ZRP Interview over the military deployment memo at
— ZimEye (@ZimEye) June 3, 2019
6pm (London) 7pm (Harare). https://t.co/RMz9FsvEJW pic.twitter.com/W8Fpuw5SqU
WATCH: Greatman Drops Heavy Music Video- Dohwe!
Billiat Speaks On “Lean Spell”
Farai Dziva|Warriors star forward Khama Billiat believes the team can go beyond the group stages at this year’s edition of the Africa Cup of Nations in Egypt.
“We want to do better than what we did last time, we believe in the team, and we believe in the coaches. It’s possible,” said Billiat.
The 28-year-old also believes that a bad season at club level does not necessarily reflect on his performance at national team level.
“This is a national team, we have a different philosophy, and we play differently, we understand each other language-wise.”
“It doesn’t matter whether you win the league at club level or not, you will be playing for your country and there is always a better understanding with other players,” he added.

Soldiers Open Fire On Civilians In Sudan, 13 Killed
13 protestors were reportedly killed when Sudan’s security forces stormed a protest camp in the capital, Khartoum to drive them out.
The soldiers are said to have fired at unarmed protestors, intending to drive them out of the camp which was the epicentre of the protests that brought down Omar al Bashir.
Protestors had refused to vacate the camp, demanding that the soldiers who took over from Al Bashir should hand over power to a civilian authority.
Reports indicate that during the military offensive carried out on Monday, 13 people were killed while 116 were wounded.
However, military council’s spokesman, Lieutenant General Shams El Din Kabbashi denied that the protest camp had been dispersed.
He said:” The protest camp has not been dispersed. The security forces were trying to disperse unruly (elements) in the Colombia area, near the protest site, and some of these elements fled to the protest site and caused this chaos.
The British ambassador in Khartoum said that he heard heavy gunfire for more than an hour from his residence and he was extremely concerned.
After the military crackdown, protestors reportedly poured into the streets in Khartoum and its twin city of Omdurman and blocked roads with rocks and burning tires after news of the raid spread. Global News

Mnangagwa “Secret” Deals Exposed
Farai Dziva|MDC A vice president Tendai Biti has disclosed that Emmerson Mnangagwa is involved in several clandestine business deals in the country.
Biti has revealed that Mnangagwa is the man behind Zuva Petroleum.The Zanu PF leader usually portrays himself as a political saint.
Speaking at the MDC A Congress in Gweru Biti said:”Who do you think is the owner of Zuva Petroleum? It’s Emmerson Mnangagwa.
That is why the company is selling fuel in hard currency without being stopped from doing so.
I can also tell you that Mnangagwa invested millions of dollars in the company.Zuva Petroleum is untouchable because Mnangagwa is wholly in charge of the company.
He is hiding behind a consortium of businesspeople but he is the man in charge of the company,”said Biti.

Picture Blast: Can These Men Transform The Economy?

Old and tired ….Can Zanu PF leadership transform the economy?
Gvt Spokesperson Accuses Zimbabweans Of Failing To Defend County’s Image

Emmerson Mnangagwa Is Descending At Speed Of Light

“Mnangagwa Liberation War Credentials Highly Magnified “

Darkest Hour Is Before Dawn -Chamisa

Another Intriguing Picture :Robert Mugabe Flanked By Grace And Robert Junior

Robert Mugabe flanked by Grace and Robert Junior
Ndiraya Remains Modest Despite Landmark Win
Farai Dziva |Dynamos coach Tonderayi Ndiraya has said the win against champions FC Platinum at the weekend is a major confidence booster for his team’s revival after a shaky start to the season.
The Glamour Boys had gone for seven years without winning at Mandava Stadium. Dynamos beat FC Platinum 1-0.
“We actually planned for this game,” the coach said. “We made sure that we go in there in search of an early goal, but when we failed to get it, we retreated and waited for a counter attack.
“This discipline showed that we can do well if we continue to work hard. The reconstruction continues for us, but it’s very pleasing looking at how the players are transforming since I took over.”
Ndiraya had lamented before that he wanted to test his players’ character against the big teams.
“Look, FC Platinum has got quality miles ahead of Dynamos. This is the test that we wanted.
“But us being Dynamos we had to rise to the occasion because when you are Dynamos, you have to live up to the billing and stand up against whoever comes your way.
“Now we have to see whether we need to beef up more or give some of the boys a chance during the mid-season.”

Chitembwe Blames Poor Officiating For Caps United Loss
Farai Dziva|Caps United coach Lloyd Chitembwe has blamed the referee for Sunday’s defeat to Chicken Inn.
Caps lost lost 3-1 in a Match-day 10 encounter played at the National Sports Stadium.
“I don’t want to talk about referees, but on this one, I thought the referee had a say in the outcome of the match,” complained Chitembwe.
“I asked my players if the Chicken Inn player had a touch on the ball, and they said yes. The goalkeeper only handled the ball after a Chicken Inn player had a touch on the ball.
But we just take it on the chin and move forward. We will go back to the drawing board and plan for the next match.”
Chicken Inn had a good start, surging ahead in the 24th minute through Clive Augusto who was set up by Clement Matawu.
Augusto doubled the lead early in the second half through the disputable goal from an indirect free kick after Mverechena had handled a back pass from Godwin Goriyati.
Caps United later pulled one back through Dominic Chungwa but hopes of a revival were dashed when Augusto killed the match as a contest with a low shot outside the box.

No Need To Trail Me, I Am Ready To Avail Myself -Chiwenga
Farai Dziva|Fearless Harare preacher Apostle Talent Chiwenga says he is ready to avail himself in person and save taxpayers’ money that is being used by state security agents to trail him.
In a letter to Emmerson Mnangagwa Chiwenga said he was ready to die for the truth.
See part of Chiwenga’s letter below:
Sir, I am being followed by unregistered vehicles believed to be from the Central Intelligence Organisation or from the Military Intelligence Department of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces, I am receiving death threats almost on a daily basis and this is because I preach the true gospel of Christ that condemns sin and calls all men to repentance, for God is not a respecter of persons.
It is my honest and humble opinion, Sir, that the people who are giving orders to military personnel or State security agents to kill me are your employees or your subordinates.
I don’t see myself as a security or political threat to anyone in this country, because I am a preacher of the gospel whose tools are the Bible and the microphone.
I am therefore asking to see you so that I may among other things surrender myself to you and your administration so that if I do not get an opportunity to answer to issues I am being stalked and threatened for, at least I will save the government’s taxpayers’ money which is being used to stalk me and harass me, if I have to die for the gospel I preach (which I am ready to die for), at least I will avail myself in person.

Mliswa Corners SB Moyo’s Wife To Investigate Billy Rautenbach
Outspoken Norton legislator, Temba Mliswa has pleaded with newly appointed Zimbabwe Anti Corruption Commission (ZACC) chairperson Justice Loice Matanda Moyo to investigate controversial businessman Billy Rautenbach’s acquisition of land in Hwange for mining.
Posting on Twitter today, Mliswa said he was pleased with Justice Matanda’s appointment expressing hope that the commission will open a hotline where people can freely send tip-offs.
He renewed his fight with the Green Fuel owner, Rautenbach whom he accused of corruptly acquiring vast tracts of land in Hwange to set up a mine.
Dancehall Star Enzo Attacked In Furore Over “Selfies”
Farai Dziva | Popular Zim Dancehall star Enzo Ishall was attacked by five men for allegedly “refusing to be pictured with them.”
The men had requested to take selfies with the musician but he reportedly declined.
“When Enzo Ishall disembarked from his car the gang pounced on him, leaving him for dead.
His car’s windscreen was damaged in the furore,” a source close to the musician revealed yesterday.

“Even The Devil Is Afraid Of Zanu PF”
Farai Dziva|Hard-hitting Masvingo based political analyst Jeffryson David Chitando has sensationally said the devil himself is afraid of Zanu PF.
In a statement posted on Facebook yesterday Chitando described Zanu PF as “an evil creature.”
“If you are able to identify and show me one thing on earth as bad and as evil as Zanu PF I will be able to show you the easy route to heaven.
An evil and satanic creature that kills the people who supported it ,fed it and clothed it during the years of liberation?
A barbaric and primitive organization which starves and lies to the people.”
“Surely there is no place for such an organization even in hell.Satan will envy its cruelty. Chero Satan unotyavo Zanu PF.

So Zhuwawo Was Right When He Said Zimbabweans Were Used By Chiwenga And Mnangagwa To Remove Mugabe?
Farai Dziva| A tweet in which former President Robert Mugabe’ s nephew Patrick Zhuwawo claimed Zimbabweans were blindly used by Emmerson Mnangagwa and Constantino Chiwenga to topple his uncle, has suddenly gone viral on various social media platforms.
Zhuwawo also posted a video footage in which he claimed Zimbabweans would regret the removal of his uncle from office.
The former leader of the liberation war was removed from office via a military led exercise codenamed Operation Restore Legacy.
Some Zimbabweans have retrieved Zhuwawo’s video clip and tweet from the archives and they admit he was right.
Zhuwawo tweeted:
“All truth passes through three stages.
First, it is ridiculed.
Second, it is violently opposed.
Third, it is accepted as being self evident.”
Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860) #kuitiswa
Zimbabwe #coup.”
602 1:10 PM – Nov 18, 2018

Wadyajena Threatens COTTCO Over Meddling In Politics
Farai Dziva| Declared Emmerson Mnangagwa apologist Justice Mayor Wadyajena has threatened the Cotton Company of Zimbabwe for meddling in politics.
Wadyajena is the Zanu PF MP for Gokwe-Nembudziya. He is also the chairperson of the Parliamentary Committee on Agriculture.
Speaking at a parliamentary committee workshop organised by Cottco in Kariba, Wadyajena said:
“Instead of trying to manipulate selection of candidates for political parties, Cottco must be thinking of beneficiation.
Instead of watching and allowing politically-connected crooks to loot inputs, Cottco must be participating in the building of communities.
As Parliament, we have an interest in ensuring that there is transparency and accountability in the use of public resources, as these must only be deployed for the purposes authorised by the law.”
“We have recorded some saddening and shocking cases of serious abuse of State-funded programmes that are meant to empower and uplift poor farmers for example, the presidential input scheme.
Let me hasten to say, the presidential input scheme is a very a noble idea and it has helped to revive the cotton industry, which was once on the brink of collapse. However, we are seeing it being threatened by side-marketing and looting of inputs.
As Cottco, you should not stand by and let the presidential input scheme get misused and manipulated. All households must receive inputs regardless of political affiliation.
Crucially, we all have to put on our thinking caps and come together to call out and stop them cheaters that ruin such important and valuable programmes,” said Wadyajena.

No Joy For Civic Leaders Arrested For Plotting To Overthrow Mnangagwa
Own Correspondent| Four human rights defenders (HRDs) who were arrested for allegedly plotting to overthrow President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government will endure more jail time after a High Court Judge deferred delivery of his ruling on their bail application to next week.
The four HRDs namely George Makoni, Tatenda Mombeyarara, Gamuchirai
Mukura and Frank Nyasha Mpahlo had their bail application heard by
High Court Judge Justice Tawanda Chitapi on Thursday 30 May 2019 and
Friday 31 May 2019 before he postponed the matter to Friday 7 June
2019, when he will hand down his ruling on the quartet’s freedom bid.
Justice Chitapi indicated that the alleged case against the four HRDs
is a serious matter hence he needs to write a full judgment which he
will deliver on Friday 7 June 2019.
Makoni, Mombeyarara, Mukura and Mpahlo were arrested on Monday 20 May
2019 and charged with subverting constitutional government as defined
in section 22(2)(a)(iii) of the Criminal Law (Codification and Reform)
Act.
Prosecutors accused the quartet of travelling to Maldives on 13 May
2019, where they allegedly attended a training workshop organised by
Centre for Applied Non Violent Action and Strategies (CANVAS), a
Serbian non-governmental organisation, with the intention of
subverting a constitutionally elected government.
The State claims that during the training workshop, the four human
rights campaigners, who are represented by Godfrey Mupanga and
Jeremiah Bamu of Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights, were trained on
how to mobilise citizens to turn against the government and to engage
in acts of civil disobedience and or resistance to any law during some
anticipated national protests organised by some anti-government
movements.
The law enforcements agents charged that Makoni, Mombeyarara, Mukura
and Mpahlo were also trained on how to operate small arms and to evade
arrest during civil unrest and on counter-intelligence and acts of
terrorism.
Two other human rights campaigners namely Rita Nyampinga and Stabile
Dewa, who were also arrested on Monday 27 May 2019 and charged with
subverting constitutional government, appeared in court on Wednesday
29 May 2019 and were remanded in custody to Thursday 6 2019.
FULL TEXT: ZimRights Distances Self From Shutdown Notice
The Zimbabwe Human Rights Association (ZimRights) has noticed with regret an incomplete institutional logo, which has been smuggled and placed on a social media statement calling for a shutdown demonstration. ZimRights would like to distance itself from this unfortunate and fake news meant to tarnish the image of our peace-loving organisation.
ZimRights would like to sincerely request the citizens of Zimbabwe to ignore the statement. The organisation has always maintained its principles of engagement with the government where it feels some issues have to be addressed. The organisation would like to WARN anyone behind the crafting of such statements to STOP this kind of illegal and inflammatory behaviour.
Zimbabwe Now In De-Facto Dollarization
By Victor Bhoroma| The persistent price volatility in the economy has left producers and retailers in Zimbabwe with very limited options apart from indexing their products in the US Dollar or pegging their RTGS prices using the black market rates of the day. To some extent, this was inevitable after the economy rolled back to the hyperinflation era in the beginning of the year with January 2019 inflation rate above the 50% mark. Though the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) inflation stats are far from being accurate in measuring the events in the market where inflation rate is above 100%, they still paint a picture of the high volatility in the economy. The local currency (RTGS Dollar) has lost more than 98% of its value since introduction on 20 February 2019 with the official Interbank Exchange rate at 4.95 to the US Dollar. Prices for goods and services are however informed by the black market rates where 1 US Dollar fetches about 7.30 RTGS.
De-facto dollarization, also known as unofficial dollarization arises when individuals lose confidence in a domestic currency and hold foreign currency bank deposits or notes to protect against high inflation in that domestic currency as is the case in Zimbabwe at present. De-facto dollarization includes the spontaneous adoption of the dollar by producers and retailers as a means to trade or store value without government legislation or recognition. In March 2019, Zimbabwe gazetted two legal instruments; The Exchange Control Regulations (Amendment) of 2019 (SI 32) and the Presidential Powers (Temporary Measures) for (Amendment) of the RBZ Act and RTGS Electronic Dollars Regulations of 2019 (SI 33).
The statutory instruments mean that the RTGS dollar (Inclusive of Bond Notes and Coins) shall be the legal tender in Zimbabwe though they do not prohibit the use of multiple currencies adopted in 2009 for pricing of goods and services, recording debts, accounting and settlement of transactions locally. Local producers and retailers have predictably used this window to price their products in the US Dollar rather than continue with the exchange rate madness which calls for price adjustments whenever the RTGS weakens against the dollar.
History has revealed that in most countries where official dollarization happens, the government or its central bank gives in to popular market demands to adopt the dollar as legal tender. It has also been evident that countries that fully dollarized have struggled to shake off the US Dollar in the absence of fundamental changes to the economy especially in building confidence in government institutions and growing domestic production. An immediate and noticeable effect of dollarization is on price and economic stability as evidenced in 2009 when Zimbabwe adopted the US Dollar as legal tender. The country actually experienced deflation as year on year (Y-O-Y) inflation reached a record low of -7.5% in December 2009. The economy experienced deflation for a prolonged periods from 2014 to 2017 and this brought joy to local consumers. Dollarization enabled businesses and investors to plan better and replenish stocks at reasonable profit margins. The positive aspect about the new wave of dollarization prevailing in the market is that suppliers and consumers now appreciate the true value of the US Dollar as opposed to wayward prices that were being charged between 2014 and 2018.
It is fair to say that the use of the US dollar in Zimbabwe in the short term alleviates the greatest pains of hyperinflation, however it is not the ultimate solution to economic growth in the medium to long term. The government has to manage the negative impact of dollarization, especially the prevailing de-facto dollarization which creates artificial shortages of the coveted US Dollar on the interbank market. The most immediate challenge is on tackling pricing distortions in a liberalized market where similar products are priced in different currencies using different exchange rates to the US Dollar as is the case in the pharmaceutical sector. The Competition and Tariffs Commission of Zimbabwe (CTC) which is the pricing watchdog of the government has to establish pricing standards in critical sectors of the economy so as to manage the cost of doing business locally. Oligopolistic tendencies where producers collude to set high prices or profiteer on limited units have to be kept in check. Without managing this key element, products produced locally will gradually fall off the shelves with cheaper imports replacing them. Lack of enforceable pricing standards in the local economy mean that foreign companies or business people selling their products in Zimbabwe profit from higher prices charged locally while evading formal banking channels. Proceeds from such trading often find their way to foreign banks through foreign currency externalization. Externalization is actually rampant where regulations enforce trading in a weaker RTGS Dollar when imports are indexed in the US Dollar or Rand.
The impending effect of de-facto dollarization is the widening of the current account deficit (increase in imports and relative decline in exports). This is partly caused by the high cost of doing business locally for the local industry and the propensity to consume foreign goods on the part of various consumers realized through using a dominant foreign currency. Product dumping of cheap merchandise from the Far East is likely to increase. In order to protect the local industry, the government needs to review upwards tariffs levied on industrial merchandise (finished goods) imports and tighten border controls among other measures. A complete trade liberalization will take Zimbabwe back to the 2011 to 2013 era when Trade Deficit averaged $4.5 billion yearly.
Zimbabwe is not in short supply of foreign currency as the country exported goods worth more than $4.23 billion in 2018 on top of remittances of over $1 billion. Local foreign currency accounts boost of more than $800 million while the interbank market has only traded less than $100 million with most of the funds being released by the central bank. The clear conclusion is that consumers and businesses do not have confidence in the local currency and various interventions by the government. Using the US Dollar is motivated by the need to survive for most businesses who suffered massive exchange rate losses from October 2018 to date. De-facto dollarization is helping local producers to get fair value for their products which keeps them in business. Local producers learnt well from their painful experiences in 2008 and have remained alert to the black market exchange rate. It can only be rational given the prevailing economic uncertainty in Zimbabwe.
Victor Bhoroma is business and economic analyst. He is a marketer by profession and holds an MBA from the University of Zimbabwe (UZ). For feedback, mail him on [email protected] or alternatively follow him on Twitter @VictorBhoroma1.
VIDEO: Riot Police Driving Through City Screaming- “Let’s Not Import Foreign Behaviour!”
TOUCHING VIDEO: I’ll Fix Potholes On My Own
Chiwenga, Wife Still Unwell Flies Back Home From An Indian Hospital
Own Correspondent| Vice President Constantino Chiwenga and his wife, Mary flew back into Harare on Friday, but both remain ill, it has emerged.
Chiwenga was in India for medical checkups together with his wife, and has been out of work for nearly 6 weeks to date.
Flight tracking data confirm that Chiwenga’s privately hired jet landed in Harare on the 30th May just after 9am.
A Gulfstream 450 jet was hired from a company in Angola to fly Chiwenga to India. “It is one of the best chartered jets in the world and can fly up to 16 hours at a stretch. The aircraft was parked at the Delhi airport …” said a Delhi airport official requesting anonymity.
Before flying out of Zimbabwe for India, ambulances (for 3 weeks) took several routine trips to Chiwenga’s residence to attend to him. He then flew to India.
While it was not clear what his wife, Mary is suffering from, Chiwenga upon being admitted to Gurugram’s Medanta Hospital last month, was said to be “suffering from a severe obstruction of the food pipe because of which he was not able to have anything, not even liquids. He was being treated back in his country but it had not helped much,” as said by the Medanta Institute of Digestive and Hepatobiliary Sciences’ chairman, Dr Randhir Sud, who treated Chiwenga. “He is much better now; stable and eating on his own. We will keep him for 2-3 more days before deciding on the discharge,” he added.

But as he touched down last week, the former army general and his wife were found to be visually unwell, to the extent that a source described the wife (Mary) saying, “had she been well, she would have worked hard to get (Emmerson) Mnangagwa removed the same way she did (the former president) Mugabe.”
The development has led to further buttress revelations that Emmerson Mnangagwa is facing internal (rising) pressure to resign following the ongoing economic meltdown which has seen the price of petrol souring above USD7 per litre.
Meanwhile, speaking to ZimEye Monday morning, an impeccable source said, “pane zvirikuitika – things are happening inside,” without disclosing further. ZimEye is following up on this investigation.
It was suggested that Chiwenga’s wife, Mary could soon play the same role she played to influence her husband against former President Robert Mugabe in November 2017. However a family source close to Chiwenga cast doubts saying they do not believe there is much Chiwenga can do since both husband and wife are struggling for health at present.
“There is very little if anything they can do because they are all ill,” they said.
– More follows…
I Am Receiving Death Threats On A Daily Basis: Pastor Chiwenga
Outspoken Harare preacher Talent Chiwenga has written a letter to President Emmerson Mnangagwa pleading with him to stop military and central intelligence organisation personnel from following him saying he is not a threat to anyone in the country.
Pastor Chiwenga who is related to vice President Constantino Chiwenga is known for his hard-hitting messages against the government and has previously reported that the powerful vice President wants him dead.
Below is Pastor Chiwenga’s full letter to President Emmerson Mnangagwa;
Sir, I am being followed by unregistered vehicles believed to be from the Central Intelligence Organisation or from the Military Intelligence Department of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces, I am receiving death threats almost on a daily basis and this is because I preach the true gospel of Christ that condemns sin and calls all men to repentance, for God is not a respecter of persons.
It is my honest and humble opinion Sir, that the people who are giving orders to military personnel or State security agents to kill me are your employees or your subordinates. I don’t see myself as a security or political threat to anyone in this country, because I am a preacher of the gospel whose tools are the Bible and the microphone.
I am therefore asking to see you so that I may among other things surrender myself to you and your administration so that if I do not get an opportunity to answer to issues I am being stalked and threatened for, at least I will save the government’s tax payers’ money which is being used to stalk me and harass me, if I have to die for the gospel I preach (which I am ready to die for), at least I will avail myself in person.
Donald Trump Finally Lands In UK, Praises Boris Johnson
By A Correspondent| US President Donald Trump has arrived in the UK.
His visit comes shortly after the mayor of London, Sadiq Khan said there should not be a red carpet for him.
Responding to the criticism, Trump described SadiqKhan, as a person “who by all accounts has done a terrible job as Mayor of London, has been foolishly “nasty” to the visiting President of the United States, by far the most important ally of the United Kingdom.
“He is a stone cold loser who should focus on crime in London, not me “
Trump’s itinerary is as follows:
Monday
1. Official welcome by the Queen, Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall at Buckingham Palace
2. The president and first lady go
to Westminster Abbey, where he will lay a wreath at the tomb of the Unknown Warrior
3. Afternoon tea at Clarence House with the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall
4. The Queen hosts a state banquet at Buckingham Palace
Tuesday
5. Business breakfast with the prime minister, the Duke of York and senior UK and US business leaders at St James’s Palace
6. Bilateral talks with the prime minister at 10 Downing Street
7. President hosts a banquet at the American ambassador’s residence, Winfield House, attended by the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall
Wednesday
Trump joins world leaders in Portsmouth to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the D-day landings
Before flying to the UK, Trump said he expected his three-day state visit to Britain to be ‘very important’ and ‘very interesting’ as he left the White House on Sunday evening.
As he boarded the Marine One helicopter, Trump praised Boris Johnson and Nigel Farage, and denied making ‘bad’ comments about the Duchess of Sussex. – VIDEO:
OPINION: Voices Above The Oppressed Voice
By Thokozile Usuwana| The entire course of black history is mapped out with a lot of tumultuous landmarking events, catastrophies and turning points that define the outline of our present day existence.
For the majority of these occurrences, certain individuals stand out as the ambassador faces of the changes that came after their efforts. We have Nelson Mandela who was the president of the ANC, imprisoned for 27years for standing up against apartheid and was later the president of South Africa after his release.
Rosa Parks, one of America’s major symbols of the civil rights movement, was arrested in Montgomery Alabama for refusing to give up her bus seat to a white passenger. The list is endless but for the sake of brevity the above mentioned faces paint a bright enough picture …
Fast forwarding to present day Zimbabwe, our country is being ravaged by E.D Mnangagwa who is often seen in the blazing sun wearing a scarf that I believe is some sort of talisman behind all his tyrannical, callous and diabolical rule.
The army, of which he previously was Minister of before becoming the vice president, ascended him into presidency via a coup in 2017. Many became very optimistic about the future of Zimbabwe at this point but MDC members and supporters knew the optimism is only short lived.
ZANU-PF is the cloth from which E. Mnangagwa was cut from. Even the most primitive human with the minimum requirement for basic mental capacity could have seen the devastation that loomed over our country at the time of the coup.
Sadly, no human being even with an IQ of the whole human population could have predicted the extent of the scourge that comes with Mnangagwa even with the retrospect of the Mugabe administration.
The year on all our calendars reads 2019 and all around us civilisation has taken great leaps but the ZANU-PF is still living the age in which it is oppressing those that have a different political voice to their own. There is a Shona saying that says, “ Avhunduka chati kwatara hunge ane chiturikwa” which means that only he that has a guilty conscience is the one at will be restless and easily spooked.
This is exactly what I am seeing in Emmerson Mnangagwa right now. The deployment of the army onto the streets to act as law enforcement to stipulate the illegal imprisonment of oppositional party supporters and activists is the manifestation of his angst and fretfulness.
The past few months has seen the incarceration of MDC supporters for unproven offences e.g for the killing of a policeman for which Last Maengahama is behind bars for despite all the evidence proving his innocence.
Farirai Gumbonzvanda , the bright intelligent young lady who is also the founder of Rozaria Memorial Trust was arrested together with four other activists for allegedly plotting to topple Mnangagwa. Tungamirai Madzokera, Farai Winners Chidziva and Choto are among the multitudes of political prisoners for whom MDC supporters from different political provinces are demonstrating for the release of.
It is appalling that in this day and age, human beings are oppressing each other because they have a different political opinions. Using the previously mentioned shona proverb reference, when a leader has an inkling that an individual wants to overthrow his government, surely it is because there are serious flaws with his leadership or lack thereof.
I, personally attended and was active in a demonstration against the oppression and incarceration of our people held in Reading on the 1st of June 2019*. It was just not MDC supporters within the South West district involved, turn up was from all across the province including from Manchester, London etc.
All the travel expenses incurred by our fellow members out of their own pockets so we can all have one voice to cry out together against this oppressive and poor excuse of a government.
The end is in sight but it is darkest before dawn and the pain that we are feeling and expressing so outwardly is a pre-notion of a brighter future for our Zimbabwe under the MDC government led by our President Nelson Chamisa.
As with any other areas in life , whenever there is any force applied to any situation, negative forces start to show their faces. Pessimists were quick to dismiss our efforts like messengers from the devil government itself. Excessive pressure produces beautiful diamonds.
The pressure from the ZANU PF will produce freedom and democracy and the pressure from us will produce a well led and anointed government and the successful and safe release of prisoners. Whichever way, it is a win-win situation for MDC even if it is going to take a lot of blood sweat and tears.
OPINION: Why Professor Mthuli Ncube Thinks Zimbabwe Is On The Path To Progress
By Professor Mthuli Ncube| Zimbabwe is on a journey of reform. Nobody ever said it wouldn’t be a bumpy ride; but the most important thing is that the journey has begun, and we are heading in the right direction.
The Transitional Stabilisation Programme, the first step of government’s economic reform programme, was launched in October 2018. Its goal was clear: To stabilise the economy, attract investment and lay the foundation for shared and sustained growth.
The overall picture so far is one of cautious optimism, largely based around the effectiveness of our measures to balance the budget.
The key to managing any budget, whether a household or a country, is to not spend more than you have. For years, that is unfortunately exactly what our governments have done, and the first step towards progress is to return the fiscal deficit to sustainable levels; both through cutting unnecessary spending and increasing revenue.
The target for 2019 is ambitious, but attainable: To reduce the budget deficit from about 12% of gross domestic product to 5%.
Over the past four months, we have made significant cuts to expenditure in five main areas: First, we have ended the unsustainable practice of issuing Treasury Bills to finance the deficit, forcing us to spend within our means and within the budget.
Second, we have reduced the public wage bill by cutting salaries of senior government officials by 5% across the board, retiring over 3 000 youth officers, and establishing a more modest bonus system for civil servants that saved over US$75 million in 2018 alone.
Third, we have diverted our resources to pressing areas by freezing the hiring of non-critical staff, while hiring 3 000 additional staff in the education sector and almost 2 000 in the health sector. Finally, we have cut unnecessary expenditure and ‘perks’ for ministers and Members of Parliament, most notably by suspending the procurement of vehicles.
These measures have been complemented by a concerted effort to widen our revenue base. One prominent example, the 2% tax on electronic transactions, was hotly disputed when it was announced, but its impact has been significant. US$166 million was raised in the last two months of 2018, and almost US$100 million was raised in January alone. We project that over US$600 million will be raised during 2019.
These measures have combined to have a major impact on our nation’s finances. The monthly budget deficit declined from US$242 million in November to a surplus of US$733 million in December, and a provisional surplus of $113 million for January, an impressive turnaround in such a short time.
Of course, as all Zimbabweans know, it has not been all plain sailing. The inflationary pressures we have faced have caused uncertainty and pain, and we have made dealing with this our number one concern. To address this, we have pushed ahead in our efforts to narrow the fiscal deficit and slow down money supply growth, and we project inflation to slow down to below 10% by the end of the year.
The shift in our monetary policy has been well documented, as we seek to remove the distortions which prevented efficient functioning of the foreign exchange market, and the economy as a whole, pushing prices beyond the reach of most Zimbabweans.
In contrast, the new monetary policy — based around the liberalisation of our foreign currency market and discarding of the fixed 1:1 exchange rate peg between the US dollar and the bond note — will promote stability, bring down prices and build confidence.
Its implementation is already underway and government has won praise internationally for truly allowing the market to determine the value of real time gross settlement (RTGS) dollar. Meanwhile, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe is strengthening this arrangement by focusing on containing money supply growth, while it has also put in place monitoring mechanisms to ensure that the interbank foreign exchange market is not manipulated.
A further area of progress is in the acceleration of the reform of State-owned enterprises and parastatals (SOEs). Having approved the implementation framework for 43 SOEs and parastatals in 2018, government has targeted five public enterprises (TelOne, NetOne, Telecel and ZimPost and POSB) for immediate reforms and work is already underway to identify transaction advisers. Government projects to realise over US$350 million from this initial process.
Other key reforms underway include turning the Grain Marketing Board into a strategic reserve entity under government and a commercial arm; improving the governance, leadership and operational efficiency at Allied Timbers; re-bundling Zesa (Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority) into a single corporate board to improve governance; the rationalisation of Industrial Development Corporation units and partial privatisation, as well as many more.
We are also accelerating and deepening the ease and cost of doing business reforms to improve competitiveness. This includes the establishment of a one-stop shop investment centre, and legislation to establish a specific and dedicated institution — the Zimbabwe Investment and Development Agency (ZIDA) — is now before Parliament.
ZIDA is set to be fully operational in the coming months, and will enable the processing of investment approvals within a day, significantly improving the investment climate.
I am aware that there are those who are disappointed by the pace of change, and who expected progress to be faster. Unfortunately, this was never going to be the case.
Reforming, restructuring and rebuilding our economy was always going to take time, and attempts to prematurely accelerate the process are liable to cause greater upheaval and suffering.
A sober, strategic and step-by-step process remains the best way to achieve our goal. By the same token, these improvements should not give us reason for back-patting and self-congratulations. They are, but one step in a much longer journey, and will mean nothing if we don’t finish the job.
Hon. Prof Mthuli Ncube is Zimbabwe’s Finance minister and a former chief economist at the African Development Bank.
VP Chiwenga Returns To Harare, But Remains Ill
By Farai D Hove| Vice President Constantino Chiwenga and his wife, Mary flew back into Harare on Friday, but both remain ill, it has emerged. Chiwenga was in India for medical checkups together with his wife, and has been out of work for nearly 6 weeks to date. Flight tracking data confirm that Chiwenga’s privately hired jet landed in Harare on the 30th May just after 9am. In May, Indian reports claimed a Gulfstream 450 jet was hired from a company in Angola to fly Chiwenga to India. “It is one of the best chartered jets in the world and can fly up to 16 hours at a stretch. The aircraft was parked at the Delhi airport …” the report quoted a Delhi airport official apparently requesting anonymity. Before flying out of Zimbabwe for India, ambulances (for 3 weeks) took several routine trips to Chiwenga’s residence to attend to him. He then flew to India. While it was not clear what his wife, Mary is suffering from, Chiwenga upon being admitted to Gurugram’s Medanta Hospital last month, was said to be “suffering from a severe obstruction of the food pipe because of which he was not able to have anything, not even liquids. He was being treated back in his country but it had not helped much,” as said by the Medanta Institute of Digestive and Hepatobiliary Sciences’ chairman, Dr Randhir Sud, who treated Chiwenga. “He is much better now; stable and eating on his own. We will keep him for 2-3 more days before deciding on the discharge,” he added.Chiwenga's hired jet after flying him back to Harare on Friday, flew to Livingstone, then to Vic Falls, then to Harare, and then afterwards to Alexandria pic.twitter.com/2JWjeteiMO
— ZimEye (@ZimEye) June 3, 2019

FULL TEXT: Pastor Chiwenga’s Touching Letter To ED, Says I Am Being Followed By Unregistered Vehicles
Sir, I am being followed by unregistered vehicles believed to be from the Central Intelligence Organisation or from the Military Intelligence Department of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces, I am receiving death threats almost on a daily basis and this is because I preach the true gospel of Christ that condemns sin and calls all men to repentance, for God is not a respecter of persons.
It is my honest and humble opinion Sir, that the people who are giving orders to military personnel or State security agents to kill me are your employees or your subordinates. I don’t see myself as a security or political threat to anyone in this country, because I am a preacher of the gospel whose tools are the Bible and the microphone.
I am therefore asking to see you so that I may among other things surrender myself to you and your administration so that if I do not get an opportunity to answer to issues I am being stalked and threatened for, at least I will save the government’s tax payers’ money which is being used to stalk me and harass me, if I have to die for the gospel I preach (which I am ready to die for), at least I will avail myself in person.
FULL TEXT: Zimbabwe’s Kariba Left With Just 3 Months Supply of Electricity
MINISTERIAL STATEMENT
STATE OF THE ENERGY SECTOR
THE MINISTER OF ENERGY AND POWER DEVELOPMENT (HON. CHASI): I wish to thank the House for this opportunity to give a statement on the state of the energy sector in the country. Mr. Speaker, I believe that this is a very serious matter which is of immense public interest and I would plead that Hon. Members give me the opportunity to deliver my statement without undue heckling. I want to start Mr. Speaker, by saying that the energy sector is as good as the governance that we have got over it. I am going to be speaking about this in more detail later on in the speech but I want to start by ensuring that we are all at the same level regarding roles and responsibilities.
I want to speak about the Energy Regulatory Authority Act of 2011. This is the Act that creates the regulatory board that we commonly refer to as ZERA. This Act contains in Section 4, a panoply of mandates for ZERA, in fact about 18 of them. The responsibilities of this authority range from importation, transmission, distribution and many other aspects of the petroleum industry. ZERA is given unfettered power to preside over this industry. I also want to say that the same law requires that as ZERA does its work, it must not be subject to direction by anybody. I want to underline that anybody also refers to me as the Minister responsible for energy.
I also want to state my role as Minister of Energy and Power Development so that Members understand and are clear. The law also stipulates that the role of the Minister is simply to issue general policy direction. I have given this preface so that the Hon. House is very clear as to what is expected of me and what is expected of ZERA itself. In broad terms, I have clarified the role of ZERA and the role of the Minister – [HON. MEMBERS: Inaudible interjections.] – Please, excuse me I cannot speak.
THE HON. SPEAKER: Hon. Minister …
HON. CHASI: They are distracting me …
THE HON. SPEAKER: No, no – [HON. MEMBERS: Inaudible interjections.] – Hon. Minister, cool down.
HON. CHASI: Mr. Speaker, I have given the background relating to the law because I intend to be legal in everything that I am going to be doing.
Mr. Speaker, I want to underline that regulation is about law and I want to apply the applicable law. I also want to state that the problem we have in this sector arose from disrespect for the law, lack of corporate governance and I will be able to demonstrate that as I go through the statement. I then want to say having identified that problem, because I have read a lot about each of the parastatals, it is quite evident to me that whether structure or foreign currency is in place we will not be able to sort out the issues at hand unless we deal with the issues of corporate governance.
As a result Mr. Speaker, it is necessary that we carry out a review from a corporate governance point of view of each and every parastatal that is under the ambit of the Ministry to examine whether we have adequate and proper skills within the board, and also skills within management of the parastatals. The country’s vision in this area is to achieve universal access to sustainable and modern energy in Zimbabwe by 2030. The mission is to ensure the provision of adequate and sustainable energy supply through formulating effective policies and regulatory framework. For those who may care to know, these are the pieces of legislation that are relevant to the sector which I would urge those with an interest to be familiar with – the Electricity Act, the Energy Regulatory Authority Act, the Rural Electrification Fund Act, Zambezi River Authority Act and the Petroleum Act.
I also want to take this opportunity to inform Hon. Members of the various policies and plans that are in place in this particular area. We have got the National Energy Policy Act of 2012; the Independent Power Producers Policy which is actually under development; National Integration Energy Resource Plan which we have commenced work on; Rural Energy Master Plan also under development; National Renewal Energy Policy which we intend to launch in the not too distant future; then the National Bio Fuels Policy which we also intend to launch in due course.
Performance of the Power Sector – I want to make reference to current electricity supply status; the situation of electricity in the country. I want to draw the attention of the Members here present that the situation is dire and that as a nation, we must be strategic in our planning for energy and also its use. The electricity sector is currently dominated by State owned power generating transmission and distribution companies; Zimbabwe Power Company and Zimbabwe Electricity, Transmission and Distribution Company. ZPC has a total of five power stations in operation. I have attached a table there so that when this is circulated, Members will be able to see but these are basically Kariba Power Station, Hwange Power Station, Harare, Munyati and Bulawayo Small thermals. All in all, when fully operational, this gives us 2 260 mega watts.
Mr. Speaker Sir, the hydrological condition of Kariba Dam has been the subject of discussion of late. As of last week the dam was 32%, and as of Monday, it had dropped to 29%. So, we can all do the mathematics involved in that to show and understand the problem at hand in terms of reduction of water levels at Kariba. If that trend continues at that pace, this means that in theory, within 14 weeks, Kariba will not be able to deliver power. This means that those who were responsible at ZESA in particular, ought to have understood the magnitude of this problem and taken steps to plan for it in accordance with the issues at hand. I will speak to that later on.
I now move to Independent Power Producers – a number of IPP’s also generate electricity to feed on to the national grid. These include sugar and ethanol producers that primarily generate for own use and sell excess to ZETDC. They include Hippo Valley, Triangle and Green Fuels. These sugar producers are also net importers of electricity. Their installed capacities are shown in the diagram that I have here, but all in all, it is about 136 mega watts arising from IPP’s.
If I move on to actual electricity demand and supply profile and I think this is very important for us to understand the implications of what is happening and what may happen in future regarding power and then the overall impact on our economy. Zimbabwe’s current average internal electricity generation is about 1200 mw. The country’s maxim demand is estimated at 1 700 mw giving a supply demand gap of about 300 to 500 mw at maximum which is usually met by exporting from ESKOM and Kabora Basa of Mozambique.
So, I want to empasise that we have got a gap in terms of availability of power versus what we consume every day. The challenges and proposed mitigation measures – the country is currently faces with a power supply deficit which has seen some of the ZESA customers being load shed for as long as 10 hours and in some instances, I have had complaints from members of the public that they have gone beyond that time which exceeds the time that may have been stated in the schedule by ZESA.
This deficit is due to a combination of factors some of which I now turn to: – Receding water levels at Kariba Dam. I think I have already made it clear. This has resulted in the Zambezi River Authority now rationing water between Zambia and Zimbabwe. There is an arrangement between us and Zambia regarding management of water on the Zambezi, so, further depleting water that is available for generation of power. So, each of the two power stations in other words, the Zambian one and our own, are now allowed water enough to generate an average of 358 mw per day, much reduced from what traditionally has been available.
An improved rainy season in 2017/18 saw the water allocations increased to allow each power station to generate an average of 480 mega watts per day. Currently, the receding water level at Lake Kariba has resulted in the sealing down of power generation in order to comply with reduced water allocation by the Zambezi River Authority. The reduced power generation has resulted in load shedding and I am sure all of us are familiar with it and its effects. In order to match power supply demand, load curtailing as it also know by others, is currently averaging 350 mega watts and we expect this amount to rise to 600 mega watts in June, given that it is going to be very cold and people will begin to use heaters and other warming devices which may include electric blankets and all. The peak that causes us to load shed and I know that there are many misunderstandings about load shedding; it is a very tortuous decision to make but it is a necessary one that has got to be done. The peak arises from about 6 to 9pm at night, when people get home, all the lights are switched on, the stoves operate, televisions and so forth. The increase in our consumption on any day is so significant that, I want to appeal to all of us here within our own families and our own constituencies to do whatever we can to conscientise our families and constituents to conserve power.
Performance of Hwange Power Station
Hwange Power Station is currently performing below its average due to its obsolete plant long past its life. This general comment is applicable to almost all the infrastructure that relates to the generation of electricity, which means that we must, in some instances, invest in maintenance and invest in new installations or renewable methods of coming up with power. The reduced power generation has resulted in load shedding in order to match power supply and demand. I want to emphasise that if we continue to consume at the rate that we are doing, if we continue to leave our houses with lights on all the time, Government buildings with lights on all the time, things can only get worse. If we continue to use bulbs that consume a lot of power, things can only get worse. There are things that can be done to make more power but there are things that we have to do to ensure that we are all responsible when it comes to consumption of power.
There are remedial measures Mr. Speaker, that we are working on as a Ministry to ensure that we save on power. It is very expensive, we are short of foreign currency so we cannot afford the luxury of just spending power having swimming pools running 24 hours and people never swim. Maybe they swim once in six months. We are not just going to concentrate on supply. Everyone, including those who are shouting must be responsible, first in how you consume electricity – HON. MEMBERS: Inaudible interjections.] –
THE HON. SPEAKER: Order, order. It will help Hon. Minister, if you run through your written Statement so that when there are issues arising, we can expand on the Ministerial Statement.
THE MINISTEROF ENERGY AND POWER DEVELOPMENT (HON. CHASI): As you please Mr. Speaker Sir. I have dealt with the performance of Hwange. We have challenges there due to obsolete equipment. We need to put more power to make sure that it is operating at full throttle. I also want to deal with thermal power. We rely on coal and we do have coal supply challenges. Currently, ZPC is receiving coal supplies from two main suppliers, mainly the Hwange Colliery and I do not need to repeat the state regarding the state of that entity and its capacity. The other one is Makomo. The company also receives much smaller quantities from Zambezi Gas. Of late, the thermal power station or power stations were facing coal supply challenges due to liquidity constraints, pricing as well as foreign currency shortages. The price of coal was recently increased from $326. 50 to RTGS$886 per metric tonne in order to address the concerns of the suppliers.
Reduced Electricity Imports
Zimbabwe is a member of the Sothern African Power Pool (SAPP) and is interconnected to all its members. Further, it is located at the regional geographical centre, making it the hub for power trading in the SAPP network. ZETDC has power purchase agreements to trade electricity with ESKOM of South Africa and HCB of Mozambique. The shortage of foreign currency in the country has had a negative bearing on electricity supply as ZETDC is struggling to meet its electricity is approximately $830 million. As a result, of this, importers are reluctant to supply electricity to Zimbabwe and ZETDC is currently getting very minimum imports from outside. Zimbabwe is also exporting 80 megawatts of power daily to Namibia in fulfilment of a loan used to fund ZPC’s contribution to the funding of the Kariba South Extension Project as required by the main financier, China Exim Bank.
Electricity Infrastructure Vandalism
This Mr. Speaker, is going to be a key determinant in the success or failure of the generation of electricity in the country and its distribution to the public. Electricity infrastructure vandalism has also contributed to a number of areas having no access to electricity in the country. Transformers are being stolen daily and there is a deficit at the moment. I am told of 2000 transformers that were stolen that need replacement. These transformers are not cheap and are as much as $50 thousand each. It is necessary to take action to stem the thefts that are occurring
Intervention measures in the power sector
Load shedding is not a sustainable method to deal with the problems that I have spoken to. Load shedding is not sustainable for exporters that are earning the country’s much needed foreign currency and contributing to economic growth of the country. For every unit of unsaved power arising from load shedding of productive sectors, the country losses, according to research, $3.20 in its GDP. We have transformers that have gone missing in farming areas and now the thieves have moved to the high density areas where they are operating in groups and action needs to be taken.
However, there are quick win interventions in power imports from ESKOM and HCB. The power imports of up to 400 megawatts can be unlocked by a bankable plan to both ESKOM and HCB. The imports would securitise power supply for the exporting mines and industries and release power for the other customers, some of whom are prepaying. It is proposed that exporters pay their electricity bills in foreign currency in proportion to their foreign currency retention percentage. This arrangement is estimated to raise $11 million against an estimated bill of $14 million per month.
A Statutory Instrument to this effect is being considered. The foreign currency generated would go towards meeting the current power import bills plus a portion for the amortisation of arrears. In addition, a portion would be used to fund the procurement of critical generation spares to sustain output of the old Hwange Power Plant. Critical transmission, grid stabilisation and distribution spares such as transformers, prepaid metres and so on, would be also funded from these inflows.
The replacement of 2000 vandalised transformers would see power restored to over 25 000 customers that have gone for long periods without electricity. These include schools, clinics, growth points, farms, businesses and domestic points.
The Hwange power station expansion flagship project whose groundbreaking was commissioned last year is under consideration and will remain on track including repayments for Kariba South Extension. An urgent support bail out of RTGs 63 million monthly from Treasury is required to enable ZETDC to continue supplying electricity to the nation and support economic activities. This will cover the funding gap created by the absence of a tariff adjustment which recognises the monetary policy and introduction of the interbank market to cover foreign currency purchases.
With the current tariff, ZETDC is collecting between RTGs 60-70
million against a monthly budget of RTGs 130 million to cover the bare essentials. ZESA is technically solvent and I am sure Hon. Members are fully aware of this. It is struggling to fully fund operations. The severe cashflow crisis being experienced would see operations grinding to a hault in the not too distant future, unless support is rendered as the funding gap increases every month cumulatively, as people fail or decide not to pay the bills. The price of critical generation consumables has increased by an increase of 250%. Coal suppliers at the moment are agitating for a price review. Import duties should be exempted. We submit on diesel for power generation and importation of critical spares for the generation transmission and distribution networks.
Overtime, once stability in the economy has been achieved, ZESA can be allowed to have a staggered approach to increasing tariffs in order to achieve cost reflectivity or in sync with economic activity. There is need to review the tariffs in order to cater for inflation and make the tariff cost effective. We have a number of priority projects that need to be executed diligently. In order to address the power deficit in the country, a number of priority projects are at different stages of implementation by ZESA. I will just mention the names of the projects:
Hwange Power Station Expansion Unit 7 and 8, Bulawayo Power Station repowering.
We also have candidates of projects that we would like to pursue with vigour in view of the dire situation that we face on the power side. These are the Gairezi Mini-hydro, the Batoka Hydro Electric scheme, Mutare Peaking, Insukamini Solar Power plant and Harare Thermal Power repowering.
There are also a number of transmission projects. Several projects are lined up to reinforce the grid and boost the country’s transmission grid’s capacity for wheeling power to enable it to perform its key role in the regional power trade. The list includes Zizabona and Mozisa interconnectors, the Alaska-Sherwood, Alaska-Karoi and Orange Groove-Triangle lines. Currently ZESA is in the process of securing funding for these projects. Prepaid meter project is also currently being implemented to enhance revenue collection by ZESA which will help in sustaining operations.
We need to put emphasis on demand side management. As I averted to earlier on, we need to deal with matters of energy efficient lighting. The Ministry will be promoting the use of energy efficient light bulbs (LEDs) in order to reduce demand in buildings and at household level.
We are also going to be promoting solar water heaters in place of electric geysers for water heating. Statistics compiled so far indicate that from January to April 2019, up to 3000 solar geysers had been installed. There is meaningful progress being made but we need much more than this if we are going to save on power.
Ripple control of electric geysers – using the ripple control system, ZESA is able to switch off electric geysers at night and during the peak periods in order to reduce domestic demand. This will help manage electric demand in the morning and evening peak periods.
We intend to launch a Switch off Switches (SOS) campaign that will sensitise the public to save power.
Let me now turn to the fuel supply situation. Generally, the fuel supply situation remains constrained due to what we believe is panic buying on the part of consumers. Because of panic buying, not all service stations have fuel at any one time – [HON. MEMBERS: Inaudible interjections.] –
THE HON. DEPUTY SPEAKER: Order Hon. Members.
HON. CHASI: This results in queues at service stations that may be having fuel. The market is receiving reasonable volumes of fuel to keep the country running. Panic buying originates from speculations that fuel prices are going to increase sharply. Some fuel retailers actually make unilateral increases to such levels as we had in the past week.
On bonded fuel stocks, the country always has fuel stocks at NOIC’s bonded storage in Msasa. This fuel belongs to international oil traders and does not belong to us. It is fuel that is stored there for ease of access.
The country continues to blend petrol with ethanol in accordance with the law. The blending ratio varies, depending on the availability of ethanol on the market.
Interbank foreign exchange rate – the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe had been providing foreign currency for fuel procurement even after the parity between the US$ and the bond note had been removed. However, the system as Members are aware has now been changed to the interbank rate. Oil companies are now supposed to access foreign currency at the interbank rate. Even the letters of credit for fuel procurement are now priced at the interbank rate as pronounced by the Reserve Bank.
The interbank rate also applies to ethanol. The price of ethanol was last pegged in 2016 when the parity between the US$ and the bond note was still in place. After removal, the producers of ethanol obviously seek to have that revised.
Challenges in the petroleum sector – the main challenge is shortage of fuel on the market. The efforts being made to ensure fuel availability include: issuance of letters of credit to oil companies by the Reserve Bank for fuel procurement, negotiating with international oil traders for long term fuel supply arrangement, curbing malpractices in the industry compound the challenge by causing artificial shortages of the fuel and enforcing discipline in the consumers to stamp out or minimise fuel boarding.
Fuel Price Fluctuations
The other challenge is related to fuel price fluctuations. In the past, fuel price changes were caused mainly by the changes in the price of fuel on the international market. Such changes were usually minimal. Now the Interbank Rate, at least up to the time it stabilizes, will also be causing fuel price changes. Currently, the changes are upwards and more significant than the price changes caused by the international prices of fuel.
To curtail the fluctuations in the short-term, the Reserve Bank will hold the fuel exchange rate constant for two weeks. In the long term, the Ministry will be proposing a Fuel Stabilisation Fund which would act like a subsidy to cushion the consumers from acute fuel price increases. Legacy Debt
Due to foreign currency constraints, the oil industry has accrued a huge debt for fuel supplied in the past. This resulted in the oil companies being unable to extend further credit, preferring to be paid up-front. Given the foreign currency challenges that the country faces, it is proving difficult to pay upfront for enough fuel to meet demand, hence the establishment of Letters of Credit for current consumption.
The Ministry continues to engage the Reserve Bank to come up with modalities to extinguish the debt. The oil companies also continue to raise concern over the issue. Their view is that Government is focusing only on paying for new suppliers, ignoring the legacy debt.
Promotion of New and Renewable Energy Sources
The country has abundant Renewable Energy resources that have largely remained untapped, especially for large scale power projects. These include solar, biogas, biofuels and wind energy sources. The Ministry seeks to increase the share on renewable energy sources in the supply mix. In order to accelerate the uptake of renewable energies, the Ministry has completed the drafting of two key policies.
Current state of Renewable energy projects
Several renewable energy projects are underway as detailed briefly below:
(a ) Mini-hydro power projects in Eastern Highlands are contributing more than 30 MW to the national grid. ZESA has already engaged a contractor to develop the 30MW Gairezi mini-hydropower plant and ZERA has licenced a reputable IPP to develop the 15MW Tugwi-Mukorsi mini-hydro power station. Detailed feasibility studies and technical designs are underway.
(b) The rural Electrification Fund has distributed solar mini-grids to schools, police posts, business centres and rural clinics.
(c ) The Rural Electrification Fund is promoting Biogas Digesters for institutions and households. To date, more than 60 institutional (large scale) digesters and numerous domestic digesters have been built. In addition, more than 80 builders have been trained to construct biogas digesters.
(d) The Ministry is also promoting the adopting of solar water heaters. Since January 2019 to date, records show that more than 3 000 solar geysers have been installed. The Ministry aims to promote the installation of more than 250 000 solar geysers by 2030.
(e) The Ministry is also promoting solar street lights. This is evident in Harare, Chinhoyi, Beitbridge and other local authorities. To date, more than 1 200 solar lights have been installed countrywide.
(f) Working closely with the Internatinal Renewable Energy Agency IRENA), the Ministry has developed a Solar Atlas for Zimbabwe and has also identified sites that are suitable for developing wind power plants. Going forward, the Ministry intends to go to tender for wind power plants at these sites.
(g) The Ministry is also keen to accelerate the development of 3 x 100MW solar projects at Gwanda, Munyati and Insukamini.
Licensing of Renewable Energy Projects
The law allows private players or IPPs to generate additional power to the grid. These projects have faced a number of challenges such as: inability to reach financial closure, currency risks and profit repatriation issues, requirements for risk mitigation through Sovereign Guarantees and limited capacity of the local financial sector to finance the projects.
Going forward, the Ministry will continue to engage Treasury on financial risks and guarantee issues, migrate from Unsolicited Energy Auction in order to attract cost effective projects and also streamline and improve licensing procedures among others.
Renewable Energy Policy and Biofuels policies
These policies have been submitted to Cabinet for approval. Primary objectives of the Renewable Energy Policy include setting of overall targets for renewable energy, promoting investment in the renewable energy sector by providing specific incentives; providing National Project Status to all the renewable energy projects, recommending of Prescribed Asset Status for renewable energy projects and specific incentives for promoting third party sale of power.
In conclusion, as articulated above, it important that we must have an effective corporate governance framework for all the players that are in this field. Significant investment is required in Zimbabwe’s Power and fuel sector in order to make the country self sufficient and thereafter export energy products. My Ministry welcomes investment in this sector and will continue to work on policy frameworks to make the investments viable, but of importance Madam Speaker is the fact that we would like all information that investors would need in order to decide to invest in this sector to be publicly available together with the attendant incentives.
Lastly, service delivery in energy sector like the other sectors of the economy is also severely affected by foreign currency challenges. Going forward we expect to see a highly disciplined sector that is regulated properly with provisions of a self regulation where that is applicable. I thank you.
HON. GONESE: Thank you very much Madam Speaker Ma’am. I have points of clarification from the Hon. Minister, in particular in relation to issues of the price when it comes to fuel. I know he just mentioned that this is related to the interbank rate and I appreciate that. However, Madam Speaker Ma’am, there is one aspect which the Hon. Minister did not advert to. I know that this is under the direct purview of the Hon. Minister of Finance and Economic Development but the Hon. Minister of Energy and Power Development being responsible for this very important issue, when it comes to the issue of price, there is a factor which I think the Hon. Minister should address his mind to. I want to find out whether he has done so.
Has the Hon. Minister looked at the impact of the duty which is levied on fuel and this is money which goes to Government? The Hon. Minister must be aware that prior to the increase of the 14th of January 2019, the duty on fuel was about 46 cents and prior to that it was actually the highest in the region.
In view of the difficulties and economic challenges which the people of Zimbabwe are going through, has the Minister considered making representations to the Hon. Minister of Finance and Economic Development that duty be scrapped completely? Because, when you look at the price of fuel and the impact of the interbank rate, and also the ripple effects that it has on pricing in general, is this not something which the Hon. Minister should be addressing his mind to, that duty should be scrapped completely or at the very least, that it be put back to pre-14th January levy which is about 46 cents? That is my point of clarity which I want the Hon. Minister to address.
HON. NDUNA: Thank you Madam Speaker Ma’am. I have just six points of clarity. The Hon. Minister spoke about 1 500 solar street lights and this is quite applaudible. Would he therefore, given that scenario, not request the Minister of Finance and Economic Development to get the solar systems, solar gadgets and infrastructure duty free in order to make sure that we use what we have to get what we want without further taxing the unsuspecting users of power?
Then the second one, the Hon. Minister spoke of vandalism. I am quite alive to the fact that at some point ZESA used to connect 600 000 customers and by this time it could have connected 1200 000 customers but due to vandalism of copper gadgets, transformers and the power lines, we are still at 600 000 users. We could have elongated or made sure we increased the capacity of the users. I ask therefore, that in conference and in a tete-a-tete with his counterpart, if they can revoke the licences of those that deal in copper. If those licences can be revoked immediately because we do not have a copper mine. So, we should withdraw all copper licences Madam Speaker Ma,am. That is my suggestion.
The third one is, the Minister spoke of the shortage of diesel and fuel. It is my hope that the Minister can conference with his counterpart the Hon. Minister of Finance and Economic Development and see reason in global fuel players coming to invest here in Zimbabwe because a lot of them can give any nation five years advance fuel and only request that they be paid after five years in hard currency. It is my hope that the Minister can see light in my intervention in order that we get these global fuel players coming to give us fuel currently and only recoup their monies after five years.
Fourthly, on the issue of governance that he spoke about in regulating the power sector, in particular ZERA; I ask that immediately there be a Statutory Instrument that gives direction to the primary Act that directs ZERA in its operations so that the Minister does not only get this oversight wishy-washy over ZERA but actually directs it in its operation. This is an organisation of strategic national importance for them to be like a board which is not appointed according to the dictates, interviews and interventions of Parliament like the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission where we as a country are having quite a big deficit. We want to make sure that the people get enough and optimum power. It is my clarion call that the Minister has a lot to do to be given powers in order to be involved in the power sector.
In the last point, the issue of parity has already been spoken to by Hon. Gonese. It is my humble suggestion that whilst we are finding mitigating factors or ways to mitigate this catastrophic limited supply of fuel, garages and local fuel suppliers here be allowed to import fuel duty free until the next rainy season. We know that we are going to have more power coming in because of the uptake of the water in the Kariba Dam. Because of that, we are then going to have reduced fuel usage. Our generators are not using fuel but whilst we are waiting for those rains, if they can be given duty free importation. It reduces the lack of availability, it reduces the prices of our fuel; if the two Hon. Ministers can also conference the Minister of Finance and Economic Development and the Hon. Minister of Energy and power Development, that currently and until such a time that we have enough power, generators be imported duty free.
These are my suggestions and the Minister is more than happy to take it or leave it, but I hope and pray Madam Speaker Ma’am, that those issues be taken on board.
HON. CHOMBO: Thank you Madam Speaker Ma’am. On your speech Hon. Minister, you indicated that there is supposed to be a culture change. That is one thing that you can control and the forex component you cannot and all the other things but there is supposed to be a culture change within the nation at large.
You mentioned that we have to limit the usage of electricity to just have at least one room lit, the types of globes that we use and even leaving the heaters on and so forth. I really want to know if you have any programmes that you have planned, like power service sensitisation programmes for the whole country for them to have that culture change and be able to appreciate their contribution. As you have said, it is not only you to be able to address this problem and yet it has to be everybody.
HON. CHASI: Hon. Gonese made reference to the issue of duty on fuel. I want to say that as a general rule, we are in constant engagement with the Minister of Finance and the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, not only them but with everyone who is a stakeholder and a player in the industry. Today from 0700 hours I was meeting together with the RBZ Governor players in the industry and I think that as we continue with that engagement we are going to be making significant progress.
There are references to solar lights being duty free. I think those are matters that will also be covered in the insensitive and there are already some incentives for the promotion of solar power. Vandalism, as I indicated we need to take a very serious view of what is happening and I want to underline that fact that it does not matter what we do in this sector. If vandalism continues at the rate at which it is going we will not be able to get all those who should be having power to get it.
There has been referencing to licensing for copper. This is a problem and we believe that the ubiquity of these licenses is creating an opportunity for people to steal copper from the transformers and export them legally outside. We are also going to be reviewing the penalties and making proposals to make amendments to the law regarding possession of copper. Those found in possession are not receiving sentences that are deterrent in-so-far as we are concerned, given the challenge – [HON. CHIKWINYA: 10 years?] – possession.
Now, Hon. Nduna spoke about governance. I did speak to this when I began to say that everything has got to do with governance and that as a Ministry, we are focusing on governance issues in all the parastatals, particularly ZESA for the reasons that I believe are notorious. I believe that the last issues pertaining to parity and generators being duty free and so forth are matters that my colleague, the Minister of Finance and I can deliberate upon and see what can be done on that front to ensure that we get continuous service.
Hon. Chombo has made reference to culture change. To be quite frank, the only way that we can control or influence conduct as Government is if we come up with specific laws that will either encourage or discourage something. But as I said earlier on, it is incumbent upon members of this House and everyone in this country to consume power responsibly. We of course have ideas on what we should do to further deal with the demand side of power. I thank you.
HON. MUSHAYI: On a point of clarity, the Hon. Minister has highlighted the shortage of fuel and procurement as the challenges that we face in the fuel sector. My question to him is, in February, 2019, the then Minister of Energy said that we had procured 24 months supply of fuel in the country. The question that I ask which arises out of it is that we were lied to as a nation. Where has this fuel gone because we could not have consumed this fuel in four months? Lastly, he also said that he had seen evidence of payment towards the procurement of that particular fuel. Where has the foreign currency gone?
HON. MUSABAYANA: My question of clarity to the Minister of Energy and Power Development is in light of the dire fuel situation that is obtaining in the country. What is the Ministry doing to ensure that there is equitable distribution of fuel to farming communities or those remote areas since he has said that his Ministry is working towards universal access to sustainable energy supply because we have areas like Wedza that have not had fuel in service stations for more than six months?
Hon. Minister, the other question that I have is on the issue to do with the President’s vision of 2030. The President is very upbeat about the Vision 2030 and I am asking for clarity from the Hon. Minister if we have an energy and power infrastructure development strategy that spans 15 to 50 years so that it feeds into the President’s 2030 vision.
Madam Speaker, gold, oil and sometimes the US$ are the three major commodities that are precious on the global market and these commodities are sometimes used as store of value. My question is – what is your Ministry doing to ensure that the fuel they procured is only for consumption by motorists and not kept as a store of value because there is a difference between the parallel rate and the interbank rate, meaning there is a gap for arbitrage. It means people can start to hoard and store fuel as a commodity or store value.
My other point of clarity is on the school of thought that says de-regulate the fuel sector and allow free market forces and only concentrate on subsidising critical and productive sectors like agriculture, public transport and Government operations so that it will relieve pressure on the excessive use or need for Government to source for foreign currency. So, I need clarification on that.
My last issue is on the demand side that we were talking about that we need to manage the demand side. I notice that Europe, Brazil, the Americans and some African countries like Botswana, including Zimbabwe are still using those bulbs that consume a lot of energy but do we have implementation of that policy because when you walk into shops, you still find these high-power bulbs in the shops. Where is the implementation to ensure that we serve energy? I thank you.
HON. RAIDZA: My point of clarity from the Hon. Minister’s Ministerial Statement is regarding the issue of solar installation on Government buildings. Would it not be ideal for the Ministry to power Government buildings and other public institutions as a way of encouraging the private sector to realise that it is possible to use conventional electricity as a stop gap measure taking into consideration the prevailing challenges that we are experiencing as a country?
The other issue that I did not quite understand is to do with bringing in investors in our solar industry as a way of avoiding the issues of Chivayo saga. We want to get clarity on what the Ministry is doing with regards to purchasing electricity from these investors rather than Government investing directly into activities like the ones of Chivayo? I thank you.
HON. CHASI: Thank you Madam Speaker. With reference to the issue that has been raised by Hon. Mushayi. I have not seen the statement that she made reference and really do not want to comment about it because I am not aware of that statement. As a result, I am unable to say that there was fuel that was bought or not – that is beyond me and is something that I am not familiar with.
Hon. Musabayana raised a very important question which I had occasion to discuss with the industry this morning – the rationalisation of distribution. I am advised that we have about 600 or so service stations across the country and as Government, we have an interest in ensuring that fuel gets to every corner of the country. We have noticed and agreed with stakeholders that we need a way of ensuring that there is rationalised distribution of fuel and at particular times like now when there is where there is a shortage. We also need to be sensitive to the economic activity that requires petroleum at a particular time. So an agreement was reached today that the regulator and players meet and come up with a framework that allows them to make informed decisions around where and what fuel should be delivered.
Store of value, this has been a problem and the prices of our fuel has generally been lower compared to neighbouring countries like Zambia. So we have had serious instances of mischief that we have requested that they be investigated – where people have been effectively getting foreign currency from our system, buying fuel and being paid outside the country. We were alerted to this development this morning and have asked that the players abide by the law and policies of the country and that they take the requisite steps to return the money.
On deregulation, I think that it is a debate that we can have for a long time – there are pros and cons about what we have at the moment. Which is why I made reference to possibilities of self-regulation by the players in certain instances but we retain the current legal framework in place. For example, one issue that I posed to them this morning was if you look at the challenges that developed at some point with regards to fuel coupons, we said that it was possible that as players, they could agree that those coupons could have been usable at various fuel stations but they needed to agree and come up with a code of conduct or Memorandum of Agreement (MOU) that allows and details how that is done.
The problem being, we have instances whereby people have prepaid for fuel but are not allowed to access the commodity even when it is available. There are also instances where service stations are refusing to accept anything else apart from the United States Dollar. We have pointed out the impropriety of that practice and that we would be keeping our fingers on it to check who is engaging in that type of practice.
The issue of solar energy in Government departments – I agree with Hon. Raidza regarding that. We need to make efforts to remove as much as possible consumers of power from the grid during the day, then they can move back onto the grid during the night. We believe that this is a key strategic matter that requires Government support. We need to attract investors to come and do this and it will also assist us even in the rural areas for people to begin improving on economic activities there. We would like to come up with a package of incentives, some are already in place and make them public – including the map that I referred to where it is optimal to have solar energy; then market this to investors both locally and internationally – that way, we will be able to improve not only on the levels of our power but also save on foreign currency.
HON. T. MLISWA: Madam Speaker, let me first of all take this opportunity to congratulate the Hon. Minister for being appointed Minister of Energy and Power Development. Hon. Minister, you said it exactly the way I would have said it and this is where the problem is. There are people, Madam Speaker, who are given foreign currency to buy fuel. The fuel industry is not a productive sector. They then sell fuel in foreign currency like he said and where does that foreign currency go? It goes to the black market – it does not go back to buy fuel. So clarity is sought that what then happens to these players who are receiving foreign currency from the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, sell in foreign currency but do not use this foreign currency to buy fuel or remit to the Reserve Bank? So the black market now thrives from that – clarity needs to be sought.
The other issue on that one, the Hon. Minister had an interview with the Zimpapers television station. He mentioned that there were cartels because we have got to hit the nail on the head – there were cartels. There are cartels in the fuel industry but people are not prepared to name them. How far have you gone as the new Minister in dealing with them? The day you will reveal these cartels to the President, that is the day the fuel industry will have sanity. Here, we are given an opportunity before we name and shame them, especially myself. I have them but you said you wanted to investigate. These cartels must be exposed.
The other issue is, what are you doing about people who are getting foreign currency to buy fuel and not buying fuel. It does not take a rocket scientist to say, we gave Hon. Mliswa $10 to buy things for $10 but I buy for $5. Arrest them, you have them. Why are we wasting time and why are people suffering because of a few individuals. We cannot allow a situation like that to continue yet we know who they are, yet the records are there with the RBZ. Let an investigation be done tomorrow and see the money given to these companies. Did they bring the fuel that is meant to come in? If not, let them go to Chikurubi because this country is suffering as a result of them. There is no debate there.
The other issue is, why we are allowing the Reserve Bank to keep giving money when we can allow these companies to bring in fuel. Total is an international company, Trafigura is an international company. They are all international companies. The only companies which would have to be exempted are indigenous companies but these are international companies Madam Speaker, making money outside. Let them use their own foreign currency offshore, bring in the fuel and it is liberal.
I do not know why we keep on blaming the RBZ and allowing the RBZ to remit the foreign currency, taking from the productive sector and giving to a non-productive sector. The Professor of economics here, Hon. Prof. Mthuli Ncube totally agrees with me that there is never any economy where you take from the productive sector and give to non-productive sector and expect anything out of it. I would want to hear how you expect that to happen.
The other issue is the ethanol given to Billy Rautenbach is for blending but the fuel is still costing more Hon. Minister, yet we are saying to be blending. Why is it that we have one white man who has monopolised ethanol?. What is so great about him? he claims that it is because he was on sanctions, how many blacks have been on sanctions in this country? Just because of one white man, who is he to destroy this sector? Who is he eating with? Who is he moving around giving monies to? We are tired. Billy Rautenbach cannot be bigger than this country and allow this country to suffer. The war veterans who fought for this country even suffer. He never went to war, he never held a gun but today he talks about sanctions. Who has not suffered from sanctions? What is so special about one man? Ethanol, Triangle can sell it cheaper but you closed Triangle and said Billy can do it. This is the corruption Hon. Minister you have to deal with.
My last question, how are you going to deal with these tendencies which have destroyed this country? I can tell you, the sooner you deal with them, you will be the most commended Minister in this country because you would have dealt with corruption. Fuel is critical in the stabilisation of the economy. The Minister of Finance sitting there, cannot be blamed for this, especially him being new in this system where there is so much corruption. He is equally shocked by the corruption which is there. No wonder why, when we are asking questions here, he cannot expose his colleagues. Corruption is rife in the industry, how are you going to deal with it? Thank you.
HON. CHIKWINYA: Thank you Madam Speaker. The Minister in his presentation split his presentation into two. He first made the power supply presentation and then the fuel supply presentation. I will try to package my points of clarity along that scale. First of all Madam Speaker, the Minister tries to disassociate himself from ZERA which is the Energy Regulatory Authority. Madam Speaker, ZERA is established in terms of the ZERA Act of 2011 as he said. That Act is superintended or administered by the Minister of Energy and Power Development, so the Minister cannot come to Parliament which deals with policy issues and say myself, as a Minister, have my own functions and ZERA has its own functions, no one must interfere with ZERA when yet he is the superintended of ZERA. What the nation expects from its elected leadership which is Parliament, which is the highest concentration of political leadership, is that we need answers on the ground. The Ministers and MPs are there to provide answers where ZESA is an implementing organ. Hon. Minister, what we need is a direction for ZERA to be able to provide the services as required in terms of the Act, according to the 18 functions that he told us.
The second issue is, according to Section 3 (2) (g) of the Constitution which says, ‘The principles of good governance which bind the State and all institutions and agencies of Government at every level include in (g) transparency, justice, accountability and responsiveness’. It is incumbent upon the Minister who is superintending these Government agencies to be responsive. We do not have power currently in the country and it is incumbent upon the Minister to be responsible. We cannot then be able to shift blame to other Government agencies that are under his ambit and then the Minister expects us to make him come clean on that. We need to respect the principles of our own Constitution as dictated.
Madam Speaker, the Hon. Minister gives shocking statistics. He says, as of Friday, Kariba was 29% full and it is left with 14 weeks supply of power. Madam Speaker, this is shocking. We have investment which is depending on power whose business plan are five years. We are only five months into the year and we are expecting power in the next two and half months to be depleted from minus 358 megawatts. Madam Speaker, we share Kariba power supply with Zambia. Zambia is currently producing two thousand megawatts a day, consuming two thousand megawatts a day. What is it that Zambians are doing which we are not doing? What is so special about the Zambians political stability or political set up which we do not have in Zimbabwe? The Minister must feel challenged that his counterparts in Zambia are able to deliver and we are failing to deliver. These are the answers which we need from him as a Minister.
Madam Speaker, I am happy the Hon. Minister of Finance is here. Only yesterday, he claimed that Zimbabwe currently sits at a surplus cash of US$100 million as expressed in RTG$600 million. We cannot celebrate as Members of Parliament and the nation to have a Minister who sits in Cabinet, chaired by the President, celebrating success of US$100 million and have a Minister of Energy coming to this House again and say we cannot import power. It cannot be. This Government is held by the principle of collective responsibility. That is why they have one Cabinet meeting. Lucky enough, to Hon. Minister Mutsvangwa, after every Cabinet meeting, she comes out to give a collective Cabinet decision making matrix. We cannot celebrate silos of decision making to say, the Minister of Finance is doing good. He has surplus but the Minister of Energy cannot be blamed because there is no foreign currency, we cannot. We need energy as a matter of urgency in our households.
The other issue that I need clarity on is that what happened to the Gwanda Solar Project? Are we sure that we can sit here, proud to have alter ego of representing our people and then the whole nation of 17 million can be duped by one individual who ate $5 million and only managed to build one-roomed cabin which is equivalent to Mbizo maME. The Minister must come clean on what happened to the Gwanda Solar Project.
Madam Speaker, I will move over to fuel and there are only a few issues. The Hon. Minister was appointed on a Thursday, the Wednesday before I, Settlement Chikwinya had asked his predecessor Dr. Jorum Gumbo a very simple question, when can Zimbabweans drive into a garage, access fuel and drive out? The answer given was that in the next few days because Government at that particular day had issued 18 million LCs. I think his answer was so wrong to the extent that the President saw it fit to remove him from office. He then appointed Hon. Chasi. The same question is before you Hon. Chasi – when can Zimbabweans drive into a garage, fill in their tank and drive out, pass through KFC buying 2 piecer chicken? When can we have such a scenario? This is your mandate and this is all what the people of Zimbabwe want.
The other issue is, what are we doing about alternative sources of energy like gas? The President went to Lupane and officially opened the Lupane gas project. What is happening to it? We must be able to provide alternative sources of heating energy. Currently we are importing gas. If you go to Zuva at Fourth Street, gas is being sold at RTGs 9.70 per kilogram. It is beyond the reach of many but I am sure if we are going to tap our gas from Lupane, it can lend cheaper. What are we doing about gas?
My last point is on ethanol. Statistics have shown that if we import ethanol from Brazil for blending purposes, it lends at RTG 0.50 cents per litre but Billy Rautenbach from Chipinge – 400 km away from here is lending it at RTG 1.70 per litre – [HON. MLISWA: That is so corrupt. Who is Billy?] – Why are we then blending? Is South Africa or Zambia also blending? If they are blending, how much is it?
As what Hon. Gonese said, may the Hon. Minister tell us that in percentage terms – if we are going to cost a litre of petrol, what is the percentage of Government tax in there and what is the percentage of cost of doing business? Maybe we are then able to sit down as Parliament and say, are we not overtaxing ourselves and what can we do within the taxing model. I thank you.
Hon. Musabayana having stood up to debate.
THE HON. DEPUTY SPEAKER: Hon. Musabayana may you take your seat.
HON. CHINYANGANYA: The Government has said that the fuel players are supposed to import fuel at the prevailing bank exchange rate. We all know that the exchange rate is increasing by the day. What will happen to the fuel prices? Are they going to remain stagnant or they will be increasing on a weekly basis.
My second question is on fuel blending. I once asked the Minister’s predecessor on the issue of blending and he was adamant that unblended fuel does not cover the same distance as blended fuel and he was adamant that blended fuel covers more distance compared to unblended fuel. This showed his lack of depth in the knowledge of fuel. Why does the Ministry or Government not give people the latitude to choose the kind of fuel they need? Whether it is blended or unblended because blended fuel is destroying our engines. It is not cost effective.
The other point is, you were talking about saving energy. We have these monitors that are on 24 hours a day. Why are we talking about saving energy when we cannot save energy in this House? Charity begins at home.
The last point I want to make has already been touched by other speakers – why can we not have solar and gas imports duty free so that we conserve the forex that we do not have. Each and every household will have solar panels and we will know that we will not be using the foreign currency that is in short supply. These are my interventions Madam Speaker Ma’am.
THE MINISTER OF ENERGY AND POWER DEVELOPMENT (HON. CHASI): Madam Speaker, I prefaced my presentation by making reference to the law that sets up ZERA. I made reference to Section 4 of that Act and I pointed out that ZERA has got 18 aspects of its mandate that are stipulated there. Its function deals from the beginning of the fuel chain, the procurement, transmission and distribution. It also includes dealing with issues of competition.
The moment you speak of a cartel, you are speaking to competition. I also made a point that the same law makes it very clear that in its operations, ZERA is subject to no control by anybody and that includes myself. The last point and I really want people to understand this – the role of the Minister is stated in that piece of law and it makes it very clear that the Minister can only give general policy direction. I think that is important in answering Hon. – [HON. T. MLISWA: You know the cartel.] – I am not prepared, neither will I break the law. If this House desires to give me additional responsibilities in the area of petroleum and power, it is up to it to amend the law, but I am going to deal with the legal framework as it obtains at the moment. It is not to underplay the issue that is being raised by the Hon. Member but I think the moment we begin to disrespect the very laws that we make and demand Ministers to do things that are clearly illegal, we are sending a wrong signal to the parastatals that we superintend.
I also made it clear that corporate governance is very key going forward in this sector and that we are going to focus on it and deal with each and every issue that arises, but I want to steer clear from the mandate of ZERA – [HON. T. MLISWA: If you mention one cartel basa rinopera.] – What I am prepared to do Mr. Speaker is require ZERA to carry out its mandate and report to me. In appropriate circumstances, Government will issue the necessary policy direction to ZERA as contemplated by the law.
Issues of violations of exchange control laws – the Reserve Bank has got significant powers to deal with those instances. I think I have covered the issue of corruption in dealing with the previous case that I have averted to. In the same vein, I believe I have also addressed Hon. Chikwinya’s question. I would like to urge Hon. Members to familiarise themselves with the legal framework dealing with our petroleum industry so that law demands that are illegal are made to me. Members might also be interested to note that even in Zambia there is load shedding as we speak at the moment. I made the point to the Energy Committee in the morning that there is a general deficit of power in the region, but I am not going to try and equate this country to Zambia. The economies are different and the Governments are different.
The challenge that we face with the players is that we work together as a nation. This is why we have taken the position as the Ministry that we will engage each and every player in the industry, each and every stakeholder and anybody who can assist to ensure that we deal with the issue. It is known that there are issues surrounding that project and in fact, upon assuming office, I made it very clear that that issue has got to be resolved. That issue has got to be resolved and we also need to take the necessary steps to deal with those that have contravened the Public Finance Management Act who were in situ at ZESA when these issues happened. That law is very clear that anybody who causes loss to Government funds or property is liable. So we expect officers that were at ZESA at that point in time who are either negligent or complicit in the country using that investment to be accountable.
It follows that if there is a multiplicity of people who determine where we are going in terms of resolving this issue and they are not under my control, I am not able to say this is the day that fuel will be delivered to service stations but I can confirm that in discussions today with the players in this industry, they made a commitment that there will be fuel in service stations today. They made that commitment and they assured us that the queues will begin to disappear. – [AN HON. MEMBER: Today?] –
I think people must listen when I speak. I have said that the players made reference to the fact that they are going to make fuel available. I do not have fuel to put into pumps. On issues of ethanol, what I am able to say at this moment and what I have been assured and I am prepared to do a paper for the purposes of this House, is that the blending has been tested and that it is up to international standards. I am prepared to bring in a paper detailing the experts who have conducted this process. – [AN HON. MEMBER: Inaudible interjection.] –
I have said that competition issues, the pricing issues are under ZERA. – [HON. MEMBERS: Inaudible interjections.] –
HON. MLISWA: On a point of order Mr. Speaker Sir.
THE TEMPORARY SPEAKER: What is your point of order?
HON. T. MLISWA: Mr. Speaker Sir, Hon. Chasi is a respected person, one of the most efficient Ministers I communicate with but I think he is fast losing his reputation if he does not do the right things. Talk about real issues. ZERA is under him as the Minister of Energy and Power Development. They report to him according to the governance issues and he cannot choose which one to say and so forth. In English they say different strokes for different folks. It does not work like that. The Minister must assure us and must be very assertive and answer the questions. The pricing is the issue – while ethanol is coming from Chisumbanje and you say it is good, the pricing is not viable. People are suffering in this country because of the pricing. Talk to the pricing. Triangle is cheaper. Brazil is 50 cents; bring it over a dollar, how? This is my question Hon. Minister. –[HON. MEMBERS: Inaudible interjections.] –
THE TEMPORARY SPEAKER: I have noted your point of order. Let me now give the Minister a chance to respond.
THE MINISTER OF ENERGY AND POWER DEVELOPMENT (HON. CHASI): Mr. Speaker, I think Members must decide whether we want to run this sector in a professional manner or not. I want to assure this House that I am not going to meddle and do things that will cause me to break… –[AN HON. MEMBER: Inaudible interjection.] –
Mr. Speaker, I think I should really be allowed to answer unless the desire is not to hear what I am saying. I have said earlier on that my function as stipulated in the law is to give general policy direction. The law is very clear that the price must be fair. It is part of the mandate of ZERA and I have expressed that point that we expect that the public gets value for money, but I am not going to conduct myself in an illegal way. Losing reputation or – [AN HON. MEMBER: Inaudible interjection.] –
THE TEMPORARY SPEAKER: Hon. Mliswa, do you want me to send you out of the House?
HON. T. MLISWA: Sorry Mr. Speaker.
HON. S. SIBANDA: Mr. Speaker Sir, what we have noticed from history is that we have seen ZERA announcing fuel prices and we have seen His Excellency President Mnangagwa announcing the prices in January…
THE TEMPORARY SPEAKER: Can you raise your point of order and not the analysis that you are trying to deliver to the Chair?
HON. S. SIBANDA: My point of order is that the current Energy Minister is saying he is not responsible for setting energy prices, whereas in previous instances, previous Energy Ministers have done so. That is my point of order. We really need the truth to be told in this House. Thank you.
HON. MADZIMURE: My first point of clarification – the only institutions that are independent are constitutional commissions. So, is ZERA a constitutional commission? If ZERA is making it impossible for the Minister to perform his duties, is the Minister going to move for amendments to the ZERA Act and when?
My other question is, the energy policies of this country – who is responsible for them if he has no control over ZERA?
My other point of clarification is that, the Minister talked about the obsolete plant at Hwange which under normal circumstances should have a maintenance schedule that will indicate whether the plant is not obsolete and needs replacement, whether there are any maintenance schedules at Hwange. Can he also clarify the contradictions between the performance of the plant and the corruption at Hwange and when will the Minister present that forensic audit about Hwange which I think is the actual cause for poor power generation at Hwange and not the age of the plant.
My other question relates to the power shortage in the region. Do we actually have a power shortage in the region or we do not have enough forex to import power? Lastly Mr. Speaker, whenever there is load shedding, industrialists and even households resort to the use of generators. At the moment, the Ministry of Energy and Power Development and not ZERA announced a policy where jerry cans should be used.
Finally on the issue of prices, only recently the fuel supplies – the service stations had increased fuel prices and the Minister was the one who was talking about the reduction reverting to the gazetted price. So, was he now usurping the powers of ZERA or he is hiding behind so that he avoids being held accountable for the shortage of fuel? Thank you.
HON. BITI: Thank Hon. Speaker Sir. My point of clarification and perhaps advice to the Minister is 1) on the issue of ethanol. The issue of ethanol is not covered by any law in Zimbabwe. The only law that covers petroleum is the Petroleum Act which was passed way back in the time of the federation and petroleum is defined as two things. It is defined as petrol and diesel which are all hydro carbons. It does not cover ethanol which is agriculture. Ethanol is agriculture whereas hydro-carbon is mining.
So, the Minister is at large when it comes to ethanol. The law that introduced mandatory blending of petroleum with ethanol was a Statutory Instrument that was enacted in 2013 by the Minister of Energy and Power Development. Therefore, it is totally and entirely within the esteemed Minister of Energy and Power Development to actually repeal that Statutory Instrument to address two things that are unacceptable in that Statutory Instrument, which is demand side monopoly and supply-side monopoly. Supply side monopoly is the law that says we can only purchase ethanol from a company that is in a joint venture with the Government yet there is only one company with a joint venture with the Government which is Green Fuels and the company owned by this dealer Billy Rautenbach.
I therefore submit to the Hon. Speaker that he needs to read that Statutory Instrument. But more importantly, he must follow the precedent of Brazil, Malawi, Sweden, United States of America, of actually enacting a new law that deals with alternative biomass energy because the Petroleum Act only covers hydro-carbons petrol and diesel. That then gives him a full mandate to deal with an unregulated industry namely, alternative energy biomass energy, ethanol energy.
The second is demand side monopoly. We all love green energy and that is the route to go, but you must give a customer, an ordinary person the opportunity to choose at a gas station, whether to go for cheap ethanol blended or not. So, the mandatory provision is the mandatory that any gas station must have a pump that is blended and a pump that is not. That is the freedom of choice that is given. So, if you go to countries like Sweden, South Africa and countries in Europe, the mandatory on the demand side is not for every consumer to be forced to consume blended fuel. The mandatoriness is for a gas station to give the consumer choice.
So, if I want to buy pure unleaded fuel, it is my choice. If I want to buy blended fuel, it is my choice but you cannot have demand side monopoly because that comes unconstitutional and is a breach of the right to equal protection of the law covered and defined by Section 56. If you do not do that, you then create the distortion in this country caused by Billy Rautenbach where the price of ethanol and blended fuel – 1) the mix fluctuates. Sometimes it is 5%, sometimes it is 15% and other times it is 20%, which is a problem. Why are we not buying from Tongaat Hullet? Why are we not buying from Brazil? Why are we not buying from the United States of America? Why are we not buying from Malawi? If we did that Hon. Speaker Sir, the cost of ethanol would be 50 cents.
I want to move to a second issue which is the issue of cartels. If you look at our current account and the Minister of Finance and Economic Development is here? Singapore has become our largest trading partner. We are giving to Singapore over a billion US dollar to buy petroleum but Singapore is a tiny little island State which produced nothing. So, why are we buying our fuel through Trafigura, a commodity broker based in Singapore instead of going on the open market and buy our hydro-carbon from Kuwait, from Saudi Arabia, from Venezuela?
So Hon. Speaker, the success of this Minister is going to be determined on whether he can break the stronghold of cartels in the fuel sector in this economy, in particular the following cartels – 1) Trafigura which controls the supply side. 2) Glenco and its indigenous partner that I shall not mention, that all of us know control the pipeline. 3) The retailers, in particular ZUVA, Puma/Sakunda. Those cartels must be liquidated if the price of fuel has to come down in this country.
Thirdly Hon. Speaker Sir, the price of fuel is in US dollars and we are spending over US$1.5 billion on fuel. If sanity has to come down, those that are importing fuel in this country must also be allowed to charge in US dollars. In other words, there has to be a dollarisation of the fuel in this county and that goes without saying Hon. Minister, my brother-in-law.
On energy Hon. Speaker Sir, Cabora Bassa can sell to Zimbabwe today namhla kathesi 350 mega watts of energy. Eskom in South Africa can sell namhla today 350 mega watts of energy. Why is the Government not purchasing and contracting with HBC, why is the Government not contracting with Eskom; the reason is foreign currency. Why are they allowing foreign currency to be their problem? We the consumers can pay in hard currency. So, once again dollarise. I thank you.
THE MINISTER OF ENERGY AND POWER DEVELOPMENT (HON. CHASI): Thank you Mr. Speaker. I want to begin with the last speaker and it is notable in the presentation or the clarifications sought by Hon. Biti that he does not contest the statements or floor that I made regarding the status of ZERA. I think that is a very clear point and as a lawyer, we agreed that my role is clearly defined in the Act to general policy direction. That does not mean [HON. MLISWA: Cartel]–
THE TEMPORARY SPEAKER (HON. MUTOMBA): Hon. Mliswa!
HON. CHASI: Hon. Speaker, the point that has been indicated falls within the purview of ZERA. In my supervisory role as the responsible Minister, I will look at every piece of mandate that is in the Act and require that ZERA performs in a particular manner. I think Members must understand that I have been in office for two weeks. I think that is a pertinent matter. I have not had time to study Brazil, Malawi, Sweden or USA in two weeks on ethanol. So, I prefer that I be methodical, very deliberate and make decisions that are evidence based. –[HON. MEMBERS: Hear, hear] – That point Mr. Speaker, does not require me to say I have been in office for two weeks and to expect me to have covered each and every aspect of issues in this sector; with respect to Hon. Mliswa in particular, is extremely unreasonable.
There are issues of maintenance. On the second day after my appointment, I went straight to Kariba to understand what was happening there because that is the basic source of our power and I think that was a proper thing to do. Thereafter, I have been in a systematic way, which is why I felt it is important that this House must have a basic understanding of this very important sector. From now henceforth, they can have plans as to what it is that is going to be done. We are working on an integrated strategy for power in this sector. We are not looking for five year plans and so forth; we are looking much more beyond that.
The issue of maintenance of various types of equipment; power plants and so forth, that is clear. I have made the point that we need men and women who are strategic thinkers because this is a strategic part at board level and needs skilled people in management. Those are the issues that henceforth we are going to be pursuing and I will be very open with what is happening, give the relevant reports and answer questions as may be required. Definitely, I am not a Chemist, so I cannot speak on the technical issues relating to ethanol but of initial interest to myself upon getting into office was to understand the processes that were taken to ensure the blending was done properly.
It is a matter that I am going to continue to work on and where appropriate, ask ZERA in accordance with the law to deal with it and achieve the necessary results. So competition issues, it is very simple for me. I expect that ZERA must ensure a market that is consistent with the prerequisites of the law. I am not going to be naming people as cartels – [HON. MLISWA: You know you will be fired] – what I can also say is what we need to do in a very direct and deliberate way. When you make decisions, when you are a regulator you base your decisions on information.
THE TEMPORARY SPEAKER: Hon. Minister, address your Chair.
HON. CHASI: I am getting destructed, it is only natural.
THE TEMPORARY SPEAKER: Hon. Mliswa, you are destructing the whole event.
HON. CHASI: Hon. Speaker, what do we need to do? We need a regulator that is empowered, a regulator that has capacity to get information from the market. We have issues as we speak, about fuel that was exported unlawfully; funds that were externalised – [HON. T. MLISWA: By who?]-
THE TEMPORARY SPEAKER: Hon. Mliswa, you are inviting me to send you out right away.
HON. CHASI: I can answer him. This is precisely why I am raising this point to say that when we have technologies that allow us to know what fuel has been delivered where, because part of the public complaint is that they are told that the fuel is finished after 30 minutes of pumping. We want to ensure that we have a system that allows us to give information regarding the players themselves; the distribution of service stations, how much has been pumped at a particular service station, et cetera. When we get to that level, I am sure we will be able to bring sanity to the sector. I thank you.
“Leave My Mother Thokozani Alone” – COMMENT
—— ORIGINAL ARTICLE BELOW ——–
VIDEO LOADING BELOW…
By Staff Correspondent| Dr Thokozani Khupe, the leader of the MDC faction, has said government did not disrespect the Dumiso Dabengwa family during the national hero’s burial at Ntabazinduna yesterday.
Dr Khupe (TK) speaks to ZimEye.com and below is the full text –
TK: I came almost at the same time with the minister of state.
ZimEye: Do you have a comment on Emmerson Mnangagwa’s failure to attend burial?
TK: I don’t have a comment because I don’t know why. I don’t have a comment.
ZimEye: You don’t feel it was weird or awkward for South Africa to send its representatives and yet he was not in attendance only his portrait was there and I’m talking about also the portrayal of the portrait at the front of the podium instead of Dumiso Dabengwa’s picture?
TK:But but but as you know that he was declared a national hero and government did all these things that were there, so for me I think I really appreciate because he got a decent send off; everything went on very well all the preparations transport, paperwise, everything. So for me I really appreciate the role that they did, in making sure that he gets a good send off.
ZimEye: And what about the giving Nelson chamisa space to speak as if he is President?
Do you feel that was right?
TK: But but I don’t like commenting about other people, that’s my nature so I don’t have any comment on that.
ZimEye: But generally as we conclude, how do you find everything, how do you find the way the funeral was handled by the government do you feel that they were fair on the Dabengwa family?
TK: I went to the house and you know everything was going on very well and the funeral everything went on very well as far as I know because that’s a funeral. They were going to…
ZimEye: You don’t feel that the government disrespected the Dabengwa family?
TK: They were there, government was there, they were represented Ministers were there they represented government. I saw Monica Mutsvangwa, the ministers of state I saw them they were there. Because government is not just one person mind you, government is not one person it is the whole executive.
Three Perish In Horrific Crash
TWO people died on the spot while another one succumbed to injuries while admitted to Mpilo Central Hospital after a pirating Toyota Wish they were travelling in veered off the road and hit a tree near Lupane.
Officer Commanding Police Lupane District, Chief Superintendent Edgar Dhliwayo confirmed the accident.
He said preliminary investigations show that the driver was speeding when the accident occurred at the 152km peg between Lupane and Kenmaur along the Bulawayo-Victoria Falls Road.
The vehicle was heading towards Lupane from Bulawayo with five passengers on board when the accident occurred last Friday.
“I can confirm that police attended to an accident where two people died on the spot while three others were rushed to St Luke’s Hospital. One of the three who is a 50-year-old woman was transferred to Mpilo Central Hospital in Bulawayo due to the seriousness of head injuries she sustained and she died on Saturday,” he said.State media

Mary Mliswa In Car Accident, Temba Comments Saying “No Weapon Formed Against us Will Prosper”
By Farai D Hove| The Mashonaland West provincial Minister Mary Mliswa was involved in a road accident when her vehicle side-swiped a truck on Sunday.
She survived the mishap. Her brother who is the Norton independent legislator Temba Mliswa said his sister escaped unharmed.
“Just received news that my sister, Hon. Mary Mliswa-Chikoka was involved in an accident on her way from Chegutu, approaching Chinhoyi when a truck veered and side swiped her motor vehicle…I’m happy to report that her & her driver are both well and safe,” said Mliswa.
Mliswa then passed a cryptic statement suggesting possible foul play. He said “no weapon formed against us will prosper, we are a God fearing family and give thanks for their divine protection.”
Meanwhile, no further details on the accident were available at the time of writing. – More follows…
PASSPORT HORRORS: We’re Being Told That Emergency Passports No Longer Exist Because of the Shortage of Paper
Dear Editor,
Please dont reveal my name. I am one of the applicants for an emmergency passport from here in diapora. We are being told that emmergency passports no longer exist because of the shortage of paper. All new applicants have to wait until February 2020 to get their passports renewed.
However we are made to understand that those who connected and can pay bribes are still getting the emergency passports. How can we usually live and survive in diaspora without a passport. Can you guys investigate and take this up with the relevant authorities on behalf of us all.
I remember last time the Minister of Home Affairs was saying the suspension of passport printing was due to the breakdown in printing machines but nhasi zvava zvimwe.
Thank you in advance Simba for taking this up.
LATEST- 2 ShutDown By Teachers Begins | FULL TEXT

Cdes our employer has consistently ignored our call for a salary review in line with prevailing economic realities. Instead of giving us a salary review we are receiving deaths threats, our leaders and members are being harassed by state agents. They hope to induce fear amongst us and bully us into submission. The question is are we ready to stand up against this brutal regime and boldly declare NO TO SLAVE WAGES!
The RTGS currency has been heavily eroded, the black market rate is now above 1:8 to the United States Dollar. Cabinet approved that all contracts which were denominated in United States Dollars before the promulgation of SI 33 of 2019 should be paid using the interbank rate. Cdes our salaries were negotiated in United States dollars and were paid in such since 2009. It follows that our current salaries should either be paid in hard currency or interbank rate equivalent. This is an unavoidable reality.
Prof Mthuli continues to deny the fact that salaries should be negotiated using USD rates. Such an assertion exposes his evil intentions of stealing our wages. Prices of goods and services are pegged using the prevailing rates because we are heavily relying on imports. Denying us salaries in line with interbank rates is both cruel and criminal.
The average teacher is earning 500 RTGS after deductions. This is an equivalent of US$ 62.50. A big slash from the US$ 500 we used to earn before the current currency crisis. A teacher can no longer afford to buy pair of shoes monthly let alone footing medical bills and other needs. We are worse off than someone receiving a government welfare grant in South Africa.
When we raise these legitimate issues we are harassed, tortured, incarcerated and threatened with death. State spies are visiting our leaders countrywide and harassing them in front of learners.
The State wants to silence us and annihilate our Union. We have to make a choice, either we remain silent and face the consequences of eternal poverty or Stand up against tyranny and labour injustice.
We have been labeled cowards and a docile lot. The government’s arrogance stems from the assumption that they can get away with anything with the teachers. They have taken away our food, our healthcare, our education and indeed our livelihoods. We have not stopped from providing service, we still work tirelessly against these difficult odds.
On the 3rd of June let’s defy the odds and speak with one voice. Let’s withdraw our labour and send a clear message that we love our profession but we deserve to be treated as human beings. We are receiving worse treatment than Sekesai Nzenza’s dogs. Her dogs eat customized meals and have health care insurance paid in US dollars. We can’t afford healthcare for our children neither can we afford decent meals for our families.
Fear is usually born out of ignorance of the consequences of your actions. In February we all tasted what the government can do to us when we engage in a job action. They will not pay us for those days, “NO work No pay.” Cdes if we are not going to be paid for 3 days is that a big loss? Remember the monthly income is already paltry what of the 3 days income? This is the time to sacrifice and push for a better deal. We should tell Sekesai and Mthuli that we are not afraid of the No work no pay principle, we are not being paid after all.
Some have complained that three days are not sufficient. Cdes are pushing for an indefinite strike, let’s begin with the three days and change tactics as we go.
3-5 June we withdraw our labour protesting against underpayment.
No pay No work!
NotoSlaveWages
ARTUZ Presidium.
VIDEO:- Mnangagwa Named In “Exit Celebrations” at Stadium Similar To Mugabe Resignation | WHAT IS HAPPENING?
VIDEO LOADING BELOW…
By A Correspondent | The below scenes (youths celebrating an impending exit of ZANU PF leader Emmerson Mnangagwa) at a stadium are similar to the ones around the time when his predecessor was removed in 2017. In the below video a crowd of youths is heard loudly singing insults of Mnangagwa similar to those sung when former president Robert Mugabe was removed, and this just after his resignation.
Man Kills Neighbour Over $ 2 Dispute
A Kwekwe man reportedly murdered his neighbour in cold blood over RTGS $2.00 at Mbizo 15 Black tuckshop on Monday evening.
Moses Takundwa of Mbizo 15 stabbed one Absolom Chinono on his abdomen after they had a misunderstanding at a snooker table.
According to one of the eye witnesses who spoke to this publication on condition of anonymity, the two had a misunderstanding in the early hours of that same day and Takundwa went to town and he came back in the evening armed with two knives.
“I was at the scene when the incident took place, everyone was shocked because these two had a misunderstanding in the morning.
“The perpetrator went to town during the day after the misunderstanding and he came back with two knives in his pocket which he used to stab the now deceased.
“We were shocked by the incident because everybody thought that they had solved their differences in the morning,” said the source.
When contacted for comment by this publication, Midlands Province Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) spokesperson Inspector Joel Goko confirmed the incident and he urged members of the public to find other means of making money rather than betting which would land them into trouble.H-Metro

Pictures :Enzo Ishall Car Attacked, Badly Damaged


Social Media To Blame For Panic Buying -Consumer Council of Zimbabwe
The media, especially the social media platforms , have become a source of pain for Zimbabwean consumers and to some extent some formal businesses, said an official from the Consumer Council of Zimbabwe.
The alarmist messages on social media have caused a run on many businesses as people conduct panic buying, prices have been hiked on the back of hoax reports of price of fuel being increased the following morning, said the official.
The list is endless, but it has been established the consumer, as all this happen, is the ultimate victim.
The sad scenario is that these prices will never come down upon learning that the reports were false, and this calls for measures to protect the consumers.
It is against this backdrop that Consumer Council of Zimbabwe (CCZ) has blasted social media alarmists for causing unnecessary panic in the market through fake messages.
The consumer watchdog urged the public to ignore such messages.
In an interview on the sidelines of CCZ/Insurance and Pension Commission (IPEC) consumer education and awareness outreach programme in Masvingo on Tuesday, CCZ executive director, Ms Rosemary Siyachitema, expressed concern over prevailing price distortions and castigated people who posted “fake” price increases on social media platforms for manufacturing a gloomy atmosphere in the country.
She urged consumers to rely on formal information from responsible authorities and not to take everything they hear from grapevine as factual.
“When I came to Masvingo last night, I found a number of consumers, especially motorists in panic mode.
Almost everyone was talking about fuel hike from about $5 to $8 that I had to phone Harare to confirm,” said Ms Siyachitema.

War Vets To Get Top Posts In Zanu PF Structures
THE ruling party Zanu-PF has directed provincial structures to implement a 2017 Extra-Ordinary Congress resolution to incorporate war veterans as either their chairperson or vice chairpersons.
The resolution provides that when the provincial chairmanship is held by someone who is not a veteran of the liberation struggle, he or she, would be deputised by a war veteran.
In a circular addressed to all provincial chairpersons and read during the Mashonaland West provincial war veterans’ indaba held in Kadoma recently, Zanu-PF national secretary for the commissariat Engelbert Rugeje said the resolution had been endorsed by the Central Committee.
The Central Committee is Zanu-PF’s highest decision-making body outside Congress.
“You will recall that the December 2017 Zanu-PF Extra-Ordinary Congress endorsed a resolution on the elevation of veterans of the liberation struggle both in the party and Government.
“Pursuant to this resolution, you are directed by way of this circular to ensure that war veterans are incorporated into the main wing party structures from cell to provincial level in view of the restructuring exercise.
“If the chairman is a non-war veteran then the deputy should be a war veteran or vice versa,” the circular read.
Rugeje said preference should also be given to war veterans for posts of commissariat and secretary for security from cell level up to provincial level.
“The posts of political commissariat and deputy commissariat from cell level to provincial level should be preferably be filled by war veterans.
“The posts of secretary and deputy secretary for security from cell level to provincial should also preferably be filled with war veterans,” he said.
The Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans Association provincial chairperson Cornelius Muoni said while war veterans were grateful for the resolution, they were anticipating a quota system for war veterans.State Media

Khupe Commends Gvt Efforts To Assist Dabengwa Family
Farai Dziva|MDC T leader Thokhozani Khupe has thanked the government for declaring the late liberation war icon Dumiso Dabengwa a national hero.
She described government efforts to assist the Dabengwa family as “commendable.”
In an interview with ZimEye.com, Khupe carefully “refused” to comment on Emmerson Mnangagwa’s failure to attend Dabengwa’s burial.
“He(Dabengwa) was declared a national hero and government did all those things that were there-so for me I think I really appreciate it because he got a decent send off.
Everything went on very well, all the preparations transport, paperwise, everything. So for me I really appreciate the role that they played,”said Khupe.

Dabengwa Got A Befitting Send Off-Khupe
Farai Dziva|MDC T leader Thokozani Khupe believes the late liberation war supremo Dumiso Dabengwa got a befitting send off from Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government.
In an interview with ZimEye.com Khupe praised the government for honouring Dabengwa.
Asked whether she did not feel the government disrespected the Dabengwa family Khupe said:
” They were there, government was there, they were represented. Ministers were there they represented government. I saw Monica Mutsvangwa.
I saw them -they were there. Because government is not just one person mind you, government is not one person it is the whole executive.”

We Can Use Our Own Resources To Build Economy, Says Mnangagwa But Is This Possible Under A Zanu PF Gvt ?
Farai Dziva| Emmerson Mnangagwa has said there is no justification for the restrictive measures imposed on members of his ruling party Zanu PF.
Said Mnangagwa on Friday :“While indeed we still say to those who imposed sanctions on us, remove them, because there is no justification for the embargo, we should not bury our heads in sand because of those sanctions.”
He added:“We should realise that we have resources in our country. We must, therefore, focus on harnessing those resources to develop, modernise and industrialise our country and our economy.
We should not have sanctions impugn our capacity and capability to use our resources to the benefit of our people. We should rise using the resources at our disposal and move forward.”

Concede Failure, MDC Tells Mnangagwa
Farai Dziva|The MDC A Mutoko East has said Emmerson Mnangagwa must concentrate on seeking solutions to the country’s waning economy – instead of blaming former President Robert Mugabe for the current mishap.
“In life when you don’t admit failure you will not move forward.
The more ED refuses to admit that we are in a mess the more it wil become even worse.
He is blaming Bob but Bob wakasiya chinhu chichifamba ichi iye kwakubvisa mavhiri hanzi economic overhaul.”
The country’s economic problems are increasing with each passing day and analysts say Mnangagwa has dismally failed to turnaround the economy.

Who is A Snake Between Mai Titi and Madam Boss?
Picture- “Over My Dead Body, I Will Never Join Zanu Pf”

UPDATED: Chamisa Warned Kirsty Coventry And She Didn’t Listen, Now ED’s Family Has Snatched Her Job Away

By Farai D Hove| Before going on maternity leave, Sports Minister Kirsty Coventry had dissolved the previous Sports And Recreation Board due to concerns that it was interfering with her functions.
She managed to run the ministry well without a bloated payroll.
While she is away on leave, the Emmerson Mnangagwa administration has moved to oppose her by appointing another board, slapping her in the face. The board is headed by none other than Mnangagwa’s son in law, Gerald Mlotshwa, something MDC President Nelson Chamisa had last year warned that Mnangagwa just wants to trouble kamdidi kedu kanodida aka- this our great swimmer.
Below is a bill of evidence showing Emmerson Mnangagwa’s son in law’s new powers.
He was appointed Board Chairman and will enjoy these powers for the next 5 years.
The below extraction which is from the official Second Schedule of the Sports And Recreation Commissions Act, as ZimEye reveals, shows that Mlotshwa has in several ways taken over Kirsty Coventry’s job. FULL TEXT – His exclusive powers are:
- To acquire premises necessary or convenient for the exercise of its functions and for that purpose to buy,
- To take in exchange, hire or otherwise acquire immovable property and interests therein and rights thereover
and concessions, grants, powers and privileges thereof. - To buy, take in exchange, hire or otherwise acquire movable property necessary or convenient for the exercise of its functions.
- To make contracts and to enter into suretyships or give guarantees in connection with the exercise of its functions and to modify or rescind such contracts or rescind such suretyships or guarantees.
- To employ, upon such terms and conditions as the Board may think fit, such persons as may be necessary for conducting the affairs of the Commission and suspend or discharge any such persons.
- To provide pecuniary benefits for its employees on their retirement, resignation, discharge or other termina-tion of service or in the event of their sickness or injury and for their dependants, and for that purpose to effect policies of insurance, establish pension or provident funds or make such other provision as may be necessary to secure for its employees and their dependants any or all of the pecuniary benefits to which the provisions of this paragraph relate.
“Premier League Of Fools, Stop It!”
For you who are Zanupf
By Stanley Goreraza| A little wisdom, is a lot of wisdom. A grain of wisdom is greater than a mountain of foolishness.
Zimbabwe is an ant and the United States is an elephant, economically, militarily, technologically, populously, societally, historically and the list goes on and on.
As Zimbabwe, there is very little that we can contest in against the United States. You can never put Zimbabwe and the United States in a ring and ring the bell!
The Americans would shake their heads, laugh and walk out of the ring because it wouldn’t even be a contest.
You see if an ant shouted obscenities at an elephant and challenged it, the elephant would not even be bothered to pay attention or respond.
If there are any wise people in Zanupf, they would know that we stand to gain and profit from good relations with the Americans. They would also know that foul relations with the Americans and British are the very reason our country is troubled.
Like it or not, they are the greatest power on the face of the earth and if they choose to make your life miserable, they can easily do it and it will be hard on you.
They can put their hands around you and squeeze the life out of you and no one would be able to come to your aid. Mr Mugabe started this nonsense of unnecessary confrontation with the Americans and look where it got us!
The premier league of fools in Zanupf, still want us going round and round with eyes closed at the edge of a cliff! Mr Mugabe and Jonathan Moyo would very often spread paranoia about the Americans having designs on recolonizing us! What do we have that they cannot get elsewhere in greater abundance? Nothing.
We need the Americans. We need to tap into the vastness of their economic and technological power in our economic recovery efforts. We need access to their economy and capital.
We need a relationship with the elephant so that we can ride on its back to get where we want to go. The Americans don’t need us but we need them.
The American economy is doing great without Zimbabwe and if Zanupf relocated Zimbabwe to Mars out of fear of being recolonized, not a tear would be shed in America, not even by African Americans! It would be noticed by no one.
It’s up to President Mnangagwa. Either he listens to the fools who during the disastrous era of Mr Mugabe would rage against Britain and America on television , radio and in newspapers, and got us into an economic hell hole, or he follows wisdom and reaches a cordial understanding with the elephant for the good of the country.
Good relations, cooperation and partnership with the Americans is the only short cut to swift economic recovery.
In Pictures: Zimbabwe Warriors v Comoros





Furore Over Harare City Council Year Old Pits In Mufakose

By Rumbidzai Madhibha| A Mufakose man went beserk when his two year old daughter fell into a pit dug by city of Harare last year, injuring herself in the process.
A furious Onai Mapanda (41) told Zimeye that his daughter fell into the trench while following her mother who was sweeping the yard in the morning.

He said:
“I am disturbed by the negligence of the city fathers. Can you imagine they left these pits last year when they were repairing the blockage of a sewerage system? They even had the audacity to destroy my fence and gate in that process and they never fixed it leaving me to foot the bill.”
Mapinda said he tried engaging the councillor for Mufakose ward 36, Loveness Gomba who came to see how much was destroyed towards the end of last year and promised that the local authority would come and repair the damage. To date, they have never returned.”
The trench is in an area connecting the main road and Mufakose poly clinic, Mutiunokura primary, Mufakose 3 High and Tendai primary schools
Mapanda said the pits are even making movement difficult for the elderly who would want to go to the clinic for their regular check ups as they have to use a longer route.
Added Mapanda’s wife:
“I was terrified when I saw my daughter rolling in the pit covered in dust. The child however sustained some minor injuries on her leg, hand and fore head.”
Efforts to get a comment from the city fathers were futile by the time of writing.
Chief Ndiweni Prophecy :Mnangagwa “Loses Senses Like King Nebuchadnezzer”
Farai D Hove|Chief Felix Ndiweni’s prophecy that God Almighty will make someone lose his mind so to stop them reaching where they thought they were going, was somewhat fulfilled on the same day, it has emerged.
Yesterday, Emmerson Mnangagwa and his administration caused mirth for many as they placated his portrait at the Ntabazinduna burial site, instead of the late Dumiso Dabengwa.
News readers mocked Mnangagwa for placating his picture as if he was the one who had passed away.
Others stated outrightly that Mnangagwa had lost his mind.
Chief Ndiweni said that the Almighty God would soon deny someone vision to stop them going where they thought they were going.
Chief Ndiweni was speaking at the holy Ntabazinduna mountain during the burial of the late ZAPU President Dumiso Dabengwa.
Said Ndiweni, “On many occasions the Lord God Almighty will deny someone knowledge.
“The Lord God Almighty will deny someone vision. The Lord God Almighty will deny someone hearing, to stop them going where they thought they were going.
“In Zimbabwe, why would ubaba Dabengwa come from Ntabazinduna? He could have come from Lupane, Tsholotsho, many other places. He comes from Ntabazinduna, he is ours.”

PICTURE: What Big Lesson Must Mnangagwa Suck From Mugabe’s Miserable State?

PICTURE: What Big Lesson Must Mnangagwa Swallow From Mugabe's Miserable State Now?
— ZimEye (@ZimEye) June 2, 2019
PICTURE: Is Mnangagwa Dead?
VIDEO: Mnangagwa Has 700 Gold Mines
VIDEO LOADING BELOW…

“No To Tribalism”
By Pupurayi Togarepi
In the 1960s and 70s men and women from diverse backgrounds in our motherland Zimbabwe left their homes to fight for the liberation of their country.
These gallant sons of the soil, some of who are still among us like President Emmerson Mnangagwa, didn’t see the world through narrow tribal or regional lances but rather theirs was a sense of duty anchored in patriotism and grounded in brotherhood and sisterhood.
They fought side by side oblivious to toxic tribalism.
Our forefathers thus were the trailblazers and cleared the path for setting up a nation that we call Zimbabwe home today.
But then some mischievous elements within our midst, some who are still streaming milk from their noses are making terrible and toxic noises.
No, there we should draw a line and we draw it in concrete, alive to the ills of the ‘isms.
It is disheartening to see and hear counter revolutionaries today barking about tribalism in toxic tones. Yes there are some who whisper of clansmen and tribal politics trying to stir up emotions and reverse the gains we have made as a country because of their narrow and parochial interests.
They are some misguided elements who speak of tribalism and regionalism, trying horribly to say that the New Dispensation is not inclusive enough, nothing could be further from the truth, actually we have never had a more inclusive and sensitive government as we have now. People currently occupying offices in government are in their positions because of qualification and not their places of origin or relation.
Indeed we cannot paddock ourselves into imagery tribes when what separates us is by and large dialectical and not tribal.
What is a karanga, what is a zezuro and indeed what is a Ndebele, if aliens were to visit this great country will they locate a Ndebele tribe or Shona tribe or rather what they will find are black Zimbabweans with aspirations and dreams, myths and historical ties.
We cannot be imprisoned forever by mindsets that were created by our erstwhile colonisers, who, in their quest for dominance and exploitation created borders and provinces that we have continued to use much to our detriment.
Perhaps it is time we rename all the provinces that seek to identify inhabitants with certain languages, names like Matabeleland (for Ndebeles) Mashonaland (for Shonas) and Manicaland (for Manyikas) have to go, for such derogative terms are not only retrogressive but also relics from colonialism and remain traps of primitive thoughts and behaviors.
It noteworthy to realise that some people today who identify with a certain region once belonged to a certain region, for instances people in Chikomba district, presently located in Mashonaland East province they were once in Masvingo province.
Thus it is insane to suggest that there is regionalism or tribalism in the present government when Zimbabwean have a right to relocate to any area of preference.
People are appointed on the basis of competence, loyalty, and trust. As Deng the Chinese reformist President once said “I don’t care if the cat is black or white as long as it catches mice” let’s give those who have been selected to lead us a chance without dwelling on petty and selfish agendas that only divide than unite us.
As our President often preaches, let us be bound by love, preach love and live in love. These ‘isms’ will only distract us from the task at hand, to develop our Great Country.

“Where Are You Mr President?”
By Fanuel Chinowaita- Mr Mnangagwa where are you? The people of Zimbabwe are looking for you everywhere but you are nowhere to be found.
Rumour is saying that you are under House arrest. You are no longer visible in public domains. Cde Dumiso Dabengwa died and you declared him a National Hero.
We all salute him, he is a real hero who fought for the freedom of this country. You went together to the struggle. You promised him that you will be together until the end; but you did not show up and pay the last respect.
Where are you President? Zimbabweans are crying. Things are not well. Even those who celebrated when you stole Nelson Chamisa’s victory are crying louder.
People who marched on the streets of Harare to remove Robert Mugabe are regretting. I can hear them saying, “akatifurira kuti tibvise Mugabe Mwari ngaave naye, whoever tricked us to remove Mugabe may God bless you”, where are you?
People are having long Queue waiting for transport to and from work, while cars and buses are having long Queues waiting for fuel. Where are you Dambudzo.
People have no money for bread, cooking oil, melie meal…..come out and rescue your people, if you are really their President. Dambudzo Mnangagwa, just come out and give people the solution.
I saw Chris Mutsvangwa, one of your advisors tweeting, ” we should hand over the button to the younger generation because they love the country more than us.” What’s your take? I advise you to do so. I know this tweet he later disowned it but that is the honest truth.
Life is now unbearable. People no longer trust you with their future. Some are thinking of occupying streets. Few People who voted and endorsed you and many people who did not vote for you. All will be in the streets if you don’t come out and give the solution.
VIDEO: Drama As Mnangagwa Town Kids Demand Chamisa Be Made President
Kids in Emmerson Mmangagwa’s town gave Nelson Chamisa a mobbing as they demanded he be made president. Below were the dramatic scenes:
“Fare Thee Well Citizen President”
Fare thee well citizen president,
What we owe to the sacrifice, valour and vigilance of such a monumental man is priceless.
Dabengwa was a distinct persona, patriot and selfless leader who chose principle over power, institutional autonomy over piecemeal whitewash conventions of independence and decreed unity.
The man set apart the essence of what it means to be free for which to most zimbabweans shall remain just a figment of imagination, when his people where killed during the gukurahundi he chose not to cohabit with and legitimise a murderous and treacherous government, it is in this vein that Dabengwa declared he was never ZANU.
The same government hunted and taunted the man to his grave, we owe this phenomenal figure the support which we refused to lend him when he spoke out as a lone voice against tyranny and oppression.
Our flame of hope has been extinguished but our betrayal will live on long after he is gone,
Lala ngokhuthula qhawe lami, butho likhamthwakazi.
Aluta continua, till freedom reigns from the mountains of ntabazinduna to the gorges and valleys of mosi-oa-tunya the struggle will continue.
Tata dabengwa one day I will tell my children and grandchildren, I lived in the times of Dabengwa an embodiment of valour, culture and the values of freedom.
Rest in power comrade till our mission is complete we shall meet again. Straight from the heart to the pen.
I remain Samson Zwide KaMloyiswa Nxumalo
UPDATED: Chief Ndiweni’s Prophecy Fulfilled Same Day As “Mnangagwa Loses His Mind”?
By Farai D Hove| Chief Felix Ndiweni’s prophecy that God Almighty will make someone lose his mind so to stop them reaching where they thought they were going, was somewhat fulfiled on the same day, it has emerged.
Yesterday, Emmerson Mnangagwa and his administration caused mirth for many as they placated his portrait at the Ntabazinduna burial site, instead of the late Dumiso Dabengwa.
News readers mocked Mnangagwa for placating his picture as if he is the one who has passed away. Others stated outrightly that Mnangagwa has lost his mind.
Chief Ndiweni said that the Almighty God will soon deny someone vision to stop them going where they thought they were going.
Chief Ndiweni was speaking at the holy Ntabazinduna mountain during the burial of the late ZAPU President Dumiso Dabengwa.
Said Ndiweni, “On many occasions the Lord God Almighty will deny someone knowledge.
“The Lord God Almighty will deny someone vision. The Lord God Almighty will deny someone hearing, to stop them going where they thought they were going.
“In Zimbabwe, why would ubaba Dabengwa come from Ntabazinduna? He could have come from Lupane, Tsholotsho, many other places. He comes from Ntabazinduna, he is ours.”
Below is the speech (part transcript) by Chief Felix Ndiweni at the burial of the late national hero, Dumiso Dabengwa:
Thank you very much. Than you very much great people.
We have a very important job to accomplish today. Thinking of our past, our history. I am asking those standing to sit down, to respect. Today we are going to be very firm.
You are not here by mistake…in Ntabazinduna by mistake. On many occasions the Lord God Almighty will deny someone knowledge. The Lord God Almighty will deny someone vision. The Lord God Almighty will deny someone hearing, to stop them going where they thought they were going. In Zimbabwe, why would ubaba Dabengwa come from Ntabazinduna? He could have come from Lupane, Tsholotsho, many other places. He comes from Ntabazinduna, he is ours.
CLAP CLAP.
I speak of Ntabazinduna because right behind me there, you will see the mountain, Ntabazinduna, the mountain that formed this nation in this part of the country. It is not just a mountain. Land is just not land, Land is spiritual, mountain is spiritual. Moses and the burning bush on the mount Sinai, on the mountain, as with us, as with us.
Moses with the 10 Commandments on the mountain, as with us, as with us. Where-ever you look in the scriptures, the Messiah in the garden just before Iscariot betrayed him, on the mountain top, as with us, as with us.
So I am trying to pass over to you that it is not just a mountain. And even if you go to Psalm 37 you will find an amazement, land is not free, land has a condition. The Lord God Almighty says if you are righteous in my sight, I will give you the land and also your descendants …that land. if you are wicked I will take that land from you….
All these people have come to give honour to this great hero, and they have come to observe how we have laid this great hero to rest. If we have buried him the wrong way, they will have to say it. This is very touchy and says a lot about our country.
“Let’s Develop And Not Fear Sanctions” – Said So For Decades Still No Development
By Nomusa Garikai- “While indeed we still say to those who imposed sanctions on us, remove them because there is no justification for the embargo, we should not bury our heads in sand because of those sanctions,” said President Mnangagwa.
“We should realise that we have resources in our country. We must therefore focus on harnessing those resources to develop, modernise and industrialise our country and our economy.”
Mr President, Zimbabwe is in a very serious economic situation right now and the root cause is that for the last 39 years the country has been ruled by the men and women who have their “heads buried in the sand”, as you aptly put it. Consider your statements above:
- Zimbabwe economic decline started soon after independence in 1980 and by 1990 Zanu PF was forced to adopt two five-year Economic Structural Adjustment Programmes (ESAP), in the hope of reviving the economy. The two programmes failed to deliver the economic recovery and by 2001 when the west imposed the sanctions the Zimbabwe’s economy was already in the gutter.
- Even if one accepted that the sanctions are the root cause of Zimbabwe’s economic meltdown. After 20 years of “harnessing our resources, modernising and industrialising our country” without success, the economy has sunk deeper and deeper into the abyss these last 20 years, surely it is high time Zanu PF admitted it has failed.
The root cause of Zimbabwe’s economic meltdown is not the sanction but the criminal waste of the nation’s human and material resources through gross mismanagement and rampant corruption. Ordinarily, the nation would have nipped these problems in the bud by holding those ruling and ruining the nation to democratic account and, ultimately, remove them from office. Zanu PF rigged the elections and so the nation was stuck with the incompetent, corrupt and tyrannical regime.
Zanu PF blatantly rigged last year’s elections to impose itself on a nation dying, literally, for free, fair and credible elections.
As long as Zimbabwe remains a pariah state ruled by incompetent, corrupt and vote rigging thugs the economic meltdown will only get worse. You, Mr President, can falsely blame the sanctions for the country’s economic woes and pretend you can rig economic recover; you are burying your head in the sand. The economic meltdown will only get worse.
The only way out is for Zimbabwe to cure itself of the criminal waste of the country’s resource by curing itself of the curse of rigged elections. Zanu PF rigged last year’s elections, the regime is illegitimate and must step down. By stepping down, Zanu PF will create to political time and space for the appointment of an interim administration tasked to implement the democratic reforms and to hold free, fair and credible elections.
“We should not have sanctions impugn our capacity and capability to use our resources to the benefit of our people. We should rise using the resources at our disposal and move forward,” said Mnangagwa.
Zanu PF has been promising to revive the economy for donkey years and year on year things have got progressively worse and worse. The regime is using the same discredited claim to justify hanging on to power. The regime will also use brute force to silence all dissent. Zanu PF is holding the nation to ransom and we must say no!
If Zanu PF remains in power until 2023, the party will rig the elections to extend its ruinous rule by another five years.
The greatest challenge before us all today is to make sure that Zimbabwe’s 2023 elections are free, fair and credible. After 39 years of rigged elections and paying dearly for our folly it will be insane to let Zanu PF rig the elections ever again!
Forget About ED’s Portrait, Let’s Appreciate The Fact That Dabengwa Was Declared A National Hero-Khupe
Farai Dziva|MDC T leader Thokhozani Khupe has thanked the government for declaring the late liberation war icon Dumiso Dabengwa a national hero.
She described government efforts to assist the Dabengwa family as “commendable.”
In an interview with ZimEye.com, Khupe carefully “refused” to comment on Emmerson Mnangagwa’s failure to attend Dabengwa’s burial.
“He(Dabengwa) was declared a national hero and government did all those things that were there-so for me I think I really appreciate it because he got a decent send off.
Everything went on very well, all the preparations transport, paperwise, everything. So for me I really appreciate the role that they played,”said Khupe.

Khupe Praises Mnangagwa For “Honouring” Dabengwa
Farai Dziva|MDC T leader Thokozani Khupe believes the late liberation war supremo Dumiso Dabengwa got a befitting send off from Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government.
In an interview with ZimEye.com Khupe praised the government for honouring Dabengwa.
Asked whether did not feel the government disrespected the Dabengwa family Khupe said:
” They were there, government was there, they were represented. Ministers were there they represented government. I saw Monica Mutsvangwa.
I saw them -they were there. Because government is not just one person mind you, government is not one person it is the whole executive.”

ZANU PF Officials And Supporters Walk Away From Dabengwa Burial Upon Hearing That Chamisa And Ndiweni Will Speak

Own Correspondent|Zanu-PF and government officials and their supporters embarrassed themselves when they walked away from the Dumiso Dabengwa burial proceedings when it was revealed that both Nelson Chamisa and Chief Nhlanhla Ndiweni had been added into the list of speakers.
Among those who immediately left the village was Information and Publicity Minister, Monica Mutsvangwa, Deputy Minister of Defence and War Veterans, Victor Matemadanda , Small and Medium Enterprises’ Sithembiso Nyoni and Speaker of the National Assembly, Jacob Mudenda.
The Joint Operations Command which had assumed running of the burial proceedings of the national hero, Dabengwa, tried by all means to block the two from being accommodated not only in the speakers list but also in the VIP list.
It took the insistence of Dabengwa’s widow Zodwa Dabengwa to demand that the two be included in the list of speakers.
“I Don’t Like Commenting About Other People”: Khupe Refuses To Comment On Chamisa’s Speech At Dr Dabengwa Funeral
By Talent Gondo| Leader of the breakaway faction of the MDC Dr Thokozani Khupe has appreciated government interventions at the funeral of the late national hero Dr Dumiso Dabengwa.
Khupe revealed that while she does not like talking about leader of the other breakaway faction of the MDC Nelson Chamisa, it should be appreciated that government intervened and the late liberation hero had a decent send off.
ZimEye (QN) spoke to Dr Khupe (TK) and below are excerpts of the interview:
TK: I came almost at the same time with the minister of state.
QN: Do you have a comment on Emmerson Mnangagwa’s failure to attend burial?
TK: I don’t have a comment because I don’t know why. I don’t have a comment.
QN: You don’t feel it was weird or awkward for South Africa to send its representatives and yet he was not in attendance only his portrait was there and I’m talking about also the portrayal of the portrait at the front of the podium instead of Dumiso Dabengwa’s picture?
TK:But but but as you know that he was declared a national hero and government did all these things that were there, so for me I think I really appreciate because got a decent send off everything went on very well all the preparations transport, paperwise, everything. So for me I really appreciate the role that they did. In making sure that he gets a good send off.
QN: And what about the giving Nelson chamisa space to speak as if he is President?
Do you feel that was right?
TK: But but I don’t like commenting about other people, that’s my nature so I don’t have any comment on that.
QN: But generally as we conclude, how do you find everything, how do you find the way the funeral was handled by the government do you feel that they were fair on the Dabengwa family?
TK: I went to the house and you know everything was going on very well and the funeral everything went on very well as far as I know because that’s a funeral. They were going to…
QN: You don’t feel that the government disrespected the Dabengwa family?
TK: They were there, government was there, they were represented Ministers were there they represented government. I saw Monica Mutsvangwa, the ministers of state I saw them they were there. Because government is not just one person mind you, government is not one person it is the whole executive.
Did Mnangagwa Die Yesterday?, Mloyi Asks
ORIGINAL ARTICLE BELOW…
By A Correspondent| Instead of Dumiso Dabengwa’s, the government of Zimbabwe on Saturday morning placated the portrait of Emmerson Mnangagwa’s portrait at the burial. IS THIS ETHICAL? Below are some pictures from the function-


BREAKING- Former ZADHR Board Chair Dies
By Own Correspondent| The former board chairperson of the Zimbabwe Association of Doctors for Human Rights (ZADRH) Dr Rutendo Bonde has died.
Dr Bonde died last night at her home in Chegutu.
Said Dr Norman Matara:
Netone Introduces 1GB Data Bundle For $1

State Media|STATE-OWNED mobile telecommunications firm, NetOne has introduced two mobile data packages as part of its efforts to cushion its subscribers in the wake of rising costs.
NetOne marketing, public relations and customer experience executive Dr Eldrette Shereni said the mobile network operator has introduced data bundles, which enable subscribers to access internet connectivity at night up until the morning of the following day at a relatively cheap price.
The bundles have one option going for $1 and netting the subscriber 1 gigabyte (GB) between 10pm and 5am. This will undoubtedly be welcomed by subscribers who are normally being asked to fork out $5 for 1.2 GB valid for 24 hours. Thus there is now an option that is five times cheaper and gives one close to the same amount of data.
“NetOne is redefining itself to be a World Class digital network that focuses on value in every product or service it offers. We realised that the cost of data is now out of reach for most Zimbabweans who love to stay connected at all times and we then introduced a special ‘Night Rider’ data bundle that gives every NetOne customer a right to quality, value access between 10pm and 5am of the following morning,” said Dr Shereni.
The “Night Rider” data bundle is most likely to be welcomed by students accustomed to studying during the night or the early hours of the day as it would offer them an opportunity to browse the internet.
“Customers all over have ultimatums from a network that serves them and us introducing such a bundle is a testimony of how we believe in access to everybody. Our customers are beyond excited by this offer since it allows them to study, chat, connect and express themselves in any way they like over the internet,” said Dr Shereni.
NetOne has also introduced social media bundles in a bid to cater for the ever-growing users of social networks.
“Introducing social media bundles, Facebook and Instagram is a step toward a full circle access to the popular social media sites in our country. That says we now have the WhatsApp bundle which allows for quality chats, voice and video calling, the Facebook bundle that also allows for instant connection and sharing of special moments plus the Instagram bundle for those of our customers who “love things.” Within our theme of creating a World Class — network…,” said Dr Shereni.
FULL TEXT- Khupe On Govt Placating Mnangagwa’s Portrait At Dabengwa’s Burial: “for me…I really appreciate because he got a decent send off…”
VIDEO LOADING BELOW…
By Staff Correspondent| Dr Thokozani Khupe, the leader of the MDC faction, has said government did not disrespect the Dumiso Dabengwa family during the national hero’s burial at Ntabazinduna yesterday.
Dr Khupe (TK) speaks to ZimEye.com and below is the full text –
TK: I came almost at the same time with the minister of state.
ZimEye: Do you have a comment on Emmerson Mnangagwa’s failure to attend burial?
TK: I don’t have a comment because I don’t know why. I don’t have a comment.
ZimEye: You don’t feel it was weird or awkward for South Africa to send its representatives and yet he was not in attendance only his portrait was there and I’m talking about also the portrayal of the portrait at the front of the podium instead of Dumiso Dabengwa’s picture?
TK:But but but as you know that he was declared a national hero and government did all these things that were there, so for me I think I really appreciate because he got a decent send off; everything went on very well all the preparations transport, paperwise, everything. So for me I really appreciate the role that they did, in making sure that he gets a good send off.
ZimEye: And what about the giving Nelson chamisa space to speak as if he is President?
Do you feel that was right?
TK: But but I don’t like commenting about other people, that’s my nature so I don’t have any comment on that.
ZimEye: But generally as we conclude, how do you find everything, how do you find the way the funeral was handled by the government do you feel that they were fair on the Dabengwa family?
TK: I went to the house and you know everything was going on very well and the funeral everything went on very well as far as I know because that’s a funeral. They were going to…
ZimEye: You don’t feel that the government disrespected the Dabengwa family?
TK: They were there, government was there, they were represented Ministers were there they represented government. I saw Monica Mutsvangwa, the ministers of state I saw them they were there. Because government is not just one person mind you, government is not one person it is the whole executive.
Biggest Referral Health Centre Runs Out Of Red Top Tubes?
“Demonstrations Will Legitimise Killing Of Civilians”: Analyst
“Sanctions Behind Economic Woes”:Mnangagwa
By Own Correspondent- President Emmerson Mnangagwa said the country has been under sanctions for a long time resulting in the collapse of the economy.
This, he said, left the country’s development stagnated.
Said Mnangagwa:
“While indeed we still say to those who imposed sanctions on us, remove them because there is no justification for the embargo, we should not bury our heads in sand because of those sanctions.
We should realise that we have resources in our country. We must therefore focus on harnessing those resources to develop, modernise and industrialise our country and our economy.
We should not have sanctions impugn our capacity and capability to use our resources to the benefit of our people. We should rise using the resources at our disposal and move forward.”-StateMedia
Information Minister Laments Abuse Of Social Media By The Country’s Detractors
By Own Correspondent- Zimbabweans have been urged to be wary of the social media which is being used by the country’s detractors to influence and shape opinion.
Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services Minister Monica Mutsvangwa said citizens should not allow social media to shape their opinion of the country since agents of regime change such as MDC-Alliance leader Nelson Chamisa and his allies were using it to post subversive statement aimed at unseating the elected Government.
She said:
“There is need to monitor the use of social media at all levels since it is being abused by the country’s detractors to influence opinion.”
She narrated how some mischievous individuals have gone to the extent of creating fake twitter accounts of eminent persons such as the president of the chief’s council Chief Fortune Charumbira and Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans’ leader and her husband Cde Christopher Mutsvangwa and posting tweets denouncing the President, party and Government.
“This infiltration is to cause division among top Government officials,” she said.-StateMedia
Tocky Vibes Songs Banned From Airwaves
SERIAL hit-maker Tocky Vibes has expressed shock and disbelief at the Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe (BAZ)’s recent move to ban his song — “African Queen” (Binga) — from the airwaves.
The song, which is part of the “Villager’s Money Volume 1”, an album exclusively released on iTunes a fortnight ago, had started making waves on various radio stations before the ban.
In a letter addressed to Zimpapers radio stations, the BAZ wrote; “We advise that we have received a complaint about the song ‘African Queen’ by Tocky Vibes, where the complainant has indicated that they find some parts of the lyrics of the song offensive as they appear to denigrate the people of Binga.”
The letter goes on the quote the alleged offensive lyrics, which commence on one minute and three seconds of the track, and go like this: “ Ukaenda Binga vanhu vanenge vakashama, ukagara Binga uchange wakashama. ”
The BAZ then goes on to deliver the damning verdict, that they have concerns with the “appropriateness of the above lyrics on radio or television platforms”.
ln an exclusive interview with The Sunday Mail Society, Tocky Vibes, a self-proclaimed “defender of African people, their culture and their rights”, said he would never denigrate any African person.
“Some people think that I insulted them. But this song actually praises women, it celebrates African women. My inspiration for the song and video came from Jah Prayzah’s song in which he showcases the culture of the people of Binga.State media

“Mnangagwa’s Absence At Dr Dabengwa Burial Is To Conform With Family’s Request For Privacy”: Presidential Spokesperson
By Own Correspondent- PRESIDENT Mnangagwa did not attend liberation struggle icon Dr Dumiso Dabengwa’s burial in the spirit of respecting the bereaved family’s request for privacy, presidential spokesperson George Charamba revealed.
Charamba said this in a brief interview soon after President Mnangagwa officially opened the Zimbabwe Annual Mining Conference in Victoria Falls recently.
He however said President Mnangagwa had sent a representative for the burial of Dr Dabengwa’s home area in Emanxeleni, Ntabazinduna in Matabeleland North.
“If a national hero’s family accepts the designation of national hero but opts for private burial, immediately the State President cannot participate directly except through delegated authority. The moment the President gets to that, it means we take over and that breaches the privacy and control of the family. So he will be represented at an appropriate level,” said Charamba.
He said a similar scenario has been used with other national heroes who were declared national heroes but their families opted for private burials.
“In short the President doesn’t go. This is for the purpose of upholding the privacy and control preferred by the bereaved family but more critically to also protect the National Heroes’ Acre because the moment we allow people to have a bite of the cherry then we are undermining the national shrine,” said Mr Charamba.
President Mnangagwa left Victoria Falls soon after officially opening the mining conference because of other commitments in Harare.
Last week he mourned the death of Dr Dabengwa saying the former Zipra intelligence supremo was and will always remain a hero.
Dr Dabengwa died in Nairobi, Kenya last week while en-route to Zimbabwe from India where he had been taken for medical treatment. The late national hero who died from a liver related illness, was 79.-StateMedia
Horrendous And Frightening Rot Unearthed At ZESA
By Own Correspondent- As the nation reels with power cuts, shocking revelations of deep-seated rot and corporate malfeasance have been unearthed at the Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority (Zesa), where millions of United States dollars were siphoned through elaborate schemes of overpayments, purchase of obsolete equipment, luxury vehicles and accessories for the parastatal’s fat cats.
The findings, which are contained in a voluminous 6 000-page report dated 22 January 2019, compiled by PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), have since been described by the newly-appointed Minister of Energy and Power Development, Advocate Fortune Chasi, as “horrendous” and “frightening”.
The probe was ordered by the Ministry of Energy and Power Development and the Office of the Auditor-General, Mrs Mildred Chiri, in April 2018.
According to investigations, Zesa Holdings and its subsidiaries — Zesa Enterprises (Zent), Powertel, Zimbabwe Power Company (ZPC) and Zimbabwe Electricity Transmission and Distribution Company (ZETDC) — haemorrhaged millions of dollars through rampant corruption and gross mismanagement.
Most notably, investigators unearthed a curious pattern through which the parastatals’ management disregarded procurement regulations and invariably overpaid for critical materials needed by Zesa.
Red flags were mainly raised over the questionable relationship between the power utility and Indian firm PME Power Solutions, which was roped-in in 2010 to supply transformers for various suburbs in Harare.
Interestingly, Zesa, through Zent, signed four contracts with PME on 26 November 2010 for materials for Glen Norah, Epworth, Mufakose and Greystone substations. While Zent was supposed to make a down payment of US$6,2 million to PME, it reportedly curiously overpaid by US$3,2 million, particularly at a time when the unit by experiencing cash flow problems.
PwC concluded that “by making the advance payment to PME in excess of the amount due by US$3 207 680 and taking into consideration that Zent had been experiencing cash flow problems in the period under review, this further worsened Zent’s cash flow position.”
It was also alleged that Zent paid PME US$11 million without purchase orders, in breach of Section 45 (c) of the Public Finance Management Act and the Technology Transfer Agreement (TTA) between the two entities, which states that materials were to be supplied after a written request.
However, Zent managers who were interviewed by the PwC blamed Zesa’s group chief executive officer, Engineer Joshua Chifamba, for the anomaly. He, however, denied the charges.
But auditors accuse Eng Chifamba for authorising the overpayment using a facility from the Commercial Bank of Zimbabwe (CBZ). They also recommend disciplinary action against officials culpable of the anomaly.
But there seemed to have been a suspicious relationship between Zesa and the Indian firm, which bled the parastatal through inflating the cost of supplied materials.
A comparative survey of materials supplied by PME and five other companies — Industrial Production Solutions, Zhengzhou LP Industry, Wilee (Transwire) South Africa, Dash Petroleum and Energy Services (India) — indicated that prices of PME’s products were inflated by more than 47 percent.
When concern was raised on the extortionate prices, PME purportedly reviewed its prices by between 12 percent and 20 percent without objection.
Notwithstanding the price review, Zesa, however, still paid Value Added Tax (VAT) to the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) based on the high invoice values, prejudicing Zesa of more than US$450 000.
As if that was not enough, it is also believed that Zent could have wasted US$1,5 million from purchasing equipment such as transformer testers, regulators, transformers, alternators and capacity voltage dividers that were never used until some of the software became outdated.
Some of the materials were bought as far back as 1998 and 2011. It was the same pattern for other subsidiaries such as ZETDC, which reportedly paid Pito Investment and Enleaver US$2,9 million for works and materials without advance guarantees that are meant to hedge the company against prejudice.
Most absurdly, some of ZETDC buyers even had the audacity to source quotations via the telephone in contravention of standing procurement regulations and company procedures.
However, in what could rank as an example of egregious greed and shameless abuse of resources, particularly for an entity that is considered to be technically insolvent, Zesa Holdings’ fat cats reportedly splurged US$600 000 between 2012 and 2017 on executive vehicles for Eng Chifamba.
Eng Chifamba took delivery of a Mercedes Benz S350 worth US$209 202,93 on 10 June 2011 before buying a Toyota Landcruiser (ACO3070) valued at US$175 790 on 23 March 2012. He topped up his top-of-the-range fleet with a Mercedes Benz GL350D (ADY9279) worth US$126 785,22.
On July 12, 2017, Eng Chifamba also got a Toyota Fortuner, which set the parastatal back by US$65 789,55. Curiously, Eng Chifamba’s contract did not put a cap on the value of the vehicle the CEO could buy, which effectively gave him a blank cheque.
Zesa’s group financial controller, Mr Eliab Chikwenhere, also took part in the looting frenzy as he was allocated a Toyota Landcruiser worth US$156 087,47 in 2009, exceeding his contractual limit of US$130 000.
He was given another luxury car — a Mercedes Benz E300 (ACR 2230) — valued at US$119 465,27 in 2012 — three years after he got the Landcruiser. It later turned out that Mr Chikwenhere was the only executive who was given luxury cars after three years while others got their allocations after five years.
Zesa also splashed US$116 861,80 on a Toyota Prado (ABL0185) for Zesa corporate accounting manager, a Mr J Mapillar, way above his contractual limit of US$110 000.
Similarly, Zent managers could not resist pillaging the power company as it pampered 17 of its managers with iPads worth US$20 000.
The subsidiary also did not heed the parastatal’s procurement regulations (Section 2.1 of the Zesa Holdings Procurement Policy, Norms and Procedures Manual), which stipulate that purchase of goods above US$10 000 should go to tender.
PwC also queried circumstances surrounding the award of a 100MW solar power plant development project to Intratreck Zimbabwe, which is fronted by flashy ex-convict, Mr Wicknell Chivayo, even after the company came second to China Jiangxi during the adjudication process.
Apparently, Intratreck’s quoted project cost of US$248 million was US$65 million more than the Chinese firm’s fee. But Intratreck later approached ZPC and requested to be considered for the project at a revised cost. The request was suspiciously acceded to.
The terms of the original tender were subsequently altered, which attracted a US$900 penalty for ZPC from the then State Procurement Board (SPB) for the variation. ZPC curiously decided to pay US$5 million to Intratreck for feasibility and other pre-commencement works.
PwC also discovered that while feasibility studies usually stretch for about six months or more, Intratreck completed its own exercise within one month.
To date, no meaningful development has taken place at the project site. Minister Fortune Chasi said Government would move heaven and earth to recover the funds that were salted away by dodgy companies, criminally incompetent managers and cunning tenderpreneurs.
“It shows you that all the boards that existed during the time when all these things were happening were not appropriate boards in that there were no systems that could pick such misdeeds by the stuff,” said Minister Chasi.
The onus was on the new board, added Minister Chasi, to implement the recommendations of the audit report, “part of which is to ensure that everyone who is liable for any wrongdoing is actually brought to book and that the quantifiable damage or loss they caused the entity and the people of Zimbabwe is recovered from them.”
He added: “The report is evidence of serious lack of good corporate governance at Zesa and the important need of the parent ministry to take an active interest in what will be happening and following up on issues.”
Former Zesa bosses, including the ex-group CEO Eng Chifamba, ZETDC managing director Engineer Julian Chinembiri and his finance director Thokozani Dhliwayo are already facing criminal abuse of office charges.
The jaw-dropping revelations come at a time when the power utility introduced a punishing load-shedding schedule which has seen residents and business enduring long hours without electricity.-StateMedia
Latest On Former Steward CEO Dr Lance Mambondiani
By Own Correspondent-Econet’s spokesperson Fungai Mandiveyi dismissed reports suggesting that Dr. Lance Mambondiani, former Steward bank CEO had been fired for alleged misuse of foreign currency.
Mandiveyi said:
That is not true. He resigned and we wish him well. There is no case of foreign exchange misuse that we are aware of.
Dr. Mambondiani has resigned after serving the Steward Bank is a subsidiary of Econet Wireless Zimbabwe for four years. He joined the bank four as the acting CEO after replacing Mr. Kwanele Ngwenya.
His departure was confirmed by the bank’s chairperson, Mr. Bernard Chidzero Jnr. Chidzero revealed in a letter addressed to the bank’s staff that Mambondiani’s last day at work was May 31, 2019.
He thanked Dr. Mambondiani for his role in helping to transform the bank through its digital strategy.- -StateMedia
EXCLUSIVE – Dr Khupe Says: Govt Didn’t Disrespect Dabengwa Family
VIDEO LOADING BELOW…
By Staff Correspondent| Dr Thokozani Khupe, the leader of the MDC faction, has said government did not disrespect the Dumiso Dabengwa family during the national hero’s burial at Ntabazinduna yesterday.
Dr Khupe (TK) speaks to ZimEye.com and below is the full text –
TK: I came almost at the same time with the minister of state.
ZimEye: Do you have a comment on Emmerson Mnangagwa’s failure to attend burial?
TK: I don’t have a comment because I don’t know why. I don’t have a comment.
ZimEye: You don’t feel it was weird or awkward for South Africa to send its representatives and yet he was not in attendance only his portrait was there and I’m talking about also the portrayal of the portrait at the front of the podium instead of Dumiso Dabengwa’s picture?
TK:But but but as you know that he was declared a national hero and government did all these things that were there, so for me I think I really appreciate because got a decent send off everything went on very well all the preparations transport, paperwise, everything. So for me I really appreciate the role that they did. In making sure that he gets a good send off.
ZimEye: And what about the giving Nelson chamisa space to speak as if he is President?
Do you feel that was right?
TK: But but I don’t like commenting about other people, that’s my nature so I don’t have any comment on that.
ZimEye: But generally as we conclude, how do you find everything, how do you find the way the funeral was handled by the government do you feel that they were fair on the Dabengwa family?
TK: I went to the house and you know everything was going on very well and the funeral everything went on very well as far as I know because that’s a funeral. They were going to…
ZimEye: You don’t feel that the government disrespected the Dabengwa family?
TK: They were there, government was there, they were represented Ministers were there they represented government. I saw Monica Mutsvangwa, the ministers of state I saw them they were there. Because government is not just one person mind you, government is not one person it is the whole executive.
Price Monitoring Officers To Spy On Retailers Overpricing Goods
By Own Correspondent- The Grain Millers’ Association of Zimbabwe (GMAZ) chairperson, Mr. Tafadzwa Musarara has announced that the association will be dispatching price monitoring officers this coming Monday.
The association revealed that it will stop supplying retailers that are to be found pricing basic commodities beyond stipulated margins.
Speaking at a retailers-wholesalers joint meeting in Bulawayo last Thursday, Musarara said:
Bulawayo will have price monitoring officers hovering around on Monday next week (this week) and they will interrogate where they will find unjustified price markups. Retailers who will not comply will face blacklisting.
Musarara added that the association shall, on a weekly basis, be notifying consumers of any changes to prices. He added:
Due to technological advancements what we are going to do is that we can on daily or weekly basis advise retailers or consumers on the price movements…and do all the necessary consultations with Government.-StateMedia
Shock As Tocky’s Song “African Queen” Is Banned From The Airwaves

By Own Correspondent- Serial hit-maker Tocky Vibes has expressed shock and disbelief at the Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe (BAZ)’s recent move to ban his song — “African Queen” (Binga) — from the airwaves.
The song, which is part of the “Villager’s Money Volume 1”, an album exclusively released on iTunes a fortnight ago, had started making waves on various radio stations before the ban.
In a letter addressed to Zimpapers radio stations, the BAZ wrote:
“We advise that we have received a complaint about the song ‘African Queen’ by Tocky Vibes, where the complainant has indicated that they find some parts of the lyrics of the song offensive as they appear to denigrate the people of Binga.”
The letter goes on the quote the alleged offensive lyrics, which commence on one minute and three seconds of the track, and go like this: “Ukaenda Binga vanhu vanenge vakashama, ukagara Binga uchange wakashama.”
The BAZ then goes on to deliver the damning verdict, that they have concerns with the “appropriateness of the above lyrics on radio or television platforms”.
Tocky Vibes, a self-proclaimed “defender of African people, their culture and their rights”, said he would never denigrate any African person.
“Some people think that I insulted them. But this song actually praises women, it celebrates African women. My inspiration for the song and video came from Jah Prayzah’s song in which he showcases the culture of the people of Binga.
“I said to myself, these are the people that still represent Africa. They may not walk around like that today but that is their culture.
“We should be having problems with people that celebrate clothes — because clothes were not part of our culture. We never used to put on any clothes,” said Tocky Vibes.
He said in this day and age, when most young girls want to look like Nicki Minaj, he found inspiration in the Tonga culture and decided to celebrate it.
“I never say anything that denigrates Africans, I always want to uplift them. However, I understand that we have different perspectives and sometimes in life we encounter things like these, which we have to overcome. It makes us stronger,” said Tocky Vibes.
However, it is BAZ’s responsibility to monitor and regulate content adjudged to be in bad taste. It was established through an Act of Parliament in 2001.
This is not the first time for Tocky to go down this road.
Another one of his compositions — “What Was Done to Me” — which depicts servitude and other forms of abuse, was once taken down from YouTube. However, Tocky successfully appealed against the move after pointing out the artistry behind the song and video.
“I’ll continue to make positive music. Music is bigger than what we all think as people. People die but music lives on,” he said.
The song, posted on YouTube just a few weeks ago, has amassed almost 200 000 views on the video-sharing website and according to the artiste, the album on iTunes is selling better than expected.
Tocky is planning to release “The Villager’s Money Volume 2” on June 21. He intends to put it on CD for easy access by his local music fans.
“I did not want to confuse my fans by giving them two albums almost at the same time. ‘Volume 1’ carries 12 tracks and that is the one on iTunes while ‘Volume 2’ has 14 tracks. I’ll put it on the local market through CDs,” said Tocky Vibes.
While Tocky Vibes may not be the most talked about artiste in Zimbabwe at the moment, he remains one of the most hard working and consistent.
Barring his collision with BAZ and YouTube, Tocky is one of the most sought-after artistes by the Zimbabwean diaspora and drops new songs, usually accompanied by videos, almost every week.
Tocky has mastered the art of low budget videos and spends most of his time at his studio, which was built at his house.
The world was introduced to a teenage Tocky Vibes in 2009 through “Tiri kumhanya”. Since then, he has shed his boyish voice for his now signature booming virile vocals that have seen him rise to prominence with a string of hits, among them “Amai”, “Aenda Nenyika”, “Ndini Ndinorira” and “Dziripo Hama”, to name just a few.
He has remained consistent in releasing music — with songs such as “Tushiri”, “Maoko Mudenga” and “Mari”, among many others — keeping the dancefloor packed and also rocking the charts.
The 25-year-old father of one — a son who is just a few weeks old — says he will not be stopping any time soon. He recently did a single with United Kingdom-based reggae-dancehall singer, Mic Inity, and the song is being polished up.
A video for the collaborative effort was shot in London in April.
Tocky Vibes, is set for a reunion with his UK fans this July when he shares the stage with Alick Macheso, Selmor Mtukudzi and Seh Calaz.-StateMedia
“15 Independent Power Producers Functional”: ZERA
By Own Correspondent- Zimbabwe Energy Regulatory Authority has revealed that out of 60 independent power producers which were licensed, 15 are now functional.
Speaking to the state media, ZERA acting chief executive officer Engineer Eddington Mazambani said the electricity projects were at different stages of implementation.
Mazambani said:
Four of them are at stage one, which is pre-feasibility stage and they have a combined capacity of 2427,6 MW, 21 are at stage 1b, which is feasibility and technical studies and they have capacity of 1 371 MW while seven, with a total capacity of 2 430, are at the second stage, which is feasibility.
Three IPPs are at funding stage with a capacity of 53,3 MW and seven are at the construction stage and can produce 57,9 MW.
A total 15 power projects are at the operational stage and are producing 131,2 MW while two were commissioned, but not yet operational.Zimbabwe is facing an acute shortage of power. The local power utility attributes this shortage to shrinking power production at Kariba as a result of dwindling water levels at the dam.Power imports have declined as a result of Zimbabwe’s failure to service its debts with suppliers. ZESA reported that it will engage Eskom, South Africa’s power utility, to discuss a proposed payment plan to guarantee more imports.-StateMedia
Army, Police Operations At Gaika Mine To Flush Out Illegal Dealings
By Own Correspondent- Joint operations between the army and police to suppress the machete wars at Gaika mine are also involved in illegal activities, a senior official has revealed.
The director of the Anti-Corruption Trust of Southern Africa (ACT-SA) that operates from Kwekwe, Obert Chinhamo said:
It’s indeed true that police officers and soldiers are now guarding the mine (Gaika) after the High Court order against Vongaishe Mupereri, but themselves (soldiers and police officers) are carrying out illegal mining activities and receiving bribes from illegal miners who continue (with) mining activities during the night.
For instance, Danmore Nyashanu, a ZRP Support Unit operative, was arrested and appeared in court after he took advantage of his position to conduct mining activities and allegedly steal gold ore.
It’s sad when law enforcement agents are involved in illegal activities. This just demonstrates the systemic nature of corruption in Zimbabwe.
The Standard claims that the Police national spokesperson, Assistant Commissioner Paul Nyathi, confirmed the joint operations between the army and police. Nyathi is believed to have said:
There is nothing sinister with the police seeking the assistance of its sister security arm to thwart any cases of machete violence.
It is in line with the constitution and the deployments will continue in order to protect property of citizens and their rights (sic).-Standard
Prophet Oscar Pambuka To Conduct First Ever Church Service
By Own Correspondent- Former ZBC broadcaster, who is now a self proclaimed Prophet Oscar Pambuka is set to conduct his first ever church service in Houghton Park, Harare.
It started off as a joke on Wednesday morning when Pambuka kindly asked his Facebook family to refer to him as Prophet Oscar Pambuka henceforth.
Then as confirmation that it was not a joke after all, Zimbabweans networked through the same social media platform (Facebook) on Thursday woke up to the announcement by Pambuka that he would be conducting his first service today in Houghton Park.
The reactions to the two announcements were mixed; whilst others took the cautious and biblical approach, that we should judge not, others were forthright: Oscar is no prophet and should be no prophet.
Then on Friday morning, asserting his newly-found profession and kindly reminding the Facebook community not to judge him, rather to mind their own business, Pambuka posted yet again.
“Yesterday I revealed that I am a ‘prophet’ and all hell broke loose because I saw that most of you don’t even know what the term ‘prophet’ means. A simple definition of a ‘prophet’ is an inspired teacher or proclaimer of God’s will.
“I also saw that most of you are used to the theatrical and trance-making prophets who tell you that the undergarments you are wearing is black or white, ignoring those who proclaim God’s will.”
Expectedly, the reactions to the three Facebook postings were as unforgiving as they were exalting.
But how does one exactly become a pastor, prophet or bishop? Is it by anointment, appointment or ordainment?
Shingai Rukwata Ndoro, who has not made his views on religion, and especially Christianity, a secret, was quick to proffer an explanation: “Prophet, pastor, senior pastor, elder, bishop, etc, it is all the same in that part of the world. I would advise him to call himself pastor.”
But Pambuka is adamant that he is a “prophet” who heads the Oscar Pambuka Ministries.
Whilst it can be argued that anyone can receive such a calling, what has not escaped the attention of many, especially the thousands that follow Pambuka on Facebook, is that his postings and comments, even after revealing that he is now a “prophet”, have been littered with expletives, a behaviour which many see as unbecoming of a man-of-the-cloth.
Rising to national prominence as a news anchor on national broadcaster, ZTV, Pambuka was to cement his love with television audiences by hosting Melting Pot, an issues-based programme in which he invited different guests to the studio to discuss burning topics.
He then joined Prophet Walter Magaya’s Prophetic, Healing and Deliverance Ministries, where at one time he was the church’s spokesperson. He left the church in unclear circumstances.
He was to join hands with another equally controversial man-of-the-cloth, Prophet Talent Madungwe, who claimed to have conversed with God over the phone and arrested Satan.
Some are arguing that Pambuka got his inspiration from his interactions with the two prophets.
But then came the allegations, and conviction, that he, together with former Highfield legislator Psychology Maziwisa, had swindled the Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority of $12 000 through misrepresentation.
Last December, the pair was caged six-and-half years and they were only released on bail when they appealed both sentence and conviction.
In-between, he had flirtations with dancehall artistes, which saw him try his hand recording some songs, many which did not make it onto mainstream radio charts.
Given the shadowy and care-free lifestyles of dancehall artistes, many of his Facebook friends have been quick to condemn his sudden conversion into a “prophet”.
To which he had a ready answer: “Carry your own cross and let God the Creator of everything judge, not us beings fighting for our own salvation. That prophet, pastor or whatever you call it, you listen to at your church, did God speak from the Heavens and say this man or woman is from me?
“Who are you to say this person does not qualify or qualifies?
‘‘God is not a politician that he takes sides and favours numbers. Not at all. God loves that person who follows His will. Period. You can be one or two out of millions, it’s ok. Prophets are not voted into office like you think or need to be ordained on Facebook.”
It remains to be seen how Christians will react to Oscar Pambuka Ministries, or as he claimed during the week, that miracles galore await those who will make it to Prophet Pambuka’s service today.-StateMedia
50c Per Trip ZUPCO To Receive More Buses
State Media|The Zimbabwe United Passengers’ Company (Zupco) is expected to take delivery of additional new buses this week, most of which will be deployed to rural areas, as Government broadens social safety nets to cushion vulnerable members of society from the vagaries of current austerity measures.
The new buses will grow the company’s fleet from the current 255 buses servicing the country’s major towns and cities, of which 212 are provided by the private sector.
More deliveries are, however, expected as Government recently purchased 300 buses — 200 from South Africa and 100 from China — to provide a cheaper alternative mode of transport for the commuting public.
In the medium term, Belarus will supply an additional 500 buses under a deal that was struck by President Emmerson Mnangagwa during his State visit to Minsk in January this year.
Zupco’s acting chief executive officer Mr Evaristo Madangwa told The Sunday Mail that most of the new buses that will be delivered this week will ply rural routes.
“We are expecting the next batch of buses in the country during the first week of June.
“These buses will not be centralised in urban areas only, but to rural areas as well, for most buses that came into the country were being deployed in urban areas, mainly Harare and Bulawayo, but these will be extended to rural routes,” he said.
Relief
Government’s targeted intervention through providing subsidised transport is meant to insulate commuters from extortionate fares charged by private transport operators.
It is believed that Treasury, which is currently buoyed by monthly budget surpluses of $100 million, is allocating $8 million per month in subsidies to Zupco.
The parastatal has also found favour with commuters as it is conveniently accepting all forms of payment, most particularly prepaid cards and other electronic payments.
“We have vendors who are selling these (prepaid) cards on loading bays . . . They explain to customers on how the system works.
“So far we haven’t yet had any complaints or challenges with the (electronic ticketing) system from customers said Mr Madangwa.
The parastatal is targeting to install the new system in all its buses.
Reviving the country’s mass transport system is one of the many measures that Government is pursuing to deepen social safety nets, especially in the wake of the inherent pain associated with austerity measures as authorities move in to stabilise the economy.
Government has since started rolling out the food relief programme for both rural and urban areas to guarantee food security.
More safety nets are expected in health delivery, education, housing and basic commodities.
Finance and Economic Development Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube, however, believes that the austerity measures will be wrapped up next year.
Prof Ncube recently told The Sunday Mail that Government was cognisant of the pain being experienced by the public and would, therefore, provide “multi-faceted” safety nets for the citizens.
“The social protection strategy of the Government is a multi-faceted package and includes food distribution to vulnerable groups in rural and urban areas, higher budget support for basic education and health services and subsidised transportation by Zupco, inter alia,” he said.
The recent El Nino-induced drought and fallout from Cyclone Idai, he added, had imposed an extra burden on the State.
“Development partners are also involved in social protection programmes involving food distribution and cash transfers. . .
“The social protection package will go a long way in ameliorating the negative impact of the drought, climate change (Cyclone Idai) and inflationary pressures,” added the Treasury chief.
In a separate interview, Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare Minister Dr Sekai Nzenza said owing to the severity of this year’s drought, Government had put in place measures to ensure food security.
She said provision of food relief to urban dwellers had started in Harare and Bulawayo, and would be intensified in the coming weeks. “The food relief programme is going well. We are covering all provinces. We have also started to identify people who are really hungry in urban areas. That is not an easy task,” she said.
Cabinet is receiving weekly updates on the country’s food security situation.
Tanzanian President Dr John Magufuli last week offered to sell 700 000 tonnes of maize to Zimbabwe after the East African country recorded a surplus in the 2018/2019 farming season.
Further, United Nations resident coordinator Mr Bishow Parajuli said the UN was closely working with Government to reduce the impact of the drought and Cyclone Idai.
Mnangagwa Reveals that Zimbabwe Is Truly Open For Business, Yes, “Family Business!”


By Farai D Hove| Emmerson Mnangagwa’s son in law, Gerald Mlothswa has taken over the Sports And Recreation Commission board
Everything has happened in Minister Kirsty Coventry (currently on maternity leave)’s absence, and ZimEye could not get convincing confirmation that she has approved the sudden move which comes after she fired the previous board.
And does Zimbabwe need an SRC in the first place? ZimEye found that the board has quasi ministerial powers hence the clash with Coventry last year.
Mlotshwa will head the government board which has ministerial powers for the next 5 years.
The announcement was made by the acting minister of Youth, Sport, Arts and Recreation, Kazembe Kazembe.
In addition to Mlotshwa, Kazembe Kazembe named Dr Allen Chiura, former Zimbabwe Rugby Union chief executive Colleen de Jong, and former ZIFA board member and Aces Youth Soccer Academy founder and director Nigel Munyati as commissioners.
Others named are: Karen Mutasa and veteran sports administrator Titus Zvomuya have been roped into the new board as well as Prince Mupazviriho (director-general).
Said Kazembe, “as the Acting Minister of Youth, Sport, Arts and Recreation with the approval of His Excellency the President of the Republic of Zimbabwe and on behalf of the minister, I have the great pleasure to announce the new SRC board.
“The board is appointed in line with the terms of Section 5 of the Sport and Recreation Commission Act (Chapter 25:15) and will take effect from the 1st of June 2019,” ready part of the statement.
Zimbabwe currently faces several major competitions, including the Africa Cup of Nations in Egypt from June 21 to July 19, the Netball World Cup in July and the African Games in August.
The SRC has quasi ministerial powers. It was created by an Act of Parliament Chapter 25:15 of 1991. A reading says the Sports and Recreation Commission derives its mandate from the Sports and Recreation Commission Act and reports to the Ministry responsible for sport. Part of the mandate of the Sports and Recreation Commission is to facilitate for the accessibility of sport and recreation programmes to the people of Zimbabwe and to oversee the general running of sport and recreation programmes by the National Sports Associations.
IN PICTURES: Thabitha Khumalo Addresses Kadoma On Top Of Lorry
National Chairperson Hon Thabitha Khumalo addresses during the Kadoma Ward 2 By-election campaign launch. – Pic:MDC Party
Massive Looting Exposed At ZESA

SHOCKING revelations of deep-seated rot and corporate malfeasance have been unearthed at the Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority (Zesa), where millions of United States dollars were siphoned through elaborate schemes of overpayments, purchase of obsolete equipment, luxury vehicles and accessories for the parastatal’s fat cats.
The findings, which are contained in a voluminous 6 000-page report dated 22 January 2019, compiled by PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), have since been described by the newly-appointed Minister of Energy and Power Development, Advocate Fortune Chasi, as “horrendous” and “frightening”.
The probe was ordered by the Ministry of Energy and Power Development and the Office of the Auditor-General, Mrs Mildred Chiri, in April 2018.
According to investigations, Zesa Holdings and its subsidiaries — Zesa Enterprises (Zent), Powertel, Zimbabwe Power Company (ZPC) and Zimbabwe Electricity Transmission and Distribution Company (ZETDC) — haemorrhaged millions of dollars through rampant corruption and gross mismanagement.
Most notably, investigators unearthed a curious pattern through which the parastatals’ management disregarded procurement regulations and invariably overpaid for critical materials needed by Zesa.
Red flags were mainly raised over the questionable relationship between the power utility and Indian firm PME Power Solutions, which was roped-in in 2010 to supply transformers for various suburbs in Harare.
Interestingly, Zesa, through Zent, signed four contracts with PME on 26 November 2010 for materials for Glen Norah, Epworth, Mufakose and Greystone substations. While Zent was supposed to make a down payment of US$6,2 million to PME, it reportedly curiously overpaid by US$3,2 million, particularly at a time when the unit by experiencing cash flow problems.
PwC concluded that “by making the advance payment to PME in excess of the amount due by US$3 207 680 and taking into consideration that Zent had been experiencing cash flow problems in the period under review, this further worsened Zent’s cash flow position.”
It was also alleged that Zent paid PME US$11 million without purchase orders, in breach of Section 45 (c) of the Public Finance Management Act and the Technology Transfer Agreement (TTA) between the two entities, which states that materials were to be supplied after a written request.
However, Zent managers who were interviewed by the PwC blamed Zesa’s group chief executive officer, Engineer Joshua Chifamba, for the anomaly. He, however, denied the charges.
But auditors accuse Eng Chifamba for authorising the overpayment using a facility from the Commercial Bank of Zimbabwe (CBZ). They also recommend disciplinary action against officials culpable of the anomaly.
But there seemed to have been a suspicious relationship between Zesa and the Indian firm, which bled the parastatal through inflating the cost of supplied materials.
A comparative survey of materials supplied by PME and five other companies — Industrial Production Solutions, Zhengzhou LP Industry, Wilee (Transwire) South Africa, Dash Petroleum and Energy Services (India) — indicated that prices of PME’s products were inflated by more than 47 percent.
When concern was raised on the extortionate prices, PME purportedly reviewed its prices by between 12 percent and 20 percent without objection.
Notwithstanding the price review, Zesa, however, still paid Value Added Tax (VAT) to the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) based on the high invoice values, prejudicing Zesa of more than US$450 000.
As if that was not enough, it is also believed that Zent could have wasted US$1,5 million from purchasing equipment such as transformer testers, regulators, transformers, alternators and capacity voltage dividers that were never used until some of the software became outdated.
Some of the materials were bought as far back as 1998 and 2011. It was the same pattern for other subsidiaries such as ZETDC, which reportedly paid Pito Investment and Enleaver US$2,9 million for works and materials without advance guarantees that are meant to hedge the company against prejudice.
Most absurdly, some of ZETDC buyers even had the audacity to source quotations via the telephone in contravention of standing procurement regulations and company procedures.
However, in what could rank as an example of egregious greed and shameless abuse of resources, particularly for an entity that is considered to be technically insolvent, Zesa Holdings’ fat cats reportedly splurged US$600 000 between 2012 and 2017 on executive vehicles for Eng Chifamba.
Eng Chifamba took delivery of a Mercedes Benz S350 worth US$209 202,93 on 10 June 2011 before buying a Toyota Landcruiser (ACO3070) valued at US$175 790 on 23 March 2012. He topped up his top-of-the-range fleet with a Mercedes Benz GL350D (ADY9279) worth US$126 785,22.
On July 12, 2017, Eng Chifamba also got a Toyota Fortuner, which set the parastatal back by US$65 789,55. Curiously, Eng Chifamba’s contract did not put a cap on the value of the vehicle the CEO could buy, which effectively gave him a blank cheque.
Zesa’s group financial controller, Mr Eliab Chikwenhere, also took part in the looting frenzy as he was allocated a Toyota Landcruiser worth US$156 087,47 in 2009, exceeding his contractual limit of US$130 000.
He was given another luxury car — a Mercedes Benz E300 (ACR 2230) — valued at US$119 465,27 in 2012 — three years after he got the Landcruiser. It later turned out that Mr Chikwenhere was the only executive who was given luxury cars after three years while others got their allocations after five years.
Zesa also splashed US$116 861,80 on a Toyota Prado (ABL0185) for Zesa corporate accounting manager, a Mr J Mapillar, way above his contractual limit of US$110 000.
Similarly, Zent managers could not resist pillaging the power company as it pampered 17 of its managers with iPads worth US$20 000.
The subsidiary also did not heed the parastatal’s procurement regulations (Section 2.1 of the Zesa Holdings Procurement Policy, Norms and Procedures Manual), which stipulate that purchase of goods above US$10 000 should go to tender.
PwC also queried circumstances surrounding the award of a 100MW solar power plant development project to Intratreck Zimbabwe, which is fronted by flashy ex-convict, Mr Wicknell Chivayo, even after the company came second to China Jiangxi during the adjudication process.
Apparently, Intratreck’s quoted project cost of US$248 million was US$65 million more than the Chinese firm’s fee. But Intratreck later approached ZPC and requested to be considered for the project at a revised cost. The request was suspiciously acceded to.
The terms of the original tender were subsequently altered, which attracted a US$900 penalty for ZPC from the then State Procurement Board (SPB) for the variation. ZPC curiously decided to pay US$5 million to Intratreck for feasibility and other pre-commencement works.
PwC also discovered that while feasibility studies usually stretch for about six months or more, Intratreck completed its own exercise within one month.
To date, no meaningful development has taken place at the project site. Minister Fortune Chasi said Government would move heaven and earth to recover the funds that were salted away by dodgy companies, criminally incompetent managers and cunning tenderpreneurs.
“It shows you that all the boards that existed during the time when all these things were happening were not appropriate boards in that there were no systems that could pick such misdeeds by the stuff,” said Minister Chasi.
The onus was on the new board, added Minister Chasi, to implement the recommendations of the audit report, “part of which is to ensure that everyone who is liable for any wrongdoing is actually brought to book and that the quantifiable damage or loss they caused the entity and the people of Zimbabwe is recovered from them.”
He added: “The report is evidence of serious lack of good corporate governance at Zesa and the important need of the parent ministry to take an active interest in what will be happening and following up on issues.”
Former Zesa bosses, including the ex-group CEO Eng Chifamba, ZETDC managing director Engineer Julian Chinembiri and his finance director Thokozani Dhliwayo are already facing criminal abuse of office charges.
The jaw-dropping revelations come at a time when the power utility introduced a punishing load-shedding schedule which has seen residents and business enduring long hours without electricity. –
British Airways Jet Forced Back To Heathrow After Commotion In Flight
A BRITISH Airways transatlantic jet was forced to make an emergency landing after a steward “knocked himself out” on an overhead locker tonight.
The Boeing 747 took off from Heathrow around 5.45pm and was heading to Washington D.C.
But the flight was forced to turn back across the Atlantic and divert to London.
A male crew member onboard the jumbo is understood to have hit his head on an overhead locker, around an hour into the flight.
He was reportedly knocked unconscious in the freak accident, forcing the pilot to declare a medical emergency.
A flight tracker website claimed the pilot of Flight BA293 had to dump the plane’s fuel over the sea before returning to Heathrow.
The injured crew member was raced to a London hospital by ambulance, but his condition is unknown.
The flight had been due to leave Heathrow at 5.15 pm on Friday.
A BA spokesman said: “The safety and welfare of everyone on board our flights is always our priority, and thankfully injuries in flight are extremely rare.
“The crew member was taken to hospital upon landing.”
Fuel Attendant Who Helped Customer Pay R100 Fuel, Set To Get Back R100k

His R100 is well on its way to becoming R100 000 as a crowdfunding campaign for petrol attendant Nkosikho Mbele, who lent a customer money after she had forgotten her bank card, gains traction.
Mbele, 28, on Thursday from his own pocket paid for the petrol when Monet van Deventer stopped at his station on the N2 near Makhaza on her way to Cape Town.
In a Facebook post, she said he told her: “Ma’am you can’t run out of petrol on the N2. I’ll throw in R100 and then you can just bring back my R100 whenever you are near again.”
He then put petrol in her tank, without taking down her details.
Mbele told News24 he had not wanted Van Deventer to be at risk on the highway after hearing many horror stories about the dangers on the N2.
Van Deventer in her personal message on the BackaBuddy fundraising platform said she would love to do something for him in return since he “saved [her] life”.
“He trusted me. On my way back, I found him and returned his blessing. I asked him why he helped and trusted a stranger. He replied, ‘Ma’am I am a believer’.
“Thank you Nkosikho for giving me hope for South Africa. May Jesus bless you,” Van Deventer wrote.
She appealed to people to donate to help Mbele to support his two children, mother and brother who live with him in Khayelitsha.
“Nkosikho can inspire others to also make a difference by being friendly and polite to others.
He will also be able to help his family and start doing charity work in his environment.”
By Saturday morning, over R45 000 had already been raised.
“This is what Ubuntu is all about. Bless you,” one donor wrote.
“You are such an inspiration, a true example of humility,” another commented.
Van Deventer has set a fundraising target of R100 000.
Source: News24
Eddie Cross Officially Receives His Zisco Deal And Applauds Mthuli Ncube’s Induced Suffering On Zimbabweans

State Media|Former MDC legislator, Eddie Cross has come out in full support of the Government’s austerity measures saying if the economy is to heal, it has to undergo painful processes.
In an interview on the sidelines of the commissioning of ZimCoke Private Limited in Redcliff recently, Cross said he was in total support of Finance and Economic Development Minister Prof Mthuli Ncube’s austerity measures saying the economy was about to reach the turnaround point.
“I am in support of the Minister’s austerity measures and also the fact that he is talking about a new currency by August or September. We have to have a currency for basic trading purposes. How do people trade, we ought to have a currency. The Minister wants to do it in August, September, I personally support that thinking,” said Cross.
He lamented unnecessary speculation saying it was a major cause of unjustified price increases.
He, however, said the economy had reached a point where it was making a positive turn, adding there was need to stop the unwarranted speculation by fixing the exchange rates.
“The economy is about to turnaround. We need to stop the speculation that’s going on, there is no justification for the current exchange rates, not at all. Rates should be around, 2,5 to 3, but how do you justify the current exchange rate,” he said.
He said Government has to go back to basics and employ the fundamental economics a move which will propel the economy turnaround strategy.
“We need to fix the fiscal deficit, people do not have spending power, imports are down 20 percent, I think we are well in into the austerity which Mthuli talked about. What we got to do now, urgently, is to get stability in the forex exchange rate market and that way, inflation will drop, prices will also come down,” said Mr Cross.
Recently, Prof Ncube assured the nation that the period of austerity will be short and certainly not exceed one year as the positive fruits of belt tightening were already being realised.
Prof Ncube pleaded with businesses to be patient and desist from wanton price increases and profiteering as Government puts in place the building blocks.
Prof Ncube said key pillars towards the desired transformation included among others infrastructure development, strengthened governance, improved democratic space, improved social services, strengthening of public institutions, improved ease of doing business climate and fighting corruption.
He said what was encouraging was that Government had so far made great progress towards achieving these goals.
Prof Ncube said the Transitional Stabilisation Programme (TSP) was a short term blue-print that has a mandate to stabilise economic fundamentals before its long term successor policy guidelines take shape.
Tsholotsho Councillors Demand US$25k Bribe For Mnangagwa Chinese Investors To Get Land.

State Media|CHINESE consortium seeking to invest in Tsholotsho has reportedly been barred from doing so, with allegations that some councillors have been demanding bribes from them to be allocated land to erect a sawmill in the district.
The Chinese, according to sources, were told to pay a bribe of between US$25 000 and US$27 000 if they wanted to setup in the Matabeleland North district.
“We were happy to learn that there was an investment coming to Tsholotsho. Ultimately this spelt development and job creation. However, after sometime we were aggrieved to learn that the development had failed to materialise, as some councillors had demanded bribes from the Chinese. The Chinese on hearing this left for Lupane where we are told they would be setting up,” said a source who requested anonymity.
Sunday News sought a comment from the said Chinese investors, who refused to talk about the issue.
“I am sorry. I don’t know what you are talking about. I would rather not talk about that,” said one of the Chinese nationals before hanging up.
Tsholotsho Rural District chairperson Councillor Esau Siwela, however, said there was no such issue, pointing out that the RDC had met the Chinese and a set of rules and procedures had been drawn and made known to them.
“It’s all just a rumour. Indeed there are Chinese people who are seeking to invest in the district. They applied to set up a sawmill and as council, we informed them on what was needed to be done. This was all done in black and white. It is a pity that they were impatient and decided to leave before undertaking most of the procedures. We informed them that a sawmill had high levels of pollution and it was prudent for them to set up in an area that was not close to residential areas. We took them to a place in Ward 13, where we had proposed and allocated them a 40 000 square metre area. In doing all this we called all departments and interested stakeholders to interview them on the proposed investment.
“They agreed to the proposal and were asked to pay a full year’s lease. They would be paying US20c per square metre, which would add up to US$8 000 a year. They were then advised to get a prospectus from the Environmental Management Agency (EMA), which cost $200. From there they disappeared. Then we heard they popped up in Lupane. I then got in touch with my fellow colleagues in Lupane who informed me that they were prospecting and buying timber. But they were not really certain what they were doing there.”
Meanwhile, the RDC has resolved to suspend its executive officer-in-charge of Natural Resources— Mr Simelisizwe Sibanda, who is under investigation for alleged criminal abuse of office charges. RDC chairperson, Councillor Siwela, confirmed that the council had resolved to suspend Mr Sibanda during a meeting that was held last Thursday. He said a letter had been written to the chief executive officer on the matter and he would in his capacity serve Mr Sibanda with the letter of suspension when he returns from leave.
“He will therefore be called to a disciplinary hearing, after he is served with the letter,” said Clr Siwela.
MDC Speaks On Congress Finalisation, Calls For National Council Members Applications

MDC Congress Statement|The MDC successfully held its 5th National Congress from the 24th to the 27th of May 2019, in fulfilment of Constitutional requirements which provide for the holding of a Congress once every five years.
The process had been on-going since March, with Branches, Wards, Districts and Provinces holding their Congresses in a process which had over 500 000 members participating.
Going forward, the ten provinces will, starting from today convene Provincial Councils which are meant to elect five members to be appointed in the National Executive.
The election must ensure gender balance.
Members who also intend to be considered for appointment in the National Executive are to submit their profiles to the office of the Secretary-General. Those who apply must be members of good standing, and the applications must be submitted by the 8th of June.
Consultations on appointments of remaining Standing Committee positions are ongoing. The party will also convene a special National Council to complete Congress business in line with Congress resolutions.
Dates of the special National Council will be released in due course.
MDC Communications
Tocky Vibes Song Banned From Local Radio And Television
State Media|SERIAL hit-maker Tocky Vibes has expressed shock and disbelief at the Broadcasting Authority of Zimbabwe (BAZ)’s recent move to ban his song — “African Queen” (Binga) — from the airwaves.
The song, which is part of the “Villager’s Money Volume 1”, an album exclusively released on iTunes a fortnight ago, had started making waves on various radio stations before the ban.
In a letter addressed to Zimpapers radio stations, the BAZ wrote; “We advise that we have received a complaint about the song ‘African Queen’ by Tocky Vibes, where the complainant has indicated that they find some parts of the lyrics of the song offensive as they appear to denigrate the people of Binga.”
The letter goes on the quote the alleged offensive lyrics, which commence on one minute and three seconds of the track, and go like this: “Ukaenda Binga vanhu vanenge vakashama, ukagara Binga uchange wakashama.”
The BAZ then goes on to deliver the damning verdict, that they have concerns with the “appropriateness of the above lyrics on radio or television platforms”.
ln an exclusive interview with The Sunday Mail Society, Tocky Vibes, a self-proclaimed “defender of African people, their culture and their rights”, said he would never denigrate any African person.
“Some people think that I insulted them. But this song actually praises women, it celebrates African women. My inspiration for the song and video came from Jah Prayzah’s song in which he showcases the culture of the people of Binga.
“I said to myself, these are the people that still represent Africa. They may not walk around like that today but that is their culture. We should be having problems with people that celebrate clothes — because clothes were not part of our culture. We never used to put on any clothes,” said Tocky Vibes.
He said in this day and age, when most young girls want to look like Nicki Minaj, he found inspiration in the Tonga culture and decided to celebrate it.
“I never say anything that denigrates Africans, I always want to uplift them. However, I understand that we have different perspectives and sometimes in life we encounter things like these, which we have to overcome. It makes us stronger,” said Tocky Vibes.
However, it is BAZ’s responsibility to monitor and regulate content adjudged to be in bad taste. It was established through an Act of Parliament in 2001.
This is not the first time for Tocky to go down this road.
Another one of his compositions — “What Was Done to Me” — which depicts servitude and other forms of abuse, was once taken down from YouTube. However, Tocky successfully appealed against the move after pointing out the artistry behind the song and video.
“I’ll continue to make positive music. Music is bigger than what we all think as people. People die but music lives on,” he said.
The song, posted on YouTube just a few weeks ago, has amassed almost 200 000 views on the video-sharing website and according to the artiste, the album on iTunes is selling better than expected.
Tocky is planning to release “The Villager’s Money Volume 2” on June 21. He intends to put it on CD for easy access by his local music fans.
“I did not want to confuse my fans by giving them two albums almost at the same time. ‘Volume 1’ carries 12 tracks and that is the one on iTunes while ‘Volume 2’ has 14 tracks. I’ll put it on the local market through CDs,” said Tocky Vibes.
While Tocky Vibes may not be the most talked about artiste in Zimbabwe at the moment, he remains one of the most hard working and consistent.
Barring his collision with BAZ and YouTube, Tocky is one of the most sought-after artistes by the Zimbabwean diaspora and drops new songs, usually accompanied by videos, almost every week. Tocky has mastered the art of low budget videos and spends most of his time at his studio, which was built at his house.
The world was introduced to a teenage Tocky Vibes in 2009 through “Tiri kumhanya”. Since then, he has shed his boyish voice for his now signature booming virile vocals that have seen him rise to prominence with a string of hits, among them “Amai”, “Aenda Nenyika”, “Ndini Ndinorira” and “Dziripo Hama”, to name just a few.
He has remained consistent in releasing music — with songs such as “Tushiri”, “Maoko Mudenga” and “Mari”, among many others — keeping the dancefloor packed and also rocking the charts.
The 25-year-old father of one — a son who is just a few weeks old — says he will not be stopping any time soon. He recently did a single with United Kingdom-based reggae-dancehall singer, Mic Inity, and the song is being polished up.
A video for the collaborative effort was shot in London in April.
Tocky Vibes, is set for a reunion with his UK fans this July when he shares the stage with Alick Macheso, Selmor Mtukudzi and Seh Calaz.
Applicants To Provide Social Media Details Before Getting A U.S. Visa, New Regulations.

BBC|Nearly all applicants for US visas will have to submit their social media details under newly adopted rules.
The U.S. State Department regulations say people will have to submit social media names and five years’ worth of email addresses and phone numbers.
When proposed last year, authorities estimated the proposal would affect 14.7 million people annually.
Certain diplomatic and official visa applicants will be exempt from the stringent new measures.
However, people travelling to the US to work or to study will have to hand over their information.
“We are constantly working to find mechanisms to improve our screening processes to protect US citizens, while supporting legitimate travel to the United States,” the department reportedly said.
Previously, only applicants who needed additional vetting – such as people who had been to parts of the world controlled by terrorist groups – would need to hand over this data.
But now applicants will have to give up their account names on a list of social media platforms, and also volunteer the details of their accounts on any sites not listed.
Anyone who lies about their social media use could face “serious immigration consequences“, according to an official who spoke to The Hill.
The Trump administration first proposed the rules in March 2018.
At the time, the American Civil Liberties Union – a civil rights group – said there is “no evidence that such social media monitoring is effective or fair”, and said it would cause people to self-censor themselves online.
US President Donald Trump made cracking down on immigration a key plank of his election campaign in 2016.
He called for “extreme vetting” of immigrants before and during his time in office.
On Friday Mr Trump vowed to impose gradually rising tariffs on Mexico unless the country curbed illegal immigration at the US southern border.
“Yekelani Umtanami Akhulume,” (Allow My Son To Speak) Dabengwa Widow Pleaded For Chamisa To Be Allowed To Speak At Burial

Own Correspondent|President Emmerson Mnangagwa refused to attend the memorial service let alone the high profile burial of the late liberation war stalwart Dumiso Dabengwa on claims that the family had requested a private burial by merely declining a Heroes Acre burial.
Shockingly, his state apparatus however failed to give the family a similar respect for a private burial as they continued to try and manipulate the programme and events at the service and burial.
Perhaps the biggest task that the state security team was given by Mnangagwa’s office was to completely shut out opposition leader Nelson Chamisa from being recognised and even being offered an opportunity to address the huge gatherings at the two events.
It is no secret that the adored young MDC leader had struck a cosy relationship with late Dabengwa who publicly endorsed Chamisa as the next President of the country. Dabengwa had to go all out and step down from contesting the 2018 elections inviting his party members to back Chamisa in the presidential race.
Besides the public knowledge of Chamisa and Dabengwa’s affection, the government Joint Operations Command that claimed to have taken over the mourning and burial programmes just would not have anything to do with Chamisa.
On Friday, at the memorial service held at White City Stadium, Chamisa was denied VIP treatment and not even accorded a seat in the tightly controlled VIP tent. He had to find space in the public gallery tent that housed some distant Dabengwa relatives and some few lowly ranked ZAPU officials.
It had to take a very dramatic moment on Saturday for Chamisa to be allowed to address the gathering at the burial and get an opportunity to mourn with the Dabengwa family that had for long embraced him as their child through the late Dr Dumiso Dabengwa.
The dramatic moment came after Dabengwa’s widow, Zodwa Dabengwa (known affectionately as MaKhumalo) stood her ground and insisted that the young opposition leader should be allowed to speak.
“Yekelani umtanami akhulume, (allow my son to speak),” gogo MaKhumalo was overhead by sources close by while she was instructing members of the president’s office who were fighting to manipulate the programme.
Chamisa was not on the list of scheduled speakers and had already personally accepted the order and settled to see the programme through. However, at MaKhumalo’s insistence, Chamisa gave an impromptu speech in which he emotionally extolled the virtues of Dr Dabengwa and promised to honour all the ideals he had stood for.
Chamisa finished his speech by firing a salvo at President Emmerson Mnangagwa and his deputies for failing to grace the occasion despite the fact that South African President Cyril Ramaphosa saw it fit to send emissaries.
“Is it not a sad indictment that we have (South African) President Cyril Ramaphosa sending his emissaries, yet in this country we have our own vice President and even President who is not available to mourn with us?”, Chamisa said.
Champions League Final Semi-Nude Pitch Invader Explains Why She Did It, “…do crazy things that you will remember forever,”
Allfootball|Champions League final pitch invader Kinsey Wolanski has explained exactly why she opted to disrupt the huge game between Tottenham and Liverpool in Madrid.
Play had to be momentarily halted in the first half after the scantily clad blonde bombshell jumped over the advertising hoardings and sprinted across the Wanda Metropolitano pitch.
She was hauled off by stewards and remanded – but she appears to have been released after breaking her silence on social media.
Wolanski, who was promoting her boyfriend’s adult prank group, Vitaly Uncensored, offered a 12-word explanation as to her dramatic interruption of the biggest game in European club football.
“Life is for living, do crazy things that you will remember forever,” she wrote, accompanied with a video of her pitch invasion filmed from the stands and footage of her being dragged away by stewards behind the scenes.
She then posted a picture of her being led away, watched on by Spurs midfielder Harry Winks, captioned: “Did I distract #8 a little too much?”
Wolanski saw her social media following sky rocket after the incident, rising from tens of thousands to a huge 900k within the space of a few hours.
She was praised by boyfriend Vitaly Zdorovetskiy, a famous YouTube prankster who famously disrupted the 2014 World Cup Final, as he vowed to marry her in the aftermath of the incident.
The pair are prominent on the adult prank group Vitaly Uncensored, with the branding of the channel splashed across Wolanski’s black leotard as the Russian swimwear model hit the headlines in front of millions of Champions League viewers.
Liverpool were already 1-0 up at the time of Wolanski’s interference early in the first half, and they ran out 2-0 winners after substitute Divock Origi sealed a sixth European triumph with his late left-footed drive into the bottom corner.
Another Great Night For Liverpool As They Are Crowned European Champions
- Liverpool beat Tottenham 2-0 in the UEFA Champions League final
- Spurs surprisingly dominated possession in Madrid
- Salah and substitute Origi got the goals
Own Correspondent|An early Mo Salah penalty and a late Divock Origi drive earned a 2-0 victory over Tottenham Hotspur that crowned Liverpool European champions for the sixth time – a figure outranked only by AC Milan (seven) and Real Madrid (13).
It took merely 26 seconds for the spot-kick to be awarded. Sadio Mane’s attempted cross hit the arm of Mo Sissoko, and Salah confidently dispatched the resulting penalty.
Tottenham had the better of the remainder of the first half, but couldn’t fashion any clear chances, with Virgil van Dijk making a decisive challenge when one-on-one with a charging Heungmin Son.
Spurs threatened considerably more in the second half. Son burst through in the 75th minute, but as he appeared set to pull the trigger, Van Dijk did superbly to divert the ball behind for a corner.
Minutes later, the Korea Republic’s vicious strike tested Alisson’s hands, before substitute Lucas Moura failed to properly test the Liverpool goalkeeper. A diving Alisson then tipped a Christian Eriksen free-kick round the post.
But in the 85th minute, a rare Liverpool break resulted in the ball falling to Origi, who coolly slotted it across Hugo Lloris into the bottom corner.
Tottenham kept trying, with Harry Kane and Danny Rose getting shots on target, but they couldn’t find a way past Alisson.
Jurgen Klopp, who lost in the UEFA Champions League finals in 2013 and ’18, was euphoria after the final whistle.
“I’m so happy for the boys,” he said. “I’m so happy for the fans. I’m so happy for my family.
“Did you ever see a team like this? Fighting with absolutely no fuel in the tank. Tottenham came out and made things difficult. But then you have a goalkeeper who makes difficult things look easy.
“Maybe the best night of my life! Normally 20 minutes after the game I’m half [drunk], but I haven’t even had a water.”
Captain Jordan Henderson, fighting back tears, said: “Without the manager this is impossible. What he’s done in this club is incredible. Not only the players he’s brought in that have made us stronger, but he’s also made the players who were already here better.
“I’m so proud to be part of this football club. I’ve just tried to give my best every time I’ve played football and help the team. There’s been tough times over my career but I’ve kept going. This is what you’ve done it for. This is the best moment of my life apart from [having] my children.”
Trent Alexander-Arnold, who played such a huge role in their comeback win over Barcelona in the semi-finals, added: “It’s hard to even put into words what’s just happened. With the season we’ve had we deserved it more than any other team. We were probably dominated for the main part of the game, but we showed we’re a world-class side and can win any way. I’m just a normal lad from Liverpool who’s dream just come true.”
Liverpool now face another all-England battle for a European trophy. Chelsea, the UEFA Europa League winners, await them in Istanbul – the city in whch Liverpool enjoyed one of their greatest nights in 2005 – on 14 August 2019.
President Ramaphosa And Umkhonto Wesizwe Hail Dabengwa As A Hero Of The World.

Own Correspondent|South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has sent a special condolence message on the death of opposition ZAPU leader Dr Dumiso Dabengwa describing him as a hero of the world and a true revolutionary.
The ANC delegation that was standing in for Ramaphosa at the burial of Dabengwa at his Manxeleni home in Ntabazinduna and led by Minister of State Security Ayanda Dlodlo described Dr Dabengwa as a true child of Africa, a son of the soil and commander.
“We are here to bury a son of the soil, the commander of Southern Africa revolutionary struggle, a child of Africa, the defender of the rights of those that are down trodden, the defender of the revolution of the people of South Africa and a child of the world,” said President Ramaphosa in a speech read on his behalf by Minister Dlodlo.
President Ramaphosa said Dr Dabengwa was a hero not only of the Zimbabwean people and the liberation struggle but was a hero of South Africa too.
“He is a hero of the world, his name will relive through the skies of Africa it will run and flow through the rivers of our respective countries – Limpopo River, it will shine like the sun that always rises in the east and set in the west,” said President Ramaphosa.
The South African President described Dr Dabengwa as, “a hero that none of us should have the luxury to forget”.
He paid special tribute to the family for having involved the people of South Africa and Zimbabwe as they prepared to lay a hero to rest.
“Special emphasis goes to those that fought with him in the battles in Sipolilo and this is the battle that crafted the history and umbilical cord between the people of Zimbabwe and the people of South Africa and for that we pay special tribute.
“We are nations that speak the same language, our cultures are the same let us remember and solidify the relationship between the two countries and between the two peoples that were fought for by Dr Dabengwa. That is history that should never be undermined, a history that should never be edited; his name must remain in the history books of both countries,” he said.
Lieutenant-General Gilbert Ramano a veteran of the South African liberation struggle also sung praises for Dr Dabengwa.
“I had the opportunity of serving under the command and leadership of Cde Dabengwa, he was a commander who was special, and he was a political military commander. He understood the struggle of the people of Zimbabwe and South Africa. It was an opportunity for me to be under a man of this calibre.
“He knew the whole front line all the way to Beira. And as a foot soldier myself, I can say he was involved in all aspects. He was brave and fearless but very kind and humble,” he said.
Shelly Brown who spoke on behalf of Umkhonto WeSizwe Military Veterans’ Association (MKMVA) said they were honoured to be in Zimbabwe for the burial of their fellow soldier.
“Cde Dabengwa shared the trenches with most of the veterans in the liberation struggle. It was therefore with a deep sense of loss and sadness that (MKMVA) received the devastating news of Cde Dabengwa’s death. We honour and recognise him as one of the greatest sons of Zimbabwe both in the position as the President of Zapu and as a former Zipra chief of intelligence,” she said.
“It was in the latter capacity that blood ties of revolutionary solidarity were formed between Cde Dabengwa and MKMVA.
“As committed as he was to the liberation of Zimbabwe he was similarly committed to secure the liberation of the people of South Africa.
“He was a true Pan-Africanist. Cde Dabengwa was never an armchair revolutionary, he lived out his unwavering commitment on the battle front.
“He lead from the front and was prepared to face the enemy and faced danger and potential death with his fellow soldiers. Cde Dabengwa never created parallel structures, even severe provocation never allowed political wounds inflicted on him as an individual to influence his understanding of the revolution and his commitment to unity,” she said.
Dr Dabengwa died on Thursday last week in Nairobi Kenya on his way back to Zimbabwe from India where he had gone to get treatment on a long kidney ailment.
Source: State Media
Perm Sec Accuses Zimbabweans Creating Negative Stories, APA Says ED Creates the Bad News By Killing People And Appointing A Fake Commission of Inquiry
It would be much easier if our military did not shoot our people, appoint a commission of enquiry and then shoot more people within a month of the report. You make the headlines. We respond to them.
