By A Correspondent- IN a typical tit-for-tat fashion, a seemingly scorned man revealed details of his ex-lover’s drug addiction claiming she was a “serial boozer” who was apparently being controlled by alcohol.
Mike Ndabenkulu Khumalo from Bulawayo’s Gwabalanda suburb claimed his ex-lover Jolyn Sibanda became violent whenever she got wasted.
Most upsetting of all, Khumalo said Sibanda was also addicted to marijuana. Khumalo decided to shame his ex-lover after she approached the court seeking a protection order against him claiming he was abusing her and threatening her with death.
“I was in a relationship with Mike Ndabenkulu Khumalo for the past five-and-a-half years. We separated after he became violent and is always threatening me with death. He beats me up and constantly comes to our home at around 2am heavily intoxicated and in the process he will be insulting me.
“My elder brother once warned him not to come to our house after 9pm but he keeps on coming at odd hours. This disturbs my peace and that of the tenants and neighbours.
This is also causing so much discomfort and I am now even afraid to remain alone at home or go to the shops whenever he is there. He has also threatened to beat me up before he flees to South Africa,” grumbled Sibanda.
Khumalo didn’t take the allegations lightly and he decided to shame Sibanda saying she was an alcoholic and drug addict.
He revealed her excessive drinking habits saying she wakes up as early as 5am to drink beer and smoke dagga.
“She is a drunkard and whenever she is drunk she becomes violent. She wakes up as early as 5am to drink and smoke dagga.
She is being ill-influenced by her friends to turn against me. We are always engaging in fist fights because of her excessive drinking,” said Khumalo.
His defence, didn’t however, court the sympathy of the presiding magistrate Rachael Mukanga who sternly ordered him not to verbally, emotionally and physically abuse his ex-lover, or threaten her in any way.-B Metro
Several times l have received threats from @mdczimbabwe folks. I always tell them that we know more than they do. Denzel Zibhodha, a CIO, was Tsvangirai's logistics man. Now, as we speak, MDC leadership has more than 6 of our people. We have them by the balls, idzungu chete. pic.twitter.com/y9NQSserNN
By A Correspondent- Gospel songbird Olinda Marowa and one of South Africa’s top artistes Deborah Fraser are currently working together on a new track, Mweya Mutsvene, which is set to be recorded this week.
Marowa — renowned for tracks such as Ndichengetei and Ndinouya Baba — told NewsDay Life & Style at the weekend that she was excited about the collaboration, especially because Frazer was her role model.
She confirmed that she would be travelling to South Africa for the recording to be done by top local producer Lyton Ngolomi and another South African producer.
“I am having a collaboration with Deborah Frazer and we are set to record the song sometime next week in South Africa. We will have two producers on it, Lyton Ngolomi and Deborah Fraser’s producer in South Africa,” she said.
“We met in the music circles and it has been my wish to collaborate with her since I love her music so much.”
Marowa said her deep admiration for Fraser’s work saw her doing a cover for her song, Hallelujah, adding that she believed working with the South African would give her own music new depth.
“I remember, at one point, I did a cover for her song Hallelujah on my first album, Nyasha, and it was received very well by people. She is an icon in the gospel music fraternity and collaborating with her will bring a lot of depth in my music and widen my listenership as well,” she said.
The gospel star who is known for her charismatic stage performances and has collaborated with some of the country’s best musicians, said that she expected to learn a lot from Fraser.
“To me, it’s really a priviledge. I have staged shows with South Africa’s queen of gospel music, Rebecca Malope, twice in 2009 and 2016, respectively and now collaborating with mum Frazer is a move from glory to glory,” she said.
She said the new song would be a teaser for her forthcoming album that would be released later this year, alongside a string of videos.
Marowa said she was set to embark on massive online marketing and international tours as a way of introducing the new album, while marketing her previous works.-Newsday
The irony of election politics is that regardless of the evidence to the contrary, election billboards remain in place continuously telling their lies! As the line goes, I don't approve of political jokes, I have seen too many of them get elected. 2023 will have the same message. pic.twitter.com/Q9TmzB0Vyd
By Own Correspondent- Government says it no longer has pressure to borrow on the local market after it repaid in excess of $1,5 billion of its domestic debt, a Treasury official has said.
Ministry of finance permanent secretary George Guvamatanga told a recent business meeting that government was liquid and had only issued around $300 million treasury bills between September last year to July 2019,
According to the 2019 National Budget, the country’s domestic debt stood at $9,6 billion at the time of the statement, and the total debt stood at $17,2 billion as at September 2018.
“From September 2018 to July 3, 2019, we have repaid over $1,5 billion of domestic debt predominantly in treasury bills. We have only issued just below $300 million of treasury bills.
So we have reduced the extent of our borrowing as government from the domestic market. At any given time these days government sits on credit balances. Not only credit balance on RTGS, my accountant general will tell you that we have credit balances in US dollars. And this is completely different from where we were in 2008,” Guvamatanga said.
He said there was no fear of the repeat of 2008 era of hyperinflation as government was carefully monitoring printing of money.
“This is a very liquid government. With no pressure whatsoever to borrow from the market (there is) no pressure to create money. So on a monthly basis we are paying government salaries which are an excess of $400 million from credit balances.
We don’t have to come to the market; we don’t have to go the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe because the funding is now available. What created the challenges we had in 2008 was money (creation), so where we are today is completely different from where we were in 2008 because government is not printing money,” he said.
About $10 billion is estimated to be in circulation.
Guvamatanga said government was living within its means.
“A surplus for government is just like your gross profit in business. So you cannot say that you cannot record a gross profit because you have a debt. So even if you are borrowing in your business, are you not recording a profit in your business? You are recording profit.
So we do acknowledge that as government we do have debt and we owe money. But a surplus simply means that within our revenues that we are receiving, vis a vis our expenditure — the recurrent expenditure, we are remaining with a balance, that has never happened in this country.”
“That’s a good starting point because when you have a surplus it means that there is no recourse to the market or to inflationary funding mechanism for government,” he said.-Newsday
By A Correspondent- Former Zanu Pf stalwart who is now a staunch supporter of the opposition MDC, Shadreck Mashayamombe said heavily armed police raided his Marondera plot asking for MDC t- shirts.
Mashayamombe said:
Heavily armed state security agents stormed my plot in Marondera asking for MDC-Alliance T-shirts.
— Hon.mashayamombeS (@mashayamombe_s) July 5, 2019
By Own Correspondent- Former Prosecutor-General Johannes Tomana’s return to private practice hangs in the balance two years after his sacking, amid reports that the Law Society of Zimbabwe (LSZ) is unwilling to re-admit him citing that he is not “fit and proper” to practise as a lawyer.
Mr Tomana was fired in June 2017, for misconduct and incompetence after a tribunal set by former president Robert Mugabe to probe him, recommended his dismissal.
His dismissal was announced in a General Notice No. 292 of 2017 published in the Government Gazette on June 9, 2017, which said the former president had acted on the tribunal’s recommendations.
Two years after he was sent packing from the highly esteemed PG’s Office, Mr Tomana is still fighting to return to his roots.
Unimpeachable sources close to Mr Tomana’s matter, told The Herald that the outcome of the tribunal was haunting him.
The source said: “He cannot come back now because the regulator of the profession is demanding that he presents to the law society council findings of the tribunal that led to his sacking before he is re-admitted.
“The society wants to study the tribunal’s recommendations first to make a proper assessment on his suitability before he returns to the profession.”
However, when contacted for comment, LSZ president Mr Thandaza Masiye Moyo was diplomatic in his response.
He said Mr Tomana has never requested to be re-admitted to the LSZ because he remains in the register of the legal practitioners of this country.
“The only thing is that when you leave the practice and you go elsewhere when you come back, there are certain processes that have to be followed,” he said.
“Council has to consider certain issues relating to where you were and how you were performing. What I can say for now is that the council is seized with the considerations and it has not made any deliberation.”-StateMedia
By A Correspondent- Junior doctors at Mpilo are said to be working about 130 hours a week instead of the 56 hours prescribed in their contracts.
In response to questions, the hospital’s clinical director Dr Solwayo Ngwenya said the shortages were also affecting the school of medicine as students have no one to teach and monitor them.
“We urgently need additional 44 junior doctors and 20 specialists for us to be able to provide quality health services. The staff complement we have at the moment is failing to cope, thereby compromising service delivery,” said Dr Ngwenya.
He said due to shortage of specialists, junior doctors were not being supervised thereby compromising their training. Dr Ngwenya said the hospital has been operating without enough specialist doctors for years and there was therefore urgent need to address the anomaly.
“The hospital is running with a handful of specialists which has greatly compromised our service delivery. We would do better with at least 20 additional specialists,” said Dr Ngwenya. In a letter addressed to Health and Child Care Minister Dr Obadiah Moyo last month, junior doctors at Mpilo Central Hospital said they could not continue working 130 hours per week.
Their representative Dr Mthabisi Bhebhe said the hospital could not be run by a few junior doctors with no supervision or assistance from seniors as that compromises service delivery.
Dr Bhebhe said no junior doctor should be in the casualty ward and doing calls alone more than twice a week. “The Ministry of Health must take the health of the people in this region seriously by immediately deploying the remaining 60 junior doctors who have just completed their studies.
“These measures must bring an end to the situation whereby surgery junior doctors are made to do calls every single day while their medicine counterparts are made to manage the whole casualty alone without supervision.”
Government is ready to raise civil servants’ pay for the second time in three months because incomes have been eroded by soaring inflation, Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube said on Monday, after a labour group threatened protests.
Zimbabweans are angry as year-on-year inflation of around 100 percent has eaten the value of their wages and savings, recalling the horrors of the hyperinflation era in 2008.
The southern African nation is grappling with a severe shortage of US dollars, fuel, bread, medicines and 17-hour daily power cuts, which have forced businesses to use expensive diesel generators.
Currency reforms introduced last month to ban the use of foreign currencies and make the interim RTGS currency the sole legal tender have done little to instil confidence that people’s living standards will improve soon under President Emmerson Mnangagwa, who came to power after Robert Mugabe was removed in a 2017 coup.
“I have a (wage increase) figure already, and I am just waiting to hear from the unions. We will be meeting them tomorrow to hear their figures,” Ncube told a meeting with local businesses in Harare.
Ncube said the government’s budget was in surplus for the first 6 months of the year.
The lowest paid public sector worker earns 430 Zimbabwe dollars (R700), which unions say has been hit by inflation of 97.85% in May. A union official said a meeting would be held later on Monday to agree a position that they will present to the government on Tuesday.
As inflation soared, the government hiked the overnight interest rate to 50% last month and Ncube on Monday said the central bank wouldn’t hesitate to raise rates again to deal with people speculating on the value of the local currency.
The Zimbabwe dollar was trading at 8.86 to the greenback on the official interbank market, bringing its total losses to 27% since June 24 when the government ended dollarisation. On the black market the unit was trading at 10.5 to the dollar.
Central bank Governor John Mangudya told the same event that Zimbabwean individuals and companies held around $1 billion in foreign-currency accounts, around three months’ import cover.
The Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions threatened “mass action” last month after the government made the RTGS the sole legal tender and renamed it the Zimbabwe dollar.
At least three people have gone to court to challenge the government’s move but Ncube said he was “very prepared for the fight” in court.
Patrick Chivaura, acting CEO of state power utility ZESA Holdings, told the same meeting that the end of dollarisation was hurting its ability to deliver power because mines could no longer pay it in US dollars.
ZESA needs $14 million for monthly electricity imports from the regional power market, Chivaura added.Reuters
THERE is a vernacular saying that advises us that: Akuruma nzeve ndewako.
In simple English, this means whoever gives you friendly advice is on your side. And when a whole Head of State takes time to advise his counterpart, it means he is very well meaning and wishes the best for his friend.
So our President, on one of his many sojourns to foreign lands, was recently told by Rwandan President Paul Kagame that:
“You need to work hard to change the perception. You can’t bribe your way through. You can’t just sweet-talk some people and think, even if they say ‘ok, we agree with you’, things will be fine, no! You keep doing your best. The way people feel about how you govern will always come out and before you even convince anybody from outside, so that they don’t have wrong perception about you, convince your own people. Make sure they are with you.
Concentrate there on making sure your people are involved, they are benefitting and they can themselves push back on this story of wrong perception. That means it must be built on tangible things. If the country is hungry, if people have nothing to eat, they will tell people that they have nothing to eat.”
Kagame could not have said it any better because many a time, some of us have been labelled as anti to President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s drive to make his new dispensation work.
We are very grateful that at least one of our very few well-meaning brothers on the continent has been strong enough to tell Mnangagwa what we have been telling him back here at home.
Critical for Mnangagwa is for him to first convince his own people on the issue of his legitimacy, which half of those who voted in the last election in 2018 are disputing.
Instead of engaging those who are disputing his electoral victory, Mnangagwa has chosen to meet with inconsequential political figures who agree with his victory or seeking political relevance after a dismal performance at the polls. Many feel that Mnangagwa has too much pride, too much for his own good.
The second critical issue that Mnangagwa needs to sincerely talk to his people about is Gukurahundi, a phantom from the past which is currently threatening to divide the country in half because his efforts to clear this dark past have not been very convincing to say the least.
People from the Midlands and Matabeleland areas are bitter from the scars of the past and are not convinced that efforts made so far to erase that past blemish are sincere. And linked to these issues are the human rights abuse accusations that attracted sanctions the country is presently struggling to shake off.
We feel these are some of the main issues, and of course corruption, that Mnangagwa has been avoiding and skirting around that he needs to talk about to his fellow countryman because, as Kagame aptly put it, no amount of sweet-talking the outside world or strongman tactics to cow Zimbabweans into silent acquiescence will make his rule pleasant and acceptable.
Zimbabwe Independent|After weeding out his new rivals — who brought him to power — in the security sector, President Emmerson Mnangagwa has now shifted the purges to Zanu PF, targeting the ruling party’s heavyweights seen as a threat to his shaky grip on power, insiders said this week.
Zanu PF secretary for administration Obert Mpofu and Speaker of the National Assembly Jacob Mudenda — who both played decisive roles in the toppling of former president Robert Mugabe, paving the way for mnangagwa’s rise during the military coup in November 2017 — have emerged as Mnangagwa’s new targets, sources said.
Zanu PF Youth League leaders on June 24 accused 15 people and officials, including the governor of the central bank, cabinet ministers and business leaders, of running illegal foreign currency networks.
The party youths, led by deputy secretary Lewis Matutu, claimed the officials were running fuel and foreign currency cartels that were bleeding the economy.
Zanu PF insiders, however, said this week the issue was not about fighting corruption, but politics and factionalism, as well as personal vendettas, with some of the accused being collateral damage.
“Since after the general elections last year, Mnangagwa has been purging those he no longer trusts and wants in the security forces. He started with the CIO (Central Intelligence Organisation), then police and later the military,” a senior party official said. “Now he has extended the purges to the party. Mpofu, who is the new centre of power at the party headquarters, and Mudenda, as head of the legislature, hence another centre of power as well, especially if Mnangagwa’s impeachment comes, are now targeted. Those officials and former ministers now stationed at the (party) HQ (headquarters) are led by Mpofu and have become a force of resistance to Mnangagwa’s rule. That is why they are opposed to his right-hand minister, Mthuli Ncube’s austerity measures.
“At the legislature, headed by Mudenda, who is not happy that he has not been rewarded after playing a key role in Mugabe’s removal, MPs have also expressed displeasure before the president in a meeting last month complaining about Ncube’s policies and programmes, and, of course, by extension the President’s leadership as well. Most of these officials are seen as supporters or sympathisers by default of (co-Vice-President Constantino) Chiwenga, who is locked in a power struggle with ED (Mnangagwa).”
Another official said to prove that the Zanu PF Youth League’s anti-corruption list and crusade was a political ploy, those youths held a meeting with a Mnangagwa confidant just before their press conference on June 24.
“Before the press conference, the youths met a person very close to the President to discuss the issue,” the source said. “When the politburo meeting came the following day, Mnangagwa pretended he had nothing to do with the youths, he in fact chided them for acting unprocedurally, but went on to say their allegations must be investigated. In the end, he couldn’t hide his hand behind the plot.”
Sources said just before the politburo meeting on June 27, Mnangagwa passed through Mpofu’s Zanu PF HQ office and strategically distanced himself from the youths, claiming they were targeting Mpofu, then co-Vice-President Kembo Mohadi and eventually himself. Mpofu initially seemed to believe it until he was advised to ‘stop being naïve’. He was told Mnangagwa had a hand it in, but was playing Mugabe’s divide-and-rule tactics and he then changed his mind.”
Mpofu chaired a critical Zanu PF central committee meeting which suspended Mugabe at the height of the coup on November 20, 2017. The same meeting also nullified Mnangagwa’s earlier expulsion from the party before elevating him to the position of acting president and first secretary of Zanu PF. The following day, on November 21, Mudenda presided over a motion by parliament to impeach Mugabe.
However, Mpofu and Mudenda have found themselves as targets of Zanu PF youths who have accused them of corruption.
Insiders say the youths are acting as Mnangagwa’s political proxies.
Senior Zanu PF officials told the Zimbabwe Independent in off-the-record briefings this week Mpofu was being targeted because he had emerged as a new centre of power at the party’s national headquarters, a towering structure located on the western edge of Harare’s central business district where he has literally been confined after he lost his long-held ministerial position in Mnangagwa’s first post-election government.
The sources also said Mpofu had become the rallying point for fellow party bigwigs disgruntled after losing their cabinet posts, along with concomitant benefits and other trappings of power. They are said to be fending for themselves now, with some of them reportedly living from hand-to-mouth.
Mpofu has, in addition, reportedly become the rallying point as he is seen filling the vacant point left by Chiwenga who is currently sidelined by long illness.
Mnangagwa has an uneasy relationship with Chiwenga whose political manoeuvres since the coup that toppled Mugabe suggest he harbours presidential ambitions.
Chiwenga, who was commander of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces, orchestrated the coup which brought Mnangagwa into power. The two erstwhile allies have, however, reportedly fallen out because of the former’s presidential ambitions.
Mnangagwa, who now faces multiple centres of internal resistance, is said to be reeling under siege and has now surrounded himself with what Zanu PF insiders described as “a small clique of political newcomers” as a political buffer. The old guard, now coalescing under Mpofu, is now seen as a dangerous hostile force.
Party sources further said Mnangagwa was eager to get rid of Mpofu whom he, despite playing a starring role in his elevation into power, has always seen as an ally of convenience.
The principal source of mistrust, insiders said, is that Mpofu derailed Mnangagwa’s failed political rise bid in 2004 by leaking critical information to Mugabe about what came to be known as the Tsholotsho Declaration.
Following the youths’ outbursts, the Zanu PF politburo last week resolved to set up a commission on inquiry to probe the allegations.
The Independent understands the commission, which will be chaired by a prominent Harare-based female lawyer, may be announced today. It will rely on dossiers and unexplained wealth order legislation to investigate the corruption allegations.
Sources said some officials like Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe governor John Mangudya, who is targeted over alleged black market activities by central bank executives, are “collateral damage”. They are also caught up in internal bureaucratic fights.
According to the sources, Mangudya is being accused of corruption by association for allegedly protecting four of the apex bank’s managers; Mirirai Chiremba, Norman Mataruka, Gresham Muradzikwa and Azvinandawa Saburi, once targeted by former chairperson of the Finance and Economic Development Communication Taskforce Acie Lumumba.
However, a source said Mangudya’s targeting had rattled the financial system, with government books and transactions nearly flagged for scrutiny and restrictions internationally. But due to his clarifications and international networks, the issue was avoided, a source said. Mangudya has taken the corruption matter to his lawyers.
Zanu PF spokesman Simon Khaya Moyo said it was up to Mnangagwa to decide on the date and composition of the commission.
“It entirely up to the president to decide when he will set up the commission, so I can’t tell you the date. What I can however tell you is that it is going to be an independent commission,” he said.
Zanu PF sources said the issue is likely to open a Pandora’s box of internal power struggles, factionalism and witch-hunting that may further divide the already fragmented party.
We are going to besiege the Office of the Registrar General, one Clemence Masango, demanding that he give the people of Zimbabwe their passports when needed and that he stops immediately this corrupt practice of nocturnally giving passports to ZANU PF supporters and officials alone.
A passport is a human right and denying me a passport is also denying me my freedom of movement, association, conscience, information, right to health, right to education, right to food (which is in short supply thanks to Command Agriculture) and many other rights as enshrined in our national Constitution and International Law.
Emmerson Mnangagwa and his government are Out of Order on this and we shall rise on a Point of Order declaring this withdrawal of our basic human right unconstitutional, undemocratic, machiavellian, illegal, inhuman, satanic and criminal.
We shall use all our might to refuse to be reduced to the status of territories under organizations like Boko Haram, Hamas or Al Quaeda Netwwork who cannot issue travel documents because they are not recognigsed by the international community.
You can set your man to kill us Mr Mnangagwa but start counting down, we are coming and it shall be eternally on record that you murdered us as we demanded only passports. Get your bullets ready.
You have reduced us to a level of your captives and we have had enough of this bullshit. We will be coming from all over Zimbabwe. CIOs here please take this to the President and tell him Zimbabweans are saying ‘we are not your chickens’.
Mobilization for this point of national action is gathering momentum.
State Media|ALLIED Timbers Zimbabwe is seeking to recover $10 million from its former chief executive officer, Joseph Kanyekanye, which was lost through unlawful hefty discounts to selected customers, unauthorised allowances and diverting millions of dollars meant for payment of Value Added Tax (VAT) to other projects.
The development is a new strategy that is now being used by parastatals for employees whose actions would have caused loss of public funds.
Criminal charges in such cases involving public funds, are preferred, but separate civil proceedings helps recover lost public funds.
A recent audit report by KPMG, which is yet to be tabled in Parliament, shows that Allied Timbers owes the State $3 103 018 in unpaid VAT in respect of contract milling arrangements that were never accounted for.
Allegations are that Kanyekanye’s actions subjected Allied Timbers to tax liabilities, but the said milling contract arrangements were never accounted for.
He also stands accused of unlawfully spending US$14 007 on buying himself a Samsung tablet, paying himself unauthorised allowances for trips to South Africa and Botswana, paying his children’s school and examination fees without approval and encashing his leave days on his own.
Kanyekanye, according to the report, allegedly caused financial prejudice to the parastatal to the tune of US$2 765 892 through making unauthorised discounts to customers on the company’s timber.
Allied Timbers also lost US$4 972 892 through failure by Kanyekanye to acquit CD1 forms in respect of timber exports, thereby exposing the company to unnecessary tax liability.
To that end, Allied Timbers, through Harare lawyer Mr Caleb Mucheche of Caleb Mucheche & Partners, issued summons at the High Court claiming $10 million plus interest. Interest, according to the summons, should be paid at the prescribed rate of 5 percent per annum.
Allied Timbers is also claiming costs of the suit on a legal practitioner-client scale.
According to the plaintiff’s declaration, Kanyekanye during his tenure as chief executive officer, conducted business with negligence and caused financial loss the company.
“The defendant conducted the business of the plaintiff with gross negligence and gross incompetence in breach of the express and implied terms of his contract of employment coupled with his common law fiduciary duties and managing director-chief executive officer thus causing financial prejudice to the company and acting contrary to the best interests of the plaintiff,” reads the declaration.
Kanyekanye, according to the parastatal, should pay for the loss of public funds.
“The defendant’s wrongful conduct or omissions led to both financial loss to the plaintiff and loss of huge sums of public funds, the latter owing to the nature of the plaintiff as a parastatal,” read the papers.
The company claims it was put on an unnecessary expense in paying lawyers for the litigation, the call for an order for costs on a punitive scale.
Kanyekanye left Allied Timbers in 2015, after agreeing on mutual separation with the board.
Prior to the termination of his contract, Kanyekanye was on suspension after the board raised several charges of misconduct against him. The suspension was meant to facilitate investigations into his conduct which bordered on corruption, failure to observe operating procedures and gross insubordination.
State Media |PARLIAMENT has welcomed the gazetting of the Freedom of Information Bill as a positive step towards fulfilment of the country’s aspirations for a vibrant media industry and entrenchment of democracy.
The Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Information, Media and Broadcasting Services, which toured Nyaminyami radio station in Kariba yesterday, indicated its intention to help steer the process towards an ideal law for the sector.
Government on Friday gazetted the Freedom of Information Bill as one of several Bills that are set to change the media industry and expunge some restrictive provisions which are said to have been stifling development and operations in the sector.
Speaking during a tour of Nyaminyami FM radio station in Kariba, committee chairperson Mr Prince Sibanda said the Bill would be thoroughly scrutinised before being taken to the people for their input.
“We are sitting down as a committee and in the next week we are going for a workshop where we are going to go through the Bill after getting some analysts and legal practitioners to unpack the Bill to the committee,” said Mr Sibanda.
“After that process we are going to interact with the citizens in terms of Section 141 of the Constitution through public hearings in ensuring that we hear their views. Surely what the citizens will say is what is going to be reflected in that Bill.”
He said Parliament was looking forward to having an “almost perfect” law that will reflect the aspirations of Zimbabweans after it has been passed into law.
Mr Sibanda said the committee was steering the law reform process which led to repeal of the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA).
He said there has been positive movement in the reform of the media laws and landscape.
“When we came in with the Ninth Parliament, Government has been engaging stakeholders in the media sector to try and see how these media laws that are coming up should be shaped,” he said.
Parliament, he said, would play an intermediary role between Government and the citizens to ensure all interests were taken on board. The committee is touring media houses across the country to appreciate their operations and the challenges they face.
Zimpapers Radio Broadcasting Division general manager Mr Comfort Mbofana said Nyaminyami FM needed to evolve into a regional radio station that caters for Mashonaland West province.
“We want to increase our coverage to reach all parts of the province so that we become a truly regional radio station. We need to increase our reach so that we touch more people in this area and beyond,” he said.
Nyaminyami FM broadcasts predominantly in Shona and Tonga for a diverse audience in and around Kariba, Hurungwe and Siavonga in Zambia.
The committee was impressed with the vernacular-centred programming which gives prominence to the conservative Tonga community.
Zimbabwe Union of Journalists secretary-general Foster Dongozi also welcomed the gazetting of the Bill saying the long- awaited process has been set in motion.
“As ZUJ we acknowledge the fact that the process of media law reform has begun,” calling on all parties involved to ensure that the end product is something that is very inclusive.
“While the Bill is not perfect, we still have opportunities through outreach programmes to make it something that we can all be proud of a century from now.”
Top economist Mr Eddie Cross said the Bill was the result of considerable consultation and work.
“It is very largely acceptable to both local media, opposition, and the international community,” he said. “It will therefore help with Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act and will help lift sanctions. As such it is a significant step in the right direction.”
The Bill seeks to repeal the AIPPA and it is expected go through parliamentary debates and public hearings in due course.
By A Correspondent- MDC Deputy National Chairperson Job Sikhala has been summoned to the Zimbabwe Republic Police’s Law and Order Section over his political statement made over the weekend at a Bikita rally.
In an exclusive interview with ZimEye, Sikhala said he will be at the ZRP’s law and section at 9am tomorrow where he is set to answer questions from one Detective Assistant Inspector Chibaya.
“Yes i have been summoned by Detective Assistant Inspector Chibaya from the Law and Order Section tomorrow at 9am.”
He however dispelled allegations that he is planning to topple a constitutionally elected government arguing that his statement was misquoted from its context.
He said:
“I have witnessed with shock the excitable elements jumping into the bandwagon to lump treason, banditry, insurgency and coup plotting on my part over a political banter of a statement I made in Bikita addressing villagers.
The shocking part comes as a result of a deliberate distortion of the import of the said statement in question.
The only coup the people of Zimbabwe will ever witness in their lifetime is the 17 November 2017 not any other one generated from me nor the MDC.
Let it be clear that the MDC nor anyone associated with it will never engage in any unconstitutional way of assuming the governance of our country.
If anything is to be said the MDC is the party of constitutionalism and legality. All its conduct and actions will be guided by constitionalism and nothing more or nothing less.
The overthrow word deliberately misconstrued is economic pressure compounded by the legitimacy question that should be definitely addressed before 2023.
It helps no one to incite the regime against me over the prediction that can either come out true or false.
Until such time when the legitimacy question is addressed the crisis Zimbabwe is facing is unsustainable until 2023.
A stolen victory impoverishes the nation and it needs an urgent solution that can only come through dialogue to avert a tragic disaster.”
MDC believes in non-violence, legality and constitutionalism. The MDC notes with deep worry and concern that Hon. Job Sikhala’s statements made during a rally in Bikita East over the weekend have caused uproar and the party wishes to clarify its position regarding the same.
It is the party’s view that Hon. Sikhala’s views as expressed at the rally and widely quoted in the press were his own personal opinions, which we believe have been misconstrued and misinterpreted.
For the record, the MDC believes in Constitutional, peaceful, democratic, non-violent and legal means of resolving the national crisis. We have never been perpetrators of illegality and non-violence. If anything, we have always been the victims.
The MDC is deeply worried about the escalating national crisis and to this end; the party will on Thursday this week launch the Roadmap to Economic Recovery, Legitimacy, Openness and Democracy (RELOAD) which is our blueprint to legitimacy and economic recovery in the country.
RELOAD does not in any way entail illegal and unconstitutional means of solving the national crisis. Once again, the MDC wishes to state unequivocally that it has always submitted itself to the cardinal values of legality, constitutionalism and democracy.
Any attempt to portray the MDC in any other way is disingenuous and unfortunate. MDC: (1999 – 2019) Celebrating 20 Years of Tenacity and Courage Luke Tamborinyoka Deputy National Spokesperson Movement for Democratic Change
The MDC notes with deep worry and concern that Hon. Job Sikhala’s statements made during a rally in Bikita East over the weekend have caused uproar and the party wishes to clarify its position regarding the same.
It is the party’s view that Hon. Sikhala’s views as expressed at the rally and widely quoted in the press were his own personal opinions, which we believe have been misconstrued and misinterpreted. For the record, the MDC believes in Constitutional, peaceful, democratic, non-violent and legal means of resolving the national crisis.
We have never been perpetrators of illegality and non-violence. If anything, we have always been the victims.
The MDC is deeply worried about the escalating national crisis and to this end; the party will on Thursday this week launch the Roadmap to Economic Recovery, Legitimacy, Openness and Democracy (RELOAD) which is our blueprint to legitimacy and economic recovery in the country.
RELOAD does not in any way entail illegal and unconstitutional means of solving the national crisis. Once again, the MDC wishes to state unequivocally that it has always submitted itself to the cardinal values of legality, constitutionalism and democracy.
Any attempt to portray the MDC in any other way is disingenuous and unfortunate. MDC: (1999 – 2019) Celebrating 20 Years of Tenacity and Courage
Luke Tamborinyoka Deputy National Spokesperson Movement for Democratic Change
Secretary for Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services Mr Nick Mangwana
State Media|Government says it has noted with disgust insurgent rants from a member of the opposition threatening to overthrow legitimate public authorities in the country, and will not hesitate to act.
Permanent secretary for the Ministry of Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services Mr Nick Mangwana said the undermining of a legitimate authority is a serious crime.
“Trying to overthrow a Government is subversive and Government will not hesitate to deploy the security institutions to constrain such abuse of democratic tenets and maintain the constitutional order,” he said.
“Zimbabwe is a peaceful country and that peace is not accidental. That status of a peaceful country will be maintained by ensuring those that threaten democracy and the liberal values adopted by the New Dispensation are tried and if convicted, removed from society and put in places where they don’t pose a threat to the rest of civilised society.”
Mr Mangwana added: “Every country under the sun has places for miscreants and we would not hesitate make use of them to protect democracy and constitutionalism values which are highly esteemed in the New Dispensation.
“It is understandable that when before a crowd some get excitable and experience a rush of blood to the head. We urge them to demobilise that animal instinct and deploy their faculties located in the higher centres of their brains and embrace constitutional means of opposing the Government.”
He added that the utterances could have been a deliberate ploy to derail current re-engagement talks with the British Government.
“We don’t rule out a deliberate effort to provoke the authorities into enforcing the law so as to get negative international attention at the time when the Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Trade is meeting the British Foreign Minister as well as the Secretary General of the Commonwealth, Baroness Scotland to advance Zimbabwe’s re-engagement and mainstreaming efforts. While we will not hesitate to enforce the law, we will not be baited to a predictable default.”
Argentina superstar Lionel Messi has labelled the COPA America 2019 as ‘corrupt’ after what he lamented as ‘unfair’ officiating at the South American showpiece.
Messi was sent off in the first half for clashing with Gary Medel in last night’s third and fourth place play-off against Chile and the Barcelona star felt hard-done by the official’s decision to dismiss him.
“We don’t need to be part of the corruption that we’ve suffered at this tournament,” Messi said according to AS.
“Medel is always right at the limit. With a yellow that would have been the end of it for both of us, but well, maybe what I said recently had an impact,” he added.
Messi also heavily criticised the referee’s officiating during Argentina’s semi-final defeat to Brazil, describing it as “crazy”.
I have witnessed with shock the excitable elements jumping into the bandwagon to lump treason, banditry, insurgency and coup plotting on my part over a political banter of a statement I made in Bikita addressing villagers.
The shocking part comes as a result of a deliberate distortion of the import of the said statement in question.
The only coup the people of Zimbabwe will ever witness in their lifetime is the 17 November 2017 not any other one generated from me nor the MDC.
Let it be clear that the MDC nor anyone associated with it will never engage in any unconstitutional way of assuming the governance of our country.
If anything is to be said the MDC is the party of constitutionalism and legality. All its conduct and actions will be guided by constitionalism and nothing more or nothing less.
The overthrow word deliberately misconstrued is economic pressure compounded by the legitimacy question that should be definitely addressed before 2023.
It helps no one to incite the regime against me over the prediction that can either come out true or false.
Until such time when the legitimacy question is addressed the crisis Zimbabwe is facing is unsustainable until 2023.
A stolen victory impoverishes the nation and it needs an urgent solution that can only come through dialogue to avert a tragic disaster.
Sadio Mane of Senegal (r) and Costa Nhamoinesu of Zimbabwe (l) during the 2017 African Cup of Nations
The Africa Cup of Nations 2019 Round of 16 produced some results which shocked the continent’s football fraternity.
The general belief that ‘big teams’ dominate African football is a deep-rooted perception which makes people underrate certain teams to the point of making forthwith conclusions when predicting games.
That being said, this past week’s results showed otherwise.
Benin’s elimination of Herve Renard’s Morocco was a big shock, considering the reputation the North Africans’ coach has in African football.
South Africa’s defeat of hosts Egypt was by far the most shocking result at the continental showpiece so far, the hosts crashed out in front of 70 000 screaming fans, much to the disbelief of football fans across the continent.
Lastly, the fact that Madagascar progressed to the quarter-finals at the expense of DRC makes it football blindness for one to still see the existence of “small teams” in African football.
Kaizer Chiefs are reportedly considering releasing defender Teenage Hadebe in order to free up some space in their foreign quota.
Chiefs now have seven foreigners on their books following the recent arrival of two Zambia’s Lazarous Kambole, Samir Nurkovi from Serbia and Ghanaian-born midfielder James Kotei.
Each PSL club is allowed a maximum of five foreigners and this means two of the non-South African players in Amakhosi squad will be dropped before the start of the new season.
And according to Sunday World, a South African newspaper, the two players are Hadebe and Colombian striker Leonardo Castro.
“It’s Castro and Hadebe who are going to be sacrificed. Teenage has not reported back as he was at Afcon [with his national team Zimbabwe], but he’s expected back at the village on Wednesday,” an unnamed source told the newspaper.
“You remember that it’s him [Hadebe] who cost Chiefs in the Nedbank Cup final against TS Galaxy; that penalty was conceded by him. That mistake put him in the bad books.”
Meanwhile, Khama Billiat and Willard Katsande are not part of the list as they are registered as local players.
Farai Dziva|South African based socialite Luminitsa Dumbisa Jemwa who is Grace Mugabe’s ex-daughter-in-law has driven the social media crazy with “suggestive” photos during her birthday.
Luminitsa also boasts of her “flaunting hourglass figure.”
Luminitsa is Grace Mugabe’s ex-muroora from her son Russell Goreraza.She is also footballer Nyasha Mushekwi’s former wife.
Her ” mouth-watering photographs where she is featured wearing a tighter-than-skin body-hugging dress have gone viral.
The socialite also boasts of having curves like no other lady.
Farai Dziva|The MDC will this week launch the Road To Economic Recovery, Legitimacy, Openness and Democracy(RELOAD) Document.
” The MDC launches its Road to Economic Recovery, Legitimacy, Openness And Democracy (#RELOAD) this Thursday in Harare.
The document is the party’s comprehensive agenda to end Zimbabwe’s current economic crisis,” said the party.
The MDC has also paid homage to the late former Masvingo Provincial spokesperson, Dusty Zivhave.
“The MDC mourns the sad passing of former Masvingo Provincial Spokesperson, Mr Dusty Zivhaye who died yesterday after a short illness. May his departed soul rest in eternal peace.”
Farai Dziva|In a shocking incident, a third-year student at the Chinhoyi University of Technology (CUT) was brutally murdered by her boyfriend.
According to H-Metro, Angela Dapi was allegedly murdered by her boyfriend Richard Nenhowe at Elizabeth Hotel in Harare.
Richard then tried to commit suicide.
He is currently admitted at Parirenyatwa Group of Hospitals where he is under police guard.
“I remember tiri ma 1.1 (First Year, First Semester) she used to complain that he was abusive.
He would beat her because of his insecurities…Angie wanted to leave this guy a long time ago, but she was trapped; it’s not making any sense. I feel like I failed her. I could have paid more attention and reported him right away, but instead we comforted her,” Angela’ s friend told H-Metro.
“Angela and her boyfriend broke up a month ago because Nenhowe had cheated on her and he refused to accept being dumped.
He travelled from a mine in Zvishavane, where he worked, to Harare on Sunday to try and fix their relationship that’s when they met at Elizabeth Hotel and he then choked her when she entered the hotel.
Nenhowe then sent a text to his friend stating that he had killed his girlfriend and when the police found Nenhowe, he was bleeding profusely after he attempted to kill himself,” a source said.
Farai Dziva|Kembo Mohadi has warned businesses against overpricing.
In a speech read on his behalf in Beitbridge, Mohadi accused businesses of “milking members of the public.”
“We know those businesses and as the President said, we will deal with you because you undertook to serve the people and not to milk them.
Can anyone explain why beverages from our local manufacturers are so expensive here in Beitbridge where we have depots?
Shops have a duty to protect consumers who must not be punished for their loyalty. Now that we are using local currency through the promulgation of Statutory Instrument 142 of 2019, we urge businesses to shun the exploitative process overburdening the consumers,” said Mohadi.
Farai Dziva|Defending Champions FC Platinum are facing a player crisis after most of their players ran out of contract at the end of June.
The Zvishavane based could only raise thirteen players for last Saturday’s match against Manica Diamonds.
The Platinum Boys had only one infield player on the bench, Devon Chafa and goalkeeper Petros Mhari on the bench.
A player at the club who requested anonymity said a number of players are out of contract and after being caught off guard the club tried to play down the face that they were facing a crisis because of injuries.
“There is nothing that they could not raise the full complement because of injuries. We know what the club does when they are caught off guard, they manufacture stories and send to friendly media outlets to try and diffuse the situation. They did the same on the strike issue and tiff between coach Norman Mapeza and chairman Evans Mthombeni,” said the player.
“Ali Sadiki is not injured, he is out of contract, William Sitima is out of contract, Elvis and Kevin Moyo just sneaked out of the country for trials at Chippa United in South Africa.
“Petros Mhari could have gone for trials at Bloemfontein Celtics but delayed for the Manica Diamonds match as there was a crisis.
“Devon Chafa actually had to brave the injury also to save the situation but was carrying an injury. Godknows Murwira is in Harare trying to push for a move to Dynamos while Mkhokeli Dube quit and went to the United States. Lawrence Mhlanga is on suspension while Raphael Muduviwa is on a lengthy lay off due to injury,” added the player.
Despite the player crisis, FC Platinum went on to post a 1-0 win over Manica Diamonds to remain on top of the log standings.
Farai Dziva|Lionel Messi has described the COPA America 2019 as ‘corrupt’ after what he lamented as ‘unfair’ officiating at the South American showpiece.
Messi was sent off in the first half for clashing with Gary Medel in last night’s third and fourth place play-off against Chile and the Barcelona star felt hard-done by the official’s decision to dismiss him.
“We don’t need to be part of the corruption that we’ve suffered at this tournament,” Messi said.
“Medel is always right at the limit. With a yellow that would have been the end of it for both of us, but well, maybe what I said recently had an impact,” he added.
Messi also heavily criticised the referee’s officiating during Argentina’s semi-final defeat to Brazil, describing it as “crazy”.
Farai Dziva|Dynamos coach Tonderai Ndiraya is not impressed with how his team beat Chapungu on Sunday.
The Glamour Boys left it until late to snatch a winner when Ghanaian forward Robert Sackey netted the only goal of the match in the last minute.
The performance, however, did not convince the coach who admitted his side was out of the rhythm.
“It was a good result but quite frankly and honestly we failed to find the rhythm today,” Ndiraya said in his post match presser.
“It was a difficult game for us. Maybe it was because of the mid-season break but I am not happy about how we performed as a team. I thought we were not ourselves in all departments.”
Dynamos created a number of chances and most of them went off target.
Their first real chance in the game came just moments before the interval when Edward Sadomba’s lofted effort was tipped over.
They never made any threatening raid in the second period until a last-minute counter attack which resulted in Sackey’s goal.
Farai Dziva|Government has conceded that 5.7 million people are facing starvation in the country.
Government sources have revealed that
5.7 Million people require urgent food aid.
The food crisis has been intensified by the drought or low rainfall that most parts of the country experienced during the 2019/2019 season, according to the government.
Another network, Famine Early Warning Systems Network has also said :
“The deteriorating macroeconomy and significantly below average 2018/19 crop production are expected to drive widespread Crisis food security outcomes through at least January 2020.
In high production northern areas and some central parts of the country Stressed outcomes are expected through August, after which Crisis outcomes are expected. One cannot deny the fact that the deteriorating economy is also playing a part in the food crisis that is looming.”
Farai Dziva|There is raging debate on a statement allegedly made by Job Sikhala at an MDC rally in Bikita at the weekend.
Sikhala reportedly warned government of “impending protests” due to the current economic crisis.
While some sections of the society feel Sikhala’ s remarks are treasonous others feel he merely expressed the mood of the people.
Sikhala allegedly told party members the party would stage a Mega- demonstration to force “Emmerson Mnangagwa to step down.”
“We are a committed leadership that will give Zanu PF headaches and [Amos] Chibaya was not lying or joking about the fight we are going to take to the doorsteps of Emmerson Mnangagwa.
We are going to overthrow him before 2023 that is not a joke,” Sikhala reportedly told party supporters on Saturday.
As long as I am still breathing, there will be no insurgency in Zimbabwe. @jobsikhala be warned. Zimbabwe is not a political playground to play with peoples livelihoods to feed your groupings insatiable appetite for power and bloodshed. Remember I still have a lot of Intel…
— Linda Tsungirirai Masarira (@lilomatic) July 8, 2019
President Mnangagwa yesterday held successful bilateral talks here with his South African counterpart, President Cyril Ramaphosa, to find lasting solutions to Zimbabwe’s power problems, clearing the way for officials from the two countries to meet soon for a new power supply arrangement.
The President said Energy and Power Development Minister Fortune Chasi would soon lead a delegation to SA to finalise a new power supply deal, that should ease electricity woes in the country.
“With President Ramaphosa we met and we were sharing challenges we are facing and, in particular energy shortages.
“We exchanged views on how we can deal with that issue. Of course, our Zesa owes Eskom quite a lot of money and they have been able to pay US$10 million last week to reduce that debt.
“This enables them to have discussions and I think our Minister of Energy (Cde Fortune Chasi) will go to South Africa next week to discuss some new arrangements,” he said.
Last week Government paid US$10 million to reduce the debt owed by Zesa to South Africa’s Eskom.
The Head of State and Government also said that they discussed the conditions set by the United States of America at the America-Africa Forum in Mozambique recently before unveiling a US$60 billion facility to Africa.
“We interrogated the conditions of accessing that fund,” he said.
President Mnangagwa has made it clear that Zimbabwe will not accept the facility since it had strings attached.
On the launch of African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) by the African Union, President Mnangagwa said it was a success story for Zimbabwe to be part of the process.
He said the AU agreed to give Zimbabwe a 15-year period to retool its industries and commerce that have been brought to their knees by the economic sanctions imposed by the US, Britain and their Western allies.
“For Zimbabwe it was a huge success because we succeeded in depositing our instruments, so we were number 23 and we have managed to get a window to develop our industry and commerce so that we catch up with the rest of the world and we got a 15-year reprieve.
“It has gone very well. We signed the protocol (African Continental Free Trade Area) in Kigali (in Rwanda), but we entered a reservation because of sanctions imposed on us which have rendered our industry and commerce uncompetitive in the market,” he said.
Apart from Zimbabwe, four other countries —Malawi, Zambia, Madagascar, Ethiopia and Eritrea — also requested for derogation.
By Own Correspondent-A heartbroken man from Harare sensationally accused his wife of having been impregnated by her own uncle.
Luke Mareya revealed this when he dragged his wife Elizabeth Jasi to court seeking a protection order.
Mareya told the court:
“I no longer love her. She broke my heart. She was impregnated by her uncle and all along she has been lying to me that the son belonged to her ex-husband.
They frequently see each other and the issue came to light when her uncle’s wife revealed it to me that I was staying with her husband’s son. She does not want to discuss the issue and she has the tendency of beating me up. I have sustained injuries due to her violent actions.
She emotionally abuses her uncle’s wife and she does not even respond to her greetings. I took the matter to my in-laws who then demanded $1000 for lobola before any discussion.”
Jasi, on the other hand, did not dispute the allegations but counter accused her husband of being abusive.
She told the court:
“Vane makuhwa ambuya, ndoda kuvarova. (I am going to beat up that aunt because of her gossip)
I still love my husband, Your Worship, but he is harassing and insulting me…Some of the things he is saying are correct and some of them are lies.”
Presiding magistrate Tafadzwa Miti ruled in favour of the husband and ordered Jasi to observe peace towards him.-StateMedia
By Own Correspondent- Speaking during the Daily News Business Breakfast Forum, “Implications Of The New Currency” on Monday morning, Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) governor John Mangudya outlined the implications of the introduction of local currency.
He said:
Stability on the interbank foreign exchange market as more foreign currency is sold through formal channels. As at end of June 2019 US$664 million had been traded.
Reduction of trading of foreign currency on the parallel market.
Stronger demand for local currency, which strengthens its value.
Halting of costly re-dollarisation – economic agents were reverting to use of US dollar as the unit of account and medium of exchange;
Improved monetary policy effectiveness – use of monetary policy in instruments to control inflation and maintain price stability going forward;
Retention of foreign exchange accounts (current Nostro deposit position around US$ billion or around $3 months import cover) to boost economic activity in the country;
Restoration of confidence in the economy as measures yield positive results;
Creation of certainty which assists business in planning and decision making
Creation of scope for increased production and productivity – low production is the major challenge facing the economy.
THE MDC has thrown its weight behind traditional leaders who are calling upon President Emmerson Mnangagwa to apologise over the 1980s Gukurahundi massacres.
Last week, Mnangagwa met chiefs from Matabeleland and Midlands provinces whose areas were affected by Gukurahundi where an estimated 20 000 people were killed by the North Korean-trained 5th Brigade soldiers. Thousands more were displaced during the disturbances.
The chiefs demanded that Mnangagwa, who was State Security minister during that period, apologise for massacres before a healing process can be conducted to give closure to the contentious issue. They also demanded that Mnangawa should not lead the healing process because he was part of the offending party and called for an independent mediator to convene the hearings.
In an interview with Southern Eye, MDC spokesperson Daniel Molokeli and his deputy Luke Tamborinyoka said an apology will be the best foot forward for the President who has indicated he wants to tackle the thorny issue.
“Mnangagwa continues to portray and sing the rhetoric of reforms. We have not seen the substance of his rhetoric – from law reform to Gukurahundi,” Tamborinyoka told Southern Eye.
“Gukurahundi, outside of an outright apology to the people of Zimbabwe in general and the people of Matabeleland and Midlands in particular, Mnangagwa is once again taking everyone up the garden path. An apology is free and it does not cost money, neither does it require a committee. All it needs is sincerity.”
Molokeli said an all-stakeholder approach that is not controlled by government would effectively deal with the Gukurahundi issue.
“We need an all-stakeholder approach, a process that will not be partisan. It is important that Zimbabwe goes through a process of opening up a truth and reconciliation process, a process that would not be controlled by government. We need something bigger and broader that is not controlled by the political forces at play,” he said.
On Mnangagwa’s dialogue process, Molokeli said it is a futile attempt.
“Whatever process the President has come up with, we are not sure of whether it is the right path, so it’s not something that we support. So at the end of the day, we have reservations about this process and it is up to ED (Mnangagwa) to prove himself that he really means business. At the moment, we will just wait and see,” Molokeli said.
Mnangagwa is on record saying he will only apologise for Gukurahundi if the National Peace and Reconciliation Commission says he must do so.
By A Correspondent- POTRAZ has called for the input of stakeholders as the body embarks on a process to review the DNS Framework for Zimbabwe.
POTRAZ intends to review the current Domain Name System (DNS) Framework for Zimbabwe. This is intended to address several weaknesses that have been identified to be inherent in the current framework. Everyone should participate. Download the paper here: https://t.co/0rGt0IVSIp
By Own Correspondent- Zanu-PF National Political Commissar Victor Matemadanda has encouraged all political players to bury their differences and work towards the development of the nation.
“I have seen a scenario here in Gweru where all the 18 local councillors are from the MDC-Alliance.
“This means Zanu-PF did not perform well here and the contestants conceded that they did not win the election. What then surprises me is that there are some political leaders who are not admitting that they were defeated.
“They contested in court, but still did not win. We are way past the election period, but they have not woken up to reality. I want to urge all political players that unity and tolerance is key to development,” he said.
The political commissar took a swipe at retailers charging exorbitant prices and underhand pricing in foreign currency saying the new dispensation will not tolerate efforts to derail the development path that the nation has taken.
“Those with pharmacies that are overcharging their products and letting people die, be warned! Those transporters who are giving their vehicles to reckless drivers who are overcharging passengers are also warned that we are coming there!”
He also took time to explain the ongoing austerity measures as a means to achieve a middle income economy.
“As a nation we really needed to get to a point when we adopt our own currency. No nation has ever developed using foreign currency. We want our youth, women and vendors to contribute towards national development.
“They can only do that if they transact using local currency. “The American dollar is currently being manipulated by economic sharks who want to further cripple our economy. We are now in the process of formalising the informal economy.”
Cde Matemadanda applauded urban dwellers for their stance towards the stayaways that were called for by some political parties.
“I am proud of your response to the call for stayaway that was being organised by enemies of the State. Well done for shunning that call. You value your work and you know very well that such actions will not put food on your tables, but disturb your peace”
He also took a swipe at corrupt individuals in parastatals and Government institutions saying that the new dispensation will totally deal with corrupt people. “You cannot afford to be half-right and half-corrupt. It’s either you are corrupt or not. And corrupt individuals will not be tolerated by the current administration.”
Own Correspondent| The Harare City Council‘s fire division suspects that the fire that destroyed part of Walter Magaya‘s hotel in Waterfalls started when workers started a generator.
The Fire Division also noted with great concern that there were no emergency exits in the boarding houses.
Acting Chief Fire Officer Mr Lovemore Mafukidze has confirmed that preliminary investigations point to the generator.
“Information gathered by both attending officers suggests that as there was no electricity in the area and the fire started soon after the occupants had started their generator for lighting purposes of the hotel complex.
“It might have been an electrical fault. The Division also noted with great concern that there were no emergency exits in the boarding houses. Therefore, the Division recommends that these emergency exits be made available.” he said.
“On 4 July 2019, there was a fire at PHD Ministries Hotel in Waterfalls. The Hotel covers an area of approximately 80 by 70 metres and the affected area which is the southern end of the hotel complex covers an area of approximately 40 by 30 metres used as boarding houses.
“The Emergency Services received a call at 17:38 hours, two fire tenders were promptly dispatched to the scene of fire, and a water carrier responded at 17:53 hours together with a command vehicle,” Mr Mafukidze said.
He said the team faced no challenges to put down the fire as they were fully equipped and had enough manpower.
“The Division faced no challenges at all since water was readily available. The first attending Officer in charge on mobilising control room informed them that the building was well alight so did the second attending officer in charge.
“A portable pump was set up drawing water from the swimming pool within the hotel to replenish the first attending fire engine.
“Two hose reels, one jet, and four breathing apparatus were used during the fire fighting process. Another water carrier arrived at 18:21 hours with additional water.
The Assistant Divisional Officer attended at 18:21 and directed fire fighting operations thereby preventing the spread of fire to other wings.
The fire was declared under control at 18:43 hours and damping down continued up to 20:01 hours when fire fighting was complete,” Mr Mafukidze said.
The MDC Youth Assembly today intensified the #GoRuralCampaign by visiting Nyanga Ward 26 in Manicaland to drum up support for party candidate, Vincent Bopoto.
Today’s program was held at Selbourne Estate whereby the Youth Assembly National leadership led by Chairman Obey Sithole, Vice Chair Cecelia Chimbiri and Spokesperson Stephen Sarkozy Chuma graced the occasion to lay out the victory roadmap for the party.
Speaking at the occasion National Youth Assembly Spokesperson, Stephen Sarkozy Chuma scoffed at recent manoeuvres by ZANU PF to hoodwink the masses into a false belief that the former liberation party can bake bread as a stop gap measure to avert bread shortages in the country.
Chuma said expecting ZANU PF to produce bread for the long suffering masses is akin to expecting the beleaguered party to produce bread out of sand-made farm bricks.
The Assembly motor mouthpiece also said bread baking is not a child’s play and as such it requires basic economics starting from input production instead of expecting honey without bees.
Youth Assembly National Vice Chairman, Cecilia Chimbiri took a bitter snipe at the ZANU PF military regime for neglecting and trampling women’s rights.
Chauya Chauya as Chimbiri is popularly known said it is regrettable that 39 years after independence the chauvinist ZANU PF regime is still blind to basic needs of women like sanitary pads.
Chimbiri said the conditions of women conditions have become nervous to the extend that women now resort to using unhygienic means like rags yet cotton is produced in Zimbabwe.
Youth Assembly National Chairman, Obey Sithole giving a key note to the same event said ZANU PF is anti people religion whose survival is hinged on corruption, nepotism and cronyism.
Cde Luther as Sithole is affectionately known declared that expecting ZANU PF to win any election is akin to expecting a second virgin Biblical Marry in our life time.
The forceful Youth Assembly Commander unapologetically likened Emmerson Mnangagwa to a habitual thief with a canning culture to reap where he did not sow.
Sithole said the Assembly will this month lead massive massive action programs to reclaim the 2018 MDC electoral victory stolen by ZEC working in cahoots with the military junta.
The Selbourne by-election rally was organized by Manicaland Youth Assembly provincial leadership led by Youth Chairman, Kelvin Kambiro.
Also in attendance were Manicaland Provincial Chairman, Prosper Mutseyami and leaders from the party’s Women Assembly.
Stephen Sarkozy Chuma
MDC Youth Assembly National Spokesperson
Gweru residents are resisting attempts by Gweru City Council
to increase rates by more than 100 percent through a supplementary budget
leaving fears that more residents may be forced to boycott payments in protest.
The Local Authority conducted supplementary budget
consultative meetings over the weekend where a majority of residents said they
cannot afford the increases as their salaries are stagnant and council is
failing to provide satisfactory service delivery.
Gweru United Residents Association Secretary General Mr
Reward Mhuri said the Local Authority is instead putting pressure on residents’
association leaders to try and hoodwink residents into accepting the tariffs
hike.
“People rejected the so called supplementary budget
but council is putting pressure for resident’s leaders to accept the increases,
my fear now is that we will be labelled sellouts.
“Council promised us that it had registered three companies
formerly running as Go Beer to cushion residents from the ever increasing rates
but up to now nothing has happened.
“This actually shows that council is trying to be arrogant
towards residents’ recommendations, how can they rush for a supplementary
budget before they have validated our report (from a service delivery committee
of inquiry). The inquiry’s recommendations must be followed first, we cannot
keep pouring water into a leaking bucket,” Mhuri said.
He said should the Local Authority persist and try to shove
the supplementary budget down their throats, they will resist as residents
through petitions and demonstrations.
Another residents’ association leader, Cornilia Selipiwe
from Gweru Residents and Ratepayers Association, said it is not just an issue
of accepting or rejecting the budget but affordability on the part of
residents.
“It is not an issue of just accepting or rejecting but it’s
an issue of facing realities on the ground, the fact is that the supplementary
budget by council is fair but the question is, are residents able to pay? Which
is a big no.
“We had a meeting earlier with residents in Mkoba; residents
are hard pressed and any slight increment to the current tariffs will have a
negative impact on poor residents,” he said.
“It is unfortunate that when these budgets are done, they
are done by the elite and they tend to forget the poor and old people, the
unemployed and the pensioners. People are failing to pay the current rates and
I am not sure how they will cope with revised tariffs. Our worst fears are that
people will just boycott paying,” Selipiwe said.
This reporter managed to attend one of the consultative
meetings in ward 13 under Councilor Catherine Mhondiwa in Mkoba where a
majority of residents said they could not afford the 100 percent increase and
the figure should be revised downwards but council management present begged
and pleaded with residents to endorse the budget.
“We actually had the increase at 420 percent and your
councilors said it was too much and that’s why we had to settle to the 100
percent increase. There is nothing we can do, let’s just carry the burden, this
is our budget, so I am asking you to propose adoption of this budget and we end
the meeting,” said one Gibson Chingwadza a council official part of the
officials conducting the meeting.
However one of council’s top officials at Town House gave an
impression that the budget had been unanimously endorsed by residents despite
the outcry.
“We are yet to get feedback from all wards, some were
postponed to next weekend, only two wards had reservations but majority have
endorsed the supplementary budget and we will then include the business fraternity
which were the first to endorse. We can say the budget was unanimously endorsed
by the majority,” he said.
Gweru Town Clerk Ms Elizabeth Gwatipedza earlier this year
in March said a supplementary budget will be the last thing council will
consider after exhausting all other channels to cover the budget gap created by
inflation.
She was on record saying first they will sit as Town Clerks
in the country to map the best way forward and engage the Ministry of Local
Government if it can assist financially as the councils will not be able to
fulfill their mandate with the current approved budgets.
The supplementary budget is expected to increase the 2019 City budget by $33 million from the current $46 million to $79 million.
By A Correspondent- First Lady Auxillia Mnangagwa has been elected Vice President of the Organisation of African First Ladies for Development (OAFLAD) in recognition of her philanthropic work and assistance to the less privileged in Zimbabwe.
She was elected during the ongoing 23rd OAFLAD’s General Assembly Meeting which is running concurrently with the African Union’s Extraordinary Summit.
According to the organisation’s constitution, elections are held after every two years.
Amai Mnangagwa takes over from Margaret Kenyatta of Kenya while former OAFLAD president, the First Lady of Burkina Faso, Adjoavi Sika Kabore was replaced by Congo Brazaville’s First Lady Antoinette Sassou Nguesso.
OAFLAD is an advocacy organisation where First Ladies of Africa seek to leverage their unique position to advocate for policies that make health services accessible and laws that boost women and youth empowerment.
In an interview after her election, an ecstatic Amai Mnangagwa pledged to continue working hard for the development of Zimbabwe and the continent at large.
She said her election was not an individual achievement but that of the whole country.
“I am happy that my colleague First ladies entrusted me with this position. I feel exalted and this is dedicated to all women (of Zimbabwe),” she said.
Amai Mnangagwa said the position she got as OAFLAD’s Vice President was not for her alone but for the nation of Zimbabwe particularly women.-State media
By A Correspondent- President Emmerson Mnangagwa yesterday held successful bilateral talks with his South African counterpart, President Cyril Ramaphosa, to find lasting solutions to Zimbabwe’s power problems.
The development clears the way for officials from the two countries to meet soon for a new power supply arrangement, the state media has reported.
The President said Energy and Power Development Minister Fortune Chasi would soon lead a delegation to SA to finalise a new power supply deal, that should ease electricity woes in the country.
He said:
“With President Ramaphosa we met and we were sharing challenges we are facing and, in particular energy shortages.
We exchanged views on how we can deal with that issue. Of course, our Zesa owes Eskom quite a lot of money and they have been able to pay US$10 million last week to reduce that debt.
This enables them to have discussions and I think our Minister of Energy (Cde Fortune Chasi) will go to South Africa next week to discuss some new arrangements.”
Last week Government paid US$10 million to reduce the debt owed by Zesa to South Africa’s Eskom.
The Head of State and Government also said that they discussed the conditions set by the United States of America at the America-Africa Forum in Mozambique recently before unveiling a US$60 billion facility to Africa.
“We interrogated the conditions of accessing that fund,” he said.
President Mnangagwa has made it clear that Zimbabwe will not accept the facility since it had strings attached.
On the launch of African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) by the African Union, President Mnangagwa said it was a success story for Zimbabwe to be part of the process.
He said the AU agreed to give Zimbabwe a 15-year period to retool its industries and commerce that have been brought to their knees by the economic sanctions imposed by the US, Britain and their Western allies.
“For Zimbabwe it was a huge success because we succeeded in depositing our instruments, so we were number 23 and we have managed to get a window to develop our industry and commerce so that we catch up with the rest of the world and we got a 15-year reprieve.
“It has gone very well. We signed the protocol (African Continental Free Trade Area) in Kigali (in Rwanda), but we entered a reservation because of sanctions imposed on us which have rendered our industry and commerce uncompetitive in the market,” he said.
Apart from Zimbabwe, four other countries —Malawi, Zambia, Madagascar, Ethiopia and Eritrea — also requested for derogation.
Meanwhile, President Mnangagwa and his delegation were expected to arrive home early this morning.-StateMedia
Shurugwi South MP Edmond Mkaratigwa (Zanu PF) took over the chairmanship of the Mines Committee from vocal Norton MP Temba Mliswa, at a time when many people were wondering what would happen to one of the most pivotal committees in Parliament.
The Mines committee was reconstituted after Mliswa almost traded blows with Chegutu West MP Dexter Nduna (Zanu PF) when the committee was investigating issues around the Hwange Colliery Company corruption saga that nearly brought the giant coal miner to its knees. Mliswa and Nduna were removed from the committee and Mkaratigwa appointed chairperson.
The committee deals with very sensitive issues in the mineral sector which is dogged with corruption, illicit financial flows and smuggling.
Accountability and transparency is needed, including Parliamentary oversight over the mining sector. A competent chairperson with the ability to probe without fear, is critical for such a committee.
Mkaratigwa describes himself as a “hands-on” electrical tech engineer-cum-marketing executive, businessman and politician who is currently studying for a Master’s Degree in Energy and Sustainability with the University of Cumbria in the United Kingdom.
“I was born and bred by Zanu PF parents and I grew up from being a party youth to vice-chairperson of Guruguru South youth league. I chose Zanu PF because in my view, it is the only party rooted in a political philosophy that is historically traceable and has a broad ideology; the party has never lost focus on,” he said.
“The party has also embarked on the new trajectory of transforming itself to suit new national characteristics as well as the renewed aspirations of the people of Zimbabwe, and yet on the contrary, a host of other political parties in Zimbabwe lack that foundation, hence I opted for Zanu PF where young leaders are nurtured by fellow experienced, decorous and mature leaders,” he said.
During the 2018 Zanu PF primary elections, Mkaratigwa competed and won against former Sports deputy minister Tapiwa Matangaidze. He says he easily trounced Matangaidze because he was not a competent MP.
“I can categorically state that I am the MP for Shurugwi South, particularly because of what my predecessor did not do right. He succumbed to the temptations that often lead one to lose touch with the constituency when engrossed in power,” he said.
“Once one loses that touch with the grassroots, it also raises questions regarding whose new interests you will now be representing, if not only personal, thereby defeating the whole purpose of the foundational concept of parliamentarism and parliamentary democracy, upon which our existence as MPs rests.”
“In short, he did not move with the winds of change, again like the Biblical Lot’s wife, remained stuck in old Zanu PF utopia, and fell into disfavour of the adaptively transforming Zanu PF party, philosophy and electorate at the dawn of the new dispensation (President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s era).”
Jane Mlambo| Deputy Information minister Energy Mutodi has threatened the opposition MDC over remarks by Zengeza West legislator Job Sikhala who said his party will overthrow the government before 2023.
Mutodi said such remarks will not be taken lightly threatening that the MDC leadership will face serious consequences.
“The terrorist utterances by Job Sikhala betraying his party’s plans to “overthrow” the government through demonstrations will not be taken lightly. The MDC dissident leadership will face serious consequences,” said Mutodi.
The terrorist utterances by Job Sikhala betraying his party’s plans to “overthrow” the government through demonstrations will not be taken lightly. The MDC dissident leadership will face serious consequences.
Addressing Bikita villagers over the weekend, Sikhala said;
“We are a committed leadership that will give Zanu PF headaches and [Amos] Chibaya was not lying or joking about the war and fight we are going to take to the doorsteps of Emmerson Mnangagwa. We are going to overthrow him before 2023 that is not a joke,” Sikhala said.
By A Correspondent- Zimbabwe has become the first country in the Sub-Saharan Africa region to complete the successful enrolment of participants who are taking part in the ongoing large-scale HIV vaccine efficacy trials which are currently underway on four continents, covering 12 countries with about 12 669 study participants on board.
Zimbabwe has 500 participants in the HIV Vaccine Trials Network (HVTN) 705 also known as “lmbokodo” and the Antibody Mediated Prevention (AMP) studies which seek to find a lasting solution to a safe and effective HIV vaccine.
Speaking to The Herald at the weekend, HIV vaccine researcher at the University of Zimbabwe College of Health and Clinical Trials Research Centre, Dr Stranix Chibanda said the country finished its participants enrolment in June and they now await to monitor them as part of the research.
“The 705 study has just finished enrolling participants and now we continue to follow them up monitoring their health and checking how the immune system will react to vaccines.
“This will take a couple of years but I think in the next few years we will be able to roll out one of the vaccines for the benefit of our children today,” said Dr Chibanda.
Dr Chibanda added that while the HIV vaccine trial remained an ongoing process, Zimbabwe had shown its preparedness to take the vaccines aboard once they pass the due process.
“We are still doing the trials and not even in the next five years can we say we will be done. Maybe in 10 years, but I have noticed that the country is ready to take the vaccines once they are approved and licensed by the Medicines Control Authority of Zimbabwe.
“However, the end of this enrolment phase facilitates the collection and analysis of trial specific data enabling researchers to answer research questions. It is in this vein that I want to applaud all those who volunteered to participate in these trials and they are commended for their selfless contribution towards this noble effort to move closer to a world without Aids,” she said.
The AMP studies is now fully enrolled with 4 625 participants from communities in the USA, Brazil, Peru, Tanzania, Botswana, South Africa, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique and Zimbabwe.
The AMP studies are the most advanced human clinical studies to test wether a broadly neutralising antibody (bNAb) called VRCO1 which is given intravenously can prevent HIV acquisition in people.
The trials also seek to help to establish the concentrations of bNAb’s required for protection and to characterise any “breakthrough” HIV infection to understand if it was sensitive or resistant to VRCO1.
The studies also could also clarify what level of neutralisation a vaccine or antibody-based method of HIV prevention needs to achieve or maintain to promote sustained protection.
HVTN705 or “Imbokodo”, meaning the rock in Zulu, was derived from a popular African proverb “Wathint’ abafazi, Wathint’ Imbokodo! meaning “You strike the women, you strike the rock!” in recognition of the strength women show in the face of challenges.
This vaccine is being administered in women in Africa with 2 637 healthy HIV negative women aged 18-35 years drawn from Zimbabwe and the neighbouring countries helping in moving ahead with the trials.
The vaccine regimen being tested in Imbokodo is based on “mosaic” immunogens — vaccine components designed to induce immune responses against a wide range of global HIV strains.-StateMedia
THE Harare City Council‘s fire division suspects that the fire that destroyed part of Walter Magaya‘s hotel in Waterfalls started when workers started a generator.
The Fire Division also noted with great concern that there were no emergency exits in the boarding houses.
Acting Chief Fire Officer Mr Lovemore Mafukidze has confirmed that preliminary investigations point to the generator.
“Information gathered by both attending officers suggests that as there was no electricity in the area and the fire started soon after the occupants had started their generator for lighting purposes of the hotel complex.
“It might have been an electrical fault. The Division also noted with great concern that there were no emergency exits in the boarding houses. Therefore, the Division recommends that these emergency exits be made available.” he said.
“On 4 July 2019, there was a fire at PHD Ministries Hotel in Waterfalls. The Hotel covers an area of approximately 80 by 70 metres and the affected area which is the southern end of the hotel complex covers an area of approximately 40 by 30 metres used as boarding houses.
“The Emergency Services received a call at 17:38 hours, two fire tenders were promptly dispatched to the scene of fire, and a water carrier responded at 17:53 hours together with a command vehicle,” Mr Mafukidze said.
He said the team faced no challenges to put down the fire as they were fully equipped and had enough manpower.
“The Division faced no challenges at all since water was readily available. The first attending Officer in charge on mobilising control room informed them that the building was well alight so did the second attending officer in charge.
“A portable pump was set up drawing water from the swimming pool within the hotel to replenish the first attending fire engine.
“Two hose reels, one jet, and four breathing apparatus were used during the fire fighting process. Another water carrier arrived at 18:21 hours with additional water.
The Assistant Divisional Officer attended at 18:21 and directed fire fighting operations thereby preventing the spread of fire to other wings.
The fire was declared under control at 18:43 hours and damping down continued up to 20:01 hours when fire fighting was complete,” Mr Mafukidze said.
A section of Caps United fans on Saturday bayed for the blood of technical director Nelson Matongorere and his team after the Green Machine lost 1 – 0 against ZPC Kariba in a Castle Lager Premiership matchday 13 at Nyamhunga Stadium.
By SportBrief Reporter
The fans tried to block the exit of the United players’ team bus as they sang songs denouncing the Makepekepe leadership while sympathizing with Lloyd Chitembwe whose absence again leaves a lot to be desired.
The coaches had to be rescued by the police who escorted them from the ground for safe exit.
No post match interviews could be conducted as a result.
The loss, third in the past four games, dented further their title aspirations after two title contenders, Chicken Inn and holders FC Platinum recorded victory each.
A late second half strike by Nigel Makumbe was all the Electricity Boys needed to secure maximum points.
United dictated the pace in the opening stanza with Phenias Bamusi, Newman Sianchali and Dominic Chungwa causing all sorts of havoc in the home side’s half.
Munyaradzi Nyakarimwe, Ian Nekati and James Marufu took matters into their own hands to ensure they thwart all raids being launched by the Green Machine.
With a little bit of luck, Makepekepe could have taken the lead on the half hour mark when Dominic Chungwa was set up by Phenias Bamusi from the left flank but Future Sibanda, in goals for Katuruturu, went airborne to ensure United is kept at bay.
At the breather, there were no changes on the scoreboard.
Upon resumption of the second stanza, Katuruturu came a more energetic side and created numerous chances.
Dividends finally paid 15 minutes before normal time when Nigel Makumbe fired home from inside the box and the lead stood to full time.
By Own Correspondent- Vice President Kembo Mohadi has appealed to local businesses to heed the Government’s economic realignment measures through implementing a fair pricing model to avoid causing unnecessary agony on citizens.
He said the days of those who are continuing to overprice goods at the expense of the masses were numbered.
The Vice President made the remarks in a speech read on his behalf by Matabeleland South Minister of State for Provincial Affairs Abednico Ncube during the official opening of the Beitbridge Business Expo.
He said:
“Beitbridge has lot of investment opportunities considering its strategic location as a logistics hub for both Zimbabwe and the SADC region,
However, as we call for investment, we also plead with local businesses for fair pricing of goods and services as opposed to exploitative pricing like we have been witnessing in some shops and supermarkets here.
You will note that for any business to thrive, it must have the consumers around it and if we milk the same consumers to death, who will buy from us tomorrow?
His Excellency the President of the Republic of Zimbabwe Cde Emmerson Mnangagwa has said the days of those who are overpricing goods are numbered and that does not spare those people in our town who have turned against the very community that supports them”.
He said it was important for people to work together in ensuring that the economy recovers.
Vice President Mohadi the Government was ready to support and engage businesses on a number of cross cutting issues.
He said now that the country was using local currency it was prudent for businesses to shun exploitative prices and over burdening the consumers.
“We know those businesses and like the President said, we will deal with you because you undertook to service the people and not to milk them. Can anyone explain why beverages from our local manufacturers are so expensive here in Beitbridge where we have depots?
“Shops have a duty to protect consumers who must not be punished for their loyalty. Now that we are using local currency through the promulgation of Statutory Instrument 142 of 2019, we urge businesses to shun exploitative process overburdening the consumers,” said Vice President Mohadi.
He said Beitbridge town was also poised for growth with the border modernisation programme taking shape.
In addition, he said the town will benefit by having a modern border post, a fire station, and a water reservoir on Mawale Hill for improved water supply, an additional sewer pond and a Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (ZIMRA) village.
The Vice President added that the initiative will also bring more investment to the town and that Government will facilitate and support all investments initiative meant to improve the quality of life of the people in the town and the whole country.
“Our infrastructure like water and sewer installations are protected by the environment and we urge people to stop the indiscriminate cutting of trees that we have borrowed from the future generations.
“I would like to salute the exhibitors at this Business Expo for the commitment to a growing economy and a prosperous Zimbabwe they have shown by participating at this Business Expo,” he said.-StateMedia
SOWETO’s Orlando East residents took to the streets to protest after being without electricity for days. Here Joburg metro police are out in full force to calm the situation and divert traffic away from troubled spots.
Soweto residents barricaded roads with stones and burning tyres, leaving commuters stranded in an attempt to force power utility Eskom to listen to their grievances following three weeks of blackouts in the area.
The protest was on its third day yesterday.
Ntsakisi Mabaso, 34, said she hadn’t been to work for the past three days and was worried about salary cuts.
“I don’t get a lot of money and now I will lose the little that I get.”
However, the mother of a 9-year-old child supported of the protest.
“I buy R100 electricity units weekly, but now my child and I have to take cold baths in this cold weather. We sometimes try and use a paraffin stove to heat the water, but the gas makes us sick.
“The food in the refrigerator is spoiled, so we have to buy kotas (bunny chow) every day with the last money we have. It’s really bad, which is why I am fully behind the protest,” she said.
Orlando East residents said they were angry with the power utility and wanted nothing but basic services delivered to them. However, Eskom blamed illegal connections and the overloading of the system for the blackouts.
Tebogo Tenyane, a resident, said it was unfair that other parts of the township had electricity, but not them.
“Eskom has been called and we have reference numbers from them and we have sent letters and emails about the blackouts.
“We followed every procedure communicated to us, but nothing has been done hence we took it to the streets to fight for a basic right,” he said.
Soweto has seen multiple protests recently over electricity blackouts following reports that it owed the power utility more than R18 billion in unpaid electricity bills.
The power utility said technicians had been deployed on site to repair the damaged infrastructure and were working to restore supply.
“Some members of the community bypass the meters, illegally connect themselves to the network, and vandalise electricity infrastructure, which leads to sporadic power interruptions.
“This is because the transformers become overloaded, particularly during the winter period, and subsequently catch fire or explode as their protections have been interfered with and vandalised,” Eskom spokesperson Dikatso Mothae said.
A ward councillor in the area, Sechaba Khumalo, said power outages were a “big challenge” in the entire township because of the residents who interfered with Eskom’s infrastructure.
Khumalo said as much as residents needed to be encouraged to pay for services, there was also a problem of affordability that required help from the government.
“Today we will be resuming negotiations with a team of Soweto ward councillors and regional directors to try to find a way forward regarding the electricity issue, because almost all the wards in Soweto are experiencing the same problem,” he said.
The residents have threatened to barricade the N17, Caroline garage, Diepkloof and the rest of Soweto should they not have electricity in their houses by today.
Joburg metro police have been diverting traffic away from the area where there protest was held.
Madagascar have reached the Africa Cup of Nations quarterfinals. GIUSEPPE CACACE/AFP/Getty Images
Madagascar’s fairytale run in the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations will continue after they beat Democratic Republic of Congo on penalties in their round-of-16 clash following a 2-2 draw.
AFCON debutants Madagascar has been one of the stories of the tournament so far as they topped a group including Nigeria to qualify for the knockout stage.
And they looked set to make it to quarterfinals as they led 2-1 going into stoppage time — only for Chancel Mbemba to take the match to extra time with an equaliser for DRC.
DRC were the better team in extra-time but the two sides could not be separated and Nicolas Dupuis’ side triumphed 4-2 on penalties and Yannick Bolasie skied his effort.
A FIRED junior woman police detective, who was discharged after she extorted US$2 250 from a suspected forex dealer following arrest, has taken Commissioner-General Godwin Matanga to court challenging her dismissal.
Ex-Det Constable, Petty Mlauzi, who was attached to the Criminal Intelligence Unit registry in Bulawayo, was discharged on Monday. Mlauzi seeks an order staying her dismissal pending the finalisation of her application for review before the High Court.
She also wants an order blocking her eviction from a ZRP house at the Western Commonage. Mlauzi, through her lawyers Mugiya and Macharaga Law Chambers, yesterday filed an urgent chamber application at the Bulawayo High Court pending review, citing Comm-Gen Matanga and the Police Service Commission as respondents.
Mlauzi, in her founding affidavit, said she was tried by a single officer for violating the Police Act, convicted and sentenced to eight days’ imprisonment at the detention barracks.
Dissatisfied with the conviction and sentence, she appealed to Comm-Gen Matanga and the appeal was dismissed.
“I filed an application for review under case number HC7003/18 querying the decision of the first respondent (Comm-Gen Matanga) to dismiss my appeal on a technicality against the settled principle that labour matters must be decided on technicalities,” he said. Mlauzi said the urgent chamber application followed a radio signal discharging her despite a pending review matter before the High Court.
“I have therefore approached this honourable court with the present application on an urgent basis for an order that my discharge be stayed pending finalisation of my application for review under case number HC7003/18. The matter is urgent in that there is a risk that I will be immediately evicted from police accommodation and the respondents’ agents were sent to harass me and I ended up seeking refuge at my legal practitioner’s offices,” she said.
Mlauzi said there was also a risk of losing her salary.
“The respondents can still execute the discharge in the event that my application fails and therefore they will suffer no prejudice if they are to stay their processes until this court finalises the matter,” she said.
On December 8, 2017, at around 11AM, the complainant Ms Sicelo Sibanda and one Mr Mehluli Bhebhe were inside their car, a Toyota Ipsum, parked near Bulawayo Centre in the central business district counting US$4 250. Mlauzi who was in the company of Detective Sergeant Thomas Hofisi, approached Ms Sibanda and Mr Bhebhe and identified themselves as police officers.
They got into the car and accused Ms Sibanda and Mr Bhebhe of engaging in illegal foreign currency trade and arrested them.
They directed Mr Bhebhe to drive towards Bulawayo Prison and along the way they demanded money in exchange for their release. They took US$2 250 leaving the complainants with only US$2 000. Ms Sibanda contacted her husband who is based in South Africa.
A report was made to the police, leading to the arrest of the two detectives.
State Media|BULAWAYO Mayor, Councillor Solomon Mguni has given up on a controversial bid to lease a council-owned bottle store amid growing pressure from concerned residents on the logic of awarding him the lease.
Last month, Clr Mguni had passed the first hurdle in his bid to lease a bottle store in Njube after the Finance and Development Committee passed the recommendation although in a controversial manner.
It had been revealed that councillors under the sub-committee of allocation of stands and premises had initially turned down Clr Mguni’s bid but this was overturned by the Finance and Development Committee after, Ward One councillor Mlandu Ncube threatened and ordered councillors to put their “necks on the line” for the mayor. Clr Ncube is a known ally and confidante of the mayor.
The matter was subsequently put on hold and referred back to the committee for further deliberation with the majority of the councillors fearing a backlash from residents if they went ahead to award Clr Mguni with the lease.
However, in the latest development, Clr Mguni has since given up on the bid with councillors awarding Mr Ezweni Maphosa with the contentious bid.
Mr Maphosa had initially been awarded the lease before Clr Ncube’s intervention.
A total of 27 other individuals and organisations had expressed interest in leasing the bottle store.
Mr Maphosa will pay a monthly rental of $150.
“Thereafter it was resolved to recommend to the Finance and Development Committee: that the tender for the lease of former beer hall outlets — Njube Bottle Store be awarded to Ezweni Maphosa at his tendered bid price of $150,” reads part of the minutes.
Contacted for comment, Mr Maphosa expressed excitement that he had finally been awarded the lease.
“I am pleased that the local authority saw it fit to award me with this lease, this shows that BCC is a transparent and professional body, as residents and now partners we will forever remain confident in its operations,” said Mr Maphosa.
Commenting on his now failed application, Clr Mguni had argued that he had responded to an advertisement in the Press like any other resident.
“I forwarded my application like any other resident and when that matter was being discussed I recused myself from the meeting and I would not know whether I got the lease or not, I am eagerly awaiting the full council meeting to see whether I got it or not,” he said.
Other properties that have since been leased out by the local authority include, Waterworks Company Grant Premises, women’s clubs in Tshabalala, Njube, Sizinda, vacant former beer hall outlets in Burombo, Elangeni, Njube and Sizinda, flea market stalls and car parks.
A couple of years ago, the Government had to dispatch an investigation team to Bulawayo after it emerged that the city’s councillors were dishing out properties among themselves.
The investigation revealed that out of the 29 councillors, then, only five had not been given any council property to lease.
It was further revealed that when the councillors get the properties they default in paying rates and rentals resulting in the properties accruing debt, as council management could not take the route of evicting the councillors, for fear of victimisation.
ZBC|Officials manning the Beitbridge Border Post and the entire frontier from Chikwalakwala to Shashe are facing a lot of challenges that affect their efficiency, making them susceptible to corruption.
It emerged during a visit to the area by the Defence, Home Affairs and Security Services Portfolio Committee that police officers deployed to patrol the Zimbabwe-South African border area stretching over 200km have not been paid their travel and subsistence allowances since 2007 and are now vulnerable to corruption.
In his submission, Officer Commanding ZRP Beitbridge , Tichaona Nyongo said his teams also have no vehicles and radio communications to effectively discharge their duties.
“We have challenges and when people say our officers are corrupt, it is difficult to defend them because they are deployed without payment, so sometimes it could be that they will be trying to make ends meet. And also, we don’t have vehicles to patrol the over 200km of the border area and this needs urgent attention,” he said.
Security organs at the port of entry said they need scanners in order to detect drugs which pass through the border hidden in vehicles.
“We have immigration officers who are overworked but with no incentives, so while work is done, the issue of incentives is critical for the workers,” Assistant Regional Immigration Officer, Mrs Memory Mgwagwa said.
In an interview after the tour of facilities, committee Chairperson, Mr Levy Mayihlome said they will make recommendations to improve border security and working conditions.
“We are happy with our findings and there is need for urgent interventions, so we will do that to ensure operations are improved because policing of the frontier is vital for national security,” said Mr Mayihlome.
Calls were also made to speed up border redevelopment, including construction of physical barriers to manage motorists, especially those who drive through boom gates in a bid to evade paying duty.
Standard|Bulawayo High Court judge Justice Thompson Mabhikwa has recused himself from hearing the 19-year-old legal wrangle between former PG Industries (Zimbabwe) Limited marketing director Nkululeko Mabhena and his ex-employers over terminal benefits of over $73 million.
Mabhikwa, who was the sixth judge to deal with the case, recused himself from hearing it after he discovered that he knew one of the parties to the matter.
“I recuse myself from dealing with this matter because I know one of the parties personally. The matter has to be set down before another judge. The matter is
hereby removed from the roll,” he said.
The matter had been set down for hearing after it had been off the roll for the past four years when Mabhena skipped the border in 2015 claiming his life was
in danger.
Mabhena only returned in December last year and was scheduled to meet Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs secretary Virginia Mabhiza, to whom he had sent
his complaint about the conduct of two judges that previously handled the case. The letter was copied to Chief Justice Luke Malaba.
However, Mabhena was advised to take the legal route and approached the High Court again demanding that his case be set down for hearing.
The protracted legal battle has seen a number of applications and counter-applications filed at the Bulawayo High Court over terminal benefits and salary
arrears amounting to $73 million.
The saga started when Mabhena fell ill and was believed to have died — with doctors at United Bulawayo Hospitals certifying him dead.
PG went on to pay off his funeral expenses. At some point he was put in a morgue.
Mabhena was eventually discharged from hospital and went back to work, where he was asked to produce a certificate of existence as he was now believed to be
dead.
After meeting the employer’s demand, PG Industries, however, refused to take him back, but dismissed him with a payoff of 64 cents.
Mabhena filed an appeal at the High Court demanding that the company pay him terminal benefits and salary arrears.
President Peter Mutharika was furious on Thursday when he learnt of violence and looting and ordered Police to arrest immediate past Vice President and UTM president Saulos Chilima and Malawi Congress Party (MCP) president Lazarus Chakwera over demonstrations calling for the resignation of beleaguered Malawi Electoral Commission (MEC) Chairperson Jane Ansah.
Mary Chilima clad in a black T-shirt inscribed OsaopaSome protesters lie on the road during the protests in Lilongwe.-Photo by Govati Nyirenda, ManaBoth Chilima and Chakwera said they joined demonstrators as concerned Malawians and not as leaders of their respective political parties
The protesters were seen burning tyres and smashing statues erected on the roundabout near Sunbird Capital while some vandalised Spar shop at City Centre and stole assorted merchandise, predominantly alcoholic beverages and food items.
Mutharika is said to have ordered Police Deputy Inspector General Duncan Mwapasa to arrest the two and Human Rights Defenders Coalition (HRDC) Chairman Timothy Mtambo, whose organization is organizing the demonstration which turned ugly especially in Mzuzu where some buildings were set on fire.
Inside sources at Area 30 Police Headquarters confided to Nyasa Times that Mwapasa in turn ordered Lilongwe Police Station Officer-in-Charge James Mthali who could not take the order.
“Mthali told them that arresting Chilima, Chakwera and Mtambo will just fuel and breed more trouble for police officers especially those residing in commercial areas,” said the source.
Another government source also corroborated the story saying a visibly angry and disturbed Mutharika ordered Police to arrest the trio accusing them for a fueling violence through the demonstrations.
“Mutharika wants these three arrested and said he doesn’t want any excuses, that was his clear order,” said an impeccable source.
However, the three have been calling demonstrators to demonstrate peacefully and asked Police to arrest anyone who will be found looting and vandalizing property as the demonstrations are ‘peaceful’.
Speaking to an estimated 4 000 protesters at the vigils on Thursday, Chilima stressed that people should exercise their right to demonstrate and not fear anything as the National Anthem states.
“Let us demonstrate peacefully without fear,” said Chilima, who was dressed in black combat regalia while his wife, Mary, was clad in a black T-shirt inscribed Osaopa (No Fear).
Added Chilima: “We are not going to relent. We are going to fight until we see where the vote of Malawians went.”
Chakwera, who finished second as per results announced by MEC, also said he will not let justice on the May 21 2019 Tripartite Elections be concealed.
HRDC first organized the demonstrations on June 20, 2019 calling for Ansah to resign who vehemently refused to resign in an exclusive television interview with Zodiak TV a week ago.
The CSOs then organized another set of demonstrations and vigils on Thursday and Friday across the country to force Ansah to resign over the way she handled the May 21 tripartite elections.
Voting in the tripartite elections took place on May 21 in 5 002 polling stations nationwide and DPP President Peter Mutharika was declared a winner seven days after the voting, securing his second five-year term.
The results have, however, been challenged by Mutharika’s main contenders, Malawi Congress Party (MCP) and UTM Party, who have called for the nullification of the presidential poll, arguing some anomalies were overlooked.
The two parties have both filed their cases at the High Court in Lilongwe whose hearing starts on July 29.
The polarised electorate has led Mutharika—who won the presidency with 38.5 percent of the vote—to face questions of legitimacy not just from his challengers, but also from influential groups such as the Public Affairs Committee (PAC) who say he has carried the day in an election that lacked credibility.
SOWETO’s Orlando East residents took to the streets to protest after being without electricity for days. Here Joburg metro police are out in full force to calm the situation and divert traffic away from troubled spots.
Soweto residents barricaded roads with stones and burning tyres, leaving commuters stranded in an attempt to force power utility Eskom to listen to their grievances following three weeks of blackouts in the area.
The protest was on its third day yesterday.
Ntsakisi Mabaso, 34, said she hadn’t been to work for the past three days and was worried about salary cuts.
“I don’t get a lot of money and now I will lose the little that I get.”
However, the mother of a 9-year-old child supported of the protest.
“I buy R100 electricity units weekly, but now my child and I have to take cold baths in this cold weather. We sometimes try and use a paraffin stove to heat the water, but the gas makes us sick.
“The food in the refrigerator is spoiled, so we have to buy kotas (bunny chow) every day with the last money we have. It’s really bad, which is why I am fully behind the protest,” she said.
Orlando East residents said they were angry with the power utility and wanted nothing but basic services delivered to them. However, Eskom blamed illegal connections and the overloading of the system for the blackouts.
Tebogo Tenyane, a resident, said it was unfair that other parts of the township had electricity, but not them.
“Eskom has been called and we have reference numbers from them and we have sent letters and emails about the blackouts.
“We followed every procedure communicated to us, but nothing has been done hence we took it to the streets to fight for a basic right,” he said.
Soweto has seen multiple protests recently over electricity blackouts following reports that it owed the power utility more than R18 billion in unpaid electricity bills.
The power utility said technicians had been deployed on site to repair the damaged infrastructure and were working to restore supply.
Metro Police keep an eye on matters after Orlando East residents took to the streets to protest after being without electricity for days.
“Some members of the community bypass the meters, illegally connect themselves to the network, and vandalise electricity infrastructure, which leads to sporadic power interruptions.
“This is because the transformers become overloaded, particularly during the winter period, and subsequently catch fire or explode as their protections have been interfered with and vandalised,” Eskom spokesperson Dikatso Mothae said.
A ward councillor in the area, Sechaba Khumalo, said power outages were a “big challenge” in the entire township because of the residents who interfered with Eskom’s infrastructure.
Khumalo said as much as residents needed to be encouraged to pay for services, there was also a problem of affordability that required help from the government.
“Today we will be resuming negotiations with a team of Soweto ward councillors and regional directors to try to find a way forward regarding the electricity issue, because almost all the wards in Soweto are experiencing the same problem,” he said.
The residents have threatened to barricade the N17, Caroline garage, Diepkloof and the rest of Soweto should they not have electricity in their houses by today.
Joburg metro police have been diverting traffic away from the area where there protest was held.
Home Affairs and Cultural Heritage Minister Cain Mathema said failure to regulate the activities of churches was creating a fertile environment for criminal activities such as money laundering and subversive behaviour.
GOVERNMENT is set to craft a law to regulate operations of churches to curb criminal activities, a Cabinet Minister has said.
Government’s decision comes at a time when prominent church leader Walter Magaya is involved in sexual abuse and financial irregularities allegations. Some church leaders have been arrested for crimes such as rape and fraud.
“Religious organisations have to be registered so that their activities are monitored to curb crimes such as money laundering and other such crimes,” said Minister Mathema.
He said there was a danger of people engaging in subversive activities hiding behind the church.
Minister Mathema said Government was aware that some churches were involved in criminal activities hence the need for a law to regulate their operations.
He said churches should disclose their source of revenue and how they were spending it.
“If you are a religious organisation it is only fair in my view to tell us where you get your money from and how you are using it,” he said.
Responding to the proposal, Zimbabwe Council of Churches (ZCC) secretary-general, Reverend Kenneth Mutata said they will closely follow the development.
THE Ministry of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare has failed to account for or distribute goods donated by the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) which are reportedly lying idle and losing value in storerooms.
In her 2018 report, Auditor General Mrs Mildred Chiri said the ministry had failed to account for the goods which are meant to be distributed to vulnerable and needy individuals.
Former First Lady Grace Mugabe was during her whirlwind time accused of abusing goods donated by ZIMRA to the Department of Social Welfare when she took the goods and distributed them in her own rallies to boost her campaigns.
“There was poor accountability for goods donated to the Ministry of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare by the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) held at Northcort Training Institute. Items donated were inconsistently being recorded either as bales, sacks, bags by quantities or by weight instead of maintaining a standard unit of measurement of classification of the goods,” said Mrs Chiri.
She said Northcort Training Institute personnel received the donated goods without physically verifying the quantities against the Issue Vouchers raised by Zimra.
“From interviews held with the staff, there were instances when deliveries were made by transporters in the absence of the Ministry’s head office administration personnel for accountability purposes as they are the ones who would have collected the items from Zimra,” she said.
Mrs Chiri said during a physical inspection of the donated goods, bales, sacks and bags of donated clothes and shoes were open and their contents were scattered on the storeroom floors.
“Although the Northcort Training Institute had a stores register in place, the register did not include vital information such as full description of items (specifications), quantities received, quantities issued, running balances and signature of the recipient,” she said.
Mrs Chari said four brand new and four used tyres were issued to one of the Ministry’s administration officers without the approval of the accounting officer. The recipient officer was the one who originated and authorised the letter of issuance.
According to Mrs Chiri the Ministry did not have a clear policy for management and distribution of the donations.
“At the time of the audit (March 12, 2019), I noted that there were over 200 bales of clothes and shoes, 16 brand new tyres and 1 200 second hand tyres of different sizes that were being kept at the institute, of which, these goods were being damaged by rodents and deteriorating in quality due to adverse weather conditions,” she said.
Mrs Chiri said there was no evidence of periodic or regular physical stock counts by supervisors both from the Ministry’s head office and the institute.
She said donated goods are exposed to misappropriation if the Ministry does not put adequate controls for delivery, receipt, recording and custody of goods.
“Failure to consistently record donated items compromises the accountability of same and without physical verification, it would be difficult to ascertain whether the received donations were properly recorded and accounted for,” said Mrs Chiri.
She recommended that the ministry should ensure that goods donated are consistently recorded using the same unit of measurement.
“The Ministry should ensure that bales, sacks and bags of donated goods are kept sealed at all times. Stores register should capture all important details such as full description of items (specifications), quantities received, quantities issued, balance (in stock) and signature of the recipient on issuances” said Mrs Chiri.
FLAMBOYANT businessman Mr Wicknell Chivayo whose company was in 2015 awarded a tender and paid US$5 million by the Zimbabwe Power Company (ZPC) for pre-commencement work at the 100 megawatt Gwanda solar power plant, yesterday came off his high horse and admitted his wrongdoing.
Mr Chivayo, who owns Intratek Zimbabwe, yesterday took to his micro-blogging site, Twitter page and apologised for failing to deliver.
“I accept full responsibility for all my wrong doing and if you thought I was perfect I apologise for being human,” he tweeted much to the chagrin of his followers who were quick to lash back at him.
Chivayo is known for flaunting his riches and scorning people who he says do not have money on social media.
A majority of his followers felt the apology was not enough while others seemed to think it was sarcastic.
They demanded that he pays back the money.
“This is not your personal pet project, your apologies mean jack (Sic) . . . it’s a national initiative which requires the seriousness it deserves . . . just payback and we find someone (company) who is competent,” said @sirosnaire.
Another follower @PrinsNathan retorted: “You are not perfect sir but then do what’s right, pay back the money since you did not deliver the services that you have been paid for.”
@NellsNelson tweeted: “Ah but u still have to go to prison.”
@JusticeMabuwa wrote: “But vaChivayo, the US$3,3 million was for a feasibility study chete? Varumeka ngatisadaro so, hona nyika yese irikungochema nekushaya magetsi (Let’s not do that, the whole nation is crying because we don’t have electricity). Just complete the job man.”
@NdiTarwanda quizzed: “Best apology is changed behaviour or in this case paying back the money?”
@Tendayee said: “You are human we all are, just pay back the money tiwane magetsi (so that we get electricity) simple.”
@TinasheBvute responded: “It’s either you pay back the money or there should be repercussions, simple! You can’t hold the whole nation hostage (sic) by prejudicing Zesa.”
@ realmedicaldoc said: “I know you have more money than me, but, I humbly request that you finish the Gwanda solar project if it’s within your means, the cries of most Zimbabweans won’t help you at all, we feel you might have abused the facility.”
Energy and Power Development Minister Advocate Fortune Chasi during his visit to the Gwanda solar power plant site last week, said the Government has suffered a potential revenue loss of about US$50 million as a result of the non-completion of the project, which was supposed to have been commissioned by December 2017.
He said the delays in implementing the project had resulted in the loss of sales by Zesa equivalent to 500GWhs (Gigawatt-hours) and potential revenue loss of about US$50 million as of June this year.
Mr Chivayo was awarded the tender in 2015 and paid US$5 million by ZPC for pre-commencement work at the 100 megawatt Gwanda solar power plant.
After receiving the money without a bank guarantee, no meaningful development has taken place at the site.
Adv Chasi expressed disappointment as no work has been done at the site despite the $5 million payment that was made to Intratek.
He said the solar project was a crucial initiative that would address electricity challenges the country is facing.
Adv Chasi said the Government was going to engage Intratek as they expected a refund or to see an operational solar plant.
State Media|Government will expedite the promulgation of the Cybercrime and Cyber Security Bill into law amid growing concerns over social media abuse and the proliferation of fake news.
Speaking at the launch of a Community Information Centre in Charandura, ICT, Postal and Courier Services Minister Kazembe Kazembe said political hooligans were now hijacking social media platforms to push their political agendas through fake news.
“We are now working hard to bring the Cybercrime and Cyber Security Bill into law. We now realise that it is long overdue with the rampant abuse of social media platforms.
“Social media abusers have become so wanton that they are now even going to the extent of creating false death notices, which goes against our culture as a people.
“I urge users of this new Community Information Centre to use it responsibly,” he said.
Cybercrimes are on the rise in Zimbabwe on the back of a rise in mobile telephony and broadband penetration.
Meanwhile, the ICT Minister said the CIC concept is well in line with the Government’s goal of achieving an upper-middle income economy by 2030.
“The aim of the Community Information Centre concept is to create centres where the community can access and use ICTs to promote their businesses, advance their education and improve their livelihood.
“In this regard, Charandura Community Information Centre is furnished with modern computers that are connected to the internet. It will provide basic electronic services such as Internet surfing, electronic mail service, printing, scanning, photocopying and document binding for your convenience.
“14 CICs have been established in Midlands Province alone. All of them including Charandura CIC are now operational,” said Minister Kazembe.
State Media|Zimbabwe has become the first country in the Sub-Saharan Africa region to complete the successful enrolment of participants who are taking part in the ongoing large-scale HIV vaccine efficacy trials which are currently underway on four continents, covering 12 countries with about 12 669 study participants on board.
Zimbabwe has 500 participants in the HIV Vaccine Trials Network (HVTN) 705 also known as “lmbokodo” and the Antibody Mediated Prevention (AMP) studies which seek to find a lasting solution to a safe and effective HIV vaccine.
Speaking to state media at the weekend, HIV vaccine researcher at the University of Zimbabwe College of Health and Clinical Trials Research Centre, Dr Stranix Chibanda said the country finished its participants enrolment in June and they now await to monitor them as part of the research.
“The 705 study has just finished enrolling participants and now we continue to follow them up monitoring their health and checking how the immune system will react to vaccines.
“This will take a couple of years but I think in the next few years we will be able to roll out one of the vaccines for the benefit of our children today,” said Dr Chibanda.
Dr Chibanda added that while the HIV vaccine trial remained an ongoing process, Zimbabwe had shown its preparedness to take the vaccines aboard once they pass the due process.
“We are still doing the trials and not even in the next five years can we say we will be done. Maybe in 10 years, but I have noticed that the country is ready to take the vaccines once they are approved and licensed by the Medicines Control Authority of Zimbabwe.
“However, the end of this enrolment phase facilitates the collection and analysis of trial specific data enabling researchers to answer research questions. It is in this vein that I want to applaud all those who volunteered to participate in these trials and they are commended for their selfless contribution towards this noble effort to move closer to a world without Aids,” she said.
The AMP studies is now fully enrolled with 4 625 participants from communities in the USA, Brazil, Peru, Tanzania, Botswana, South Africa, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique and Zimbabwe.
The AMP studies are the most advanced human clinical studies to test wether a broadly neutralising antibody (bNAb) called VRCO1 which is given intravenously can prevent HIV acquisition in people.
The trials also seek to help to establish the concentrations of bNAb’s required for protection and to characterise any “breakthrough” HIV infection to understand if it was sensitive or resistant to VRCO1.
The studies also could also clarify what level of neutralisation a vaccine or antibody-based method of HIV prevention needs to achieve or maintain to promote sustained protection.
HVTN705 or “Imbokodo”, meaning the rock in Zulu, was derived from a popular African proverb “Wathint’ abafazi, Wathint’ Imbokodo! meaning “You strike the women, you strike the rock!” in recognition of the strength women show in the face of challenges.
This vaccine is being administered in women in Africa with 2 637 healthy HIV negative women aged 18-35 years drawn from Zimbabwe and the neighbouring countries helping in moving ahead with the trials.
The vaccine regimen being tested in Imbokodo is based on “mosaic” immunogens — vaccine components designed to induce immune responses against a wide range of global HIV strains.
President Mnangagwa (right) shares a lighter moment with his South African counterpart Cyril Ramaphosa on the sidelines of the African Union summit in Niamey, Niger, yesterday.
State Media|President Mnangagwa yesterday held successful bilateral talks here with his South African counterpart, President Cyril Ramaphosa, to find lasting solutions to Zimbabwe’s power problems, clearing the way for officials from the two countries to meet soon for a new power supply arrangement.
The President said Energy and Power Development Minister Fortune Chasi would soon lead a delegation to SA to finalise a new power supply deal, that should ease electricity woes in the country.
“With President Ramaphosa we met and we were sharing challenges we are facing and, in particular energy shortages.
“We exchanged views on how we can deal with that issue. Of course, our Zesa owes Eskom quite a lot of money and they have been able to pay US$10 million last week to reduce that debt.
“This enables them to have discussions and I think our Minister of Energy (Fortune Chasi) will go to South Africa next week to discuss some new arrangements,” he said.
Last week Government paid US$10 million to reduce the debt owed by Zesa to South Africa’s Eskom.
A 24-year-old Masvingo man allegedly fatally stabbed a fellow congregant with a knife during a prayer vigil following a dispute over badly cooked relish, police have confirmed.
Tinos Mudyanembwa of Mutumwapasi Village under Chief Shumba allegedly stabbed Clever Guvuriro (28) of the same village once on the left side of the neck during prayers at their church deacon’s homestead.
Masvingo police spokesperson Chief Inspector Charity Mazula said the incident occurred on Saturday at around 10 pm.
She said the body of the deceased was taken to Masvingo General Hospital mortuary for post-mortem. “I can confirm receiving a report of murder involving congregates who had a prayer vigil at a homestead in Masvingo rural. The suspect has since been arrested and is expected to appear in court soon facing murder charges,” said Chief Insp Mazula.
She said Clever Guvuriro and other congregates were at Mr Mutupo Madondo’s homestead for a prayer vigil when tragedy struck. “At around 8 pm, a 14-year-old boy allegedly served Clever Guvuriro and his friend, Mr Simbarashe Gumbochuma supper.
Guvuriro mocked the boy saying the relish was poorly cooked and resembled women hair,” she said.
This, she said, apparently irked the boy who advised Clever Guvuriro that he was supposed to be mindful of the church environment and his language was in bad taste.
The man could not accept being reprimanded by the boy and in protest, repeatedly slapped him on the face until he fled.
The boy, she said, reported the matter to his attacker‘s sibling, Mr Moses Guvuriro and Mudyanembwa.
The two confronted Clever Guvuriro who was with his friend, Mr Gumbochuma and accused the pair of being a nuisance at church.
Messrs Mudyanembwa and Moses Guvuriro teamed up and fought with the pair, Clever and Gumbochuma.
Mudyanembwa allegedly drew an okapi knife from his pocket and stabbed Clever on the left side of the neck and he died minutes later.State media
GOVERNMENT is set to craft a law to regulate operations of churches to curb criminal activities, a Cabinet Minister has said.
Home Affairs and Cultural Heritage Minister Cain Mathema said failure to regulate the activities of churches was creating a fertile environment for criminal activities such as money laundering and subversive behaviour.
Government’s decision comes at a time when some church leaders have been arrested for crimes such as rape and fraud.
“Religious organisations have to be registered so that their activities are monitored to curb crimes such as money laundering and other such crimes,” said Minister Mathema.
He said there was a danger of people engaging in subversive activities hiding behind the church.State media
GHANAIAN Robert Sackey made the difference on his debut for Dynamos when he rose from the bench and grabbed a late winner in this tough Castle Lager Premiership football assignment against Chapungu at Rufaro yesterday.
The midfielder brought the house down three minutes into stoppage-time when he beat the badly exposed Chapungu goalkeeper Talbert Shumba with a powerful left-footer which all but erased the seething emotions in the terraces following a rather disappointing shift by the hosts in this early kick-off.
DeMbare skipper Edward Sadomba, who was full of energy the whole afternoon, should also have left the park with a great deal of satisfaction after providing the brilliant assist.
Sadomba had earlier in the first half shaken his head in disbelief after goalkeeper Shumba made a spectacular save to keep out his dipping long-range strike.
A draw was possibly going to be a fair result for both teams. But just as Chapungu were beginning to wind down the clock, a long delivery from the back found Sadomba who controlled well and released the ball into the path of the unmarked Ghanaian Sackey.
Sackey, who had appeared unsettled earlier on, silenced his critics when he responded with a powerful shot and the goal could help his confidence after he had missed almost the whole first half of the season with injuries.
“I just want to thank the coach for giving me this opportunity to play because when I came I was facing challenges with injuries each and every time. But the coach gave me this opportunity,” said Sackey.State media
First Lady Auxillia Mnangagwa has been elected Vice President of the Organisation of African First Ladies for Development (OAFLAD) in recognition of her philanthropic work and assistance to the less privileged in Zimbabwe.
She was elected during the ongoing 23rd OAFLAD’s General Assembly Meeting which is running concurrently with the African Union’s Extraordinary Summit.
According to the organisation’s constitution, elections are held after every two years.
Amai Mnangagwa takes over from Margaret Kenyatta of Kenya while former OAFLAD president, the First Lady of Burkina Faso, Adjoavi Sika Kabore was replaced by Congo Brazaville’s First Lady Antoinette Sassou Nguesso.
OAFLAD is an advocacy organisation where First Ladies of Africa seek to leverage their unique position to advocate for policies that make health services accessible and laws that boost women and youth empowerment.
In an interview after her election, an ecstatic Amai Mnangagwa pledged to continue working hard for the development of Zimbabwe and the continent at large.
She said her election was not an individual achievement but that of the whole country.
“I am happy that my colleague First ladies entrusted me with this position. I feel exalted and this is dedicated to all women (of Zimbabwe),” she said.
Amai Mnangagwa said the position she got as OAFLAD’s Vice President was not for her alone but for the nation of Zimbabwe particularly women.State media
Egypt’s FA President Hany Abou-Rida along with some board members have resigned from their posts following the nation’s exit from the 2019 AFCON.
Abou-Rida also announced that Coach Javier Aguirre and his staff have been relieved of their duties.
Despite stepping down as the FA boss, Abou-Rida will continue in his position as the head of the organizing committee of the tournament.
The Pharaohs who are hosting the tournament were knocked out in the Round of 16 after a 1-0 loss to South Africa on Saturday, thanks to an 85th-minute strike by Thembinkosi Lorch.
The win was Bafana Bafana’s first in the knockout stages since 2000.
Despite the abuse of state funds by ZANU PF the people of Bikita East defied ZANU PF by attending in their thousands an MDC rally held today to drum up support for Moses Maphosa.
ZANU PF has been abusing the CIO whenever the MDC held campaign rallies in ward 31 by moving around with an unmarked vehicle.
After years of neglect, roads are being graded to hoodwink the voters in the ward.
People are heading calls by the MDC to reject a party that has dismally failed to run the country despite decades of being in power through rigging machinations.
Prices are rising on daily basis and the ZANU PF regime banned the selling maize to other buyers non-other than GMB. This has incensed the rural voters and they are ready to show ZANU PF the exit door.
As we enter the last stretch of the campaign the MDC will continue to radicalise voters in ward 31 so that they would not be intimidated by ZANU PF.
Cde Gore
Information and Publicity Secretary, Youth Assembly, Masvingo Province
The flamboyant businessman Mr Wicknell Chivayo whose company was in 2015 awarded a tender and paid US$5 million by the Zimbabwe Power Company (ZPC) for pre-commencement work at the 100 megawatt Gwanda solar power plant, yesterday came off his high horse and admitted his wrongdoing.
Mr Chivayo, who owns Intratek Zimbabwe, yesterday took to his micro-blogging site, Twitter page and apologised for failing to deliver.
“I accept full responsibility for all my wrong doing and if you thought I was perfect I apologise for being human,” he tweeted much to the chagrin of his followers who were quick to lash back at him.
Chivayo is known for flaunting his riches and scorning people who he says do not have money on social media.
A majority of his followers felt the apology was not enough while others seemed to think it was sarcastic.
They demanded that he pays back the money.
“This is not your personal pet project, your apologies mean jack (Sic) . . . it’s a national initiative which requires the seriousness it deserves . . . just payback and we find someone (company) who is competent,” said @sirosnaire.
Another follower @PrinsNathan retorted: “You are not perfect sir but then do what’s right, pay back the money since you did not deliver the services that you have been paid for.”
@NellsNelson tweeted: “Ah but u still have to go to prison.”
@JusticeMabuwa wrote: “But vaChivayo, the US$3,3 million was for a feasibility study chete? Varumeka ngatisadaro so, hona nyika yese irikungochema nekushaya magetsi (Let’s not do that, the whole nation is crying because we don’t have electricity). Just complete the job man.”
@NdiTarwanda quizzed: “Best apology is changed behaviour or in this case paying back the money?”
@Tendayee said: “You are human we all are, just pay back the money tiwane magetsi (so that we get electricity) simple.”
@TinasheBvute responded: “It’s either you pay back the money or there should be repercussions, simple! You can’t hold the whole nation hostage (sic) by prejudicing Zesa.”
@ realmedicaldoc said: “I know you have more money than me, but, I humbly request that you finish the Gwanda solar project if it’s within your means, the cries of most Zimbabweans won’t help you at all, we feel you might have abused the facility.”
Energy and Power Development Minister Advocate Fortune Chasi during his visit to the Gwanda solar power plant site last week, said the Government has suffered a potential revenue loss of about US$50 million as a result of the non-completion of the project, which was supposed to have been commissioned by December 2017.
He said the delays in implementing the project had resulted in the loss of sales by Zesa equivalent to 500GWhs (Gigawatt-hours) and potential revenue loss of about US$50 million as of June this year.
Mr Chivayo was awarded the tender in 2015 and paid US$5 million by ZPC for pre-commencement work at the 100 megawatt Gwanda solar power plant.
After receiving the money without a bank guarantee, no meaningful development has taken place at the site.
Adv Chasi expressed disappointment as no work has been done at the site despite the $5 million payment that was made to Intratek.
He said the solar project was a crucial initiative that would address electricity challenges the country is facing.
Adv Chasi said the Government was going to engage Intratek as they expected a refund or to see an operational solar plant. – state media
Farai Dziva|Non Governmental Organizations in Masvingo have threatened to withdraw aid following a directive by government to stop foreign currency disbursements.
Government has with immediate effect directed all non-governmental organisations operating in the country who have been giving aid in the form of foreign currency to either buy food using the money and donate to the beneficiaries or give out local currency.
This comes after Government outlawed the multi-currency regime and restricted domestic transactions to local currency through Statutory Instrument (SI) 142 of 2019, in an effort to enhance the affordability of goods and services by the majority.
The Government recently had a meeting with the World Bank and United Nations representatives as well as embassies in the country through which humanitarian aid comes to deliberate on the matter and ensure that SI 142 is fully implemented.
“As you are aware I am the chairperson of the inter-Cabinet Committee that deals with disaster and climate change, recently we had a meeting with World Bank and United Nations representatives as well as embassies.
The Minister of Finance (and Economic Development, Professor Mthuli Ncube) was there, the Minister of Public Service (Labour and Social Welfare Dr Sekai Nzenza) was there as well as other ministries,” said Minister July Moyo.
“We discussed how best we can get help as a country. We told them that non-governmental organisations should stop giving beneficiaries US dollars or any other foreign currency. If they so wish to give them money, they should give them local currency.
The argument was we have removed the multi-currency regime and restricted domestic transactions to local currency and most people in rural areas to which most of the aid goes will not be able to use the money.”
However NGOs in Masvingo have vowed to withdraw aid as a result of the government directive.
“The directive will result in donor fatigue and widespread protests.
The directive will grossly affect our operations,” said a COTRAD official.