten children, that hour must come to an end.

Mr. Chairman, the most concerning issue why I want to contribute to this vote is that Hon. Minister, do you understand that our Parliament is a member to a number of international organisations where we participate in various activities as part and parcel of international integration.  The Zimbabwean Parliament is a member of the SADC PF, IPU, ACP-EU and Afro PAC.  Our members who have been attending those meetings, Mr. Chairman, come back home humiliated when Zimbabwe’s membership arrears are 10 years back.

I still remember when I went to Geneva to attend the IPU meeting with the former Speaker, the late Hon. J. L. Nkomo.  Zimbabwe was among only five states that had outstanding arrears to the IPU.  If we ask the Speaker today and his delegation to the IPU, Zimbabwe is still in arrears 12 years back.  Does the Minister know that?  When Parliament made its bid, it was based on its…

Hon. Joseph Chinotimba

HON. CHINOTIMBA:  On a point of order – [HON. MEMBERS:  Go and read your Standing Order, this is a Committee of Supply.] –

HON. SIKHALA:  Mr. Chairman, what I want to impress on the Minister is that he must not be oblivious of those obligations.  So specifically we urge him to reconsider the parliamentary vote.  I thank you.

THE MINISTER OF FINANCE AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT (HON. PROF. M. NCUBE):  Hon. Chairman, if I could respond to the input from the Hon. Members questions starting with the Hon. Member Gonese.  He raised a number of issues.   Obviously, the first issue which cuts across is about the size of the resource envelope that the $101 million that we have allocated to Parliament is not adequate [HON. MEMBERS:  It is Hon. Chikwinya.] –

It is Hon. Chikwinya who came to talk to me and also contributed, my apologies Sir.  So he raised the issue of the size of the resource envelope and that cuts across the three contributions from Hon. Members of $101 million.  I submit that this is a 25% increase from the previous year’s budget.  We do work in terms of increments per annum.  Twenty five percent is quite a bit from the $80 million from the 2018 budget to the $101 million for the 2019 budget.

Coming specifically to the issue of vehicles, this issue is under control; we are dealing with it.  Members of Parliament, you will get vehicles and I think we had even agreed on the model and if my information is correct unless they have changed, the model, it is a Hilux twin cab – [HON. MEMBERS: Inaudible interjections.] – if I can proceed Hon. Chair, we can debate the model of the car offline – [HON. MEMBERS: Inaudible interjections ] –

THE DEPUTY CHAIRPERSON: Can you listen to the Minister please.

HON. PROF. M. NCUBE: We are dealing with the issue of motor vehicles; you will get your motor vehicles.  I cannot give you the model right away because you are already disputing the model.  Maybe my information is not correct on the model but you will get your vehicles.   I also want to correct an impression that has been created in the House that the Ministers have received their cars.  That is not correct, we have not authorised the purchase of vehicles for Ministers.  I certainly do not have a vehicle that has been allocated by the Government.  In our view, we said that the Ministers should be the last people in line to receive vehicles whilst Members of Parliament receive their vehicles.  That is what we agreed – [AN HON. MEMBER: When?] – soon enough.  I am also acutely aware that the hotel costs have gone up.  I know that those who have to use hotels, you used to negotiate at a rate of $120 per night and now some of these hotels are saying you must pay $180 per night.  $220 is a higher end like Meikles and so on, we are fully aware and naturally we will be able to accommodate you in terms of adjustments.  I have got some reserves that we can make use of and we will look into those reserves and make sure they are accommodated.

We are also aware that there is another issue regarding the gratuity payment for Members of Parliament who have served one term.  A formula is being finalised and that will be dealt with.  I am now adding issues myself, they did not even raise it but I want to show that we understand these issues and we are very concerned.  Should any situation arise where we have to adjust Government salaries sometime in our lives, certainly, I do not see any reason why Members of Parliament and staff would not be included in that adjustment.

Let me come to the other issues that have been raised; for instance issues around donor agencies from Hon. Chikwinya.  Donor agencies are a key part of what we do as Government and State.  We welcome them, they support us with capacity building and I am delighted to learn that they are actually supporting Parliament.  I was going to invite more of them to do that, especially when it comes to supporting research, Paliamentarians and capacity building on issues of service delivery which I discussed at length when we were in Bulawayo at a Retreat where we can invite institutions such as the AfDB and others to support Parliament in capacity building.  This is normal, let us not miss that opportunity and ignore donor agencies, that is what they do and that is why they give us funds.  So, let us work with them.

I would also want to say that there is no risk of donor agencies influencing the debate or Parliamentary agenda.  I am not aware that they have done that in the past unless they have done so.  We should not shy away from working with them, that is what they do.  In the Budget, we budgeted about over $600 million that will be contributed to our entire budget by the donor community and we welcome that absolutely.

Hon. Mliswa raised issues over the size of the envelop itself, the role of Parliament, which I agree with.  He also raised issues of the gym, quality of the building but also Hon. Chikwinya raised similar issues in terms of the building and so on.  We are aware of this but the way to deal with capital expenditure is through the PSIP but also in a multi-year approach, we cannot fix everything in one year, that is what we are going to be doing.  However, we also allocated a budget for the New Parliament Building which is being built in Mt. Hampden.  Also what we do not want to do is to overinvest in the building that you will be abandoning instead of investing in the one that you are going to occupy in the future.  So, that is the balancing act that we have to deal with.  Imagine if we over-invest in a top gym in this building and then in another two and half years you will all be migrating to a new building, that will certainly be a waste.  I urge members to bear with us on this and focus all our investment on the new building.  However, we will spruce up whatever needs to be spruced up here so that the comfort levels can be raised.

Hon. Sikhala raised similar issues on increasing the resource envelope on the role of Parliament, that is correct.  The issue of arrears is about the availability of foreign currency.  It is not just arrears in terms of Parliament; it is a whole lot of international arrears, including debt.  The debt is being dealt with separately. We are also in arrears with Embassies and we continue to make best effort in raising foreign currency to clear these arrears so that the Hon. Member Sikhala and others can participate as full members of the international community without the embarrassment that they have suffered in the past.

To conclude, I would like Hon. Members of Parliament to bear with us, we are in a very tight fiscal situation and really the budget of $101 million, which is a 25% increase from the previous year, we think is a very good start.  We do have reserves and all the issues that they are referring to, especially that of vehicles is being dealt with and I think they will be very happy when they see the vehicles they will receive at the end of the day.  We are working so that as soon as possible, they will receive their vehicles.  I thank you – [HON. MEMBERS: Inaudible interjections.] –

The Chairperson asked Hon. Prof. M. Ncube to approach the Chair.

THE DEPUTY CHAIRPERSON: Order Hon. Members.

HON. PROF. M. NCUBE: Hon. Chikwinya raised another very important issue regarding the Constituency Information Centres in which he requested that they be capacitated.  We have listened to this and again, we will use reserves to deal with this issue.  It is a very important issue and we agree with him that it is important.

HON. MUSABAYANA: Thank you Hon. Chair.  I want to add my voice to this debate on Vote No. 2.  Hon. Chair, I think this august House should agree on reminding the Minister that when you are looking at Vote 2, we are not looking at it as an expense, it should be looked at as working capital.  When you are giving a budget to Parliament, you are actually investing into the economy [HON. MEMBERS: Hear, hear.] – Mr. Chair, these are the people who are involved in the policy formulation of this country.  We are looking at policies and we are looking at the Constitution, it is the quality of work that is produced in this august House that will determine the level of investment that will come to this country.

If our Parliament is robust, is engaging in health debate, if Parliament is fully committed to the work of Parliament, then we will have results in this august House.  We have a challenge in this august House and time and again, the Speaker is complaining about members who come and sit in the House for a few minutes.  It is not their fault, it is because they are moonlighting, and they are trying to eke out a living.

Mr. Chairman, we want this Budget to help some of the Hon. Members who have been voted to this august House but do not have any other form of income to be able to fend for themselves and their families and also to be able to produce quality work.  Mr. Chairman, we also need to look at the issue of oversight.  When you are looking at oversight, you are looking at compliance in terms of corporate governance.  Our ministries are involved in trade deals and we expect Parliament to carry oversight.  That role requires that Parliamentarians are ethical; parliamentarians must be honest and are people of integrity.  It is difficult for our members to have integrity if they are not well paid.  For Hon. Members – [HON. MEMBERS:  Inaudible interjections.] – Mr. Chairman, we have a challenge where Hon. Members are soliciting for presents, they are soliciting for allowances when they go out to do their oversight role.  That is very embarrassing Mr. Chairman – [HON. MEMBERS:  Hear, hear.] –

I think it should be enough for an Hon. Member to have a normal or average standard of living.  So, it is my proposal that the Minister reconsiders Vote No. 2 to be able to help members to improve.  Having said that Mr. Chairman, it will be better for the other side of the House to consider that we are looking at Parliament and we are not just looking at party issues.  We are looking at national issues – [HON. MEMBERS: Inaudible interjections.] – but when we look at national issues, we must always know that there is a Head at the top – [HON. MEMBERS: Inaudible interjections.] – and it is the Head who chairs the Executive, for the opposition not to recognise that we have a Head of State and then at the same time wants the Executive to consider entries in Budget, I do not think it makes sense.  So, I beg the other side of the House to reconsider their position and acknowledge that we have a Head of State, His Excellency the President Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa then we will be able to walk this journey together.  I thank you.

THE MINISTER OF FINANCE AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT (HON. PROF. M. NCUBE): I request that we adjourn debate for 30 minutes for caucusing and then we will resume at 1540 hours sharp.

Business was suspended at Half-Past Three O’clock p.m. and resumed at Five Minutes to Four O’clock p.m.

Thousands Of Sick People Turned Away From Public Hospitals

NewsDay|The month-long strike by doctors at public hospitals is taking its toll on patients as more people are being turned away without getting any treatment.

Junior doctors from across the country went on strike on September 3 after the government offered them a measly 60% salary increment.

The health practitioners, who early this year embarked on another crippling job boycott, also want the government to ensure the provision of equipment and medicines at public hospitals where standards have plummeted over the years.

Senior doctors joined the strike last Thursday citing “appalling and disgraceful conditions” at public hospitals.

At Parirenyatwa Hospital, Zimbabwe’s largest referral hospital, a teary 84-year-old Chistine Mahakwa feared she would die if she was not attended to by a doctor urgently.

She was among tens of people milling around the hospital last week after they were turned away because there were no doctors on duty.

Mahakwa, whose tummy was swollen, said she had no idea what was afflicting her and was in great pain.

“I am afraid to eat anymore because I am not able to relieve myself,” she said.

“I feel so much pain and I have spent the whole day lying down here.

“Soon others will be attending to their fields when the rains come, but I do not think I will live to see the next harvest.”

A young mother, who only identified herself as Mirriam, said her 10-year-old son had been struggling to get treatment for almost a month.

She said the boy has been suffering from severe bouts of headaches and dizziness, but had not received any form of treatment because doctors were yet to diagnose his condition.

“Sometimes he wakes up in the middle of the night screaming and saying he is hearing voices,” Miriam said. “Maybe someone bewitched him.”

The situation was the same at Chitungwiza Central Hospital where only critical cases were being handled by the few doctors at work.

“We have been told to go back home because they consider our conditions not to be life-threatening, but what if I die?” said an elderly woman as she left the outpatients department.

Alex Gasasira, the World Health Organisation country director in Zimbabwe, said vulnerable people, were being turned away from hospitals.

“We hear that many patients are being turned away, some of them with very serious conditions,” he told the Voice of America.

“So we are concerned that the most vulnerable people, who are in most need of services, would not be able to access the services that they would require if their doctors keep being away from work. So, that is a big concern for us.

“So that is why we would hope that this could be resolved and they returned to work soonest.”

Health and Child Care minister Obadiah Moyo yesterday ordered the striking doctors to return to work tomorrow morning or face disciplinary action.

Moyo said the government had tried its best to address the doctors’ grievances and it was “appalled that doctors have walked out from the negotiating table and from their patients who are in dire need of their care”.

Senior doctors, however, said the government had ignored their grievances for far too long. They said Zimbabwean doctors were poorly paid compared to their regional counterparts.

For instance, senior doctors in South Africa get a basic salary of between 80 000 rand and 120 000 rand a month, in Zimbabwe they get an average of $500, the doctors said.

Consultants receive a basic salary of $1 010.

“No effort has been taken to address any of our concerns, giving the impression that there is no interest on the part of the government to address those concerns,” the Senior Hospital Doctors’ Association said in a letter addressed to the Health and Child Care ministry, which was copied to the Health Services Board (HSB).

Since junior doctors went on strike, nurses had been holding fort, but they also work between two to three days a work because they do not have transport money.

Senior doctors said the situation had seen them work under a lot of pressure.

“It is for this reason that we scaled down our operations to the provision of only emergency hospital services,” the association added.

HSB chairperson Paulinas Sikhosana said the body was aware of doctors’ grievances and believes that they could be addressed through dialogue.

“The issue of the state of the hospitals affects the work environment and motivation and ability of health workers to perform their professional tasks effectively,” he said.

“The HSB is aware of the regional remuneration framework for health workers in neighbouring countries.

“We have undertaken the necessary surveys in order to try and benchmark our salaries to these to the extent that government can afford the salary bill.”

Sikhosana urged senior doctors to use available platforms to negotiate with the government for better working conditions.

“In terms of negotiations the Health Apex is the forum where negotiations between the HSB as the employer and health workers take place,” he said.

“Senior doctors have a seat reserved for them at the table. It would, however, seem that they do not use it preferring instead to cede it to the junior doctors.”

Gasasira said the problems facing health sector workers were universal among employees in Zimbabwe who are reeling from a collapsing economy.

“As you may know, the complaints of the doctors are factored around the economy, the current economic condition of the country, which is really the higher level than just the health sector,” he added.

“Their main complaints, as you may know, are around the payments, the conditions of service.

“So these factors are affecting many sectors, not just that, in fact all aspects of life.”

The International Monetary Fund put Zimbabwe’s annual inflation rate at 300% for August following a spike in prices that followed the rolling-out of currency reforms.

In June, Zimbabwe ended a decade of dollarisation and adopted a local currency, which has been losing value against the United States dollar rapidly.

The local currency, which was at 1:1 against the US dollar in January, has plunged to 1:16 against the greenback.

Civil servants, including nurses and doctors, have been hit by the skyrocketing prices as the government has not been reviewing their salaries regularly.

While the rest of the civil service has not resorted to strikes yet, doctors have been on a collision course with the government since late last year as they demanded better living conditions.

In April last year, Vice-President Constantino Chiwenga ordered the dismissal of all striking public hospital nurses and ordered the recruitment of unemployed nurses. Retired nurses were also recalled to cover the gap.

Zimbabwe’s health delivery system, once the envy of many in Africa, has been collapsing over the years due to poor funding and a brain drain that has been blamed on poor remuneration of critical staff.

Huge Number Of Zimbabweans Quit Using Data Bundles

The Postal and Telecommunications Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe has in its latest report revealed that the number of internet bundles users has deteriorated sharply in the most recent months.

POTRAZ Director-General, Gift Machengete, attributed the decrease in the use of the internet to the deteriorating economy. He said:

The 1,1 percent (91 000) decline in total active data and Internet subscriptions is attributable to the depressed demand in the economy.

What this means is that, it could actually be a function of affordability where now a lot of people prefer to use free Wifi.

Machengete revealed that despite the sharp decrease in internet usage which is attributed to the high cost of internet bundles, the regulator intends to review up the prices of data, voice calls and SMS.

He added that this is meant to protect mobile network operators from the inflationary economy.

Chiwenga Bans Wife From Hospital

Mrs Mary Chiwenga

Vice President Constantino Chiwenga has purged some of his security aides and banned his wife from visiting him, ZimLive reported.

Chiwenga, hospitalised in China over suspected poisoning, ordered his wife, Mary, to return home and also sacked two security aides from the Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO) whom he accused of spying on him.

Mary legally married Chiwenga during a secret ceremony in June, just days before the former army general, who has been battling ill-health for over a year, relapsed and was flown to South Africa before being transferred to China.

But family friends say the marriage is on the rocks. Chiwenga has told his Chinese hosts not to issue a visa to the former model.

Chiwenga has also stripped his security to just two military aides with the rest seconded by the Chinese government, the Zimbabwe Independent reports.

“He believed they (CIO aides) were giving updates to his political rivals, including President (Emmerson) Mnangagwa about his progress,” a source told the paper.

Chiwenga was treated in India and South Africa before he was finally airlifted to China where he is admitted to a top military hospital. Reports say he was admitted with oesophageal motility disorder, and has since undergone two operations.

One report says he has been fitted with an artificial oesophagus and told by his doctors to retire from politics.

According to the Zimbabwe Independent, he is now able to walk and has substantially gained weight from a low of 50kg to about 80kg.

A family friend who asked not to be named told ZimLive: “It should be understood that very little is coming out from China. It however appears that the decision to limit the information that is shared, and restricting the number of people who can see him, was taken in consultation with Chinese authorities.

“One can only imagine this is linked to suspicions of poisoning. Until the source of the poison is established, access to him will be very limited, and it appears even his wife – for now at least – is not trusted. When you are gravely ill, it’s a natural expectation that your spouse should be around, but not so in this case and that’s not normal.”

In August, Chiwenga’s wife shared an undated picture of herself with Chiwenga on social media. It later emerged that it was an old image.

Mary was guest of honour last week when residents of Borrowdale Brooke in Harare commissioned a sewage treatment plant.

Chiwenga was the army general who led the coup that ousted former president Robert Mugabe in November 2017 after conspiring with Mnangagwa. But the two men quickly fell out in a contest for authority: Mnangagwa seeking to dilute Chiwenga’s influence over the military and Chiwenga seeking to position his lieutenants in key position in the government and Zanu-PF party.

Chiwenga’s poor health has left his supporters without a captain, and handed the initiative to Mnangagwa whose supporters are now openly backing him to lead the party into the next election.

Mnangagwa Buys 30% Shares In NewsDay

President Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa will soon become a media proprietor by acquiring a stake in private Zimbabwe newspaper Alpha Media Holdings Group owned by Trevor Ncube.

Trevor Ncube, Faith ZABA and ED Mnangagwa

Insiders have revealed that a 30% stake in the group will be controlled by Mnangagwa through his son-in-law Gerald Mlotshwa.

Ncube has been highly critical of the government and Mnangagwa’s use of a proxy to represent his interests in the group is to evade public resentment over the deal.

The president, who recently appointed Trevor Ncube as his advisor thought as a new partner he would influence editorial independence at the stable.

Whether newspaper group will retain its editorial policy remains to be seen as the deal as already claimed a long serving editor Dumisani Muleya who announced his departure from AMH yesterday.

Muleya was effectively forced out and Faith Zaba is tipped to take over as the new investor has specifically demanded.

Zaba has very strong personal links with Mnangagwa .Sources revealed that despite Ncube being an advisor to the president, he used Zaba as the link to work his way to the head of state.

Mupfumira Case Begins Its Natural Death – “She Had Govt Authority To Abuse NSSA Funds

Mupfumira case in new twist

Standard|Former Tourism minister Priscah Mupfumira’s corruption has taken a new twist following revelations that she had government authority to buy cars using National Social Security Authority (NSSA) money.

Mupfumira was arrested by the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (Zacc) in August on charges of corruption and criminal abuse of office US$95 million.

She was only freed two weeks ago on $5 000 bail after spending two months in remand prison.

One of the charges was that sometime in 2014, Mupfumira unlawfully instructed a Labour ministry top official secure a loan advance of US$90 000 from NSSA for the purchase of a ministerial vehicle.

According to ZACC, Mupfumira knew that NSSA had no provision to issue such loans. Documents, however, show that the former Zanu-PF heavyweight obtained Cabinet authority for the purchase and that the loan advanced to the ministry was repaid.

Ray Ndhlukula, the former deputy chief secretary to the president in a letter dated July 13, 2015, advised the Labour ministry to “proceed as requested … on the understanding that NSSA will be reimbursed of the funds they avail to you once Treasury has allocated the required funding.”

“Proceed as requested and purchase an E 300 Mercedes Benz vehicle. This is on the understanding that NSSA will be reimbursed of the funds they avail to you once Treasury allocated the required funding,” Ndhlukula wrote to Ngoni Masoka, the Labour ministry secretary.

In another letter to the NSSA general manager on June 26, Masoka wrote: “Honourable Mupfumira was appointed as the new Minister of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare in December 2014.

“Among the issues to do with her conditions of service is the provision of a Mercedes Banz for her official duties.

“Requests have been made to Ministry of Finance and CMED for the purchase of this vehicle but due t financial constraints Treasury has indicated that funding of the said vehicle will be made available when cash inflows improved.

“In order for this vehicle to be purchased for the minister, you are kindly requested for the release of an amount of US90 000 as an advance payment from NSSA.
“Repayments of this advance will be made as soon as the funding is made available by Treasury.”

And on July 1, 2015, then NSSA GM James Matiza wrote to Masoka promising to put funds together for the vehicle.

“We take note of your requests and we are in the process of putting the funds together. We are working towards paying the full $90 000 on Wednesday, July 8, 2015,” reads the letter.

“In the meantime, could you furnish us with the bank details? We would want to disburse the money through your ministry.”

It also emerged that Mupfumira was appointed in December 2014 and the car was bought in 2015, but ZACC papers claimed the former minister swindled NSSA in 2014.

The payment for the car was only made on July 8, 2015.

Zim Crisis :What Is The Way Forward?

The Zimbabwean economy is in a deep crisis as manifested by a proliferation of unresolved deepening monetary, fiscal, social and political headaches which the illegitimate regime has clearly failed to arrest.

The problem in Zimbabwe is a Confidence-cum-Legitimacy crisis.

The recent SONA and the preceding RBZ ban on cash-in, cash-back and cash-out platforms are desperate attempts to provide white wash and token solutions based on manifested symptoms of a sick economy.

The business as usual SONA must be roundly condemned by all right thinking Zimbabweans for the SONA failed to provide answers to the suffering Zimbabweans.

Indeed, the SONA failed to provide answers or solutions to the following:

An unprecedented energy crisis (fuel and electricity shortage) Record price increases and inflationary pressures (hyperinflation).

The collapse of Social Services especially the Health Sector The Exchange rate crisis The Currency Crisis Low Productivity The Inflation tax on Wages and Salaries that has resulted in Incomes erosion Unemployment that is now estimated at 90% Sluggish economic growth estimated by the IMF to decline by minus 6% in 2019. A crippling debt crisis Policy Reversals and Policy Ambiguity Failure to sterilize TBs No firm measures to curb corruption and state capture. Further, there are glaring policy gaps in the SONA. One could go on and on pointing out many omissions and commissions.

What is the alternative?

The country is at a cross roads.and one year after the stolen election the illegitimate regime has driven the economy on the cliff edge and plunged the country into a socio-economic Armageddon.

The regime remains unrelenting in its quest to inflict suffering on the people by clearly committing an economic genocide.

The MDC has the solutions to reverse the current economic catastrophe.

We propose the following:

The first order of business is to address the confidence and legitimacy question through a genuine process.MDC Communications

EPL Update:Nakamba Shines, Liverpool Maintain Perfect Start

Zimbabwean midfielder Marvelous Nakamba starred as Aston Villa recorded their biggest league victory of the season on Saturday.

Nakamba retained his place in the first XI when they cruised to a 5-1 victory at Norwich.

The 25-year-old had a decent game again and was instrumental in aiding the defence and making some interception in the middle of the park.

Villa got their goals from Jack Grealish, Conor Hourihane, Douglas Luiz and Wesley who scored a brace in the first half and also failed to convert from the penalty spot.

Norwich secured their consolation late in the second half through Josip Drmic.

Elsewhere in the Premier League, Liverpool maintained their perfect start to the season after beating Leicester City 2-1 at Anfield.

The Reds opened the scoring on the 40th minute courtesy of Sadio Mane’s effort before James Maddison cancelled out the lead with ten minutes left on the clock.

With the match seemingly heading for a stalemate, Marc Albrighton conceded a penalty after he impeded Mane inside the box in the added time. James Milner stepped up and made no mistake to bury the setpiece to save the day for his side.

Liverpool is now eight points clear on the top, at least for now.

Watford played to a goalless draw against Sheffield United while Jeff Hendrick’s second-half goal saw Burnely edging ten-man Everton.

The Toffees finished the match with a man short after Seamus Coleman received his second booking in the 54th minute.

In an early kick-off, Brighton stunned visiting Tottenham 3-0. Aaron Connolly netted a brace to add to Neal Maupay’s third-minute goal.Soccer24

Hazard Finally Scores For Madrid

Belgian star Eden Hazard scored his first goal for Real Madrid in their 4-2 win over Granada at the Santiago Bernabeu today.

The former Chelsea man, who had been heavily criticised for his ‘slow start’ to Spanish football of late, doubled Los Blancos’ advantage in first half time added on after Karim Benzema had put them in front in the second minute.

Croatian midfielder Luka Modric put Zinedine Zidane’s men further ahead after coming on to replace the injured Toni Kroos, making it 3-0 before Granada threatened to mount a remarkable come back, scoring two quick goals in ensuring a nervy finish at the Bernabeu.

James Rodriguez then put the final nail on the Granada coffin, making it 4-2 and ensure Real go four points clear of city rivals Atletico.Soccer24

Eden Hazard in action

Kaitano Tembo Guides Supersport To MTN8 Glory

Zimbabwean coach Kaitano Tembo’s SuperSport United are the 2019-20 MTN8 champions after they edged Highlands Park 1-0 in a thrilling final at the Orlando Stadium today.

In-form striker Bradley Grobler’s solitary strike on the stroke of half time was all Matsansansa needed to ensure Tembo collected his first trophy as a coach.

The Club’s CEO Stan Matthews had reportedly given Tembo the ultimatum, that he either wins the knock out competition or lose his job and the former Zimbabwe international delivered.

Evans Rusike started for the Pretoria-based side while his Warriors teammate Kuda Mahachi was on the bench.Soccer24

Celebration time. ..

Mutodi Mocks Chamisa, Malema And Kasukuwere

Motormouth deputy information minister Energy Mutodi is at it again after mocking opposition leader Nelson Chamisa and his South African counterpart Julius Malema saying they are small hills that will never grown into mountains.

Mutodi who is no stranger to controversy has always been the receiving end of social media users who feel he just say things without thinking through considering his position as a member of the executive.

Posting on Twitter today, Mutodi touched raw nerves when he dismissed former Zanu PF Commissar Saviour Kasukuwere whom he equated to Chamisa and Malema.

Circus As Mupfumira Corruption Case Begins To Crumble Amid Claim Her Charges Were Unfounded

FORMER Tourism Minister Priscah Mupfumira who is facing corruption charges related to the National Social Security (Nssa) scandal may not have committed any offence after all if emerging details are anything to go by.

According to sources privy to the case, charges that Mupfumira could have abused her position as Public Service Minister around 2015, to force Nssa to buy her a vehicle may have been unfounded.

In a June 26, 2015 letter to Nssa general manager at the time James Matiza , then Public Service permanent secretary Ngoni Masoka who is also on trail for abuse of office charges related to the scandal at the government pensions administrator, made the request.

“Among the issues to do with her (Mupfumira)’s conditions of service is the provision of a Mercedes Benz for her official duties.

“Requests have been made to the Ministry of Finance and the CMED for the purchase of this vehicle but due to financial constraints, Treasury has indicated that the funding of the said vehicle will be made available when cash inflows improved,” said Masoka then.

“In order for this vehicle to be purchased for the Minister, your are kindly requested for the release of an amount of $90 000 as an advance from Nssa. Repayment of this advance will be made as soon as the funding is made available by Treasury.”

In response Matiza on July 1st the same year wrote to Masoka confirming receipt of the request and that it would be actioned.

“We take note of your request and we are in the process of putting the funds together. We are working towards paying the full $90 000 on Wednesday 8 July, 2015. In the meantime could you please furnish us with your bank details. We would want to disburse the money through your Ministry,” said Matiza’s letter in part.

On July 8th the money reflected in the Ministry of Public Service’s account and recorded under “sundry debtors” reference number DFC1098/15 as an “advance to purchase Minister’s vehicle to be refunded by Treasury when budget is approved.”

An FBC Bank slip is also available showing the money was indeed moved from Nssa to the Ministry and signed by authorised signatories as required and recorded as had consistently been done elsewhere.

However a red-flag in the transaction is that Masoka seems to have skipped processes only requesting Cabinet authority a week after the money had been released.

In response to what should have been a letter requesting Cabinet authority for the purchase of the vehicle, Deputy Chief Secretary in the Office of the President and Cabinet, Ray Ndhlukula gave Masoka green-light to but Mupfumira the car.

“Proceed as requested and purchase an E300 Mercedes Benz vehicle. This is on the understanding that Nssa will be reimbursed of the funds they avail to you once Treasury has allocated the required funding,” said Ndhlukula in the letter referenced “request for Cabinet authority to purchase condition of service  and utility vehicles for Honourable P Mupfumira, Minister of Public Service and Social Welfare.”

The letter was dated 13 July 2015. The car was subsequently purchased from a local car dealer.

Mupfumira, was arrested in late July and slapped with a litany of charges including allegations of fraud, money laundering and abuse of office involving US$95 million.

Govasburg-Mandeed Bus Accident Claim 10 Lives

At least 10 people died on the spot, including both drivers, while several others were injured when two buses – Govasburg and Mandeep Tours – collided head-on just before Kwekwe River along the Gweru-Kwekwe road this morning.

When The Herald crew arrived at the scene around 8:30 am, Gweru and Kwekwe Fire Brigade were using cutters to try and retrieve the bodies of the two drivers trapped on the seats.

Officer Commanding Kwekwe District, Chief Superintendent Conrad Mubaiwa, who was at the scene of the accident, confirmed the disaster.

He said the number of the deaths could rise.

“We have 10 people who died on the spot including the two bus drivers but we are still at the scene.

“We will do a follow up on those who were rushed to Kwekwe District Hospital,” he said.

More to follow…

They Reported That Prices Will Start Falling In October But Now They Are Hiking Their Newspaper Prices

Zimbabwe Newspapers Limited (Zimpapers) has announced new cover prices for all its publications with effect from Thursday 3 October 2019. In a statement, Zimpapers said:

Zimpapers would like to advise its valued customers of new cover prices for all its publications with effect from Thursday 3 October 2019. The increases come as a mitigatory measure in the face of increasing costs of production.

The new prices which come into effect are as follows:

  • Herald – ZW$10
  • Chronicle – ZW$10
  • SundayMail – ZW$15
  • Business Weekly – ZW$15
  • Sunday News – ZW$10
  • H-Metro – ZW$5
  • B-Metro – ZW$5
  • Kwayedza – ZW$5
  • UMthunywa – ZW$5
  • Manica Post – ZW$6

Govt Ponders Over Diaspora Vote, IS THIS A GENUINE REFORM PLAN?

In what could be a major overhaul of the local voting system, Government will assess the feasibility of introducing Diaspora voting to Zimbabweans living in foreign lands, The Sunday Mail can reveal.

Current legislation limits voting rights to Zimbabweans who are on official Government assignments.

Any other Zimbabwean living in a foreign land is required to physically present themselves at their registered polling station to cast their vote.

Zimbabwe has a large Diaspora in countries such as South Africa and the United Kingdom.

Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi told The Sunday Mail that an international study will be commissioned next year.

“We want to commission a study to see how other jurisdictions are implementing the Diaspora vote and hopefully we will be done with that by June 2020,” said Minister Ziyambi.

“Once we have seen how others do it, we will then be able to make a decision on whether we need to amend the law to give effect to it or not.”

Election Resource Centre (ERC) executive director Mr Tawanda Chimhini said Government’s intention to consider introducing the Diaspora vote is welcome.

“The Diaspora vote is there in our statutes but it is just restricted to people on Government business,” said Mr Chimhini.

“They vote at their designated polling stations through postal voting.

“What is needed is to extend postal voting to all voters in the Diaspora on the condition that they register to vote.

“There will be need to change the Electoral Act to extend postal voting, not only to people on Government business, but to all people who are registered voters.

“But what is clear is that the Diaspora vote cannot be extended to every country where there is a Zimbabwean voter.”

He said other African countries have Diaspora voting systems that ensure citizens are not disenfranchised.

“They extend the right to countries where there is a significant population from their countries.

“The only difference is that they have different electoral systems from ours.

“In Mozambique, for example, they have created a Diaspora constituency, where they vote for a Diaspora representative.

“In South Africa they have proportional representation, which means that voters cast their ballots for political parties, not necessarily for individuals.

“We already have a postal voting system that works, the same provision can be extended to everyone.

“It is important for Government to carry out this study so that we can come up with a system that works for us,” he said.

-State Media

Leaked CIO Report Exposes State Strategies To Deal With Chamisa

A leaked intelligence report mapping out strategies on how to deal with MDC Alliance demos in Chiredzi District has sent chills down the spines of activists.

The report which was confirmed by several sources as an authentic document from the Chiredzi District Joint Operations Command specifies which individuals to put under surveillance, how to deal with them and thwart any machinations.

Activists who talked to The Mirror said the report is disturbing particularly in view of the rising number of alleged abductions in the country.

In Chiredi there are a number of activists who have disappeared in the past including ZESA manager Dumisani Hapazari in 2008 and Kariborn Nyemba. Nyemba later escaped from his abductors but the whereabouts of Hapazari are still unknown.

The report which was prepared on August 16 2019 accused MDC leaders in Chiredzi of planning to host a heavily armed insurgence team from South Africa to destabilize the district.

The report placed six MDC members including Chiredzi Town Council Chairman Gibson Hwende, former MP for Zaka West Festus Dumbu and Chiredzi MDC District Chairperson James Kampota as potential threats.

Other people named as security threats are Menias Gangata who is an MDC activist and one named Sisokisi.

The homes of Gangata, Dumbu, Hwende, Gilbert Mutubuki, and Kampota were identified as potential threats.

When contacted for comment Dumbu said MDC did not seek to unsit the Zanu PF Government through unconstitutional means.

“I saw the report but it`s fortunate that it leaked to the public but we know that they always track us,” said Dumbu.

-Mirror

Mining Sector Feels The Economic Pinch

Zimbabwe’s largest platinum producer Zimplats recorded a 36,1% slump in production volumes to 415,72kg in August as rising inflation, coupled with power cuts and foreign currency shortages, took a toll on the extractive sector, it has been revealed.

Zimplats’ production in the first eight months was pegged at 5 230,584kg.

The Impala Platinum Holdings (Implats) subsidiary retained US$150,9 million and US$98 million respectively from platinum sales.

Figures, however, indicated that Zimplats was getting a lot of value from other metals that form part of the platinum group of metals (PGMs), particularly palladium and rhodium sales.

Zimplats recently put its US$23 million refinery project on hold citing lack of a clear government road map on the mineral beneficiation policy.

“The SMC Base Metal Refinery refurbishment project remains on hold pending finalisation of the national beneficiation road map.

“The project total expenditure as at 30 June 2019 was US$23,6 million,” the company said in statement accompanying its year-ended June 30 results.

The Australian Stock Exchange (ASX)-listed miner was upbeat about the future despite the economic challenges facing Zimbabwe. Its shareholders continue to inject more capital into the company.

“The group spent a total of US$115 million in the full year-ended 30 June up from US$135,3 million spent on capital projects (stay in business, replacement mines and expansion projects) during the year compared to US$135,3 million spent in 2018,” the company added.

Zimplats said it had successfully navigated Zimbabwe’s turbulent currency market because most of its revenues were in foreign currency.

“Revenue is generated from sales of platinum group metals. We traced, on a sample basis, payments received in US$ to the relevant bank statements, noting no material exceptions,” the company said.

“We considered factors impacting the operating subsidiary’s access to foreign currency by inspecting relevant exchange control regulations and underlying agreements and obtained an understanding of the underlying terms and conditions.

“We found management’s conclusions to be reasonable.

“We inspected the expenditure disclosed for the operating subsidiary and noted that the operating subsidiary transacted using a combination of United States dollars, bond notes and real time gross settlement (RTGS).

“(We looked at) underlying agreements and noted that all long-term debt and borrowings were denominated in US$.”

Zimplats said the scrapping of the Indigenisation and Empowerment Regulations was expected to attract more players into the mining sector.

-The Standard

Unlicensed Chief Fined For Negligent Driving

CHIEF Dobola of Binga District has been fined $800 for negligence and driving without a licence after he crashed his newly Government issued Isuzu double cab pick-up truck last year.

Chief Dobola whose name is Edward Munkombwe (44) of Binga was on Tuesday convicted on his own plea of guilty to charges of “driving without a licence” and “negligent driving” by Hwange provincial magistrate Mr Gift Ntando Dube.

He was fined $400 for each charge and in addition was suspended from driving any class of vehicle for a month. Prosecuting, Mr John Mutyakaviri said on 11 October 2018 at about 7am, Munkombwe was driving an unregistered Isuzu double cab pick-up along Tinde-Pashu Road with no passengers on board. The court heard that when he reached the 23km peg, he lost control resulting in the vehicle veering off the road and hitting a tree before overturning. Munkombwe sustained minor injuries and was ferried to Kamativi Clinic where he was treated and discharged.

The vehicle was damaged during the accident as its windscreen was shattered, had dents on the left side, passenger door and loading box. It was recommended that the vehicle be taken to VID Hwange for examination.

The State relied its case on particulars of negligence which include failing to keep the vehicle under proper control, failing to stop when accident was imminent and travelling at an excessive speed under the circumstances.

Last year Mnangagwa’s Government, distributed cars to chiefs as part of improving their mobility to execute traditional roles.

State Media

SB Moyo’s Wife Armed To Shoot Christopher Mutsvangwa?

Justice Matanda Moyo

Paul Nyathi|Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC) chairperson Justice Loice Matanda-Moyo and her team of commissioners were recently provided with firearms for personal security amid reports that they have been receiving death threats from unknown people over high profile graft cases under investigation.

About a fortnight ago, Justice Matanda-Moyo and the commissioners underwent a firearms training at the Zimbabwe Republic Police shooting range at Morris Depot in Harare before being issued with arms.

In an interview, Justice Matanda-Moyo said she personally received incessant phone calls from members of the corruption cartels involving cases of high profile political figures under investigation and a firearm becomes a necessary self-defence weapon.

“I have received a number of calls from people instructing me to drop certain cases involving political figures and other prominent people.

“I still receive the calls with others threatening my life. Others were trying to influence me on how ZACC should operate, particularly telling me who should and should not be investigated,” she said.

The callers, Justice Matanda-Moyo said, complain about the investigation of certain individuals.

It has since emerged that the Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans Association (ZNLWVA) and President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s advisor Christopher Mutsvangwa is top amongst those people who have been threatening Justice Loice Mtanda-Moyo.

According to weekend media reports, Mutsvangwa is among those who are said to have called the Zacc chairperson accusing her of fronting a G40 agenda following the arrest of the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority board chairperson Callisto Jokonya early last month.

Jokonya appeared in court on charges of abuse of office after reportedly showing favour in extending Zimra Deputy Commissioner General Happier Kuzvinzwa’s contract for another four year term.

“Kuzvinzwa is a war veteran and Mutsvangwa was not happy with what he thought was Jokonya’s harassment over the re-appointment of a member of his association.

“The other thing is that Kuzvinzwa and (Zimra Commissioner General Faith) Mazani are not on talking terms. There is tension between them and she was happy his term had come to an end only to be shocked by the re-appointment,” a top source told online media nEWS263zim.com.

Zacc then pounced on Jokonya who is currently on on bail. Mutsvangwa was unamused and took this as an attack on veterans of the liberation struggle.

“The war veterans think they should not be touched. They want a hear no evil see no evil approach. But its wrong and while a lot more people called Justice Matanda-Moyo, Mutsvangwa also did,” the source said.

Justice Mtanda-Moyo is wife to Foreign Affairs Minister Sibusiso Moyo who is not in the best of relations with Mutsvangwa.

Power Cuts, Inflation Chokes Platinum Giant Zimplats

Zimbabwe’s largest platinum producer Zimplats recorded a 36,1% slump in production volumes to 415,72kg in August as rising inflation, coupled with power cuts and foreign currency shortages, took a toll on the extractive sector, it has been revealed.

Zimplats’ production in the first eight months was pegged at 5 230,584kg.

The Impala Platinum Holdings (Implats) subsidiary retained US$150,9 million and US$98 million respectively from platinum sales.

Figures, however, indicated that Zimplats was getting a lot of value from other metals that form part of the platinum group of metals (PGMs), particularly palladium and rhodium sales.

Zimplats recently put its US$23 million refinery project on hold citing lack of a clear government road map on the mineral beneficiation policy.

“The SMC Base Metal Refinery refurbishment project remains on hold pending finalisation of the national beneficiation road map.

“The project total expenditure as at 30 June 2019 was US$23,6 million,” the company said in statement accompanying its year-ended June 30 results.

The Australian Stock Exchange (ASX)-listed miner was upbeat about the future despite the economic challenges facing Zimbabwe. Its shareholders continue to inject more capital into the company.

“The group spent a total of US$115 million in the full year-ended 30 June up from US$135,3 million spent on capital projects (stay in business, replacement mines and expansion projects) during the year compared to US$135,3 million spent in 2018,” the company added.

Zimplats said it had successfully navigated Zimbabwe’s turbulent currency market because most of its revenues were in foreign currency.

“Revenue is generated from sales of platinum group metals. We traced, on a sample basis, payments received in US$ to the relevant bank statements, noting no material exceptions,” the company said.

“We considered factors impacting the operating subsidiary’s access to foreign currency by inspecting relevant exchange control regulations and underlying agreements and obtained an understanding of the underlying terms and conditions.

“We found management’s conclusions to be reasonable.

“We inspected the expenditure disclosed for the operating subsidiary and noted that the operating subsidiary transacted using a combination of United States dollars, bond notes and real time gross settlement (RTGS).

“(We looked at) underlying agreements and noted that all long-term debt and borrowings were denominated in US$.”

Zimplats said the scrapping of the Indigenisation and Empowerment Regulations was expected to attract more players into the mining sector.

-The Standard

LIVE – Revealed: How Gono, Mangudya Are Running Parallel RBZs As USD5,9bln Disappear Without A Voucher

WATCH VIDEO BELOW ….
By Simba Chikanza| Former Reverse Bank Governor Gideon Gono is running another virtual central bank under the guise of a so called “special economic zones board,” it has emerged. These revelations come in the face of the ongoing foreign currency problem which began in the last 3 months before the November 2017 coup. Back then it was claimed that Zimbabwe would enter into a New Dispensation after criminals surrounding the president (Robert Mugabe) have been removed from power. Revelations however show that the new regime was more of a Dispensary than a Dispensation. In October 2017, several industries filed complaints saying they are being suffocated on allocations so they can import their goods. They included cooking oil companies. The problem would worsen into 2019. WATCH VIDEO BELOW ….

LEAKED: Dumisani Muleya’s Goodbye Memo Which Which Was Deleted

IT is now time for change. Change at the helm of the Zimbabwe Independent — the leading investigative newspaper in the market — and, indeed, by extrapolation change in my life.

Change is the only constant in life. After more than 20 years in journalism — eight of them as editor — it is time to say goodbye to multitudes of audiences, our real masters, from the editorial helm of the Independent and Alpha Media Holdings (AMH), also publishers of NewsDay and The Standard, where I’m currently chief content officer; editor-in-chief.

It has really been a breath-taking run, but it’s time to move on. Hold on, not so fast. I’m still in charge for about a month.

AMH publisher Trevor Ncube says he wants to change things around, a good move, but, of course, it depends on the form, content and character of that change. He says I should assume a new role as editor-at-large in charge of group investigations.

I was previously appointed to a similar position in 2010, albeit in different circumstances. But events moved fast and I found myself serving in other top capacities.

Shortly before that, I had been appointed editor of The Standard, but didn’t take the offer to continue investigating and writing — my real passion. I only became editor of the Independent in 2012 after some urging, having given way to a colleague to take charge two years earlier.

The Independent has had five substantive editors in its illustrious 22-year history. I was fortunate to preside over its 20th anniversary three years ago, a milestone given the paper’s feats and difficulties it had to overcome in a repressive political and volatile economic environment.

Having arrived at the Independent a year after it started and rising through the ranks to the top, it has been a dramatic journey. We worked with some of the best journalists around.

I have also written for some good papers like Business Day, Mail & Guardian and Sunday Times in South Africa, including overseas media platforms. I relished every bit of it.

For me, it was about passion, ground-breaking and paradigm shifting reporting with huge public and societal impact, less about reward. This applies to many journalists, hence their spartan lifestyles or existence. Only the corrupt ones are thriving.

The main objective of journalism should be serving the public interest. It should never be prostituted for self-serving ends, be they political or commercial interests; or indeed the whims of publishers, editors’ caprices and readers’ worst instincts.

From running around ferreting for stories — some of them big and award-winning — to covering politics, business and political economy issues, and investigations, it has been a challenging enterprise; a terrific rollercoaster.

We also focussed on abuse of office and public resources, and corruption in a bid to hold the powerful to account — secrecy is the fulcrum of unaccountable power and venality.

In the process, there were great moments, getting recognition, serving the public good and building an innovative media institution. There were also pitfalls navigating the explosive political minefield and sailing across technological upheavals from the typewriters/telex/fax, to computer/internet and now smartphone/social media eras.

Although a lot has changed, there is still lack of pluralism, diversity and innovation in local media, especially in broadcasting, hence the need for comprehensive reforms.

We also endured pain; subjected to pressure and many arrests for doing our job.The Independent, which rescued independent and investigative reporting in Zimbabwe, carved out a niche for quality, progressive and insightful journalism — a marketplace for ideas.

I hope it will remain rooted in the same values and editorial policy in this quicksand political environment and rapid changes unfolding due to far-reaching disruptions by the digital revolution, with irrevocably evolving business models.

Credibility is the paper’s trademark and currency. But in the end, editors — and even publishers — come and go; only audiences, the real journalism torch-bearers, remain.

Sesiyayivala (curtain down). Goodbye.”

GMB Ups Producer Prices For Maize, Other Grains

By Own Correspondent| Grain Marketing Board Chief Executive Officer, Rockie Mutenha has announced that producer prices of maize and other grains have been increased.

In a statement dated 4 October 2019, Rutenha said:

1. THE Grain Marketing Board (GMB) advises that the Government increased the producer prices for maize and traditional grains namely sorghum, millet and rapoko to RTGS$4 000.00 up from RTGS$2 100.00.

2. GMB is encouraging farmers who still have grain to take advantage of the new price and urgently deliver their crop to their nearest depot.

3. For any clarification, farmers can contact the GMB Corporate Communications Department through the hotline telephone line 04-701898 or email at [email protected]

Gvnt Brokers Deal With Striking Doctors

By Own Correspondent| The Minister of Health and Child Care, Dr Obadiah Moyo, has brokered a deal with striking doctors by offering them a 60 percent increase in allowances and ordered all health workers to report to work tomorrow or face disciplinary action for breaching their contracts.

In a statement, Dr Moyo said the Health Services Bipartite Negotiating Panel (HSBNP) agreed to a 60 percent increase on Health Specific Allowances despite the doctors walking out on the negotiations.

“ . . . the doctors’ representatives walked out on the negotiations as they preferred a higher percentage. The 60 percent was an improvement on the previous offer by Government of 30 percent which was rejected by the Health Apex Council,” he said.

Dr Moyo said they were, however, appalled by the conduct of the doctors whose duty is to save lives as they abandoned their work stations.

“Government is appalled that doctors have walked out from the negotiating table and from their patients who are in need of their dire care. Government is grateful to those doctors who remained at their posts of duty delivering care, saving lives and alleviating suffering.

For the sake of saving lives and patients we now call on all doctors to (Ministry of Health and University Consultants) to report to their posts of duty on Monday the 7th of October 2019. Those who fail to do so are reminded that they are in breach of their contacts of employment and will face disciplinary action,” he said.

Dr Moyo said the proposed new allowance rates would cover night duty allowance, nurse managers allowance, on call allowance, special health allowance and a standby/call out allowance.

“The parties to the meeting also agreed on the locum rates for nurses and paramedics to be reviewed from the current $4 to $16 per day hour and from $6 to $24 per night hour. 

“Locum rates for doctors were also reviewed from the current $7 to $28 per day hour and from $10 to $40 per night hour,” he said.

Dr Moyo said uniform grant was reviewed from $75 to $300, uniform maintenance allowance moved up from $75 to $300 while those who are in the psychiatric department will see an increase in allowance from $20 to $100 per month. Out of residence allowance has been reviewed from $250 to $500 each month while post basic allowance now stands at $150 from $70 each month and additional post basic allowance would be increased from $10 to $25 per month for the first additional qualification.

Dr Moyo stressed that the Government was concerned with the working conditions of doctors.

Our Harare Bureau understands that the latest offer tabled by Government, will see senior doctors pocketing between $8 000 and $11 000 monthly in salaries and allowances while junior doctors earn slightly less.

“Government has shown its sincerity by continuously engaging the health workers to address their challenges including implementing programmes that ensure that they have the needed medicines and equipment to deliver health care.

Their remuneration packages have been reviewed constantly in the context of the obtaining economic climate,” said Dr Moyo.

Doctors, who downed tools weeks ago, had argued that they were unable to continue reporting for duty citing poor working conditions and poor salaries together with lack of adequate working equipment at central hospitals.

Contacted for comment Zimbabwe Hospitals Doctors Associating acting vice-president Dr Dean Ndoro said doctors rejected the offer but were still looking at the other contents of the Minister’ statement. 

He said doctors were also pulling out of the Health Apex Council. Sources said doctors wanted to be paid at United States dollar interbank rate.

“We have peculiar grievances which are unique to ourselves and the Bipartite Negotiating Panel is not addressing them. We are seeking an alternative association to belong to,” he said.

-StateMedia

Zanu PF And MDC Captured MPs Run To Temba Mliswa To Push Their Agendas In Parliament, Mliswa Claims.

Mliswa: MDC, Zanu PF MPs approach me to push for Parly perks
Norton MP, Temba Mliswa has been turned into an attack dog by other MPs

OUTSPOKEN independent MP Temba Mliswa has made sensational claims legislators from both the ruling Zanu PF and opposition MDC parties coax him into making some demands from Parliament.

Mliswa claimed most MPs don’t want to come in the open with their demands for allowances and other trinkets because they are scared to lose their political positions and a backlash from their parties.

He was speaking at #TheHubUnconference, the opening platform of Shoko Festival in Harare last week Friday.

His statements come barely a week after some 290 parliamentary vehicles were delivered for the MPs at Croco Motors in Harare.

This is despite massive uproar from the public that the all terrain vehicles that will gobble US$410 million are too expensive.

“If you ask yourself who in parliament makes the most noise, it is me, not because I am good but because I am independent.

“In fact, I actually help the MDC and Zanu PF MPs because they cannot speak out on issues to do with cars, they are afraid but they want those V8 vehicles because they are durable,” said Mliswa.

“So they send me to bite and tell me that they will not clap hands after my address because they will be recalled, they are smart.”

In July, Mliswa threatened to sue President Emmerson Mnangagwa over failure by Parliament to give MPs their perks which it had promised them. The promised perks include residential stands, a hike in allowances, among other things.

Mliswa was the most vocal in demanding vehicles and diplomatic passports from government with MDC and Zanu PF legislators both hesitant on issues to do with these benefits.

He argued that 4×4 vehicles will make their work much easier as they will be able to access far flung areas in their constituencies.

Parliament then offered all legislators a Vehicle Loan Scheme with a cap of US$35 000 to purchase Ford Ranger all terrain vehicles from Croco Motors.

Government will pay the amount over eight months with MPs paying for the vehicle over the next five years.

THREAD: Why Resurface When Its Nero, Women Groups Slammed

1/3 I am not saying whatever Nelson Chamisa did was right or wrong, everyone does have his own opinion! But my challenge with these Feminist movements is they only resurfaces when it’s Nero only! Old ladies were beaten in town last months and I am yet to hear their voices!

2/3 Don’t tell Women Coalition of Zimbabwe never saw that picture of an old woman who was beaten for exercising her constitutional right and was left for dead by our law enforcement agents, they never said a single word up to now! If they want the pics or videos I have them

3/3 Many women were beaten up and raped by soldiers in Jan this yr and I have a relative who is a victim! Where was there Women Collation Group? Never heard their voice at all, and suddenly after Nero took the mic from his wife they are demanding a public apology?

Zimbabweans Surviving On One Meal A Day, “More Hungry People Than Ever Before.”

In the morning only the children get the porridge, and everyone skips lunch.

In eastern Zimbabwe’s parched Buhera district, Omega Kufakunesu’s family has been forced to scale down daily meals to just a portion of vegetables and sadza, a thick maize-meal porridge.

“During the day we have wild fruit collected by the children, and at night we have smaller portions of sadza with vegetables,” harvested from the communal village garden, said Kufakunesu, sitting outside her thatched round hut.

A palmful of shumha, a drought-resistant wild fruit,  is all she will eat during the day until dinner time.

“We have reduced our food portions so that its enough for everyone,” she said.

But there are days when “my husband and I don’t eat at all” to make sure the children have some food, she said.

Zimbabwe is experiencing one of the worst droughts in history, blamed on the effects of the El Nino weather cycle.

In addition, the former regional breadbasket is in the throes of its worst economic crisis in a decade with inflation estimated to be over 900 percent.

(FILES) In this file photo taken on September 2, 2019 Leon Kufakunesu (R) hands a plate of jackalberry fruit to his mother which she has resorted to serving the family as a midday meal while saving up the little mealie meal left for dinner, at Buhera in Zimbabwe’s Manicaland Province. – Zimbabwe is experiencing one of the worst droughts in history, blamed on the effects of the El Nino weather cycle.

‘More hungry people than ever’

Because of the combined effect of drought and an ailing economy, more than 5 million rural Zimbabweans, nearly a third of the population, are going to face food shortages before the next harvest in 2020.

A disturbing feature of this year’s food shortages is the increase in the number urban poor who are vulnerable.

The government estimates that up to 2.2 million people in towns and cities are struggling to feed themselves.

WFP country representative Eddie Rowe said there are “more hungry people than ever before in Zimbabwe”.

In August, the United Nations extended its appeal for aid — from $234 million in February to $331 million to feed the combined total of over seven million Zimbabweans, roughly half the country’s population.

Buhera is home to around 300,000 people and experiences dry spells even during good rainy seasons. It is one of the areas hardest hit by the drought.

To make matters worse, it was in the path of Cyclone Idai which devastated Mozambique and parts of eastern Zimbabwe earlier this year.

(FILES) In this file photo taken on September 2, 2019 Leon Kufakunesu prepares to gather jackalberry fruit to serving the family as a midday meal at Buhera in Zimbabwe’s Manicaland Province. – Zimbabwe is experiencing one of the worst droughts in history, blamed on the effects of the El Nino weather cycle.

‘Bartering wire mesh for food’

According to the UN, most of Zimbabwe’s 60 districts will have exhausted their staple maize stocks by October.

The Kufakunesu family and neighbouring villagers have been lucky to have boreholes to draw water for drinking, washing and watering the garden — but the water is drying up due to the heat and scanty rain.

The UN’s World Food Programme has been handing out food parcels – cooking oil and porridge for children under fives – and US$8 in cash per month for every family member. But the payouts are only restricted to the so-called lean months.

At Joni, a neighbouring village, 49-year-old Fungai Mugombe, one of three wives and a mother of seven, used the money set up a simple wire mesh making project.

“People buy the mesh wire for fencing, and we make a small profit. I sometimes exchange the fences with food,” Mugombe said outside a cluster of huts where a red bougainvillea adds colour to a bleak dusty landscape.

Freeman Mavhiza, the district administrator, said the government was providing villagers with irrigation facilities and seed for drought resistant crops such as millet and sorghum.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa has said the government had budgeted $120 million for the production of “strategic crops, such as maize, soya beans and cotton”.

(FILES) This file photo taken on September 3, 2019 shows a child standing outside Dhave General Dealers store at Buhera in Zimbabwe’s Manicaland Province, which serves beneficiaries of a World Food Programme (WFP) sponsored cash transfer assistance programme. – Zimbabwe is experiencing one of the worst droughts in history, blamed on the effects of the El Nino weather cycle.

The Citizen

Zim Domestic Soccer League Back Amongst The Top African Leagues

Standard|THE Castle Lager Premier Soccer League (PSL) championship race is getting more and more competitive by each passing season, but what is more significant is the strides that the Zimbabwean game has made in Pan-African club football.

One does not need to be told as events on the ground are evidence enough to show how Zimbabwean clubs are gradually moving to the class of the best in Africa.

FC Platinum have for the second year running reached the group stages of the Caf Champions League following hard on the heels of CAPS United, who were also among the best 16 football teams on the continent in 2017.

Triangle are enjoying their life in the sun in the Caf Confederation Cup and are only 180 minutes away from also reaching the lucrative group stages of the competition, having won all the four matches they have played in the tournament so far.

This is a far much different story from the events of over the past few years as between 2010 and 2016, Zimbabwean clubs failed to make an impression in Africa with the best they did being way back in 2010 when Dynamos reached the group stages of the competition, but were a big disappointment later.

This newfound success in Africa has been brought about by the improved standards and the competitiveness of the PSL, which this season is heading for another close finish as was the case in 2016 when the title was taken away by CAPS United and in 2017 when won by FC Platinum.

As at week 24, leaders CAPS United and sixth-placed Ngezi Platinum Stars were separated by only nine points, a difference which is not much in football nowadays. This means any of the top six teams — CAPS United, Chicken Inn, FC Platinum, Black Rhinos, ZPC Kariba, and Ngezi Platinum Stars — have an equal chance of winning the title and representing Zimbabwe in the 2020 edition of the Caf Champions League.

More in Home

However, after a change of coach and their participation in the Caf Champions League group stages, there is also no guarantee that FC Platinum will take the league title as they have done over the past two years due to the stiff competition at hand.

In fact, that CAPS United are at the top of the table has made the Green Machine family excited, but they should not forget that they were once there at the summit of the 18-team table and fell off the tree before their latest recovery.

The fact that the league title leadership has also changed so many hands — including those of Black Rhinos, Chicken Inn, FC Platinum, and ZPC Kariba — is a clear indication that there is no guarantee that Makepekepe would still be there at the top after the next two games.

So being at the top right now is nothing to get excited about, but CAPS United should strive to get into celebration mood only after they are still at the top after their last game of the season at home to FC Platinum at the National Sports Stadium.

So, as things stand right now, the league title is anyone’s for the taking, but what is heartening is the fact that the Zimbabwean game has not only become more exciting, more entertaining and more competitive, but is also discovering more and more new talent.

A number of exciting young players have emerged and the changing rooms of all the teams in the Premiership including bottom-placed Yadah are flooded with new and exciting players unlike over the past few years when the same old players were always on the fans’ lips.

Yes, the likes of Prince Dube, Joel Ngodzo, Phineas Bhamusi and Denver Mukamba are still turning on the style in the Premiership, but it is the likes of Evans Katema of Dynamos, Ian Nekati of ZPC Kariba, Ray Lunga and McClive Phiri of Highlanders, Wellington Taderera of Black Rhinos, Ian Nyoni of Chapungu and Nomore Chinyere of Hwange, among others, who have brought pride in the smile and gusto in the applause.

Sadly, though, the tragedy of Zimbabwean football is that the Zimbabwean game cannot hang onto that talent due to the economic situation which every season forces players to leave for foreign lands where they are better paid.

However, what is encouraging is the fact that the Premiership has each year been able to replace the departed talent with even more exceptional talent as evidenced by the show going on in the 2019 soccer season, and the Warriors’ status in the run-up to the African Nations Championships (Chan)

What is surprising, however, is the fact that at a time the fight for the championship is getting tighter and more exciting by the day and the battle for survival even more intense, crowd attendances have not matched the excitement on the field of play due to the harsh economic climate in the country.

Gone are the days when football was good and the crowds good too, but now the football is going up every week, but the fans are deserting the stadiums week-in and week-out, and one wonders when domestic football will once again attract crowds of around 20 000.

So far, it is so good on the field of play but at whatever cost, Zimbabwe football must find ways of bringing back the crowds to the stadiums.

Govt Says It Is Assessing Feasibility Of Diaspora Vote

In what could be a major overhaul of the local voting system, Government will assess the feasibility of introducing Diaspora voting to Zimbabweans living in foreign lands, The Sunday Mail can reveal.

Current legislation limits voting rights to Zimbabweans who are on official Government assignments.

Any other Zimbabwean living in a foreign land is required to physically present themselves at their registered polling station to cast their vote.

Zimbabwe has a large Diaspora in countries such as South Africa and the United Kingdom.

Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi told The Sunday Mail that an international study will be commissioned next year.

“We want to commission a study to see how other jurisdictions are implementing the Diaspora vote and hopefully we will be done with that by June 2020,” said Minister Ziyambi.

“Once we have seen how others do it, we will then be able to make a decision on whether we need to amend the law to give effect to it or not.”

Election Resource Centre (ERC) executive director Mr Tawanda Chimhini said Government’s intention to consider introducing the Diaspora vote is welcome.

“The Diaspora vote is there in our statutes but it is just restricted to people on Government business,” said Mr Chimhini.

“They vote at their designated polling stations through postal voting.

“What is needed is to extend postal voting to all voters in the Diaspora on the condition that they register to vote.

“There will be need to change the Electoral Act to extend postal voting, not only to people on Government business, but to all people who are registered voters.

“But what is clear is that the Diaspora vote cannot be extended to every country where there is a Zimbabwean voter.”

He said other African countries have Diaspora voting systems that ensure citizens are not disenfranchised.

“They extend the right to countries where there is a significant population from their countries.

“The only difference is that they have different electoral systems from ours.

“In Mozambique, for example, they have created a Diaspora constituency, where they vote for a Diaspora representative.

“In South Africa they have proportional representation, which means that voters cast their ballots for political parties, not necessarily for individuals.

“We already have a postal voting system that works, the same provision can be extended to everyone.

“It is important for Government to carry out this study so that we can come up with a system that works for us,” he said.

State Media

“Stop The Lies, We Do Not, I Repeat, Do Not Have Sanctions Against The Country Of Zimbabwe,” USA Says It All.

Paul Nyathi|The government of the United States has once and for all come out blunt, candid and unwavering about the status of bilateral relations with Zimbabwe declaring that it has no sanctions at all against Zimbabwe and they have always made the fact clear to President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

Responding to a question from the state run Sunday Mail Newspaper journalist Norman Muchemwa in a Telephonic Press Briefing the U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of African Affairs, Tibor P. Nagy, Jr, implored that Zimbabwe must begin telling the truth about the relationship with the United States.

Tibor P Nagy, Jr emphasised unequivocally that President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s “leadership understands what the United States is looking for, before we can begin to have a normal, constructive, positive relationship with Zimbabwe.”

We produce below extract of the transcript of the interview:

MODERATOR: Thank you. The next question goes to a listening party at U.S. Embassy Harare. Operator, please open the line.

OPERATOR: What was the location?

MODERATOR: Embassy Harare, Zimbabwe.

OPERATOR: Thank you. And that line is now opened.

QUESTION: Okay, good afternoon. My name is Muchemwa Norman from Sunday Mail in Harare, Zimbabwe. And my question is as you mentioned earlier on that you hoped for Africa and that is an encouragement for American businesses to invest in Zimbabwe. You know that Zimbabwe is open for — in Africa, rather, you know that Zimbabwe is open for business. What measures are there in place for a win/win arrangement regarding the issue of investment for the benefit of the long-suffering Zimbabweans?

ASST. SEC. TIBOR NAGY: Well I love that question too because I’ve had occasions several times to have dialog at highest levels of your government and our dialogue has been very frank and honest and I’m not going to go into details because those are private discussions. But your leadership understands what the United States is looking for, before we can begin to have a normal, constructive, positive relationship with Zimbabwe.

Now, I told you guys this before, that I have a very special place in my heart for Zimbabwe because not only did I help open up the embassy there shortly after the Lancaster House Agreement in 1980, I think my vehicle was the second one to cross the Chirundu Bridge going from Zambia to Zimbabwe. But my kids first trip was born in independent Zimbabwe were born in Harare. So I really, really appreciate the country. I appreciate the tremendous talents, the positive attributes. Unfortunately it’s no secret, we have a problematic relationship with Zimbabwe. There’s the ZIDERA Act which restricts to a certain extent what the United States can and cannot do.

However, there’s a very false narrative out there which I want to correct. Some people say that the United States has sanctions against the country of Zimbabwe. We do not, repeat, do not have sanctions against the country of Zimbabwe. We have sanctions against certain individuals and certain corporations and there could be greater detail on that, but not against the country of Zimbabwe. There is nothing to stop U.S. businesses from investing in Zimbabwe, from going to Zimbabwe.

However, again, let’s be very frank. Zimbabwe has a reputational problem. We have great concerns over how the government treats its own citizens. We have great concerns over the space that’s available for democracy and governance in Zimbabwe. We have been alarmed with how the government has treated its own citizens. So those are the issues. But as I said, we’ve had very frank, honest and open discussions between ourselves and the highest levels of your government. So you know, hopefully, again, you know my dream and prayer is that we can have fully normalized positive relations with every country in Africa. And Zimbabwe is near the top of my wish list.

Again, given the personal connections I’ve had with your beautiful, beautiful country and your wonderful people. Over.

Read the full transcript below:

https://ng.usembassy.gov/transcript-telephonic-press-briefing-with-assistant-secretary-of-state-for-the-bureau-of-african-affairs-tibor-p-nagy-jr/

Masvingo Villagers Turn The Heat On Govt Over High Data Charges

File Picture of now popular messages warning of data charge increase

Masvingo villagers say awareness programmes being carried out by the Postal and Telecommunications Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe (Potraz) have helped them dealing with cyber safety issues.

The villagers attended one of the programmes at Nemamwa growth point in Masvingo yesterday.

Timothy Chikozho said such interactions with the regulator were key and called for urgent intervention by government on tariffs to ensure affordability by users.

“We are privileged to have such interactions with Potraz,” he said. “We now know what to do and where to go when we encounter problems with operators and it is something we learnt from this programme.

“The cost of data is now beyond our reach. We can’t connect via data and it is becoming a challenge.

“We want to appreciate your education through such programmes, they open our eyes on ICTs.”

Agnes Bhasera said Potraz should continue with awareness programmes and also target schools and colleges as a number of abuses of technology were being reported there.

Consumers also pleaded with Potraz and government to intervene and ensure mobile data is accessible.

“We cannot access some networks here and it is becoming a big challenge.

“From what we learnt from Potraz today, we have a lot to use our mobile phones for, but there is very little coverage,” Marble Mabhena said.

Potraz consumer affairs manager Phibion Chaibva said the authority would remain a consumer’s shield and open platforms for regular interactions.

Chaibva warned consumers against abuse of digital media platforms saying as a regulator, the safety and security of the users remains critical.

“We warn users against improper use of digital media platforms. Use them for your good and growth of our communities and not to harm yourselves or others,” he said.

“We have heard your challenges and your good words on what we are doing as Potraz and we will not tire to keep on coming and engaging you. We are there for you.”

He said Potraz was advocating for stiffer penalties against vandalism and theft.

This followed numerous reports of destruction and theft on base stations and infrastructure across the country.

Leo Mugabe Is The Reason Why Harare Has No Water Today, ZACC Called In.

Harare Mayor Herbert Gomba

Paul Nyathi|Harare Mayor Herbert Gomba says late former President Robert Mugabe’s nephew Leo Mugabe, who was funeral spokesman, is the reason why the City of Harare does not have water today.

In an angry series of Tweets on his Twitter page, the mayor revealed that Leo Mugabe was over twenty years ago given a tender to built a new backwash treatment plant along Bulawayo road at Morton Jeffrey plant, which despite payments never worked.

An angry Gonna has threatened that he will be taking the issue to the Zimbabwe Anti Corruption Commission.

Said Gomba, “Harare will engage the new Zacc to investigate the tender alleged given to ex President’s nephew who was funeral spokesman to built a new backwash treatment plant bluish in color along Bulawayo road at Morton Jeffrey plant, which despite payments never worked, causing water problems.”

He added, “The plant was to give water to Hre residents,a contractor was given an opportunity to deliver but didn’t if all had happened according to plan, 80 million litres  of water per day for 25 years would have alleviated our problems in our fight we get strength from those carrying buckets every day.”

The Mayor was not happy with some responses he received, “I see some would want to defend what cannot be defended, all we want is water, in fact more water, surely how do you sleep knowing fully you caused that, how do you use Bulawayo rd knowing fully you abused your uncle’s position and 25 years latter we don’t have water.”

The Mayor also accused another Mugabe relative, Mr John Mapondera of neopatrimonialism.

“The reason why kunzvi could not be built and nothing was done to Mr Mapondera John is that he was said to be relative of the founding father, we are now in a crisis because of the neopatrimonialism ….truth must rain like bumharutsva.”

Over 20 000 Gwanda Residents Pack Stadium For The Gwanda Gospel Music Show

Paul Nyathi|THE 2019 edition of Gwanda Gospel Music Festival at Phelandaba Stadium in Gwanda, which ended early hours of Sunday morning literally saw the whole of Gwanda town residents and surrounding mining communities pack the stadium beyond its capacity.

Over 20 000 people packed the small Phelandaba Stadium to witness a moving ten hours of high class gospel music acts.

The annual free entry music concert courtesy of businessman Justice Maphosa was headlined by top South African acts.

The festival which was in its fifth edition ran under the theme “God is Speaking, Are You Listening?” and was headlined by South African duo Shongwe and the Khuphuka Saved Group and Sipho Makhabane.

They were joined by Denzel the Pianist (South Africa) and South Africa-based Gwanda born artiste Takesure Zamar as well as local acts Vocal Ex, Mathias Mhere, Indosakusa: The Morning Star, Mkhululi Bhebhe, Joyful Praise, Hybrid Sounds and Harvest Music Super Choir.

“The Gwanda Gospel Festival just gets bigger every time ” Big Time Strategic Group spokesperson Mthokozisi Dube told local media.

“We had a different line-up this year as we had Shongwe from Swaziland who the people of Gwanda love. This is the first time that we’re bringing a foreign act that isn’t South African.

“The festival should be an altar where Zimbabweans can go once a year to seek God. The nation will also get direction from God’s word. Zimbabwe finds itself in a difficult time and it’ll only take the voice of God to direct it out of it.”

Watch video downloading below:

Passports Backlog Balloons To 370 000

Cain Mathema

State Media|THE backlog in the issuing of passports in the country has ballooned to 370 000 from around 340 000 last month as the Registrar-General’s Office is only able to process just 750 per day, an official has revealed.

Registrar-General Mr Clemence Masango told state media on the sidelines of Civil Registration and Vital Statistic (CRVS) Day held in Bulawayo yesterday that lack of foreign currency remained the major challenge.

“The Department is currently hamstrung by the shortage of essential passport production materials which is imported and requires foreign currency and it is also public knowledge that foreign currency is scarce in the country and is affecting not only the department but many other sectors in the country. At the moment we are doing 750 passports a day and these are mainly on urgent basis and also on first come first serve and we have a backlog of over 370 000 passport applications,” he said.

Mr Masango acknowledged that the department needed to clear the backlog as soon as funding is availed.

“We are also aware that there is a backlog that we have to attend to and arrangements are underway that we get funds to get the materials to work on clearing the backlog so that we return our services back to normal. We need to go back to what our charter says of providing urgent passports, 24 hour passports as the fastest, three days and one for four weeks. We have not been able to do this because of unavailability of resources,” he said.

Asked on reports on pending increases in passport fees, Mr Masango said the department has not yet received the green light from the Government to do so. He said the problem of antiquated machinery has been eased following the acquisition of a US$600 000 machine to produce the passports.

Mr Masango said his office has also received numerous complaints from the public about the treatment they are getting from officials in the department.

“It is unfortunate that there are members of the public who have not been well attended to as seen by the complaints that we get. It is Government policy that everybody must be served professionally, courteously and with respect. However, we do get individuals not living up to that expectation. We currently have an ongoing public care and public customer handling internal refresher course to ensure that we maintain the standards expected by the public and Government to serve our public,” he assured.

Meanwhile, the Minister of Home Affairs and Cultural Heritage Ambassador Cain Mathema has stressed the need for all parents and guardians to register births for their children within the stipulated time in order to secure basic human rights to name, identity and nationality.

Speaking during the CVRS Day belated commemorations which were held for the first time in Zimbabwe, Ambassador Mathema said it was disturbing to note that many undocumented children were coming from South Africa. The celebrations were held under the theme “Birth Certificate for All: a Fundamental for Protecting Human Rights and Promoting Inclusion”.

“It is sad to note that there are children born in South Africa and brought here with no birth certificates via illegal transporters and dumped without any particulars to elderly grandparents who will fend for them. Those grandparents may not be able to secure those documents which is a problem when they want to start school,” he said.

The celebrations were marked with a march from the Bulawayo Passport Office to Milton Junior Primary School, which was the venue for the commemorations. The commemorations were meant to raise awareness on the importance of birth certificates and other identity particulars which people should acquire in order for them to enjoy full benefits of being citizens and residents of Zimbabwe.

Govt Introduces New Regulations For One To Contest Presidential Elections

2018 Election presidential candidates

State Media|Aspirants who wish to lend the country’s top job — that of President — will have to be nominated by at least 1 000 registered voters from the country’s 10 provinces and fork out more than the current $1 000 nomination fee.

This comes as Government moves to align local nomination processes with regional and international best practices, it has been learnt.

The overhaul is also expected to winnow out “chancers”.

Last year, 23 candidates successfully registered for the Presidential election, the largest number since 1980.

The 2018 Presidential ballot paper

However, the large pool of candidates created a logistical nightmare for the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) in designing the ballot paper.

Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi told The Sunday Mail that the new regulations will ensure that only serious candidates participate.

“We are also looking at provisions that deal with nomination fees for Presidential candidates and that of people who nominate the President with a view of increasing them from 100 to maybe 1 000,” said Minister Ziyambi.

“We want to revise the fees to make sure that they are reasonable.

“As you saw, (in) the last election we had the largest pool of candidates in the history of the country. While we want to encourage participation, we also want to make sure that only serious candidates find their names on the ballot.”

Current regulations require candidates seeking to contest Presidential, Parliamentary and local council polls to submit their candidacy to one of several specially convened nomination courts across the country.

To register successfully, Presidential candidates pay a fee of $1 000 and must be nominated by at least 100 registered voters from across the country’s 10 provinces.

Zimbabwe Election Support Network (ZESN) chairperson Mr Andrew Makoni said the changes will eliminate chancers from participating.

“Increasing the number of signatures required to register one as a candidate is meant to avoid a situation where we have people trying their luck at a cost to the elections management body,” said Mr Makoni.

“Organising an election is a very expensive exercise, so if we have a situation where someone just gathers a 100 signatures and a small amount of money, but have no following at all, becomes a very huge cost to the elections management body.

“So I think the idea is to ensure that only serious candidates with constituencies behind them are able to participate and do away with chancers.”

Last year President Mnangagwa out-polled 22 candidates that include Nelson Chamisa (MDC-Alliance), Thokozani Khupe (MDC-T), Nkosana Moyo (Alliance for People’s Agenda), Joice Mujuru (People’s Rainbow Coalition), Elton Mangoma (Renewal Democrats of Zimbabwe), and Ambrose Mutinhiri (National Patriotic Front).

Also on the Presidential ballot were Lovemore Madhuku (National Constitutional Assembly), Daniel Shumba (United Democratic Alliance), Noah Ngoni Manyika (Build Alliance Zimbabwe), Joshua Makamba Busha (FreeZim Congress), Johannes Tonderai Chiguvare (People’s Progressive Party), Melba Dzapasi (Hashgtag 1980 Freedom Movement Zimbabwe), Peter Mapfumo Gava (United Democratic Front), Kwanele Hlabangana (Republicans Party of Zimbabwe), Divine Mhambi Hove (National Alliance of Patriotic Democratic Republicans), Blessing Kasiyamhuru (Zimbabwe Partnership for Prosperity), Violet Mariyacha (United Democratic Movement), Taurai Bryn Mteki (Independent), William Taonezvi Mugadza (Bethel Christian Party), Tendai Peter Munyandiri (New Patriotic Front), Harry Peter Wilson (Democratic Opposition Party).

Mugabe’s Highly Sophisticated Casket Was Bought And Shipped To Zimbabwe Before He Died

The coffin in which Mugabe was buried in

State Media|Although former President Robert Mugabe was buried last week, the story of his caskets has remained subject of much debate, adding to the “controversy” surrounding his burial.

Many believe his body was changed into three caskets between his arrival in Zimbabwe and burial.

A source who was in Singapore at the time of the death said there was nothing amiss on the change of the caskets.

“When the former President died in Singapore, a casket was secured and that is the wooden one which everyone saw at Rufaro Stadium and at the State Funeral held in the National Sports Stadium.

“The confusion was that when that wooden casket arrived at the airport, it was wrapped in a brown hessian cloth as it had been carried among luggage from Singapore and the covering was meant to ensure it does not get damaged. This is very normal,” said the source.

Adding: “Further, it should be distinguished that the body came on board a charted private plane, hence the decision to place it in a casket.

:If it was a commercial plane maybe it would have been placed in the traditional air tray, which is a wood-bottom tray with a lid made of a wooden board.

“When the body arrived at the airport, it was taken to One Commando Barracks where the hessian cloth was removed before the exposed brown wooden casket with independent side and front flap handles was taken to Cde Mugabe’s Borrowdale Brooke home.

“Everyone will agree that the programme from Wednesday to Saturday was packed and there had not been solid confirmation of the burial place, hence the continued use of the wooden casket.

“It was only placed into another casket on Monday morning by Doves undertakers before going to Zvimba.

“The casket that was in Zvimba is the same whose pictures circulated in the media when Julius Malema came. It is also the same that the former President has been buried in.”

In a terse statement after a church service for the late leader and before his burial, family spokesperson Mr Walter Chidhakwa said: “The journalists, we thank you for being here with us.

“Tell your story the way you want to tell it, but we are confident that that which we did will never be tainted by a wrong interpretation of the story.”

According to national handling services, the process of preparing a body for a flight, in non-exceptional cases — is relatively straightforward.

It must be double-wrapped in a plastic, then packed into an air tray filled with cooling gel packs.

Typically, caskets are not used because there are high chances they might get damaged since they will be among other cargo during travel.

Aviation sources say caskets or coffins are usually provided by the funeral home on the receiving end of the flight.

The former President was buried in a centimetre-thick copper and steel, square-cornered casket.

The coffin also came with a 5mm thick inside glass compartment and airtight gasket, presumably meant to preserve the body.

The Sunday Mail can reveal that the casket arrived into the country well before his death and has been in the custody of Doves Funeral Services, which at one time kept it —locked — at its Harare Street and Kwame Nkrumah parlour.

According to sources, the automotive paint finish — with three layers of clear coat casket — is fitted with handles secured by inside reinforced metal strips.

It came with a three-way adjustable bed frame and mattress for both tilt and height adjustments.

The casket’s interiors also include a 100 percent polyester cushioning and pillow.

A further search of similar caskets online showed that they are usually given a continuous welded bottom, including joints.

It is also fitted with a polypropylene-injected moulded gasket to ensure air tightness once closed.

The airtight casket keeps away insects, air or water and allows the body to decompose naturally.

Mystery, however, surrounds the whereabouts of the wooden casket that the body of the former revolutionary icon came in from Singapore.

Govt Seriously Considering Diaspora Voting

State Media|In what could be a major overhaul of the local voting system, Government will assess the feasibility of introducing Diaspora voting to Zimbabweans living in foreign lands, The Sunday Mail can reveal.

Current legislation limits voting rights to Zimbabweans who are on official Government assignments.

Any other Zimbabwean living in a foreign land is required to physically present themselves at their registered polling station to cast their vote.

Zimbabwe has a large Diaspora in countries such as South Africa and the United Kingdom.

Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi told The Sunday Mail that an international study will be commissioned next year.

“We want to commission a study to see how other jurisdictions are implementing the Diaspora vote and hopefully we will be done with that by June 2020,” said Minister Ziyambi.

“Once we have seen how others do it, we will then be able to make a decision on whether we need to amend the law to give effect to it or not.”

Election Resource Centre (ERC) executive director Mr Tawanda Chimhini said Government’s intention to consider introducing the Diaspora vote is welcome.

“The Diaspora vote is there in our statutes but it is just restricted to people on Government business,” said Mr Chimhini.

“They vote at their designated polling stations through postal voting.

“What is needed is to extend postal voting to all voters in the Diaspora on the condition that they register to vote.

“There will be need to change the Electoral Act to extend postal voting, not only to people on Government business, but to all people who are registered voters.

“But what is clear is that the Diaspora vote cannot be extended to every country where there is a Zimbabwean voter.”

He said other African countries have Diaspora voting systems that ensure citizens are not disenfranchised.

“They extend the right to countries where there is a significant population from their countries.

“The only difference is that they have different electoral systems from ours.

“In Mozambique, for example, they have created a Diaspora constituency, where they vote for a Diaspora representative.

“In South Africa they have proportional representation, which means that voters cast their ballots for political parties, not necessarily for individuals.

“We already have a postal voting system that works, the same provision can be extended to everyone.

“It is important for Government to carry out this study so that we can come up with a system that works for us,” he said.

We’re Suffering Because Nyami Nyami Snake Is Angry | TRUTH or UTTER NONSENSE?

a river snake similar to the Nyami Nyami “god”

These people who are talking about the Nyaminyami phenomenon are no different from some politicians who believed that (refined) diesel fuel could come out of a rock.

That is utter nonsense.

Episodes of drought are common all over the world, California, Australia, Cape town, etc but people there look for practical solutions to mitigate the effects of the drought, like water conservation for example.

Climate change is a fact and how societies PREPARE for and participate in measures to slow down and eventually stop this phenomenon will make a difference.

Right now deforestation (in Zimbabwe) is rampant by the “emerging” farmers who are hacking down 100 year old trees to burn during tobacco curing. Pre-independence commercial farmers always used coal for that purpose. These farmers were smart and knew the importance of trees.

So, to those talking about the Nyaminyami nonsense, “STOP IT”!

ANONYMOUS

Faceless Sunday Mail Reporters Say MDC Run Harare Council Involved In Roadworks Scandal

Faceless Sunday Mail reporters have published a lengthy article blaming the MDC party run Harare City Council for a roadworks scandal.

All road construction work in the country is under the ZANU PF controlled Zinara parastatal, and it was not clear why the state broadsheet chose to point the finger on the municipality. The below article was published without even a single comment being sought from Zinara.

FULL TEXT:

Harare City Council (HCC) is reeling from yet another controversy after an internal audit unearthed a major scandal through which some road contractors engaged to rehabilitate 43 selected roads in the capital were paid despite “the fact that absolutely no works had been done”.

It is believed that council’s department of works even had the audacity to present fraudulent progress reports in order to renew contracts for some of the companies.

Documents obtained by The Sunday Mail indicate that the scam was exposed when the city’s procurement unit insisted on an inspection of the roads that were purportedly under construction.

In one of the most glaring cases, City of Harare’s department of works allegedly misrepresented that Fossil Construction — one of the biggest contractors — had rehabilitated 1,2 kilometres (15 percent) of Kelvin South Road in Graniteside when works had not even begun.

After discovering the anomaly, the procurement division subsequently wrote a letter to town clerk Engineer Hosiah Chisango on July 5 this year to alert him about the discrepancy.

“The constitution of the 15 percent completion could not be explained, with the responsible engineer Mkombeza stating that he exaggerated the percentage as he claimed that there was work done, which he failed to identify, and (we) asked that the road be removed from the list of extension or he writes a report on that,” reads part of the letter.

“In light of the fact that absolutely no works had been done on the road, which had been given 15 percent completion, coupled with the fact that the engineer stated that he probably exaggerated the percentage, it would then leave a lot of questions on all stages of completion on all other roads on the report . . . with the probability of exaggeration clearly manifested.”

The scope of works on Kelvin South Road included reclaiming 250mm of existing road, adding 150mm gravel (stabilise), prime and 25mm asphalt concrete surfacing.

Further, the contractor was expected to upgrade storm water drainage and put road markings, signs and cat eyes.

Scathing

In a letter dated July 8 2019, HCC’s audit manager Mr Archibald Nyamurova was particularly scathing on the department of works.

“Kelvin South Road was not rehabilitated to 15 percent stage of completion as was indicated by the department of works when it submitted information to the supply chain manager for purposes of renewing contracts,” it reads.

“There were no materials on site to show that Fossil Construction ever attempted to rehabilitate Kelvin South Road.”

Mr Nyamurova then recommended that Fossil Construction contract be cancelled while an audit of all the 43 roads under rehabilitation be done before any of the contractors are given new jobs.

“An external engineer should be contracted by council to assess the stage of completion of uncompleted roads, taking into account materials used and funds already paid to contractors,” he said.

Overall, Fossil Construction was paid $1,7 million of the $7,4 million council paid to contractors for various road works.

Admission

Head of HCC’s department of works Engineer Isaiah Zvenyika Chawatama confirmed that his department had cooked figures as it sought to renew contracts.

“Such a situation arose that progress update figures did not tally with physical works. It was an error by one of our engineers; he just plugged in figures, you know. He didn’t mean any mischief,” he told The Sunday Mail.

“We have extended the contracts to June 2020 to allow the contractors to finish works. We are now going on the ground,” he said.

Audit

The local authority’s new scandal comes barely a month after Government released more than $214 million to extricate the capital from a serious water crisis.

The facilities were released to help pay off debts for water treatment chemicals and rehabilitate the city’s water works.

Government has since ordered a forensic audit to establish the root cause of the paralysis in service delivery, particularly the inability to supply residents with potable water, which is putting lives at risk.

Minister of State for Harare Provincial Affairs Oliver Chidawu told The Sunday Mail there is a “management crisis” at the local authority.

“Government has allocated funds to the city to help with the water crisis and this means some projects will be stalled or temporarily shelved,” said Minister Chidawu.

“So we are now looking at ways of how to come up with long-term solutions to the problem, and we have asked the Harare City Council to do an audit on their revenue streams.

“We feel there is a management crisis at the City of Harare and that is why we need to have an audit to see how revenue is being used, how it can be used going forward and how it can help with service delivery.”

Government has also made a commitment to provide technical support once the audit is completed.

HCC Mayor Councillor Hebert Gomba said the planned forensic audit will help city fathers to chart their service delivery mandate.

“We will soon be flighting a tender for the external auditing firm.

“The findings will help us on our service delivery mandate, and we will also be doing a skills audit to help us to do away with practices and individuals that stand in the way of progress, and ensure that we put in place robust systems.”

Billing Glitches

City of Harare’s revenue collections are currently plummeting as a result of the billing crisis.

The rollout of the new billing system, Sage Evolution, has been affected by system glitches which are seriously inconveniencing ratepayers.

Council decided to source a new software after it severed ties with South African company Quill Associates in March after the latter increased licence fees for its BIQ system.

Since then, ratepayers have been unable to both enquire account balances and receive bill statements.

The Sunday Mail witnessed long queues at some council offices in the capital as service was slow.

Harare Residents Trust (HRT) director Mr Precious Shumba said residents were worried about the absence of a credible billing system.

“We have realised that the city does not have a consolidated billing system. They are unable to access previous data from accounts. Late August, residents received bills that were exaggerated.

“This destroys any chances of financial recovery and eventually leads to the city failing to deliver. We continue the process of engaging them,” he said.

However, Mayor Gomba said the hiccups were part of teething problems that were not uncommon for new systems.

“We have a new system which was approved by Praz (Procurement Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe); it is called a CCG system and it complies with the Public Finance Management Act and has new ways of checking account balances that the previous system could not. We procured it from a local company, which is working with internationally recognised companies. The same system is also being used in Chitungwiza,” said Cllr Gomba.

“We are in transition; glitches happen. We have given the supplier up to the end of this month, when they have finished fully installing it, to see if it works well,” he said.

The Harare mayor said data was preserved during the transition from the BIQ system.

New Law On Occupational, Health and Safety To Be Enacted

Government seeks to enact the Occupational, Health and Safety Bill aimed at ensuring a safe, secure and healthy working environment in all sectors including agriculture and the informal sector.

The informal sector and other types of menial jobs including in agriculture are not covered by the country’s occupational health and safety policies because the work involved is not uniform.

Many injuries and deaths occur in these sectors hence the government is in the process of ensuring that safety and health standards are upheld in these sectors just like any other mainstream sector through the Occupational Safety and Health Bill.

This was revealed by the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare, Mr Simon Masanga on the sidelines of the NSSA Safety awards presentation ceremony in held recently in Harare.

“NSSA has what is called Vision Zero and this is aimed at ensuring that across all sectors we maintain zero injuries and deaths and the Occupational Safety and Health Bill compliments such a goal by including all previously excluded sectors such as agriculture,” said Mr Masanga.

Mr Masanga added that the Tripartite Negotiating Bill has already been signed into law and provides a legal framework for government, labour and business to negotiate, with a common ground in dealing with the economic challenges.

Various companies from different economic sector won accolades for their outstanding record in maintaining a safe, secure and healthy environment at their workplaces.

– state media

New Regulations For Presidential Aspirants

Aspirants who wish to land the country’s top job — that of President — will have to be nominated by at least 1 000 registered voters from the country’s 10 provinces and fork out more than the current $1 000 nomination fee.


This comes as Government moves to align local nomination processes with regional and international best practices, it has been learnt.


The overhaul is also expected to winnow out “chancers”.
Last year, 23 candidates successfully registered for the Presidential election, the largest number since 1980.


However, the large pool of candidates created a logistical nightmare for the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) in designing the ballot paper.


Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi told The Sunday Mail that the new regulations will ensure that only serious candidates participate.


“We are also looking at provisions that deal with nomination fees for Presidential candidates and that of people who nominate the President with a view of increasing them from 100 to maybe 1 000,” said Minister Ziyambi.


“We want to revise the fees to make sure that they are reasonable.
“As you saw, (in) the last election we had the largest pool of candidates in the history of the country. While we want to encourage participation, we also want to make sure that only serious candidates find their names on the ballot.”


Current regulations require candidates seeking to contest Presidential, Parliamentary and local council polls to submit their candidacy to one of several specially convened nomination courts across the country.State media

3 Coffins For 1 Man, Mugabe, Explanation

Following an indepth analysis article by a columnist Masimba Mavaza, sources have weighed into the Mugabe coffins mystery.

Although former President Robert Mugabe was buried last week, the story of his caskets has remained subject of much debate, adding  to the “controversy” surrounding his burial.

Many  believe his body was  changed into three caskets between his arrival in  Zimbabwe and burial.

A source who was in Singapore at the time of the death said there was nothing amiss on the change of the caskets. 

“When the former President died in Singapore, a casket was secured and that is the wooden one which everyone saw at Rufaro Stadium and at the State Funeral held in the National Sports Stadium.

“The confusion was that when that wooden casket arrived at the airport, it was wrapped in a brown hessian cloth as it had been carried among luggage from Singapore and the covering was meant to ensure it does not get damaged. This is very normal,” said the source.

Adding: “Further, it should be distinguished that the body came on board a charted private plane, hence the decision to place it in a casket.
:If it was a commercial plane maybe it would have been placed in the traditional air tray, which is a wood-bottom tray with a lid made of a wooden board. 

“When the body arrived at the airport, it was taken to One Commando Barracks where the hessian cloth was removed before the exposed brown wooden casket with independent side and front flap handles was taken to Cde Mugabe’s Borrowdale Brooke home.

“Everyone will agree that the programme from Wednesday to Saturday was packed and there had not been solid confirmation of the burial place, hence the continued use of the wooden casket.

“It was only placed into another casket on Monday morning by Doves undertakers before going to Zvimba.

“The casket that was in Zvimba is the same whose pictures circulated in the media when Julius Malema came. It is also the same that the former President has been buried in.”

In a terse statement after a church service for the late leader and before his burial, family spokesperson Mr Walter Chidhakwa said: “The journalists, we thank you for being here with us.

“Tell your story the way you want to tell it, but we are confident that that which we did will never be tainted by a wrong interpretation of the story.” 
According to national handling services, the process of preparing a body for a flight, in non-exceptional cases — is relatively straightforward.

It must be double-wrapped in a plastic, then packed into an air tray filled with cooling gel packs.

Typically, caskets are not used because there are high chances they might get damaged since they will be among other cargo during travel.
Aviation sources say caskets or coffins are usually provided by the funeral home on the receiving end of the flight.

The former President was buried in a centimetre-thick copper and steel, square-cornered casket.

The coffin also came with a 5mm thick inside glass compartment and airtight gasket, presumably meant to preserve the body.

The state owned Sunday Mail says the casket arrived into the country well before his death and has been in the custody of Doves Funeral Services, which at one time  kept it —locked — at its Harare Street and Kwame Nkrumah parlour.

According to sources, the automotive paint finish — with three layers of clear coat casket — is fitted with handles secured by inside reinforced metal strips.  It came with a three-way adjustable bed frame and mattress for both tilt and height adjustments. The casket’s interiors also include a 100 percent polyester cushioning and pillow.

A further search of similar caskets online showed that they are usually given a continuous welded bottom, including joints.
It is also fitted with a polypropylene-injected moulded gasket to ensure air tightness once closed.

The airtight casket keeps away insects, air or water and allows the body to decompose naturally.

Mystery, however, surrounds the whereabouts of the wooden casket that the body of the former revolutionary icon came in from Singapore

Macheso Targets International Market

SUNGURA maestro, Alick Macheso, is taking his Orchestra Mberikwazvo band management to another level.


The veteran musician has enlisted the services of Eirik Hoff Walmsness as the group’s international manager.


Walmsness is a versatile musician who is based in Trondheim, Norway.
The drummer, guitarist and vocalist is currently in the country for a three-week visit that ends this week.


This is not the Norwegian’s first visit. He frequently comes to Zimbabwe for a number of ventures, which include the ongoing recording of his debut sungura project. Macheso, also known as Baba Sharo, believes adding Walmsness to his management team will help boost his global visibility.


The “Charakupa” hit-maker has a healthy regional following. However, his presence overseas – like that of many Zimbabwean artistes – is confined mainly to the United Kingdom and Australia.


“We have big plans with Eirik (Walmsness). Zvemuno takagadzirisa (we have sorted the local market) and now need to solidify our brand beyond borders. Eirik is based in Europe and has a lot of connections in the showbiz that side, which we can take advantage of by working with him as our international manager,” said Baba Sharo.


He added: “The guy has natural love for sungura and our group Orchestra Mberikwazvo in particular. He likes African music and that has made it easy for us to work with him, in the process promoting culture exchange. My team has embraced him.”State media

Alick Macheso

Nakamba’s Aston Villa Run Riot

ON-FIRE Zimbabwe international midfielder Marvelous Nakamba made his fourth straight start for Aston Villa and impressed in front of Prince William as the Clarets beat Norwich 5-1 at Carrow Road to register their second win of the season yesterday.

The 25-year-old Nakamba once again relegated the highly rated Brazilian, Douglas Luiz to the bench, but the former Manchester City man came on late into the match and sealed the game with a fine strike.


Villa fan Prince William attended the clash with future King of England Prince George (6) and Princess Charlotte (4) and was captured by the cameras clapping hands as Aston Villa romped on to register one of their biggest Premiership victories on the road.State media

Passport Backlog Balloons To 370 000

THE backlog in the issuing of passports in the country has ballooned to 370 000 from around 340 000 last month as the Registrar-General’s Office is only able to process just 750 per day, an official has revealed.

Registrar-General Mr Clemence Masango told Sunday News on the sidelines of Civil Registration and Vital Statistic (CRVS) Day held in Bulawayo yesterday that lack of foreign currency remained the major challenge.

“The Department is currently hamstrung by the shortage of essential passport production materials which is imported and requires foreign currency and it is also public knowledge that foreign currency is scarce in the country and is affecting not only the department but many other sectors in the country. At the moment we are doing 750 passports a day and these are mainly on urgent basis and also on first come first serve and we have a backlog of over 370 000 passport applications,” he said.

Mr Masango acknowledged that the department needed to clear the backlog as soon as funding is availed.

“We are also aware that there is a backlog that we have to attend to and arrangements are underway that we get funds to get the materials to work on clearing the backlog so that we return our services back to normal.

We need to go back to what our charter says of providing urgent passports, 24 hour passports as the fastest, three days and one for four weeks.

We have not been able to do this because of unavailability of resources,” he said.State media

Masvingo Girls “Despise” Condoms

A health expert in Masvingo has raised a red flag over the behaviour of most sexually active girls amid reports that about 70 percent of young women prefer the morning-after-pill ahead of condoms.

In an interview last week, the Zimbabwe National Family Planning Council (ZNFPC) marketing officer, Mr Hebert Chikosi said research has revealed that during school days, most pharmacies in Masvingo run out of the morning-after-pill suggesting that sexually active girls preferred them in place of other methods.

He said the trend was worrying considering that the country was trying to eradicate new infections. Mr Chikosi also said during school and university days, health facilities have also recorded high incidents of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) thereby scuttling efforts of achieving zero infections by 2030.

“We are unfortunate here in Masvingo, as we have discovered that most young girls are shunning the use of condoms during intimacy.

They prefer the morning-after-pill and about 70 percent from the sample size we used are found on the wrong side. Youths are more worried about falling pregnant than contracting STIs which is a conduit to HIV infection.”
He said while the morning-after-pill help the girls against unwanted pregnancies, it was disastrous in terms of HIV prevention.

“We therefore encourage the sexually active youths to use condoms instead of the emergency contraceptive so that we can win the war against new infections, especially HIV.

Our condom champions distribute free condoms in colleges, public places such as bottle stores or beer halls, universities as well as hospitals. These condoms are for free that youths can get at zero cost.” State media

Will Mnangagwa Doctorate Help Zimbabweans In Any Way?

President Mnangagwa yesterday capped 2 243 graduates at Chinhoyi University of Technology (CUT) where he was also conferred with an honorary Doctorate Degree in Engineering, Sciences and Technology in recognition of his efforts to promote science and technology as key enablers of development.


In his acceptance speech, the President said science and technology fields had the potential to create jobs and improve people’s livelihoods.


“As I receive this prestigious award, allow me to acknowledge that engineering, sciences and technology are key in the developmental trajectory, modernisation and industrialisation of our great country.


“The transformation of these fields and associated milestones will undoubtedly have a profound effect on the achievement of sustainable economic development. Altering the types of jobs, the way people live, connect, communicate and transact,” President Mnangagwa said.


He urged institutions of higher learning to enhance capacities and competences in engineering, science, technology and innovation in line with the country’s development thrust.


“The CUT is one of those institutions in our country with the mandate to advance the development, design and utilisation of technologies.


“I recognise the strides that the institution continues to make in this regard. I am aware that some alumni of this university have gone on to develop ICT and engineering solutions which are now being used by various public entities,” he said.


The President said the Government will continue supporting the education model that emphasises innovation.State media

Emmerson Mnangagwa

Experts: ID Checks at ZRP Roadblocks Are Illegal

FULL TEXT: VERITAS

ID Checks at Roadblocks – Are they Legal?

ZRP COPS

For several days after the MDC-A attempted to hold a demonstration in Harare last month, the police mounted roadblocks along routes leading into the city centre [the CBD].  They stopped and searched commuter omnibuses and other vehicles and forced passengers without identity documents to disembark, leaving them to walk the rest of their journey.  A Member of Parliament raised the issue in the National Assembly, calling the conduct of the Police “unlawful”, and received the following response from the Minister of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs:

“Where there is a threat to the peaceful co-existence of members of the society, the police will use every necessary means that they have to ensure that there is peace, and that includes having roadblocks, ensuring that everyone who is in a commuter omnibus gets out and they search to ensure that there are no dangerous weapons that will get into the city centre.  So that is standard practice.”

Perhaps emboldened by the Minister’s support, the Police adopted the same tactics late last month when the MDC-A celebrated their 20th anniversary in Harare.  Again, they set up roadblocks, searched vehicles and demanded IDs from passengers.

The Minister was correct in saying that the Police are entitled to use “every necessary means that they have” to preserve peace, i.e. to prevent violent disorder.  But the “necessary means that they have” are those the law gives them:  the Police must not act unlawfully, and when the Minister went on to suggest that their conduct was lawful, he was with respect wrong.  In fact, the conduct of the Police violated the Constitution and the law in several respects.

Freedom of Movement

Section 66(2)(a) of the Constitution provides that:

“Every Zimbabwean citizen and everyone else who is legally in Zimbabwe has the right to … move freely within Zimbabwe.”

As long ago as 1997 our Supreme Court ruled that arbitrarily stopping either people or vehicles infringes the constitutional right to freedom of movement, though the court held that the random stopping of vehicles to check for vehicle defects could be regarded as a justifiable limitation if it was done for the purpose of ensuring safety on the roads.

Section 72(1)(a)(i) of the Road Traffic Act authorises the Police to stop vehicles, but they may do so only for the purposes specified in the Act, namely to check the vehicles and their equipment for compliance with the law and to ensure the vehicles are not overloaded.  This provision is probably constitutional, but there is no suggestion that the Police were checking for vehicle defects when they stopped vehicles and required passengers to identify themselves.  So the section cannot be used to justify the conduct of the Police.

A statute which the Police might more plausibly rely on for their actions is the Public Order and Security Act [POSA] — which is still in force, not yet having been replaced by the Maintenance of Peace and Order Bill [MOPO].  Section 34(2) of POSA states that the Police can set up roadblocks to stop and search vehicles and everyone in them, “in circumstances where there are reasonable grounds for believing that the search is in the interests of public safety, public order or public health”.  Another section of POSA, section 32(4)(d), permits the Police to require anyone stopped at a police roadblock to produce an identity document and, if they do not, to detain them until their identity is established.

These two sections of POSA, far-reaching as they seem to be, probably do not authorise the Police to stop and search all vehicles and to prevent passengers without IDs from continuing their journey.  Section 86 of the Constitution allows fundamental freedoms such as freedom of movement to be limited by a law which is “fair, reasonable, necessary and justifiable in a democratic society”, but the law cannot go so far as to remove the freedom altogether.  By ordering passengers without IDs to disembark from their vehicles the Police were denying many if not all of those passengers their right to travel to the Harare CBD.  That was not fair, reasonable, necessary or justifiable in a democratic society.

In any event, section 32(4)(d) of POSA does not permit the Police to order people without IDs to get out of their vehicles and proceed for the rest of their journeys on foot.  No law allows them to do that.

The action by the Police was clearly illegal.

The Right to Privacy

Another ground for regarding the Police action as illegal is that it infringed peoples’ right to privacy guaranteed by section 57 of the Constitution.  This right includes the right not to have one’s home, premises or property (including a vehicle) entered or searched without permission.  Zimbabwe, like other countries, accepts that there can be limitations on this right, though in our case any limitation must be “fair, reasonable, necessary and justifiable in a democratic society”.

We noted above that freedom of movement can be limited by a law which allows vehicles to be stopped so that they can be checked for vehicle defects and to ensure that their drivers are licensed to drive them.  The right to privacy can be limited for the same purpose, to search vehicles in order to see that they are roadworthy ‒ for example, to check that they are carrying a spare tyre.

The right to privacy can also be limited to allow the Police to search premises and vehicles if there are reasonable grounds for believing that the search will yield evidence of a crime — the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Act [CP&E Act] makes provision for this.  But neither the Constitution nor the CP&E Act allows the Police to stop and search vehicles on the off-chance that one or two of them may be carrying something that may be connected with a crime:  the Police must have a reasonable and prior ground for believing that an item of evidence concerning the commission of a known offence is likely to be in the particular vehicle they want to search.  The CP&E Act certainly does not allow random searches, and section 34(2) of POSA, if it is interpreted to  comply with the Constitution  – and the Constitution is supreme  – must be construed restrictively so as not to permit the Police to stop and search at random any vehicle and person at a roadblock.

Conclusion

Under section 219(1)(d) of the Constitution the Police are responsible for maintaining law and order in Zimbabwe.  In carrying out that responsibility they must comply with the law because they, like all other institutions of government, are subject to the Constitution and the law.  They must remember that their responsibility is not just to maintain order:  it is to maintain law and order.

Traditional Leader Fined For Driving Without Licence

CHIEF Dobola of Binga District has been fined $800 for negligence and driving without a licence after he crashed his newly Government issued Isuzu double cab pick-up truck last year.


Chief Dobola whose name is Edward Munkombwe (44) of Binga was on Tuesday convicted on his own plea of guilty to charges of “driving without a licence” and “negligent driving” by Hwange provincial magistrate Mr Gift Ntando Dube.


He was fined $400 for each charge and in addition was suspended from driving any class of vehicle for a month.


Prosecuting, Mr John Mutyakaviri said on 11 October 2018 at about 7am, Munkombwe was driving an unregistered Isuzu double cab pick-up along Tinde-Pashu Road with no passengers on board. The court heard that when he reached the 23km peg, he lost control resulting in the vehicle veering off the road and hitting a tree before overturning. Munkombwe sustained minor injuries and was ferried to Kamativi Clinic where he was treated and discharged.


The vehicle was damaged during the accident as its windscreen was shattered, had dents on the left side, passenger door and loading box. It was recommended that the vehicle be taken to VID Hwange for examination.


The State relied its case on particulars of negligence which include failing to keep the vehicle under proper control, failing to stop when accident was imminent and travelling at an excessive speed under the circumstances.State media

Kanu Blasts Nigerian Citizens Who Opted To Play For England

Nwankwo Kanu has told the Nigerian Football Federation (NFF) to move on from the disappointment of losing Chelsea stars Tammy Abraham and Fikayo Tomori to England.

The duo was named in the squad for the Euro 2020 qualifiers against the Czech Republic and Bulgaria later this month.

Kanu told AFP that Nigeria should “move on” and still had enough top players to cope with missing out on the two Premier League stars.

“That’s football and I think we have enough quality and we can win matches without them,” said the former Super Eagles skipper.

“We can’t continue to beg one player to play for us. Nigeria cannot beg, players have to beg Nigeria.”

The NFF had made efforts to lure Abraham to play for the Super Eagles. The 22-year-old is eligible through his Nigerian father.

In the past, Nigeria have convinced players like Victor Moses and Sone Aluko, who played for England at youth level, to represent the West African nation.Soccer24

Mushowani Ready To Take On Caps United

NEWBOYS Mushowani, who are unbeaten at their home ground this year, have dared giants CAPS United to brace for a big test on Sunday.


The two clash in a Castle Lager Premiership match at Trojan.
Makepekepe opened a three-point lead at the top of the table during the midweek following the vital win over Triangle.


Their new coach Darlington Dodo has silenced Doubting Thomases since he was elevated to replace Lloyd Chitembwe.


Dodo has so far added 10 points from a possible 15 in their fight for the championship.


And the wins in their last two league outings against Harare City and Triangle, who are led by former CAPS United coaches Chitembwe and Taurai Mangwiro, should have boosted confidence in the Green Machine family.


Players like Ronald Chitiyo are also beginning to get into the groove at this important juncture of the season.
However, Mushowani, who are unbeaten at home in six games, are looking to give the 2016 champions a good run for their money.


The hosts’ team manager, Takunda Mutandiri, believes the newboys have benefited from an army of home supporters drawn from across Mashonaland Central.


“The mood here is brilliant. Our supporters have been starved of Premiership football for a long time and the fact that it’s CAPS United who are coming has gotten everyone excited.


“These are some of the big teams which they usually don’t get the opportunity to watch, so we are expecting a good crowd. They are enjoying it.
“We haven’t lost a match at our home ground and I believe we are not going to lose one this season,” said Mutandiri.state

Italian Serie A Fixtures

ROME. — Antonio Conte warned Inter Milan were angry at their defeat to Barcelona and ready to fight to maintain their Italian Serie A football supremacy against his former club Juventus in this weekend’s top-of-the-table clash at the San Siro.

Italian Serie A Fixtures
Saturday : SPAL v Parma (3pm); Verona v Sampdoria (6pm); Genoa v AC Milan; Sassuolo v Atalanta (both 8:45pm).

Sunday : Fiorentina v Udinese (12:30pm); Atalanta v Lecce; Bologna v Lazio; AS Roma v Cagliari (3pm); Torino v Napoli (6pm); Inter Milan v Juventus (8:45pm). — AFP.

Agony For Zim Karateka As She Fails To Travel To Russia Due To Economic Crisis

IN what is a painful reality faced by Zimbabwean sports personalities, female karateka Grace Chirumanzu has failed to travel to Russia for the Sixth Kyokushin World Cup.

Chirumanzu, who is also the reigning Zimbabwe Sportswoman of the Year, was supposed to fight in the Under-65 kg category.

According to the draw released on Thursday, she was supposed to fight Anara Suyundukova from Khazakstan.

“The tatami has been laid in Russia for the 6th Kyokushin World Cup. The draw for the women’s U-65kg has been drawn with Zimbabwe‘s Sportswoman of the year set to face a fighter from Khazakstan. But Grace Chirumanzu is in Harare having failed to travel due to lack of funding,” Chirumanzu wrote on her Twitter account.

“Dream of becoming the first woman from Africa to be crowned World Champion have faced the sad reality that it’s not happening. Not because l gave a good fight & got defeated. But because l never showed up. Please get well soon Zimbabwe.”State media

Grace Chirumanzu

Passport Backlog Soars

By A Correspondent| The backlog in the issuing of passports in the country has ballooned to 370 000 from around 340 000 last month as the Registrar-General’s Office is only able to process just 750 per day, an official has revealed.

Registrar-General Mr Clemence Masango told the state media on the sidelines of Civil Registration and Vital Statistic (CRVS) Day held in Bulawayo that lack of foreign currency remained the major challenge.

“The Department is currently hamstrung by the shortage of essential passport production materials which is imported and requires foreign currency and it is also public knowledge that foreign currency is scarce in the country and is affecting not only the department but many other sectors in the country.

At the moment we are doing 750 passports a day and these are mainly on urgent basis and also on first come first serve and we have a backlog of over 370 000 passport applications,” he said. 

Mr Masango acknowledged that the department needed to clear the backlog as soon as funding is availed.

“We are also aware that there is a backlog that we have to attend to and arrangements are underway that we get funds to get the materials to work on clearing the backlog so that we return our services back to normal.

We need to go back to what our charter says of providing urgent passports, 24 hour passports as the fastest, three days and one for four weeks. We have not been able to do this because of unavailability of resources,” he said.

Asked on reports on pending increases in passport fees, Mr Masango said the department has not yet received the green light from the Government to do so. He said the problem of antiquated machinery has been eased following the acquisition of a US$600 000 machine to produce the passports.

Mr Masango said his office has also received numerous complaints from the public about the treatment they are getting from officials in the department. 

“It is unfortunate that there are members of the public who have not been well attended to as seen by the complaints that we get. It is Government policy that everybody must be served professionally, courteously and with respect. However, we do get individuals not living up to that expectation.

We currently have an ongoing public care and public customer handling internal refresher course to ensure that we maintain the standards expected by the public and Government to serve our public,” he assured.

Meanwhile, the Minister of Home Affairs and Cultural Heritage Ambassador Cain Mathema has stressed the need for all parents and guardians to register births for their children within the stipulated time in order to secure basic human rights to name, identity and nationality.

Speaking during the CVRS Day belated commemorations which were held for the first time in Zimbabwe, Ambassador Mathema said it was disturbing to note that many undocumented children were coming from South Africa.

The celebrations were held under the theme “Birth Certificate for All: a Fundamental for Protecting Human Rights and Promoting Inclusion”.

“It is sad to note that there are children born in South Africa and brought here with no birth certificates via illegal transporters and dumped without any particulars to elderly grandparents who will fend for them.

Those grandparents may not be able to secure those documents which is a problem when they want to start school,” he said.

-StateMedia

“Chamisa Won The 2018 Election”: Prof Jonathan Moyo

Chief Fined For Crashing New Gvnt Vehicle

By Own Correspondent| Chief Dobola of Binga District has been fined $800 for negligence and driving without a licence after he crashed his newly Government issued Isuzu double cab pick-up truck last year.

Chief Dobola whose name is Edward Munkombwe (44) of Binga was on Tuesday convicted on his own plea of guilty to charges of “driving without a licence” and “negligent driving” by Hwange provincial magistrate Mr Gift Ntando Dube.

He was fined $400 for each charge and in addition was suspended from driving any class of vehicle for a month.  Prosecuting, Mr John Mutyakaviri said on 11 October 2018 at about 7am, Munkombwe was driving an unregistered Isuzu double cab pick-up along Tinde-Pashu Road with no passengers on board. 

 The court heard that when he reached the 23km peg, he lost control resulting in the vehicle veering off the road and hitting a tree before overturning.

Munkombwe sustained minor injuries and was ferried to Kamativi Clinic where he was treated and discharged.  The vehicle was damaged during the accident as its windscreen was shattered, had dents on the left side, passenger door and loading box.

It was recommended that the vehicle be taken to VID Hwange for examination.
The State relied its case on particulars of negligence which include failing to keep the vehicle under proper control, failing to stop when accident was imminent and travelling at an excessive speed under the circumstances.

Last year the Government, distributed cars to chiefs as part of improving their mobility to execute traditional roles.

StateMedia

Matemadanda Embarassed During Consumer Situation Assessment

By A Correspondent| Zimbabwe War Vets deputy minister Victor Matemadanda was last week left embarrassed after a female Masvingo resident told him straight to his face that she had no under_wear ear as she could no longer afford it.

Matemadanda was in Masvingo to assess the consumer situation in face of rising prices fueled by high inflation.

Matemadanda embarked on a walk-about, talking to ordinary members of the public about their situation and asking them to tell him what they wanted him to report to President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

At Pick n Pay Supermarket, Matemadanda met his worst embarrassment when a woman told him she had no under_wear as it had become an unaffordable luxury for her.

“I am a domestic worker and I earn RTGS$100 which cannot buy me enough of the most basics of life. Prices of sugar and cooking oil have risen beyond my reach. Right now I don’t even have under_wear because I cannot afford it,” the woman said.

British Council Hauled To Court Over $11k Debt

By A Correspondent| The British Council has been dragged to court by African Refractory Industries (Pvt) Ltd for refusing to settle a US$11 708,28 debt.

African Refractory Industries (Pvt) Ltd trading as Yakani Construction alleges that it rendered construction services to the British Council as per the contract they had entered into in February.

The British Council, however, did not pay all the money required for the services rendered. Yakani Construction further alleges that the British Council paid US$62 671,44 for the services, leaving a balance of US$11 708,28. Part of the court papers reads:

The plaintiff has fully performed its obligations to defendant and in terms of the agreement of the parties rendered to defendant the invoice for the final payment in the sum of US$11 708, 28. The defendant has for no just cause refused, failed and neglected to pay to the plaintiff US$11 708  in respect of the final invoice despite demand being given.

-DailyNews

“ED A Bully”: Zhuwao

I write to you with a profound sense of shame proffering my most sincere apologies for the deplorable manner in which your kind gesture of honouring the legacy of the late revolutionary icon, President Robert Gabriel Mugabe has been maligned and abused by Emmerson Mnangagwa’s regime.

As a Zimbabwean, I feel obligated to apologise and take responsibility for the bad behaviour of Mnangagwa and his band since they are my compatriots.

The objective of the abuse and disparagement is to deflect attention from how Mnangagwa’s regime and its associated entities hounded and tormented President Mugabe into his death in exile.

Mnangagwa has tried to bully and threaten President Mugabe’s family into burying him at Heroes Acre.

He failed. After failing, Mnangagwa continues on a programme of retribution against President Mugabe’s widow and family. They have set illegal panners onto the family farms.

It is appalling that the Mnangagwa government owned and controlled Sunday Mail newspaper has been consistently abusing you for honouring the memory of President Mugabe. Mnangagwa’s media is pushing a blatantly false narrative that President Mugabe anointed Honourable Saviour Kasukuwere for president in a bid to downplay President Mugabe’s respect for democratically electing leaders.

These narratives are then taken on by state-run social media ghost accounts that seek to further undermine President Mugabe by stoking tribalism.

It is also unfortunate that some individuals have also given hostage to fortune by injudiciously seeking to publicise the so-called Zimbabwe Generation 40 political party as being associated with some of us who are labelled as G40 stalwarts.

Whilst I acknowledge that individuals have a right to harbouring and furthering their own personal political ambitions, I also have a right to dissociate myself from such ambitions as I hereby do.

Apart from which, I am still mourning and grieving for my uncle, President Robert Gabriel Mugabe, to engage myself in such political shenanigans.

Asante Sana. Iwe Neni Tine Basa. Umsebenzi lo Umkhulu.

Yours comradely, Patrick Zhuwao

LIVE: “Satanist” Fungai Maruta Strikes Again, Dupes Thousands In South Africa

By Own Correspondent| Barely a year after she was exposed, a self confessed UK based Satanist and a fraudster, Fungai Maruta has struck again.

Maruta threatens her victims saying she has satanic powers from a so called, “njuzu,” so the thing will retaliate should they report her.

The 40 year old Maruta, who last year swindled Zimbabweans in the UK more than a hundreds thousands pounds, has taken her trade to South Africa were scores are wailing after being duped in a similar pattern.

Maruta is notorious for editing financial documents one of which is a founding constitution booklet. ZimEye opens another whistleblowing series of programs and below is the account of the first victim. VIDEO LOADING BELOW ….

Customers Warned To Brace For Price Change At The Till

By Own Correspondent| Mahommed Mussa Wholesalers have warned customers that prices displayed on shelves might not reflect the correct prices.

This may suggest that prices on the shelves are meant to mislead or they change regularly that they no longer update them on a regular basis.

See the notice below:

Prices notice

Namibian Ruling Party Launches Election Manifesto

Windhoek – Namibia’s ruling party South West Africa People’s Organisation (SWAPO) launched its election manifesto on Saturday.

The launch in Outapi in northern Namibia signalled an all-out campaign for the ruling party in preparation for the forthcoming national election.

SWAPO promised to spearhead efforts on ways to economically empower young people, who are mostly unemployed and give preferential treatment to Namibian companies in the public procurement system.

SWAPO Secretary-General, Sophia Shaningwa, reiterated the need to fight corruption and increase the participation of women, youth and people with disabilities in leadership and decision-making positions.

SWAPO will be represented in the Nov. 27 elections by incumbent President Hage Geingob.

(Xinhua/NAN)

Fashion Shops Offer To Dress Job Sikhala

Fashion shops offer to dress Job Sikhala

SEVERAL clothing outlets are reportedly scrambling to dress Zengeza West legislator Job Sikhala following the circulation of pictures of him in a seemingly tiny waistcoat.

Wiwa, as the Zengeza West MP, is fondly known has became a social media sensation over the wardrobe malfunction, with fashion police “arresting and convicting” him of crimes.

“As it stands there are more than three clothing outlets that have approached me for fashion deals. I cannot name them until we conclude the deals. This is just popularity in a different way.”

While many saw the funny side of the pictures, this has come as a blessing in disguise for the legislator, who said he was not angered by the social media jokes as hard pressed Zimbabweans seek relief from their daily pressures.

“More than three clothing outlets have approached me for fashion deals. I cannot name them until we conclude the deals. This is just popularity in a different way. Unlike being popular for the wrong things such as corruption as with others this has resulted in a benefit for me,” he said.

Social media went into overdrive with jokes being made over the waistcoat, which some wits described as a waist trainer. Waist trainers are used to fight belly fat and are worn directly on the skin.

People mocked Sikhala, implying that he was wearing a waist trainer on top of a shirt. Marketers could not resist but capitalise on the frenzy to promote their products, with food outlet Mambos creating promotional material over it.

Social media was also quick to it with a Job Sikhala challenge which saw people sharing images in their waistcoats.

“Things are tough in the country and people are stressed and seeking relief. I’m glad the pictures brought some relief to people, escaping from their daily pressures arising from Zanu-PF’s failures,” he said.
– dailynews

Job Sikhala Says It Was Photoshop

Movement for Democratic Change deputy chairperson, Job Sikhala, is happy that social media was on fire Friday after he was photographed wearing a suite with a waist coat only covering his belly.

Sikhala says his wife bought the suite in Harare. “I bought it in town (Harare) … It was bought by my wife l think for about US$350,” said Sikhala, laughing his lungs out.

He is aware that social media was on fire with some people photo-shopping the picture in which he was captured with MDC spokesperson and a colleague, posing for a photo.

Sikhala said the waist coat, only covering his belly, was the work of a crafty individual in that particular picture.

“That one is photo-shopped. I did not have it (the waist coat when l took the photo) right now. Is this the way it looks? Can you see it now?” asked Sikhala, who was wearing the same suit while talking to reporters in Harare at a town hall organized by the Voice of America and Media Center on Friday.

He dismissed suggestions that he hid the waist coat after realizing that some people on social media were literally giving him fresh lessons on dressing in public.

But he appeared to be ready for the fun. “It’s good, it’s very good because, you know, l was the largest social media ‘trendier’ today in the whole world,” he said amid bouts of laughs and giggles, adding, “it’s good and nice.”

Some of the photo shopped images of the seemingly original photo circulating on social media, show him without the infamous waist coat, leaving his belly exposed and others are hilarious pieces being created by Zimbabweans.

Fuel Tanker Explodes In Sakubva

WORKERS and clients at Sakubva’s Green-market home industrial park were lucky to escape unhurt after an empty fuel tanker exploded on Sunday afternoon. The tanker was being welded in a backyard industrial hub.

Although it was empty, residual fuel and pressure built up from
the welding heat, resulting in the explosion. Manicaland assistant provincial police spokesperson Luxson Chananda could not give details but expressed concern at the unprofessional procedure.

“The incident is very disturbing and people should learn from it. “It’s not everything that can be dealt with in our backyard industries without risking people’s safety,” Chananda said. Witnesses said disaster was only averted because the area was not busy on the day.

The identity of the owners of the fuel tanker could not be established by the time of going to press.
– dailynews

ZANU PF Behind Machete Wielding Miners

Mashurugwi machete

NewsDay|The opposition MDC has alleged that warring machete-wielding artisanal miners in Mashonaland Central province are under Zanu PF control.

MDC’s provincial chairperson George Gwarada challenged a high-powered delegation of five Cabinet ministers which visited Mazowe and Eureka mines on Wednesday to physically inspect the state of the mines. The team comprised Winston Chitando (Mines), Fortune Chasi (Energy), Monica Mutsvangwa (Information), Kazembe Kazembe (ICT) and Monica Mavhunga (Mashonaland Central Provincial Affairs).

“We know that illegal miners who are causing terror in this province are under Zanu PF control,” he charged.

“They visited the homes of artisanal miners at Mazowe and Eureka, what for? Yet we all know that Zanu PF leaders are behind the machete-wielding gold panners?”

Mazowe Mine popularly known as Jumbo is now the hub for illegal miners amid reports that Zanu PF bigwigs were sponsoring their activities.

“It is now pay back time for President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s regime after removing former President Robert Mugabe. Surely, how can the police and the army fail to control artisanal miners who use machetes and concentrate on unarmed protesters,?” he asked.

“The reason is that some Zanu PF officials are sponsoring the illegal miners.”

He claimed that some Cabinet ministers, particularly from Midlands province were godfathers of the artisanal miners.

But Kazembe, who is Zanu PF the Mashonaland Central provincial chairperson said his party does not condone abuse of authority.

Kazembe recently led a stakeholders meeting in Glendale and Bindura after Zanu PF youths attacked panners popularly known as MaShurugwi resulting in the burning of two commuter omnibuses and damage of houses.

“If such cases are taking place, we ask those with information or evidence to report to the police. We also need to be wary of criminals who abuse names of senior party officials to instil fear in their victims,” he said.

Some of the artisanal miners who spoke to NewsDay, however, commended Mnangagwa for allowing them to mine, unlike his predecessor the late Mugabe who arrested them.

Meanwhile, war veterans in Guruve have been accused of using their district party vehicle to harass mine owners and demanding gold ore and money. Two suspected State operatives were also seen mobilising illegal miners who invaded Ashly Makara’s gold mine in Kachuta two months ago resulting in divisions reportedly arising between operatives in the President’s Office and the police in Guruve district.

Rogue police officers are also accused of illegally mining and accepting bribes to allow artisanal miners to mine in both Mazowe and Eureka.

Eleven police officers who were guarding Mazowe Mine were last month arrested on charges of murdering an artisanal miner after receiving US$120 in “protection fees” from the panners.

FULL TEXT: Zhuwao Apologizes To Malema On Behalf Of Mnangagwa

I write to you with a profound sense of shame proffering my most sincere apologies for the deplorable manner in which your kind gesture of honouring the legacy of the late revolutionary icon, President Robert Gabriel Mugabe has been maligned and abused by Emmerson Mnangagwa’s regime. As a Zimbabwean, I feel obligated to apologise and take responsibility for the bad behaviour of Mnangagwa and his band since they are my compatriots.

The objective of the abuse and disparagement is to deflect attention from how Mnangagwa’s regime and its associated entities hounded and tormented President Mugabe into his death in exile. Mnangagwa has tried to bully and threaten President Mugabe’s family into burying him at Heroes Acre. He failed. After failing, Mnangagwa continues on a programme of retribution against President Mugabe’s widow and family. They have set illegal panners onto the family farms.

It is appalling that the Mnangagwa government owned and controlled Sunday Mail newspaper has been consistently abusing you for honouring the memory of President Mugabe. Mnangagwa’s media is pushing a blatantly false narrative that President Mugabe anointed Honourable Saviour Kasukuwere for president in a bid to downplay President Mugabe’s respect for democratically electing leaders. These narratives are then taken on by state-run social media ghost accounts that seek to further undermine President Mugabe by stoking tribalism.

It is also unfortunate that some individuals have also given hostage to fortune by injudiciously seeking to publicise the so-called Zimbabwe Generation 40 political party as being associated with some of us who are labelled as G40 stalwarts. Whilst I acknowledge that individuals have a right to harbouring and furthering their own personal political ambitions, I also have a right to dissociate myself from such ambitions as I hereby do. Apart from which, I am still mourning and grieving for my uncle, President Robert Gabriel Mugabe, to engage myself in such political shenanigans.

Asante Sana. Iwe Neni Tine Basa. Umsebenzi lo Umkhulu.

Yours comradely, Patrick Zhuwao.

“MDC With No Eyes Supported ED’s Coup” – Double Jeopardy, Failing To See Being Led By The Blind

By Patrick Guramatunhu| “Rinemanyanga hariputirwi!” (The truth will always come out no matter how much one tries to conceal it!) so goes the Shona adage. After 20 years of blundering from pillar to post the truth is now coming that MDC is a party of breathtakingly corrupt and incompetent individuals. 

“Exclude me, I did not participate in that nonsense (support of the November 2017 coup). Firstly, being a scholar of history not as a lawyer alone, knowing well that where the military has taken a leading role in the changing of government, nowhere in Africa have soldiers led a democratic change,” remarked Job Sikhala, MDC Alliance deputy national chairperson.

“We knew we were going through a military coup and a military coup would only be supported by those people who did not have the eyes to see that we are being taken into a trap of a worse dictatorship.” 

It is interesting to note here that most MDC Alliance leaders including the late Morgan Tsvangirai and the current party leader Nelson Chamisa publicly and unreservedly supported the military coup. Of course, Sihkala is right; supporting the November 2017 coup was foolish because the coup was never going to bring about any meaningful democratic changes as events have since shown.

What was the blind as a mole MDC leaders hoping to achieve, one might well ask. 

Chamisa and Tsvangirai said they supported the coup because Mnangagwa, through his emissaries, had promised to replace the Mugabe regime with a National Transition Authority (NTA), in which MDC was to play a role, and to postpone the upcoming 2018 elections. The elections due in July 2018, were to be postponed to allow the NTA to implement the democratic reforms to ensure free, fair and credible elections, MDC argued. 

We all know that MDC leaders had failed to get even one reform implemented during the 2008 to 2013 GNU. Mugabe had bribed them with the trappings of high office, ministerial limos, very generous salaries and allowances, a US$4 million mansion for Tsvangirai, etc., etc. With their snouts in the feeding trough; MDC leaders completely forgot about implementing the reforms. 

MDC leaders failed to implement even one reform in five years. Not even one!

“We got in the inclusive government and just sat there, spent five years in there. We came out without doing anything,” Nelson Chamisa admitted in July this year.

Of course, Tsvangirai and company were going to get the same royal treatment of ministerial limos, generous salaries, etc. in the proposed NTA. One has to be really naive to believe the NTA would have implemented any meaningful reforms; Tsvangirai et al would have, once again, sat there, eat and did nothing else.

Indeed, if MDC leaders were truly interested in making sure the reforms were implemented BEFORE the elections, then why did the party participate in the 2018 elections knowing fully well that Mnangagwa had not implemented even one reform? 

Chamisa has often commented on how Tsvangirai “died a bitter man” because Mnangagwa did not keep his NTA promise. Even with the benefit of hindsight of the broken promise to have NTA and the broken promise of holding free, fair and credible July 2018 elections; he still fails to see  the folly of having trusted the Zanu PF dictatorship to deliver democratic change. 

Indeed, even now, MDC is still fighting for the NTA as a way out of the country’s worsening economic and political mess. Even now, with millions of Zimbabweans living in abject poverty, with all basic services such as supply of clean water and health care all but collapse and the nation at the edge of edge of the precipitous abyss, all MDC leaders care about is another chance to sit, eat and do nothing! 

Job Sikhala is spot on Mnangagwa has indeed “taken (the nation) into a trap of a worse (than the Mugabe) dictatorship” and MDC leaders too corrupt and incompetent to even see it! And to make matters worse, there are many Zimbabweans out there who still continue to trust MDC leaders to deliver free and fair elections and follow them blindly like sheep to the slaughter.

Go Back To Work On Monday Or We Deal With You, Minister Tells Doctors – Full Statement

Minister Obadiah Moyo

On 4 October 2019, 01 parties to the Health Service Bipartite Negotiating Panel (HSBNP, agreed to a 60% increase on Health Sector-Specific Allowances. However, the doctors’ representatives walked out on the negotiations as they preferred a higher percentage. The 60% increase was an improvement on the previous offer by Government of 30% which was rejected by the Health Apex Council.

The new allowance covers:-Night Duty Allowance, Nurse Managers Allowance, On-call allowance, Special Health Allowance and a Standby/ Callout Allowance.

The parties to the meeting also agreed on the Locum rates for Nurses and Paramedics to be reviewed from the current $4 to $16 per day hour; and from $6 to $24 per night hour, locum rates for Doctors were also reviewed from the current $7 to $28 per day hour; and from $10 to $40 per night hour.

The following were also reviewed in the manner prescribed below:-

• Initial Uniform Grant reviewed from $75 to $300.

• Uniform Maintenance Allowance reviewed from $75 to $300.

• Psychiatric Allowance reviewed from $20 to $100 per month.

• Out of Residence Allowance reviewed from $250 to $500 per month.

• Post basic Allowancereviewed from $70 to $150 per month, whilst Additional Post Basic Allowance would be increased from $10 to $25 per month for the first additional qualification.

Government has shown its sincerity by continuously engaging the health workers to address their challenges including implementing programmes that ensure they have the needed medicines and equipment to deliver medical care. Their remuneration packages have been reviewed consistently in the context of the obtaining economic climate. Government is therefore appalled that doctors have walked out from the negotiating table and from their patients who are in dire need of their care.

Government is grateful to those doctors who remained on their post of duty delivering care, saving lives and alleviating suffering. For sake of saving lives of the patients, we now call on all doctors (Ministry of Health and University Consultants) to report to their posts of duty at 0800 hours on Monday the 715 of October 2019. Those who fail to do so are reminded that they are in breach of their contracts of employment and will face disciplinary action.

Patients’ lives are paramount.

Statement by

Hon Dr 0. Moyo

Minister of Health & Child Care

Leo Mugabe Reacts To News Of Mugabe’s Other Child

Mugabe family

Leo Mugabe, the spokesperson of the family of the late former president of Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe has reportedly said that a number of people have come out alleging that they were children of Zimbabwe’s founding leader.

Speaking after one lady, Siphiwe, whom Mugabe reportedly produced with a lady only known as Gogo Mancube, has popped out, Leo said: We would not know what happened decades ago.

We getting a lot of people coming and saying ‘I am Mugabe’s child, my mother passed away’ and so forth. But as family, we are not buying into all that. All these admissions should have been made when he was still alive.

Zim Morning Post reports that a close member of the Mugabe family revealed that Mugabe was in a relationship with Gogo Mancube whom he promised to marry. He, however, would later marry Sally. The source reportedly said:

Gogo maNcube relocated to Canada with her daughter, Siphiwe, They have been living there ever since. Siphiwe now has a family of her own. On Siphiwe’s wedding, Mugabe sent a gift through his late sister Sabina, but that gift was rejected by Gogo maNcube.

Zim Morning Post further reports that the family in Canada extended their condolences to the Mugabe family through a letter they sent.

Source – Zim Post

FULL TEXT: RBZ Ends USD Withdrawal In Zimbabwe

In cases where the Exchange Control Unit of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe has approved in writing the payment of salaries for a company/institution’s employees in USD, the following terms and conditions must be strictly adhered to;

• Funds should be transferred to individual NOSTRO FCAs for employees.

• There shall be no cash withdrawals from these particular accounts funded under this arrangement. However, should there be a genuine need for cash to be withdrawn from the accounts, specific applications must be made to the Reserve Bank and supported by letters written by the accountholders detailing the reasons and circumstances surrounding such requests. The absence of cash withdrawal facilities is also extended to offshore travellers who must load their MasterCard prior to departure.

• Where an account holder intends to conduct domestic transactions, such shall be done in line with SI 142 of 2019 where all such transactions should be done in local currency (for domestic transactions, funds in the accounts should be liquidated at the prevailing exchange rate)

• Foreign currency funds in these accounts may, however he used to settle bona fide foreign payments wherein the bank shall ensure that goods and services paid for are fully accounted for through submission of relevant documentation to be scrutinized and approved by either the Branch Operations Manager or Branch Manager who must annotate FOREIGN PAYMENT FROM THE NOSTRO FCA ACCOUNT APPROVED BY ME, record the full name, date, sign and quote the signing number and such documentation must be filed in the Exchange Control file and retained as an auditable item.

• Such foreign payments shall not include offshore investments or transfer to offshore accounts as well as domestic inter-FCA transfers.

• Branches must maintain a register for tracking the funds in the individual NOSTRO accounts and MasterCard to curb abuse and facilitate liquidation after the 30 day period. Prior to processing transactions for this category of account holders, a statement enquiry (operating account and MasterCard) to check and ensure that the transaction is within the limit of the amount authorized as per salary proceeds credited and that the MasterCard has not been reloaded from another branch.

• Any unutilized balances in the individual NOSTRO FCAs shall be compulsorily liquidated after thirty (30) days from date of salary payment at the prevailing interbank market rate. The onus is on the administering branch to ensure full compliance with the conditions of the RBZ approval, otherwise, we risk being fined which regrettably is unacceptable.

Please be guided accordingly and ensure there is strict adherence to the above requirements at all times.

Distributed to: Branches / Departments/ Divisions/Units By • Group Marketing Division

Fuel Tanker Explodes In Sakubva, Mutare

By A Correspondent| Workers and clients at Sakubva’s Green-market home industrial park were lucky to escape unhurt after an empty fuel tanker exploded.

The incident, which occurred on Sunday happened when the tanker was being welded in a backyard industrial hub.

Although it was empty, residual fuel and pressure built up from the welding heat, resulting in the explosion.

Manicaland assistant provincial police spokesperson Luxson Chananda could not give details but expressed concern at the unprofessional procedure.

“The incident is very disturbing and people should learn from it. It’s not everything that can be dealt with in our backyard industries without risking people’s safety,” Chananda said.

Witnesses said disaster was only averted because the area was not busy on the day.

The identity of the owners of the fuel tanker could not be established by the time of going to press.

– dailynews