Giant Pharmaceutical Company To Shut Down Its Operations

SOUTH African pharmaceutical group Adcock Ingram says it is assessing the viability of its continued presence in Zimbabwe, given the country’s deteriorating economic environment.

The Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE)-listed company has interests in flagging Bulawayo-based pharmaceutical manufacturer and distributor, Datlabs through a wholly owned subsidiary, Pharmalabs (Jersey).

“Operations in Zimbabwe remain unpredictable and investment may be required in the short to medium-term to recapitalise its facilities,” part of the statement accompanying the group’s results read.

“Consequently, the board is assessing the viability of the group’s continued presence in that country.”

Zimbabwe had begun to see renewed interest from foreign investors since long-time President Robert Mugabe was removed from power by a military coup in November 2017, but the tide seems to have turned, as the new administration under Emmerson Mnangagwa has failed to break from the past.

Mnangagwa’s government has come under fire for failing to address the country’s economy, which has taken a turn for the worst since he came to power.

Adcock Ingram revealed that turnover in its enterprises in Zimbabwe and Kenya collectively increased by 7,5% to R222,6 million ($16,28 million) compared to R207,1 million ($15,14 million) achieved in 2017, to register a trading profit of R18,3 million ($1,34 million).

“The positive performance is attributable in Zimbabwe to a significant improvement in demand for the top brands following improved stock availability, while the improvement in the Kenyan operation is due to strict management focus by the OTC Division from South Africa,” the company said.

Datlabs produces brands such as Cafemol, Panado, Solphyllex and Lanolene Milk under licence, but has been facing serious competition from imports, mainly from the Asian bloc.

Recently, Datlabs chief executive Todd Moyo told State media that the company required at least $4,5 million to upgrade plant and equipment.

The company also has plans to upgrade its Large Volume Parenterals plant, which would cut the firm’s import requirements.

NewsDay

Full Text Of Harare Mayor Councilor Herbert Gomba’s Press Statement On Vendors’ Relocation

Near Siyaso market in Mbare

PRESS STATEMENT ON VENDOR RELOCATION BY HIS WORSHIP HARARE MAYOR COUNCILLOR HERBERT THOMAS GOMBA AT TOWN HOUSE

29 JANUARY 2019

In the spirit and desire to accord the informal sector decent trading spaces Harare City Council is allocating additional trading spaces and reviving old and disused markets through the rerouting of mass bus transit system through the approved markets.

Bus terminuses at the old markets are being revived.

We therefore call on all informal sector members doing business at undesignated sites to approach their district offices for allocation.

To complement our efforts we are inviting stakeholders with capacity to construct temporary and permanent vending infrastructure at designated sites to approach council for space allocation.

All such engagements should be done through the Town Clerk’s office at Town House before close of business on Wednesday next week.

Council supports legal vending and has an obligation to avail sheltered spaces and where capacity is constrained, council has authority to seek partners for assistance.

All members of the informal sector who have been trading at undesignated and were moved from the illegal sites are advised to visit their nearest district offices for space allocation.

Relevant District Officers have been advised to attend to all space inquiries.

Taking up space at approved trading sites will eliminate the demolition of illegal structures and loss of investments.

Informal traders are advised to deal with council officials and help us eliminate the presence of space barons – who only take our money and do not invest in the provision of the trading spaces or their maintenance.

Business models will be discussed with the shortlisted stakeholders or partners.

South Africa’s Opposition Leader To Make Solidarity Visit To Nelson Chamisa

By Own Correspondent| The leader of South Africa’s main opposition political party Mmusi Maimane of the Democratic Alliance is set to visit Zimbabwe this week.

Maimane is expected to see MDC president Nelson Chamisa and vice national chairperson Tendai Biti.

Maimane is seeking to gather support for a regional intervention in Zimbabwe.

Said Maimane hile addressing the media:

“I will pay a working visit to Zimbabwe this week. I will meet with the current opposition leader, Nelson Chamisa, and former Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) leader, Tendai Biti, among others.

The purpose of this visit is to seek practical solutions to the ongoing crisis and garner support across the region for much-needed intervention in Zimbabwe.

Widespread civilian suppression, military-led violence, and bloodshed have ensued, as (President) Emmerson Mnangagwa’s Zanu-PF government has implemented what can only be described as a dictator-like military clampdown on citizens, which has to date claimed the lives of at least 12 people.

Zimbabweans are fleeing their country, as we are told by border officials that over 130,000 people crossed the Zimbabwean/SA border in a single day in mid-January. The situation is dire.

There has been no advocacy for the citizens, no justice for the deceased, and no protection of civil liberties for those who are currently detained.-TheEastAfrican

Warriors To play Crunch Match For Tuku

Oliver Mtukudzi in a game of soccer

Correspondent|THE Warriors will play their final AFCON qualifier against Congo Brazzaville on March 24 for the late music icon Oliver Mtukudzi.

Speaking at the funeral wake of the late icon, Warriors Manager Wellington Mpandare said they will dedicate the match to Tuku, who was a fan of the game.

“Tuku was an inspiration to a lot of people across the country so we have lost a great person all-round.

“As the Warriors, we feel it is worthy to dedicate our last game which is a decider to qualify for AFCON to him as our way of saying thank you for touching lives. We are playing for Tuku.

“We have set out to win the game so in honouring a legend we complete our goal and represent the country in Egypt,” he said.

Sunday Chidzambwa’s men lead Group G with eight points ahead of their last game at the National Sports Stadium.

Their rivals, DR Congo and Liberia contest in their own do or die tie as they have seven and six points respectively; the winner is guaranteed a place at AFCON 2019 finals.

To avoid the commotion that marred the Warriors’ 1-1 draw with DR Congo at the same venue, ZIFA has announced advance tickets for the potentially explosive clash with Congo-Brazzaville, who anchor the group on five points.

In a statement ZIFA said:

“Gate charges for the Warriors’ AFCON qualifier against Congo on 24 March are as follows ROG: $10 Bay 15-18: $50 VIP: $200. Ticket sales begin on 1 February at outlets and platforms to be advised. *No tickets will be sold at entry points on match day*.”

This last fixture will also pave way for positive reception of the COSAFA cup challenge that Zimbabwe has the privilege to host in May.

“Chamisa Needs Dialogue More Than Mnangagwa Because ED Is President While He Is Leader Of Opposition”: George Charamba

By Own Correspondent| President Emmerson Mnangagwa’ spokesperson, George Charamba has claimed that MDC leader Nelson Chamisa needs dialogue more than the government does considering he is a mere opposition leader.

Chamisa is on record callimng for dialogue accusing the Zanu Pf leader, Mnangagwa of snubbing calls for dialogue to resolve the country’s economic and socio political crisis.

However, Charamba said that Chamisa needs dialogue to save his political career since the issue of legitimacy was settled by the people during the 2018 harmonised polls.

While speaking on state-owned radio, CapiTalkFM, Charamba said;

One of the leaders of the opposition, still insists that his interlocutor (Mnangagwa) is illegitimate. He needs the dialogue more acutely than everyone else.

Let’s accept the verdict of the people. He (Chamisa) must acknowledge that ED is the president and that he is the leader of an opposition party.

South Africa’s Fikile Mbalula Says It Is In The Interest Of His Country For Zimbabwe’s Economy To Flourish

By Own Correspondent| South Africa’s African National Congress’s (ANC) elections head Fikile Mbalula said it is in the interest of their country for Zimbabwe’s economy to flourish considering the number of people that have migrated to his nation due to the economic crisis in Zimbabwe.

Mbalula said that South Africa has to assist Zimbabwe to find a solution to the challenges that the country is facing so that  Zimbabweans living in South Africa go back home.

Speaking to journalists in Johannesburg on Tuesday, Mbalula said:

Zimbabweans are here because there is no employment in Zimbabwe, so the economy of Zimbabwe must flourish. It is in our interest.

If Zimbabwe flourishes, Zimbabweans will go to Zimbabwe and work for their country. There is no employment there, they come to our country looking for opportunities.

Mmusi Maimane [the DA leader] is saying there must be sanctions on Zimbabwe. He supports undemocratic means and we are not supporting that. We are working with Zimbabweans to find a solution to their challenges.

Petrol is R45 a litre in Zimbabwe – what world is that? It is our neighbour next door. When the people of Lesotho, Swaziland or Botswana are suffering, they will come to our South Africa so we have got to work with these countries in our neighbours to ensure that we bring prosperity in their countries.

Zimbabwe is facing an economic crisis that has been ongoing for close to two decades. However, things have turned for the worse since former President Mugabe was pushed out of power by the military in 2017. This has resulted in an exodus of thousands of Zimbabweans, most of them trekking down to South Africa.

Telecom Companies Betrayed Their Customers By allowing Mnangagwa To Willy Nilly Cut Off Internet

Correspondent|Institute of Southern Africa (Misa) Zimbabwe legal expert Kuda Hove has said telecommunications companies betrayed their customers by failing to challenge government’s recent decision to shut down the Internet during recent protests against fuel price hikes.merryulp7

Speaking at an AMH conversations recently, Hove said telecommunications service providers should have asked their lawyers to look at the statute used by the State to shut down the Internet.

“…and that was a basic legal understanding that competent lawyers could have picked up and could at least have highlighted..,” he said.

Hove said government only has the right to shut down the Internet if the country was at war or in a state of emergency.

“Our argument was very simple. It was based on the premise that the government does not have the right when the country is not at war and in a state of emergency to shut down the Internet nationwide or any other form of communication,.” Hove said.

Speaking at the same event, NewsDay online editor John Mokwetsi said Internet shutdown destroyed any hope the outside world was holding onto that Zimbabwe was now on a new path under a new leadership.

“We lost an opportunity to show the world we are tolerant,” Mokwetsi said.

7 Zimbabweans Killed In Botswana

SEVEN Zimbabweans died in Botswana after the wheel of an overloaded and speeding Toyota Hilux truck they were travelling in came off and the vehicle rammed into a tree before overturning.

The accident occurred at around 2AM on January 18 in Sherwood village, along Martins Drift Road in Tswapong District.

The vehicle was ferrying 17 people including the driver, all from Tsholotsho district under Chief Gampu’s area, and travelling to South Africa via Botswana.

The driver and his two assistants escaped unhurt and fled the scene of the crash.

Botswana Police Service (BPS) spokesperson Assistant Commissioner Dipheko Motube confirmed the accident on Friday.

“We received a report of an accident involving a Toyota VVT-I from Zimbabwe which was travelling to South Africa via Botswana. The 17 people who were on board were all Zimbabweans. A wheel came off and the driver lost control of the vehicle which then veered off the road and rammed into a tree before overturning.
Seven people were certified dead at one of our local hospitals while seven others were injured,” said Ass Comm Motube.

The deceased who were buried in their respective homes yesterday were identified as Mongameli Mpofu, Lizwe Ncube, Kelvin Ncube, John Vundla, Christopher Vundla, Otilia Ngwenya and Phephisani Ncube.

The injured were brought home and admitted to Mpilo Central Hospital in Bulawayo.

Another Bus Robbed At Gunpoint

Lusaka bound Kabor Bus Robbed at gunpoint. There are unconfirmed reports that a Kabor Bus travelling from Harare to Lusaka was robbed by 3 men at gunpoint.

Kabor Bus Robbed

According to social media, a woman was shot in the process as 3 armed men walked away with cellphones and cash from the passengers. This is the update from social media:

A Kabor bus was travelling to Zambia from Harare with 50 passengers was robbed. At 139 Km peg the accused requested to relieve himself. The bus stopped and requested all other passengers needing recess to follow suit. When getting back 1 accused fired at the driver and missed him. Driver escaped. Other two accused among the passengers ordered everyone to surrender cash and phones. The armed accused who was at the door fired a shot towards a lady passenger hitting her on the arm, a ricochet hit another passenger. The accused escaped with the loot that included cellphones and money.

We are yet to find out how much was stolen when the Kabor Bus was robbed and we will update you as soon as more information is available to us.

ZIMSEC Website Crashes As Parents, Students Jostle To Log In For Results

THE Zimbabwe Schools Examination Council (Zimsec) website crashed on Wednesday, after failing to handle a huge spike in traffic generated through endless online queries by Ordinary Level students who are trying to access their November 2018 results released on Tuesday.

In a statement released on Tuesday, ZIMSEC said: “We are pleased to announce that, beginning with the November 2018 Ordinary Level Examinations.

“Results will be accessible to Candidates and authorised personnel online. This will be done through the ZIMSEC website: www.zimsec.co.zw.

“Instructions on how to access the Results Panel are available on the ZIMSEC Examination Portal page. A circular to this effect has been sent out to all concerned institutions. The ZIMSEC Examination Panel can be accessed from any electronic device that supports the Internet.”

Results on the Portal are in view-only mode, therefore, they cannot be printed.

The Results Slip which can only be collected by the candidates from their respective Examination Centres is the official document of ZIMSEC results.

However, candidates trying to check their results on the ZIMSEC website on Wednesday were welcomed by an error message that read:

The server is temporarily unable to service your request due to maintenance downtime or capacity problems. Please try again later.

The November 2018 Ordinary Level exams were the first to be written under the controversial new curriculum introduced by former Minister of Education Lazarus Dokora in 2016.

Mnangagwa Came Back Because Davos Was No Longer Relevant For Him, Charamba

Correspondent|Speaking in a radio interview this morning, presidential spokesperson George Charamba said that the Shutdown Zimbabwe situation is not the main reason President Mnangagwa came back to the country.

Mnangagwa Returns Home

He said the main reason was the British, Germans and French were not going to Davos so there was no point in attending. Charamba said Zimbabwe crisis was a “residual” reason.

He pointed out 3 things:

When we left Harare we had targeted 3 critical delegations Germans, French and the British. The 3 aborted the trip to Davos and it was unnecessary to go to Davos.

The success of the trip so far had far exceeded our expectations and the president was anxious to get back home to start implementing needs of the deals with the Belarusians.

A residual issue of unrest back home was not a big issue as the situation had stabilized. Vice President Chiwenga even advised the Mnangagwa to continue his trip to Davos.

Mutambara Takes Over Late Libyan Dictator’s Call For United States Of Africa

Former deputy prime minister of Zimbabwe, Professor Arthur Mutambara, whose country is in an economic meltdown, has told a British audience that the mooted “ever closer African Union” was “despicable” and instead suggested that a “United States of Africa” would be more beneficial to Africans.

Speaking at the Oxford Union Debate Society, University of Oxford in the UK, Mutambara said: “I stand before you in unequivocal and vicious opposition to the proposition that says: ‘This House would embrace an ever closer African Union’.

“For a start, we need the United States of Africa – a country – and not a union of sovereign states. We need to abolish national sovereignty and embrace continental sovereignty.”

“We must pull our individual national sovereignties into one indivisible and all-inclusive Pan-African sovereignty. In order to leverage Africa’s 1.2 billion people, massive natural resource base and potential $2.3 trillion GDP we need to operate as one country and not a union of sovereign states.”

Mutambara made his remarks on Thursday, 24 January 2019, amid mounting international criticism of Zimbabwe’s government which used the amy to put down protests sparked by astronomical fuel hikes.

-IOL

Who Really Is Responsible For The Violence In Zimbabwe?

President Emmerson Mnangagwa claims opposition fuelled deadly protests

A police officer removes tyres left by protesters to block roads during a demonstration in Bulawayo

The government in Zimbabwe has accused the opposition of orchestrating violent protests in which at least a dozen people have been killed and scores more injured.

Protesters have clashed repeatedly with security forces in the capital Harare and the southern city of Bulawayo since President Emmerson Mnangagwa, the successor to long-time ruler Robert Mugabe, announced a steep increase in fuel prices earlier this month.

As the security crackdown continues, The Week examines the claims made by Zimbabwe’s governing Zimbabwe African National Union – Patriotic Front (Zanu-PF) party.

What has the government said?

Mnangagwa claims the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) is behind the violence and looting that has accompanied the protests, as part of a campaign to undermine his rule following his narrow victory in a disputed election in July. 

“The MDC leadership has been consistently pushing out the message that they will use violent street action to overturn the results of [last year’s] ballot,” the president’s spokesperson, George Charamba, told the state-owned The Sunday Mail newspaper.

“It is a false narrative to suggest a causal link between the fuel price review and the violence unleashed in the streets by the MDC and its allies,” Charamba said, adding that the MDC leadership and its affiliate organisations will be held “fully accountable”.

What has the opposition said?

The MDC has denied the claims that it is behind the violence and has accused authorities of using the protests as an excuse to attack the country’s largest opposition party and its members.

“It was not the MDC that called for either the stayaway or the protests, we don’t believe in violence,” said the MDC’s president, Nelson Chamisa.

The opposition party says more than 750 people have been arbitrarily arrested, including five of its MPs and nine of its councillors, reports South Africa’s Eyewitness News.

 “Clearly, being in the MDC is being criminalised,” Chamisa said. “This has nothing to do with the stayaway. It has all to do with a vindictive agenda, to terrorise citizens and victimise them by subjecting them to fear.”

What are the facts?

On 12 January, President Mnangagwa announced that petrol and diesel prices would more than double, as the country struggles with its worst fuel shortage in a decade.

In response, the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions called a three-day general strike, and thousands of people took to the street to protest against the soaring cost of living.

The demonstrations began in Harare and Bulawayo before spreading to other cities across the country, and quickly turned violent.

Looting and property destruction has been widespread, with protesters setting fire to tyres and blockading roads. Officials said that a police officer had been stoned to death.

In response, the government deployed military personnel who fired live ammunition and tear gas at demonstrators. Internet services were also shut down for several days to prevent people from supporting or organising protests.

The security forces said three people were killed during the clashes, but according to the Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum, at least 12 were killed and a further 78 were treated for gunshot injuries.

The organisation also recorded at least 242 cases of assault, torture or inhumane and degrading treatment, and 466 arbitrary arrests and detentions.

A report published by the Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission (ZHRC) last week provided evidence of systematic abuses by security forces.

The ZHRC said that the authorities were using “brute, excessive and disproportionate force in most circumstances, thereby causing avoidable loss of life and also worsening the situation”.

Amnesty International has also documented hundreds of human rights violations by police officers and soldiers.

“The onslaught by the security forces in Zimbabwe has seen people killed, arbitrarily arrested, abducted, reportedly raped and jailed on suspicion of taking part in the protests. Children as young as 11 years old have been detained on frivolous charges,” said Amnesty’s regional director for Southern Africa, Deprose Muchena.

A soldier involved in the crackdown told The Daily Telegraph that troops had been ordered to go into the poor suburbs of Zimbabwe’s capital in order to locate opposition activists and “punish them”.

The man admitted to beating MDC activists, breaking their legs, and raping a woman. 

“Our lieutenant told us to go in and find them. We got our information of where the Movement for Democratic Change activists live from members of our party, Zanu-PF,” he told the newspaper.

Who is right?

The Zimbabwean government has provided no evidence to support its claim that the MDC is behind the violent demonstrations that broke out earlier this month.

Reports from local and international human rights groups and accounts from those involved in the crackdown indicate that the security forces are responsible for the worst of the bloodshed.

theweek.co.uk

Hwende Seeking Refuge In Namibia, Amid Reports He Is Wanted By Police

Chalton Hwende, a Member of Parliament for Zimbabwe’s Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) Alliance, is in Namibia amidst reports in his home country that he is wanted by police in connection with recent protests in which about 12 people died.

Hwende, the Deputy Treasurer of the MDC-Alliance that lost a presidential election in Zimbabwe late last year, is in the country and has asked Inspector-General of the Namibian Police Sebastian Ndeitunga for protection. According to media reports in Zimbabwe, the Zimbabwe Republic Police have launched a manhunt for at least 27 MDC-Alliance officials and activists, including their civil society partners, for allegedly organising #Shutdown Zimbabwe protests which later turned violent.

Although it is suggested in some circles especially in Zimbabwe that Hwende is in hiding in Namibia, his Namibian lawyer Norman Tjombe said the opposition MP is in the country to visit his relatives during the period which the Zimbabwean parliament is in recess. He is due to return to Zimbabwe in early February 2019, Tjombe said in a letter to Ndeitunga.

According to media reports in Zimbabwe, suspects on the police wanted list include, activist Promise Mkhwananzi, Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition (CiZC) chairperson Rashid Mahiya, Hwende and party spokesperson Jacob Mafume. 
Police spokesperson Assistant Commissioner Paul Nyathi was quoted saying they wanted ‘to interview’ these people with regards to the violent disturbances.

Tjombe’s letter to Ndeitunga, dated yesterday, said Hwende needed protection against unlawful abduction and the possible rendition to Zimbabwe at the hands of Zimbabwean Central Intelligence (ZCI).

“Should our client not be afforded the necessary protection, our client will not hesitate to approach the High Court of Namibia on an urgent basis for appropriate order, including an interdict,” reads Tjombe’s letter.

Tjombe said, as publicly known, Zimbabwe maintains the death penalty for offence such as treason, which is another reason that Hwende feared returning to Zimbabwe, especially at the time of the brutal security clampdown in response to the protest of the fuel increases. 

“In the course of January 2019, our client was informed, through reliable sources, that members of the Zimbabwean intelligence agency, namely the Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO), travelled to Namibia to abduct and rendition him (Hwende) to Zimbabwe where he is apparently wanted for treason, incitement to commit public violence and other charges,” further reads the letter.

 “According to the information, the members of the CIO already arrived in Namibia on or before 28 January 2019,” added the letter.

Yesterday former Zanu-PF Mashonaland Central provincial chairman Itai Dickson Mafios was convicted of inciting people in Bindura to join the violent MDC Alliance-led protests, The Herald reported. He was to be sentenced later in the day.

-New Era

Pay Attention To The Voice Of The People, Church of Scotland Tells ED

Former Moderator of the Church of Scotlandand current convenor of its World Mission Council, the Very Rev Dr John Chalmerssaid their church is ‘deeply disturbed’ by a brutal crackdown being waged against civil protesters in Zimbabwe.

In a proclamation, the Rev said it is time the chaos-torn country restore order and pay particular attention to the voices of its pregnable people.

‘We are deeply disturbed by the reports coming out of Zimbabwe and strongly endorse this statement issued by the Council of Churches in Zambia and other civil groups. It is time to restore order and to allow the voices of the most vulnerable to be heard,’ said Rev Chalmers. 

The Church of Scotland urged the Scottish and UK Governments to respond to a call for help from the Council of Churches in Zambia (CCZ).

In an open letter for help, the CCZ, itself a partner church of the Church of Scotland said it was ‘disheartening’ that the international community was not doing more to help stem the violence in its neighbouring country.

‘Civil society in Zambia remains deeply concerned with the economic meltdown in Zimbabwe and the reported human rights violations against citizens of the state,’ 

it said.

‘The onus lies with President Mnangagwa to be all inclusive in finding a lasting solution to the many challenges that the country faces. It is disheartening to note that the terrible situation in Zimbabwe has not garnered the desired response, both regionally and internationally.

As civil society activists, we cannot sit idle while our neighbours are being beaten, arrested, detained and killed.

‘Zimbabwe deserves better from its leaders and the international community,’

wrote the CCZ.

Africa and Caribbean Secretary for the Church of Scotland, Jennie Chinembiri, said the World Mission Council also received a ‘disturbing and saddening’ report. The account of the situation was from another partner Church, the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa, in which it said there was a ‘warlike feeling in the air’.

‘Perhaps the most shocking effect of the demonstrations and riots is the government’s reaction of shutting down the internet and social media sites for all,’ the Church said.

The Calvinist Church called for prayer as it admitted it was struggling to minister to its members in the face of the violence.

‘One of the hardest things for us ministers is how to minister to people at this time?

How to preach a message of hope in the face of the seeming hopelessness of our country? How to preach a message of comfort without sounding like ‘peace where there is no peace’? And how to help the people lament without leaving them in despair? Please do continue to hold us up in prayer,’ 

wrote the church.

Zimbabwe recently experienced a grim phase when an alarming number of its citizens were killed or assaulted. It was an effort by the state security to calm down commotion caused by the citizens. They had taken it to the streets to protest a steep increase in fuel prices that made its petrol the world’s most expensive.

The Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forumsaid the clampdowns by the state security left twelve people dead, seventy-eight with gunshot wounds, two-hundred-and-forty-two with dog bites and 466+ people arrested and detained.

The abuses have not calmed despite President Mnangagwa denouncing the violence as “unacceptable” and “not the Zimbabwean way”. Members of the police and the military have of late reportedly accused of continuing to carry out arbitrary beatings, rapes, and abductions.

The government accuses the opposition of kindling up trouble and the army said uniformed perpetrators of abuses are “bogus elements” out to tarnish its image.

Intimidated residents in the working-class suburbs of Harare and Bulawayo are locking themselves in at night.

“We have received very disturbing reports of a number of cases of women allegedly raped by members of security forces. Beatings, harassment and other abuses, have continued after Mnangagwa’s return and there are no clear actions from the government to hold accountable those committing the abuses,”

said Dewa Mavhinga, Southern Africa director for Human Rights Watch.

Vendors in the city centre were being routinely rounded up by the military, beaten and dumped at police stations, another human rights lawyer Doug Coltart said.

Police spokeswoman Charity Charamba, however, said their units have received no reports of rape.

Dozens of civil society leaders, opposition figures and activists have gone into hiding, fearing for their lives, with some of them being arrested, detained and abducted, Amnesty International said in a statement. It noted reported rapes, “lethal force” against protesters and the targeting of health workers who treat victims.

“Children as young as 11 years old have been detained on frivolous charges,” said Deprose Muchena, Amnesty’s southern Africa director. “The authorities must immediately stop this merciless crackdown.”

Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights said arrests of suspected protesters continued, with many denied bail.

South Africa’s opposition Democratic Alliance (DA) leader Mmusi Maimane has since threatened to jet into Zimbabwe to compile a human rights abuse dossier against President Mnangagwa and hand it over to the International Criminal Court in the Hague.

Maimane on Monday said efforts to pressure South African President and SADC chair Cyril Ramaphosa to intervene in the Zimbabwean crisis had not yielded results, hence the decision to refer Pres. Mnangagwa’s gross human rights abuses to the ICC and the UN.

“President Ramaphosa is mistaken to focus solely on the economic situation in Zimbabwe, while turning a blind eye to the dictator-like military clampdown on citizens, which has, to date, claimed the lives of at least 12 people.

Despite concerted pressure from the DA, President Ramaphosa and his government have failed to show leadership and intervene in what has now become a humanitarian crisis. It is vital that stability is restored in Zimbabwe and in the Southern African Development Community region,” he said.

The continued merciless crackdown of citizens by state security has since been cited as a major threat to efforts to bring President Mnangagwa and opposition MDC leader Nelson Chamisa to the negotiating table to resolve the current political and economic logjam.

-Hallelujahmag

Charamba Clarifies Why State Reacted “In A Forceful Way” To Protests

By Own Correspondent| Presidential spokesperson, George Charamba said that government reacted in the “very very forceful way” it did because there was an attempt to “redraw” the elections results from 2018.

Charamba said this during an interview with a local radio station, CapitalkFM and he was asked about why the military and police reacted with such heavy-handedness on Zimbabweans following the recent protests

Said Charamba: “Don’t ever get into a situation where you equate demonstration with violence or equate demonstrations with challenging the authority of the state. Because once that happens we are drifting in uncharted territory where only the fittest survive, and then you can’t allow that kind of a situation to happen.  So yes government will use a set of mix of measures which are appropriate to the situation.

“And given those symbolic gestures by way of attacking police stations trying to wrestle arms of war, we knew basically that we were dealing with a determined demonstrator who was out to, as it were, redraw the results of the July 30 elections. And what once that happens, it means the state will have to react in a very very forceful way.”

Presidential Spokesperson Says Peace Is Important Ahead Of The Internet For Investors

By Own Correspondent|President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s spokesperson, George Charamba has said that the peace is a priority ahead of the internet for investors.

Charamba had been asked by an interviewer during a program with CapitalkFM, “Do you not believe that its counter-intuitive for a nation that is desperate not only for foreign investment but has a serious need for an image overhaul? ”

He responded:

On Friday we met a Belgian investor who said “Mr. President, I don’t put my money in a country which is unstable, where law and order is not assured. I look at the authority of the state – can it secure my investments. I look at the judiciary – can it arbitrate in the event of difficulties. I look at the general work environment and say can my works work and go back home to come again. So really, lets not over dramatise false arguments, to think that investors come here for internet. They have better internet services in their own countries.

The interviewer interjected, “But they need them here when they come for business”.

Charamba responded.

Yes they do, but above all they need peace. And that’s the primary consideration. After all, why are we trading peace for internet?

The Zimbabwe government shut down the internet on two occasions in the week of the demonstrations, and blocked access to social media for close to a week. It was only ordered by the courts to restore access when activists approached the High Court.-CapitalkFM

“Mnangagwa Worse Than Mugabe”: Chamisa

By Own Correspondent| Opposition MDC leader Nelson Chamisa said the “terror” reaction to protests by President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s administration makes former President Robert Mugabe look like a baby.

Chamisa said Zimbabweans have seen an increase in the Mugabe type of terror despite the fact that the former strongman has been out of power for 14 months now. Said Chamisa:

This is now 14 months after Mr. Mugabe exiting the political stand, but what we are seeing is actually an escalation, not only of the Mugabe type of terror, but we are actually seeing something that makes Mugabe look like a baby in terms of terrorism. At night, people are no longer enjoying their freedoms, they are dragged out of their places of joy and entertainment, restaurants… (and) being beaten up.

ANC Visits ZANU PF, DA To Visit Chamisa Next Week

Correspondent|SOUTH Africa’s opposition Democratic Alliance (DA) leader Mmusi Maimane says he will visit Zimbabwe this week to seek solutions to the ongoing crisis.

“I will pay a working visit to Zimbabwe this week. I will meet with current opposition leader, Nelson Chamisa, and former Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) leader, Tendai Biti, among others,” Mr Maimane said on Monday.

“The purpose of this visit is to seek practical solutions to the ongoing crisis, and garner support across the region for much-needed intervention in Zimbabwe.”

Mr Maimane hopes to garner support across the region for intervention in Zimbabwean, which is facing its worst economic crisis since attaining independence in 1980.

His visit will be a test of the Zimbabwe government which has attacked him and described his comments on Zimbabwe as rubbish.

Among other things, the opposition leaders expect to discuss the DA’s intention to approach the United Nations (UN), the International Criminal Court (ICC) and parliament over what the party terms a political and humanitarian crisis.

“Widespread civilian suppression, military-led violence, and bloodshed have ensued, as (President) Emmerson Mnangagwa’s Zanu-PF government has implemented what can only be described as a dictator-like military clampdown on citizens, which has to date claimed the lives of at least 12 people,” said Mr Maimane

Earlier this month, Zimbabweans took to the streets, sparking a brutal crackdown by the country’s security forces.

Mr Maimane revealed that DA was on the verge of writing to the office of the prosecutor of the ICC to request an investigation into the conduct of the government of Zimbabwe as per Article 15 of the Rome Statute.

He added that the party would formally request the intervention of the UN Human Rights Council and an urgent joint meeting of the South African parliament’s portfolio committees on home affairs, international relations and cooperation, police and defence and military veterans to deliberate on the political and humanitarian crisis in Zimbabwe.

Currently detained

DA will also request the national assembly to urgently debate the impact of the violence by Zimbabwean government on South Africa.

“Zimbabweans are fleeing their country, as we are told by border officials that over 130,000 people crossed the Zimbabwean/SA border in a single day in mid-January. The situation is dire,” said Mr Maimane.

He said despite the humanitarian crisis, President Cyril Ramaphosa’s ANC government had “sat on its hands and watched on, employing its ‘quiet diplomacy’ policy”.

“There has been no advocacy for the citizens, no justice for the deceased, and no protection of civil liberties for those who are currently detained,” concluded Mr Maimane.

The Zimbabwe Government and the ruling Zanu-PF party yesterday dismissed as hugwash posturing the utterances by South Africa’s opposition Democratic Alliance (DA) leader Mr Mmusi Maimane who threatened to compile a human rights abuse dossier against President Mnangagwa for the International Criminal Court and the United Nations Human Rights Council.

“We have nothing to do with the DA, absolutely nothing. We have a relationship with ANC of South Africa, that is why we were meeting with them even today (yesterday). We never met with DA. We do not even know what they stand for. Who are they?” ZANU- PF spokesperson Simon Khaya Moyo is quoted by the State media saying.

“You can rest assured that what they are saying is hogwash but we are not members of the ICC at all and we have no relationship with them.”

“Mugabe Was Better”: Harare Vendor

By Own Correspondent| A street vendor from Harare who claims that she voted for Zanu-PF in the July 2018 harmonised polls, said she regrets the ouster of the former President Robert Mugabe.

Said the vendor in an interview with a local publication:

We want to be free, “open for business”. But there’s no business. Many bigs shops are closed. We can’t even become prostitutes because prostitution doesn’t pay much. I can’t prostitute yourself for 50 cents, what will I buy? Nothing! We want the president to tell us what to do. We want a marketplace [to use to sell our things ] for which we can pay at the City Council.

We also want them to give us back Mugabe. He was better. We were better off. I have spent 37 years in Zimbabwe under the Mugabe rule. I never needed to run from the police for vending. Tsunami (Murambatsvina) came but we continued selling. Murambatsvina would target illegal residential areas and not vendors. Kombis would keep moving. Last week there was no movement of public transport, we spent our days at home. What do they want us to do? How shall we survive in a country in which we voted and won?-BusStopTv

Mugabe Was A Better Dictator, Chamisa

Nelson Chamisa the leader of the main opposition party held a press conference today at their national headquarters. The press conference was used as to mystify the allegations that the party was responsible for the previous shutdown and violence around the county.

Speaking during the press Chamisa managed to highlight that the era of Mugabe was better than the one the country is facing.

The current situation makes Mugabe look like a baby in terms of terrorism. There has been no attempt by the government to indicate the number of deaths during this protest. We don’t organised protest by Bluetooth.”

“We are going to have our protest. Mnangagwa is the one who caused thus protest by hiking the fuel prices by 150%. Being in the mdc is been criminalized. Civilian politics is been criminalised.”

 We do our politics openly because we are civilian political party. We are now taking this matter to another level. They have started destroying properties in Mbare  and Chitungwiza, people who have been doing there business innocently in order to survive.”

“I don’t know how many bodies are needed to be seen on the streets before SADC does something. It had nothing to do with MDC. We don’t organise a stay away. What we want is to Stay at State House, we don’t stay away.”

ZIMSEC Results Now Accessible Online

By Own Correspondent| Speaking to the media in Harare on Tuesday, Zimsec chairperson Eddie Mwenje said candidates can now view their results through a recently introduced online portal.

The online option will be through the Zimsec website www.zimsec.co.zw and instructions on how to access the results are available on the Zimsec examinations portal page.

Alternatively students can collect the results from their respective centres.

Kasukuwere’s Brother Dickson Mafios Jailed For #Shutdown Zimbabwe Protests

By Own Correspondent| Former Zanu-PF Mashonaland Central Chairperson who is also brother to former cabinet minister Saviour Kasukuwere, Dickson Mafios was sentenced to 2 years behind bars for inciting violence in Bindura.

However, 10 months of his sentence were suspended on condition that he does not commit a similar offence within five years.

Mafios will serve an effective 14 months in prison. Mafios, who was represented by Graciano Manyurureni made a plea for community service on medical grounds and the plea was considered in the suspended sentence.

Prosecutor Carol Mupazviriwo told the court that on the 15th of this month, Mafios arrived  at Club 10, Chiwaridzo Shopping Centre and challenged people to stand up, burn and destroy property in solidarity with Harare and proceed with a total shutdown. Mafios allegedly made demeaning remarks about President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s ascendancy.

In his defence, Mafios said he retired from politics, arguing that the allegations were a fabrication by former colleagues meant to settle political scores. However, the court found Mafios guilty considering his convenience to the place of the offence and found out that the remarks resonated with events which prevailed in other parts of Zimbabwe.

The court also took into consideration that Mafios is not a first offender.t.-StateMedia

Zim Health Sector Plagued By Problems As Mutoko Records Cholera Outbreak

An 18-year-old Mutoko man has succumbed to cholera, with four others currently admitted as the country records a fresh outbreak of the medieval waterborne disease.

Mashonaland East provincial Epidemiology and Disease Control officer Paul Matsvimbo confirmed the fresh outbreak yesterday and said government had since set up two treatment camps in the area.

“I confirm the death of an 18-year-old male adult in the Rukanda area, about 15km from Mutoko Centre. We received a report of a suspected death by cholera from a village health worker. Our team then took samples, tested them and it came out that he had died of cholera. Currently, three members from the homestead are admitted and recovering well after testing positive to cholera,” he said.

“Another person from the area is admitted as well. We have set up two treatment centres, one at Mutoko Hospital and another near the homestead. We are happy with the support we are getting from partners like World Health Organisation as we work flat out to combat cholera.”

The fresh outbreak comes barely a month after the death of eight people in the Nyamutumbu area of Murewa, who contracted the disease at an apostolic shrine.

The deceased were all members of the Johanne Marange Apostolic sect.

Matsvimbo said 35 cases of cholera had so far been recorded in Nyamutumbu and government had since engaged partners from the Christian community for awareness campaigns.

“As of January 24, we have 35 line cases, including eight deaths in Murewa. We are working in partnership with organisations like Evangelical Fellowship of Zimbabwe and Higher Life Foundation, among others doing hygienic awareness campaigns in the affected area. A borehole has since been drilled at one of the shrines. Some of the sect members were trained to become hygiene champions,” he said.

-Newsday

Police And Soldiers Should Not Be A Law Unto Themselves

The Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) has said members of the security forces are not above the law and urged victims of brutality to report to the police for justice to take its course.

Hundreds of people have reportedly been brutalised by soldiers and police officers during the crackdown on recent protests, while several women also revealed falling victim to rape.

Addressing journalists in Harare yesterday, police spokesperson Commissioner Charity Charamba said any abuse should be reported to the law enforcement agents, with a view to arresting perpetrators and gathering evidence to initiate interventions so that victims receive medical care.

“Without being discriminatory, we are alive to the fact that women and children suffer the brunt of any conflict the world over, hence our call for all those who might have been affected to come forth. We reiterate that all cases reported to us will be handled in a professional manner which accords victims full protection of the law and privacy,” she said.

Charamba said police did not condone any unlawful conduct by security forces.

She said women who were living in fear of stigma or mistrust should be bold enough to approach the police.

“Some victims may be scared to report for one reason or the other. It might be fear of reprisals, stigma or mistrust but we are saying if such heinous acts are allowed to go unresolved, they have lasting traumatic implications on the victims,” Charamba said.

“The law is clear; for each and every offence, there should be redress or a penalty, hence our passionate appeal to members of the public to report.”

Musasa Project director Netty Musanhu said there was need for women to report any abuse against them and her organisation stood ready to facilitate and assist the victims.

“It should never be allowed to happen again. We have had a lot of cases of gender-based violence in this country and if we allow the situation in every chaos for women to be violated and it goes unnoticed or unreported, we are creating a society that is characterised by chaos,” she said.

Adult Rape Clinic manager Rudo Mashingaidze said there was need for rape victims to come forward and get assisted with pregnancy and sexually transmitted disease interventions.

Over a dozen women in Harare last week claimed they were raped by members of the security forces and in many cases without protection, sometimes in the presence of their families, as punishment for participating in the recent mass protests.

Police have arrested and suspended a police officer who was filmed assaulting a handcuffed civilian along Chiremba Road in Epworth.

They are also now looking for other members of the security services involved in the attack of civilians during the recent crackdown on opposition supporters.

Charamba said one Constable Makumire had been arrested for assault and described him as one of the “rogue elements” within the security services as he committed the offence while on suspension for theft.

“Constable Makumire is seen in the video clad in civilian attire with a satchel strapped on his back, assaulting the victim. The member was not on official duty during the time of the offence as he is on suspension,” she said.

“Earlier reports had indicated that the video was shot in 2016. However, upon further clarification from (the) investigating team it was established that the video was actually shot on Saturday 26 January, 2019. Investigations are widening to account for the remaining members of the security services captured in the video.”

-Newsday

Petina Gappah Appointed On Russia-US Dispute Adjudication Panel

Zimbabwean lawyer and author, Petina Gappah has been appointed to a three-member panel expected to adjudicate a dispute between the Russian Federation and United States of America.

Breaking the news on her Facebook page, Gappah said she is honored to serve on this panel which includes Ambassadors of Uruguay and Pakistan.

READ PETINA GAPPAH FULL TEXT ON HER APPOINTMENT BELOW…

It’s now official, so I can share it here. The Director-General of the World Trade Organization has appointed me to a three-member panel to adjudicate a dispute between the Russian Federation and the United States of America. It is a huge, billion-dollar dispute, part of an ongoing and increasingly fractious trade conflict between the two countries.

The actions taken by the Trump administration have raised significant interest; not only have other WTO Members complained about the same issues and established their own panels, no less than 21 WTO Members have registered as third parties in our panel, among them major trading parties like China, India, Japan, Brazil and the European Union.

It is a real honor to serve on this panel with my co-panelists, Ambassador Ehlers of Uruguay, our chair, and Ambassador Shah of Pakistan. Panelists serve in a part time capacity, working from wherever they are based and traveling to Geneva as needed for meetings and hearings.

So this fits nicely with other things I am doing, winding up my work on ZIDA, which is now before parliament, and starting my book tour.

I am delighted to be returning to service at the WTO. It feels like coming back home. But this time, as an adult.

Regular As Clock, NANGO Calls For Dialogue For “Rule Of Law”, Yet Already Accepted Rigged Elections

By Nomusa Garikai| The last two weeks have seen stay-aways to protests the soaring cost of living turn into street protests and looting.

The Zanu PF government has, as expected, responded with an orgy of wanton violence; hundreds were arrested, hundreds of thousands were beaten up and/or raped and 25, according to some reports were shot dead. 

This is a regime that determined to the people complaining against rigged elections and the worsening economic meltdown at all cost, The populous are expected to suffer and die in silence like sheep in a slaughter house. 

Regular as clock work, the workshops (talk-shops really), reports, recommendations, etc. on the stay-away, street protests and orgy of violence from Zimbabwe’s bloated NGO community have started coming out. 

“In pursuit of a Zimbabwe people want, which is characterized by rapid and sustainable economic, social and political development underpinned by the rule of law, constitutionalism and unity, NANGO proffers the following recommendations for consideration:” said National Association of Non-Governmental Organisations (NANGO). There are so many NGOs is Zimbabwe NANGO is the official umbrella body of NGOs operating in Zimbabwe.

1. Call to candid, inclusive and open national dialogue: The mammoth task ahead of Zimbabwe on the economic, social and political sphere demands more structured multi-stakeholder collaborations and partnerships between government, business, non-state actors and citizens on actions and activities which are crucial in addressing challenges bedeviling the country.

We urge President Emmerson Mnangagwa to expedite the national dialogue involving key political parties, civil society, churches to resolve a myriad of issues faced by the nation. 

2. Rule of law and constitutionalism: We implore the government to investigate murders, assault, torture and other human rights abuses that were reported and bring all perpetrators to justice.”

The report goes on to list 9 recommendations in total and all they usual platitudes. This is very predictable and monotonous to the point of foolishness! 

NANGO is one of the many who have been calling for “all stakeholders’ meeting” but will not say what what exactly must be discussed?  

NANGO says it wants “Rule of law and constitutionalism: We implore the government to investigate murders, etc., etc.” This is just a cliché. If these NANGO members were serious about wanting rule of law and constitutionalism then why have they done nothing to stop Zanu PF rigging last year’s elections in the first place or stopping the regime getting away with it.

By addressing this vote rigging and, per se, illegitimate Zanu PF regime as “the government” NANGO have tacitly accepted the regime as the de facto legitimate government.

Zanu PF has never ever held free, fair and credible elections in the last 38 years and hence the reason why the nation is in this mess. And yet, even now with the nation up to her eyes in this economic and political nightmare we still have some people pretending they do not know what constitutes free, fair and credible elections!

The Zimbabwe we want will never come to pass as long as those calling for rule of law, etc. are only paying lip service to rule of law, etc. 

“Alive to the economic recession, coupled with governance deficit, impunity, social, economic and political exclusion that has seen the majority of the population particularly the marginalized susceptible to hunger, social dislocation of families, high levels of poverty, unemployment and underemployment, human rights violations as well as severe shrinking of NGOs’ operating space,” NANGO pontificated. 

The truth is NGOs do not give a damn about the economic recession, the serious human rights violations, etc. Indeed, they have profited from all the economic and political mess.

The madness and orgy of violence of the last two weeks have created thousands of man-years work for the NGO directors all paid for by naive and gullible but very generous donors! 

Corrupt and tyrannical regimes do NOT shrink NGOs’ operating space, they expand it. 

NGO and religion are the two social sectors which have grown in leaps and bonds in Zimbabwe in the last 38 years and the directors and the pastors are living in comfort and luxury, comparable to that of the political ruling elite and their cronies. 

NGOs and Churches are doing well thanks to the corrupt, tyrannical and dysfunctional political systems there is now a symbiotic relation between political and civic leaders.

Many politicians have cultivated good relationships with church leaders with many a politician becoming church leaders in their own and church leaders have become self-appointed political commissars on root to a political career. Call it civic society and politics cross pollination! 

Whilst civic society may publicly criticise one side or, on very rare occasions, both sides of the political establishment, civic leaders know there are lines which they must never cross. Of all the country’s brigade of NGOs only the Catholic Church has dared to tell Zanu PF to its face that last July’s elections were rigged. 

And, as if to attorn for their honesty, the Catholic Bishop have been bending over backwards to underline they are NOT asking for Zanu PF to step down.

They want the Zanu PF thugs to lead the national dialogue hopefully leading to a GNU in which Zanu PF will call the shots. 

Civic society has been divided along party lines with pro-Zanu PF church leaders like Wutaunashe taking up the party’s propaganda lie of blaming sanctions for the nation’s economic ills.

He would never admit that corruption is the cancer killing the economy even after Mugabe confessed in 2016 to $15 billion in diamond revenue being swindled. 

Neither Mugabe nor his successor, Mnangagwa, have arrested even one swindler and there is every reason to believe the swindling is still going on to this day. No nation, much less one with a mere $10 billion GDP like Zimbabwe, can sustain a $15 billion haemorrhage. Wutaunashe and others will not even acknowledge corruption is a problem. 

Many NANGO members have remained doggedly faithful to MDC leaders, they have cheered and applauded the oppositions even when the latter failed to implement even one reform during the GNU, for example. 

Linda Masarira, a human rights activist turned politician, confessed of how the NGOs and the opposition worked together to falsified their activities to defraud the naive and gullible donors.

The mission statement of each and everyone of Zimbabwe’s army of NGOs, if they all had one, would claim they work to establish a free, just and prosperous Zimbabwe.

The irony is Zimbabwe would have become a free, just and prosperous nations decades ago if those working in civic society had pay little more than lip service to their respective organisation’s mission statement to ensure their organisation remained relevant and to secure their own job. 

A politician’s job is never done, this is certain true of Zanu PF and MDC politicians. If we accept the vague definition of the politicians’ work of creating a free, just and prosperous nation, then Zanu PF politicians’ work load has increased 100 fold, at least.

Compared to 1980 since the ordinary people have moved from third class citizen to serf whose freedoms and rights are not worth even the paper they are written on. 

On the economic front the country’s per capita GDP was US$ 942 in 1980 it dropped to a record low of $479 (or 2.7% of US) in 2008 and was $1268 (3.8%) in 2018. As we can see above, whilst the economic meltdown is getting worse, Zanu PF has given up all hope of an economic recovery and is retaining its iron grip of power by stepping up its political repression, instead. 

The need for democratic change in Zimbabwe is greater now than in 1999 when MDC was formed. The party has failed to implement even one democratic reform in the last 19 years. Not one. 

So both Zanu PF and MDC have their work cut out; so far, both have made things worse not better. The country’s civic society has grown and thrived to meet the demand born out of the politicians doing such a through job destroying the national economy and resorting to more and more barbaric measures to remain in power! 

9 Year Old Killed In Mock Suicide Game

A MOCK suicide went wrong when a nine-year old boy ended up dead while playing with mates.

The incident occurred last week Tuesday in Lupane when the boy was herding cattle with his Lusulu village mates. He hanged himself to death from a tree while playing mock suicide.

Matabeleland North provincial police spokesperson Chief Inspector Spiwe Makonese yesterday confirmed the incident.

“Yes, we received such a report. We appeal to parents to take care of their children so that they do not get involved in activities which endanger their lives, especially such activities which might be termed ‘don’t try this at home’.

“These activities involve imitating wrestlers, boxers, and some fiction like activities which usually come out on televisions, as these might lead to unnecessary loss of life,” she said.

A source close to the matter said the deceased was in the company of other boys when they started playing a mock suicide game using a rope; imitating how people would hang themselves.

“They were playing this game at the grazing area where they tied a rope to a tree and one would come and place his neck around the knot and let the rope tighten around him, imitating how people committed suicide. Other boys did that and managed to loosen the grip. However, when it came to the boy’s turn, he failed to remove the rope and efforts by other boys also failed,” he said.

The source said the other boys rushed back to the village to notify elders about the incident.

“However, when the elders arrived at the scene, he had already died. The matter was reported to Lupane police who attended the scene and removed his body. The body was taken to United Bulawayo Hospitals (UBH) for post-mortem,” he said.

An official at UBH mortuary, who spoke on condition of anonymity, yesterday confirmed that the body of the boy was conveyed to the morgue.

“It has since been collected for burial. But, indeed, the body came here for post-mortem which was done last week before his relatives collected the body for burial in Lupane,” he said.

Protester Sentenced To Three Years Imprisonment For Laying Stones On The Road

A 31-year-old Mutare man, who was among the 15 people arrested in connection with protests that rocked the eastern border city three weeks ago, was on Monday jailed for two years.

Provincial magistrate Mrs Sekai Chiundura found Trymore Nyamaropa guilty of contravening Section 38 (c) of the Criminal Law Codification and Reform Act Chapter 9:23 which criminalises the obstruction or endangering free movement of people or traffic.

Nyamaropa of Number 6 Moody Road, Palmerstone was being represented by Mr Blessing Nyamaropa of the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights.

Nyamaropa, who was denying the charges, was convicted after the State led by district public prosecutor Mr Tirivanhu Mutyasira presented overwhelming evidence that warranted a conviction.

The court heard that on January 15, police officers were on deployment gathering evidence in the city centre when they received information that the suspect was blocking Josiah Tongogara Road in Palmerstone with stones.

The officers arrested Nyamaropa in the act.

Mr Mutyasira urged the court to impose a lengthy jail sentence on Nyamaropa, arguing that his actions sabotaged the economy. He said the country bore the brunt of such acts of sabotage since the violent protests forced a complete shutdown of industry.

Mr Mutyasiri added that the stones that Nyamaropa placed on the roads were a danger to motorists. Mrs Chiundura concurred with the submissions of the State.

She initially sentenced nyamaropa to 36 months in jail before suspending 12 months for five years on condition of good behaviour. The trial of the other suspects was continuing at the Mutare Magistrates’ Courts.

State Media

Court Rules That Komichi Has A Case To Answer

MDC-Alliance vice president Morgan Komichi’s bid for freedom from charges of contravening the Electoral Act after he staged a sideshow during the announcement of Presidential election results at the National Results Centre last year, hit a snag yesterday after his application for discharge was thrown out.

In dismissing the application, magistrate Ms Ruramai Chitumbura ruled that Komichi had a case to answer and should be put to his defence.

She said the State led by Mr Michael Reza had managed to prove a prima facie case against him.

“In this case, the announcement of results had commenced and ZEC had taken a break before announcing the rest of the results,” said Ms Chitumbura.

“It, therefore, means that the proceedings had not yet ended and the accused had, therefore, interrupted, disturbed or disrupted proceedings.”

Komichi, through his lawyer Mr Obey Shava, had made an application for discharge at the close of the State case, arguing that the State had failed to prove a prima facie case against him.

In response, Mr Reza opposed the application for lack of merit. He argued that Komichi had a case to answer and should be put to his defence.

After hearing submissions from both parties, the court concurred with the State and dismissed Komichi’s application.

The matter was remanded to February 6 for continuation of trial. Allegations are that on August 2, Komichi was at Harare International Conference Centre waiting for the announcement of the results of the July 30 polls by ZEC.

During a break, Komichi went to the podium reserved for ZEC commissioners and announced that MDC-Alliance was disputing the election results, it is alleged.

Army And Police Clampdown On Citizens Far From Over, Govt Warns

The ZANU PF government has said security forces will remain firmly on the ground “to ensure that peace and sanity prevails across the country” following threats of another round of citizen protests.

In separate interviews, Home Affairs and Cultural Heritage Minister Cain Mathema and Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services Minister Monica Mutsvangwa assured Zimbabweans that they were secure.

“The security forces have always remained on high alert and firmly on the ground,” said Minister Mathema. “We are ready for anybody (hooligans) and the law will take its course. My ministry and the ZRP will do their best to maintain the law.

“We don’t make the laws, but we enforce them and everybody should operate within the confines of the law. Look at the nonsense they recently did, destroying property, killing people and burning cars.”

Minister Mathema said Government will not fold its hands and watch lawlessness taking place in the country.

He said they were aware of some people who wanted to illegally exhume remains of the dead and use them to demonstrate in the country.

Minister Mathema warned such people that they would be arrested and would face the full wrath of the law.

“This is uncultural, they will be arrested,” he said.

In a separate interview, Minister Mutsvangwa said there was no need to continue calling for a stay-away and those that were doing so were the country’s detractors who wanted to divide the people.

“As I have been alluding earlier on, the Government’s position is to guarantee security of the people,” she said. “Those that continue to call for the stayaways are detractors who want to incite our people.

“The people should know that the peace we are enjoying is not a free gift and we should continue safeguarding it. Zimbabweans are peace-loving people and we should come together. There is no need for stayaways.”

State Media

ED Under Pressure To Withdraw Soldiers From The Streets

President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government is under withering pressure to immediately withdraw troops deployed across large swathes of urban areas following protests over fuel price hikes.

This comes as soldiers are being accused of viciously beating up residents in high density suburbs and continuing to carry out attacks on selected targets.

The crackdown has largely targeted high density suburbs in the capital Harare and the second city of Bulawayo in what is being seen as a bid to instil fear in communities, imposing their control over the ghettos and as a form of punishment, rights groups have said.

National Association of Non-Governmental Organisations (Nango) — a non-party political, non-profit making organisation and non-denominational coordinating body of over 1 000 NGOs in Zimbabwe — pleaded with government to remove the soldiers saying their heavy-handedness has led to injuries, deaths and in some cases rape.

Soldiers and police have allegedly raped and sexually assaulted dozens of women and girls in a campaign to punish urban communities for the fuel hike protests that turned violent — acts that constitute crimes against humanity.

“We are still concerned with the continued presence of soldiers within communities and demand that soldiers immediately go back to the barracks and police play their role of protecting and serving citizens,” Nango said.

Mnangagwa, who was forced to cut short his crucial visit to Europe and central Asia to drum up investment to attend to the festering crisis back home, has denounced the continuing violence as absolutely “unacceptable”.

He tweeted that violence or misconduct by the country’s security forces is unacceptable and a betrayal of the “new Zimbabwe”, and shall be investigated.

Home Affairs minister Cain Mathema said the rights violations are being probed.

Nango slammed what it called “the use of the army in fighting political battles”, suggesting that soldiers should stick to protecting civilians.

“In the same vein, we condemn the law enforcement agents that exude a semblance of being political. Law enforcement agents should at all times stick to their constitutional mandate. We therefore demand that political parties should refrain from giving instructions to enforcement agents,” Nango added.

Nango also condemned the wanton attacks and abductions of civilians and has demanded an immediate end to abuses to ensure citizens’ security.

Innocent members of the public allegedly suffered injuries from assaults with sharp objects, booted feet, batons, sjamboks and tarmac abrasions as the security forces were hunting down protesters.

State rights body Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission (ZHRC), significantly, has also castigated use of the military in the repression.

“It is therefore disturbing to note that the deployment of the army in quelling civilian disturbances leads to loss of life and serious bodily injuries and other human rights violations, yet the government continues to make such deployments,” ZHRC commissioner Sheila Hillary Matindike said.

Amnesty International on Friday called on Zimbabwean authorities to act swiftly to ensure security forces are held to account for ongoing brutal human rights violations, including rape, torture, beatings and killings of civilians.

“The onslaught by the security forces in Zimbabwe has seen people killed, arbitrarily arrested, abducted, reportedly raped and jailed on suspicion of taking part in the protests. Children as young as 11 years old have also been charged,” said Deprose Muchena, Amnesty International’s regional director for Southern Africa.

“The Zimbabwean authorities must immediately halt their menacing threats towards civil society leaders, activists, opposition leaders and suspected organisers of protests. The authorities must ensure that those who violated and continue to violate human rights face justice.”

This comes as the international community has called on government to put a stop to the crackdown which has seen soldiers sexually assaulting women in some parts of Harare.

The British State minister for Africa at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office Harriet Baldwin has expressed her disgust over the rape reports and has called on Mnangagwa to investigate the issue.

“I’m sickened at reports that Zimbabwe’s security forces have raped civilians during their violent crackdowns. Sexual violence is an atrocity and who is commanding these forces? The UK urges Mnangagwa to ensure these perpetrators are brought to justice,” Baldwin said.

Nelson Chamisa’s opposition MDC Alliance said in a statement last weekend it was shocked by the surge in allegations of State-sponsored rape cases and harassment of the victims.

“Some of the women who were interviewed were followed, brutalised and arrested,” Bekithemba Mpofu, the MDC deputy national spokesperson, said.

— DailyNews

Zim Inflation Soars Yet Again, This Time Under Mthuli Ncube’s Eyes

Political analyst, David Moore, says Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s credibility is diminishing – as tensions continue to rise over inflation rates and a hike in fuel prices.

Violent protests erupted earlier this month following a massive hike in fuel prices.

Economists say Zimbabwe’s inflation rate has hit 290% – the second highest in the world after Venezuela. Inflation is being driven mostly by the shortage of foreign currency.

Moore says government has allocated buses for people to travel in – after the price of fuel skyrocketed, which resulted in the halting of other transport services.

“Mnangagwa was supported to a large extent by many when they got rid of Mugabe but that respect diminished very quickly when demonstrations came out in January and at least 12 people were killed. We are seeing more and more reports of soldiers looting, raping. Today, you get on buses which are run by the army as the prices were going up for the kombis there. Now they have control of these buses and charging cheaper rates. People are put on them like the military does and the buses don’t really know where to go; so it takes hours where you want to go.”

-SABC

Lawyers, New Prosecutor General Fight Over Corruption Claims

Law Society of Zimbabwe (LSZ) has slammed Prosecutor-General (PG) Kumbirai Hodzi after he alleged legal practitioners dominate the list of corrupt officials, suggesting the allegations are exaggerated and disparaging in nature.

who was on Wednesday sworn in as the substantive PG, said in an interview with State media that the most heinous corruption is emanating from the legal practitioners.

The LSZ denied the corruption allegations, and said Hodzi never raised the issue with them even though he has been in office for months.

“Is the PG not convicting these lawyers before investigations are concluded? It is disconcerting that Hodzi having been in this office for six months in an acting capacity never saw the wisdom in bringing such serious allegations to the attention of the Law Society Council.

“One would wonder why these lawyers who are alleged to be corrupt are not being prosecuted, especially when the PG seemingly suggests that he is armed with incriminating evidence against these lawyers,” LSZ said in a statement. 

-Daily News

Mutare Man Rapes 7-Year-Old Niece

A 45-year-old Mutare man has been arraigned in a Mutare magistrates’ court for allegedly raping his seven-year-old niece.

Jonathan Chirwa, 45, of Dangamvura, was not asked to plead when he appeared before magistrate Perseverance Makala.

He was remanded in custody to February 4 and advised to apply for bail at the High Court.

Chirwa is being charged with rape as defined by section 65 (1) of the Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act chapter 9:23.

According to State papers, Chirwa allegedly raped his niece on January 4 and the crime was discovered two days later due to a drastic change in her behaviour.

He allegedly interrupted her play by inviting her into his house where he raped her once.

Chirwa threatened to assault the Grade One child if she reported the abuse.

On January 6, her mother confronted the minor as she had begun exhibiting a completely different personality during which she disclosed the abuse.

She was taken to Dangamvura police where the matter was reported, leading to Chirwa’s arrest. The girl was medically examined and the medical report will be used as evidence during trial.

-Daily News

Chombo Takes Fight For Freedom To High Court

THE High Court is tomorrow set to hear an application to permanently halt criminal proceedings against former Finance minister Augustine Chombo, charged on suspicion of corruption, including trying to defraud the central bank in 2004 and being a criminal nuisance. 

Chombo, a staunch ally of former president Robert Mugabe, has said in his application he was illegally detained after the military seized power in “Operation Restore Legacy”, and kept blindfolded for nine days after being arrested at his home on November 15 in 2017.

He claims he was assaulted  when he was held incommunicado in army detention.

The former minister — whose prosecution was temporarily shelved last year pending the hearing of the constitutional application for stay of proceedings — is arguing that his constitutional rights were infringed when he was detained illegally.

“I am making this constitutional application in terms of section 85 (1) (a) of the Constitution of Zimbabwe, 2013, seeking a declaration by this honourable court in exercise of its jurisdiction in terms of Section 171 (1) (c) of the Constitution. As an appropriate relief in respect of the aforesaid infringements, I am seeking an order permanently staying my criminal prosecution,” he said in his application.

He gave a narration of the events that took place on the day he was arrested.

“At around 1am in the morning of the 15th of November 2017, I was awoken by loud noise. My wife woke up and wanted to establish what had happened. After some moments, a second explosion occurred. Immediately thereafter, I heard crackling sounds at the kitchen door area, and then footsteps in the roof area. 

“The door in the bedroom to where we were was knocked down. I saw men in military uniform. They came and told me to lie down and a gun was pointed to my head. The same was told to my wife and housemaid.

“During my interrogation while blindfolded, the person guarding me would come in and identify himself as my ‘mother’ and on another day as my ‘father’, they would then ask me how I was doing and how my stay was. This was particularly traumatic for me because both of my parents had passed away,” he said.

According to the papers, Chombo said he wanted the court to determine whether or not the State, during his arrest, did not violate his constitutional rights when he was allegedly abducted by its agents, blind-folded for nine days and subjected to torture and other forms of inhumane and degrading treatment.

-Daily News

FULL TEXT: Chamisa Statement On Zim Crisis

President Nelson Chamisa’s statement to the press
29 January 2019

Introduction

The situation in the country has reached crisis levels. The country is currently mired in a multi-layered political, economic, social and humanitarian crisis. Added to this is the latest onslaught by the State to kill, torment and harass innocent Zimbabweans in a tragic move that only goes to show that contrary to the much-vaunted mantra, this is not in any way the second Republic but a heinous continuation of the brutal first regime post-independence in 1980.

Several organizations including the Catholic bishops have produced reports on the current disturbances.
While the August 1 violence that emanated from yet another stolen plebiscite saw the callous murder of seven innocent Zimbabweans, 12 more people have been brutally killed in a State orgy of violence in recent weeks pointing to a massive crisis that needs be stemmed before it degenerates into an outright genocide against innocent Zimbabweans.

The Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission, in line with its constitutional mandate, has since pronounced itself on the recent violence and held the State liable. At this rate, the situation in the country can only get worse unless and until there is urgent intervention to avert the Zimbabwe crisis.

The events in context

Our sympathies are with Zimbabweans who have in the past weeks experienced a throwback t the darkest days of Rhodesia or incarnated an apartheid Zimbabwe where armed personnel descended on communities, indiscriminately dragging men and women, boys and girls out of the privacy of their own homes to brutalize them without cause.

We reiterate the importance of peace and non-violence. This is a cardinal principle which has always been the foundation of our glorious movement.

The events and protests over the past weeks were self-evidently triggered by an ill-thought announcement of fuel price increases made by Mr. Mnangagwa.

This came hard on the heels of the 2 October levy on e-transactions which adversely affected the people. This resulted in citizens being vulnerable, feeling betrayed and undermined by anti-people policies and anti-poor measures.

The people of Zimbabwe are therefore facing an existential threat. Zimbabweans need a country where dignity, security and opportunity are guaranteed as an absolute entitlement.

Hardship knows no party and therefore the challenges facing Zimbabweans are neither MDC now Zanu PF. For that reason, all State institutions must perform their constitutional duties to serve and secure not to destroy and threaten.

Our army and police must protect and not terrorize. No citizen must feel vulnerable on account of excesses in the behaviors and conduct of the State. Citizens must be free.

The government must not be feared. No single Zimbabwean must walk in the country or go sleep scared of being harassed or brutalized by the State.

No Zimbabwean must be embarrassed in communities or before their own families. No Zimbabwean must be killed by the government. No Zimbabwean must get injured or maimed on account of holding a different opinion.

Over the past few weeks, many Zimbabweans have been subjected to human rights abuses, violation of fundamental freedoms, crimes against humanity and internal displacements. Many have been subjected to dehumanizing and life threatening brutality and injuries.

This raises serious questions about our values and morals as a nation. The sanctity of human life is not being honoured.

The culture of violence dates back to the 1980s and 1990s where traumatic State orchestrated episodes of gratuitous violence was visited upon the citizens.

I know many of you have an eye witness account and personal stories to tell about what has happened.
We note with serious concern the attempted arson of the MDC national headquarters and the on-going annihilation of the MDC structures and leadership.

There has been a serious attempt to decimate the MDC as evidenced by the targeting of its leadership including elected Honourable Members of Parliament and councilors as the regime moves to hold the people’s party liable for what in essence were the actions of an angry citizenry demanding that government finds a lasting solution to the burgeoning political and economic crisis.

The response of the State has been brutal; deploying armed soldiers to kill and maim and targeting some citizens who had retreated to their homes by indiscriminately assaulting them. Others in areas such as Epworth have reportedly been raped by agents of the State while those picked by the State have been denied bail by the State, pointing to a deliberate ploy to cow and intimidate the citizenry in this de-facto state of emergency.

There has been a sustained vilification and attack of the MDC, a legitimate political party especially by government leaders and the State media. The blanket curtailment of basic freedoms in the country has led to a situation in Bulawayo where the party failed to hold its primary elections to select a candidate in preparation for the by-elections in Cowdray Park.

There is fear and trepidation across the country as agents of the state continue to cow the nation, randomly targeting innocent Zimbabweans and assaulting them.

The human rights situation in the country has simply reached a crisis level.

The human rights violation statistics

It has been difficult to collate figures and specific names due to circumstances of emergency in the country where more than 12 people have reportedly been killed in the past one-and-half weeks.

Some of the 12 casualties include Kelvin Tinashe Choto (22) of Unit A, Chitungwiza, Abraham Nyapokoto (35) of Mbare, Trymore Nachiwe (22) of Glen View, Solomon Nyaruwa (49)of Marondera who was buried in Chimanimani, Thandiwe Ncube, of Epworth, andTinashe Kaitano of Kadoma, Tafadzwa Katare (22) of Kuwadzana and Kudakwashe Kapandamurongo (22) of Mbare. There have been killings of a police officer in Bulawayo and other innocent citizens in Sizinda and other areas.

There have been 844 reported human violations and 78 gun-shot injuries, according to the Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO forum even though the figures keep rising every day.

At the last count there were well over 1 000 arbitrary detentions in Harare, 28 in Mashonaland central, 41 in Midlands South, 395 in Bulawayo, 138 in Chitungwiza and 53 in Manicaland while the figures continue rising while the figures for other areas are still being captured.

More than fourteen women were allegedly raped by armed people in Harare South and Epworth. Some of our elected councilors who were arrested include Elvis Ruzani and Munyaradzi Kufahakutizwi, Simbarashe Nyahuye and Charles Ngenya in Marondera, Epworth ward 5 councillor, Elias Sithole and Kadoma councilor Michael Gore.

Just today and a few days ago, there have been property demolitions in Chitungwiza and Mbare targeting hard working Zimbabweans who are trying to eke an honest living.

Civic bodies indicate that more injuries are being recorded on a daily basis especially at night.
The MDC is still compiling a comprehensive list of its supporters who were being harassed and were caught in the crossfire as the government mounts a crackdown on a legitimate political movement.

Also arrested were Honourable Members of Parliament including Hons’ Amos Chibaya, Settlement Chikwinya, Livingstone Chimina, Rosemary Nyathi and Lloyd Mukapiko while about 43 MPs have either been harassed or are being harassed with their lives in serious danger. Members of the party’s staff have also been targeted with some being assaulted.

Regrettably, the State is in denial. Instead of showing accountability and taking responsibility, some in the State have manufactured a list and catalogue of falsehoods, scapegoats, excuses, justifications and convoluted explanations. It is necessary and urgent for us to plot a way out of the current crisis which has led to a far worse humanitarian crisis with devastating consequences.

The State has alleged that protesters who exercised their section 59 constitutional right to protest peacefully engaged in violence, looting and destruction of property. But tellingly, protesters accused of violence, looting and destruction of property are being routinely charged with treason and/or seeking to overthrow a constitutional government. The difference is between day and night.

People are accused of one thing but they are charged of another. This is absurd. The desperate and embattled authorities want to eat their cake and keep it at the same time. This must stop.

The Nature of the Crisis

The crisis in Zimbabwe is a crisis of governance. It is a crisis of leadership which is inherently political in nature and character but manifesting itself economically. The political crisis draws its roots from a toxic political environment and a perennially flawed electoral process.

It is trite that authority to govern derives from the people. It is the people who confer legitimacy upon a government. They do so through free, fair and credible elections. Unfortunately, for years, our flawed electoral system has failed to deliver legitimacy to govern. Consequently our beautiful nation has remained stuck in the Dark Age, isolated and ostracized. The fabric of politics has been characterised by suspicion, fragmentation, deep division, palpable mistrust, accusation and counter-accusation.

Our governance foundations are ruined. Our leadership roots are rotten. Our base of values is shaken. In this regard, we have held out a hand of dialogue but it has been spurned and disrespected by our counterparts in Zanu PF.

It is not because we are desperate in pursuit of power. It is not because we covert the seat of authority. It is because we care for our beautiful country and the ordinary loving people of Zimbabwe whose plight grows with each day that passes.

The economic effects of a stolen election, disputed election result and political instability are evident for all to see. To heal the economy, we must heal our politics. To fix our economy, we must repair our political fabric and moral fibre ringing about a revolution of values and culture to respect the sanctity of human life and the dignity of humanity. Without doubt, the political crisis has also had catastrophic social effects, leaving the weakest and most vulnerable members of our society falling on hard times.

Indeed, great danger lies ahead on both the economic and the social front. Here, we speak of the aged, the disabled, the women, the children, the orphaned, pensioners and all those on the margins of the mainstream of the economy including the many vulnerable young men and women so unemployed.

Way Forward

To all fellow Zimbabweans, we in the MDC respect and emphasise the constitutional principle that authority to govern derives from the people. This is in terms of the Constitution which forms the foundation of the social contract between government and the people. The people must never live in fear of their government. They must stand firm in defense of their rights, freedoms and the Constitution.

The government must respect and honour the people because without them there is no authority to govern.
To the State, there must be a cessation of lawlessness and break down of the rule of law. Lawlessness must be reversed. There must be affirmation, respect and observance of the Constitution. We must re-establish and re-entrench civilian police mandate to keep peace, law and order, taking our troops off the streets and the villages.

Zimbabwe needs an urgent return to and restoration of constitutional rule, civilian administration and the rule of law, harassment of prisoners of conscience and release of political prisoners.

Equally, our security services’ constitutional role in defending the country is unreservedly acknowledged. The role of our security must be performed professionally and in accordance with the law. There is no room for impunity and immunity.

Individuals who are violating human rights are contravening the Constitution and international treaties and conventions on human rights. They also are doing intolerable damage to the reputation of these key national institutions of both the police and the army negating the citizens confidence in the same.
Many have been abducted whose whereabouts remain unknown. Some have been tortured and raped. Internal displacements and damages to properties and homes in the high density areas have become rampant.

Beatings have become a daily diet, with assaults being a routine dose. The challenge is that the full extent of these atrocities remains unknown. It is crucially important that there be a neutral, fact-finding mechanism process which is multilateral and judicial so as to determine the full extent of the atrocities that have been committed against the people.

The notion that the very authorities alleged to be responsible for the atrocities should also audit the extent of these atrocities is unacceptable. It is irrational and inhuman to expect perpetrators to audit victims. It is equally irrational to expect the perpetrators to hold themselves accountable. The human rights situation now obtaining in Zimbabwe requires the appointment of a special UN rapporteur on Zimbabwe to ensure accountability.

To our brothers and sisters in the SADC region, we say this is the time to stand with the peace-loving people of Zimbabwe. This not the time to see no evil, hear no evil and speak no evil, burying heads in the sand while a human rights crisis escalates into inordinate levels.

How many people must die or be killed before a firm and principled stance against atrocities being committed in the country is taken. How much blood must flow on the streets before the eye and hand of the region is drawn to this dire situation.

Our concern is that in spite of the letters and communication we have sent to SADC and the AU, they have remained mum in light of a precarious human rights situation in the country and an onslaught on a legitimate political movement in the country.

We urge SADC and the AU to show solidarity with the people of Zimbabwe by stopping this heinous onslaught on the country’s citizenry and facilitate dialogue to resolve the political stalemate I the country. Lives have been needlessly lost while innocent Zimbabweans have either been needlessly assaulted or are seeking refuge in the mountains for their safety.

We urge urgent action to be taken in Zimbabwe to deal with the economic crisis, the humanitarian situation and the critical matter of a government that has become a grievous danger to the citizens. In a situation where party leaders and innocent members of parliament are being targeted, no one is safe.
We call for the National Peace and Reconciliation Commission to institute a healing process that involves compensation, psycho-social support and rehabilitation of State sponsored violence.

We call for the world to turn and train its eyes on Zimbabwe and to empathize with the innocent citizens undergoing a brutal onslaught with no prospect of respite on their plight. We urge the world, particularly our own SADC and the AU, to stand with the people of Zimbabwe and not with the Zimbabwe leadership.

On our part, we shall not despair.
The people are sovereign and ultimately, the people shall govern.

Ignorant Mangwe Mp, O Mguni, must leave professional Teachers’ issues to professional People: PTUZ

29 January 2019

The behaviour of some honourables is surely dishonourable. Some rogue Mps have joined the band wagon of blaming teachers who have done so well with so little in Zimbabwe.

Most outstanding is Chegutu West, D. Nduna who threated explusion of all incapacitated teachers in his constituency. He has since been joined in the educational vandalism crusade by Mangwe Mp O. Mguni whose vitriolic attacks on Mangwe teachers and DSI leave a lot to be desired.

He has come out blazing, ignorantly though, that Mangwe DSI must report to him the situation in Mangwe District rather than reporting to his immediate provincial bosses in Gwanda.

Such ignorance baffles logic and common sense, more so coming from an Mp. Worse still the Mp wrongly sites section 299 as the basis for his claim that he should get reports from DSI and as a basis for condemning incapacitated Mangwe teachers. We humbly remind the Mp that section 299 is on parliamentary oversight of state revenue and expenditure.

By no means does that give him priviledge to get professional reports from the DSI . Dear Hon Mguni, be guided accordingly. Rather your responsibility is to lobby for a better budgetary allocation to Education in line with the Dakar Agreenent of 2000 in which above 22% of the total budget must be allocated to education.

Please note that our 2018 Grade 7, ‘O’ level and ‘A’ level pass rates increased nationally and even in Mangwe district. As Ptuz we are tired of the so few ignorant people attacking so many teachers for doing so much with so little.

Teachers are workers and not slaves and have families to look after, children to pay fees for yet their salaries are just pathetic. Hands off teachers Hon Mguni, and be professional in your relations with teachers and Ministry officials.

To be forewarned is to be forearmed. We dont eat you threats.

Viva status restoration viva
Viva Ptuz viva

Venceremos

Dr Takavafira M. Zhou

Chamisa Refuses To Endorse ED Says He Doesn’t Believe In Lies That The Zanu PF Leader Won Elections

MDC President Nelson Chamisa has refused to accept that Zanu PF candidate Emmerson Mnangagwa won the July 30 elections saying he doesn’t believe in lies.

Asked to comment on Zanu PF insistence that the opposition leader recognizes Mnangagwa before any national dialogue can start, Chamisa said he doesn’t want to lie and will not endorse a sham election.

Read full statement below…

I President Nelson Chamisa’s statement to the press
29 January 2019

Introduction

The situation in the country has reached crisis levels. The country is currently mired in a multi-layered political, economic, social and humanitarian crisis. Added to this is the latest onslaught by the State to kill, torment and harass innocent Zimbabweans in a tragic move that only goes to show that contrary to the much-vaunted mantra, this is not in any way the second Republic but a heinous continuation of the brutal first regime post-independence in 1980.

Several organizations including the Catholic bishops have produced reports on the current disturbances.
While the August 1 violence that emanated from yet another stolen plebiscite saw the callous murder of seven innocent Zimbabweans, 12 more people have been brutally killed in a State orgy of violence in recent weeks pointing to a massive crisis that needs be stemmed before it degenerates into an outright genocide against innocent Zimbabweans.

The Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission, in line with its constitutional mandate, has since pronounced itself on the recent violence and held the State liable. At this rate, the situation in the country can only get worse unless and until there is urgent intervention to avert the Zimbabwe crisis.

The events in context

Our sympathies are with Zimbabweans who have in the past weeks experienced a throwback t the darkest days of Rhodesia or incarnated an apartheid Zimbabwe where armed personnel descended on communities, indiscriminately dragging men and women, boys and girls out of the privacy of their own homes to brutalize them without cause.

We reiterate the importance of peace and non-violence. This is a cardinal principle which has always been the foundation of our glorious movement.

The events and protests over the past weeks were self-evidently triggered by an ill-thought announcement of fuel price increases made by Mr. Mnangagwa.

This came hard on the heels of the 2 October levy on e-transactions which adversely affected the people. This resulted in citizens being vulnerable, feeling betrayed and undermined by anti-people policies and anti-poor measures.

The people of Zimbabwe are therefore facing an existential threat. Zimbabweans need a country where dignity, security and opportunity are guaranteed as an absolute entitlement.

Hardship knows no party and therefore the challenges facing Zimbabweans are neither MDC now Zanu PF. For that reason, all State institutions must perform their constitutional duties to serve and secure not to destroy and threaten.

Our army and police must protect and not terrorize. No citizen must feel vulnerable on account of excesses in the behaviors and conduct of the State. Citizens must be free.

The government must not be feared. No single Zimbabwean must walk in the country or go sleep scared of being harassed or brutalized by the State.

No Zimbabwean must be embarrassed in communities or before their own families. No Zimbabwean must be killed by the government. No Zimbabwean must get injured or maimed on account of holding a different opinion.

Over the past few weeks, many Zimbabweans have been subjected to human rights abuses, violation of fundamental freedoms, crimes against humanity and internal displacements. Many have been subjected to dehumanizing and life threatening brutality and injuries.

This raises serious questions about our values and morals as a nation. The sanctity of human life is not being honoured.

The culture of violence dates back to the 1980s and 1990s where traumatic State orchestrated episodes of gratuitous violence was visited upon the citizens.

I know many of you have an eye witness account and personal stories to tell about what has happened.
We note with serious concern the attempted arson of the MDC national headquarters and the on-going annihilation of the MDC structures and leadership.

There has been a serious attempt to decimate the MDC as evidenced by the targeting of its leadership including elected Honourable Members of Parliament and councilors as the regime moves to hold the people’s party liable for what in essence were the actions of an angry citizenry demanding that government finds a lasting solution to the burgeoning political and economic crisis.

The response of the State has been brutal; deploying armed soldiers to kill and maim and targeting some citizens who had retreated to their homes by indiscriminately assaulting them. Others in areas such as Epworth have reportedly been raped by agents of the State while those picked by the State have been denied bail by the State, pointing to a deliberate ploy to cow and intimidate the citizenry in this de-facto state of emergency.

There has been a sustained vilification and attack of the MDC, a legitimate political party especially by government leaders and the State media. The blanket curtailment of basic freedoms in the country has led to a situation in Bulawayo where the party failed to hold its primary elections to select a candidate in preparation for the by-elections in Cowdray Park.

There is fear and trepidation across the country as agents of the state continue to cow the nation, randomly targeting innocent Zimbabweans and assaulting them.

The human rights situation in the country has simply reached a crisis level.

The human rights violation statistics

It has been difficult to collate figures and specific names due to circumstances of emergency in the country where more than 12 people have reportedly been killed in the past one-and-half weeks.

Some of the 12 casualties include Kelvin Tinashe Choto (22) of Unit A, Chitungwiza, Abraham Nyapokoto (35) of Mbare, Trymore Nachiwe (22) of Glen View, Solomon Nyaruwa (49)of Marondera who was buried in Chimanimani, Thandiwe Ncube, of Epworth, andTinashe Kaitano of Kadoma, Tafadzwa Katare (22) of Kuwadzana and Kudakwashe Kapandamurongo (22) of Mbare. There have been killings of a police officer in Bulawayo and other innocent citizens in Sizinda and other areas.

There have been 844 reported human violations and 78 gun-shot injuries, according to the Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO forum even though the figures keep rising every day.

At the last count there were well over 1 000 arbitrary detentions in Harare, 28 in Mashonaland central, 41 in Midlands South, 395 in Bulawayo, 138 in Chitungwiza and 53 in Manicaland while the figures continue rising while the figures for other areas are still being captured.

More than fourteen women were allegedly raped by armed people in Harare South and Epworth. Some of our elected councilors who were arrested include Elvis Ruzani and Munyaradzi Kufahakutizwi, Simbarashe Nyahuye and Charles Ngenya in Marondera, Epworth ward 5 councillor, Elias Sithole and Kadoma councilor Michael Gore.

Just today and a few days ago, there have been property demolitions in Chitungwiza and Mbare targeting hard working Zimbabweans who are trying to eke an honest living.

Civic bodies indicate that more injuries are being recorded on a daily basis especially at night.
The MDC is still compiling a comprehensive list of its supporters who were being harassed and were caught in the crossfire as the government mounts a crackdown on a legitimate political movement.

Also arrested were Honourable Members of Parliament including Hons’ Amos Chibaya, Settlement Chikwinya, Livingstone Chimina, Rosemary Nyathi and Lloyd Mukapiko while about 43 MPs have either been harassed or are being harassed with their lives in serious danger. Members of the party’s staff have also been targeted with some being assaulted.

Regrettably, the State is in denial. Instead of showing accountability and taking responsibility, some in the State have manufactured a list and catalogue of falsehoods, scapegoats, excuses, justifications and convoluted explanations. It is necessary and urgent for us to plot a way out of the current crisis which has led to a far worse humanitarian crisis with devastating consequences.

The State has alleged that protesters who exercised their section 59 constitutional right to protest peacefully engaged in violence, looting and destruction of property. But tellingly, protesters accused of violence, looting and destruction of property are being routinely charged with treason and/or seeking to overthrow a constitutional government. The difference is between day and night.

People are accused of one thing but they are charged of another. This is absurd. The desperate and embattled authorities want to eat their cake and keep it at the same time. This must stop.

The Nature of the Crisis

The crisis in Zimbabwe is a crisis of governance. It is a crisis of leadership which is inherently political in nature and character but manifesting itself economically. The political crisis draws its roots from a toxic political environment and a perennially flawed electoral process.

It is trite that authority to govern derives from the people. It is the people who confer legitimacy upon a government. They do so through free, fair and credible elections. Unfortunately, for years, our flawed electoral system has failed to deliver legitimacy to govern. Consequently our beautiful nation has remained stuck in the Dark Age, isolated and ostracized. The fabric of politics has been characterised by suspicion, fragmentation, deep division, palpable mistrust, accusation and counter-accusation.

Our governance foundations are ruined. Our leadership roots are rotten. Our base of values is shaken. In this regard, we have held out a hand of dialogue but it has been spurned and disrespected by our counterparts in Zanu PF.

It is not because we are desperate in pursuit of power. It is not because we covert the seat of authority. It is because we care for our beautiful country and the ordinary loving people of Zimbabwe whose plight grows with each day that passes.

The economic effects of a stolen election, disputed election result and political instability are evident for all to see. To heal the economy, we must heal our politics. To fix our economy, we must repair our political fabric and moral fibre ringing about a revolution of values and culture to respect the sanctity of human life and the dignity of humanity. Without doubt, the political crisis has also had catastrophic social effects, leaving the weakest and most vulnerable members of our society falling on hard times.

Indeed, great danger lies ahead on both the economic and the social front. Here, we speak of the aged, the disabled, the women, the children, the orphaned, pensioners and all those on the margins of the mainstream of the economy including the many vulnerable young men and women so unemployed.

Way Forward

To all fellow Zimbabweans, we in the MDC respect and emphasise the constitutional principle that authority to govern derives from the people. This is in terms of the Constitution which forms the foundation of the social contract between government and the people. The people must never live in fear of their government. They must stand firm in defense of their rights, freedoms and the Constitution.

The government must respect and honour the people because without them there is no authority to govern.
To the State, there must be a cessation of lawlessness and break down of the rule of law. Lawlessness must be reversed. There must be affirmation, respect and observance of the Constitution. We must re-establish and re-entrench civilian police mandate to keep peace, law and order, taking our troops off the streets and the villages.

Zimbabwe needs an urgent return to and restoration of constitutional rule, civilian administration and the rule of law, harassment of prisoners of conscience and release of political prisoners.

Equally, our security services’ constitutional role in defending the country is unreservedly acknowledged. The role of our security must be performed professionally and in accordance with the law. There is no room for impunity and immunity.

Individuals who are violating human rights are contravening the Constitution and international treaties and conventions on human rights. They also are doing intolerable damage to the reputation of these key national institutions of both the police and the army negating the citizens confidence in the same.
Many have been abducted whose whereabouts remain unknown. Some have been tortured and raped. Internal displacements and damages to properties and homes in the high density areas have become rampant.

Beatings have become a daily diet, with assaults being a routine dose. The challenge is that the full extent of these atrocities remains unknown. It is crucially important that there be a neutral, fact-finding mechanism process which is multilateral and judicial so as to determine the full extent of the atrocities that have been committed against the people.

The notion that the very authorities alleged to be responsible for the atrocities should also audit the extent of these atrocities is unacceptable. It is irrational and inhuman to expect perpetrators to audit victims. It is equally irrational to expect the perpetrators to hold themselves accountable. The human rights situation now obtaining in Zimbabwe requires the appointment of a special UN rapporteur on Zimbabwe to ensure accountability.

To our brothers and sisters in the SADC region, we say this is the time to stand with the peace-loving people of Zimbabwe. This not the time to see no evil, hear no evil and speak no evil, burying heads in the sand while a human rights crisis escalates into inordinate levels.

How many people must die or be killed before a firm and principled stance against atrocities being committed in the country is taken. How much blood must flow on the streets before the eye and hand of the region is drawn to this dire situation.

Our concern is that in spite of the letters and communication we have sent to SADC and the AU, they have remained mum in light of a precarious human rights situation in the country and an onslaught on a legitimate political movement in the country.

We urge SADC and the AU to show solidarity with the people of Zimbabwe by stopping this heinous onslaught on the country’s citizenry and facilitate dialogue to resolve the political stalemate I the country. Lives have been needlessly lost while innocent Zimbabweans have either been needlessly assaulted or are seeking refuge in the mountains for their safety.

We urge urgent action to be taken in Zimbabwe to deal with the economic crisis, the humanitarian situation and the critical matter of a government that has become a grievous danger to the citizens. In a situation where party leaders and innocent members of parliament are being targeted, no one is safe.
We call for the National Peace and Reconciliation Commission to institute a healing process that involves compensation, psycho-social support and rehabilitation of State sponsored violence.

We call for the world to turn and train its eyes on Zimbabwe and to empathize with the innocent citizens undergoing a brutal onslaught with no prospect of respite on their plight. We urge the world, particularly our own SADC and the AU, to stand with the people of Zimbabwe and not with the Zimbabwe leadership.

On our part, we shall not despair.
The people are sovereign and ultimately, the people shall govern.

“No To Dialogue With Conditions”: Chamisa Tells Mnangagwa

By Own Correspondent|Addressing journalists at Morgan Tsvangirai House in Harare, MDC leader Nelson Chamisa dismissed President Mnangagwa’s condition for dialogue.

Senior Government officials have said Mnangagwa is willing to engage MDC president Nelson Chamisa on any issue except that of legitimacy.

However Chamisa said legitimacy is a point of dialogue and the people have been having dialogue with Mnangagwa’s administration through violence.

Said Chamisa:

I am not a liar, I will not acknowledge lies. I have said I will not recognise what is not recognisable. There has to be talks, we are ready to talk but we are going to talk about that issue (legitimacy) as a first issue, it is a dialoguing point. Let us agree on that issue, why are you putting conditionalities and why do you want Mr Chamisa to acknowledge you. If you allege that you won the election, why do you want the endorsement of an individual so please tell them to be serious. It is important for the nation to dialogue but I can tell you there has not been any dialogue. If anything, the dialogue that has been there between the citizens and the state is the dialogue of violence.

Former Zanu Pf Stalwart Jailed 2yrs For Public Violence During The #Shutdown Zimbabwe Protests

By Own Correspondent| Former Zanu-PF Mashonaland Central Chairperson, Dickson Mafios was sentenced 2 years in prison for inciting violence in Bindura.

A Bindura magistrate however suspended 10 months of the sentence on condition that he does not commit a similar offence within five years.

Mafios will serve an effective 14 months in prison.

Mafios, who was represented by Graciano Manyurureni made a plea for community service on medical grounds and the plea was considered in the suspended sentence.

Prosecutor Carol Mupazviriwo told the court that on the 15th of this month, Mafios arrived  at Club 10, Chiwaridzo Shopping Centre and challenged people to stand up, burn and destroy property in solidarity with Harare and proceed with a total shutdown.

Mafios allegedly made demeaning remarks about President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s ascendancy. In his defence, Mafios said he retired from politics, arguing that the allegations were a fabrication by former colleagues meant to settle political scores.

However, the court found Mafios guilty considering his convenience to the place of the offence and found out that the remarks resonated with events which prevailed in other parts of Zimbabwe. The court also took into consideration that Mafios is not a first offender.-StateMedia

WARNING DISTURBING PICTURE: Actor Fighting For Dear Life After Lover Assaulted Her For Kissing Another Actor In Theatre

Own Correspondent|Londiwe Ngcamu, a South African actress beaten by boyfriend beyond recognition after she kissed an actor in a stage play, is currently recovering in the hospital  .

The incident reportedly occurred at the weekend after 30-year-old Londiwe Ngcamu featured in a theater production Seven Days War, set in the 1980s.

She was said to have played the lead role of an IFP woman who fell in love with an ANC member at the Winston Churchill Theatre.

After the show ended at around 10pm on Saturday, the mother of a two-month-old baby girl and a six-year-old boy met her boyfriend at the bus stop and walked home with him.

When they got home, they got involved in an argument before the man attacked her. He banged her head on the ground and used his knee and fists to hit her face as she begged for her life.

Speaking to The Witness from her hospital bed on Monday afternoon, Ngcamu, from Sobantu, said:

 “We had just come back from the theatre after our performance and I was chilling with my cast members at the clubhouse in Sobantu, where some of our cast members who live far away stay during shows.

“At around 10.30 pm I got a call from home informing me that my baby was restless, so I had to rush home,” she said.

South-African-actress-beaten-by-boyfriend-for-kissing-in-a-play-lailasnews-2-357x410

Ngcamu said a man known to her, who cannot be identified by The Witness at this time, had called her and offered to walk her home.

She decided to walk alone for some of the distance intending to meet the man halfway, but when they met on the road an altercation broke out between them and the man then dragged Ngcamu to his home where he beat her severely.

“When we got to his home the gate was closed and he pushed me onto the gate to open it.

“One of his friends and [that man’s] girlfriend were there but they did nothing to help me.

“They saw him beating me up but stood and watched for a while before they left.

“When we got to his room he threw me on the floor and started beating me. He banged my head on the ground and used his fists and knee to hit my face. He even used the small suitcase I had with me to hit me on my face.”

South-African-actress-beaten-by-boyfriend-for-kissing-in-a-play-lailasnews-212x410
Londiwe Ngcamu

Ngcamu said at some point the man started punching her and kicking her in the ribs, telling her that he wanted to break them.

“I was so scared and kept on begging him not to kill me, but he kept on going. It went on for hours.

“When he got exhausted he would lie down on his bed to rest and gather his strength, then start beating me all over again.”

The woman said at some point she realised that he had a knife and she tried to grab it.

“I can’t remember what happened to the knife but I have a huge cut on my palm and I think it was from when I grabbed the knife.

“He then pulled out an axe and asked me if I would prefer that he used the axe to slit my throat or to cut off my fingers. I thought he was going to kill me. I kept on praying, asking God to spare my life.”

She managed to grab the axe and threw it under his bed.

“While beating me up, he was shouting to one of his relatives who was in another outside building that he must help him dig my grave because he was going to kill me,” said the still visibly shaken Ngcamu.

She also added that she made her escape from his house after he went to bed, and rushed to her siblings who took her to the hospital and reported the case to the police.

Confirming the incident, police spokesperson Captain Nqobile Gwala, said a case of assault has been opened at the Mountain Rise police station.

“SADC Is A Grouping Of Elected Political Thugs,” Activist

Brebner Changala

SADC is a grouping of elected political thugs with no concern for any ordinary citizen in this region, says Zambia’s Brebner Changala.

The civil rights activist charged that SADC was a disgrace to the region adding that the grouping was now a club for dictators and elected criminals.

“We must go back to the genesis of SADC…. SADC was a creation of the frontline Heads of State who are Kenneth Kaunda, Julius Kambarage Nyerere and Samora Machel of Mozambique, added to the list was Mobutu Sese Seko although not very active. This grouping was to fight for the independence and emancipation of the people of South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Namibia and their mission was to introduce one man, one vote in these countries and give access to the people, black people of this region, called the SADC region,” he explained. “They financed and supported the liberation movements in these countries of Zimbabwe, South Africa and Namibia. When all these countries were independent – because Frontline heads of state was more political, for political emancipation of the people of this region, when they were independent – they had to turn it into an economic and social rights body and other accruing benefits through the people of SADC. So it transformed from Frontline heads of state to SADC and its main core as trade, human rights and democracy and many other needs they had to conduct on behalf of many other people and citizens who live in these countries.”

Changala said regrettably the SADC had lost its meaning.

“It has become an organisation or an embodiment where SADC leaders are there to serve their interest and protest each other from the citizens of this region. In other words, they have risen against its own people who they are supposed to serve. Look at the chaos happening in Zimbabwe. SADC for one reason or the other doesn’t want to side with the people who are being brutalised and maimed and killed on the daily basis,” he said. “If anything they are going round the world demanding the people of the Western world to lift sanctions…sanctions to benefit who, to benefit the oppressor and not the oppressed. And if you look at the chaos happening in Congo DR, SADC has a mammoth task to give direction and side with the people of DR Congo. For two years, [Joseph] Kabila refused to step down and hold elections in the eyes of SADC. And SADC entertained it because he was one of them to the point where the international community had to start sanctions against the leadership of Kabila and his colleagues but SADC did nothing to serve the interest of the common man in DR Congo.”

He said the spirit of great leaders on whom SADC was formed had been lost.

Changala said SADC was today void of service to humanity and service above self.

He said SADC had become a rebel movement against people.

Changala appealed to the people to rise and make leaders accountable and save SADC from the elected ‘criminals’.

“Having said that, it has become for apparently clear that SADC has lost that spirit of Samora Machel, the spirit of Kenneth David Kaunda, and the Julius Kambarage Nyerere of service to humanity and service above self. And when you go back, the most corrupt leaders in Africa are in the SADC region. That’s where the elected thieves are…criminals, they are amassing wealth at the expense of the same people who elected them to be in those offices,” said Changala. “SADC has become a rebel movement against the very people they aspire to lead and serve. So the people of the region must rise and make our leaders accountable, rise and save SADC from these elected criminals.”

Zambian Observer

Police Announce Arrest Of Sky News Video Officer Though They Initially Disclaimed The Video

Correspondent|The Zimbabwe Republic police has announced that it has managed to locate the police officer who was caught on camera by Sky News abusing a citizen.

“The Zimbabwe Republic Police has made inroads into a case of assault by security agents , involving a handcuffed person along Chiremba road, Harare as seen in a video clip by Sky News,” police spokesperson Charity Charamba said.

“Number 066913FConstable Makumire was suspended form performing active police duties in September 2018 and is on bail over four counts of theft.

“He has been arrested and is assisting police with investigations into the current case.”

On Monday President Emmerson Mnangagwa reacted angrily to the video clip and said the behaviour by security forces is not consistent with the new dispensation.

“I was appalled by today’s Sky News report.” Mnangagwa said. “That is not the Zimbabwean way. I have instructed that the individuals behind this be arrested and encourage all those impacted to contact the authorities and file an official complaint.” Mnangagwa said on Monday.

The video by Sky News shows a man in grey being bundled into a private taxi van, then dragged out by a policeman. Several policemen set upon him as he sat handcuffed on the ground.

A man in a blue police uniform delivered a series of blows with all his strength. The victim looked bewildered as his attacker tried to hold his head up.

Police had earlier rubbished the video clip as a 2016 incident.

World Looking At Zimbabwe Over Rights Abuses

 The ongoing savage crackdown by the military against innocent civilians — including killings, rape, torture and horrendous beatings of law-abiding citizens — has become a full-blown international human rights crisis for President Emmerson Mnangagwa and his government, the Daily News on Sunday can report.

Such is the extent of the global public relations disaster that now confronts Zimbabwe’s so-called new dispensation — as a result of the dreadful conduct of the country’s security forces over the past two weeks — that even hitherto friendly powers such as Britain are now turning against Zimbabwe.

And from the United States of America to Germany, China and South Africa, the only coverage being given to Zimbabwe these days in those countries’ mainstream media only relates to the brutal clampdown by authorities against dissenting voices.

Similarly, churches and global human rights organisations are churning out statement after statement on the military’s atrocities in the country, meaning that Zimbabwe once again finds itself in the position which obtained in the last two decades of former president Robert Mugabe’s ruinous rule — as a pariah among the global family of nations.

Not surprisingly, the United Kingdom is planning to take Zimbabwe’s ongoing human rights abuses to all relevant multilateral forums — including the United Nations — Foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt said last week.

“We all celebrated the demise of the Mugabe regime, feeling and hoping that a new chapter of Zimbabwean history was commencing. We are very concerned about the disproportionate response of the security forces to the recent protests,” British minister of State in the Foreign Office, Mark Field, added.

On its part, Amnesty International has called on authorities to reign in the security forces, and to see to it that they are held to account for the ongoing brutal human rights violations.

“At least 12 people have been killed and dozens more injured by the security forces since protests began on 14 January.

“Up to 700 people, including minors, have been detained after being arrested on trumped-up charges or brought before courts in hearings that do not meet fair trial standards. Hundreds have been denied bail,” Deprose Muchena, Amnesty International’s regional director for southern Africa, said at the weekend.

“The onslaught by the security forces has seen people killed, arbitrarily arrested, abducted, reportedly raped and jailed on suspicion of taking part in protests. 
Children as young as 11 years old have been detained on frivolous charges.

“The Zimbabwean authorities must immediately halt their menacing threats towards civil society leaders, activists, opposition leaders, and suspected organisers of protests.

“The authorities must ensure that those who violated and continue to violate human rights face justice,” Muchena added.

He said Amnesty International had documented a systematic pattern of human rights violations, including restrictions on public assembly, excessive use of force, arbitrary arrests, and the recent Internet shutdowns by authorities.

“A Zimbabwe that is prosperous and based on the rule of law will never be built by brutalising dissent. The authorities must immediately stop this merciless crackdown on activists, civil society leaders, and others who are guilty of nothing more than exercising their right to freedom of expression.

“President Mnangagwa has called on all Zimbabweans to come together during this difficult moment. That must include respecting human rights,” Muchena said.

On its part, the military has denied that its members are responsible for the killings, rape and beatings — saying the perpetrators of these atrocities are “bogus 
elements” working to sully the image of security forces.

“The Zimbabwe National Army (ZNA) has noted with concern allegations of misconduct and acts of violence … The actions of these bogus elements have subsequently put the image of the organisation into disrepute,” it said this week.

However, local churches and rights groups have disputed this rebuttal and also challenged the government to act to bring justice to the victims of the violence, which they say has reached “epidemic levels.”

In a rare rebuke of the government, the founder and senior pastor of Celebration Church, Tom Deuschle, said it was heart-breaking that dozens of victims of sexual violence in this conflict were children.

“I spoke to one of Zimbabwe’s fine nurse counsellors yesterday. Stories of more than 23 children she had treated— all brutalised physically + sexually during recent political upheaval.

“They all identified police as perpetrators! Unacceptable! Cannot be swept under the carpet,” the respected cleric wrote on Twitter.

Last week, the Catholic Church in Zimbabwe also issued a withering criticism of the government, saying it should end the rights abuses in the country by the military.

“We, the Bishops of the Catholic Church in Zimbabwe, have observed with increasing concern and alarm the state of our Zimbabwean nation from the time of the military-assisted political change that took place in November 2017, to the total shutdown of Zimbabwe’s major cities and rural trading centres that began on Monday, 14 January 2019.

“We witnessed with sadness and concern the dissipation of hope for a united nation and a promising future when our politicians failed to harness the palpable oneness and goodwill prevailing among Zimbabweans across the political divide during and immediately after the political events of November 2017.

“Government’s heavy-handed and intolerant handling of dissent and expression of rights by … the dissatisfied population resulted in injury and death to innocent ordinary people,” the bishops said in their letter sent to the Vatican last week.

Meanwhile, Information minister Monica Mutsvangwa told the Daily News on Sunday yesterday that the government had launched probes into the alleged abuses by security forces.

“Everything will be investigated and no stone will be left unturned. We need peace to prevail,” she said.

Police also said they were separately investigating all accusations made against their officers and urged people to report “without fear” all those who had perpetrated the violence.

“The ministry of Home Affairs and Cultural Heritage wishes to acknowledge reports of alleged rape, sexual abuse and assaults that have been perpetrated by security forces during the recent operation.

“So far, the police have received one such report from St Mary’s, Chitungwiza, and the case is already under investigation.

“We take these rape allegations very seriously and investigations will be instituted immediately once complainants file reports with the police.

“Let me assure all Zimbabweans that … government takes an exception to anyone who perpetrates any form of crime, especially rape perpetrated against women and children,” Home Affairs minister Cain Mathema said at the weekend.

Human rights groups said it was “shocking “ that brutal acts of sexual and gender-based violence continued to be perpetrated even after Mnangagwa had promised to take action.

“Men in army uniforms allegedly raped three Form One girls today in Old Phumula, Bulawayo, & 11 men in army uniforms ordered people at Bhangu shops in Mpopoma, Bulawayo to close their shops & go indoors … no reasons given for directive,” Human Rights Watch director for southern Africa , Dewa Mavhinga said on Twitter.

-Daily News

FULL TEXT: Chitungwiza Residents Condemn Demolition Of Vending Stalls

Chitungwiza Residents Trust(CHITREST) on Demolition of Vending Stalls.

Today Chitungwiza Residents Trust field officers witnessed in awe hoards of vendors in Zengeza,Seke and St Mary’s being forced to demolish their own vending stalls by a team of Zimbabwe Republic Police and Chitungwiza Municipal Police.

The site of armed Military Police was menacing and predictably,there was no resistance from the frightened but angry vendors.This is particularly so since there has been reports of incidences of use of excessive force on citizens in recent times by the country’s security services.

Our team managed to talk to some vendors who expressed anger at the government’s failure to empathise with their plight.They said they are ordinary citizens who have been trying to etch an honest living by trading in various wares,but this insensitive act by government will make their lives miserable as they have lost their only source of income.

Chitrest calls upon Chitungwiza Municipality and Central Government to respect citizens rights.Demolishing vendors’ stalls without engaging them and proffering alternative vending sites is barbaric and grossly inhumane.As a residents organisation we will sit down and map a wayforward together with partner vendor’s associations.We are also engaging our lawyers to find legal recourse considering this is being done without a full council resolution.

[email protected]
+263774699901

Chamisa Slaps Down Mnangagwa

By Farai D Hove| Zimbabwe’s most popular politician, the MDC President, Nelson Chamisa during the day slapped down ZANU PF leader, Emmerson Mnangagwa.

Chamisa spoke about the much talked about conditions for dialogue by ZANU PF.

The ZANU PF media has said Mnangagwa is willing to engage Chamisa on any issue except that of legitimacy. Speaking Tuesday however, Chamisa said legitimacy is the first port of dialogue.

Chamisa also said Mnangagwa’s administration has been dialoguing through violence. Chamisa said: “I am not a liar, I will not acknowledge lies. I have said I will not recognise what is not recognisable. There has to be talks, we are ready to talk but we are going to talk about that issue (legitimacy) as a first issue, it is a dialoguing point.

“Let us agree on that issue, why are you putting conditionalities and why do you want Mr Chamisa to acknowledge you. If you allege that you won the election, why do you want the endorsement of an individual so please tell them to be serious. 

“It is important for the nation to dialogue but I can tell you there has not been any dialogue. If anything, the dialogue that has been there between the citizens and the state is the dialogue of violence.”

BREAKING- #ThisFlag Movement Pastor Granted $2k Bail

By Own Correspondent| #ThisFlag Movement Leader Evan Mawarire has been granted bail by the High Court in Harare.

Mawarire has been in custody for more than a week.

He is facing charges of subversion and is accused of inciting protests which degenerated into rioting on January 14 this year.

The High Court in the capital, Harare, says Evan Mawarire must pay $2,000 and report to the police three times a week.

This is a developing story. Refresh this page for updates.

Lawyers Accused Of Unprofessional Conduct During Their Protest.

Paul Nyathi|Lawyers who took to the streets of Harare on Tuesday afternoon to demonstrate against the country’s justice system put a dent on their very genuine cause by brandishing placards that mocked Vice President Constantino Chiwenga.

Critics who spotted the placards and highlighted the issue to ZimEye.com, expressed disappointment on the lawyers’ behaviour claiming that the light note pulled down all the respect they had on the lawyers.

“That was very unprofessional for the lawyers who we believe to be amongst our highly learned and professional people in the country, ” said King Dube a ZimEye.com reader.

See some of the unpleasant placards:

Should read: Liberate our courts from the army

Zim In Crisis, NPRC Calls For Dialogue

NPRC Commissioners

NATIONAL PEACE AND RECONCILIATION COMMISSION

PRESS STATEMENT

Following the press statement issued on 15th January 2019[link], the National Peace and Reconciliation Commission (NPRC) is in the process of providing a platform for a National Dialogue to allow Zimbabweans to share their views on how to address the situation in our country and foster sustainable peace and development.

Drawing from its mandate as espoused in Chapter12 Part 6 s. 252 of the Constitution, (function(d); develop procedures and institutions at a national level to facilitate dialogue among political parties, communities, organisations and other groups, in order to prevent conflicts and disputes arising in the future), the NPRC envisages the National Dialogue as an opportunity for Zimbabweans to collectively shape their desired socio-economic and political landscape and bring meaningful transformation to the nation.

The Commission has so far conducted bilateral consultations with the goal of building consensus on the need for a national dialogue.

The nation is hereby advised that the NPRC will shortly be inviting sectoral representatives to jointly formulate with us the framework to guide the National Dialogue process.

Let us all own the process that will create the end that we desire.

Issued  By The National Peace and Reconciliation Commission

7th Floor, First Mutual Life Building, 99 Jason Moyo Ave, Harare.

Twitter: @NPRCZim , Website:www.nprc.org.zw

MDC Official, Shadreck Mashayamombe’s Brother ‘abducted’

Opposition MDC Alliance losing candidate for Harare South constituency Shadreck Mashayamombe’s brother Cephas Mashayamombe is reported to have been abducted by unknown assailant who were driving a white Toyota Fortune on Tuesday afternoon.

A message circulation on social media said, “Shadreck Mashayamombe’s young brother Cephas Mashayamombe abducted right now at his shop in Ushewekunze. He was picked up by a white Toyota Fortuner without number plate those who abducted him were wearing MDC-T shirts as disguise.”

Meanwhile MDC has warned Zimbabweans about bogus MDC members who are roving around abducting people at gun point.

“Fellow Zimbabweans must be wary of non MDC people who are moving around urban areas abducting people at gun point, wearing MDC regalia. They are all out to tarnish the party image. The MDC is a peace loving party that will never harm the people. Such hooligans who are engaging in violence in our party regalia must be reported to the police.”

The former Harare South MP, Shadreck Mashayamombe was last year reportedly kidnapped by suspected Zanu PF supporters who demanded that he withdraws his candidature from the constituency before taking his Parliament-issued Chevrolet vehicle and dumping it along the Harare-Bulawayo Highway.

“Three men came out of the Honda Fit, demanded my car keys and forced me out of the car. They blindfolded me and drove off with me in my car. They parked the car and told me they had an instruction to dump me in Kariba Dam if I don’t want to withdraw my candidature against the President’s nephew.

“They later removed the blindfold and I saw one man with a gun, the other one with a metal rod, while the other two were unarmed. I could not recognise any one of them,” he said in an interview with the Media then.

Mashayamombe was expelled from Zanu PF last November after the bloody coup that ended former President Robert Mugabe’s 37-year rule. — Byo24

Sky News Shames Charity Charamba Over Video Footage She Lied Was Taken In 2016



Newly Found Warriors Star Says Benjani Was Miles Better Than Peter Ndlovu

Peter Ndlovu

WARRIORS and Nottingham Forest defender Tendayi Darikwa has joined the endless debate on who was the best between legends Peter Ndlovu and Benjani Mwaruwari.

Darikwa gave his opinion on the debate that has divided Zimbabwean football since the former Warriors strikers hung up their boots.

Darikwa took to Facebook to give his views.

“Peter Ndlovu. When I was very young, he was a very good player for the national team. He had a very good career in England as well.

“But Benjani was the main one for me in my life time growing up here in England. He had a very successful career and scored a lot of goals for the clubs he played for so probably Benjani.”

Peter Ndlovu arguably had the greater impact on the Warriors front as he scored a record 38 goals for the national team in a record 100 caps – a goal in every 2.6 matches.

Benjani, on the other hand, scored around 22 goals in 44 caps for the Warriors – a better goals per game ratio of a goal in every two matches. However, he scored 16 goals less than Ndlovu although the latter played 56 games more.

Both captained the national team during their time. Mwaruwari was five years Ndlovu’s junior therefore becoming the successor.

Another point of argument is the players’ impact in Europe where they took different routes to the top.

Mwaruwari played for the likes of AJ Auxerre in France before making a switch to England where he played for the likes of Portsmouth, Blackburn Rovers, Sunderland and notably Manchester City.

Ndlovu made his mark in Europe with Coventry City in the English Premier League but would go on to the Championship in England where he also represented Sheffield United, Birmingham City and Huddersfield Town.

The debate on who was the best can only be settled on what criteria is used but no doubt Peter Ndlovu and Benjani Mwaruwari left their mark on football and are among the best the country has produced. — H-Metro

FC Platinum Gears Up For Horoya Clash


Pure Platinum Play FC Platinum Squad

Paul Nyathi|After the hosting challenges faced when FC Platinum hosted Orlando Pirates at Barbourfields Stadium in the opening round of Total CAF Champions League Group B, the Zimbabwe champions have upped preparations for Saturday’s Horoya tie.

The club seeks to smoothen the logistical challenges faced with the high fans volume and on the media front have since opened up accreditation with the form now accessible on the club website www.fc-platinum.net for media fraternity.
Club media and public liaison officer, Chido Chizondo confirmed the accessibility of the form last week.

On the technical front, the Zvishavane based outfit have been quietly preparing for the match at their base as they seek to assert themselves in their maiden group stage dance after a winless start to the new life of international football stage.

Meanwhile, Horoya FC jetted into Harare on Saturday morning as part of their attempts to turn the corner from their faltering start to the group stage.

Horoya AC managing director Amadou Bangoura said they had to be thorough with their preparations for Saturday’s match.

“The reason we are here is simple, we come from Guinea which is too far from Zimbabwe. So if we want to be efficient we must come early to prepare for our match set for next Saturday. That is the only reason we are here and we thank the Zimbabwe federation (ZIFA) for facilitating our preparations.“This is the biggest and most important match for all of us at HAC. That’s why we are here, being early to prepare for that,” 

said Bangoura.

The Guinea side brought 22 players with the delegation.
Horoya AC squad:
Goalkeepers: Khadim Ndiaye, Abdoulaye Kante, Moussa Camara
Defenders: Godfred Assante, Marius Hamed Assoko, Boubacar Samasekou, Yakubu Hubu, Mohamed Lamine Fofana, Alseny Camara, Samuel Conte, Abu Mangue Camara
Midfielders: Baffour Sebe, Abdoulaye Camara, Dramane Nikiema, Brefo Mensah, Boniface Haba, Mohamed Djibo Wonkoye, Naby Soumah
Strikers: Patrick Razak, Ocansey Mandela, Sékou Keita, Siméon Bolaji.

JUST IN: Mawarire Granted Bail

Cleric Pastor Evan Mawarire has been granted $2 000 bail after spending two weeks in police cells.

Mawarire, accused of subverting a constitutionally elected government after a video of him and ZCTU President Peter Mutasa mobilising people to stay away on the 14th to 16th of January went viral.

More to follow…

Fans To Pay More To Watch Crunch Warriors AFCON Qualifier

ZIFA announces gates charges for Warriors clash against Congo Brazzaville
Warriors fans in full swing

Paul Nyathi|ZIFA has announced the Gate charges for the Warriors AFCON Qualifier against Congo Brazzaville.The match is set for the National Sports Stadium and will have Pre-match ticket sales which will be sold on the 1st of February

In a statement the association said:

The Zimbabwe Football Association advises the football family that gate charges for the Warriors’ final Africa Cup of Nations qualifying match against Congo Brazzaville on 24 March 2019 are as follows:

Rest of the Ground:                         $10

Bay 15 – 18:                                      $50

Very Important Person(s):              $200

Bosso Lose Another 2018 Season Star

Nigel Makumbe leaves Highlanders

Paul Nyathi|Nigel Makumbe will not be part of the Highlanders squad in 2019 season after his loan contract expired at the end of the year.

Bosso confirmed the midfielder is set to return to his parent club after spending the 2018 campaign in Bulawayo.

“We would like to confirm that Nigel Makumbe whose 1-year loan contract from FC Platinum expired on the 31st of December and he will not be part of the 2019 squad.

The Club appreciates and thanks Makumbe for his contribution to our club’s development & the exciting moments he shared with us in 2018.

The Club is trying to reduce the number of players coming in on loan contract basis. We wish Makumbe all the best in his career,”

Said Bosso in an official statement.

The Bulawayo Giants have also lost Tafadzwa Sibanda who was on loan from TelOne. The forward arrived at Highlanders in July and returned to his parent club following its promotion into the Premiership.

CAF Reschedules AFCON Dates

Paul Nyathi|CAF has officially announced that the kick-off date for the 2019 AFCON finals will be delayed by a week.

The tournament which will be hosted in Egypt is now set to start on 21 June instead of 14 June and runs until the 19th of July. The decision was made at an Emergency Committee meeting on Sunday and is to accommodate Ramadan and the Eid Al-Fitr holiday.

The draw will take place on Friday 12 April 2019.

Twenty-four teams will take part in the competition for the first time in history. Cairo will be home to two stadiums, including the 74,100-capacity Cairo Stadium where the opening match will be played. Two stadiums will be used in Alexandria and two others in Suez, while Port-Said and Ismailia will provide one each.

Full Text Of MDC Leader Nelson Chamisa’s Press Statement

29 January 2019

Introduction

The situation in the country has reached crisis levels. The country is currently mired in a multi-layered political, economic, social and humanitarian crisis.

Added to this is the latest onslaught by the State to kill, torment and harass innocent Zimbabweans in a tragic move that only goes to show that contrary to the much-vaunted mantra, this is not in any way the second Republic but a heinous continuation of the brutal first regime post-independence in 1980.

Several organizations including the Catholic bishops have produced reports on the current disturbances.

While the August 1 violence that emanated from yet another stolen plebiscite saw the callous murder of seven innocent Zimbabweans, 12 more people have been brutally killed in a State orgy of violence in recent weeks pointing to a massive crisis that needs be stemmed before it degenerates into an outright genocide against innocent Zimbabweans.

The Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission, in line with its constitutional mandate, has since pronounced itself on the recent violence and held the State liable. At this rate, the situation in the country can only get worse unless and until there is urgent intervention to avert the Zimbabwe crisis.

The events in context

Our sympathies are with Zimbabweans who have in the past weeks experienced a throwback t the darkest days of Rhodesia or incarnated an apartheid Zimbabwe where armed personnel descended on communities, indiscriminately dragging men and women, boys and girls out of the privacy of their own homes to brutalize them without cause.

We reiterate the importance of peace and non-violence. This is a cardinal principle which has always been the foundation of our glorious movement.

The events and protests over the past weeks were self-evidently triggered by an ill-thought announcement of fuel price increases made by Mr. Mnangagwa.

This came hard on the heels of the 2 October levy on e-transactions which adversely affected the people. This resulted in citizens being vulnerable, feeling betrayed and undermined by anti-people policies and anti-poor measures.

The people of Zimbabwe are therefore facing an existential threat. Zimbabweans need a country where dignity, security and opportunity are guaranteed as an absolute entitlement.

Hardship knows no party and therefore the challenges facing Zimbabweans are neither MDC now Zanu PF. For that reason, all State institutions must perform their constitutional duties to serve and secure not to destroy and threaten.

Our army and police must protect and not terrorize. No citizen must feel vulnerable on account of excesses in the behaviors and conduct of the State. Citizens must be free.

The government must not be feared. No single Zimbabwean must walk in the country or go sleep scared of being harassed or brutalized by the State.

No Zimbabwean must be embarrassed in communities or before their own families. No Zimbabwean must be killed by the government. No Zimbabwean must get injured or maimed on account of holding a different opinion.

Over the past few weeks, many Zimbabweans have been subjected to human rights abuses, violation of fundamental freedoms, crimes against humanity and internal displacements. Many have been subjected to dehumanizing and life threatening brutality and injuries.

This raises serious questions about our values and morals as a nation. The sanctity of human life is not being honoured.

The culture of violence dates back to the 1980s and 1990s where traumatic State orchestrated episodes of gratuitous violence was visited upon the citizens.

I know many of you have an eye witness account and personal stories to tell about what has happened.

We note with serious concern the attempted arson of the MDC national headquarters and the on-going annihilation of the MDC structures and leadership.

There has been a serious attempt to decimate the MDC as evidenced by the targeting of its leadership including elected Honourable Members of Parliament and councilors as the regime moves to hold the people’s party liable for what in essence were the actions of an angry citizenry demanding that government finds a lasting solution to the burgeoning political and economic crisis.

The response of the State has been brutal; deploying armed soldiers to kill and maim and targeting some citizens who had retreated to their homes by indiscriminately assaulting them.

Others in areas such as Epworth have reportedly been raped by agents of the State while those picked by the State have been denied bail by the State, pointing to a deliberate ploy to cow and intimidate the citizenry in this de-facto state of emergency.

There has been a sustained vilification and attack of the MDC, a legitimate political party especially by government leaders and the State media.

The blanket curtailment of basic freedoms in the country has led to a situation in Bulawayo where the party failed to hold its primary elections to select a candidate in preparation for the by-elections in Cowdray Park.

There is fear and trepidation across the country as agents of the state continue to cow the nation, randomly targeting innocent Zimbabweans and assaulting them.

The human rights situation in the country has simply reached a crisis level.

The human rights violation statistics

It has been difficult to collate figures and specific names due to circumstances of emergency in the country where more than 12 people have reportedly been killed in the past one-and-half weeks.

Some of the 12 casualties include Kelvin Tinashe Choto (22) of Unit A, Chitungwiza, Abraham Nyapokoto (35) of Mbare, Trymore Nachiwe (22) of Glen View, Solomon Nyaruwa (49)of Marondera who was buried in Chimanimani, Thandiwe Ncube, of Epworth, andTinashe Kaitano of Kadoma, Tafadzwa Katare (22) of Kuwadzana and Kudakwashe Kapandamurongo (22) of Mbare. There have been killings of a police officer in Bulawayo and other innocent citizens in Sizinda and other areas.

There have been 844 reported human violations and 78 gun-shot injuries, according to the Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO forum even though the figures keep rising every day.

At the last count there were well over 1 000 arbitrary detentions in Harare, 28 in Mashonaland central, 41 in Midlands South, 395 in Bulawayo, 138 in Chitungwiza and 53 in Manicaland while the figures continue rising while the figures for other areas are still being captured.

More than fourteen women were allegedly raped by armed people in Harare South and Epworth. Some of our elected councilors who were arrested include Elvis Ruzani and Munyaradzi Kufahakutizwi, Simbarashe Nyahuye and Charles Ngenya in Marondera, Epworth ward 5 councillor, Elias Sithole and Kadoma councilor Michael Gore.

Just today and a few days ago, there have been property demolitions in Chitungwiza and Mbare targeting hard working Zimbabweans who are trying to eke an honest living.

Civic bodies indicate that more injuries are being recorded on a daily basis especially at night. The MDC is still compiling a comprehensive list of its supporters who were being harassed and were caught in the crossfire as the government mounts a crackdown on a legitimate political movement.

Also arrested were Honourable Members of Parliament including Hons’ Amos Chibaya, Settlement Chikwinya, Livingstone Chimina, Rosemary Nyathi and Lloyd Mukapiko while about 43 MPs have either been harassed or are being harassed with their lives in serious danger. Members of the party’s staff have also been targeted with some being assaulted.

Regrettably, the State is in denial. Instead of showing accountability and taking responsibility, some in the State have manufactured a list and catalogue of falsehoods, scapegoats, excuses, justifications and convoluted explanations.

It is necessary and urgent for us to plot a way out of the current crisis which has led to a far worse humanitarian crisis with devastating consequences.

The State has alleged that protesters who exercised their section 59 constitutional right to protest peacefully engaged in violence, looting and destruction of property. But tellingly, protesters accused of violence, looting and destruction of property are being routinely charged with treason and/or seeking to overthrow a constitutional government. The difference is between day and night.

People are accused of one thing but they are charged of another. This is absurd. The desperate and embattled authorities want to eat their cake and keep it at the same time. This must stop.

The Nature of the Crisis

The crisis in Zimbabwe is a crisis of governance. It is a crisis of leadership which is inherently political in nature and character but manifesting itself economically. The political crisis draws its roots from a toxic political environment and a perennially flawed electoral process.

It is trite that authority to govern derives from the people. It is the people who confer legitimacy upon a government. They do so through free, fair and credible elections.

Unfortunately, for years, our flawed electoral system has failed to deliver legitimacy to govern. Consequently our beautiful nation has remained stuck in the Dark Age, isolated and ostracized. The fabric of politics has been characterised by suspicion, fragmentation, deep division, palpable mistrust, accusation and counter-accusation.

Our governance foundations are ruined. Our leadership roots are rotten. Our base of values is shaken. In this regard, we have held out a hand of dialogue but it has been spurned and disrespected by our counterparts in Zanu PF.

It is not because we are desperate in pursuit of power. It is not because we covert the seat of authority. It is because we care for our beautiful country and the ordinary loving people of Zimbabwe whose plight grows with each day that passes.

The economic effects of a stolen election, disputed election result and political instability are evident for all to see. To heal the economy, we must heal our politics.

To fix our economy, we must repair our political fabric and moral fibre ringing about a revolution of values and culture to respect the sanctity of human life and the dignity of humanity. Without doubt, the political crisis has also had catastrophic social effects, leaving the weakest and most vulnerable members of our society falling on hard times.

Indeed, great danger lies ahead on both the economic and the social front. Here, we speak of the aged, the disabled, the women, the children, the orphaned, pensioners and all those on the margins of the mainstream of the economy including the many vulnerable young men and women so unemployed.

Way Forward

To all fellow Zimbabweans, we in the MDC respect and emphasise the constitutional principle that authority to govern derives from the people. This is in terms of the Constitution which forms the foundation of the social contract between government and the people. The people must never live in fear of their government. They must stand firm in defense of their rights, freedoms and the Constitution.

The government must respect and honour the people because without them there is no authority to govern. To the State, there must be a cessation of lawlessness and break down of the rule of law.

Lawlessness must be reversed. There must be affirmation, respect and observance of the Constitution. We must re-establish and re-entrench civilian police mandate to keep peace, law and order, taking our troops off the streets and the villages.

Zimbabwe needs an urgent return to and restoration of constitutional rule, civilian administration and the rule of law, harassment of prisoners of conscience and release of political prisoners.

Equally, our security services’ constitutional role in defending the country is unreservedly acknowledged. The role of our security must be performed professionally and in accordance with the law. There is no room for impunity and immunity.

Individuals who are violating human rights are contravening the Constitution and international treaties and conventions on human rights. They also are doing intolerable damage to the reputation of these key national institutions of both the police and the army negating the citizens confidence in the same.

Many have been abducted whose whereabouts remain unknown. Some have been tortured and raped. Internal displacements and damages to properties and homes in the high density areas have become rampant.

Beatings have become a daily diet, with assaults being a routine dose. The challenge is that the full extent of these atrocities remains unknown.

It is crucially important that there be a neutral, fact-finding mechanism process which is multilateral and judicial so as to determine the full extent of the atrocities that have been committed against the people.

The notion that the very authorities alleged to be responsible for the atrocities should also audit the extent of these atrocities is unacceptable. It is irrational and inhuman to expect perpetrators to audit victims. It is equally irrational to expect the perpetrators to hold themselves accountable. The human rights situation now obtaining in Zimbabwe requires the appointment of a special UN rapporteur on Zimbabwe to ensure accountability.

To our brothers and sisters in the SADC region, we say this is the time to stand with the peace-loving people of Zimbabwe. This not the time to see no evil, hear no evil and speak no evil, burying heads in the sand while a human rights crisis escalates into inordinate levels.

How many people must die or be killed before a firm and principled stance against atrocities being committed in the country is taken. How much blood must flow on the streets before the eye and hand of the region is drawn to this dire situation.

Our concern is that in spite of the letters and communication we have sent to SADC and the AU, they have remained mum in light of a precarious human rights situation in the country and an onslaught on a legitimate political movement in the country.

We urge SADC and the AU to show solidarity with the people of Zimbabwe by stopping this heinous onslaught on the country’s citizenry and facilitate dialogue to resolve the political stalemate I the country.

Lives have been needlessly lost while innocent Zimbabweans have either been needlessly assaulted or are seeking refuge in the mountains for their safety.

We urge urgent action to be taken in Zimbabwe to deal with the economic crisis, the humanitarian situation and the critical matter of a government that has become a grievous danger to the citizens. In a situation where party leaders and innocent members of parliament are being targeted, no one is safe.

We call for the National Peace and Reconciliation Commission to institute a healing process that involves compensation, psycho-social support and rehabilitation of State sponsored violence.

We call for the world to turn and train its eyes on Zimbabwe and to empathize with the innocent citizens undergoing a brutal onslaught with no prospect of respite on their plight.

We urge the world, particularly our own SADC and the AU, to stand with the people of Zimbabwe and not with the Zimbabwe leadership.

On our part, we shall not despair.
The people are sovereign and ultimately, the people shall govern.

LATEST- Zimsec Releases O Level Results

PRESS STATEMENT
29 January 2019
Re: RELEASE OF NOVEMBER 2018ORDINARY LEVEL EXAMINATION RESULTS
On behalf of the Zimbabwe School Examinations Council Board and Management, it gives me great pleasure to advise the nation of the release of the November 2018 ZIMSEC Ordinary Level Examination results. The 2018 November Ordinary Level examination was the first on the new curriculum introduced by the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education.
Candidates who sat for this examination will be able to collect their results from their respective schools/centres from Wednesday. 30 January 2019.
We are pleased to announce that, beginning with the November 2018 Ordinary Level Examinations. results will be accessible to Candidates and authorised personnel online. This will be done through the ZIMSEC website: www.zimsec.co.z.w. Instructions on how to access the Results Panel are available on the ZIMSEC Examination Portal page. A circular to this effect has been sent out to all concerned institutions.

The ZIMSEC Examination Panel can be accessed from any electronic device that supports the Internet. Results on the Portal arc in view only mode, therefore, they cannot be printed. The Results Slip which can only be collected by the candidates from their respective Examination Centres is the official document of ZIMSEC results.

The total number of candidates who sat for the November 2018 Ordintu-y Level examination was 239 441. This is 29.98% less than the candidates who entered for the 2017 November examination session which was 332 473.

The rise in the 2017 entry was as a result of a rush by candidates to write the last 0 level examination on the old curriculum. 162 541sat for 5 or more subjects and of these50664 obtained Grade C or better in five or more subjects, yielding a 32.83% which was higher than the 28.7% of 2017 where 162 915 sat for 5 or more subjects. The performance of candidates was analysed in the following categories:

• School candidates:
• Private candidates:
• Female candidates; and
• Male candidates.

More Than 2k Illegal Settlers In Chiredzi Face The Boot

By Own Correspondent| More than 2 000 families in Chiredzi district are set to be evicted and have their homes destroyed after the government declared that they acquired the land where they are settled illegally.

Government revealed that the families settled themselves on this land in contravention of Section 3 of the Gazetted Lands Act Chapter 20:28.

The government issued directive through the Ministry of Lands, Agriculture, Water, Climate and Rural Resettlement that all illegal settlers in resettlement areas should be evicted.

The directive to evict the settlers was confirmed by Chiredzi District Administrator Mr Lovemore Chisema.

He said:

Yes, we received a directive from the Ministry of Lands to undertake an eviction programme mainly targeting illegal settlers in Chiredzi.

We have been meeting with the district joint operations command members and currently, we are consulting relevant stakeholders to see how best we can undertake the process.

Minister of State for Masvingo province Ezra Chadzamira insisted that the eviction process will go on as per the government directive. Said Chadzamira:

This process is not targeting everyone; it is targeting those who illegally invaded land without the approval from the government.

We want order in our country so we don’t allow people to act in a manner that compromises the development of our country.-StateMedia

Acute Fertiliser Shortage Threatens Farming In Mnangagwa’s Backyard

Fertiliser

By Own Correspondent| Farmers in the Midlands province are the worst affected by the acute shortage of top dressing fertiliser, Ammonium Nitrate (AN) this 2018/19 farming season.

The country’s sole fertiliser manufacturer, Sable Chemicals, which is also located in the Midlands Province, is able to produce only 25 per cent of the required fertiliser.

Midlands provincial crop and livestock officer Medlinah Magwenzi said:

Our farmers in the Midlands Province are struggling to get ammonium nitrate fertiliser.

Most of those who benefited under the Presidential Inputs Support Scheme and Command Agriculture also did not get ammonium nitrate. The irony of it is that the company that produces ammonium nitrate is here in Kwekwe, in the Midlands province, yet farmers in the province are the most affected.

Their explanation is that they don’t sell fertiliser to individuals, but they sell bulk quantities to companies and retailers, but farmers can always organise themselves and buy the fertiliser in bulk.-StateMedia

Mashayamombe’s Brother Abducted

Cephas Mashayamombe, brother to Shadreck Mashayamombe, the former MP candidate for Harare South, has been abducted by men driving a white Toyota Fortuner.

According to ZimLive, the vehicle is a CID HQ pool vehicle, once used by ZRP’s Stephen Mutamba when he was CID boss.

More to follow…

Notice Of Intention To Sue CBZ

Plaintiff
Dr Clarence Kudzai Patsika
[ADDRESS REDACTED]

Defendant
CBZ Bank ZImbabwe
60 Kwame Nkrumah Avenue
Harare P.O. Box 3313


Letter of Demand and Notice of intention to sue CBZ Bank $200 millon us for Poor Service, Gross Negligence, Poor Conduct, Bad Customer Service, Denying my right to a redress, Wasting my time and Temporary theft of Funds, Misleading by giving false or deceptive information, False Advertising; failing to give important information in a clear manner

I write in my personal capacity and as a stakeholder of Zimbabwe

This is a formal notice of my intent to file a lawsuit against This is to notify you that i am beginning a process to sue CBZ Bank and i intend to make this Letter open should i not get a quick response. A Company, a business or cooperation is Guilty until proven innocent because they have an obligation to the people.

Preface
This is my first time using CBZ Bank and the service is extremely poor, The Whole of Zimbabwe will know my story because i have the platform. Its is Banks like this one that makes people loose confidence in Zimbabwe Banking System and People end up opening accounts offshore in other countries thereby depleting Zimbabwe’s Forex Source. The Blame for this Poor service eventually Comes upon the Office of the President then eventually Zanu PF.

Claim
On Friday 11 January 2018 at around between 1430hrs and 1430hrs Before opening an FCA account i Told the Bank What i wanted to use the Account for and My Source of Money, and i asked how long the Bank Takes to process a wire transfer from Google Ireland. I was told not more than 5 days, I open the Account and Gave some of my Google Payments Documents as proof of income.

On 18 January 2019 I received a wire Transfer of 3.178.26 Euros. It should have taken not more than 5 Days to be credited into my account but up until today, 28 January 2019, that is 10 Days later i haven’t received anything.

My other Funds from the same Source, (Google Ireland) sent 3 days latter than the CBZ one are already Deposited in FBC Bank and Ecobank. These Banks have proven to be by far more efficient than CBZ and ill never use CBA again and Zimbabwe will know of this

On 24 January i visited CBZ Treasury and was told to wait for 5 to 7 Days, i understood and left. On 25 January time 1342hrs i contacted the Bank through Helpline wanting to know why the money was not yet in my account, Below is my encounter with helpline. Please note i have the recordings of all calls which i made after notifying helpline

25 January , A Helpline Personell Tinotenda cut my Call then i called gain and spoke to Isabel who lied that Tinotenda had gone for lunch. Both the Cutting the Call and The Lying about lunch covering for each other are Crimes. I demand that Discplinary action be taken upon these two and they Should Compensate me for wasting my time and fooling. Isabel goes on to lie that Tinotenda is no longer there, Isabel then Puts me on Hold and Tinotenda gets Back on the line 1345hrs & says “Let me put you through to Mr Juma”. Who she says its the Person in charge of international Banking. Isabel goes on to lie “i did not go for Lunch” Lies that she was escalating the issue, yet she hung up.

Mr Juma at 1349hrs 51 seconds Says “Hanti transfer yenyu Ndeye MaEuro, Makange makapiwa here maBanking Details Edu ema Euro”
He goes on “Chicopy Chandaona Hachisi KuStater anything Along those lines” (The Copy im seeing is not saying anything on Euros
13:50hrs 14seconds Mr Juma “We cant pay mari (money) we havent recieved on our Account”
13:50hrs 40seconds “We cant track from here”
13:50hrs 43seconds “Imi munotoenda kuBank kwenyu kuNatwest” (You go to your Bank Natwest).
13:50hrs 51seconds “we do no track incoming Transfers”
1354hrs “We have not received the money”

On Above Statements Mr Juma was Lying terribly, He Tells me of the Source Bank Natwest which I never Told him and I don’t know what Natwest is. He Lies that CBZ cant track a wire Transfer. yet When i opened an Account i was given an account Number and a Swift Code COBZZWHAXXX.

And I don’t know which copy is he talking about in all this it shows Mr Juma Knows where the money is, if he has not stolen it himself and invested it or is waiting for Euro to USD rates to Drop.

He lies that The Bank has not received the money in that for the transfer to be completed the Receiving Bank has to Authorize the transaction because if i had used a non existing Bank Account the Transfer wouldn’t have completed.

I contacted Helpline with a Complain and Dispute and Dispute resolution Procedure was not followed, All i got was gross negligence lies and Misrepresentation.

For A wire Transfer that is delayed i should able to contact my Bank and Give them the Tracking Code, in this case GG101OA645 And they Should track it and Credit immediate because a Wire Transfer in not a Quench it does not require Clearance, as soon as CBZ receives the SWIFT Notice my account should be credited.

When I opened the Bank Account i Specified what i wanted to use it for and if CBZ couldn’t do it I should have been told. I intend to publicize this and let people know they cant trust CBZ to receive their funds in time, they should use Ecobank.

Demands

These demands have to be met whether a resolution has been made or the transaction has been reversed or funds credited, i have already gone through the loss. I demand a report on what happened to my money and why did it delay,

I demand Isabel and Tinotenda get Disciplined or Fired and i need Details on that I demand Mr Juma get Discplined or Fired.

I demand Immediate Crediting of My Account and the Bank should Bring the money to my House. The Bank can Convert The Money To USD or Cancel the transaction so i can use another more efficient bank with people who know what they are doing.

I demand Compensation for the work i did contacting Helpline and Transport Cost
I demand compensation for above mentioned Damages
10.12 if you had the confirmation i could Check
11.20 on receiving money we dont play any part
Damages
Opportunity Cost €3,178.26
Overtime $100us per day Delayed
Emotional Stress $700us per day Delayed
Humiliation $1000us per day Delayed
Lifestyle Deprivation €3,178.26
Helpline Mitigation Tinotenda, Lesey, Isabel, Mr Juma $300us each in their Personal Capacities
Below are Some of My Rights Breached in Brief,
Consumer Protection Bill 2014

PART III FUNDAMENTAL CONSUMER RIGHTS
8 Right to Safety
10 Right to choose
11 Right to be heard
12 Right to redress
17 Consumer’s right to choose or examine goods
(3) If the consumer has agreed to purchase goods and services solely on the basis of a description or sample, or both, provided by the supplier, the goods goods and services delivered to the consumer must in all material respects and characteristics correspond to that which an ordinary alert consumer would have been entitled to expect based on the description or on a reasonable examination of the sample, as the case may be.
(4) If a supply of goods or services is by sample, as well as by description, it is not sufficient that any of the goods correspond with the sample if the goods do not also correspond with the description.
19 Consumer’s right to be heard and obtain redress
(1) If a consumer has exercised, asserted or sought to uphold any right set out in this Act or in an agreement or transaction with a supplier, the supplier must not, in response—
(a) discriminate directly or indirectly against that consumer, compared to the supplier’s treatment of any other consumer who has not exercised, asserted or sought to uphold such a right;
(b) penalize the consumer;
(c) alter, or propose to alter, the terms or conditions of a transaction or agreement with the consumer, to the detriment of the consumer; or
(d) take any action to accelerate, enforce, suspend or terminate an agreement with the consumer.
(2) If an agreement or any provision of an agreement is, in terms of this Act, declared to be void, the supplier who is a party to that agreement must not, in response to that decision—
(a) directly or indirectly penalize another party to that agreement;
(b) alter the terms or conditions of any other transaction or agreement with another party to the impugned agreement, except to the extent necessary to correct a similarly unlawful provision; or
(c) take any action to accelerate, enforce, suspend or terminate another agreement with another party to the impugned agreement.

I demand a prompt response

Disgruntled
Dr Clarence Kudzai Patsika, Human Rights Defender, Student Lawyer, Citizen Journalist, Political Analyst, Computer Programmer, Architect, Musician, Producer, Mathematician, Engineer, Inventor, Anatomist, Geologist, Cartographer, Deejay, Veejay, Botanist, Philosopher, Philanthropist, Entrepreneur, Blogger, Comedian, Film Producer, Author and Writer.

DISCLAIMER The information in this message is confidential and is legally privileged. It is intended solely for the addressee. Access to this message by anyone else is unauthorized. Unless Authorized by Dr Clarence as of now until i decide to make it open or upon getting authorisation from Dr Clarence

UMP, They Vote For ZANU PF In Record Numbers But Remain The Most Underdeveloped, What A Shame

Maramba-Pfungwe legislator Tichawona Karumazondo (Zanu PF) is appealing to government to start developmental projects in his constituency, which he said is the poorest in the country despite being a Zanu PF stronghold.

Speaking at the handover of goods to victims of a hailstorm at Chitsungo Primary School in Pfungwe on Thursday, Karumazondo said the constituency was one of the poorest despite supporting the ruling party in every election.

“We need development in this area. This is the new dispensation and I hope this time we are going to be heard. We are number one voters, but there is hunger here. There is a massive water shortage, with villagers walking four to five kilometres to fetch water,” he said.

Villagers in Maramba-Pfungwe, traditionally known for producing shocking election results for Zanu PF, together with the neighbouring Uzumba constituency, mainly survive on food aid due to erratic rains that have resulted in successive droughts.

The event was attended by Public Works, Labour and Social Welfare minister Sekai Nzenza, who pledged to address the issue of hunger in the area.

Karumazondo called for government to intervene in the pricing of basic commodities and transport, which were now out of reach of most villagers.

“We appeal to the government to intervene and solve the issue of price hikes of basic commodities in shops and transport fares. If you ask shop owners on why they are charging high prices, they tell you that it is because of high transport costs,” Karumazondo said.

Addressing the same gathering, Mashonaland East Provincial Affairs minister Aplonia Munzverengi said government was working around the clock to deploy cheaper buses to rural areas to ease transport challenges.

Newsday

Police Officer Beats Mentally Disabled Person To Death

A GURUVE police officer and his two accomplices were arraigned before a local magistrate yesterday for allegedly killing a mentally-challenged man.

Tenwiro Chitaura (58), stationed at Guruve Police Station and his alleged accomplices William Muzhenje (62) and Elifas Muzhenje (55), were not asked to plead to the murder charge when they appeared before Guruve magistrate Shingirai Mutiro, who remanded them in custody to February 5.

It is the State case that on December 22 last year, the now deceased Ronaki Mupogo (27) developed a mental problem and was brought to his rural home in Mudindo by a relative.

At around 10pm on the same day, Mupogo slipped out of Chiyangwa village into a nearby Chitauro village, wearing only a pair of shorts.

He arrived at William Muzenje’s homestead and later fled as dogs chased after him.

William teamed up with Elifas and chased after Mupogo, who they caught and brought to Chitauro’s homestead where they handcuffed and beat him up.

They later surrendered Mupogo at Mudhindo Police Base, manned by one Constable Joram.

Joram allegedly assaulted Mupogo, but released him without charge.

Mupogo died on arrival at his homestead. According to court papers, the trio, in their defence, accused Joram of killing Mupogo.

Carson Kundiona represented the State.

NewsDay

ANC Delegation Meets ZANU PF At “Shake Shake House”

Correspondent|VISITING delegation from South Africa’s Africa National Congress (ANC) which arrived on Monday night has met with ZANU-PF officials at the ruling party’s headquarters in Harare.

The ANC team is being led by the party’s Secretary-General Ace Magashule and includes senior ANC officials Tony Yengeni, Thoko Didiza, Bongani Nongo, who are all ANC central committee members and Justice Phitso, the chief of staff to the secretary general’s office.

In his address, Magashule applauded President Mnangagwa for giving them the opportunity to interact with their counterparts.

“We clearly understand the situation on the ground which is affecting your country and we want to move forward as former liberation movements in addressing your situation,” he said.

ZANU-PF secretary for administration Orbert Mpofu said they were joined together by a very rich revolutionary background which actually realized their people being emancipated from the tentacles of oppression and subjugation over many years.

“Our long walk to freedom as stated by your founding father Nelson Rolihlala Mandela still continues. As Zimbabwe we have achieved one milestone in this journey of emancipation by ensuring that we take ownership of the land.

“This precious resource which is very dear and sentimental to all Africans should not be taken for granted,” he said.

Mugabe’s Long Shadow, New York Times

image
A fuel price increase drew protesters this month in Harare, Zimbabwe.CreditAaron Ufumeli/EPA, via Shutterstock

By The New York Times Editorial Board|Reviving a country from the devastation and plunder of a dictator is a daunting challenge for the best intentioned of leaders. Whether it’s possible at all if the successor is a close comrade of the fallen despot is an open question. Zimbabwe, where 37 years of misrule by Robert Mugabe were finally ended in a palace coup 14 months ago led by his vice president and onetime enforcer, Emmerson Mnangagwa, is a case in point.

This month, after President Mnangagwaraised the price of gasoline by 150 percent, protesters hit the streets. Mr. Mnangagwa arguably had no choice, since the government could not continue subsidizing fuel, and the protests were inevitable. The problem was that security forces replied with all the viciousness of the Mugabe era— a crackdown like what Mr. Mnangagwa used to mete out when he was in charge of internal security and earned the nickname “Crocodile.” Soldiers and unidentified thugs went door to door in Harare beating and arresting scores of people at random; 12 shooting deaths were reported; the internet was shut down.

image
The crackdown against protesters in Zimbabwe was violent.CreditPhilimon Bulawayo/Reuters

Mr. Mnangagwa was away on a fund-raising tour when the violence broke out. When he cut short the trip and returned, he promised to investigate the actions of the security forces and to open a dialogue with political, civic and religious leaders. Whether he ordered the crackdown remains unclear; one rumor is that his vice president, Constantino Chiwenga, a hard-line former commander of the army who backed Mr. Mnangagwa in the coup, was trying to undermine the president for his own ends.

It almost doesn’t matter. What does is that many Zimbabweans — and potential international investors — concluded that things had not changed with the exit of Mr. Mugabe. The ZANU-PF political machine that the old dictator ran since independence in 1980 was still in command and up to its old ways.

There was a moment of hope when Mr. Mnangagwa, backed by the military, ousted Mr. Mugabe. People danced in the streets — anything was better than the enfeebled nonagenarian autocrat who had all but destroyed the economy of a country rich in resources and human potential. The new president donned a bright scarf in the colors of the Zimbabwe flag (which he has worn ever since) and promptly lifted much of the petty oppression and harassment that had been the norm. A few weeks later he was in Davos, spreading the word that Zimbabwe was “open for business.” At home, he declared that “the people’s voice is the voice of God,” and he promised free elections.

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Emmerson Mnangagwa continues to wear a scarf in the colors of the Zimbabwe flag.CreditJekesai Njikizana/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The doubts set in with those elections, held last July 30. Mr. Mnangagwa was elected to a full term, and international observers declared the vote a marked improvement over elections under Mr. Mugabe, which, granted, is not saying much. But the 40-year-old challenger, Nelson Chamisa, claimed fraud, and when his supporters gathered in protests, government forces crushed them mercilessly.

The economic challenges before Zimbabwe are enormous: vast debts, a battered infrastructure, hyperinflation, soaring unemployment. Confronting them will require foreign aid and investment, lifting the international sanctions imposed during Mr. Mugabe’s rule and restoring a glimmer of optimism for the future in a population that will be asked to make more sacrifices, like the fuel price increase, before things can get better. Under American law, removing sanctions requires a nonpartisan army and respect for the rights and freedoms of all people.

It is far from clear whether Mr. Mnangagwa or ZANU-PF are up to the challenge. But if they have any hope of surviving in office or lifting Zimbabwe out of the mess they helped create under Mr. Mugabe, the time to start is now, by immediately reining in the security forces and opening the dialogue Mr. Mnangagwa has pledged with the opposition and civil society. The United States and other potential donors could create an incentive by preparing a major package of assistance once the Zimbabwe government shows it is really committed to change.

New York Times

Mnangagwa’s Shock Fuel Price Hike “Working Wonders”

Correspondent|PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa’s decision to review the price of fuel upwards seems to have worked wonders as the situation at most fuel stations across the country has vastly improved.

According to the New York Times of Tuesday 29 January 2019, President Mnangagwa had no choice.

“Mr. Mnangagwa arguably had no choice, since the government could not continue subsidizing fuel, and the protests were inevitable,” said the opinion piece titled Robert Mugabe’s Long Shadow.

“Fuel was the big conversation dominating our landscape in the last two months. On the 12th of January, ED announced a price review and a raft of other interventions. This appears to have worked wonders. Fuel usage habits have changed and fuel is now available,” said Nick Mangwana, the
Permanent Secretary for Information, Publicity & Broadcasting Services.

Finance and Economic Development Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube also explained that the fuel situation had normalised following President Mnangagwa’s interventions to contain the artificial shortages.

He defended the fuel of $3.31 per litre saying, “Our fuel was being bought for something like 40 cents (USD) per litre and was being sold internally and also externally to other countries.

Truckers were coming in to fill up and offload in Zambia. Imagine buying fuel for about 40 cents (USD) and then resell it in Zambia for over a US$1. So we closed that gap.”

The fuel situation was on the verge of getting out of hand, grounding emergency services like ambulances and fire tenders across the country.

Pictures of ambulances queuing for fuel were everywhere on social media.

For now, the problem appears resolved.

For how long will things remain steady? We await to see.

ZRP Confirms Arresting 36 Children For #ShutdownZimbabwe Related Crimes

By Own Correspondent| The Zimbabwe Republic Police has confirmed arresting 36 children for public violence, looting and destroying property in the fuel protests that rocked the country early January.

Addressing the media, Senior Assistant Commissioner Charity Charamba said the minors were arrested mostly in Chitungwiza and Braeside, Harare.

She said:

“In Braeside, 14 children were arrested while in Chitungwiza, at least 22 minors were arrested for various crimes including looting, barricading roads and destroying property.”

Zimbabwe Going No Where Slowly, Kenyan Critic

The ZANU Patriotic Front leader and freedom fighter Robert Mugabe once shone as a beacon of hope to many disillusioned Zimbabweans, a country that was under the yoke of colonialism, imperialism and white minority rule for a long period.

As a self-declared life-time ruler of Zimbabwe, he would later lead the wealthy nation down the path of destruction. While a majority of the citizenry lived in abject poverty Mugabe and his close allies lived a lavish and extravagant life-a story replicated in most countries in Africa.

His 37-year chokehold onto power was a sad story characterised by decreased food production, famine, economic failure, human rights abuses and international sanctions

It has been almost a year since the military forced Mugabe to relinquish power in a soft coup.

The elections that followed saw Emmerson Dambudzo Mnagangwa take the reins of power. As the streets of Harare burst into jubilation, political pundits expressed concerns that the ex-intelligence chief and defense minister and later vice president would be another Mugabe.

Mnagangwa was nicknamed the Crocodile for his role in the early 80s massacre of the Ndebele ethnic minority for opposing the Mugabe government

The current crackdown on innocent protesters over spiked fuel prices and internet shutdown rekindles memories of the Ndebele repression.

With the highest fuel prices in the world occasioned by acute shortages, one could have wished that the current leadership would inspire hope through key institutional reforms coupled up with respect for human rights and expansion of civic space to stir up social economic development. But, with the current state of affairs, there is little hope.

In a report, the joint mission of the US-based International Republican Institute and the National Democratic Institute say Zimbabwe has not yet demonstrated that it has established a tolerant, democratic culture that enables the conduct of elections in which parties are treated equitably and citizens can cast their vote freely

Endemic corruption and systemic embezzlement of public funds have significantly eroded public confidence in both the public and the private sector.

Millions of shillings that could otherwise have been used for the public good are lost to corruption daily. Lack of transparency, corruption and misappropriation of public funds being on the rise.

The government has consistently come under sharp criticism for being complacent in the fight against corruption.

The hopes of the people on August 26, 2018 as Emmerson Dambudzo Mnagangwa was being sworn-in are quickly evaporating as almost every sector in Southern Rhodesia requires reforms.

It is the onus of the current regime to restore public confidence and set Zimbabwe on the path of success.

Opposition MDC party supporters protest in the streets of Harare during clashes with police.

The Standard Media Kenya

BREAKING- MDC National Organising Secretary Amos Chibaya Granted Bail

By Own Correspondent| MDC National Organizing Secretary, Amos Chibaya and Livingstone Chimina who have been facing charges of inciting public violence have been granted bail.

The duo were granted bail by Masvingo High Court Judge, Justice Joseph Mafusire.

Justice Mafusire granted them bail after the state failed to provide evidence and witnesses.

However, the two MDC leaders were denied bail by two Gweru magistrates courts before they approached the High Court in Masvingo.

This is a developing story. Refresh this page for updates.

Highly Divided Civil Servants Just Don’t Know What To Do, Are They Falling To Political Pressures And Infiltration

SALARY negotiations between civil servants and government yesterday ended prematurely after some workers’ union representatives stormed out of the meeting, accusing their employer of not being committed to improving their welfare.

Apex Council leaders, however, said they had given government up to tomorrow to come up with an improved package or they would declare a full-blown strike.

But Progressive Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) president Takavafira Zhou later accused the Apex Council of making unilateral decisions, adding that since they were not consulted on the latest decision, they were going ahead with the planned industrial action.

“Apex Council decisions are done collectively and not unilaterally. The recent unilateral statements allegedly by (chairperson) Cecilia Alexander that Apex Council has postponed industrial action to open room for negotiations is unfortunate and has no locus standi,” he said in a statement.

“Alexander must make decisions after consulting Apex affiliates. That she has unilaterally given a statement without consulting affiliates reveals her flirtation and romance with the employer.”

Zhou said they “cannot continue to negotiate for infinity”, adding teachers would withdraw their labour until the impasse was resolved.

He accused the Apex Council of betraying the struggle and called for the realignment of the body.

“Our withdrawal of labour is certainly not synonymous with a shutdown. Let expedient elements desist from hijacking labour issues,” Zhou warned.

“The law is clear that there must be three negotiating meetings, and workers thereafter can either decide to push negotiations by other means, viz industrial action or arbitration. That we gave notice of industrial action means we have chosen the path of industrial action,” he said.

The rift between the civil service body and unions was visible as some union leaders refused to brief the media on the outcome of the meeting, while others implored the Apex Council leadership to show character and not deviate from the “agreed position”.

Civil servants are demanding $1 733 for the least paid worker.

Initially, the union leaders met with government at the National Joint Negotiation Committee, but no new offer was presented.

Government recently offered a 22,7% cushioning allowance and 5% per month to its workers on a sliding scale between January and March, but the offer was shot down as pittance.

David Dzatsunga, the Apex Council secretary, told journalists that they would be meeting government again tomorrow.

“Following the expiring of the 14-day notice given to government by the Apex Council on Friday January 25, 2019, the Apex Council gives the government up to Wednesday January 30, 2019 or face an inevitable job action,” he said.

PTUZ secretary-general Raymond Majongwe said government should pay civil servants in hard currency.

“The most important part is that the government is not taking civil servants seriously,” he said.

Blaze In Beitbridge, Indications Of Foul Play Involving High Ranking Officials Emerge

By Paul Nyathi|Early reports from Beitbridge indicate that foul play is suspected in the fire that burnt down a Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) warehouse at the Border Post.

Sources within the border disclosed to ZimEye.com that there is a possibility that the warehouse was set ablaze by employees in the government revenue department after some queries were raised on the records of goods confiscated from travellers who could not pay duty or the goods were being smuggled.

According to the sources, senior officials in the department at the border and at the Head Office in Harare will be implicated if thorough investigations on the matter are carried out.

“There has been a lot of corrupt activities at the warehouse some involving senior officials here and in Harare and we are not surprised that the building has been set on fire,” said the source.

“This is a clear process of burning up evidence by the looters,” he added.

High corruption levels at one of the busiest inland border posts on the continent attracted the ire of President Emmerson who last year warned the authorities at the border that government will catch up with them.

Speaking during the ground breaking ceremony of the $241 million expansion of the Border Post in July last year, Mnangagwa warned that his government was prioritising putting order at the border.

Several members of the Zimbabwe National Army and state security agents were immediately deployed at the border raising serious fears amongst the customs and immigration officials at the point of entry.

“I direct all men and women within our border control institutions to stop all forms of corruption and chicanery.

Perpetrators will face the full wrath of the law. Please stand warned,” Said Mnangagwa.

Police spokesperson, Assistant Commissioner Paul Nyathi could not comment on the issue saying that he is yet to be briefed of the incident.

More to follow ….

“Implement Security Sector Reforms”: Crisis In Zimbabwe Coalition

By Own Correspondent– Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition director Thulani Mswelanto has called for the speedy implementation of security sector reforms as the army has become a major power broker in Zimbabwe.

Said Mswelanto:

After mapping the power matrix in Zimbabwe, it is clear that the army is a major power broker that plunged the country into chaos by creating an illegitimate political order in 2017.

The army is now seized with protecting and sustaining that order using coercion and violence. The dialogue will dislodge the army of its role in our politics because that dialogue must focus on timelines for key reforms that include security sector reforms, electoral reforms and creating a clear economic agenda that prioritises social protection.- Newsday