Tracing My Role/Footprints Within The National Trade Union: The ZCTU: The MDC Past, Present & The Future
Blessing Tivafire Chebundo|MDC Congresses are not merely for positions: they are an opportunity to strengthening the party: structure rejuvenation: Leadership renewal: policy reviewing/reformulation: revamping of democratic processes…
Building the Future…..Basing on the Past & Present!
I am proud to have been there from the beginning: the Present: and with God’s grace, the ongoing future……….
We Ought To Reflect, And Share On The Past: Fusing It With The Present: And Continuously Looking Into Making The Future MDC…Better, Stronger & Lasting……! As Julius Caesar wrote: “I came, I saw, I conquered”…
I always find it very encouraged to want to continue with the struggle, having been there in the labour trenches from as early as soon after the independence and FROM THE PIONEERING STAGE of the labour birthed party….as I witnessed and partook through and through at the conceiving process of the party, I was the national Chairperson of Admin & Finance at Saint Andrews House, Zimbabwe Chemical Plastics, and Allied Workers Union (ZCPAWU), an affiliate of the ZCTU…. my spacious office on 2ndfloor, side to the Secretary General’s office, was the regular venue for the +12 member MDC pioneers, my big brothers and sisters, for their private strategic planning. It was so nourishing and politically enriching:…Amongst them from labour and civic society were:- Morgen Tsvangirai; Gibson Sibanda; Remus Makuwaza; Isaac Matongo; Gift Chimanikire, Thomas Mudzengerere aka Rick Flair: James Makore; Sekai Holland; Trude Stevenson; just to mention half the team…………and as the runners: orderlies: logistics: myself with ‘Tachiona Tich Baba va Fay Chiminya (ZCPAWU Organizer)’, and others such as Solomon ‘aka’ Sox Chikowore, the two Georges Govo and Santana, and the office ladies….and often in and out were the pioneer team’s technical facilitators amongst them baba Timothy Kondo, and others ……….. (My heart however, continue to bleed…as latter on, just 4 days after I granted and penned sabbatical leave for baba va Fay to ‘Aid MRT in his campaigns’, he had his last breathe on 9 March 2000 at Murambinda growth point due to gruesome murder when petrol bombed inside his vehicle). And as fate had it, exactly a month later in KK on 9 April 2000, I missed death by a whisker after being doused with 20 litre petrol but the intended match box got soaked and could not lit. A week later on the 15 April, my 10 roomed suburban house in Newtown KK was ‘petrol roasted’ by +50 marauding machetes wielding militia while I was inside, and only to walk out unscratched the ‘Biblical Meshach, Shadreck, Abednego’ way. Thus with God’s grace, I lived to share and strengthen the struggle with these experiences.
Yes, I have seen it all: I walked it: Lived it: Suffered some of the unprecedented persecutions, violence, arrests and torture……..But still with God given courage and endurance, lives to see it through to achievements of objectives for which it was all started more than two decades ago.
Summary of my Trade Union & Main Front Political History:
1.Turning Point:-
v Joined Sable Chemical Industries, Kwekwe in 1980 armed with a diploma in Environmental Health (Tech)….as a Trainee Occupational Health, Safety, and Loss Control Practitioner..ending up as Loss Control Officer by the time I was elected to parliament 2000
v Founding Kwekwe Midlands Branch Secretary of Chemical Workers Union, 1985, latter on strengthened: “Zimbabwe Chemical, Plastics and Allied Workers’ Union’ [ZCPAWU] and served that office till 1990
v On the mother body ZCTU,: I served from three fronts:
a. By nature of my job at Sable Chemical; I found myself working in Health and Safety Team led by Nathan Banda in the ZCPAWU, and in the Rene Loewenson led National Health and Safety Team at ZCTU level….Training the Trainers, and Material development.
b. Had an opportunity to serve on the paralegal front (with paralegal training) under the ZCPAWU……as its Midlands North Branch Admin
c. On the ZCTU Regional mainframe, was elected, and served in the Central Region (Midlands) Executive ‘1991 – 1995’, further elected to serve as Regional Deputy Chair (with the late Bethel Makwembere as chair) from 1995 to 2000 when we were then both elected to Parliament on ‘the ticket of ZCTU’s child, MDC’
v On the National Union ‘ZCPAWU’ political structure, from 1990 to 2000, I served as National Executive member: as National Treasurer, and Chairman of both the Finance and Admin Committee, and as the position was second to apex, will act as President from time to time.
v During this period stretching three decades to date, I had the opportunity to venture into self initiated, as well as work related and sponsored block-release studies, both local and abroad (At the National Institute of Working Life, Sweden: Free University of Brussels, Belgium: MSU Zimbabwe…and majored in Labour studies; Policy development (with bias in Health) : Industrial Ergonomics, and Local Governance ….courtesy of both ZCPAWU/ZCTU and Sable Chemical Industries……. These programs enriched, and benefited the struggle……Am indebted and grateful to all these institutions.
2. As the ZCTU Vice Chairperson of the Central Region (Midlands 1995-2000), I was tasked with taking charge of the Labour based/backed progammes in the Northern hemisphere of the Midlands (Admin districts of Kwekwe, 2 Gokwes, Kadoma)….while Chair Makwembere oversaw the Southern hemisphere.
Spearheaded Programmes such as:-
· Cadreship development programmes
· ZCTU led Industrial actions of the 1997s (tested my first arrest)
· Mobilization towards National Working People’s Convention 1998
· Mobilization for the formation of National Constitutional Assembly 1998
· NCA inaugural assembly; University of Zimbabwe, 1998.
· Mobilization for the Constitutional Referendum 2000
Many other programmes
3. Thus when MDC was formed in 1999, I was elected the Chairman for Midlands North Province on May 25th 1999…..though in absentia completing my Sweden programmes that were to end June 1999….I spearheaded the formation of the structures in the province, with a provincial team, amongst the members: Isaac Mzimba: Same Mzembi: Sylvester Majekuza: Willard Somerayi (youth Chair): Abraham Mtshena: Jesca Bheka (Chairlady): Rose Muchero: Lawrence Kondowe: Erick Rukavhairo (Sec Intl): Evans Ruzvidzo and many others……
4. At the MDC national inaugural Congress 2000, I was elected Nat Executive member-and later (2001) Secretary & Spokesperson For Health ‘2001-2006’. Am credited for penning the party’s Health & HIV/AIDS Policy that onwards serve as foundation: Latter, and subsequently was to be entrusted with Nat Secretary Local Gorvenment: Transport: Nat Healing, Peace, Reconciliation, Integration…….
5. Was elected MDC Parliamentarian (2000-2013). Founding Chair of Africa wide Parliamentary Health Networks (2004 – to current 2019). While the Kwekwe 2000 results were MDC most celebrated, it was like ‘going to Hell first, and come back with a Bang’. …..the level of violence; persecutions; arrests; arsons; murders……and as the Late MDC founding father MRT remarked during the tour of the destructions on 3rd August 2000, in Kwekwe soon after he officiated at the gathering to recognize the win, I quote….’ When the perpetrators of such intense of violence die, even Lucifer would not claim parenthood of them’ …close quote!
6. My major areas at the parliamentary front were on: Health and HIV/AIDS: On Transport and Infrastructure Development: On Anti-Corruption Advocacy. And facilitation for Citizens participation in parliamentary processes. I would then make it easy for the relevant CSO and Professional institutions to engage parliament and partake in national issuesand as provided by parliamentary reforms. Facilitated the likes of ZCTU Health and Safety department to obtain an MOU with parliament.
7. The international front, as chairman of Africa wide Parliamentary Networks on Health saw me sharing annual platforms with prominent people like Secretary Hillary Clinton: former Presd. B. Mkapa of Tanzania: Directors of AU and WHO Social services on social issues.
8.As a diploma graduant in Theological Studies, when the MDC Networks, and networking programme was ushered in 2017 I was tasked with Coordinating the Church Networks for peace bringing the democratic minded clergy together at national and downstream levels. Bearing in mind that the MDC is a ‘GOD FEARING PARTY, with a GOD FEARING PASTOR PRESIDENT (The Fear of the Lord is the beginning Of Wisdom Prov 1:7—- Putting Jesus First in everything the party undertakes…. Psalms 127:1)
9. Membership : Served: and Serving:
·‘WHO’ Commission on Social Determinants of Health ‘Health Systems Knowledge Networks’, 2006 – 2009.
·‘International Commission for Occupational Health’ [ICOH] 22 years
· International 5Occupational Safety, Health and Administration’ [OSHA]
· Coalition of African Parliamentarians against HIV and AIDS 2003-2013
· Founding and Current chairman Network of Africa Wide Parliamentary Committees on Health’ [NEAPACOH]
· African Parliamentarians Network Against Corruption 2005-2013
· Zimbabwe Parliamentarians Against HIV and AIDS {ZIPAH}
·Trustee (2004) & board member; Anti-Corruption Trust of Southern Africa
So, it real matters talking about Foundation: For, whether as an individual, or an institution, you cannot be ANYWHERE without coming from SOMEWHERE! The past DEFINES THE PRESENT, while the present is the TRAJECTORY of the FUTURE: The party would be as strong as is desired when we apply an ‘INTERGENERATIONAL FUSION APPROACH’……the individual cadres; and structures working like the mortar and bricks of a strong umbwogabel (Kiswahil for unbreakable) MDC. When you have seen it all: You always feel duty bound to guard against erosion of the founding values: you guard against the life investment you made: you guard against invasion of the people’s project.
I wish to bring the much needed Experience: Maturity: Institutional Memory & Political Professionalism into Top MDC part Leadership….
By Own Correspondent- President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s administration torched a storm this week after “decriminalising” discussions around the early independence atrocities, that former President Robert Mugabe had effectively banned.
The move by the government according to authorities will also allow the reburial of victims most of whom are still in mass graves nearly 40 years later.
Veterans of the liberation struggle who served under the Zimbabwe People’s Revolutionary Army (Zipra), Zapu’s military wing, have urged Mnangagwa to issue a public apology first before discussions on the Gukurahundi atrocities can begin.
Reacting to the announcement by the government, Zipra veterans association spokesperson, Bester Magwizi said the perpetrators of the violence should also come forward before any healing processes start.
Early this week Justice Ministry permanent secretary, Virginia Mabhiza met civil society organisations under the auspices of the Matabeleland Collective and announced that President Mnangagwa had assigned Home Affairs Minister, Cain Mathema to assist families with the reburial of victims of the genocide.
Mabhiza said the government has also come up with an implementation matrix that will address the region’s concerns. But Magwizi said the perpetrators should also confess their participation in the heinous crimes.
“All those people who were involved should come forward. A law should be enacted on how to deal with these people. Most of these perpetrators are still in government and they are all known,” he said.
“There is no political will on the part of this government to address Gukurahundi.” Magwizi’s sentiments were also echoed by the opposition MDC national chairperson Tabitha Khumalo.
“It is clear that the government is not sincere on the issue of Gukurahundi. The first thing which the government should do is to issue a public apology on the massacres.
“The government should also make wider consultations particularly on the affected communities on how the issue should be handled,” said Khumalo.
Conservative figures claim some 20 000 civilians were killed by a crack military unit known as Fifth Brigade deployed by Mugabe between 1980 and 1987 under the guise of putting down an insurrection in the western parts of the country
By Own Correspondent- The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has forecasted that the country’s economy would enter into a recession in 2019.
The IMF previously forecasted Zimbabwe’s economy to grow by as much as 4,2 per cent, but its latest report indicates that it will shrink by as much as 5,2 per cent.
An economic recession or slump is a period of temporary economic decline during which trade and industrial activity are reduced, generally identified by a fall in GDP in two successive quarters.
Labour and Economic Development Research Institute of Zimbabwe director Godfrey Kanyenze opined that the slump is attributable to two extreme weather phenomena, El Nino and Cyclone Idai.
Said Kanyenze:
Well, the government has also indicated that they may also have to revise their (gross domestic product growth) as well. It is very simple and straight forward, it (IMF’s revision) is related to the El Nino-induced drought and the aftermath of Cyclone Idai.
Also, as you know there is the role of the primary factors that have had an adverse effect on the economy and the shortages of foreign currency. As you can see, a lot of companies are closing as a result of the acute shortages of foreign currency.
So, it is the El Nino-induced drought that has had a very adverse impact, the issue of Cyclone Idai which has worsened the situation and the absolute shortage of foreign currency.
These are just forecasts, predictions in terms of the weather, the foreign currency situation and reforms.-DailyNews
Farai Dziva|Zanu PF “comeback kid” Didymus Mutasa says former President Robert Mugabe worked for the ruling party more than anyone else.
Mutasa and former Mashonaland East Resident Minister Ambrose Mutinhiri were this week accepted back into the party.
Speaking to Daily News about Mugabe’s possible return, Mutasa said:
“When we gained independence, we were talking about the establishment of a one-party state … but that did not fit with the democracy of the Western world.
Now we should do everything we can to bring everyone back to the party, including him (Mugabe). He worked for Zanu PF more than anyone else, and I don’t think there is anyone who can dispute that.
He should, therefore, be brought back into the party.”
“For now, I am just a card-carrying member. But I think by now Zanu PF should have developed into the undisputed main party in this country, as we have seen elsewhere. I think from what we have seen so far from Mnangagwa, he wants everyone involved.
If you look at other countries like Tanzania, they have arranged themselves very well, especially their ruling party, and that is what we want to see in our party.”
Farai Dziva|MDC A leader Nelson Chamisa has vowed to deal with rampant indiscipline in the party.
Chamisa on Monday expressed disappointment at the party’s loss to ZANU PF in a local government by-election in Cowdray Park, Bulawayo two weeks ago.
In an interview with Southern Eye on Tuesday, MDC deputy spokesperson Edwin Ndlovu said:” The president condemned indiscipline in our structures, all forms of violence, confusion and intolerance resulting in needless expulsions of some members from the party.
He was not happy about this since it impacts on the party’s growth in Bulawayo, particularly when looking at election statistics.
On Cowdray Park, our president was clear that indiscipline also contributed to the loss.
He was clear that the contestants were supposed to show maturity and reach an agreement that would have seen one of them stepping aside.
He condemned the selfishness of the candidates and said they were supposed to put the interests of the party first before individual interests for positions.
The president was clear that this kind of indiscipline prevailing in Bulawayo is a thing of the past, and that will not be tolerated.”
By Own Correspondent- Amalgamated Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (Artuz) secretary-general, Robson Chere has blasted schools for hiking fees ahead of schools opening next term.
Chere said:
Most schools held their AGMs this term and approved the fees hikes. Schools such as Arcturus High, Goromonzi and Mandedza schools.
For example, Goromonzi High’s 2018 levy was around $300 and as of now it’s around $500 and levy and boarding fees will amount to around $1 100.
A day school like Arcturus increased its fees from $40 to $95 with effect from next term.
Fees increases at a time when the cost of living is burdening the parents and generally, the majority of Zimbabweans, including the working class is ill-timed and as such will have negative effects like school dropouts, early marriages, increased poverty.
The move to hike the tuition fees is unjustified, according to the Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) secretary-general Raymond Majongwe.
He said:
It’s clearly unacceptable and unjustified. It simply means several teachers will not be able to send their own children to school.
Several have also pegged fees in USD meaning it’s difficult for teachers to send their children to such schools.
It means we are heading for a collision course with the employer.-DailyNews
By Own Correspondent- Former first lady Janet Banana is said to be seriously ill.
83-year-old Banana has been in and out of the hospital recently due to failing health, reports allege.
Banana is the wife of the country’s first post-independence president Canaan Sodindo Banana.
He was President of Zimbabwe from independence in 1980 until 1987.
Banana relinquished his post when the post of Prime Minister, which was held by Robert Mugabe, was abolished thus creating an executive President. He died in the United Kingdom in 2003 and was not accorded national hero status.
Daily News sources say Mrs Banana is suffering from renal disease, also known as chronic kidney disease. Said the source:
In February she was asked to sign a certificate of life so her pension payments could be re-activated after having been stopped a couple of years ago.
She was allocated a temporary hired 4×4 vehicle and a driver and security detail which was withdrawn mysteriously at the beginning of March after she was told it had gone for service.
It turned out that the owner had not been paid by the government for several months and had decided to take back their car.
The president and first lady (president Emmerson Mnangagwa and wife Auxillia) visited Bulawayo on several occasions but none of them ever tried to come to visit her despite knowing that she was in the country from January.
Bulawayo provincial minister confirmed to a local publication that the government is taking care of Banana’s medical bills.
Said Ncube:
“She is not feeling well, that is the reason why the president had to call her so that she can be assisted. It is her right to get government assistance.
It is the government that is actually taking care of her bills. At the moment, we are frantically looking for a house for her that will be purchased by the government, because she is currently staying with her sister.
The government is working towards giving her, her pension. Two weeks ago, her pension had not yet reflected in her bank account. She is well taken care of. It’s just a question of time before everything gets into place.”
Reverend Canaan Banana was a Methodist pastor who died in November 2003, was found guilty in 1999 of 11 counts of sodomy and abusing his power to sexually assault and carry out homosexual acts with men, most of whom were on his presidential staff.
He is best remembered for his role in ending the ethnic violence in Matabeleland, also known as the Gukurahundi massacres.-DailyNews
By Precious Shumba| Compensating white commercial farmers who lost the farms they had illegally occupied during colonisation is not the best policy for Zimbabwe.
The white commercial farmers had taken our land by force and they forced our ancestors to go and live in regions with poor rainfall patterns, infested with tsetse flies, and they even imposed multiple taxes on the indigenous Zimbabweans as they ensured that the blacks did not produce on their land.
They sought cheap labour and they made the blacks to work in order to pay the taxes. The repossession of the land was necessary, and the accompanying violence did not affect only the white commercial farmers but the black farm labourers as well as perceived Government opponents. Will these be compensated as well?
The strategy being adopted by the Zimbabwe Government of pleasing the western world at the detriment of Zimbabweans is misguided and should be rejected as a reversal of the gains made on the land resettlement programme. Britain should pay the white commercial farmers who were dispossessed of farms that they had illegally occupation during the racist driven occupation of Zimbabwe in 1890.
The President must not buckle under pressure from the west. His desperation to be accepted by the USA and the EU will in the long term create a weaker State. Of course Zimbabwe needs to be admitted into the world of nations, but not through betraying the black majority who suffered under a racist policy driven by a minority white population under colonial rule.
In light of these moves, President Emmerson Mnangagwa is showing himself to be a puppet of the West and open to manipulation because of perceived business opportunities and lines of credit that will come to Zimbabwe. The reality is that western capital interests will prevail and they will bring more suffering matching the Economic Structural Adjustment Programme of the 1990s which was inspired by the Bretton Woods institutions, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.
Julian Assange, 47, (03.07.71) has today, Thursday 11 April, been further arrested on behalf of the United States authorities, at 10:53hrs after his arrival at a central London police station.
This is an extradition warrant under Section 73 of the Extradition Act. He will appear in custody at Westminster Magistrates’ Court as soon as possible.
He was dragged out of the Ecuadorian embassy in the morning, and that was his first arrest.
Stakeholders have welcomed the decision by Government to address the festering wounds of civil disturbances that occurred mainly in the Midlands and Matabeleland provinces in the 1980s, saying the measures would help affected people find closure.
Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Secretary Mrs Virginia Mabiza on Tuesday announced that the Government will exhume and rebury victims of Gukurahundi, offer medical assistance, implement protection mechanisms and provide relevant documentation for the affected.
The announcement followed a meeting that President Mnangagwa had in Bulawayo last month with NGOs and civic groups, known as the Matabeleland Collective.
Yesterday, there were a lot of reaction to the news.
In her opening remarks at the national multi-stakeholder post-election conference in Nyanga yesterday, Zec chairperson Justice Priscilla Chigumba said the commission was now conducting an introspection of the 2018 election cycle to assess its shortcomings and seek ways to improve its management of future polls.
Opposition MDC leader Nelson Chamisa’s bid to overturn President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s victory in last year’s polls on grounds of legitimacy has been overtaken by events because the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) has effectively put the 2018 electoral cycle to bed, with preparations for the next round of elections gaining momentum.
“The main thrust of this conference is to introspect on the 2018 harmonised elections as the commission seeks to formally bring the 2018 election cycle to its logical conclusion in preparation for the 2019-2023 election cycle,” she said.
Chamisa has insisted that he won the general elections despite losing a Constitutional Court challenge and often calls Mnangagwa an illegitimate President. He also wants political dialogue to address the question of Mnangagwa’s legitimacy.
Chigumba said the commission was aware of the various concerns raised by political parties and civil society groups, adding that the conference would strive to address them. “Key objectives are to assess the adequacy challenges of the legal framework supporting various stages of the 2018 harmonised electoral process and recommend improvements to it,” she said.
By Farai Maguwu| The imminent fall of Sudan’s Omar Al Bashir, following hot on the heels of the resignation of Algeria’s Abduleziz Bouteflika are very encouraging moments of people power. It demonstrates that a united people can bring down any dictator on the continent.
However the military assisted transitions have so far proven to be grand failures as power moves from a civilian dictatorship to a military dictatorship. This has been seen in Egypt and Zimbabwe where blood thirsty military dictatorships followed long reigns of military-backed civilian dictatorships. In Egypt the military hijacked a popular anti-govt protest and it took power resulting in Sisi becoming President whilst in Zimbabwe the military rented a crowd to disguise a coup as a popular uprising and a Sisi-type of General is now marching to State House with far reaching consequences on democracy and good governance.
Africans are right and in the right direction but there is need for a new strategy to defend people’s revolutions from being hijacked by the military. The role of the military in such situations should be to ensure a smooth transition and swear to respect whoever the people want to form the next government. Because people are tired of the long serving dictator and their focus is firmly on his fall, it is possible that most people will be in the ‘anyone else except….’ mindset, something being manipulated by the military to muscle its way into power. It will take a few weeks or months before they realize that the military intervention was actually meant to preserve the old guard rather than to allow people power to govern.
The African Union and regional blocs need to address this growing cancer in Africa and put a clause that anyone who has been in the military need at least 10years out of the military to compete for political office.
By Own Correspondent | Former President Robert Mugabe could sensationally return to ZANU PF one-and-a-half years after he was deposed through a military coup.
ZANU PF has of late been courting former party bigwigs in a bid to secure their return to the former liberation movement.
Former secretary for administration Didymus Mutasa and former Mashonaland East Resident Minister Ambrose Mutinhiri were this week readmitted to the party.
Speaking to a local publication about Mugabe’s possible return, Mutasa said:
“When we gained independence, we were talking about the establishment of a one-party state … but that did not fit with the democracy of the Western world.
Now we should do everything we can to bring everyone back to the party, including him (Mugabe). He worked for Zanu PF more than anyone else, and I don’t think there is anyone who can dispute that. He should, therefore, be brought back into the party.”
When asked if ZANU PF is seeking to readmit members who were part of the G40 cabal, the likes of Saviour Kasukuwere and Patrick Zhuwawo, Mutasa had this to say:
“For now, I am just a card-carrying member. But I think by now Zanu PF should have developed into the undisputed main party in this country, as we have seen elsewhere. I think from what we have seen so far from Mnangagwa, he wants everyone involved.
If you look at other countries like Tanzania, they have arranged themselves very well, especially their ruling party, and that is what we want to see in our party.”-DailyNews
Residents of Chitungwiza expressed dismay over the manner in which water and sanitation delivery issues are handled by Chitungwiza Municipality. Serious issues were reported during Community Water Alliance movement building exercise in St Marys, Chitungwiza.
Community Water Alliance staff were taken to No. 2717 where a sewage tank is situated beneath the dining room of a residential stand allocated in contravention of provisions of City planning. The owner of the house complained that sewer bursts from the tank have affected hygiene standards at the house.
A visit to House No.6825 by Community Water Alliance staff confirmed that some roads have been “closed” by heaps of uncollected refuse dumped by residents.
Some stands have serious ownership battles emanating from double allocation of a single stand to multiple beneficiaries.
Another worrying situation was Chitungwiza Municipality’s blind eye to a homestead where a person with mental impairment was left to run affairs of the home alone. Lack of medications for the person with mental impairment has caused deteriorating health conditions both at the house and neighboring homesteads.
Residents fear that water borne diseases might hit the suburb if nothing is done to address the problem.
Community Water Alliance demand that Chitungwiza Municipality address urban planning issues as a matter of urgency. Allocation of residential stands should be done taking into consideration the man-made and natural infrastructure of water delivery.
The State failed to avail a trial date in ARTUZ president, Obert Masaraure’s case, today. The legal team representing Masaraure made an application for refusal of further remand but the Magistrate threw it out. The magistrate ruled that there is no inordinate delay since Masaraure was only remanded on January 19 2019. The State had argued that the docket was now ready and was being perused by the National Prosecution Authority. Masaraure was remanded out of custody to 29 May 2019. Kadzere stood as defence council.
Masaraure is facing a charge of subverting a constitutionally elected government or alternatively inciting public violence. The charge stems from the protests against fuel price hikes staged from 14-16 January this year. Masaraure was abducted by members of the Military intelligence from his home on 18 January 2019, he was tortured and latter dumped at Harare police station. He spend 16 days at Chikurubi Maximum prison and was released on stringent bail conditions.
Opposition MDC President Nelson Chamisa has lashed at Zanu PF leader Emmerson Mnangagwa saying he has been knocking everyday but there is no door to be opened.
Replying to a Twitter user who asked the youthful politician to knock at ED’s door so that they can work together.
In response, Chamisa blamed the country’s economic situation on ignorance and disharmony, problems he said had successfully relegated Africa to the periphery of accelerated transformation.
” I knock everyday but it seems he has no door.I always whisper but he has a blocked ear.Disharmony destroys the most beautiful countries.Ignorance has relegated our Africa to the periphery of accelerated transformation! “
I knock everyday but it seems he has no door.I always whisper but he has a blocked ear.Disharmony destroys the most beautiful countries.Ignorance has relegated our Africa to the periphery of accelerated transformation!
Jane Mlambo| Norton legislator, Temba Mliswa has scoffed at remarks that he has ambitions to be a minister saying the only time he wanted to be one was in 2013.
Mliswa said his comments on some portfolio does not mean he wants to takeover that role.
“The assumption that I desire to be a Minister just because i have commented on a specific portfolio is thoroughly wrong. The only time i wanted that was 2013. Neither influence or money is the prerogative of a Ministerial position. I may, can & do have that without the position.”
The assumption that I desire to be a Minister just because i have commented on a specific portfolio is thoroughly wrong. The only time i wanted that was 2013. Neither influence or money is the prerogative of a Ministerial position. I may, can & do have that without the position.
Women’s Academy for Leadership and Political Excellence (WALPE), has been closely monitoring the ongoing MDC Congress nominations process and regrettably notices that women are being side-lined from senior leadership positions.
So far, the proportion of women nominated to the standing committee (highest decision making body of the party) is a cause for concern. Women represent less than 10% of all the nominations from the three (3) provinces that have already completed the nomination process, worse most of those women were nominated to subordinate positions.
As a party that claims to be a democratic alternative, MDC is expected to do better in providing women opportunities to attain the 50/50 gender representation as mandated in Section 17, 56 and 80 of the Constitution.
WALPE therefore raises a red flag and calls on the MDC to seriously introspect and create a conducive environment for women to effectively and actively occupy influential leadership positions. Having more women in leadership positions is part of a global United Nations (UN) campaign under the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) number 5. Political parties must make concerted efforts to ensure women ascend to senior leadership positions and are allowed to freely discharge their duties. The participation of women in political leadership is important for national development therefore, it is critical to ensure that political party structures and internal party processes are democratic and inclusive.
It is imperative that the MDC Congress results in advancing women’s representation at all levels of the party institutions and structures. We therefore challenge the party to demonstrate the democratic ethos they preach. The party cannot talk about democracy, accountability, social justice and inclusivity when women are being side-lined.
WALPE shall petition the MDC leadership before the main congress to consider creating a conducive environment for women to effectively and actively participate in the plebiscite. The organisation continues to open its doors to assist in enhancing the capacity of women to effectively occupy leadership positions.
Jane Mlambo| A strong warning fro firebrand South African Opposition leader Julius Malema to President Emmerson Mnangagwa that he may not finish his term as well as news of Sudanese president Omar Al Bashir resigning has brought renewed sense of hope among Zimbabweans that they could soon see the back of Zanu PF.
Malema labelled Mnangagwa a sellout who will not be able to finish his term of office for reversing the gains of the revolution by pandering to the interests of white farmers while neglecting the basic needs of the citizens such as health care.
Inaddition, the news of the fall of one of Africa’s remaining dictators Omar Al Bashir has reinvogated hope that the situation in Zimbabwe could soon be over.
Jealousy Mawarire, Spokesperson of the National Patric Front (NPF) said those responsible for gukurahundi, August 1 2018 butchers who usurped power in Zimbabwe in Nov 2017 should be handed over to the ICC for crimes against humanity.
“We want the gukurahundists, August 1 2018 butchers who usurped power in Zimbabwe in Nov 2017 be handed over to the ICC for crimes against humanity,” he said.
Douglas Coltart said, “As the sun comes up over #Sudan this morning, praise God that last night there were no attacks by militia on the protestors in the Square. “
Firebrand South African Opposition leader Julius Malema has branded President Emmerson Mnangagwa a sellout who will not be able to finish his term of office. Malema said that Mnangagwa was reversing the gains of the revolution by pandering to the interests of white farmers while neglecting the basic needs of the citizens such as health care.
Unsurprisingly, the government did not take this well with Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services, Ndabaningi ‘Nick’ Mangwana tweeting,
South African opposition parties have this Big Brother mentality that makes them behave like some super- transnational parties? They have no respect for national boundaries and attendant sovereign automy (sic) of neighbours. At least our own do their grandstanding on national issues.
It’s crucial indeed that’s why I am leading this Govt pushback on undue and ill-informed interference and name-calling of neighbouring leaders. This is part of my job.
By Own Correspondent| Zimbabwe’s First lady, Auxilia Mnangagwa, won the Pan-African Humanitarian Award for her philanthropic work at the recent awards ceremony held in Morocco.
The award category is for leaders who have demonstrated high levels of selflessness and commitment to serving humanity and promoting sustainable community development by reaching out and touching the lives of the vulnerable in their countries.
The first lady acknowledged the efforts of her partners. She further called upon those who are willing to make a difference in the lives of vulnerable people in society to come forward.
Conferring the award to her, the chairman of Pan African’s advisory board, Ambassador Wallace Williams said:
The conferment is based on your cumulative outstanding leadership qualities, exceptional contribution and persistent efforts to Africa’s development through several bold policies and innovative initiatives geared towards building a prosperous, sustainable, regionally-integrated and globally-competitive Africa through the Organisation of African First Ladies and your Angel of Hope Foundation.
The First Lady also scooped the 2019 African Phenomenal Woman of the Year Award in recognition of her philanthropic work in Zimbabwe.
She received the honor at the African Women in Leadership Organisation awards ceremony in Rwanda last week.-StateMedia
By Own Correspondent| Zimbabwe is set to get €4 million from the European Union to assist victims of the Tropical Cyclone Idai. devastating floods.
A total of €12 million that will be equally shared by Mozambique, Zimbabwe, and Malawi was raised by the EU. The EU has so far donated over €15 million towards Cyclone victims.
Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management Mr. Christos Stylianides pledged EU’s continued support to the three countries during the humanitarian crisis.
He said:
We continue to stand in solidarity with the people affected by cyclone Idai and the floods in Mozambique, Zimbabwe, and Malawi. There are still urgent humanitarian needs to be met and we are scaling up our efforts so that relief continues to be brought to the people in need.
He observed that the cyclone left a lot of people in need of flood, shelter, water, and sanitation.
He said:
The cyclone coincided with the annual harvest period, thereby affecting food security in the months ahead. Access to safe water is a major concern in a bid to avert the spread of disease outbreaks.
The government estimates that cyclone Idai left approximately 344 people dead and or missing. It also reports that property worth billions of dollars was destroyed.-StateMedia
By Own Correspondent| Transport and Infrastructural Development Minister Joel Biggie Matiza has opened up on government restructuring of Zinara.
Matiza said:
Zinara was not doing its core business, was now doing other businesses, contracting, engaging in construction direct.
That aspect is where all these other problems are coming from. By simply making sure that Zinara sticks to its core mandate they disappear.
He also revealed that members who were implicated in scandals are going to be suspended. Matiza also indicated plans to have a substantive chief executive officer at ZINARA.
Zinara board chairman Engineer Michael Madanha promised thorough cleansing of the department.-StateMedia
The Sudanese army is expected to make “an important announcement”, state media said on Thursday, after months of protests against longtime President Omar al-Bashir.
“The Sudanese army will issue an important statement soon. Wait for it,” a television anchor said, without giving further details.
The protests, which erupted in December, have become the biggest challenge yet to Bashir’s three decades of rule.
Thursday marked the sixth day of a defiant sit-in outside the military’s headquarters, which also houses Bashir’s official residence and the defence ministry.
Crowds of demonstrators have spent five nights thronging the sprawling complex, singing and dancing to revolutionary songs.
Al Jazeera’s Hiba Morgan reporting from the Sudanese capital, Khartoum said there was a heavy security presence on the city’s main roads.
“There are a lot of military trucks around the capital and around the main streets of the city. Most roads have been blocked especially those leading to the army HQ. There are a few roads opened for the protesters who have been participating in the sit-in,” Morgan said.
“People are extremely happy even before the army made any announcement. People are celebrating and pouring in to the sit-in area. Protesters are saying they are very confident that Bashir will resign,” Morgan added.
The group spearheading the nationwide demonstrations urged residents of the capital to mass outside army headquarters.
“We call on our people from across the Khartoum capital and the region around to immediately go to the sit-in area and not leave from there until our next statement is issued,” the Sudanese Professionals Association said.
Death toll
The demonstrators have braved repeated volleys of tear gas from members of the powerful National Intelligence and Security Service (NISS) since they began camping outside the complex on April 6, protest organisers say.
But for the first time on Tuesday night they did not face any “threat” from security agents, said a protester who requested anonymity for security reasons.
That came after 11 people, including six members of the security forces, were killed on Tuesday during demonstrations in the capital, government spokesman Hassan Ismail told the official SUNA news agency.
Officials say 49 people have died in protest-related violence since demonstrations first erupted in December.
“I hope our revolution will achieve its goal,” said Alaa Salah, dubbed the protest movement’s “Nubian queen”, referring to an ancient name for Sudan, after a video clip went viral of her conducting chants with demonstrators outside the army headquarters.
Earlier this week, the US, Britain and Norway for the first time threw their weight behind the protesters.
“The time has come for the Sudanese authorities to respond to these popular demands in a serious” way, the countries’ Khartoum embassies said in a statement.
“The Sudanese authorities must now respond and deliver a credible plan for this political transition.”
Sudan, along with Iran, Syria and North Korea, is on Washington’s blacklist of state sponsors of “terrorism”.
Bashir, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court on charges of war crimes and genocide, came to power in a 1989 coup. He remains one of the longest serving presidents in Africa.
Bashir’s ruling National Congress Party said plans to hold a rally backing the president on Thursday had been postponed.
IT literary never rains, but pours for Redwing Mine workers who have not been paid for the past 15 months, but stayed put at the mine compound, demanding payment of their dues. Five days ago, Zesa piled on their misery by disconnecting electricity supplies to the workers’ quarters over a $3 million debt.
Almost 600 workers, who are occupying the company houses in Old West village, Liverpool are living in darkness after the power utility cut supplies at the weekend. Redwing Mine is located 20 kilometres north-east of Mutare. Management at the company yesterday refused to talk to journalists, but a member of the workers’ committee confirmed the power cut.
A member of the Redwing mine workers’ committee, Antony Chivanda said they have been living in darkness for almost five days.
“Our company is failing to pay dues of almost $3 million and almost 600 workers are affected,” he said.
Before the gold mine was switched off, contract and permanent workers had demonstrated at the company’s premises, demanding their dues for the past 15 months. At least 68 workers have already been retrenched without getting their dues. Contract workers have since been told to come to work for only two weeks per month.
The company is now rationing water to the workers amid fears of a possible water-borne disease outbreak.
“The management is saying that since 2018 they have been making losses. They are blocking us from speaking to the company directors,” the committee member said.
“Last week, we demonstrated against the non-payment of salaries. We have 68 workers who have been retrenched, but have not been given their dues.”
Mutasa South MP, Regai Tsunga (MDC Alliance), who visited the company, said the mine management was breaching workers’ contracts.
“What the company is doing is a clear breach of contracts. This requires urgent redress and the workers are bitter because they have families to take care of and what they are doing is inhumane,” he said
“The standard provision of social amenities and utilities, including water and electricity has always been a responsibility of the employer in mining compounds. I have also engaged the company management. My understanding is that they are not performing well and, therefore, they were unable to pay workers. That is what they told me, but I believe they have been insensitive for not paying workers for 15 months.”
By Own Correspondent| A 14 year old Bulawayo girl has gone missing.
The police are appealing for information that can lead to her location.
A police statement says that Sarah Mbuzva, a Form Two pupil at Montrose Girls High School, was last seen on February 21 around 5 PM.
Bulawayo provincial police spokesperson Chief Inspector Precious Simango’s statement indicates that Sarah left a note to her family. The note as said did not specify where she was going.-StateMedia
Police in Marondera have arrested a leader of a suspected gun-totting gang which was terrorising residents in the town and nearby areas, getting away with cash and cellphones, among other things.
The terror gang targeted businesses and moved around with pistols, canisters and crow bars, among other weapons, robbing a number of residents at gunpoint.
Last month, one of the gang members, Blessing Nyika Kuzvinzwa was convicted and sentenced to an effective 25-year jail term over a string of robberies.
The gang leader, who allegedly masterminded the attack, Solomon Nyamukondiwa was only arrested this week on Tuesday in Harare and police reportedly recovered the pistol used in committing the crimes.
When NewsDay visited Marondera Central Police Station yesterday, Nyamukondiwa and another suspected gang member were in holding cells. The two are expected to appear in court tomorrow and investigations are still in progress because the other gang members were still at large.
Mashonaland East provincial police spokesperson Inspector Tendai Mwanza confirmed the arrest and promised to issue a statement later.
Marondera crime consultative committee (CCC) chairperson Dunmore Mutyambizi, who worked closely with police officers, applauded the force for working tirelessly to arrest the suspects.
“As business, we greatly appreciate the sterling efforts of the dedicated crime-busting units at CID Marondera. We also applaud businesspeople that are mobilising resources for police through the CCC,” he said.
“Together, we have managed to curb the surge of crimes of concern, especially armed robbers which were giving everyone sleepless nights in our usually safe town. Working hand in hand with the police using community policing initiatives has yielded splendid results as evidenced by the pace and rate at which most of the criminals are being nabbed.”
On February 15, at around 6pm, Nyamukondiwa and his four accomplices went to Ndirande Farm in Goromonzi where they allegedly forcefully entered ex-magistrate Jacqueline Pratt’s kitchen and ordered the family to lie down while assaulting them with logs.
They allegedly tied the complainants with cables and ransacked the house. They stole a Bernadelli pistol loaded with 20 rounds, US$270, ZWR$1 270, cellphones and Mercedes Benz ML car keys. They allegedly bundled the complainants into the Mercedes Benz and drove to Pratt’s daughter-in-law’s residence on the same farm. The total value of the stolen property was pegged at ZWR$10 040 and only ZWR$8 150 was recovered.
The gang also stole property and cash at Pratt’s daughter-in-law’s residence using the stolen pistol. They then dumped the Mercedes Benz before stealing a Nissan X-trail.
It is alleged that during the same night and using the stolen Nissan X-trail, the accused and his accomplices now wearing masks proceeded to businessman Gift Phillip’s (37) residence in Marondera. They broke the bedroom window and pointed the stolen piston at Phillip and his wife while others were breaking down the kitchen door to gain entry. While inside the house, the suspects threatened to rape Phillip’s wife if they were not given cash. They ransacked the house and stole US$200, ZWR$800 and some valuable. Goods worth ZWR$250 were later recovered.
On the same night, using the Nissan X-trail, the gang allegedly carried out another armed robbery in Ruvimbo Park where they stole cash and some valuables before speeding off.
By Own Correspondent| Finance and Economic Development Minister, Mthuli Ncube is in the United States of America for the IMF and World Bank 2019 springs meetings.
Ncube informed reporters that he is expected to report to the Breton Woods institutions on debt clearance, economic and political reforms.
He said he will also take the opportunity to ask for assistance in rehabilitating the Cyclone Idai ravaged areas.
Preempting his report, Ncube said:
The message I am carrying is that Zimbabwe is making excellent progress in its reform agenda under the TSP (Transitional Stabilisation Programme).
The discussions on the SMP (Staff Monitored Programme) and debt arrears clearance are (also) gathering pace.
However, in the interim, Zimbabwe needs international support, financially, to rebuild people’s lives after the devastating effects of Cyclone Idai.-StateMedia
MDC Alliance president Mr Nelson Chamisa has allegedly threatened to bar Bulawayo province from the party’s congress next month over alleged indiscipline, prompting some members to accuse him of dictatorship.
Mr Chamisa who reportedly sneaked into Bulawayo on Monday for a crisis meeting with members of the provincial executive vowed that the province will not be represented at the congress if they don’t put their house in order.
He allegedly told the provincial leaders that approaching the courts would not yield anything as his decision would be final.
In the meeting, sources said, Mr Chamisa demanded that his deputy and ally Professor Welshman Ncube, who is facing resistance from the province, be accorded respect.
Party insiders said the MDC leader launched into a tirade over the party’s loss to Zanu-PF at the recent Cowdray Park Ward 28 by-election saying the electoral loss was tantamount to treason.
Mr Chamisa is said to have taken Mr Collet Ndlovu to task for contesting the poll.
“He said Bulawayo is ill-disciplined and was the most violent province in the country. He claimed that reports he received from party officials show that party members in Bulawayo were unprincipled and lacked truth. He warned that the province risks not participating in the May 24-26 congress if it does not resolve all the culture of violence,” said the party insider.
“He even declared that the party’s national leaders will impose leaders for Bulawayo if the province is not careful, emphasising that taking the party to court would not change what they will have decided. Also I think his sentiments on Prof Ncube were influenced by the fact that the Prof is backing him for the presidency,” said the source.
MDC Alliance deputy spokesperson Mr Edwin Ndlovu confirmed the meeting but downplayed that the MDC Alliance leader threatened to ban Bulawayo province from the congress.
“Each province has a timeline to hold its provincial congress. Bulawayo missed its timeline. We were supposed to hold our provincial congress today (yesterday) but we still have not completed five ward elections, meaning we cannot do districts before the wards.
“So the point he was making is that no matter the province, if it fails to set up its structures it will not be allowed to attend the party’s congress which will be held in Gweru in May. So we have up to Saturday to complete setting up our structures and making nominations,” he said.
Mr Ndlovu also refuted claims that Mr Chamisa declared Bulawayo the party’s most violent province.
Meanwhile, the MDC Alliance has been slammed for denigrating, stigmatising and discriminating people living with HIV and Aids during campaigns for positions.
A Bulawayo based non-governmental organisation which advocates for rights of people with HIV, Bulawayo Association of People Living with HIV/AIDS (BAPLA) yesterday raised alarm over derogatory language used against people purported to be living with HIV and Aids in the MDC Alliance.
“The BAPLA condemns in strongest terms the use of HIV status as stigmatisation and de-campaigning strategy by some aspiring leaders of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC),” said the organisation.
BAPLA said one’s HIV status has no bearing on their leadership qualities.
Mr Ndlovu professed ignorance on the matter saying the party will investigate the reports.
By Own Correspondent| The Fortune of the Elderly (Trace) is spearheading a solar-powered irrigation project meant to benefit the elderly and orphans.
Mariyeti Mpala, Director of Trace indicated that the horticulture irrigation scheme is for the elderly and pensioners in Sizinda and Tshabalala high-density suburbs in Bulawayo.
The director also revealed that the project is being funded by the United States government through the Ambassador Self-Help Project.
Lupane State University offered training to the beneficiaries. The initiative focuses on various horticulture crops such as beetroot, carrots, onions, and beans.
The Ambassador Self-Help Project, Mutsa Machimbidzofa revealed that they teach organisations to be self-empowered. She said:
We want them to move away from donor dependency syndrome. Our ambassador and the US government came up with this idea that ‘let us not give them fish but let us teach them how to fish.-StateMedia
LUXURY bus City Link’s passengers travelling from Bulawayo to Harare were delayed for about three hours as a gang of nine men manhandled the driver accusing him of ‘stealing’ their US$7 000 that was in a parcel he had delivered.
The incident occurred when the bus stopped in Gweru for its scheduled five minutes recess.
The bus company had to provide another bus driver to proceed to Harare as the first driver went with the police and people who were accusing him of stealing their money.
Some passengers are said to have missed their appointments due to the fracas.
The bus normally leaves the City of Kings at 7.30AM and arrives in Harare at 1.30PM but yesterday sources said it arrived after 3PM.
In an interview, Bulawayo model Mr Oliver Keith, who was one of the passengers on the bus said he missed his appointment due to the delay.
Mr Keith said the commotion started when the bus stopped in Gweru and nine men driving a blue Honda Fit raided the bus and manhandled the driver before force-marching him to their parked car.
“When we arrived in Gweru, the host announced that we were stopping for a five- minute recess. A few minutes after the bus parked, the gang invaded the bus and went straight for the driver demanding ‘their money’,” said Mr Keith.
He said the information they later got was that the driver had delivered the parcel the previous day and the gang was saying that the parcel had US$7 000 but the driver was insisting that the parcel had no money.
Mr Keith said after the driver had been taken away by police, the host informed the stranded passengers that the bus company was organising an alternative driver from either Bulawayo or Harare.
He said the driver later arrived and they proceeded with their journey without the first driver who was probably still detained at the police station.
A comment could not be immediately obtained from City Link Bus Company as its employees based in Bulawayo said they knew nothing about the incident.
Midlands police spokesperson Assistant Inspector Ethel Mukwenda said she had not received such a report.
THE $400 000 Hwange Colliery bribery saga took a new twist during parliamentary inquiries yesterday after it emerged that Shepherd Tundiya, the linkman between the four MPs implicated in the alleged scam, President’s Office and businessman James Goddard, was actually a con-artist on mission to swindle the businessman.
This came as the MPs gave oral evidence saying Tundiya masqueraded as an operative of the Central Intelligence Organisation and offered to assist Goddard to clinch a mining deal in Hwange on condition he palm greased the four members of the Mines Parliamentary Committee.
All four legislators implicated in the matter, Temba Mliswa (Norton), Anele Ndebele (Magwegwe), Prince Dubeko Sibanda (Binga North) and Leonard Chikomba (Gokwe-Kabuyuni) described Tundiya as a “crook” and “con-artist”, who owed Chikomba US$2 600.
The Parliamentary Privileges Committee heard that Tundiya had invited the MPs to a meeting with Goddard so he could con the construction mogul, which money he would use to pay Chikomba $400 000 in bond notes.
It was said the $400 000 was being touted as facilitation fees to assist Goddard get the Hwange deal.
Mliswa was the first to give oral evidence before the Privileges Committee chaired by Senator Chief Charumbira, where the Norton legislator said the meeting was informal and had nothing to do with parliamentary committee business, adding he did not even know the agenda of the meeting which was facilitated by Tundiya and was held at Goddard’s Borrowdale offices.
“The meeting discussed Hwange Colliery issues, where Goddard had an interest and I referred him to Justice minister Ziyambi Ziyambi because I told him that HCCL was under reconstruction and there is nothing wrong with that,” Mliswa said.
“I took over the agenda and said Tundiya cannot speak and during the meeting, I never heard anything about the $400 000 bribe. If you drive through Bulawayo, you see vehicles branded J R Goddard, and Goddard did not have to go through anyone to speak to President Emmerson Mnangagwa.
“Tundiya is a renowned con-artist and I doubt the wisdom of Goddard to deal with such a person.”
Asked by Privileges Committee member Matthew Nyashanu (Buhera Central) if Goddard’s act of reporting the bribery case could have been heroic, Mliswa responded: “You cannot say that you are fighting corruption when you are associated with Tundiya; it means you are part of the corruption.”
Chikomba then gave his oral evidence, where he disclosed that when Tundiya invited him to Goddard’s offices in Borrowdale, he had been made to believe that Goddard was the one who was going to settle the US$2 100 debt in local currency.
He told the committee that Tundiya owed him $2 700 since 2011, and had only paid back US$600.
“I asked Ndebele, who is a lawyer, to accompany me and assist me to recover my money from Tundiya, and because on that day, I had no vehicle and Ndebele had no vehicle, we asked Sibanda to accompany us in his car. Sibanda then said Tundiya is a conman and it was better to ask Mliswa to also accompany us to Borrowdale at Goddard’ offices,” Chikomba said.
“During the informal meeting, only Hwange Colliery issues were discussed and it was only outside when we were already going that I asked Tundiya to pay back what he owed to me. Tundiya said murungu wake (his boss, to mean Goddard) was the one that was going to pay, as they were business partners, and then he said I should write down my account number on a piece of paper which he then gave to Goddard,” Chikomba said.
Privileges Committee member Jonathan Samukange then demanded to know how Goddard was made to understand he was supposed to deposit $400 000 facilitation fees in Chikomba’s account.
Another committee member, Tatenda Mavetera, demanded to know the interest rate that Chikomba had used to conclude that Goddard should deposit his money as $400 000 in local currency.
Chikomba said when Tundiya communicated with Goddard, he could not hear what was said.
“Tundiya was the one who went to speak to Goddard and I gave him a piece of paper with my bank account because Tundiya had said the following day, Goddard would deposit money in payment of my debt. When I mentioned $400 000 to Tundiya, which Goddard could have heard, I did that in passing because I was saying to Tundiya I lent him the money in foreign currency and seven years later, it would be worth more in local currency and that I could have invested it as a businessman and got around $400 000 to date. Tundiya is a cunning conman who even pretended to have links with the President (Emmerson Mnangagwa) to Goddard,” he said.
Sibanda also gave his oral evidence, saying he had been asked by Chikomba and Ndebele to drive them to Goddard’s offices since they did not have a vehicle. He said during the informal meeting, the issue of a bribe or facilitation fees was never mentioned.
“I first heard about the $400 000 bribe amount through The Herald. When we accompanied Chikomba to recover his money from Goddard, we were made to believe that Goddard was the one who was going to pay his debt,” Sibanda said.
“He said the following day after their meeting with Tundiya at Bronte Hotel, he got a call from Hwange Colliery board chairperson Juliana Muskwe, who warned him that Tundiya was a con-man who had told her that he, Tundiya, had given MPs from the Mines committee $500 000 each. That is when I asked Mliswa to join us to the meeting with Goddard because I suspected it was a set-up, and I only went there as a driver to Chikomba and Ndebele, who was assisting Chikomba legally to recover his debt from Tundiya.”
It turned out Goddard never directly spoke to the MPs about the money, but that Tundiya acted as a go-between between Chikomba and Goddard, without them both hearing what was exactly communicated to the other.
In his evidence, Ndebele said as a lawyer, Chikomba had asked him to accompany him to Goddard’s offices to assist him recover his debt from Tundiya, who he said had invited them there.
“I first heard of the $400 000 bribe from The Herald. It was never discussed inside or outside the meeting. My knowledge of Tundiya is that he is a colourful character and I told Chikomba that he can be given the money as cash and then set-up, and so there was need to be watertight with the document to recover the debt,” he said.
Ndebele said he knew Goddard to be a well-respected Bulawayo-based businessman, but was surprised that he was dealing with Tundiya.
He said he had personally requested Sibanda to accompany them using the latter’s vehicle.
The Privileges Committee will now table a report of its findings before Parliament, which will be debated before a determination is reached.
Ten people were killed while several others were injured when a Kwekwe-bound kombi collided head on with a bus about 20km outside Gweru along the Gweru-Kwekwe road last night.
When the news crew arrived at the scene, some bodies were still strewn on the tarmac.
Police at the scene confirmed the death of 10 people and said all of them were from the kombi, which had its roof ripped off following the impact.
According to the police officers all the people in the kombi including the driver were killed on the spot while the injured were from the bus owned by Birdgreen Transport Pvt Ltd.
The injured were all rushed to Gweru Provincial Hospital.
“I boarded this bus from Kadoma but all the way we were complaining of the speed. He then tried to overtake another bus at this curve resulting in the head on collision with the oncoming kombi,” said Mrs Marvelous Marova.
Another witness, Mr Kelvin Zimuto also blamed the bus driver for the accident.
“The bus driver is to blame for this accident. He was just speeding for nothing and imagine everyone in the kombi was killed,” he said.
The Officer Commanding Midlands province Commissioner Moses Magande confirmed the accident and said police were waiting for more details.
Mass demonstrations have marred Sudan as thousands have taken to the streets in an anti-government uprising demanding President Omar al-Bashir step down.
Recent reports have surfaced that Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir has stepped down, this after the Sudanese army on Thursday planned to make “an important announcement”, state media said, after weeks of protests against the longtime leader.
“The Sudanese army will issue an important statement soon. Wait for it,” a television anchor said, without giving further details.
The protests, which erupted in December, have become the biggest challenge yet to Bashir’s three decades of iron-fisted rule.
Sudan’s police orders its forces to avoid intervening against protesters as three Western nations threw their weight behind demonstrators’ demands for a political transition plan in the country.
Thursday marked the sixth day of a defiant sit-in outside the military’s headquarters, which also houses Bashir’s official residence and the defence ministry.
Crowds of demonstrators have spent five nights thronging the sprawling complex, singing and dancing to the tunes of revolutionary songs.
The Sudanese Presidential Palace has been surrounded by armed military forces.
Several military vehicles carrying troops entered the army compound in the early hours of Thursday, witnesses said.
And witnesses said many army vehicles carrying troops were deploying in the centre of Khartoum early Thursday.
“People are coming in droves,” said an onlooker at the sit-in without revealing his name for security reasons.
The group spearheading the nationwide demonstrations urged residents of the capital to mass outside army headquarters.
“We call on our people from across the Khartoum capital and the region around to immediately go to the sit-in area and not leave from there until our next statement is issued,” the Sudanese Professionals Association said.
Death toll mounts
The demonstrators have braved repeated volleys of tear gas from members of the powerful National Intelligence and Security Service (NISS) since they began camping outside the complex on April 6, protest organisers say.
But for the first time on Tuesday night they did not face any “threat” from security agents, said a protester who requested anonymity for security reasons.
That came after 11 people, including six members of the security forces, were killed on Tuesday during demonstrations in the capital, government spokesperson Hassan Ismail told the official SUNA news agency.
Officials say 49 people have died in protest-related violence since demonstrations first erupted in December.
“I hope our revolution will achieve its goal,” said Alaa Salah, dubbed the protest movement’s “Nubian queen”, referring to an ancient name for Sudan, after a video clip went viral of her conducting chants with demonstrators outside the army headquarters.
Earlier this week, the US, Britain and Norway for the first time threw their weight behind the protesters.A
“The time has come for the Sudanese authorities to respond to these popular demands in a serious” way, the countries’ Khartoum embassies said in a statement.
“The Sudanese authorities must now respond and deliver a credible plan for this political transition.”
Sudan, along with Iran, Syria and North Korea, is on Washington’s blacklist of state sponsors of terrorism.
Bashir, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court on charges of war crimes and genocide, came to power in a 1989 coup. He remains one of the longest serving presidents in Africa.
On Tuesday, security agents had to abort bids to disperse the crowds when soldiers countered their volleys of tear gas by firing in the air, witnesses said.
NISS said it was “monitoring the demonstrations and discharging its duty according to law”.
Troops stationed
Sudan’s police has ordered its forces not to intervene against protesters.
“We call on God to preserve the security and calm of our country… and to unite the Sudanese people… for an agreement which would support the peaceful transition of power,” it said in a statement.
On Wednesday, protesters were raising funds to ensure a regular supply of food and water for the crowd.
“Many shop owners and businessmen have offered us free supplies,” said one demonstrator.
Protesters have set up five big screens at the complex to watch football matches, an onlooker said.
Witnesses said troops stationed vehicles mounted with machine-guns at the gates of the army complex.
The SPA said “several members and leaders” of Sudan’s paramilitary Rapid Support Force (RSF) had given indications they would join the movement.
The RSF is made up of Arab militias that fought on the side of government forces against rebels in Sudan’s western region of Darfur in the initial years of the conflict.
Bashir’s ruling National Congress Party said plans to hold a rally backing the president on Thursday had been postponed.
ZANU-PF youths have called for the acceleration of empowerment of marginalised youths at grassroot level to enable them to continue towards economy revival and also contribute towards the Gross Domestic Product.
This came from a meeting held by the Youth League national executive council ahead of the first National Assembly meeting today where President Mnangagwa will be the guest of honour.
The first National Youth Assembly of 2019 which will be held under the theme; “Discipline and Servant Leadership” will be attended by the Youth League national executive members and provincial and party affiliates.
In a statement after yesterday’s meeting secretary for administration, Cde Tendai Chirau said the meeting endorsed current efforts by President Mnangagwa in calling for national dialogue with different stakeholders; churches, the business community, and political parties, among others.
“The league has since taken a cue from these efforts to embrace youths from all spheres of life. The meeting focused on how to unpack Vision 2030 and how the generality of the youth can participate in achieving Vision 2030.
“The meeting noted with regret the slow pace at which youth empowerment initiatives are being implemented. A clarion call was made that there be accelerated economic empowerment for the marginalised youth,” he said.
The meeting also deliberated on the inclusion of youths in the extractive mining industry especially de-siltation, industrial brick moulding, and quarry stone and three-quarter stones mining.
“A recommendation was put forward that in granting of these licences, youths should be prioritised and in the absence of interested youths, companies should be directed to initiate programmes that benefit the locals.
The meeting commended resource mobilisation efforts by President Mnangagwa in assisting the victims of Cyclone Idai.
“It was noted there has been significant progress in the reconstruction of some of the damaged infrastructure.
“The youth executive also applauded relief efforts through donations from the Youth League and its membership and the voluntary aid in the rescue missions provided by members and its various affiliate organisations which include the Zimbabwe National Youth Service Graduates Association,” he said.
File picture of a white commercial farmer being evicted from his farm in Zimbabwe under Mugabe.
For 64-year-old Ben Gilpin, a white former commercial farmer in Zimbabwe, the country’s fast track land reform programme – which started in 2000 and led to the displacement of approximately 3 500 white commercial farmers – has been nothing but traumatic.
In a matter of months, Gilpin lost some 25kgs due to stress.
Unlike some, who may have inherited land that was forcibly taken from the black majority, Gilpin bought his farm, located in Zimbabwe’s Manicaland Province, in 1987.
By the time his farm was taken, he had already paid off the mortgage, and the farm was at an advanced stage of development, with irrigation and dams having been constructed.
The 1 300-hectare farm, which employed 150 permanent employees and another 450 casual workers, was used for horticulture, cash crops and tobacco.
What pains Gilpin most is that his decision to buy and work the land was based on former president Robert Mugabe’s reconciliatory tone at independence.
‘Join hands’
“We also do not intend to interfere unconstitutionally with the property rights of individuals. I urge you, whether you are black or white, to join me in a new pledge to forget our grim past, forgive others and forget.”
“Join hands in a new amity, and together, as Zimbabweans, trample upon racialism, tribalism and regionalism, and work hard to reconstruct and rehabilitate our society as we reinvigorate our economic machinery,” Mugabe had said.
The message made Gilpin stay.
“My parents had passed on during the liberation war, so I had no reason to stay, but Mugabe’s reconciliatory message made me change my mind to invest in a farm,” explains Gilpin, a father of four. “We were significant domestic investors.”
Like most farmers, Gilpin said he perceived his farm as an investment and pension, and losing it meant he had lost retirement security.
Additionally, Gilpin and other farmers were forced to give their farm workers severance packages, a move that cost him his last tobacco crop.
“It was most burdensome for those with established farm workers.
“It cost me my last tobacco crop and the means to re-establish in post farming life,” he said.
Traumatic court processes
He had to depend on his wife, a medical practitioner outside the country, for financial support.
It was she who ultimately shouldered the cost of educating their children until they graduated from university.
During the farm invasion, Gilpin had to go through traumatic court processes, landing some victories, but failing to get court orders enforced.
“We got court orders to go and remove our equipment and property, but still struggled to take anything out, until court papers were changed to make it impossible for us to get anything,” he tells Fin24.
Although he finally managed to remove some equipment, he had lost 25kgs in weight in just eight months, as the anxiety took its toll on his health.
‘Let’s move forward’
For Gilpin, the interim payment – for which 300 distressed farmers have already applied, out of a possible 3 500 – is the beginning of a process to bring closure.
“It has been a painful experience, but let’s put it into the past. There is need for national healing and this (payment of compensation) is an opportunity to move forward.
“This window should also be used to bring skills back into the country. Some farmers have already left the country, but being an immigrant in another country is a hard journey.
“For many of those, certainly the younger ones who went looking for opportunities, it’s been a hard ladder to climb,” Gilpin says today.
“What is significant is that this has come as a form of dialogue, and we believe dialogue is the way forward.
“Since November 2017, we have felt there is desire to deal with it. We would like to see an agreement reached on [an amount for] the overall compensation.
“We feel positive about it, although taken in context RTGS$53m* is small in terms of the size of the problem.”
File Picture of ZANU PF members involved in cyclone Idai aid diversion.
Three people have been arrested on suspicion of misappropriating humanitarian relief aid for victims of a deadly cyclone that last month killed hundreds and displaced tens of thousands in Mozambique.
“There are many complaints of diversion of donations,” said Joaquim Tomo, the public prosecutions spokesperson in the cyclone-hit Sofala province.
“We are investigating on a case-by-case basis,” he said.
“We have three detainees who diverted 19 bags of rice, 19 bags of (maize) flour, 11 bags of soybeans, 100kg of beans,” he said adding many more arrests were expected.
Aid agencies are feeding hundreds of thousands of people who were affected by cyclone Idai which hit the coast of central Mozambique on March 15 with hurricane-force winds and rains flooding the hinterland and drenching eastern Zimbabwe.
In Mozambique, 598 people have been killed, and another 268 have died in Zimbabwe, according to the toll as of Wednesday.
UN humanitarian agency OCHA on Friday said it had so far reached 550 000 people with food aid.
“The United Nations and other humanitarian organisations that are in the country, the NGOs, have a very good track record of being able to reach out to the people they need,” Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs’ deputy head Sebastian Rhodes Stampa, said.
“We know where it’s going and where it’s coming from, and we’re distributing food to over 500 000 people,” said Stampa.
Mozambique’s National Institute for Disaster Management (INGC) director Augusta Maita expressed concern at reports of diversion of food aid, but pointed out that “so far we have not had any indication of the involvement” of workers of the organisation.
Survivors, who have been placed in temporary crowded shelters, have been hit by a cholera outbreak which has killed five people so far and infected 2 424 others.
THE deal in which ZimCoke (Private) Limited is set to revitalise a coke plant within Ziscosteel now awaits Cabinet approval.
The company took over a coke oven within Ziscosteel in a $133 million deal viewed as the first step towards revitalisation of the steel giant.
ZimCoke and Zisco signed an agreement of sale in 2017 where the former bought the coke-making assets of Zisco consisting of the plant and machinery, land and buildings, and associated infrastructure of coal handling and infrastructure.
Refurbishments are expected to begin soon after Cabinet gives the nod and production is expected to start before the end of the year.
In an interview, ZimCoke consultant Mr Eddie Cross said the deal was now hinged upon Cabinet approval before refurbishment work can commence.
“We cannot do anything before Cabinet okays the deal. Once that is done, we are good to start work on the site. Once the Cabinet gives the go ahead, we are going to take between six to eight months before we start exporting,” he said.
The company has since engaged the services of a Germany Engineering Consultancy Company, ThyssenKrupp Engineering, for the refurbishment of the coke plant before it starts operations.
The refurbishment of the plant is the last hurdle before the company commences production, which is expected before the end of the year.
The company is also in the last stages of honouring a $225million debt owed by Ziscosteel to Germany bank KFW, marking full ownership of the coking plant.
ZimCoke management together with ThyssenKrupp engineers recently toured the plant to assess the impact and the work needed. Mr Cross said once the deal sails through, refurbishment work will start.
“These are a technical consultancy and they are on site to carry out an assessment of how much work needs to be done as we await the decision by Government. Once that is done we are ready to start refurbishment and within six months, exports will begin,” he said.
ZimCoke recently announced plans to invest about $75 million into Hwange Colliery Company Limited’s coke division in a bid to capacitate the company and enhance increased production.
The firm took over a coke oven battery plant segment within Ziscosteel under a $133 million deal.
At full capacity, the project is expected to produce 500 000 tonnes of coke annually, for both local usage and the export markets.
THE $400 000 Hwange Colliery bribery saga took a new twist during parliamentary inquiries yesterday after it emerged that Shepherd Tundiya, the linkman between the four MPs implicated in the alleged scam, President’s Office and businessman James Goddard, was actually a con-artist on mission to swindle the businessman.
This came as the MPs gave oral evidence saying Tundiya masqueraded as an operative of the Central Intelligence Organisation and offered to assist Goddard to clinch a mining deal in Hwange on condition he palm greased the four members of the Mines Parliamentary Committee.
All four legislators implicated in the matter, Temba Mliswa (Norton), Anele Ndebele (Magwegwe), Prince Dubeko Sibanda (Binga North) and Leonard Chikomba (Gokwe-Kabuyuni) described Tundiya as a “crook” and “con-artist”, who owed Chikomba US$2 600.
The Parliamentary Privileges Committee heard that Tundiya had invited the MPs to a meeting with Goddard so he could con the construction mogul, which money he would use to pay Chikomba $400 000 in bond notes.
It was said the $400 000 was being touted as facilitation fees to assist Goddard get the Hwange deal.
Mliswa was the first to give oral evidence before the Privileges Committee chaired by Senator Chief Charumbira, where the Norton legislator said the meeting was informal and had nothing to do with parliamentary committee business, adding he did not even know the agenda of the meeting which was facilitated by Tundiya and was held at Goddard’s Borrowdale offices.
“The meeting discussed Hwange Colliery issues, where Goddard had an interest and I referred him to Justice minister Ziyambi Ziyambi because I told him that HCCL was under reconstruction and there is nothing wrong with that,” Mliswa said.
“I took over the agenda and said Tundiya cannot speak and during the meeting, I never heard anything about the $400 000 bribe. If you drive through Bulawayo, you see vehicles branded J R Goddard, and Goddard did not have to go through anyone to speak to President Emmerson Mnangagwa.
“Tundiya is a renowned con-artist and I doubt the wisdom of Goddard to deal with such a person.”
Asked by Privileges Committee member Matthew Nyashanu (Buhera Central) if Goddard’s act of reporting the bribery case could have been heroic, Mliswa responded: “You cannot say that you are fighting corruption when you are associated with Tundiya; it means you are part of the corruption.”
Chikomba then gave his oral evidence, where he disclosed that when Tundiya invited him to Goddard’s offices in Borrowdale, he had been made to believe that Goddard was the one who was going to settle the US$2 100 debt in local currency.
He told the committee that Tundiya owed him $2 700 since 2011, and had only paid back US$600.
“I asked Ndebele, who is a lawyer, to accompany me and assist me to recover my money from Tundiya, and because on that day, I had no vehicle and Ndebele had no vehicle, we asked Sibanda to accompany us in his car. Sibanda then said Tundiya is a conman and it was better to ask Mliswa to also accompany us to Borrowdale at Goddard’ offices,” Chikomba said.
“During the informal meeting, only Hwange Colliery issues were discussed and it was only outside when we were already going that I asked Tundiya to pay back what he owed to me. Tundiya said murungu wake (his boss, to mean Goddard) was the one that was going to pay, as they were business partners, and then he said I should write down my account number on a piece of paper which he then gave to Goddard,” Chikomba said.
Privileges Committee member Jonathan Samukange then demanded to know how Goddard was made to understand he was supposed to deposit $400 000 facilitation fees in Chikomba’s account.
Another committee member, Tatenda Mavetera, demanded to know the interest rate that Chikomba had used to conclude that Goddard should deposit his money as $400 000 in local currency.
Chikomba said when Tundiya communicated with Goddard, he could not hear what was said.
“Tundiya was the one who went to speak to Goddard and I gave him a piece of paper with my bank account because Tundiya had said the following day, Goddard would deposit money in payment of my debt. When I mentioned $400 000 to Tundiya, which Goddard could have heard, I did that in passing because I was saying to Tundiya I lent him the money in foreign currency and seven years later, it would be worth more in local currency and that I could have invested it as a businessman and got around $400 000 to date. Tundiya is a cunning conman who even pretended to have links with the President (Emmerson Mnangagwa) to Goddard,” he said.
Sibanda also gave his oral evidence, saying he had been asked by Chikomba and Ndebele to drive them to Goddard’s offices since they did not have a vehicle. He said during the informal meeting, the issue of a bribe or facilitation fees was never mentioned.
“I first heard about the $400 000 bribe amount through The Herald. When we accompanied Chikomba to recover his money from Goddard, we were made to believe that Goddard was the one who was going to pay his debt,” Sibanda said.
“He said the following day after their meeting with Tundiya at Bronte Hotel, he got a call from Hwange Colliery board chairperson Juliana Muskwe, who warned him that Tundiya was a con-man who had told her that he, Tundiya, had given MPs from the Mines committee $500 000 each. That is when I asked Mliswa to join us to the meeting with Goddard because I suspected it was a set-up, and I only went there as a driver to Chikomba and Ndebele, who was assisting Chikomba legally to recover his debt from Tundiya.”
It turned out Goddard never directly spoke to the MPs about the money, but that Tundiya acted as a go-between between Chikomba and Goddard, without them both hearing what was exactly communicated to the other.
In his evidence, Ndebele said as a lawyer, Chikomba had asked him to accompany him to Goddard’s offices to assist him recover his debt from Tundiya, who he said had invited them there.
“I first heard of the $400 000 bribe from The Herald. It was never discussed inside or outside the meeting. My knowledge of Tundiya is that he is a colourful character and I told Chikomba that he can be given the money as cash and then set-up, and so there was need to be watertight with the document to recover the debt,” he said.
Ndebele said he knew Goddard to be a well-respected Bulawayo-based businessman, but was surprised that he was dealing with Tundiya.
He said he had personally requested Sibanda to accompany them using the latter’s vehicle.
The Privileges Committee will now table a report of its findings before Parliament, which will be debated before a determination is reached.
MDC’S standing committee meeting last week Wednesday degenerated into a war of words after a faction aligned to party leader Nelson Chamisa, accused secretary-general Douglas Mwonzora of bringing the party’s name into disrepute, allegations he firmly refuted.
Chamisa and Mwonzora are likely to lock horns at the upcoming elective congress next month after the latter won a tightly contested race for secretary-general post in 2014.
Chamisa was later appointed vice-president by the late Morgan Tsvangirai and was elevated to party leader at his death.
According to MDC standing committee sources, Chamisa started the attack on Mwonzora, who was also accused of causing the party’s defeat in Bulawayo’s Cowdray Park local authority by-election.
“Mwonzora was told by the president that this is not a peacock contest, where one is trying to spread feathers and be seen to be more attractive than others,” one source said.
“He was accused of trying to appropriate himself to Tsvangirai’s achievements and to claim all the landmarks into his name, such as the Constitution-making process. He was accused of trying to personalise everything that the party achieved, thereby bringing the party’s name into disrepute.
“He was asked why he was contesting the race that hasn’t been opened yet,” the source added.
According to others, the standing committee fell short of bringing the code of conduct against Mwonzora, with virtually all the leaders fighting in Chamisa’s corner taking turns to accuse the secretary-general of various misdemeanours.
“As for the Cowdray Park, the buck stops with Mwonzora and he must take responsibility. He was reminded that instead of seeking media attention, he is supposed to put the house in order and effectively run the party,” a senior party official said.
During the barrage, Mwonzora, who has been openly described as a “half-wit” by other party leaders, reportedly defended himself, claiming he needed to clear his name as others were unfairly accusing and labelling him in the media.
Asked to comment, the opposition party spokesperson Jacob Mafume said a resolution was made to make him the official spokesperson of the congress issues.
“What I can say is that the standing committee reiterated that the formal channel of communication is through the office of the spokesperson. There will be a period when all the leaders will be told to openly campaign and this is when the nomination opens,” Mafume said while refusing to be dragged into the Mwonzora issue.
However, Mwonzora defended himself yesterday, declaring that he would not be silenced.
“I was never gagged,” he said.
“I was asked why I had said certain things in the Press and I explained that it was because those leaders were attacking me in the Press.
“I explained that I had the right to reply and further explained that for me, it was a reputation issue. I do not accept being portrayed as weak.”
Mwonzora added that many of those who were attacking him rely on urban seats which can be won safely.
“We agreed that we are in this position because of other senior leaders who were attacking me and nobody was there to defend me,” he said.
“In terms of the Constitution of Zimbabwe, accused people have the right of reply, especially when there are lies circulating that I am being funded by Zanu-PF.”
In an earlier interview with NewsDay, Mwonzora accused his predecessor and current vice national chairman Tendai Biti of fanning divisions.
He was responding to allegations that he was a Zanu-PF pony in MDC internal fights, which have left the party at odds with itself.
“What is ironic in the MDC is that the people who are raising these allegations are people who split from the party, who took money away from the party and who called (the late founding leader Morgan) Tsvangirai all sorts of names and they came back to the party. We accommodated them and what they are trying to do is to drive a wedge between myself and Nelson Chamisa as a way of getting an accommodation. Fortunately, the MDC members are intelligent enough to read through this,” Mwonzora said.
Contacted for comment, Biti said: “He did not mention my name, so that becomes a party issue. The party spokesperson can deal with that. I will not speak on party issues.”
Mafume dismissed the allegations by Mwonzora, saying those who left the party reintegrated with Tsvangirai and were now part of the MDC.
“We are not going to deal with innuendos. Those allegations are being raised in the wrong platform. When you have disagreements with fellow leaders, you should know where to raise them,” Mafume said.
“We are going to congress and it’s a pressure cooker, people will say a lot of things when they can’t stand the heat, but we are committed to holding a successful congress and we will deliver it.”
Party organiser Amos Chibaya, who is looking to retain his position, is reported to be engineering Chamisa’s grip on structures and ultimately, the party presidency amid allegations of voter manipulation.
Chibaya, however, denied allegations that he was Chamisa’s fixer, saying he was conducting party elections in line with the MDC constitution.
“Congress is a contest for power and people will always find a way of blaming the other person for their failures, but I can assure you that the process is going on smoothly after holding congresses in 1 954 wards. We have one unfortunate incident of violence. We have a few petitions. Surely this shows mature democracy,” he said.
Party vice-president Morgan Komichi said he was confident there would be no contests for Chamisa’s post.
“The MDC people are going to nominate Nelson Chamisa with ease. He is going to be nominated by all the 10 provinces in the country and our three external ones. No one is going to be nominated except president Chamisa,” he said.
Those close to Mwonzora said he was not throwing in the towel yet and will be looking to repeat the 2014 feat of defeating Chamisa after securing one last-minute nomination.
“There are some who are saying he should pull out because the structures voting at congress appear to be in favour of Chamisa, but he is not willing to give up. He is going for the presidency, to win it,” a source said.
There have been attempts to paint Mwonzora as a Zanu-PF agent to, hopefully, discredit him among the MDC faithful.
Mwonzora has denied the allegations, saying he has a history of defeating Zanu-PF and cannot be its agent now.
“I have been fighting Zanu-PF. I have a history of fighting Zanu-PF. I fought Zanu-PF as a member of Copac, they did not want that Constitution. We brought it. I fought Zanu-PF in the Supreme Court regarding political funding. Up to now, the MDC is receiving funding from the government. I have been fighting for electoral reforms, we have had success. I have been a member of almost every demonstration,” he said.
“Now the regrettable part is that when we are going for congress, people start mudslinging. I have seen a few brick bats thrown at Nelson Chamisa, some of which are very unfair. For example, that bizarre rape case, we always go through this.”
THREE police officers, one of them a senior cop, who allegedly stole guns, more than 180 live bullets and an assortment of related weaponry from the police armoury, were yesterday released on $200 bail each.
David Fugao (age not given), the officer-in-charge of the ZRP provincial armoury in Matabeleland North, Wonder Tawanda Karamba (33), Francis Chaterera (39), who are both stationed at the armoury appeared before Bulawayo magistrate Mr Franklin Mkhwananzi yesterday facing charges of theft and criminal abuse of duty as public officers.
They were remanded out of custody to April 24 on $200 bail each. The trio was ordered to surrender passports and report twice a week at Khumalo Police Station as part of the bail conditions.
They were also ordered not to interfere with State witnesses and to reside at their given addresses until the matter is finalised.
The prosecutor, Mr Mufaro Mageza, said on March 23 detectives from the Criminal Investigations Department homicide section received information that there were suspicious movements of firearms at the armoury.
The court heard that the detectives through investigations found out that some police officers were removing firearms that are subject to a handover-takeover from the armoury to a backyard room.
This was discovered following the arrest of Fugao after he was implicated by a suspected armed robber Ame Mpala, who was arrested with an AK-47 rifle along the Bulawayo-Beitbridge Road.
“When detectives arrived at the armoury they requested it be opened and a search was conducted in the presence of Karamba and Chaterera. It was discovered after the search that there were several firearms that had been stored in the armoury that did not match any recorded on official documents,” said Mr Mageza.
Some of the guns listed included Birmingham Sport Company rifles, Bore Winchester shotguns, a Bruno rifle, a Mouser long rifle, 303 Era rifle, Kregskorte rifle, Winchester rifle and a special revolver. They were also found with more than 185 different kinds of live bullets.
The court heard that when it was established that the accused persons had been allegedly receiving firearms for repairs at the station workshop, which is not consistent with their duties, they were arrested.
On the same day at around 7PM, detectives received a tip-off informing them that there was a suspicious package that had been stashed at a house in Thorngrove. Upon searching the house they found an assortment of weapons and ammunition.
Some of the guns discovered at the house included a Norinco pistol, Visor Pistol, FN pistol, Special Renato gamba revolver, an Astra revolver, Berretta pistol and an automatic pistol.
The detectives interrogated the owner of the house, Mrs Delighted Chingoyori, who revealed that Karamba had left a parcel containing the firearms at her house, stating that she had given him the keys to the garage where the parcel was for safe keeping.
Mr Reliance Ndou of Mugiya and Macharaga Law Chambers is representing the accused persons.
PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa, Vice-President Kembo Mohadi and Justice minister Ziyambi Ziyambi were yesterday named in the ongoing Hwange Colliery saga inquiry being conducted by the Parliamentary Privileges Committee (PAC).
The trio’s names came up in the alleged bribery case, where a suspected dubious Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO) operative claimed that he had been sent by Mnangagwa and Mohadi to deal with problems at Hwange.
He then reportedly demanded a $400 000 bribe from businessman James Goddard, claiming that he was acting on behalf of four members of Parliament’s Mines Committee.
The four MPs were Temba Mliswa (Norton), Anele Ndebele (Magwegwe), Leonard Chikomba (Gokwe-Kabuyuni) and Prince Dubeko Sibanda (Binga North).
The alleged bogus CIO agent was named as Shepherd Tundiya.
Before the hearing commenced, Nyasha Makuzwa, who is Job Sikhala’s assistant lawyer and representing Ndebele and Sibanda, tried to stop the proceedings, arguing that Sikhala was filing a Constitutional Court (ConCourt)application for violation of section 69 of the Constitution, which stipulates that every person should be represented by a lawyer of their choice.
PAC chairperson Chief Fortune Charumbira refused to stop the proceedings and, instead, demanded that Makuzwa should provide documentary evidence to prove that the application had been filed at the ConCourt.
The Privileges Committee first heard oral evidence from Goddard, who disclosed that Tundiya facilitated a meeting between him and the four MPs, claiming that Mnangagwa had instructed him to look into the revival of Hwange Colliery.
Tundiya is also said to have claimed that the President had tasked him to sort out the mess at the coal miner after it emerged that one Mota Anjil was demanding foreign currency for services, thereby prejudicing government.
Goddard told Parliament lawyer Elizabeth Hove that Tundiya claimed Mnangagwa had sent him to facilitate a meeting with the four MPs.
He said they later met at his Harare offices.
“Mliswa spoke for about 30 minutes saying that Mnangagwa was encouraging members of government to join up with the private sector to form partnerships to improve the operations of the economy,” Goddard said.
He further said during the meeting, Mliswa left saying he was going to join his family for dinner.
He added that he remained behind with the other three MPs, where Tundiya then claimed that the MPs had demanded a $400 000 bribe to enable them to fly to Hwange the following day and would not go there with nothing.
Goddard told Mliswa’s lawyer, advocate Tawanda Zhuwarara, during cross-examination that the Norton legislator never personally demanded any bribe in writing or orally. It also emerged that Goddard did not know the agenda of the meeting held at his offices.
He also said Tundiya was not his agent.
“He (Tundiya) was not my agent. As far as I know, he was the guy requested by the President (Mnangagwa) to sort out Hwange and he showed me photos of himself with the Zimbabwe flag and he told me he had been sent by the President’s Office, he had been to Mnangagwa’s farm and the President had asked him to sort out Hwange Colliery,” Goddard said.
The businessman denied during cross-examination by Zhuwarara that Mliswa had personally demanded the $400 000 bribe, but intimated that it was something said in Shona, a language he was not conversant in.
Ziyambi’s name came in when Goddard claimed he had learnt that Hwange Colliery was under judicial management and had asked Mliswa to facilitate a meeting for him.
Chikomba’s lawyer, Simon Musapatika, then further cross-examined Goddard on the role of his client in demanding the $400 000 bribe.
Goddard said after the meeting, and when they were outside, he overheard Tundiya and Chikomba engage in heated discussions in Shona, where the Gokwe-Kabuyuni MP and Sibanda demanded money.
He said Chikomba later gave Tundiya his bank account, adding he again overheard the MPs demanding $400 000.
Goddard said after the meeting, he met Mohadi and told him that the four MPs had demanded a $400 000 bribe, and the VP advised him to then report the issue to Parliament.
Further asked by Musapatika to explain if he had ever received any official correspondence from the Office of the President and Cabinet (OPC), Mnangagwa or Mohadi to confirm that Tundiya was, indeed, working under the instructions of the OPC, Goddard responded to the affirmative. He said when he met Mohadi at one time, he asked the VP to verify whether Tundiya was, indeed, a member of the OPC.
“When I met Mohadi, I asked him about Tundiya and he indicated to me that he will revert back to me, but up to now, he has not reverted. When Mnangagwa officially opened Arcturus Mine, I phoned Mohadi and told him I was confused and told him what was worrying me. He said if I was prepared to testify, it was the right thing to do so,” Goddard said.
Musapatika then suggested that since Goddard could not understand the Shona used by Tundiya and Chikomba, there was a possibility that the MP was simply demanding his dues from Tundiya.
A photo circulating from the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) post 2018 elections review meeting currently underway in Nyanga shows the commission’s chairperson Priscilla Chigumba with a bulging stomach. Could she be pregnant for sure?
By Own Correspondent| Bulawayo police are investing suspected case of rape and murder of a woman on an unknown date.
A police statement reveals that the dead body of a woman was discovered and reported to the police by a passerby.
The woman, who was found half-naked, is believed to have been raped first before she was killed.
Bulawayo police spokesperson Chief Inspector Precious Simango said the deceased’s body was taken to the United Bulawayo Hospital mortuary for a post mortem.-StateMedia
Police were called into the scene as bus was delayed for over three hours.
LUXURY bus City Link’s passengers travelling from Bulawayo to Harare were delayed for about three hours as a gang of nine men manhandled the driver accusing him of ‘stealing’ their US$7 000 that was in a parcel he had delivered.
The incident occurred when the bus stopped in Gweru for its scheduled five minutes recess.
The bus company had to provide another bus driver to proceed to Harare as the first driver went with the police and people who were accusing him of stealing their money.
Some passengers are said to have missed their appointments due to the fracas.
The bus normally leaves the City of Kings at 7.30AM and arrives in Harare at 1.30PM but yesterday sources said it arrived after 3PM.
In an interview, Bulawayo model Mr Oliver Keith, who was one of the passengers on the bus said he missed his appointment due to the delay.
Mr Keith said the commotion started when the bus stopped in Gweru and nine men driving a blue Honda Fit raided the bus and manhandled the driver before force-marching him to their parked car.
“When we arrived in Gweru, the host announced that we were stopping for a five- minute recess. A few minutes after the bus parked, the gang invaded the bus and went straight for the driver demanding ‘their money’,” said Mr Keith.
He said the information they later got was that the driver had delivered the parcel the previous day and the gang was saying that the parcel had US$7 000 but the driver was insisting that the parcel had no money.
Mr Keith said after the driver had been taken away by police, the host informed the stranded passengers that the bus company was organising an alternative driver from either Bulawayo or Harare.
He said the driver later arrived and they proceeded with their journey without the first driver who was probably still detained at the police station.
A comment could not be immediately obtained from City Link Bus Company as its employees based in Bulawayo said they knew nothing about the incident.
Midlands police spokesperson Assistant Inspector Ethel Mukwenda said she had not received such a report.
The UK and the EU have agreed a “flexible extension” of Brexit until 31 October, European Council president Donald Tusk has said.
Speaking after five hours of talks at an EU summit in Brussels, Mr Tusk said his “message to British friends” was “please do not waste this time”.
Theresa May said the UK would still aim to leave the EU as soon as possible.
Irish Taoiseach Leo Varadkar said the UK must now hold European elections in May, or leave on 1 June without a deal.
Prime Minister Mrs May had earlier told leaders she wanted to move the UK’s exit date from this Friday to 30 June, with the option of leaving earlier if her withdrawal agreement was ratified by Parliament.
Mr Tusk emerged from the talks – and a subsequent meeting with Mrs May – to address reporters at a news conference at 02:15 local time (01:15 BST).
He said: “The course of action will be entirely in the UK’s hands: they can still ratify the withdrawal agreement, in which case the extension can be terminated.”
Mr Tusk said the UK could also rethink its strategy or choose to “cancel Brexit altogether”.
He added: “Let me finish with a message to our British friends: This extension is as flexible as I expected, and a little bit shorter than I expected, but it’s still enough to find the best possible solution.
“Please do not waste this time.”
European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said: “There will probably be a European election in the UK – that might seem a bit odd, but rules are rules and we must respect European law and then we will see what happens.”
Mrs May then spoke to reporters at 02:45 local time (01:45 BST). She said that although the delay extends until 31 October, the UK can leave before then if MPs pass her withdrawal deal.
“I know that there is huge frustration from many people that I had to request this extension,” she said.
“The UK should have left the EU by now and I sincerely regret the fact that I have not yet been able to persuade Parliament to approve a deal.”
She added: “I do not pretend the next few weeks will be easy, or there is a simple way to break the deadlock in Parliament. But we have a duty as politicians to find a way to fulfil the democratic decision of the referendum, deliver Brexit and move our country forward.
“Nothing is more pressing or more vital.”
The PM said that the UK “will continue to hold full membership rights and obligations [of the EU]” during the delay.
Fudge and can-kicking are the EU-familiar words that spring to mind at the end of this Brexit summit.
After all the drama and speculation leading up to the meeting, effectively all that happened here is that the threat of a no-deal Brexit has been postponed for another six months.
Time enough for the EU to hold European parliamentary elections, choose a new president of the European Commission and pass a new budget – without EU leaders having to keep one eye at least on the day-to-day dramas in the House of Commons.
Despite EU leaders’ rhetoric beforehand, they granted this extension without hearing a convincing plan of Brexit action from Theresa May.
In the summit conclusions there is no evidence of the punitive safeguards mooted to ensure the UK “behaves itself” – refraining from blocking EU decisions – as long as it remains a club member.
Yes, EU leaders worry about who might replace Theresa May as prime minister. Yes, they’re concerned these six months could fly past with the UK as divided as ever but their message to the UK tonight was: “We’ve done our bit. Now you do yours. It’s up to you. Please use the time well.”
The EU had been split over the length of delay to offer the UK and by law they had to reach a unanimous decision. Although other EU countries backed a longer delay, French President Emmanuel Macron pushed for a shorter extension.
The BBC’s Katya Adler said that the date of 31 October was an indication that Mr Macron had “won the day”. as his was the most hard-line voice in the room.
Speaking afterwards, Mr Macron said: “For me, this is a good solution.”
He said EU leaders had partly decided to back a delay because Mrs May had explained she had started talks with the opposition party – “a first in decades in the British political system”.
Malta’s prime minister Joseph Muscat said the 31 October deadline was “sensible” as it “gives time to UK to finally choose its way”.
The new deadline is one day before the next European Commission President – the successor to Mr Juncker – takes office.
Mr Juncker joked that if it results in a summit with another late-night meeting, he “may have to leave at midnight”.- BBC
TWELVE people were killed, while several others were injured when a Kwekwe-bound kombi collided head-on with a bus about 20 km outside Gweru yesterday evening.
All the dead were in the kombi, which had its roof ripped off on impact. The accident occurred around 7pm not too far from the Gweru tollgate.
According to police officers at the scene, no one survived in the kombi, while a few people from the bus, owned by Birdgreen Transport Pvt Ltd, were injured and ferried to Gweru Provincial Hospital.
Unconfirmed reports indicated the kombi was among a convoy of cars belonging to Kwekwe-based ZANU-PF politician and gold dealer Kandros Mugabe, and were coming from a funeral.
Witnesses described horrific scenes, with many blaming the bus for over-speeding.
“I boarded this bus from Kadoma, but all the way we were complaining of the speed.
“The driver then tried to overtake another bus on this curve resulting in the head-on collision with the oncoming kombi,” said Mrs Marvelous Marova.
Memory Jarazava from Kwekwe told ZOOMZimbabwe: “I witnessed this with my own eyes. It happened around 7pm. Some images you can never erase them from your memory. I’m so broken. I’m so devastated.”
Another witness, Mr Kelvin Zimuto said no one survived in the kombi.
“The driver of the bus I was travelling in is to blame. He was just speeding for nothing and imagine everyone in the kombi was crushed,” he mourned.
Last night, Police Officer Commanding Midlands Province, Commissioner Moses Magande, confirmed the accident and said investigations were underway.
Correspondent|The 2019 harvest is one of the country’s lowest in years and will put pressure on the government to channel its scarce foreign currency reserves to feed about 5-million vulnerable people, Information minister Monica Mutsvangwa has announced.
Zimbabwe’s situation is so dire, Mutsvangwa said, that the government was considering feeding its vulnerable citizens with sweet potatoes as a substitute for maize meal, the country’s staple.
She said the poor harvest was a huge concern for government.
“Cabinet is seized with the fact that there won’t be enough grain, so there are a number of interventions, like growing winter maize for example and making sure that we increase production of potatoes and sweet potatoes, and to consider the possibility of importing.”
Mutsvangwa noted that while the country had some grain in its strategic reserves, its food stocks would not last until the next harvest, adding that “the government is seized and alive to the fact that food security is the number one issue that affects the citizens”.
The government also reviewed upwards the producer price of maize to $726 RTGS dollars, up from $390, to encourage farmers to deliver grain to the state’s grain marketing board.
Mutsvangwa said the country had lost hope of finding any cyclone Idai survivors, and indicated that Zimbabwe needed $612m for humanitarian assistance and reconstruction of infrastructure after Cyclone Idai devastated the eastern part of the country in March.
“The president signed our appeal document. It details what we believe we need, which amounts to $612m (of domestic and international aid),” local government minister July Moyo said on Tuesday.
According to the document, $155m is needed for logistics and emergency communication to get help to affected communities.
A further $292m is needed for food and nutrition to about 100,000 people in the hardest hit area of Chimanimani; $75m is required for emergency shelter; and $51m has been budgeted for water sanitation and hygiene.
Other funds have been budgeted for rebuilding schools and hospitals, as well as psychosocial support.
The cyclone has also set back Zimbabwe’s agricultural sector.
The government will import grain after it recorded a poor harvest of 714,958 tonnes, putting further strain on the country’s battered economy.
By A Correspondent| The Norton MP Temba Mliswa yesterday took stand before the committee that is investigating allegations of bribery.
The hearings lasted several hours and Mliswa lifted pitch when he made the following declaration: “I don’t come from that upbringing at all; I advocate for pushing for zero tolerance.
“On corruption my way of doing the important I always watch because everyone is watching [me] they say Mliswa is the one who makes a lot of noise on corruption. So I am very aware of the lot of things honourable member. I am not naive. I wouldn’t talk about it, because but I have never solicited for a bribe in my whole life.” VIDEO BELOW
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR | “Hi everyone! The robbers have devised a new way of Robbery. They leave a female to scream outside your house while they park nearby. Once you open your door or gate to assist, the robbers pounce on you. Be vigilant of strange females loitering in your vicinity. They are part of the gang. Pass this message to friends and family. ” By Patrick Chari
About 3 850 former Ziscosteel workers and those of its subsidiaries, failed to get their outstanding salaries in March after the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) garnished the former steel giant’s accounts.
Government assumed Ziscosteel debts under the Debt Assumption Act in 2017 after retrenchment of all employees in 2016.
Former Ziscosteel employees have been receiving part of the $38 million windfall availed by Government as part of their outstanding salaries backdated to 2009 .
Government agreed to clear the former workers’ salary arrears in tranches beginning September 2017. Ziscosteel Workers Committee chairperson, Mr Ben Moyo, confirmed that they had not been paid their March instalment but said he was not aware of the reasons.
Ziscosteel chief executive officer Mr Alois Gowo confirmed that Zimra had garnished the company’s account where the workers salaries are deposited hence they could not be paid.
“The company failed to pay its statutory obligations and this prompted Zimra to garnish its account. All along the company has been surviving on selling of blast furnace slag that is the same money we would use to pay for electricty, Kwekwe City Council water bill as well as the little we paid some workers.We however failed to raise enough money to meet our statutory obligations,” said Mr Gowo.
He could not disclose how much they owed Zimra but said negotiations were underway for workers to be paid their outstanding salaries.
“The company has offered a payment plan to Zimra, which is under consideration. Once accepted, the garnishee would be lifted and former workers would be able to access their salaries. Workers need not panic as we are hopeful that the talks will yield positive results,” said Mr Gowo.
Workers at Ziscosteel subsidiary companies, Lancashire Steel and Bimco were also affected. Zimra spokesperson, Mr Francis Chimanda, could not be reached for comment as his mobile phone went unanswered.
The company effectively stopped production at its Redcliff plant back in 2008 resulting in about 5 000 people losing their jobs.
Hopes for the revival of operations at the steel giant were revived in 2017 after coking company, ZimCoke, bought a coking company within the now defunct former regional steel giant, a move considered as the first step towards the company’s resuscitation. – state media
Econet Wireless yesterday commissioned a 466kW solar power plant at its Willowvale industrial complex in the capital, the largest commercial and industrial carport and roof mount installation of its kind to be deployed in the country, signalling easement of the country’s energy challenges.
Zimbabwe could make huge savings on energy import costs, achieve its Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) on energy and contribute towards Vision 2030.
Under the Transitional Stabilisation Programme (TSP), Government identifies solar as an alternative source of power, particularly for rural households in off-grid areas and seeks adoption of renewable energy sources.
Econet is now saving between 10 percent and 15 percent of its traditional electricity consumption by adopting the use of the grid connected solar system with panels installed on roof tops and car parks of its premises.
Distributed Power Africa, a subsidiary of Econet Wireless Zimbabwe, has installed a total capacity of 1MW solar power plants at its six sites.
Says Dr Sosten Ziuku, director Energy Conservation and Renewable Energy in the Ministry of Energy and Power Development: “The installed capacity of 1MW has enabled Econet to save between 10 – 15 percent of its electricity consumption. The power plants generate 1.6GWh of energy annually. This translates to a cost saving of $160 000 dollars per annum.
“Zimbabwe currently imports electricity from Mozambique and South Africa using scarce forex resources. If all heavy electricity consumers such as mines and manufacturing companies were to install similar solar power plants at their premises as was done by Econet, the country will save millions of dollars in foreign currency.”
Assuming the country’s 100 top electricity heavy using companies, install industrial solar plants at their premises and make energy savings similar to Econet, Zimbabwe could save as much as $16 million dollars a year.
The country is currently facing energy supply challenges leading to load shedding and interruption of power supply across the nation.
Energy experts say less than a quarter of the population in the rural areas has access to clean energy.
They further point out that electricity supplies cannot meet demand as the electricity grid is in a poor state due to inadequate investment in the sector, leading to erratic supplies.
As a result, Zimbabwe is forced to import expensive power from its neighbours, mainly South Africa and Mozambique.
By December 2018, Zimbabwe’s energy import bill had dropped to about $1,2 million monthly from at least $48 million as the country increased its local electricity generation.
For years, Zimbabwe has been grappling to raise adequate foreign currency to pay for its energy imports.
Power imports chewed more than $300 million in 2017 piling pressure on the country’s scarce foreign currency reserves.
According to official figures, Zimbabwe has an installed capacity of about 2000 MW, of which 58 percent is thermal and 37 percent is hydro, mainly from the Kariba South Power Station.
Others such as Bagasse based energy production (Green Fuel, Triangle and Hippo Valley) and a mini hydro generation produce 114 MW mainly for own use and with a balance of 12 MW supplied to the national grid.
It is estimated that Zimbabwe has a total demand for electricity of 2029 MW against average available supply of 1200 MW.
Most of the country’s generation units are old and inefficient, even though the Government has taken steps to upgrade the plants to increase capacity.
A massive campaign to promote the installation of both industrial and domestic solar systems could immediately help the country to make significant savings on energy costs whilst at the same time promoting a cleaner environment.
The current rate of traditional electricity supply is exorbitant for most companies and households and it makes most services and products uncompetitive.
With an average access to electricity standing at 21 percent in the rural areas and 80 percent in urban areas, the need for alternative energy supplies to meet the energy supply deficit cannot be overemphasized.
Zimbabwe has abundant renewable energy resources which are barely exploited and we need to unlock value from this as well as the exploitation of lithium for batteries that can power cars.
Access to electricity in both rural and urban areas is still low and the harnessing renewable energy could easily fill this energy gap especially now when Zimbabwe is experiencing rapid urbanisation which is pushing up demand for energy.
Zimbabwe is experiencing electricity supply challenges and many users connected to the national electricity grid have had to buy standby generators – either diesel or petrol powered ones which also increase demand for fuel which requires the scarce foreign currency.
The recent move by Econet in adopting solar energy at its premises demonstrates its willingness to invest in the improvement of the planet and fight environmental degradation.
Government and all other players – private companies, households, mines and other heavy power users should take practical steps to adopt green energy generators.
Going green is one of the best options to help with the energy crisis we find ourselves in.
Renewable energy collected from renewable resources such as sunlight, waste, wind, water and geothermal heat, are some of the options we can look at as a country.
Power shortages, the need to adopt cleaner and efficient systems, SDG targets on energy and our dream to be a middle income economy by 2030 all highlight the importance of adopting renewable energy as a national strategy.
What Econet has done will certainly increase the knowledge and confidence of production businesses for this promising renewable energy – solar.
Solar solutions to industries and homes have numerous benefits that include – energy savings, no load restriction, secure energy, reliability, pollution free energy almost zero maintenance cost.
The use of renewable energy can help accelerate access to energy, particularly for the majority of our people without access to electricity and who are still using traditional biomass which cause much harm to the environment.
Use of renewable energy can also reduce vulnerability to supply disruptions and market volatility and it has been shown to have tremendous environmental and health benefits.
Zimbabwe’s renewable energy resource base is made up of vast solar energy radiation hydro; municipal solid waste; municipal sewage biogas; agricultural waste and forestry waste.
The country has a number of policies that promote the adoption and wider use of renewable energy.
And, what is largely lacking is implementation and an aggressive promotion of renewable energy use.
Efforts by Econet should be applauded and promoted across all sectors in the country.
“With new technology, increased expertise and our viable financing solutions, the adoption of solar energy has increased significantly, and as Zimbabwe is gearing itself towards global competitiveness energy remains a critical pillar in our economic transformation,” says DPA Zimbabwe CEO Divyajeet Mahajan.
“In the global agenda, Zimbabwe seeks to achieve a 33 percent reduction in emissions by 2030 and the Willowvale installation will result in a marked reduction of its carbon footprint, by 285,000 kg per annum.” – state media
By Nomusa Garikai| I would like to congratulate the Daily News in breaking the tradition of vague and ambivalent coverage of last year’s elections and why the west is right in maintaining the sanctions against Mnangagwa and a few party leaders.
“Since coming to power in November 2017 through a “soft coup” that overthrew long-time ruler Robert Mugabe, Mnangagwa has made it his number one priority to see the end of Zimbabwe’s isolation from the Western block,” stated the Daily News Editorial.
“Mnangagwa was asked to implement a number of reforms by these world super powers in order for his government to be fully-recognised and earn lines of credit. However, nothing much happened on the reforms front as evidenced by what occurred during last year’s harmonised elections.
“Electoral, media, and human rights reforms were never fulfilled resulting in the disputed outcome which effectively ended any hopes of Zimbabwe’s smooth return to the global political arena.
“The US extended their targeted sanctions on Mnangagwa and other selected government officials while Zimbabwe readmission to the Commonwealth is still on ice.”
For the EU, the Americans, the Commonwealth and many other foreign nations and organisation to dismiss the elections as flawed and illegal is one thing but to get a leading independent paper like Daily News to come out and same the same thing is another. Gone are the wishy-washy phrases like “disputed elections” as if the journalist has no clue what constitutes free and fair elections and therefore has no opinion of his/her own on the matter.
The Editorial was firm and decisive; “the electoral, media and human rights reforms were never fulfilled.” The editorial title said it all; “Mnangagwa shooting himself in foot over sanctions”.
The Daily News has put to shame those opposition candidates who had foolishly participated in these flawed and illegal elections knowing fully well Zanu PF was stubbornly refusing to implement the reforms. Everyone knew that Zanu PF had refused to allow the 3 million or so Zimbabweans in the diaspora to register to vote, for example. It beggars belief why any opposition candidate would still participate in an election in which ZEC failed to produce a verified voters’ roll.
Now that the Daily News has confirmed the international community’s condemnation of last year’s elections as a farce; Zimbabwe’s opposition who had given the elections a thumbs-up and accepted the result as legitimate will now have to explain why they had ignored all the glaring flaws and irregularity!
Deputy Minister Victor Matemadanda and his war veterans are going to stage a demonstration at the USA Embassy calling for the lifting of the sanctions. The demonstrators will look very foolish indeed when they see newspaper headlines making it clear it was Mnangagwa who shot himself in the foot on the matter by failing to implement reforms.
Now that the Daily News has admitted that last year’s elections were indeed not free, fair and credible and therefore Zanu PF and its leader, Emmerson Mnangagwa, are illegitimate. The gene is out of the bottle and it will not be put back in. The question the nation must now answer is; what are we going to do with the illegitimate Zanu PF regime.
Some people would argue that we should just let Mnangagwa and his Zanu PF junta friends serve the rest of their five year term to 2023. This is a very foolish idea for five main reasons:
1) Zimbabwe’s economy is in total meltdown because by rigging the elections Mnangagwa confirm the country is still a pariah state ruled by corrupt and lawless thugs. As long as the country remains a pariah state there will be no meaningful economic recovery. Unemployment has soared to 90%, basic services such as water supply, working sewage, health care, etc. have all but collapsed. The prospect of four and half more years of this economic nightmare is simply unthinkable.
2) If Zanu PF is allowed to remain in office until 2023 then we can be certain that the regime will never implement any meaningful reforms and it will rig that year’s elections as readily as it rigged last year’s elections. Allowing Zanu PF to rig elections again will be madness.
3) In rigging the elections, Zanu PF was committed high treason; we have pretended not to notice and even rewarded the party with absolute power. We have paid dearly in the economic chaos and political oppression and paralysis that have ensued. We must now put an end to this madness. Zanu PF must be forced to step down, at the very least, as punishment for rigging last year’s elections.
4) We need Zanu PF to step down a.s.a.p. to allow the political space and time for the appointment of an interim administration that will be tasked to implement the reforms to ensure the next elections are free, fair and credible.
5) The international community will work with an interim administration to rebuild the democratic institutions and to restore basic services.
THE Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (Zec) is in a dilemma after Mutasa Central ward 10 councillor Frank Chitembwe (MDC), whose seat was declared vacant following his incarceration for public violence, resurfaced this week after being granted bail pending appeal.
His party now wants the results of the nomination court, which sat last week and selected candidates for the by-election, to be set aside.
MDC Manicaland provincial spokesperson Trevor Saruwaka said they would appeal to the electoral court to reverse the results of the nomination court.
“We are going to appeal to the electoral court urgently to seek an order to reverse the results of nomination court and declare Chitembwe the sitting councillor for ward 10,” he said
Chitembwe, who was recently slapped with a two-year jail term for taking part in the January 14-16 shutdown by blocking roads, on Monday successfully applied for bail pending appeal at the High Court.
The ex-councillor and another party activist, Job Kusano, were granted $300 bail each following an application by their lawyers Christopher Ndlovu and David Tandiri.
Chitembwe was released after the nomination court sat last week to select candidates to contest in the May 12 by-election to fill the position.
The three candidates who successfully filed their nomination papers are Tanyaradzwa Rose Mukodza (MDC), Magret Tindika of Zanu PF and Tanyaradzwa Justin Chirimo of NCA Saruwaka added that the MDC Alliance candidate, Mukodza, was ready to step down for Chitembwe.
“We are not in a dilemma. Our candidate is fully aware that should the appeal succeed, she will happily give way to councillor Chitembwe,” he said.
“If the appeal fails, we contest and an MDC councillor will win. So there is no dilemma on our part. It is actually a nightmare for Zanu PF because it’s a lose-lose situation for them. Whichever way, the seat will remain in the hands of the MDC.” — NewsDay
The silence and lack of action by law enforcement agents following reports of alleged domestic violence by Vice-President Kembo Mohadi reflects badly on the government’s position on the rule of law.
The Standard last Sunday exposed how Mohadi stormed his former wife Senator Tambudzani Mohadi’s home and threatened to shoot her after going on a rampage destroying property.
The VP allegedly poked his former wife with a metal rod before he was restrained by aides as he moved to collect a gun from his car.
Senator Mohadi said the senior Zanu PF politician hacked three doors with an axe and towed away three of her vehicles.
A group of at least 25 police officers are said to have witnessed the violent incident, but the law enforcement agents have not done anything about it a week later.
Violence against women has become a cancer in Zimbabwe and the government has over the years promulgated legal reforms to arrest the scourge.
Too many women die every year at the hands of their abusive spouses despite the legal statutes that protect them, hence the need for change in attitudes.
Mohadi not only violated the law with his shocking behaviour, but also put a serious dent on the government’s efforts to eliminate the culture of violence against women.
He showed lack of respect for both women and the law through his conduct in the full glare of law enforcement agents.
What makes the incident more worrying is that the police in Beitbridge appear to have done their best in frustrating Senator Mohadi so that she does not press any charges against her former husband.
After observing the VP towing away the senator’s cars, the police officers are said to have insisted that she must go and report her case at a police station.
Many victims of domestic violence are reluctant to report their cases fearing stigma and at times harassment by the police.
In Mohadi’s case, the police clearly missed an opportunity to send a clear message that such crimes would never be tolerated no matter the social status of the perpetrators.
Victims of domestic violence also need to be assured that the Zimbabwe Republic Police is the first port of call for survivors and that their cases will be handled without any bias.
More importantly, the police owe it to Zimbabweans to demonstrate that no one is above the law by acting professionally and protecting the victim in this case.
Senator Mohadi told this publication that her former husband declared that he was above the law and the lack of action by the police would only confirm that the VP’s declaration was true.
(newZWire) Standard Charterd Bank plc is to pay US$18 million in fines to the US government for violating American sanctions on Zimbabwe by handling transactions for state-owned firms and sanctioned individuals.
The bank is being fined for allowing 1,795 transactions worth close to US$77million.
Under sanctions first imposed in 2002, and renewed annually since then, the US restricts the movement of money owned by Zimbabwean state firms and individuals on its sanctions list.
“Separately, between May 2009 and July 2013, SCB Zimbabwe processed transactions to or through the United States involving Zimbabwe-related Specially Designated Nationals (SDNs) or entities owned 50 percent or more, individually or in the aggregate, by one or more Zimbabwe-related SDNs. These transactions constituted apparent violations of the Zimbabwe Sanctions Regulations (ZSR), 31 C.F.R. Part 541. SCB will remit $18,016,283 to OFAC to settle civil liability relating to the apparent violations of the ZSR,” the US Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) said in a notice Tuesday.
According to the settlement document detailing the offences, “the designated and/or blocked persons maintained account relationships with SCB’s affiliate in Zimbabwe, and engaged in funds transfer or debit/credit card transactions whose net settlement transfers were sent to, and processed by SCB NY or other U.S. financial institutions. SCB NY processed 1,795 transactions totaling $76,795,414, for or on behalf, or that otherwise contained a property interest, of those sanctioned entities.”
According to the charges, the total base penalty amount for the bank’s Zimbabwe-related violations is US$26,690,789.
OFAC says both Standard Chartered and its Zimbabwe unit (SCBZ) “appear to have had actual knowledge regarding customer relationships that SCBZ maintained with persons identified on the SDN List over a period of several years”.
The conduct, the US government says, “resulted in significant harm to the sanctions program objectives embodied in the Zimbabwe sanctions regulations”.
OFAC adds: “Multiple SCBZ personnel appear to have been unaware that the Bank’s customers (including those on the SDN List) could use their SCBZ-issued credit cards outside of Zimbabwe (including in the United States).”
In a statement, Standard Chartered, also fined US$1.1 billion for Iran transactions, said it “accepts full responsibility for the violations and control deficiencies outlined in the resolution documents, the vast majority of which predated 2012 and none of which occurred after 2014.”
Standard Chartered is the latest bank to fall foul of US measures on Zimbabwe.
Earlier in 2016, to avoid offending the US treasury, Standard Chartered ordered IDC to close its accounts with the bank. Standard Chartered’s fears were not unfounded.
Earlier, Barclays plc had paid a US$2.5 million settlement to the US Treasury after processing 159 transactions worth US$3.4 million between 2008 and 2013. The transactions were mostly for its client IDC and its subsidiaries.
In 2017, CBZ was subject to OFAC investigations over 15,127 transactions, carried on behalf of then sanctioned ZB Bank. OFAC was reported to have imposed a penalty of US$385 million on the bank, leading CBZ to sack its CEO and issue a cautionary.
OFAC regulations are partly why many international banks have cut off Zimbabwe.
According to RBZ data, Zimbabwe has over the past decade lost 102 correspondent banking relationships (CBRs), the links that make it possible for a customer to make international payments.
PM Benjamin Netanyahu is likely to secure a record fifth term after almost complete results from Israel’s election suggest a new right-wing coalition.
His Likud party is expected to finish with a similar number of seats as ex-military chief Benny Gantz’s centrist Blue and White alliance.
But Likud and right-wing allies are set to be the largest bloc with 65 seats in the 120-seat Knesset, local media said.
The 69-year-old premier is facing corruption allegations.
However, the election result means he could become Israel’s longest-serving prime minister later this year, overtaking Israel’s founding father David Ben-Gurion.
Exit polls had predicted a tight race with no clear winner, prompting both Mr Netanyahu and Blue and White leader Benny Gantz to claim victory on Tuesday night.
“It will be a right-wing government, but I will be prime minister for all,” Mr Netanyahu told cheering supporters.
“I’m very touched that the people of Israel gave me their vote of confidence for the fifth time, and an even bigger vote of confidence than previous elections.
“I intend to be the prime minister of all citizens of Israel. Right, left, Jews, non-Jews. All of Israel’s citizens.”
No party has ever won a majority in Israel’s 120-seat parliament and it has always had coalition governments.
‘Netanyahu’s most serious challenge yet’
There were roars of celebration at the election night party for Benny Gantz as the first exit poll was released. His supporters believed Israel was on the brink of a new centre-ground government.
But as the votes were counted overnight, Benjamin Netanyahu’s success became clearer. The incumbent PM’s Likud party appears most likely to be able to form another coalition government with the help of right-wing nationalist and religious parties.
He said history had given the people of Israel another chance as his supporters, using his nickname, chanted: “Bibi, the King of Israel.”
With left-wing and Arab-Israeli parties suffering heavy losses, his win appears decisive, despite the most serious challenge yet to his decade in office.
How was the campaign fought?
Mr Netanyahu, 69, put forward tough messages on security ahead of the vote and it soon became one of the election’s key issues.
He also made a significant announcement in the final days of the campaign, suggesting a new government would annex Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank.
The settlements are considered illegal under international law, although Israel disputes this.
In a separate controversy on Tuesday, Israeli Arab politicians condemned his Likud party for sending 1,200 observers equipped with hidden body cameras to polling stations in Arab communities.
The Arab alliance, Hadash-Taal, said it was an “illegal” action that sought to intimidate Arabs. Likud said it wanted to ensure only “valid votes” were cast.
Mr Netanyahu’s main challenger, Mr Gantz, is a retired lieutenant-general who formed the Blue and White in February, promising to unite a country that had “lost its way”.
The 59-year-old former chief of staff of the Israeli military rivalled Mr Netanyahu’s tough stance on security and promised cleaner politics.
Mr Gantz’s campaign platform referred to “separation” from the Palestinians but did not specifically mention them having an independent state. It also called for continued control over the Jordan Valley and retaining West Bank settlement blocs.
What allegations is Netanyahu facing?
Recent weeks have seen tensions flare between Israel and Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip, and US President Donald Trump is expected to publish his plan which aims to solve Israel’s long-standing conflict with the Palestinians soon.
However, ways to revive the moribund peace process were not a main subject of electoral debate. Many Israelis appear to see little hope in the longstanding international formula for peace – the “two-state solution”.
In the final days of the election campaign, Mr Netanyahu made a significant announcement suggesting a new government led by him would annex Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank. The settlements are considered illegal under international law, although Israel disputes this.
Israel’s once-dominant Labour party, which sealed a breakthrough peace deal with the Palestinians in the 1990s, managed to win just six seats – its worst-ever performance.
The secretary general of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), Saeb Erekat, tweeted a downbeat view of the prospects for peace.
A two-state solution is the shorthand for a final settlement that would see the creation of an independent state of Palestine within pre-1967 ceasefire lines in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem, living peacefully alongside Israel.
What comes next?
Under Israeli law, the Israeli president will consult political parties before designating a candidate deemed most able to form a government backed by a parliamentary majority.
The process could take several weeks.
Mr Netanyahu has promised to speedily put together a coalition with his “natural partners”. Some Israeli analysts have predicted that this could produce a government that will accelerate nationalist and conservative policies pursued by Mr Netanyahu’s outgoing administration.
Why did Netanyahu prevail?
Despite pending indictments against the prime minister in three corruption cases and a strong challenge by a centre-right alliance featuring three former army generals, Mr Netanyahu was able to rally his right-wing base to deliver the votes he needed.
During the campaign, Mr Netanyahu warned that his opponents would set up a “leftist” government with the support of Israeli Arab parties that would allow the creation of a Palestinian state, which he said would pose a mortal threat to Israel.
He promoted his foreign policy credentials in the weeks before the elections, meeting US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin and hosting Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro.
To attract hawkish voters, Mr Netanyahu veered further to the right in promising to annex Jewish settlements in the West Bank, and in a final election-day push he frantically warned that his opponents were poised to win if his supporters chose to stay at home.
Own Correspondent|In an unprecedented plot twist, National University of Science and Technology lectures for Financial Econometrics and Data Analysis have allegedly put a clause on the examination paper which allows students to shed tears should they feel overwhelmed with the questions.
The alleged examination paper which is circulating on social media has one peculiar instruction which says:
‘Crying is allowed but do so without disturbing others”
The institution is yet to confirm if such a clause exists indeed.
Multi-award-winning Afropop musician Zahara claims she is owed millions of rands by her former record label, TS Records.
Zahara yesterday made allegations against TS Records executives TK Nciza and Sbu Leope, claiming that she was underpaid for her performances, the sale of her records, and royalties for when her songs were played.
She made claims about her monster 2011 debut album Loliwe, which she said sold more than 500,000 copies. Zahara could not be reached by Sowetan for further comment late yesterday, but Nciza said he heard figures of “R10m and R30m being bandied about in the media”.
“She needs prayers. I’ve not worked with her for three years,” Nciza said.
Both Zahara, real name Bulelwa Mkuthukana, and Nciza had earlier confirmed to Sowetan’s sister publication, Daily Dispatch, that they worked together on three albums, Loliwe, Phendula and Country Girl.
Leope could not be reached on both his phones. Nciza said Leope was overseas.
In a telephonic interview yesterday, Nciza laughed off Zahara’s financial claims. He said her top three albums combined could not have made the amount she was claiming. “Now that things are going bad she wants to make an excuse and point fingers,” said Nciza.
When asked how much money was made in total by the company from sales of Zahara’s three albums, Nciza said: “I can’t give you the figure from the top of my head.” He denied all allegations Zahara made, saying there was no way he could have misappropriated her royalties as they were paid by another bigname company’s royalty department.
“We work with credible companies. We don’t even pay her directly,” he said.
The Phumlani village, Eastern Cape-born artist, said: “I want my money back, all of it. Many artists suffer in silence, suffer depression and ultimately die paupers. I won’t be a statistic. I will speak out.” Zahara said she left TS Records in 2016. She claimed while she cut her third album with TS, there was a contractual agreement.
Asked why she was going public only now, Zahara said: “I have been silent for too long because I was scared that my music career would be sabotaged. “Lots of people get blackmailed and end up being blocked in the industry.” Zahara first made the allegations on an afternoon radio show on Monday.
She told the Dispatch: “Many artists are embarrassed to even return home or call for help after people are done with us.”
A man who was gathering together fireworks and other component parts to make an improvised incendiary device has been handed a five-year custodial sentence.
The investigation, which was led by detectives from the Met’s Counter Terrorism Command, found the 41-year-old man from south London had intended to combine the various component parts he’d collected in order to target a mosque in south-west London.
Steven Bishop, 41 (28.11.77) of south London had previously pleaded guilty at Kingston Crown Court to possession of an explosive substance with intent, contrary to section 3 of the Explosive Substances Act 1883, as well as collection or making a record of information of a kind likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism, contrary to section 58 of the Terrorism Act (TACT) 2000.
He was sentenced to four years’ imprisonment with an additional year to be served on licence in relation to the explosives offence, and he was sentenced to two years’ imprisonment to be served concurrently in relation to the TACT offence.
Bishop will also be subject to terrorist offender notification requirements for 15 years following the conclusion of his five-year custodial sentence.
In sentencing Bishop for the Explosives Substance Act offence, the judge ruled that Bishop had committed the offence with a terrorist link, under section 30 of the Counter Terrorism Act, 2008.
Bishop was arrested by Counter Terrorism detectives on 29 October 2018, at his address in south London. Officers attended the address after police were contacted by one of Bishop’s key workers when he showed her images of items he was collecting for the purpose, he said, to build ‘a bomb’, and told her that he was intending to target a mosque.
Commander Clarke Jarrett, head of the Met’s Counter Terrorism Command, said: “From our investigation it was clear Bishop stockpiled a quantity of fireworks and other component parts with the intention of creating a device that he was intending to use in a terrorist attack on a mosque.
“Thanks to the diligence of his key worker in alerting us we were able to intervene before he could progress with his plans any further and crucially, nobody came to any harm.
“This example shows that information we get from the public really can help to protect the public and save lives. If you have any information about suspicious or terrorist activity, then please ACT and call police on 0800 789 321.
“Given Bishop was focussed upon a mosque, and in light of recent events in New Zealand, we also know that Muslim and other faith communities may be feeling particularly concerned and vulnerable. Specialist officers continue to provide support and protective security advice to mosques, and indeed all places of worship across the UK on how to best keep their buildings and visitors safe.”
After the concerns over Bishop were raised to police, officers initially attended his address and Bishop claimed he was just planning to let fireworks off at his mother’s address in south-west London. However, further enquiries were carried out and on 29 October 2018 Bishop was arrested at his mother’s home address. When detectives searched his address, they found several fireworks – some of which had been tampered with, as well as other equipment associated with making homemade incendiary devices, including fuses and remote control and ignitor. A firing device was also delivered to Bishop’s address two days after his arrest.
Officers identified that Bishop had bought a smartphone on 18 October 2018. The first searches made on the phone were for instructions on how to access the ‘dark web’ and he carried out research on how to conduct covert internet searches.
Further analysis of his device showed Bishop visited sites and viewed videos about the Manchester, London Bridge and Paris terrorist attacks. Detectives found a comment Bishop had posted on 24 October 2018 in relation to a video on Facebook about the victims of the Manchester Arena attack which ended with him saying: “don’t worry something bad is going to happen soon mark my words”.
Two ‘VPN’ apps were downloaded on to the phone – the apps are designed to hide which internet sites and online information the user has been accessing. However, when they opened one of the apps, officers found a page was still open, which showed Bishop had been researching further details on explosives detonators. Bishop had also carried out a number of online searches for Morden mosque.
Police searched Bishop’s mother’s address where they found wrapping that matched the fireworks at his home address. In the garden shed, detectives found a red suitcase inside which they found component parts which could be combined to create an improvised incendiary device.
Furthermore, detectives also found a number of hand-written notes by Bishop with detailed information on how to make various explosive substances, as well as information on how to access the dark web. The notes were deemed to be of use to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism.
After questioning and whilst further enquiries were being carried out, Bishop was charged a week after his arrest on 5 November 2018 and subsequently pleaded guilty and sentenced for the offences above.- UK Police
President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government plans to compensate victims of the Gukurahundi genocide which claimed thousands of lives in the Matabeleland and Midlands provinces in the mid-1980s.
Virginia Mabiza, the permanent secretary in the justice ministry, on Wednesday said that the compensation would take various forms.
Among these would be the exhumation and reburial of victims, the provision of counselling and medical services and the issuance of national identity documents to displaced survivors.
It is not immediately clear if there would be any financial compensation for survivors and their families.
“The ministry of home affairs and cultural heritage will facilitate the issuance of birth certificates and death certificates for victims affected by Gukurahundi. It will also facilitate the exhumation and reburial of Gukurahundi victims.
“We’re also implementing protection mechanisms for those affected by Gukurahundi to be free to discuss their experiences,” Mabiza was quoted in the state-owned Herald newspaper.
The term Gukurahundi is derived from the Shona language and is loosely translated to mean the “early rain which washes away the chaff before the spring rains”.
Under the watch of former president Robert Mugabe, his North Korean-trained Fifth Brigade led the brutal crackdown against civilians, mostly Ndebele speaking, in the southern part of the country under the pretext of looking for “dissidents”.
Until his fall in November 2017 from a military coup, Mugabe never apologised for the genocide which he described “a moment of madness”.
Mnangagwa was state security minister at the time. His rule has come under criticism for the failure to acknowledge the genocide and the various roles played by different people in the execution of Gukurahundi, with some of them currently serving in his government.
Perence Shiri, now the agriculture minister, was the commander of the Fifth Brigade during Gukurahundi.
Last month, Mnangagwa held a meeting with the Matabeleland Collective, an advocacy organisation that seeks to promote the development of the Matabeleland region.
Mnangagwa said the meeting was meant to show that his administration was not paying lip service to the demand for the development of the Matabeleland provinces.
Dumisani Nkomo, the head of secretariat in the Matabeleland Collective, told TimesLIVE in an interview on Wednesday that when it came to the Gukurahundi, his organisation had both short-term and long-term views on the matter.
“The issues of access to birth and death certificates as well as the exhumation are the first steps in addressing the issue. There are other critical steps such as acknowledgement, but it’s a good start to hold the government to account according to the implementation matrix which they have provided,” Nkomo said.
But lobbyists on Gukurahundi said the “lack of acknowledgement” of the genocide was a missing factor in the plans by Mnangagwa’s government and it should have started from there.
“Why is the permanent secretary announcing these plans on Gukurahundi? It must be a minister and there is a need to gazette the plans to make it legally binding.
“The compensation plans are also suspicious and happen at a time that finance minister Mthuli Ncube plans to compensate white farmers too. It looks like a box-ticking exercise by the government which must meet some conditions in order for the US sanctions to be lifted,” a lobbyist said.
Last weekend, vice-president Constantino Chiwenga attended the 25th commemorations of the Rwanda genocide in Kigali. Calls have increased from civic society groups that Harare should learn from Kigali how it has dealt with its genocide that claimed the lives of more than 800,000 people in 1994.
10 people are feared dead while several others were injured when a kombi collided with a bus just after the first tollgate outside Gweru along the Harare highway Wednesday evening.
At the time of writing, police were yet to confirm the actual number of deaths. Reports however indicated that they might be 10.
Information at hand suggested that the kombi driver died on the spot while the bus driver was amongst those injured and ferried to the hospital.- state media
By Own Correspondent| The Daily News has apologised to the First Lady Auxillia Mnangagwa over a report it published suggesting that she had hired a luxury jet to travel to Dubai.
The publication said it regretted publishing the story without verifying all the facts.
Mnangagwa, it turned out, had travelled on a scheduled Emirates flight.
A group of South Sudanese students are stranded in Zimbabwe after alleged failure by their government to clear outstanding arrears and secure flights for their home return.
Those affected are from two universities in Zimbabwe.
The students, in an April 8 letter, urged South Sudan government to urgently facilitate the release of funds approved by the council of ministers to support students studying abroad.
The funds, they stated, were meant to clearing arrears and buy air tickets for students who completed their studies to return home.
At least seven of the 22 students who completed their studies in December last year are still stranded, unless their government intervenes.
“We truly appreciated the scholarship chance we got and that is why we finished on time. Unfortunately, we are now being left stranded in Zimbabwe despite the enormous commitment from the highest authority due to lack of follow up or ill-intention somewhere within the ministry concern,” partly reads the letter.
Sudanese Students Radio Tamazuj interviewed said they are facing immigration problems since they are no longer eligible for study permit extension.
“Most of us are experiencing passport expiration that will affect our staying here in Zimbabwe. We simply need to go home because we completed what we were here for,” further notes the letter.
According to the students, each one owes the university nearly $7,000, meaning government has to pay $154,000 for the 22 of them.
However, of the 22 students who completed studies, 15 of them returned home, while seven of them have not yet secured air tickets.
John Aweenthi, a stranded graduate, said they have not received any communication from the education ministry on their issue.
“We are in a dilemma. Some of our colleagues have expired passports. They do not know what to do,” Aweenthii said.
He added, “We are urging the government to clear our accounts so that we go. Maybe we will one day find a job somewhere to do”.
Meanwhile Moses Kat, the President of South Sudan Students Association in Zimbabwe acknowledged the students’ concerns, saying he has been engaging the authorities in Juba on this matter.
“We have been pleading with the government so that they can clear the arrears and after the clearance of these arrears, they should be able to provide tickets to these students so that students who have completed their studies can be able to go back to South Sudan,” said Kat.
He added, “They cannot get their papers if these outstanding arrears are not cleared”.
Kat blamed the ministry of higher education for the students’ woes.
“We have written to the ministry of higher education, but they have not responded. Even the embassy wrote to the ministry,” he said.
According to the students’ leader, a total of 79 South Sudanese have been studying in at least five different universities in Zimbabwe.
The ministry of higher education could not immediately be reached for comment. — Radio Tamazuj
Correspondent|ZIMBABWE Electoral Commission (ZEC) Chairperson Justice Priscilla Chigumba says she and her fellow Commissioners are unfazed by the attacks they received during the 2018 elections and continue to receive on social media and other platforms.
Chigumba has said some of the voters and opposition leaders who picketed ZEC offices were ignorant of the demands they were calling for versus the Electoral Act.
Speaking on the sidelines of the 2018 Multistakeholder Post-Elections Review Conference currently underway in Nyanga, Chigumba said those threats and abuses did not make her a victim in any way as she rose above hate speech.
“These attacks on our personas in particular were basically different opinions by our voters on whether or not we had executed our duties well.
“We decided to ignore and proceeded with our mandate and I believe we discharged our mandate to the best of our abilities,” said Chigumba.
Chigumba became a subject of abuse especially online where mainly members of the opposition parties bullied her as they accused her of being a puppet of the ruling party led by President Emmerson Mnangagwa.
On two separate attempts, the MDC Alliance and other political parties threatened to invade ZEC offices intending to confront Chigumba on their demands which they wanted addressed a few days before the election.
She said the female commissioners had to undergo a counselling session as they assured themselves that they were on the right path.
“We had counselling amongst ourselves and told each other that we took oath of office and we agreed in terms of the Constitution that we run elections,” she added.
During the run-up to the elections, the opposition political party would picket ZEC offices and would come back with the same demands again despite the demands having been clearly outlined in the Electoral Act.
Chigumba said some of the voters and leaders who picketed their offices were ignorant of the demands they were calling for .
“It is my considered view that a lot of what transpired during the elections arose from a position of ignorance from our main stakeholders who are the voters,” she said.
Meanwhile, the Permanent Secretary in Ministry of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Ms Virginia Mabhiza, while giving her opening remarks at 2018 Elections Review Conference, encouraged participants to be candid in their deliberations.
Virginia Mabhiza speaking at Troutbeck Inn, Nyanga
ZEC Commissioner Dr. Qhubani Moyo said the the conference helps them look at what worked well, what did not work well and what needs to be done going forward as Zimbabwe builds up to the 2023 elections.
MDC’s ongoing congress nomination process has produced some surprises in the individuals chosen for the main elective congress scheduled for next month.
The youth assembly race is being led by Obey Sithole, who has received two nominations so far from both Matabeleland South and North ahead of the current secretary-general Lovemore Chinoputsa and fiery activist Haruziviishe Makomborero.
Chinoputsa has one nomination so far from the United States branch. For the main wing, although MDC leader Nelson Chamisa has since received three nominations so far, there has not been the same consistency for his lieutenants.
Chamisa is expected to be challenged by secretary-general Douglas Mwonzora, who has, however not yet received any nomination for the presidency. Mwonzora’s backers are adamant that tables will be turned in the course of the nomination.
For the youth assembly, Sithole said although the race was still on, taking the early lead is a clear message from young people that they want a refreshed assembly which will take a lead in fighting for their welfare.
“We are confronted with a very difficult situation which has the potential to destroy the future of this nation,” he said.
“Given that situation, the priority is to recruit and mobilise young people to take part in the political processes. We need to create a more responsible citizenry ready to exercise their constitutional rights in fighting against this military State.
“We will develop cadres who are ready to accept the streets as their second homes in pursuit of democratic change. We are confronted with a misinformed uniformed force, which as aiding the continued stay of Zanu PF in power.
“To that end, we will also reform the men and women in uniform.”
Clifford Malingwa was nominated for vice-chair, while Ostallos Siziba received nominations for the secretary-general’s position in both Matabeleland South and North provinces.
Chamisa got his third nomination while Tendai Biti, Welshman Ncube and Morgen Komichi who are eyeing the vice-presidency received a boost in Matabeleland North province.
Joel Gabuza was nominated for the chairman’s position while the current chair Tabitha Khumalo was nominated for the treasurer-general’s position. – Newsday
President Emmerson Mnangagwa fingered in the Hwange Scandal. Is this what he swore he will do?
Correspondent|PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa, Vice-President Kembo Mohadi and Justice minister Ziyambi Ziyambi were yesterday named in the ongoing Hwange Colliery saga inquiry being conducted by the Parliamentary Privileges Committee (PAC).
The trio’s names came up in the alleged bribery case, where a suspected dubious Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO) operative claimed that he had been sent by Mnangagwa and Mohadi to deal with problems at Hwange.
He then reportedly demanded a $400 000 bribe from businessman James Goddard, claiming that he was acting on behalf of four members of Parliament’s Mines Committee.
The four MPs were Temba Mliswa (Norton), Anele Ndebele (Magwegwe), Leonard Chikomba (Gokwe-Kabuyuni) and Prince Dubeko Sibanda (Binga North).
The alleged bogus CIO agent was named as Shepherd Tundiya.
Before the hearing commenced, Nyasha Makuzwa, who is Job Sikhala’s assistant lawyer and representing Ndebele and Sibanda, tried to stop the proceedings, arguing that Sikhala was filing a Constitutional Court (ConCourt)application for violation of section 69 of the Constitution, which stipulates that every person should be represented by a lawyer of their choice.
PAC chairperson Chief Fortune Charumbira refused to stop the proceedings and, instead, demanded that Makuzwa should provide documentary evidence to prove that the application had been filed at the ConCourt.
The Privileges Committee first heard oral evidence from Goddard, who disclosed that Tundiya facilitated a meeting between him and the four MPs, claiming that Mnangagwa had instructed him to look into the revival of Hwange Colliery.
Tundiya is also said to have claimed that the President had tasked him to sort out the mess at the coal miner after it emerged that one Mota Anjil was demanding foreign currency for services, thereby prejudicing government.
Goddard told Parliament lawyer Elizabeth Hove that Tundiya claimed Mnangagwa had sent him to facilitate a meeting with the four MPs.
He said they later met at his Harare offices.
“Mliswa spoke for about 30 minutes saying that Mnangagwa was encouraging members of government to join up with the private sector to form partnerships to improve the operations of the economy,” Goddard said.
He further said during the meeting, Mliswa left saying he was going to join his family for dinner.
He added that he remained behind with the other three MPs, where Tundiya then claimed that the MPs had demanded a $400 000 bribe to enable them to fly to Hwange the following day and would not go there with nothing.
Goddard told Mliswa’s lawyer, advocate Tawanda Zhuwarara, during cross-examination that the Norton legislator never personally demanded any bribe in writing or orally. It also emerged that Goddard did not know the agenda of the meeting held at his offices.
He also said Tundiya was not his agent.
“He (Tundiya) was not my agent. As far as I know, he was the guy requested by the President (Mnangagwa) to sort out Hwange and he showed me photos of himself with the Zimbabwe flag and he told me he had been sent by the President’s Office, he had been to Mnangagwa’s farm and the President had asked him to sort out Hwange Colliery,” Goddard said.
The businessman denied during cross-examination by Zhuwarara that Mliswa had personally demanded the $400 000 bribe, but intimated that it was something said in Shona, a language he was not conversant in.
Ziyambi’s name came in when Goddard claimed he had learnt that Hwange Colliery was under judicial management and had asked Mliswa to facilitate a meeting for him.
Chikomba’s lawyer, Simon Musapatika, then further cross-examined Goddard on the role of his client in demanding the $400 000 bribe.
Goddard said after the meeting, and when they were outside, he overheard Tundiya and Chikomba engage in heated discussions in Shona, where the Gokwe-Kabuyuni MP and Sibanda demanded money.
He said Chikomba later gave Tundiya his bank account, adding he again overheard the MPs demanding $400 000.
Goddard said after the meeting, he met Mohadi and told him that the four MPs had demanded a $400 000 bribe, and the VP advised him to then report the issue to Parliament.
Further asked by Musapatika to explain if he had ever received any official correspondence from the Office of the President and Cabinet (OPC), Mnangagwa or Mohadi to confirm that Tundiya was, indeed, working under the instructions of the OPC, Goddard responded to the affirmative. He said when he met Mohadi at one time, he asked the VP to verify whether Tundiya was, indeed, a member of the OPC.
“When I met Mohadi, I asked him about Tundiya and he indicated to me that he will revert back to me, but up to now, he has not reverted. When Mnangagwa officially opened Arcturus Mine, I phoned Mohadi and told him I was confused and told him what was worrying me. He said if I was prepared to testify, it was the right thing to do so,” Goddard said.
Musapatika then suggested that since Goddard could not understand the Shona used by Tundiya and Chikomba, there was a possibility that the MP was simply demanding his dues from Tundiya.
Pastor Alph Lukau's "Elliot"(Brighton Moyo) reportedly died and was buried in St Luke's village in South Africa. Do you think he really died or its another hoax by Lukau to evade being charged?
The government of Zimbabwe could have linked a fake earthquake to the cylone Idai attack last month, it has been said.
The government has claimed that a 3.8 earthquake hit the country last month at the same time as Tropical Cyclone Idai.
The claims are an addition to reports by the Headman for Ngangu, Mukono who last week claimed to ZimEye.com there were loud drum like sounds in the mountains just before the cylone effects hit the area.
Headman Mukono told ZimEye this was punishment on Christians who were praying in the mountains.
Minister of Information, Monica Mutsvangwa said: “Cabinet has also established that the scale of the disaster was to some extent exacerbated by a 3.8 magnitude earthquake which hit the Chimanimani areas shortly before the onset of the cyclone.”
Journalist Ndaba Matshazi commenting on his portal said, “The Zimbabwe government says an earthquake measuring 3.8 hit the country at the same time as Cyclone Idai, the bizarre thing is no one else detected the earthquake. Below is USGS data showing earthquakes around Africa in the past 30 days.”
The below state broadcaster article uses the headline noun “stampede” to describe drug supply availability at the state parastatal, NatPharm, but is this true? One news reader describes the article in the following words: “Stupid post. What we want are drugs in hospitals.”
Epworth Police (Sunway City) assault man, steal mobile phone, $230 bond, dump him at police station bleeding and then discharge him to seek medical services….
Mwonzora’s backers are adamant that tables will be turned in the course of the nomination.
Douglas Mwonzora
MDC’s ongoing congress nomination process has produced some surprises in the individuals chosen for the main elective congress scheduled for next month.
The youth assembly race is being led by Obey Sithole, who has received two nominations so far from both Matabeleland South and North ahead of the current secretary-general Lovemore Chinoputsa and fiery activist Haruziviishe Makomborero.
Chinoputsa has one nomination so far from the United States branch. For the main wing, although MDC leader Nelson Chamisa has since received three nominations so far, there has not been the same consistency for his lieutenants.
Chamisa is expected to be challenged by secretary-general Douglas Mwonzora, who has, however not yet received any nomination for the presidency. Mwonzora’s backers are adamant that tables will be turned in the course of the nomination.
For the youth assembly, Sithole said although the race was still on, taking the early lead is a clear message from young people that they want a refreshed assembly which will take a lead in fighting for their welfare.
“We are confronted with a very difficult situation which has the potential to destroy the future of this nation,” he said.
“Given that situation, the priority is to recruit and mobilise young people to take part in the political processes. We need to create a more responsible citizenry ready to exercise their constitutional rights in fighting against this military State.
“We will develop cadres who are ready to accept the streets as their second homes in pursuit of democratic change. We are confronted with a misinformed uniformed force, which as aiding the continued stay of Zanu PF in power.
“To that end, we will also reform the men and women in uniform.”
Clifford Malingwa was nominated for vice-chair, while Ostallos Siziba received nominations for the secretary-general’s position in both Matabeleland South and North provinces.
Chamisa got his third nomination while Tendai Biti, Welshman Ncube and Morgen Komichi who are eyeing the vice-presidency received a boost in Matabeleland North province.
Joel Gabuza was nominated for the chairman’s position while the current chair Tabitha Khumalo was nominated for the treasurer-general’s position. – Newsday
I’m very proud of the Angel of Hope Foundation, today, donating this ambulance which will serve the people of Zimbabwe. We are one nation, and we are all responsible for one another; let us all look after one another. pic.twitter.com/pCQjPpCDru
Who doesn't know that Angel of Hope belongs to your wife Auxillia? The same ambulance which was donated to that charity organisation is now donated out ??. pic.twitter.com/ZV9B0qPJhx
Below was Emmerson Mnangagwa’s Wednesday update as he was asked, “from Trump’s $2,5mln kwasara marii?”
By Emmerson Mnangagwa: It was a privilege today to meet captains of industry and thank them for contributing to the areas hit worst by Cylcone Idai. Schools are being adopted, children fed three meals per day and infrastructure donated. Thank you for working closely with us in the spirit of love, compassion and ubuntu.
I was also very proud of the Angel of Hope Foundation, today, donating this ambulance which will serve the people of Zimbabwe. We are one nation, and we are all responsible for one another; let us all look after one another.
Nicholas Tariro Toronga and Tinotenda Makuvire (ZimDgester)
By Pius Sawa| Two young Zimbabwean men have started a program to provide affordable cooking energy to rural households in the country, saving rural Zimbabweans from walking long distances to fetch firewood from diminishing forests.
Households have to cook meals at least three times a day, but families across Zimbabwe, especially those in the rural have only one source of energy: firewood. Not only is it dangerous to human health because of the carbon emitted, it is also harmful to the environment and contributes to climate change.
“Our target is Zimbabwe’s rural population. These communities mainly use firewood to cook. A few years ago, it used to be easy to access firewood, but because of massive deforestation, people now have to travel very long distances just to get firewood,” said Nicholas Toronga.
Nicholas and his partner Tinotenda Makuvire met in 2016 as Mastercard Foundation Scholars at McGill University, selected for the scholarship for their academic talent, social consciousness, and leadership qualities. As engaged students, the fellow Zimbabweans started discussing how they would use their education to benefit their community. Nicholas, who is pursuing his studies in finance, and Tinotenda, who is studying engineering, are building a low-cost bio-digester that will harness animal waste to produce biogas for household cooking. Their initiative, ZimDigester, will provide biogas to low-income Zimbabwean households.
In the past, it was women and children who would go to the forests to fetch firewood, but that is no longer the case.
“People are now relying on buying the firewood from local men who have seen this as an opportunity to make money and charge exorbitant prices for it. People have no other option but to buy this firewood. In a community where unemployment is high and people are already struggling, this just makes life extra difficult,” said Tinotenda.
According to data gathered by Global Forest Watch, Zimbabwe lost 373,000 hectares of tree cover from 2001 through 2012, which is about two percent of the country’s total forest cover. These losses are attributed to the use of forests as the main source of fuel in rural areas.
Nicholas observes that few measures have been put in place since the report was released, to protect forests. According to him, clean energy is the way to go of the future.
Since almost every household in rural Zimbabwe and semi urban, owns an animal, waste will be a readily available raw material for the generation of biogas.
“Most people in rural areas have domestic animals that they rear, and we are going to leverage that to power the bio-digester. So, in essence, everyone controls the source of fuel. If they purchase a bio-digester, they will have one less headache to deal with,” said Nicholas.
He said the bio-digester is easy to use and the only thing that the user has to do is to feed the animal waste and water into the bio-digester and let the digester do its work.
ZimDigester will first seek to sell 30 bio-digesters. Depending on early sales during the initiative’s initial rollout in the first two months, the project will continue to sell more bio-digesters to low-income families.
“We have developed our bio-digester and we are still iterating it to make it as efficient as possible, while also putting in place infrastructure on the ground for the project. This involves talking to the communities about the importance of preserving their forests. Our aim is to cover most of rural Zimbabwe in one year, but that depends on the success and feedback from the first phase of the project,” said Tinotenda.
The cost of one bio-digester is estimated to be around $85 US, with a lifespan of three years and with no repairs, meaning if every household can have a bio-digester, many forests will be saved as fewer trees will be cut down.
ZimDigester won the Resolution Social Venture Challenge in 2018, a competition that rewards compelling leadership and promising social ventures led by youth. These young leaders earned a fellowship that includes seed funding, mentorship, and access to a network of young global change-makers to pursue impactful projects in their communities. A collaboration between the Mastercard Foundation and The Resolution Project, the Resolution Social Venture Challenge provides a pathway to action for socially responsible young leaders who want to create change that matters in their communities.
Nicholas and Tinotenda are optimistic that they will overcome all the challenges to change people’s perceptions of the new, affordable, and clean energy solution.
“The opportunity we have been awarded through the Social Venture Challenge is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to give back to my community, something I have always been passionate about. We have been given an opportunity to change the lives of people in a meaningful way — and this is just the start of the change we can affect in our communities,” said Nicholas
By Own Correspondent- A Nyanga man’s body was discovered recently by the roadside in what is suspected to be an overdose of an illicit brew called kachasu.
Shame Mudakuenda (37) from Nyabanga village Nyanga was found dead at Chidokohori village on April 5 by a passer-by.
Manicaland police spokesperson inspector Tavhiringwa Kakokwa confirmed the incident.
The now deceased, a known imbiber in his village, had been taking some illicit brew, among them, kachasu, teku-teku and nipa at Manyau business centre.
He reportedly went home drunk at around 8 pm on April 4 and was found dead the following morning by one Lilian Satambara who was on her way to a nearby village.
Satambara later informed fellow villagers who later reported the matter to police.
By Own Correspondent- A Councillor for Ward 3, in Bindura Brian Kembo has been hauled to court charged with disorderly conduct after he allegedly stated that President Emmerson Mnangagwa is to blame for the high stress levels among citizens and for authoring Zimbabwe’s agonising economic crisis.
Kembo is being represented by Idirashe Chikomba from the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR).
This is a developing story. Refresh this page for updates.
By Own Correspondent| Didymus Mutasa has revealed that he never left Zanu Pf but was just a victim of former president Robert Mugabe’s purges within the party which sought to elevate his wife Grace.
Mutasa and Ambrose Mutinhiri, a former NPF leader who contested for presidency in the 2018 harmonised elections and lost dismally were on Tuesday re- admitted into Zanu Pf.
Said Mutasa:
“I never left Zanu Pf. It is the former president and his wife who pushed us out because he wanted to elevate his wife to become President. Let him hear now that i have remained Zanu Pf.”
By Own Correspondent| A student at Ezekiel Guti university has been suspended for querting why tje institution raised fees without consulting or notufying students.
Said ZINASU in a statement:
“Another shocking or rather obtuse suspension of ZINASU Comrade Chamu for questioning the administration on fee increment reached without consulting students.
By Own Correspondent- The World Bank (WB) has projected that the currently spiralling price increases in Zimbabwe will have a negative impact on the country’s growth prospects.
Earlier this year, the World Bank projected that Zimbabwe’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) would grow by 3,7% in 2019 while Finance and Economic Development minister Mthuli Ncube had put the growth rate at 3,1%.
Said WB Zimbabwe Chief Economist Marko Kwaramba:
“The increases in prices that we have witnessed since October last year will affect the growth rate for 2019. For 2018, in the first quarter the growth was real, but it was then disturbed by the last quarter.
“Zimbabwe at World Bank is classified as a fragile economy, but it is not fragile like Sudan or other countries that are in the warzone. The solution that has been propelled by those that have moved from fragility is to focus more on regional integration. So, Zimbabwe is a member of Sadc, African Union and Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (Comesa). If we facilitate intra-regional trade, then maybe they will be high growth for Zimbabwe”-Newsday .
By Own Correspondent- Government is enacting policies to facilitate the development of an enabling environment for internet connectivity to curb the effects of future natural disasters such as the one induced by Cyclone Idai in the eastern and southern parts of the country, a senior government official has revealed.
Information Communication Technology and Courier Services Minister Kazembe Kazembe said this while addressing the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) Forum in Geneva, Switzerland, on Tuesday.
Minister Kazembe said Zimbabwe cannot run away from its role in the creation of an enabling environment for ICTs.
He said:
“Even in this dire situation, dear WSIS participants, we cannot run away from the role of Government in creating an enabling environment.
“For Zimbabwe, this is not the time to make small plans or to come up with stopgap policies. This is the opportunity to put up state-of-the-art infrastructure. To use these devastated areas as the springboard for development of the whole country.”-StateMedia
GOVERNMENT has rescinded its order for mandatory vacation lessons during the April and August holidays for schools in Matabeleland North province.
The order had been made by acting provincial education director Jabulani Mpofu to enable the schools to improve their Grade Seven pass rates and make up for time lost during teachers’ protests at the beginning of this term.
The move was, however, fiercely resisted by rural teachers, who argued that the directive was made without their consent. The teachers also argued that the low pass rates recorded at rural schools were as a result of lack of teaching resources as well as poor working conditions.
Mpofu later wrote to district schools’ inspectors on April 8, saying it was now up to individual schools to decide whether or not to conduct the vacation lessons during the holidays.
“This serves to correct the previous communication on the 2019 April and August vacation schools during holiday,” the letter read.
“… only Grade 7, Form 4s, U6ths can attend the vacation school if the school can afford to hold it and for the number of days which the school has planned for, not necessarily the 10 days. No school is forced to hold the vacation school.”
He also urged school authorities to consult key stakeholders such as parents over vacation lessons.
Amalgamated Rural Teachers Union of Zimbabwe president Obert Masaraure said his union had written to Mpofu, expressing displeasure over his earlier order.
“Teachers in remote areas, deep down in the rural parts of Matabeleland North, like in Binga and Bubi, will now enjoy their holidays and have time to go back to their homes to bond with their families. Teachers will also have time to engage in means of getting extra income to augment their poor salaries. We formally wrote the provincial education director a letter, protesting his earlier order on April 3 and we are happy that he has reversed the unpopular decision,” he said.
MDC’s ongoing congress nomination process has produced some surprises in the individuals chosen for the main elective congress scheduled for next month.
The youth assembly race is being led by Obey Sithole, who has received two nominations so far from both Matabeleland South and North ahead of the current secretary-general Lovemore Chinoputsa and fiery activist Haruziviishe Makomborero.
Chinoputsa has one nomination so far from the United States branch.
For the main wing, although MDC leader Nelson Chamisa has since received three nominations so far, there has not been the same consistency for his lieutenants.
Chamisa is expected to be challenged by secretary-general Douglas Mwonzora, who has, however not yet received any nomination for the presidency. Mwonzora’s backers are adamant that tables will be turned in the course of the nomination.
For the youth assembly, Sithole said although the race was still on, taking the early lead is a clear message from young people that they want a refreshed assembly which will take a lead in fighting for their welfare.
“We are confronted with a very difficult situation which has the potential to destroy the future of this nation,” he said.
“Given that situation, the priority is to recruit and mobilise young people to take part in the political processes. We need to create a more responsible citizenry ready to exercise their constitutional rights in fighting against this military State.
“We will develop cadres who are ready to accept the streets as their second homes in pursuit of democratic change. We are confronted with a misinformed uniformed force, which as aiding the continued stay of Zanu PF in power.
“To that end, we will also reform the men and women in uniform.”
Clifford Malingwa was nominated for vice-chair, while Ostallos Siziba received nominations for the secretary-general’s position in both Matabeleland South and North provinces.
Chamisa got his third nomination while Tendai Biti, Welshman Ncube and Morgen Komichi who are eyeing the vice-presidency received a boost in Matabeleland North province.
Joel Gabuza was nominated for the chairman’s position while the current chair Tabitha Khumalo was nominated for the treasurer-general’s position.