Oh No Mukanya, That’s Not How Top Players Behave, Tuku Would Not Have Done That To His Home People.

SCORES of Chimurenga fans in Guruve were left seething with anger after the United States-based music legend Thomas “Mukanya” Mapfumo failed to turn up for what had been touted as his final farewell gig in his rural home on Sunday.

Show promoter, Magret Mutongerwa, had told NewsDay Life & Style last week that Mukanya would stage the show after his return from Oliver Mtukudzi’s funeral in Madziwa.

But Mukanya’s failure to turn up at the show did not sit well with fans after it had been extensively advertised. Irate fans told NewsDay Life & Style on Sunday night that it was unprofessional for Mukanya to treat his fans in that manner.

“With the recent fuel price hikes, surely how can Mukanya abandon us in such a manner. We have sacrificed the few dollars that we had on fuel in a bid to have a farewell with our homeboy. It would have been more fun to have him here since it is his rural home. I am really disappointed”, said a fan who identified herself as Hazel Bayisa.

The show, whose tickets were going for $10, was also meant to feature Progress Chipfumo.

“When we came here, the atmosphere looked as though the legend was on his way from Oliver Mtukudzi’s burial and we called each other, inviting more fans

as we waited anxiously for Mukanya, but after some hours, we were told by the DJ that the show had been cancelled and scheduled for Saturday,” Farai Zimba said.

The venue had been refurbished to meet the standards of the ageless Chimurenga icon.

A fan identified as Shungu Murendo felt they were robbed by Mukanya and the promoters as they ended up spending the cash they had at the hotel.

“We have been robbed by both Mukanya and his promoters. As you can see, we have no choice, but to spend the money we budgeted for him at this hotel; this is really unfair,” lamented Murendo.

Mutongerwa confirmed to NewsDay Life & Style yesterday that things did not go according to plan, but assured the Guruve fans that the show would now be held on Saturday.

The Murombedzi show, however, went ahead without incident.

NewsDay

Good News For Zimbabweans Who Went To “Wenela” In The 1970s

By Own Correspondent|Zimbabweans who contracted tuberculosis or silicosis while working in South Africa’s gold mines in the 1970s are being called to register for a compensation class settlement.

 The proposed settlement is subject to certain conditions and must be approved by the High Court when it sits from May 29 to 31, 2019 in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Recently, South African mines reached a conditional settlement to pay compensation of up to R500 000 each to thousands of Zimbabweans who used to work in the neighbouring country’s mines in the 1970’s, subject to approval by the High Court.

Six companies, African Rainbow Minerals, Anglo American SA, AngloGold Ashanti, Gold Fields, Harmony, Sibanye-Stillwater and some of the affiliate mining entities have reached a conditional settlement to pay compensation to eligible former Wenela mine workers and dependants of those who have passed away.

Wenela is an acronym for Witwatersrand Native Labour Association, comprising former Southern African mine workers drawn from Zimbabwe, Malawi, Botswana and Mozambique.-StateMedia

BREAKING- Beitbridge Warehouse Goes Up In Flames, What Is Going On?

Beitbridge Border Post

By Own Correspondent- Property worth thousands of dollars were reduced to ashes Tuesday morning when a state warehouse caught fire at Beitbridge Border Post.

The fire, whose cause is unknown broke out between 6 and 7 am.

Fire tenders from the local municipality and Noic had been summoned on site.

The warehouse on the export side becomes a fourth in a few years to go up in smoke. In 2016 another warehouse on the import side went up in flames destroying property worth millions. The fire was attributed to an electrical fault.

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

Thandazani Moyo Elected New Law Society Of Zim President, To Sit With Chigumba In Mnangagwa Task Team

BULAWAYO lawyer Mr Thandazani Masiye-Moyo was yesterday elected the new Law Society of Zimbabwe (LSZ) president, taking over from Mr Misheck Hogwe, whose tenure has expired.

Mr Masiye- Moyo, a senior partner at Masiye-Moyo and Associates Legal Practitioners in Bulawayo, was a LSZ councillor prior to his elevation to head the organisation.


He will be deputised by Mr Tatenda Mawere of Mawere, Sibanda Commercial Lawyers.

The election was held in Harare yesterday following the expiry of Mr Hogwe’s two-year term.

LSZ secretary Edward Mapara confirmed the development, saying Mr Masiye-Moyo was unanimously elected.


Outgoing president Mr Hogwe said he had managed to achieve his set goals over the two-year period with among his achievements, the introduction of the electronic case management system and continuous professional development.
He said the major focus of the LSZ was regulation and discipline among its members.


“The core business of the law society is regulation, as a legal profession we are self-regulating. The law society can fail in everything else but not regulation because that’s its core mandate. “The integrity of the legal profession is based on the conduct of the members and the trust that members of the public have is based on how the legal practitioners conduct themselves in the execution of their duties,” said Mr Hogwe.

“So it is fundamental that the law society emphasises the aspect of regulation and for that reason, one thing that I’ve tried to do together with council was to tighten the regulations and make sure that we rein in our errant members.


“This among other things necessitated having a look at the time in disposing of cases and general case management. So it was during my tenure that the law society introduced an electronic case management system to ensure that the management of matters is done more efficiently.”


He said he cultivated a culture of engagement between the LSZ and other stakeholders namely the Judiciary, police, National Prosecuting Authority and even the Executive.


Mr Hogwe said back in the day, the Law Society was confrontational but his predecessors Mr Lloyd Mhishi and Mrs Vimbai Nyemba created a good rapport with the Executive.


“During my term, a good rapport was created because I’m one person who believes in engagement as the route to solving all problems. There is no need for confrontation and when you engage you tend to get more co-operation.


“One thing I did during my tenure was to look at continuous training, continuous professional development, I think you may have heard some complaint from the late Chief Justice about lawyers appearing in court ill-prepared, poor preparation of documents among other issues, so my council also looked at that aspect and did quite a lot in trying to make sure that we continuously provide training to our members in collaboration with other stakeholders and other lawyer associations, “he said.

The last LSZ president from Bulawayo was Mr Josphat Tshuma in 2011. A LSZ president is given a two-year term of office and after its expiry, the 11-member council elects a new president in terms of the society’s constitution.

In an announcement by President Emmerson Mnangagwa on Monday, the President of the law society will be a member of the task force assigned to implement the Motlanthe Commission recommendations. He will join the ZEC Chairperson Priscilla Chigumba in the task team.

State Media

Bindura Town Frustrated Tuku’s Biggest Dream.

The late Oliver Mtukudzi

THE late music icon and national hero Oliver “Tuku” Mtukudzi died a bitter man after the Bindura Municipality frustrated his dream to set up an arts centre in his Madziwa rural home in the mould of Pakare Paye to empower youths in this rural outpost, it has emerged.

Tuku died in Harare on Wednesday last week and was buried at his rural home on Sunday after he was unanimously declared a national hero by the Zanu PF politburo.

The Mtukudzi family spokesperson, Victor Rukainga, told mourners at Tuku’s burial that the music superstar died a bitter man after failing to secure land

from the Bindura municipality.

“My uncle told me that his desire was to help talented youths in arts by setting up an arts centre here in Madziwa. I accompanied him to Bindura municipality and talked to council authorities, but we were directed to a place that was not suitable as his wish was to build the arts centre along the highway,” he said.

“He even proposed to set it up at a place where there was a dysfunctional swimming pool, but the Bindura Municipality refused again.”

Rukainga said by denying Tuku’s request, the municipality denied young people in Mashonaland Central an opportunity to see their dreams come true.

Rukainga said Tuku was passionate about his roots, something reflected in his song, Ndafunga Dande. If the Bindura Municipality had granted Tuku’s wish, the proposed arts centre would have become the musician’s second after Pakare Paye Arts Centre in Norton, where young promising talent in the mould of

Mbeu, Tsvete, Munya Mataruse and Donald Kanyuchu has been raised.

Meanwhile, it was a befitting send-off for Tuku as thousands of mourners across the spectrum thronged his homestead to pay their last respects to the artiste who was buried on Sunday.

NewsDay

Son Gets Dad Arrested For Slapping Him After Refusing To Perform Duties At The Fields.

A Victoria Falls man will live to rue the day he decided to discipline his wayward son after the lad reported him to the police for physical abuse.

Livias Weza (45) of BH 36 Chidobe under Chief Mvuthu just outside Victoria Falls town slapped his 19-year-old son British after he refused to go to the fields and look for a missing donkey.

Weza slapped his son.

With the help of his mother whose details were not given in court, British filed a report of physical abuse leading to his father’s arrest.

The man is set to appear in court soon.

State Media

Killer Soldier’s Trial Fails To Kick Off

The trial of an Airforce of Zimbabwe pilot accused of brutally murdering his Gweru based girlfriend late last year, failed to kick off yesterday after his lawyer applied for the matter to be referred to the Constitutional Court.

Bulawayo High Court judge Justice Thompson Mabhikwa sitting at the Gweru High Court Circuit yesterday ruled that the trial of Airforce of Zimbabwe pilot, Tashinga Musonza (29) who allegedly killed Lucy Duve (32) in a crime of passion in November last year be remanded to February 19 at the Bulawayo High Court.

“The matter has been remanded to Bulawayo High Court following an application made by the defence counsel to have the matter referred to the Constitutional Court. The accused is remanded in custody to February 19,” said Justice Mabhikwa.

This was after Musonza’s lawyer, Mr James Makiya of Makiya and Partners, had made an application to have the matter be referred to the Constitutional Court for the purposes of challenging the existence or presence of assessors on the High Court bench.

“We apply that the matter be referred to the Constitutional Court for purposes of challenging the issue of assessors. The assessors should not be part of the bench because there is no provision for them in the High Court Act,” said Mr Makiya.

Chief Public Prosecutor Mr Samuel Pedzisayi who is in charge of Midlands province, said the State was not opposed to having the matter remanded to next month because the Gweru High Court Circuit had no time for such challenges and arguments.

“This is a High Court Circuit which only has 10 days and already half a day has been lost due to the official opening procession. So I have liaised with my colleagues at Bulawayo High Court and the matter can be heard on 19, 20 and 22 February,” he said.

Musonza allegedly fatally assaulted Duve who was working for a local non-governmental organisation (NGO) accusing her of cheating on him with his colleague.

It is the State’s case that on November 25, Musonza went to their lodgings at around 10PM and found Duve asleep. He allegedly accused her of cheating on him with his colleague.

The two allegedly drove to the airbase since Musonza wanted the matter clarified. They allegedly woke up Duve’s alleged lover who denied being in a relationship with her.

Musonza allegedly got furious and started assaulting his girlfriend.

His colleague tried to restrain him but was overpowered before he ran away from the scene to seek assistance from colleagues.

Upon their return they found Duve lying unconscious in a pool of blood.

Musonza later drove Duve to Clay Bank Hospital in the company of two of his colleagues and another female who was said to be Duve’s friend.

She was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital leading to the arrest of Musonza.

A post-mortem report showed that Duve had a fractured skull, blood clots in her brain and that her lungs were affected by the attack among other injuries.

The Minister of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister, Cde Ziyambi Ziyambi, together with Minister Local Government, Public Works and National Housing Cde July Moyo visited the Duve family in Suburbs, Bulawayo, to console the family.

Cde Ziyambi said Government doesn’t condone violence against women and also assured Duve’s family that justice will prevail.

State Media

Tuku’s “Twin” Picky Kasamba To Take Over Leading The Black Spirits?

Oliver Mtukudzi in action win Picky Kasamba and the Black Spirits

Correspondent|Eight South Africa-based Zimbabwean artistes have penned a tribute song to the late national hero and global music icon, Oliver “Tuku” Mtukudzi and called on Picky Kasamba, a former Black Spirits member, to take over his band.

Mtukudzi died last Wednesday at Avenues Clinic in Harare after battling diabetes for a long period and was declared a national hero by President Mnangagwa.

He was 66.

Picky was the longest serving member of Tuku’s The Black Spirits when he called it a day in 2008 after 25 years in the music industry.

Mtukudzi’s followers know Kasamba very well for his ability to equal his master in everything he did including playing the acoustic guitar in the trademark Tuku way and dancing in perfect rhymes with the late musician. Many actually resorted to calling him Tuku’s twin brother.

Picky who spent 20 years playing with Tuku said at that time that he was leaving to concentrate on his business in Bindura on a full time basis.

Blessing Gwara, the leader of the group, said if she had her way, Picky should come back and lead the group.

“We do not want the band to die and if things could be done my way, the leadership at the ensemble should call back Picky Kasamba. He has the same qualities with our late icon and he has the pedigree to carry on with the assistance of the wife Daisy Mtukudzi,” she said.

She thanked Tuku for inspiring many people to pursue music and appealed to surviving members of The Black Spirits to keep “the fire burning”.

“We could have come and paid our tribute but failed. While his songs will survive the test of time, we appeal to many generations to come and to those remaining Black Spirits members to continue,” she said.

The song, Tinochema, is a dedication to the late music hero’s life and is sung in both ChiShona and isiNdebele with a jazz flavour, akin to Samanyanga’s beat.

Other members of the project are Lindi Marc, Ephraim Dube, Solomon Simbi, Letty Chawira. Denford Gambiza and Jonathan Mugazi, the producer.

Gwara said they united as singers based across Limpopo to show solidarity with the Mtukudzi family and the rest of the world through the song.

“We decided to pay our last respects through composing a song using his beat. This is how we thought of paying our tribute to the great man in our industry. Tuku was a larger than life character whose music brought together all and sundry,” said Gwara.

Tuku was buried at his rural home in Madziwa, Mashonaland Central on Sunday.

Hordes of people from all walks of life thronged the homestead with international personalities in both showbiz and political spheres sending condolence messages.

State Media


Julias Malema Goes To Church, Comes Out And Declares Forgiving Jacob Zuma

Back in time, Julius Malema and Jacob Zuma during their good times.

EFF leader Julius Malema on Sunday said that a church service had moved him to forgive former president Jacob Zuma.

Malema attended a service at the Apostolic Faith Mission River of Life in Soshanguve on Sunday.

Speaking after the service, he said the sermon had been about forgiveness.

“I was even saying to the pastor that we’ve forgiven Zuma because of the sermon. So Zuma must thank the pastor, because we’ve got wisdom from the pastor,” Malema said with a light smile.

During Zuma’s presidency, EFF MPs consistently challenged the former president in Parliament, calling for him to pay back money from his Nkandla homestead security upgrades.

The new developments seem to indicate a thawing of the relationship between Malema and Zuma.

The Constitutional Court ultimately ruled in 2016 that Zuma had failed to uphold the Constitution by not complying with then Public Protector Thuli Madonsela’s remedial action regarding payment for the upgrades to his Nkandla homestead.

The court also ruled in 2017 that the National Assembly had failed to hold the president accountable.

South Africa votes in general elections in May, and it is difficult to determine whether or not Malema’s statement on Zuma could simply be an electioneering ploy designed to appeal to Zuma loyalists in the ANC.

The governing party continues to battle divisions following the election of Cyril Ramaphosa as president and the removal of Zuma from office. The EFF website has not been updated with any information on its stance toward the former president on Monday.

– News24

Mbare Traders Defy Operation Murambatsvina 2, Return To Their Bases As Soon As Soldiers Leave

Illegal tuckshop owners and vendors in Mbare yesterday started trooping back to prohibited trading sites, two days after being removed by Harare City Council using members of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces.

Council on Saturday began a citywide blitz to remove illegal traders in what has been described as the return Operation Murambatsvina of 2005.

The illegal traders, who are not paying levies to council, defied the order and are back at their trading sites.

During a visit to Mbare by The Herald yesterday, vendors were selling groceries from their cars, while others resorted to spreading the goods on the ground.

Harare City Council spokesperson Mr Michael Chideme said there was no going back on the operation.

“We urge the vendors to go to designated sites,” he said. “If there is no space, we urge them to visit our Remembrance offices where we have a fully-fledged division handling that. They will be allocated trading sites from there.”

Interviewed traders said there was no space for them to sell their products at the designated sites.

“There is no space to accommodate all of us at the designated sites, so we are appealing to them to provide a bigger space,” said Mr Godfrey Mapfumo.

Mrs Vimbai Mutinha, one of the vendors, said: “It is a good initiative to allocate space for us at disgnated sites, though it has affected us as we had already established our clientele here in Mbare.”

Harare City Council aims to achieve world class city status in the next six years.

State Media

Gvnt To Mine Diamonds In Marondera?

By Own Correspondent| The Zimbabwe Consolidated Diamond Company (ZCDC) said it will conduct an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) in Chihota, Marondera district before undertaking effective diamond mining operations.

This will be done in fulfilment of the requirements of the Environmental Management Act.

ZCDC said it has engaged a local research institute to conduct the EIA.

Said ZCDC:

Zimbabwe Consolidated Diamond Company (ZCDC) intends to carry out mineral exploration in Chihota Communal Lands in Marondera District. According to the Environmental Management Act (Cap 20:27), this development requires that an Environmental Impact Assessment be carried out. As such, ZCDC contracted the Scientific and Industrial Research and Development Centre (SIRDC) to conduct an EIA for the diamond exploration project.-StateMedia

“Sky News Is Not Accredited To Work In Zimbabwe”: Nick Mangwana

By Own Correspondent| Secretary for Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services, Nick Mangwana has said British broadcaster Sky News is not accredited to work in Zimbabwe.

His comments come after Sky News Africa correspondent, John Sparks, reported of an alleged incident in which a man is being beaten by men wearing police and army uniforms.  

Said Mangwana:

We have checked our records and we have not cleared anyone from Sky for accreditation. Normally that should happen before they are even allowed to come into the country. During the disturbances we cleared dozens of journalists but Sky News did not apply. It’s strange why they chose not to obey the law because everyone else from British Media such as ITN, BBC, Financial Times did things the correct way and they never faced any problems. We even granted them interviews when they asked for same.

Mangwana noted said Sky News’ report is not balanced because they had not sought comment  from Government before they broadcast their allegations.

Overwhelmed Prisons Relocates Remand Prisoners

By Own Correspondent| Zimbabwe Prisons and Correctional Services (ZPCS) public relations officer Chief Correctional Officer Meya Khanyezi has revealed that they are moving remand prisoners to bigger prisons in an effort to minimise overcrowding at smaller prisons.

Khanyezi said it is important to manage overcrowding at prisons as it has a negative impact on the rehabilitation of prisoners.

Said Khanyezi:

The issue of overcrowding in prisons is problematic as it stretches limited resources. ZPCS always endeavours to minimise overcrowding by ensuring that some offenders awaiting trial are accommodated at other less overcrowded prisons within a particular area. With reference to Bulawayo, some remand prisoners are being accommodated at Prisons at Khami Complex.-StateMedia

Civil Servants Shut Down Deferred After Govt Buys Them Out

Own Correspondent|Civil servants who have been threatening to bring government service to a halt by engaging a potentiality crippling industrial action have developed colds feet on their threats.

The Government workers had issued a 14-day strike notice which lapsed on Thursday, but they have discarded it after government forced payments of a 22.7% once off payment into the workers’ accounts as from Friday.

The workers representatives yesterday ruled out the strike, saying they have decided to extend negotiations with the employer.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa offered the allowance , which covers the period January to March, claiming that it was a way of cushioning the civil servants from current challenges in the economy. He claimed that the offer has nothing to do with negotiations currently underway.

Apex Council chairperson Mrs Cecelia Alexander said they would meet Government early next week. “Government has invited us to a meeting early next week,” she said.

“We have to sit down and map the way forward.

“There is no law that says we should immediately go on strike when the notice lapses. We, as Apex Council, have not yet declared a strike. Industrial action is declared, but for now we are dialoguing.”

Mrs Alexander said as workers, they expected Government to have improved on its offer of $300 million.

Government last week raised its salary offer to civil servants from $160 million announced early this month to $300 million.

The $300 million is to be shared by workers in the civil service as an increment from April to December this year.

“We hope in the Monday meeting they will be giving us a positive feedback,” said Mrs Alexander.

Apex Council secretary Mr David Dzatsunga yesterday confirmed cushioning allowances for the civil servants had started trickling in.

“Some of our members have started receiving their allowances and we appreciate the gesture as we wait for the salary negotiations to complete,” he said.

The workers are demanding a $1 733 salary for the least paid worker, up from $414 inclusive of allowances.

“Its Fake”: Primary Schools List Of Recruited Teachers Circulating On Social Media

By Own Correspondent|Primary and Secondary Education Permanent Secretary Tumisang Thabela has dismissed as fake a document showing a shortlist of recruited primary school teachers submitted to the Public Service Commission (PSC).

According to the document, the Primary and Secondary Education Ministry shortlisted 1 576 teachers for recruitment.

In an interview with the state media, Thabela said her ministry does not communicate via social media.

However, she said recruitment is ongoing.

Said Thabela:

It’s fake. We don’t communicate through social media. As you have seen my signature is not appended there. I haven’t submitted any list anywhere. There are issues that have to be looked into but we are in the pipeline, am yet to get a briefing on how far the process has gone.-StateMedia

Macheso Responds To Juju Allegations, Says Its All Hard Work

By Own Correspondent| Sungura icon Alick Macheso has responded to accusations that he uses juju revealing that he is doing well because he works hard.

Macheso challenged those who believed that he used juju to get money to give the juju guitars and realise wealth from this.

Said Macheso:

I spend six hours or more on stage performing live, three or four days in a row. At times I sleep in the studio recording, away from my family. Those who say I use juju, I challenge them because if juju could sing why don’t they give it guitars so it can bring money

Lawyers March For Justice, Rule Of Law

By Own Correspondent| Disgruntled by the continued violation of justice and the rule of law, Zimbabwean lawyers will today hold a march for justice and the upholding of the rule of law jn the country.

Below is the invitation for the event:

Law Society of Zimbabwe

Lawyers are urged to meet at Law Society of Zimbabwe (LSZ) offices located at 46 Kwame Nkrumah Avenue. The lawyers will march to the Constitutional Court.

“Report Soldiers Who Raped You To The Police”: Information Minister Tells Rape Victims

By Own Correspondent| Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services Minister, Monica Mutsvangwa has urged women who were allegedly raped by soldiers to report their cases to the police.

She assured the women that their safety is guaranteed after reporting the cases.

Said Mutsvangwa:

All women who were allegedly raped are encouraged to come forward and report the cases to the Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) Victim Friendly Unit which can be found at every police station around the country. The unit is headed by a female commissioner, hence, all affected women will be treated with empathy, compassion, respect and due care. Their safety will be guaranteed. In order to ensure the anonymity of victims of the alleged rape cases, the affected women can use the following WhatsApp number: 0712 800 197 to set the wheels of justice in motion. While reporting cases to non-governmental organisations (NGOs) for counseling services is helpful, the police can only act on alleged cases if victims come forward. Government urges NGOs to encourage and support women who approach them to report the cases to the Police Victim Friendly Unit.-StateMedia

ZANU PF Youth Leaders Jailed For Burning ZUPCO Bus During Protests

File Picture of a ZUPCO Bus on fire.

Own Correspondent|Six Zanu PF youth officials were on Monday jailed for a combined 32 years after they were convicted for torching a ZUPCO bus and ransacking a supermarket owned by Chegutu East MP Webster Shamu during fuel price protests on January 14.

Thirty-five-year-old Benson Bhobho, the Zanu PF youth league chairperson for ward 40 in Whitecliff together with members of his executive Charles Bengeza, 28, Shylock Chihuri, 25, Emmanuel Chari, 25, Miston Siriva, Cassim Muzhingi, 23, Noleen, 29, and Rumbidzai Dulana, 25, all denied charges of public violence.

Regional magistrate Elijah Makomo acquitted Bhobho and Muzhingi for lack of evidence, but found the other six guilty.

Chari, who briefly drove the ZUPCO bus which the group commandeered along the Harare-Bulawayo highway before setting fire to it, was jailed for seven years while his co-conspirators were each jailed for five years.

The Zimbabwe government blames the MDC for instigating violent protests and looting on the first of three days of a stay-at-home protest called by the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions, but evidence has emerged that in instances, agent provocateurs were either military personnel or Zanu PF youths.

The court heard how the group, with others still at large, barricaded the Harare-Bulawayo highway with boulders close to Shamu’s Whitehouse Shopping Centre on January 14. They also threw stones at passing cars.

The six – part of a group numbering about 2,000 according to prosecutors – stopped a ZUPCO bus heading into Harare and ordered its passengers and crew to disembark.

Chari, the prosecution proved, then drove the bus a further 40 meters up the road where it was set alight.

The six, acting in connivance with others still at large, proceeded to a PUMA service station operated by Shamu where they ordered staff on duty to leave.

They broke the doors and windows to Webcon Supermarket at the service station and looted the shop clean before setting a Mitsubishi van in the car park ablaze.

Police recovered some of the looted items from the homes of some of the six.

Michael Reza prosecuted supported by George Manokore and Charles Muchemwa.

Harare City Council Vows To Continue “Clean Up Exercise” On All Illegal Structures

Near Siyaso market in Mbare

By Own Correspondent| Harare City Council (HCC) spokesperson Michael Chideme has revealed that the demolition of illegal structures in Mbare and other areas will continue until order and sanity is restored in the city.

Chideme told the Mail and Telegraph that the ongoing clean-up campaign is aimed at ensuring that the city fathers are able to implement the proposed master grand plan in urban areas.

Said Chideme:

We want Mbare to breathe again, we want to free the walkways and busways.

We want to restore land uses in Mbare. We have a grand master plan, the renewal or regeneration of Mbare that is coming soon.

Small-scale business owners in the bustling residential areas of Mbare and Chitungwiza were given 30 minutes to demolish their structures.R

The demolitions took place under the watchful eye of truckloads of armed soldiers.

Mnangagwa Appoints Chigumba Into Task Team To Implement Motlanthe Commission Of Inquiry Recommendations

Correspondent|PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa on Monday announced a task-force to address the issues raised by the Kgalema Motlanthe commission of inquiry into the country’s August 1 post-election fatal shootings as well as issues raised by various groups that observed the July 2018 harmonised elections.

Justice, legal and parliamentary affairs’ Ziyambi Ziyambi would chair the task-force, while his foreign affairs and international trade counterpart Sibusiso Moyo would act as deputy.

Other members of the task-force are the Zimbabwe Law Society, ministers Monica Mutsvangwa (information, media and broadcasting services), Mthuli Ncube (finance and economic development), Cain Matema (home affairs), Mangaliso Ndlovu (industry and commerce), Owen Ncube (state security), attorney-general Prince Machaya and the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission Chairperson Priscilla Chigumba.

The announcement was made by the information, media and broadcasting services ministry.

“Government remains committed to implementing political, electoral and legislative reforms aimed at deepening the country’s democratic processes as well as the ease of doing business,” the ministry said.

“President Mnangagwa has established an inter-ministerial task-force to address issues arising from the reports by the 2018 harmonised election observer missions as well as the findings of the Motlanthe commission.”

The disputed July 31 elections were observed by international groups like the European Commission, Commonwealth, The Elders, the International Republic Institute and the National Democratic Institute, African Union and SADC.

Election observers raised red flags over “an un-level playing field, intimidation of voters and lack of trust in the process [which] undermined the pre-election environment”.

Observers also cited misuse of state resources by the ruling Zanu PF, among other issues.

Immediately after the elections, violence broke out following protests which saw the military being deployed onto the streets of Harare to quell protestors, leading to loss of life and injuries.

Under immense global criticism Mnangagwa constituted a commission of inquiry into the August 1 post-election violence, which was chaired by former South African president Motlanthe.

Mnangagwa also promised to implement the findings of the commission.

In its findings, the Motlanthe commission concluded that six people were killed and 35 others were injured by the military and the police during protests.

The commission also found that the protests were pre-planned by the opposition, which had declared beforehand that it was not going to accept any results other than a win.

The Motlanthe commission recommended “the establishment of a multi-party reconciliation initiative, including youth representatives, with national and international mediation to address the root causes of the post-election violence and to identify and implement strategies for reducing tensions, promoting common understandings of political campaigning, combating criminality, and uplifting communities.”

Since the commission, violence has continued with twelve more people killed, thousands beaten and hundreds raped by the same military. Will Mnangagwa set up another commission?

Sable Chemicals Setting Up Solar Plant

Kwekwe-based ammonium nitrate producer, Sable Chemicals has entered into a partnership with a local energy solutions company, Katanga Solar Energy to fund a solar power generation project that is set to produce up to 400 megawatts.
In an interview, Sable Chemicals chief executive Mr Bothwell Nyajeka said feasibility studies for the project were now complete and the company was seeking a licence from the Zimbabwe Energy Regulation Authority (Zera).
“We have already secured land under Zibagwe Rural District Council to establish what we call the Katanga Solar Farm. The solar farm will produce up to 400 megawatts which will be fed on to the national grid,” he said.
Mr Nyajeka said Kwekwe was strategically positioned for the solar project. “Our feasibility studies in terms of radiation have shown that the area is the best for such a project,” he said.
Mr Nyajeka said the project would initially produce 50 megawatts and production would increase gradually to 400 megawatts when it is complete.
“What we have done is to apply for a licence for 50 megawatts. This will then improve as we complete the project,” he said.
Mr Nyajeka said the electricity generation project would help Sable to reduce its electricity bill. He said his company was paying a lot of money electricity to the Zimbabwe Electricity Transmission and Distribution Company (ZETDC). 
“As you might be aware, Sable Chemicals Plant consumes a lot of electricity so the solar energy project will help us reduce our electricity bill as we will be producing for ourselves.
“These are some of the company’s long-term plans to increase production,” he said.-state media

Govt Tells Raped Women To Report To Same Policemen Who Attacked Them

Government has urged women who were allegedly raped by some rogue members of security forces to report the abuse to the police.

The Zimbabwe Republic Police is also urging Non Governmental Organisations (NGOs) providing so-called safe houses for victims to facilitate the reporting of such cases so that due process can take place.
Despite a glut of allegations of systematic rape by security forces, only one case has been reported — in Chitungwiza — and is being investigated.
In separate statements yesterday, Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services Minister Monica Mutsvangwa and police spokesperson Commissioner Charity Charamba urged women to take advantage of the police Victim Friendly Units (VFUs), which are manned by female officers, to open up. The State also guarantees the safety of victims. 
“Rape is a heinous crime, cognisant of this fact, it is the duty of the police to investigate all reported cases of alleged rape,” Minister Mutsvangwa said.
“However, to date, only one case of rape has been reported in Chitungwiza and the police are seized with investigations on the matter.
“All women who were allegedly raped are encouraged to come forward and report the cases to the Zimbabwe Republic Police Victim Friendly Units which can be found at every police station around the country,” added Minister Mutsvangwa.
She assured the victims that their safety was guaranteed. “All women, who were allegedly raped, are encouraged to come forward and report the cases to the Zimbabwe Republic Police Victim Friendly Unit which can be found at every police station around the country. The unit is led by a female Commissioner, hence, all affected women will be treated with empathy, compassion, respect and due care. Their safety will be guaranteed,” said Minister Mutsvangwa.
She said Government will not condone criminal behaviour by any member of the society.
Minister Mutsvangwa urged the rape victims to report timely to the police.
“Government does not condone and will never tolerate criminal behaviour by any member of society particularly those in positions of trust.

“Government wishes to underscore that it is critical for rape cases to be reported in a timely manner to the police. While reporting cases to NGOs for counselling services is helpful, the police can only act on alleged cases if victims come forward, Government urges the NGOs to encourage and support women who approach them to report the cases to the Police Victim Friendly Unit,” she said.

She said in order to ensure the anonymity of victims of the alleged rape cases, the affected women could use the following WhatsApp number, 0712800 197. 
Commissioner Charamba appealed to NGOs to encourage alleged victims they were housing to report to the police in the interest of justice.

“In the same vein, we are appealing to Non Governmental and Human Rights Organisations who are allegedly providing shelter to alleged victims to consider the rights of the individuals concerned and encourage them to make official police reports. Preventing them from exercising their right of access to justice (making police reports) is doing them disfavour as the police have a constitutional mandate to investigate all such cases and refer them to court, justice delayed is justice denied. All aggrieved members of the public should come forward and report to the police so that thorough and comprehensive investigations are conducted,” said Commissioner Charamba.
Meanwhile, the security services have arrested several individuals who have been committing various crimes following the recent riots, including some clad in military uniforms.

According to police, one Tranos Muzanenhamo (28) was arrested in Epworth, Harare, after he was found clad in military attire.

“Investigations are underway to establish where he got the military outfit and ascertain any other offences he might have committed,” she said.

In another case, a Harare man was arrested as he  attempted to have a military identity card produced in his name.

“We once again thank members of the public who continue to provide valuable information to the police which has led to recovery of looted goods and account for those involved in public violence,” Comm Charamba said.-state media

Zim Ambassador To Sweden Dies

ZANU PF leader Emmerson Mnangagwa yesterday described as shocking and sad the death of Zimbabwe’s ambassador to Sweden, Samuel Chihondo Mhango, saying he was a committed cadre who dedicated his life to serving the country.

Ambassador Mhango died in Harare on Sunday from a heart ailment. In a statement, Mnangagwa consoled the Mhango family over the death of the accomplished diplomat.

“I learnt with deep sadness of the death yesterday of our ambassador to Sweden, Samuel Chihondo Mhango,” he said.

“While we were aware that Ambassador Mhango was suffering from a heart ailment, we had held high hopes for his speedy recovery and return to active service in Sweden, sadly this was not to be with his passing on.”

Mnangagwa said Ambassador Mhango would be missed. “The nation has thus lost a committed cadre of the liberation struggle, an accomplished diplomat, who dedicated his whole life and career to serving his country and people with selfless distinction,” he said.

“He will be sorely missed by many of his friends in the diplomatic circles, in the civil service and in ordinary life for bringing laughter and joy to all those around him. Mhango’s goodness touched many hearts.”

Mnangagwa said the nation grieved with the Mhango family.

“On behalf of Government, the people of Zimbabwe whom Mhango represented so faithfully and loyally, on my own behalf and that of my family, I wish to express deep sorrow and sympathy to Mrs Mhango, his children and the entire Mhango family, on their sad loss of a husband, father and family pillar,” he said.

“May they derive comfort from the knowledge that we grieve with them during these difficult moments.”

Foreign Affairs and International Trade Minister Dr Sibusiso Moyo said Ambassador Mhango was a distinguished diplomat.

“It was with profound grief and shock that the Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Trade Hon. Dr Lt Gen (Rtd) S.B. Moyo, the Secretary for Foreign Affairs and International Trade Ambassador J. Manzou and the entire staff learnt of the sad passing on of Ambassador Samuel Chihondo Mhango, Zimbabwe’s Ambassador to Sweden in the evening of January 27 in Harare,” he said.

“On behalf of the Ministry, we wish to express our deepest and most sincere condolences to H.E the President of the Republic of Zimbabwe, Cde E.D Mnangagwa, Mrs Mhango and family and Government and people of Zimbabwe on this tragic and untimely loss.

“Mr Sam Mhango, as he was popularly known to colleagues in Government, was a distinguished and accomplished diplomat, officer, gentleman and comrade in arms, who played a crucial part in the liberation of Zimbabwe and the defence and advancement of the intrinsic interests of the country after independence.”

Minister Moyo chronicled Ambassador Mhango’s achievements. “Ambassador Mhango was born in Zvishavane in the colonial Rhodesia on February 16 1958 and did his primary and secondary school education in his rural home,” he said.

“He joined the liberation struggle in Zambia in 1976 under the auspices of ZAPU.

“In 1978, he was nominated for higher studies to Bulgaria where he attained a Masters of Economics degree before returning to independent Zimbabwe, where he taught for a while before joining the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as a junior officer in 1985.”

Minister Moyo said due to his sterling work, Ambassador Mhango rose through the ranks to become ambassador in October 2014. Ambassador Mhango served Zimbabwe in various positions in Nigeria, Malaysia, Switzerland, Ethiopia and South Africa.

Minister Moyo said Ambassador Mhango will be remembered for his deep friendship, unassuming composure, steadfastness, civility, diligence, light heartedness and camaraderie.

“The Ministry and the whole Government has lost a true patriot, a pan-Africanist and a champion of the Zimbabwean interests and cause, both before and after independence,” he said.

“May Ambassador’s family, in particular his wife Faith Juliene and the children and indeed the whole Government and the people of Zimbabwe, be consoled in the knowledge that their loss is a shared one and that the nation mourns and is with them during their darkest hour of sorrow.”

Ambassador Mhango is survived by his wife, Faith Juliene and four children. Mourners are gathered at Kurrichane Drive, Mandara, in Harare.-state media

LIVE: Banning ZDF And ZRP From UN And Interpol

By A Correspondent| ZimEye is facilitating whistleblowing for the EU lawsuit to get the Zimbabwe Republic Police removed or from Interpol , the France based International Criminal Police Organization, which facilitates for international police cooperation.

The core reason for the latest action is that the ZRP has violated Interpol’s founding principles, and furthermore degenerated from a police organisation to a terror unit.

ZimEye reveals the latest violations which show how the ZRP as an organisation is now no more than a terror unit. The events of the last 14 months are key to note, how the (UN) Universal Declaration of Human Rights has been continually violated.

A case to note is how the basics of policing have been totally negated and the police has furthermore issued public statements of a terror nature. The latest incidents that have seen women being sexually violated raise the case.

Legal experts explained to ZimEye that there is strong prima facie evidence at several fronts against the ZRP.

– THE PROGRAM BEGINS SHORTLY…

Mnangagwa Appalled By Reports Of Soldiers Violating Citizens’ Rights

By Own Correspondent| Following a report on Sky News exposing how soldiers beat up those suspected to be behind #ShutdownZimbabwe and raped women in the process, President Emmerson Mnangagwa has expressed shock at the development.

Mnangagwa said such conduct was alien to Zimbabwe and the pepetrators of such atrocities should be brought to book.

Said Mnangagwa on his official twitter handle:

Chamisa Told Me His Supporters Only Know How To Burn Property And Loot Shops: Mutodi

Mutodi with Chamisa at Tuku burial

Correspondent|DEPUTY Minister of Information, Publicity & Broadcasting Services Energy Mutodi has said that MDC leader Nelson Chamisa admitted opposition supporters only know how to burn property and loot shops

Mutodi, who posed for a selfie moment with Chamisa at national hero Oliver Mukudzi’s burial in Madziva on Sunday, ‘revealed’ the nature of the ‘conversation’ he had with the popular opposition leader.

“Today, at the funeral of Dr Tuku, MDC leader Nelson Chamisa told me his party will no longer support any more demos against government.

“Our people know not peaceful protests, instead they burn property & loot shops. Demos don’t pay. So we agreed on quiet diplomacy, peaceful engagement,” Mutodi said in a tweet moments after the selfie.

His tweet refers to the violence that gripped the nation a fortnight ago during protests against increase in fuel prices. Dozens of shops countrywide were looted and property worth hundreds of thousands of dollars lost to theft, vandalism and arson.

MDC Supporters have since called on Chamisa to stop associating with ZANU PF leaders as they are out to bring him down.

LIVE: ZRP To Be Kicked Out of Interpol Because Of Mnangagwa, Brutality | LEGAL

By A Correspondent| ZimEye is facilitating whistleblowing for the EU lawsuit to get the Zimbabwe Republic Police removed or from Interpol , the France based International Criminal Police Organization, which facilitates for international police cooperation.

The core reason for the latest action is that the ZRP has violated Interpol’s founding principles, and furthermore degenerated from a police organisation to a terror unit.

ZimEye reveals the latest violations which show how the ZRP as an organisation is now no more than a terror unit. The events of the last 14 months are key to note, how the (UN) Universal Declaration of Human Rights has been continually violated.

A case to note is how the basics of policing have been totally negated and the police has furthermore issued public statements of a terror nature. The latest incidents that have seen women being sexually violated raise the case.

Legal experts explained to ZimEye that there is strong prima facie evidence at several fronts against the ZRP.

– THE PROGRAM BEGINS SHORTLY…

“Zimbabwe Is On The Verge Of A Humanitarian Crisis”: Democratic Alliance

By Own Correspondent: The Democratic Alliance (DA), one of South Africa’s opposition parties has said Zimbabwe is on the verge of a humanitarian crisis and the party will approach the United Nations and International Criminal Court (ICC) and parliament over the country’s political and humanitarian crisis.

Speaking to the South Africa media on Monday, the DA leader Mmusi Maimane said:



Today, [Zimbabwe] finds itself on the verge of a humanitarian crisis.

Widespread civilian suppression, military-led violence, and bloodshed have ensued, as 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.

Firstly, in my capacity as chairperson of the Southern African Partnership for Democratic Change (SAPDC), I will pay a working visit to Zimbabwe this week.

I will meet with the current opposition leader, Nelson Chamisa, and former 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.

Last week, the DA approached President Ramaphosa. For President Ramaphosa and his ANC, maintaining the brotherhood of ‘big man politics’ across the continent is more important than the dignity, livelihood and human rights of fellow human beings.

From Zimbabwe to Zambia, to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) — the ANC has chosen oppressors over the oppressed. This is because Ramaphosa and Mnangagwa are cut from the same cloth.



Mukanya Is The Only Legend Left After Tuku: Macheso

Sungura music maestro Alick Macheso has showered praises on the Chimurenga music icon Thomas Mapfumo saying he is the only music legend the country is left with.

Macheso was speaking during the late, Dr. Oliver “Tuku” Mtukudzi’s burial service in Madziwa yesterday.

“I am saddened by the loss of this great icon. We were left with only two people to look up to for advice and guidance, and now that Tuku is nomore, all the load is now on Mukanya’s shoulders,” said Macheso.

This follows an attack on the “Kudzwai” hit-maker by my Mapfumo in an interview with ZBC where he disqualified Macheso’s works from being worthy to earn him national hero status.

“Before he (Tuku) was declared a national hero, we knew already that he was a hero.

“Besides myself and Tuku, no other Zimbabwean artist was known overseas. Macheso’s popularity only reached England and nowhere else,” said Mapfumo.

The “Nyoka Musango” hit-maker has been on a nationwide tour that has been characterized by poor turn outs.

He is billed to share the stage with Progress Chipfumo on 1 February at Tanza Centre.

-263Chat

Perrence Shiri Says Zanu PF Has No Regrets Over The Killing Of Innocent Civilians By Soldiers During Shutdown

ZANU-PF Politburo member Cde Perrance Shiri has said the party has no regrets over the recent military intervention in restoring peace following violence perpetrated by malcontents two weeks ago.

He said people should revert to constitutional ways of expressing their grievances and refrain from resorting to violence.

Addressing a crowd at the commissioning of Guruve Community Information Centre last Friday, Cde Shiri said the army could not sit and watch the country burn after the police force was incapacitated.

“There are several ways to express our griviences,” he said.

“You can do so through Parliament, Government and peaceful protests. However, we will not tolerate acts of violence, looting and burning of property. This is not how Zimbabweans behave. We do not regret the intervention by the soldiers. If the police is incapacitated we will call the military to put out the fire. Did people want Harare to burn while soldiers watched? We appeal to youths to be disciplined and to appreciate the importance of peace, unity and love.”

Cde Shiri urged teachers to continue reporting for duty as their grievances were being addressed.

-State Media

Zanu PF members ditch party regalia

MASVINGO Zanu PF provincial leadership got a rude awakening last week, when Chiredzi district chairpersons revealed that they had stopped wearing party regalia in public places for fear of being shunned by community members.B

This was revealed after Masvingo provincial spokesperson Ronald Ndava questioned why they were not putting on party regalia at an inter-district meeting held at Chitsanga Hall.

One chairperson, Natala Chauke, from Makondo township in Tshovani, shot back from the gallery, saying the ceremonial dress attracted the ire of community members, and anyone seen wearing it risked being ejected from either commuter omnibuses or private cars.

His counterparts shouted in unison that he was on point, much to the chagrin of the district war veterans chairperson, Killer Makuni, and the Zanu PF provincial chairperson Ezra Chadzamira, who berated them for the their cowardly behaviour.

Makuni said they should note down and hand over the list of commuter omnibuses involved so they could deal with them or take them off their routes.

“How could you be ejected from a kombi by someone who is not Zanu PF? You are just cowards. Instead, you are the ones who are supposed to eject someone
without party regalia from those kombis, not vice versa. I am so disappointed with you,” he said.

Chadzamira, who is also Masvingo Provincial Affairs minister, accused the provincial leadership of sitting on the fence, further fuelling speculation of ongoing factional fights within the ruling party.

“I can’t believe what you are saying. Maybe you are now shy to wear our regalia. We know that there are some people who are now sitting on the fence. If you are that kind of a person, let me tell that the party has no room for you. We want people who know what they want,” he said.

Zanu PF won resoundingly all four constituencies in Chiredzi, with Chiredzi North recording the highest votes in the July 31, 2018 election, beating Uzumba, which traditionally posted the highest number of votes in previous elections.

Chiredzi came under the spotlight last year after Zanu PF councillors voted for their MDC counterpart for the chairmanship and an independent candidate as deputy.

-Newsday

MDC Calls For The Establishment Of An Independent Complaints Mechanism In Zimbabwe

With violations of human rights spiking in the past two weeks, the MDC calls for an urgent establishment of the independent complains mechanism provided in section 210 of the Constitution.

Reports of rape, abductions, assault, torture and even killings by members of the security forces have been reported and videos of some of these episodes have been circulated.

Yet the people of Zimbabwe have nowhere to seek redress.

The Constitution of Zimbabwe obligates the government to establish an independent body to receive complains, evaluate and order remedy.

The provision was against a background of regular spikes of violent episodes specifically those that are politically motivated and state sponsored.

The mechanism must be established to compliment the work of Independent Constitutional Commissions.

We applaud the Civic Society for taking this matter to court seeking an order to compel the government to establish the mechanism, sadly years later no judgement has been passed.

We find the delay to establish this body to be deliberate and negligent.

It is a failure to obey and uphold the Constitution.

The claim by Ziyambi Ziyambi that his government will investigate the violations is therefore disingenuous, the easiest task is to implement provisions of section 210 of the Constitution.

It is not option.

An attempt to provide military hotlines to report these crimes is also unworkable.

Jacob Mafume
MDC National Spokesperson

“Zanu Pf Are The Grand Masters Of National Shutdowns And Violence”: MDC

Zanu PF and its surrogate media have been on the forefront in blaming the recent national shutdown and the attendant violence on the MDC led by President Advocate Nelson Chamisa, yet Zimbabweans are well aware which of the two political parties has always masterminded violence and national shutdowns in this country.

In any case, the MDC national headquarters, Morgan Richard Tsvangirai House, had its windows shot at and shattered in last week’s violence. The building was petrol-bombed in an attempt to raze it to the ground in the same horrific manner Zanu PF and the captured State security agents have executed similar acts in the past.

Nine vehicles with no number plates pulled up outside the MDC headquarters around 10 pm on Monday, 14 January 2019. Armed men jumped out of the vehicles and shot at the building, shattering all front windows and hurled petrol-bombs into the building with the party’s security personnel trapped inside.

The front-office desk was completely burnt in the raging inferno while all the walls of the six-storey building are still pitch-black with smoke arising out of the arson. It is by the sheer mercy of God that the three security personal who guard the building during the night survived and that the building itself is still standing today.

Now that’s terrorism!

One cannot expect the ZBC to have reported on this brazen case of arson at Morgan Tsvangirai House because it kills their propaganda narrative that the MDC is to blame for all the violence that took place during the national shutdown.

Yet Zimbabweans are all too familiar with the identity of these armed merchants of violence who drive around in unmarked cars, engaging in wanton violence and without any prospect of being arrested.

The inescapable fact of last week’s events remains that all Zimbabweans were outraged by the steep increase in the price of fuel that was nocturnally announced in the dead of the night by Emmerson Mnangagwa before his trip to Eastern Europe.

The country was outraged because any fuel price increase inadvertently results in the hike in the price of commodities and transport fares, burdening already weather-beaten citizens. Coupled with work stoppages by disgruntled doctors, nurses, teachers and the rest of the civil service whose meager salaries could barely take them through the month, a shut-down was inevitable.

And all this had nothing to do with the MDC.

The national shutdown became loud and palpable and assumed the scope of a huge labour dispute between the Zanu PF government and the suffering civil service, which civil service now constitutes the majority of those still at work in the country.

Due to the immediate national impact of the work of any civil service, their work stoppage affected all public service and immediately permeated into a citizenry already breathing under the heavy yoke of run-away prices and a biting cash crisis.

The national anger across the sectors easily took the form of a national shut-down. It is naïve for anyone to arrogate the shut-down to the MDC, which has a history of publicizing its protests and actions, as it did only some two months ago.

The trigger to last week’s shutdown and the violence that emanated there was Mnangagwa who announced a steep fuel price increase in the bewitching hours, triggering rampant chaos by sunrise as a despondent nation painfully struggled to adjust to his pronounced economic reality.

Displeased teachers closed their schools. Health personnel, including struggling doctors who are now using condoms as disposable gloves, had already shut down strategic national health institutions and the contagion immediately assumed a national scope.

While any form of violence is criminal and the perpetrators ought to be brought to book, the groundswell of national discontent was already brewing long before the clueless Mnangagwa’s witch-hour press conference. The country already stood to a heap of dry wood and paper and it was none other than Mnangagwa himself who provided the spark to this horrific national consequence.

Zanu PF and its megaphone media have ironically upped the ante in criminalizing any form of national shut-down, shifting the blame elsewhere when it is Zanu PF goons that have always been grandmasters of national shut-downs, including violent ones as in the latest case.

After all, Zanu PF’s illegal and medieval act to shut down the internet played into and exacerbated the national shutdown. The High Court was very clear on the illegality of the internet shutdown.

What remains unforgivable is that in this brave 21st century, when almost all economic activity thrives on the back of online and e-transactions, one could have a national leadership with the sheer nerve to shut down the internet for a whole week. That was tantamount to shutting down the country, considering the utility of the internet in this digital age.

Yet we had Mnangagwa in the same week gallivanting to the back of beyond in Belarus, Azerbaidjan and Kazakhstan; shouting himself hoarse that Zimbabwe is open for business when all economic activity was at a standstill back home; thanks to an illegal internet shutdown by his own government.

In any case, the touting of some of the countries Mnangagwa visited as havens of global investment was a yawning lie unless this jaunt was a cover-up for its real purpose of interacting with close political associates as well as mining tycoons and cronies in the criminal underworld.

Considering the government-sponsored shutdown at home, Mnangagwa’s call for foreign businesses to come and invest in Zimbabwe was a whistle in the dark; it was akin to inviting a business concern to come and sell oxygen tanks in a graveyard!

How does a national leader woo investors to a country where a government wantonly and illegally shuts down the internet, the very back-bone of 21st century economies?

Yet all this might not be surprising because it is Zanu PF that began this grand crusade of national shutdowns. Their bad policies since 2000 have meant that our industries have shut down. The roaring production plants have gone dead and quiet and the once-belching thick smoke is no longer bellowing out of our now quiet industrial areas.

It is Zanu PF that masterminded that national shutdown.

When I was growing up in Chitungwiza, every morning Zupco buses would be ferrying thousands of the country’s workers to industrial sites at Lyton Road, Msasa, Plymouth Road, Graniteside and other industrial areas.

Thanks to Zanu PF, there has been a virtual national shutdown of these once-thriving industrial sites.

Zanu PF spawned a similar shutdown on the country’s farms, where we used to earn hard currency through huge tobacco exports. Today, the politically connected elite that took over these farms has largely been unproductive. On most of these farms can only be seen thriving weeds and grass, derisively referred to by ordinary Zimbabweans as a thriving crop of soya-beans.

No one can dispute the fact that we had to own our land but we did it to intractable national detriment. We could have done it better. In the words of the late Eddison Zvobgo, we bastardized an otherwise glorious revolution by turning it into a violent and racist agrarian enterprise.

Thanks to Zanu PF, there has virtually been a national shutdown of our agriculture. That is why in the past few years we were importing maize from Zambia and Malawi, of all places, after we downgraded our national status from a bread-basket to a basket case.

With over three million Zimbabwean economic refugees in South Africa and millions others in Europe and the broader international community, is it not Zanu PF that orchestrated that national economic shutdown, resulting in us exporting our skills and expertise abroad?

In 2008, it is Zanu PF under Robert Mugabe that had shut down the country when we had empty shelves, a worthless currency and closed schools and hospitals.

Was that not a Zanu PF inspired national shutdown? And was it not Morgan Tsvangirai and the MDC’s ministers’ competent hand on the wheel of government that opened a country that had been virtually shut down by Zanu PF’s incompetence.

Yet they now want to criminalize shutdowns by saying those who spearheaded this one should be prosecuted, which shutdown they masterminded themselves?

They also have the cheek to say the MDC is a violent party! Yet it is Mnangagwa who should tell us more about the Gukurahundi genocide, Murambatsvina and the 2008 violence that was orchestrated by the military while he was Minister of Defence.

The callous murders of August 1 and last week’s murder of at least 12 people, which happened with him as Commander-In-Chief, are instructive. The Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission, an independent constitutional body, has pronounced itself on the matter by holding the military liable for last week’s deaths.

Now that innocent Zimbabweans, including some in the MDC leadership, have escaped with their lives into the mountains in fear of the sword of Damocles, we have a regime that is now blaming the victims. It is instructive that it is not even the police who are hunting down these innocent Zimbabweans but Zanu PF youth in army uniform.

Zimbabweans are aware of the real godfathers of violence—the deacons and arch-bishops of violence, as Tendai Biti would say.

The press last week exposed the gory details; the intricate inside plot in Zanu PF to either impeach or remove Mnangagwa through yet another military coup. The mouldy and divided command element was exposed in last week’s action where some soldiers were ordering schools to shut down while others were commanding that they be opened.

The different instructions spoke to acute divisions at the very apex of the State. Upon their return from Eastern Europe, one could see George Charamba’s hand in the vain propaganda attempt to deflect and divert the whole matter from Zanu PF’s rotten innards by implicating the MDC in the latest violent acts.

For the record, and however justifiable the reasons for the shut-down may have been, the MDC did not call for any such shut down and did not partake in any violence. The MDC is not a secret cult movement. It is a political behemoth and when it calls for a shut-down, it does so openly. Only two months ago, the MDC publicly called for and held a peaceful demonstration in Harare and had no reason to spill blood or to loot people’s businesses.

Anyone who killed or looted must face the music before a competent court of law. All we urge is that there be no persecution by prosecution.

School headmasters and teachers, civil servants and other institutions that were shut down did not do so at the behest of the MDC. They did so for legitimate economic reasons that had nothing to do with the MDC.

When the MDC does call for a national shut-down, as it may in the future, it will be peaceful and its tremors will betray its gigantic national traction, its legitimacy and its mammoth source.

For now, Zimbabweans know that it is Zanu PF that is the master-mind of violence and all national shut-downs, including the on-going wanton violence. Any lame attempt to implicate the MDC will not wash. We note the desperate attempts to divert from the internal fissures in Zanu PF and the widely reported Zanu PF internal plots to violently oust Mnangagwa. The rotten Zanu PF innards should not be blamed on the MDC, whose national headquarters was burnt in a criminal act of arson.

Never mind the oft-repeated mantra that Zimbabwe is open for business. A free and fair election is the foundational business upon which all other businesses are built. It is a contradiction in terms for a country to purport to be open for business when it is not open for credible elections.

Zimbabwe is definitely closed for business while the party in government remains completely shut down and impervious to common sense, reason and logic.

G40 Kingpin Walter Mzembi Critically Ill And Needs Prayers

By Own Correspondent: Former Tourism and Hospitality Industry Minister and G40 Kingpin Walter Mzembi’ s lawyer Job Sikhala has revealed that his client is gravely ill and is not able to stand trial.

Sikhala said Mzembi is not in a condition to stand trial over charges of theft to the tune of $1.6 million of trust property.

Mzembi is said to be in South Africa where he is receiving treatment for colon cancer. Sikhala said Mzembi is critically ill and need prayers. Said Sikhala:

The circumstances are beyond all of us, I had to fly to South Africa to get my own personal assessment of the condition of my client on Saturday and my client is seriously indisposed to stand trial.

Accused will not be able to stand trial, not in the near future. Join us in prayer so that he gets through this. It is something very serious and on the next date, I don’t think anything would have changed.-StateMedia

South Africa’s Democratic Alliance To Take The Zimbabwean Crisis To UN, ICC

DA

By Own Correspondent: South Africa opposition party, the Democratic Alliance (DA) has revealed that it will approach the UN, International Criminal Court (ICC) and parliament over the political and humanitarian crisis in Zimbabwe.

Addressing the media in South Africa on Monday, the youthful DA leader Mmusi Maimane said:Today, [Zimbabwe] finds itself on the verge of a humanitarian crisis.

Widespread civilian suppression, military-led violence, and bloodshed have ensued, as 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.

Firstly, in my capacity as chairperson of the Southern African Partnership for Democratic Change (SAPDC), I will pay a working visit to Zimbabwe this week.

I will meet with the current opposition leader, Nelson Chamisa, and former 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.

Last week, the DA approached President Ramaphosa. For President Ramaphosa and his ANC, maintaining the brotherhood of ‘big man politics’ across the continent is more important than the dignity, livelihood and human rights of fellow human beings.

From Zimbabwe to Zambia, to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) — the ANC has chosen oppressors over the oppressed. This is because Ramaphosa and Mnangagwa are cut from the same cloth.

Zanu PF Members Who Torched A Zupco Bus During Shutdown Jailed 32 Years

SIX men who burnt a Zupco bus and a car belonging to Chegutu East legislator Webster Shamu’s wife during the recent violent protests that rocked Harare and other cities have been jailed a combined 32 years.

They were eight when they initially appeared in court but regional magistrate Mr Elijah Makomo acquitted two of them due to lack of evidence linking them to the offence.

The ring leader Emmanuel Chari was sentenced to 7 years while five others were jailed 5 years each.

WARNING-DISTURBING VIDEO: Woman Stripped Naked By Policemen In Public Bulawayo

Mnangagwa Sold The World Snake Oil, He Is The Same Or Even Worse Than Mugabe, Economist

Zimbabwe’s government led by President Emmerson Mnangagwa, which fashioned itself as a new dispensation when it won elections in July last year, gave Zimbabweans hope and confidence that the economy was poised for better days, but now it seems the promises were just pie in the sky, according to economist John Robertson.

Leading economist John Robertson, often seen as a fierce critic of the Zanu-PF government, is one of those who believed the Mnangagwa led government was serious about making decisive measures to overcome the country’s well-documented challenges.

Pre-election promises of changes in economic policies suggest that Zimbabwe’s prospects of enjoying a substantial recovery are better now than they have had at any time since independence in 1980, wrote Robertson soon after the 2018 elections won by Mnangagwa.

“In the election, all these major discouragements to investors were targeted for reform. And by correctly identifying their causes, improvements to prospects were placed within reach,” he wrote then.

One could not fault the optimism that Robertson and many other Zimbabweans had following the change in government after 37 years of Robert Mugabe’s rule and economic ruin.

Policy documents that were put forward by the new government were unusually critical in their assessments of government’s past performance and gave confidence that long drawn economic problems would receive attention.

But several months later, the situation has worsened. There is no fuel, there is no joy. Zimbabweans are spending nights in fuel queues, medical doctors across the country are on strike, teachers have threatened their own strike while government workers have given a 14 day notice to do the same.

Robertson is not amused and believes the southern African country’s government is reneging on its promises.

In his 2019 Economic Outlook, Robertson points out that the National Budget carried no indications of commitment to any of the promised reforms.

“As a starting point, total spending is to rise by 47%, even though revenue is expected to increase by only 17%. Borrowings to fund the budget deficit will have to increase by 44,6% to $4.1bn. Government expenditure proposals, therefore, do not support the assurances offered at the beginning of October,” said Robertson.

On the Public Sector Investment Programme figures, the Budget shows that the capital spending will come to only 18,4% of total expenditure, instead of the promised target of “more than 25%”.

“So far, government has failed to resolve the difficulties, but it is not clear whether they want to. It suits them to sustain the 1:1 exchange rate for privileged individuals, who have priority rights because of who they are, or what they import.”

According to Robertson, current conditions certainly contradict the central bank’s claims that “signs of sustained recovery” are evident.

“On the contrary, the viability of many businesses is in doubt and the formal economy is a fragile state. All of these have called into question the government’s frequently repeated claim that the New Dispensation is going to drive the country in a new direction.”

Will Arrested And Tortured Obert Masaraure Ever Get Justice?

Media Statement|Amalgamated Rural Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (ARTUZ) President, Obert Masaraure’s bail hearing which was scheduled for today ( 28 January 2019) was postponed for tomorrow after the State failed to file its papers.

This deplorable conduct by the State confirms the conclusions of the Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission and Law Society of Zimbabwe that all arrested in the ongoing brutal clampdown by the government of Zimbabwe will not receive justice.

As ARTUZ we hold that justice delayed is justice denied and once again make our demand that all ARTUZ and other leaders who are political prisoners should be released unconditionally.

Released by
ARTUZ Information Department

Mnangagwa Just Waffling On Human Rights Reform Pledge, Rights Group.

No idea what human rights are, Emmerson Mnangagwa

GLOBAL human rights watchdog, Human Rights Watch (HRW) has dismissed President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s reform pledge as a paper tiger devoid of implementation since he came into office, with his regime accused of widespread human rights violations.

In a damning report released on January 17 this year, HRW said Mnangagwa was among a number of regional leaders who had failed to deliver on their promises.

“Despite promises for reforms, Mnangagwa, who has a long record of human rights abuses, called on Zimbabweans in December 2017 ‘to let bygones be bygones’, paving the way for continued human rights violation mostly perpetrated by police and military,” part of the report read.

The report said although the July 30, 2018 general elections were relatively peaceful, they were marred by disputed results and post-election violence.

“Throughout the year, Mnangagwa and other high-level government officials made numerous promises to deliver governance reforms to mark the post-Robert Mugabe era, but took few steps to demonstrate commitment to accountability, justice for human rights abuses, and respect for the rule of law,” HRW said.

The rights group also condemned the Zanu PF administration for failing to revive the economy, and to effectively respond to the outbreak of cholera, which killed over 50 people countrwide, but mainly in Harare.

On media freedoms, HRW said the government had failed to amend or repeal repressive laws such as the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA), the Public Order and Security Act (Posa), and the Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act.

These pieces of legislation were used under Mugabe’s regime to curtail basic rights through vague defamation clauses and draconian penalties.

Reforms that are expected in Zimbabwe include restoration of the rule of law, a commitment to equitable, legal and transparent land reform, and ensuring that military and national police forces are subordinate to the civilian government

Meanwhile, the National Peace and Reconciliation Commission (NPRC), in line with its call for national dialogue, is setting up a platform to allow Zimbabweans to share their views on how to stem the current crisis in the country.

For the past two weeks, the country has been rocked by a violent crackdown by the military and police on suspected protesters who took part in the national stayaway that turned violent.

“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 said.

The NPRC 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,” it said in a statement.

NewsDay

Mzembi Seriously Ill Needs Prayers: Sikhala

Former Tourism and Hospitality Industry Minister Walter Mzembi is in a critical condition and according to his lawyer Mr Job Sikhala, he is unable to stand trial.

He is facing $1.6 million theft of trust property charges.

Mzembi’s trial failed to kick off as he is said to be in South Africa where he is receiving treatment after being diagnosed with colon cancer.
Mr Sikhala said Mzembi needed prayers as he is seriously ill.

Mr Sikhala said: ” The circumstances are beyond all of us, I had to fly to South Africa to get my own personal assessment of the condition of my client on Saturday and my client is seriously indisposed to stand trial. Accused will not be able to stand trial, not in the near future. Join us in prayer so that he gets through this. It is something very serious and on the next date I don’t think anything would have changed.”

Mzembi is jointly charged with two others and the State is now considering separation of trial. The matter was remanded to February 4.

-State Media

Meet The Zimbabwean Who Has Killed More Black People Than Apartheid South Africa As He Declares He’s Appalled By SkyNews Report Exposing Military Brutality

By Simba Chikanza| The man who has killed more black Africans than apartheid South Africa, ZANU PF leader Emmerson Mnangagwa, has announced that he is appalled by a SkyNews report which exposes military brutality.

The report comes over 2 weeks after the military opened fire and shot nearly 100 people resulting in a confirmed 12 dead, plus also more than 800 assaulted.

It also comes after 2 weeks of this reporter exposing Mnangagwa’s deputy Constantino Chiwenga for declaring that anyone who was shot dead must go report to the police.

To this date Mnangagwa had not at all commented on the military brutality on civilians which has included the raping of women as soldiers forced their way into people’s houses at night.

The development saw businessman Nigel Chanakira getting to question if the person posting on his Twitter account is truly Mnangagwa and not a worker as previously hinted by Mnangagwa’s spokesman, George Charamba.

Wrote Chanakira, “Respectfully, President @edmnangagwa we have many wounded whom we may show you. Are you honestly so uninformed about what is going on in our country? It’s difficult to believe that it is you who runs this account. I’m very willing to engage you on this matter with a few braves.”

Meanwhile, below was Mnangagwa’s full text comment: “I was appalled by today’s @SkyNews report. 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”

Is Petina Gappah The Face Behind ED’s Twitter Account

Amid claims by Presidential spokesperson that Emmerson Mnangagwa’s Twitter account is sometimes abused and does not always reflect his views, several people have been linked to Mnangagwa’s Twitter account, including his son Emmerson Junior and lately the lawyer turned publicist, Petina Gappah.

Who is exactly behind Mnangagwa’s Twitter account?

Mutodi Chamisa Selfie, “Next Time President Don’t Trust Anyone Who Is Zanu PF Kumira Pedyo Newe,” MDC Supporters

By Paul Nyathi|A cross section of MDC supporters have called on party President Nelson Chamisa to completely avoid social moments with ZANU PF leaders or anyone with ZANU PF links.

The call by the MDC supporters comes after ZANU PF spin doctor Energy Mutodi published a selfie featuring him and the MDC leader at Oliver Mtukudzi burial claiming that he had met with Chamisa who undertook that the MDC will never hold any more demonstrations against the failing government of Emmerson Mnangagwa.

“Next time President don’t trust anyone who is Zanupf kumira pedyo newe
Havakude ava,” wrote a ZimEye.com reader Gracemore Masawi Chitiyo.


“You look at everyone with Pastors eyes please protect yourself from these Vultures
Vanoda kuku kanganisa,” she pleaded.

FULL TEXT: State controlled media fueling crimes against humanity

For Immediate Release

Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition (CiZC) implores the state media to be professional and desist from fuelling and supporting crimes against humanity.

We have noted that of late, the State media has been on an overdrive targeting and criminalizing the work of civic society organizations.

Such partisan and unprofessional conduct on the part of the state media has placed the lives of many civic society actors at great risk especially given the brutality of the regime.

The state media has a history of hate language against civic society organizations and this has been the basis upon which the government has been arresting, abducting and even killing civic society actors.

Since the current government came into power through a military coup in November 2017, the state media has deliberately chosen not to condemn or report on the murder, torture and rape of civilians by the army but has rather adopted a public relations stance in a brazen attempt to underplay the brutality of the army against civilians.

Such a practice is alien in a democratic society.

We need to put it on record that the state media, (from the Gukurahundi atrocities which left over 20 000 civilians dead) has been an accomplice in the murder and torture of civilians through misrepresentation of facts and such a practice cannot be allowed to continue.

As Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition, we hold the firm view that in a democracy, the role of the media should be to promote respect for fundamental human rights as well as the right to life.

-Crisis In Zimbabwe Coalition

Mnangagwa Suddenly Says He Is Appalled By SkyNews Report Exposing Military Brutality, 2 Weeks Later

By Simba Chikanza| The man who has killed more black Africans than apartheid South Africa, ZANU PF leader Emmerson Mnangagwa, has announced that he is appalled by a SkyNews report which exposes military brutality.

The report comes over 2 weeks after the military opened fire and shot nearly 100 people resulting in a confirmed 12 dead, plus also more than 800 assaulted.

It also comes after 2 weeks of this reporter exposing Mnangagwa’s deputy Constantino Chiwenga for declaring that anyone who was shot dead must go report to the police.

To this date Mnangagwa had not at all commented on the military brutality on civilians which has included the raping of women as soldiers forced their way into people’s houses at night.

The development saw businessman Nigel Chanakira getting to question if the person posting on his Twitter account is truly Mnangagwa and not a worker as previously hinted by Mnangagwa’s spokesman, George Charamba.

Wrote Chanakira, “Respectfully, President @edmnangagwa we have many wounded whom we may show you. Are you honestly so uninformed about what is going on in our country? It’s difficult to believe that it is you who runs this account. I’m very willing to engage you on this matter with a few braves.”

Meanwhile, below was Mnangagwa’s full text comment: “I was appalled by today’s @SkyNews report. 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”

First Batch Of Shutdown Protesters Acquitted

SEVEN people have been set free after the courts found them not guilty of committing public violence crimes after they were arrested by Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) officers last week for allegedly participating in anti-government protests.

The six Chinhoyi residents namely Obey Zirota aged 37 years, Simbarashe Mubaira Kuenda aged 25 years, Mini Bizabani aged 41 years, Owen Musariranwa aged 48 years, Basil Nhira aged 19 years and Adonai Tiriwawi aged 22 years, stood trial in Mashonaland West province after they were arrested by ZRP officers a fortnight ago and charged with public violence as defined in section 36(1)(a) of the Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act.

During trial, prosecutors alleged that the six residents on Tuesday 15 January 2019 and at Christos Shopping Centre located along the Chinhoyi-Chegutu Highway, unlawfully and forcibly disturbed the peace security or order of the public by erecting some barricades along the road, threw stones at passing vehicles, attacked police officers, who were manning a roadblock, burnt tyres and destroyed some equipment, which was being used by ZRP officers at a roadblock.

But Zirota, Kuenda, Bizabani, Musariranwa, Nhira and Tiriwawi, who were represented by Tinashe Jore of Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR), were acquitted on Thursday 24 January 2019 at the close of State case by Chinhoyi Magistrate Letwin Rwodzi-Machakaire after she ruled that there was no evidence presented in court by the State linking the accused persons to the commission of the alleged offence.

In Mashonaland Central province, Guruve Magistrate Shingirai Mutiro acquitted Ernest Gandayi, who stood trial after he was arrested by ZRP officers two weeks ago for allegedly participating in the anti-government demonstrations held across the country to protest against the worsening economic crisis.

Prosecutors claimed that Gandayi, who was represented by Ernest Jena of ZLHR, contravened section 36(1)(a) of the Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act after he allegedly obstructed or endangered free movement of persons or traffic.

In acquitting Gandayi, Magistrate Mutiro ruled that the state witnesses who testified during his trial did not link him to the commission of the crime while they also disowned the witness statements which ZRP officers recorded from them. In the end, Magistrate Mutiro ruled that the evidence given during the trial was so unreliable such that no reasonable court would act upon it.

The Moment Really Shook Me: Chamisa Reveals Experience Of Being Mobbed By Excited Supporters In Madziwa Yesterday

Opposition MDC leader who grabbed headlines and caused a stir on social media after videos of Mashonaland Central supporters mobbing and calling him President when he was leaving the Oliver Mtukudzi burial place, said he was shaken by the overwhelming support he got.

Responding to a Twitter user who posted a video of supporters mobbing the MDC leader saying the excited people were echoing what voters in the July 2018 elections said, Chamisa confessed that he did not know how to handle the humbling experience

Soldiers And Individuals Filmed Beating A Civilian In Sky News Video Should Be Arrested: ED

President Emmerson Mnangagwa has tweeted that soldiers and individuals captured in Sky News video beating a civilian should be arrested.

Posting on Twitter today, Mnangagwa said he was appalled by the report which he said is not the Zimbabwean way

Law Society Convenes Urgent Meeting To Discuss Zim’s Rule Of Law

The Law Society of Zimbabwe (LSZ) is today convening an urgent extraordinary general meeting to discuss the state of the rule of law in the country amid concerns from the legal fraternity that the lower courts might have improperly handled cases involving the over 1 000 suspected protesters arrested during a recent wave of anti-government mass protests.

More than 1 000 people have been denied bail and had their trials fast-tracked throughout the country, raising concern over possible miscarriage of justice.

“Whereas council has considered the state of rule of law in the country, in particular, the events occurring at the courts and whereas in terms of by-law 10 of the Law Society of Zimbabwe by-laws 1982, the council has resolved that this is a matter of urgency, justifying calling a meeting on short notice,” the letter inviting members to the meeting read.

The agenda, as stated in the letter, is: “To consider the state of the rule of law in the country and resolve on the appropriate response by the profession.”

This comes after the LSZ had initially met with Chief Justice Luke Malaba and others raising concern over the same matter.
LSZ president Misheck Hogwe told NewsDay yesterday that they recently met Chief Justice Malaba and presented concerns raised by various lawyers representing the accused.

“The Chief Justice’s position was that as far as administrative issues are concerned, it will be pretty easy for his office to intervene,” Hogwe said.

“But as far as judicial decision-making is concerned, the Chief Justice rightly pointed out that it would be inappropriate for his office to intervene or interfere with the judicial decision-making process of the magistrate.

“After giving that feedback to our members, it was felt that it was necessary for the members to convene by way of an extraordinary meeting to discuss those issues.”

Hogwe said the so-called fast-track trials were believed to be compromising the concept of fair trial.

“A number of legal practitioners had raised concern about the administration of justice in the lower courts pertaining from cases arising from the events of last week.

“Basically, some of our members feel that there are certain injustices prevailing in the lower court. For example, they feel like there is a routine denial of bail to suspects accused of violence or other offences arising from the events of last week, but one. They also feel that the suspects have not been generally given adequate time and facilities to prepare their defences.”

-Newsday

Gvnt, Civil Servants In Crunch Indaba Over Salaries

By Own Correspondent|Government and civil servants’ representatives are in a crunch meeting in the Capital Harare today in talks aimed at resolving the issue of salaries.

During the last meeting to be held between the two parties, the government tabled a $300 million offer which the civil servants rejected.

The workers are demanding a $1 733 salary for the least paid worker, up from $414.

Government workers had initially issued a 14-day strike notice which ended on Friday. They, however, opted against striking instead, choosing to give negotiations a chance.

The Apex Council chairperson Cecilia Alexander told State Media that her association had not yet declared a strike and was expecting the government to improve on its former.-StateMedia

Harare City Council Says Demolitions Are A Gvnt Directive

By Own Correspondent: Chitungwiza and Harare councils have revealed that they are demolishing illegal structures and tuckshops as directed by Government.

Said Harare City Council:

Harare City Council began its citywide exercise in Mbare over the weekend demolishing illegal tuckshops. Harare City Council chief town planner Samuel Nyabeze said the urban regeneration project is being spearheaded by Government. Chitungwiza Acting Town Clerk Dr Tonderai Kasu said council was acting on a pre-existing circular from Government sent to all local authorities last year. Said Kasu:There is a pre-existing circular from Central Government that was sent to all local authorities last year which was directing all local authorities to conduct clean-up operations and clean-up campaigns. What is happening now is just intensification of work that council had previously been directed to do. As part of the planning process for the current operation, there was an exercise done to identify the sites that vendors are going to be relocated, and this exercise was done before the start of the current operation. The operation is not about how much vendors were or were not remitting to council, it is about bringing sanity to public and open spaces in Chitungwiza.

“Vapostori” Significantly Contribute To Zanu Pf Victories In Elections”: RAU

By Own Correspondent– A study by a Zimbabwean based think tank has revealed that members of the white garment churches popularly known as Vapostori contribute significantly to ZANU PF victories in elections.

The study, recently released by the Research and Advocacy Unit (RAU), and titled Religion and Politics in Zimbabwe, reveals that vapostori members have stronger support for ZANU PF than other churches.

Read the report:

Members of the apostolic churches do have stronger support for Zanu PF than other churches and are a very distinct group from all other religions.

… They have significantly greater social capital, less political fear, and greater political trust.

Clearly, Apostolics are the largest religious group and, if partisan affiliated, can have a significant effect on the outcome of an election.

When it comes to political participation such as voting, Apostolics are merely a sub-group of the general rural population, and it is this population that demonstrates affiliation for Zanu PF rather than the MDC.

At least, this was so in February 2017, but it also seems fair to conclude that not all members of the Apostolic churches will support or vote for
Zanu PF.

There is a common assumption that the apostolic churches, the Vapostori, represent a “captured” constituency for Zanu PF when it comes to elections.

This is undoubtedly a story with some truth to it but rarely examined in any analytical fashion.

The assumption probably derives some support from the notion that the Apostolic churches take their support from a largely rural population as well as from the poorer sections of Zimbabwean society.

In the past, ZANU PF leaders have addressed apostolic gatherings, numbering in the thousands in some places. Members of the Presidium, both past and current, have been seen wearing the long white robes at apostolic shrines.-Newsday

“Zanu Pf Has No Regrets On Military Crackdown On Protestors”: Perrance Shiri

By Own Correspondent| Former Commander of the Airforce of Zimbabwe and current Agriculture Minister Perrance Shiri said that his party, ZANU PF does not regret the ongoing military crackdown on protestors.

While addressing people who had gathered at the commissioning of Guruve Community Information Centre on Friday, Shiri said that the security forces could not fold their arms and watch whilst malcontents were burning the country.

Said Shiri:

There are several ways to express our grievances. You can do so through Parliament, Government and peaceful protests.

However, we will not tolerate acts of violence, looting and burning of property. This is not how Zimbabweans behave. We do not regret the intervention by the soldiers.

If the police are incapacitated we will call the military to put out the fire. Did people want Harare to burn while soldiers watched? We appeal to youths to be disciplined and to appreciate the importance of peace, unity and love.-StateMedia

Last Chance For Govt To Avoid Shut Down

GOVERNMENT and its edgy workers are meeting for the third time today in a last-minute attempt to avoid a crippling nationwide industrial action as previous salary negotiations ended in a stalemate with civil servants’ 14-day notice to strike lapsing on Friday last week.B

Today, the National Joint Negotiating Council (NJNC) will meet workers’ union leaders for feedback over government’s $300 million offer that was presented at the last meeting, but rejected by the union leaders.

In the afternoon, the Apex Council will then meet to decide the way forward.

Although other unions are already priming their members to down tools, Apex Council leader Cecilia Alexander yesterday said she was still hopeful that government would table a better offer.

“This will be our third meeting. We haven’t declared a deadlock yet, but we hope the government has a better offer,” she said.

“It will be up to the Apex Council in its wisdom to call for a strike or not after the meetings. We, as Apex, it’s a body of 16 unions and if two or three decide that they are on strike, that is their own position, but as Apex, we will make the decision after the meeting,” she said.

Progressive Teachers’ Unions of Zimbabwe secretary-general Raymond Majongwe said if government failed to table a better offer today, a strike was inevitable.

“As long as nothing happens tomorrow (today) by 10am, then the strike is inevitable,” he said.

Civil servants are demanding $1 733 for the least paid worker, but government has so far offered way too far below their

demands.

The civil servants claimed they were financially incapacitated to continue reporting for duty, dismissing a measly “cushioning allowance” deposited into their accounts on Friday as a drop in the ocean.

NewsDay

Mliswa Says Cabinet Reshuffle Is Needed

Outspoken Member of Parliament for Norton Constituency Temba Mliswa (Independent) has said that a cabinet reshuffle is needed for the current Emmerson Mnangagwa led administration.

Mliswa said this reshuffle is also need for the bureaucrats considering that the scourge is deeply embedded within the country.

Writing on social media, Mliswa said:

I continue to insist that a reshuffle is needed. Corruption is so deeply embedded & we can’t expect a different result with the same faces especially the bureaucrats.

Deputy Minister for Information, Media and Broadcasting Services Energy Mutodi hinted towards the end of 2018 that a Cabinet reshuffle was imminent.

However, to date nothing has yet materialised.

ZANU PF Youth Loot Bus Terminus In Broad Daylight, But MDC MP Gets Arrested, kutonga kwaro!

CHIWUNDURA legislator Livingstone Chimina (MDC Alliance) has been further remanded in custody to February 11 in a case where he stands accused of allegedly assaulting Zanu PF youths who invaded Gweru’s Kudzanayi bus terms and extorted money from buses drivers.B

Chimina, together with a Gweru City Council employee, Charles Machangira, and bus company supervisor Leticia Mteliso, are accused of assaulting three Zanu PF activists who stormed Kudzanayi long-distance bus terminus last month and illegally collected ranking fees from transport operators.

Gweru magistrate Beauty Dube deferred the matter to February 11 during a court sitting on Friday.

When he appeared for initial remand, his lawyers, Shepherd Mafa and Wellington Davira, told magistrate Dube that it was the complainants who must actually be charged for extortion.

“They (complainants) collected money from buses illegally at the rank and were never arrested. However, when our clients apprehended one of them in a civil arrest manner and handed him to the police, they surprisingly refused to take their report, saying the case was political,” Davira argued.

Chimina, who denied the charges, is also facing incitement of public violence charges related to the fuel price hike protests.

Political Tensions At Tuku Burial As ZANU PF Grabs The Legendary Musician

POLITICAL tempers flared at the burial of the late music icon and national hero Oliver “Tuku” Mtukudzi yesterday after State security agents, for the second time inside 24 hours, attempted to block opposition MDC leader Nelson Chamisa from entering the main gate to the musician’s rural home in Madziwa, Mashonaland Central province.B

It took the intervention of mourners to break the security barrier and let Chamisa in after over 40 minutes of haggling with soldiers and police officers, who claimed they had received orders from their “superiors” to bar him from the funeral.

After forcing his way in with the aid of mostly youthful mourners, Chamisa had to endure another hour of standing in the crowd as security agents again blocked him from securing a seat in the VIP tent, where other dignitaries were being ushered to.

As if that was not enough, attempts were also made to block Chamisa from joining other church leaders at the grave site, but fellow clerics came to his rescue, arguing he was an ordained pastor with the Apostolic Faith Mission in Zimbabwe.

NewsDay witnessed police forming a 20-man wall to block Chamisa, who was in the company of his deputy, Morgen Komichi and several MDC legislators, before the crowd moved in and broke the wall.

On Saturday, Chamisa failed to attend a memorial concert organised for Mtukudzi at the National Sports Stadium in Harare as security agents could not let him in with his motorcade.

Komichi yesterday described the incident as the height of political intolerance by the Zanu PF government and its State apparatus.

“We arrived at the gate and the police refused to open the gate for us. The officer-in-charge later confirmed the police was under instruction not to allow us in,” he said.

“When we eventually entered, the police put a barricade on us so that we don’t get into the tent. We left and joined the public to watch the proceedings from a distance. They tried again to block us from the grave site. All this was in the view of everyone, including foreign dignitaries and ambassadors.”

He added: “This is disrespect of the death; to segregate people at the burial of a person who was everyone’s relative.”

But Information deputy minister Energy Mutodi, who witnessed the drama, later chose to be diplomatic, saying: “Chamisa was not blocked. I actually went at the same time with him. My security gave way to Chamisa to get in. When I arrived, he was in the crowd, trying to find his way. He was actually helped by security staff to make his way to the funeral. He was not blocked. He should not lie. My security made way for me and, as I passed, he also passed. We believe that funerals are for everybody. Everyone should be free to bereave.”

Chamisa’s presence at the funeral almost disrupted the proceedings, as mourners mobbed him, prompting Defence minister Oppah Muchinguri, who was reading out President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s speech, to briefly stop and plead for order.

“Can we be silent, please! These are some of Oliver’s friends who have come to pay their last respects. Let us listen what I am saying here. It is more important,” Muchinguri bellowed.

Police were again forced to form a human shield to block photojournalists who had shifted focus from Muchinguri to Chamisa.

Hostility between government officials and opposition officials heightened over the past two weeks after State security agents rounded up over 1 000 mostly suspected MDC activists accused of leading recent violent countrywide protests.

Government insists the protests were organised by Chamisa’s MDC as part of its regime change agenda, but the latter has denied the charge.

The majority of the suspects have been denied bail, while their trials have been fast-tracked, raising the ire of their lawyers, who have claimed miscarriage of justice.

At the Saturday concert, former DJs linked to the MDC were denied the opportunity to eulogise using the public address system at the stadium.

NewsDay

Zimbabwean Women Stand In Solidarity With Army Rape Victims, Declare #BlackWednesday

#BlackWednesday

By Own Correspondent| Zimbabwean women have mobilised themselves to speak out against the alleged rape of women by members of the army following the crackdown on organisers of the #ShutdownZimbabwe protests which saw violence breaking out and an estimated 12 people being shot by security agents.

In a message doing the rounds on social media platforms, Zimbabwean women have declared Wednesday #BlackWednesday calling on all citizens who are standing in solidarity with women who were allegedly raped by soldiers to put on black attire.

Nettie Musanhu called on citizens to stop demonising and judging rape victims but to support them in order to assist victims break the culture of silence.

Said Musanhu on twitter:

Linda Masarira. Spokesperson of the MDC led by Dr Thokozani Khupe urged women to speak out as one against rape.

Said Masarira:

“Our greatest challenge is that we have women’s organisations that are very much polarised. Most of the organisations are only after donor funding and having conferences in hotels. But when it comes to dealing with the real issues in the ground, they are nowhere to be found…..Women’s organisations should not be silent when there are so many violations against women right now.”

Added one Chido Luciasi:

“Acting as if our lives do not matter. It took them seconds to locate plough thieves. Now it’s taking ages to bring the culprits to book. #WomenLivesMatter”

Said Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition Director Memory Kadau :

Added the Adult Rape Clinic:

Komichi Ruling Postponed For The Third Time, Magistrate In No Show

Harare Magistrate Ruramai Chitumbura has for the third time postponed ruling on MDC leader, Morgen Komichi’s case.

The ruling which was expected today will now be passed tomorrow after Chitumbura failed to attend court today.

Komichi is accused of breaching electoral laws after reportedly announcing that his party President Nelson Chamisa had won the elections.

More to follow….

Gukurahundi Leader “Black Jesus” Says Govt Does Not Regret The Army Killings Of Unarmed Citizens

Perrance Shiri, notoriously known as Black Jesus.

By Paul Nyathi|ZANU-PF Politburo member Perrance Shiri has said the party has no regrets over the recent military intervention in restoring peace following violence perpetrated by malcontents two weeks ago.

He said people should revert to constitutional ways of expressing their grievances and refrain from resorting to violence.

Addressing a crowd at the commissioning of Guruve Community Information Centre last Friday, Shiri said the army could not sit and watch the country burn after the police force was incapacitated.

“There are several ways to express our griviences,” he said.

“You can do so through Parliament, Government and peaceful protests. However, we will not tolerate acts of violence, looting and burning of property. This is not how Zimbabweans behave. We do not regret the intervention by the soldiers,” he said.

“If the police is incapacitated we will call the military to put out the fire. Did people want Harare to burn while soldiers watched? We appeal to youths to be disciplined and to appreciate the importance of peace, unity and love.”

Shiri is notorious for being the commander of the killer fifth brigade soldiers that came to be known as Gukurahundi in the early eighties.

Then known as “Black Jesus,” Shiri led the soldiers to kill over 20 000 people in the Matabeleland and Midlands province in a spate of three years of massive violence.

The region is still living in fear of Shiri who is now the Minister of Agriculture, Lands and Water.

His statement comes after the army killed twelve people in the one week of citizen protests over a 143% fuel price increase effected by President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

The Army also killed seven people in Harare on August 1 after riots emerged inn the capital following the delays in announcing presidential election results of the July 30 elections.

In the last few days, reports have been received of members of the army persecuting innocent citizens on a door to door follow up operation accusing them of having taken part in the protests that turned violent.

The world has heavily condemned the actions of the army and police calling on Mnangagwa to urgently address the issue.

The former Airforce of Zimbabwe commander further warned teachers who are contemplating going on a cripling strike to remain at work despite the very low salary government is paying them.

Source: State Media

Killer Soldier Trial Opens At The High Court

Tashinga Musonza

THE trial of an Airforce of Zimbabwe pilot accused of killing his lawyer girlfriend in a crime of passion late last year, kicks off in Gweru today.

The case is part of the 17 murder cases lined up for hearing by the High Court on circuit in Gweru.

In an interview, Chief Public Prosecutor Mr Samuel Pedzisayi who is in charge of Midlands province, said High Court judge Justice Thompson Mabhikwa will preside over 17 murder cases in the next two weeks.

“The first circuit for the 2019 legal year for the Midlands is starting on Monday and 17 cases will be heard before Justice Mabhikwa,” he said.

Mr Pedzisayi said the trial of Airforce of Zimbabwe pilot, Tashinga Musonza (29) who allegedly killed his lawyer girlfriend Miss Lucy Duve (32) in a crime of passion in November last year kicks off today.

“Gokwe has six cases, Gweru four, Shurugwi three, Zvishavane two, Lower Gweru and Lalapansi one each,” he said.

Musonza allegedly fatally assaulted his Gweru-based lawyer who was working for a local non-governmental organisation (NGO) accusing her of cheating on him with his colleague.

It is the State’s case that on November 25, Musonza went to their lodgings around 10PM and found Ms Duve asleep. He allegedly accused her of cheating on him with his colleague.

The two drove to the airbase since Musonza wanted the matter clarified. They allegedly woke up Ms Duve’s alleged lover who denied being in a relationship with her.

Musonza allegedly got furious and started assaulting Ms Duve.


His colleague tried to restrain him but was overpowered before he ran away from the scene to seek assistance from fellow colleagues.

Upon their return they found Ms Duve lying unconscious in a pool of blood.

Musonza later drove Ms Duve to Clay Bank Hospital in the company of two of his colleagues and another female who is said to be Ms Duve’s friend.

She was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital leading to the arrest of Musonza.

A postmortem report showed that Miss Duve had a fractured skull, blood clots in her brain and that her lungs were affected by the attack among other injuries.

The Minister of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Minister, Ziyambi Ziyambi, together with Minister Local Government, Public Works and National Housing July Moyo visited the Duve family in Suburbs, Bulawayo, to console the family.

Ziyambi said Government doesn’t condone violence against women and also assured Duve’s family that justice will prevail.

State Media

Govt Deploys Armed Soldiers To Effect Another Operation Murambatsvina

Zimbabwe appears headed for another social crisis as authorities have embarked on a widespread operation to destroy illegal structures in urban areas, reminiscent of the 2005 disastrous Operation Murambatsvina which left over 700 000 people homeless.

The operation began in Chitungwiza on Friday afternoon where armed soldiers stormed the busy C Junction in Chitungwiza Unit C ordering owners of tuckshops and other small business premises to remove their wares and pull down their structures within 30 minutes failure which they would be beaten up.

With memories of the blood that soldiers spilt in the communities still fresh in their minds gloom immediately descended on the usually bustling centre of business as people began pulling down their shops and carting their wares home, marking an end of sources of livelihood for many.

The Standard witnessed the operation in action at C Junction on Friday before it spread to other parts of Chitungwiza, a dormitory town of Harare and home to over three million people. Yesterday the destruction had become commonplace in the town with major action being reported at Makoni Shopping Centre, one of Chitungwiza’s biggest and busiest business hubs.

It appeared the police and the city municipality were all behind the operation as their officers stood by as people pulled down their tuckshops and stalls.

The Standard also visited Harare’s oldest and most populous suburb of Mbare where the operation began to unfold yesterday morning. Illegal shop owners in the sprawling suburb were busy pulling down their structures under the watchful eye of soldiers, police and Harare municipal police.

There was no resistance seen except downcast and visibly angry faces of affected people.

Residents were pulling down the structures on their own after being given a 24-hour notice to demolish the structures on Friday by soldiers who reportedly warned unspecified action if the order was not heeded.

Almost all morning, armed municipal police and soldiers were milling around the suburb, observing the demolitions. The Standard witnessed a group of the council police officers moving in clusters around Mbare.

“Yesterday (Friday) municipal police came here and ordered us to remove the structures within 24 hours or face unspecified consequences. Soldiers then came today (yesterday). They are armed and watching from their trucks, not saying anything,” one resident said.

“We don’t have room to disobey — you know what the soldiers have been doing these days. We, however, feel they should have given us adequate notice and alternative places to sell out wares. We are here not because we want to, but because we don’t have jobs.”

But other residents said the decision was a welcome move because the tuckshops were mushrooming everywhere and not paying council levies, but paying to Zanu PF youths.

“And they are now a menace, obstructing traffic. These tuckshops also fuel the black market. They were selling cooking oil at as high as $17 when OK Zimbabwe is selling it at $4. They should go,” another resident said.

But although municipal police were seen apparently backing the operation, it appears there could be discord and controversy in the launching of the operation.

Harare mayor Herbert Gomba, the policy head of the city told The Standard yesterday that he was not aware of any such operation and that council had definitely not sanctioned the demolitions or enlisted the services of the military.

“We have not made a resolution to that effect,” Gomba said. “My council’s policy is that of engagement and we have always advocated for that. I am not sure if that was followed, but we will investigate further and give details later.”

Standard

“Ndima Yangu Ndasakura Ndapedza,” 40 000 Bid Tuku Farewell

Oliver Mtukudzi

The late music icon and national hero Oliver “Tuku” Mtukudzi received a befitting farewell from over 40 000 people who thronged the National Sports Stadium in Harare on Saturday to celebrate his life during a send-off concert organised by local promoters.

There was jubilation from the beginning to the end of the concert, as Tuku’s adoring fans gave their last respects to the man who had entertained them for over 40 years.

Ammi Jamanda, of the Rhythmz of Africa, ignited the dancing mood with a cover version for the late Mbuya Maduve’s song Ndega Ndega.

Zimdancehall’s man of the moment, Enzo Ishall, threw the audience into a frenzy when he jumped off the stage and stood by the terraces, belting out the song of the moment, Kanjiva.

Gospel music guru Mechanic Manyeruke’s son Guspy Warrior, Soul Jah Love, Kinnah and Mathias Mhere did not disappoint.

Jah Prayzah, who captivated the audience with Muchinjikwa Unorema, and former Black Spirits member Picky Kasamba broke down as they were giving their farewell speeches.

“If we were able to restore his life back, he would be here with us,” Jah Prayzah said.

NewsDay Life & Style also witnessed several Tuku fans in tears, as they battled to come to terms with the death of their icon.

When the hearse carrying Tuku’s coffin entered the stadium, driven by Nyaradzo Funeral Services owner Philip Mataranyika, ululations and whistles filled the stadium.

As the hearse left for One Commando Barracks, some fans rushed from the terraces, chanting Shona: “Tipeiwo nguva yekuchema gamba redu” (Give us time to mourn our hero).

Speaker after speaker described Tuku as a unifier, mentor and promised to live by his legacy.

“He was a man that lived to unify people, lived by values and loved his country. I hope we honour him by instilling those values in every single one of us. I also hope that moving forward we will be a unified proud Zimbabwe,” Youth, Sports, Arts and Recreation minister Kirsty Coventry said.

National Arts Council of Zimbabwe board chairperson Herbert Chimhundu thanked government for conferring national hero status to Tuku.

Manyeruke concurred, telling NewsDay Life & Style: “The recognition given to him befits him. He was a man of the people, whose arms were open to everyone.

Oliver was just good. I advise young artistes to emulate the late Tuku, he was just good.”

Gospel musician Togarepi Chivaviro said Tuku taught them to work together without feeling threatened.

“We should be able to adopt the legacy such that when we die, living artistes should also say I learnt this and that from Chivaviro, Leonard Zhakata or Alick Macheso,” he said.

Zora musician Leonard Zhakata said: “My words cannot do enough to describe this legend. The numbers that came to bid him farewell and events that took place speak for themselves. Videos and pictures also speak. It’s the first time a musician has been given national hero status, first time the stadium is

full for such an occasion.”

Fellow musician Bob Nyabinde described Tuku as a unifier, who encouraged people to work together through his music.

“He was a philosopher and a mentor to many musicians, particularly the upcoming. He could sing with any artiste from a particular genre. We have been challenged to be people who others will emulate,” he said.

Partying continued outside the stadium when the concert ended, with some people playing Tuku music in their parked vehicles.

NewsDay

Thirty Five Protesters Denied Bail, Appeal To The High Court

THIRTY-FIVE suspects who are languishing in remand prison for allegedly participating in violent protests and looting shops have approached the High Court challenging the court’s refusal to grant them bail pending trial.

They are alleged to be part of a mob that unleashed an orgy of violence and mayhem in Bulawayo, burning cars, property and looting shops.

Elvis Ncube, Hope Mlotshwa, Duduzile Chitumbura, Sibangani Muchinda, Bongani Mugadza, Silethemba Mhlanga, Francisca Chibowe, Paul Chiwanhito, Nkosilathi Ndlovu, Victor Mahachi, Andile Moyo, Silibaziso Ncube, Penziwe Mudenda, Michael Sithole, Carnel Tshuma, Gracious Mudimba, Peter Mapaike, Vusumuzi Mumba, Emmanuel Nyathi, Rejoice Ngwenya, Sindiso Dube, Samukeliso Dlamini, Bekithemba Mhlanga, Heneck Chapeta, Precious Sibanda, Lucia Zhilenty, Melusi Munsaka, Precious Mwembe, Sifelani Muleya, Henry Tshuma, Simiso Mpofu, Thompson Ndlovu, Tendai Gwizo, Prince Musimwa and Memory Dlomo, through their lawyers Dube-Tachiona and Tsvangirai Legal Practitioners, filed an appeal at the High Court against the lower court’s refusal to grant them bail.

They cited the State as a respondent.

The suspects were last week denied bail pending trial by Western Commonage magistrate Mr Lungile Ncube.

The appellants, who are accused of breaking into several shops at Entumbane Shopping Complex and looting, are facing charges of public violence and unlawful entry.

In their bail statements, the accused persons argue that there are no compelling reasons for the magistrate to deny them bail.

They are denying the charges levelled against them, arguing that they are only victims of political violence.

“The appellants did not participate in public violence or looting. In fact, they are victims of political violence who were rounded up by police without committing any offence. They submit that upon arrest at their homes, police did not even bother to listen to their explanations,” said the appellants’ lawyers.

The lawyers argue that the evidence against their clients is yet to be tested during trial hence they should be granted bail.

“Our constitution provides for the right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty. This means there is a likelihood that the appellants may be found not guilty and it is because of this likelihood that the courts have always granted bail pending trial to accused persons. It is for this reason that the courts should not keep in custody possibly innocent people,” said the lawyers.

The appellants also challenged the assertion by the State that there was a likelihood of absconding if granted bail, arguing that they are of fixed abode. They also contended that they would not interfere with witnesses.

The State is however opposing the application arguing that there was no guarantee that the accused persons would not abscond or interfere with State witnesses if granted bail.

It further argues that the accused persons are a threat to the safety of the public given that they allegedly participated in a civil unrest.

According to court papers on January 15, the accused persons were allegedly among a group of violent protesters who ganged up with others who are still at large and went to Entumbane shopping Complex.

They allegedly engaged in violent skirmishes with law enforcement agents forcing them to retreat before they looted shops during the planned three-day nationwide stay away called by the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) and other civil society organisations aligned to the opposition MDC- Alliance.

They allegedly invaded OK Supermarket and other shops in the complex and looted groceries among other items.

The accused persons were allegedly part of a mob that staged mass protests dubbed “Zimbabwe National Total Shutdown” and went around looting shops, burning vehicles and private properties and disrupted public order and peace.

They were part of the crowd that allegedly damaged property and burnt tyres, barricaded roads and threw missiles at the law enforcement agents.

The protesters also turned parts of the city’s western suburbs into no-go areas as they set up barricades, makeshift roadblocks, burnt tyres and attacked police officers and other law enforcement agents.

– state media

Bulawayo Hit By Another Bomb Scare Incident, This Time At Nite Club

There was panic at a nightclub in Bulawayo last Tuesday when a security guard found what looked like a bomb in a male toilet.

The authorities at Skittle Inn Nite Club immediately contacted the police who also contacted their counterparts at 1 Brigade.

Engineers from 1 Brigade rushed to the nightspot and on inspection discovered that the object was in fact a perfume in a grenade like container.

Bulawayo deputy police spokesperson Inspector Abednico Ncube confirmed the incident and said after the nightspot authorities reported the suspicious object, they contacted the army.

“A team of engineers from 1 Brigade Bulawayo inspected the suspected bomb and discovered that the alleged bomb was in fact perfume in a grenade like container. The object was taken by army engineers for disposal,” he said.

A security guard, Mr Sanele Ndlovu said he was conducting routine checks inside the club when he saw the suspicious object.

“When I entered one of the male toilets, I was attracted by an object which was green in colour which was on an air vent and partially covered by a piece of paper,” he said.

He said he became curious and retrieved the suspicious object.

“At first glance, I thought it was a tear-smoke canister as it had what appeared to be a safety pin protruding at the top,” said Mr Ndlovu.

He said upon closer inspection of the object, he suspected it was a hand grenade as it was inscribed ‘Spice bomb Victor & Roll’ on it.

After convincing himself that the object was a bomb, he informed the club manager who in turn called the police.

Mr Ndlovu said investigations concluded that it was a just a perfume container.

He said due to the just ended violent protests that saw businesses being looted by hooligans, he panicked when he saw the suspicious obejct.

“Following the violent shutdown protests last week and a threat of a second shutdown, I panicked thinking that we were under attack. It was very scary and now I’m relieved,” he said. 

Tungamira, Tichasangana Kudenga, Tuku Laid To Rest.

It  was a rare scenario in local music and in the history of national heroism.

The Bindura-Mt Darwin highway was a sea of colours as thousands of people gathered at Oliver Mtukudzi’s homestead in Madziwa, Mashonaland Central province.

Mtukudzi’s fans came from all walks of life to bid farewell to their hero.

He was the first musician to be declared a national hero and his burial in Madziwa as per the wishes of his family did not deter people from showing their love to the man who made history in the country’s showbiz scene.

The activities in Madziwa began on Saturday night when a contingent of the musician’s followers arrived from various parts of Mashonaland Central.

Others came from Harare and Norton to salute their hero. Mashonaland Central was Tuku’s home province. His fans from areas like Shamva, Bindura, Mt Darwin and Rushinga made sure that they gave their hero a befitting farewell.

Music lovers from all walks of life also gave Tuku a memorable send-off.

A stage was set about 200 metres from the musician’s homestead. As people trooped in to pay their last respects, attention shifted towards the stage at around 9pm on Saturday.

Musicians took turns to salute Tuku with energetic performances and the homestead reverberated to song and dance.

It was an excellent way of saluting a hero who had shown great artistry on stage. Yesterday morning saw all roads leading to Madziwa and with numbers swelling, parking became a challenge as vehicles continued to extend for several kilometres on both sides of the highway.

Musicians, politicians, sportsmen, entertainers and villagers gathered for merrymaking. Celebrating a hero and a superstar who has left an indelible mark.

Instead of shedding tears, many decided to celebrate his life and share their experiences with him. Burial proceedings began towards mid-morning with Tuku’s widow, Daisy, giving a touching speech.

She revealed how the departed hero made a mark in her life and how his hardworking culture has been passed on to the family and musicians after him.

Family spokesperson Victor Rukainga revealed how Tuku began his career. He said the musician was in love with his art and began playing homemade guitars when he was young.

“He started playing guitars made out of ‘Olivine’ tins. I knew that he had the talent because of his passion for music. When he got a job, he bought a good guitar with his first pay,” he said.

“His parents did not know that he was doing music. He tried to hide it because it was not acceptable to pursue music.

“When his popularity started growing, he took his close relatives to one of his shows and they were surprised. He gave his best performance.”

He revealed that the Municipality of Bindura at one point disappointed Tuku when they failed to avail an appropriate place for him to build his arts  centre.

Pakare Paye Arts Centre, which is in Norton, was meant to be in Bindura, but the authorities were not co-operative.

The family spokesperson then called Mtukudzi’s daughters to the podium. Sandra Mtukudzi said her father taught them the importance of unity.

She saluted her mother Melody Murape for inspiring them to work hard even when things seemed bleak.

Selmor Mtukudzi then led her sisters and mourners in singing “Mumweya Nemuzvokwadi”.

Alick Macheso was then given a chance to salute Mtukudzi on behalf of other musicians. Macheso said Tuku was a father in the music industry and they had worked together on a number of projects. He said he has taken advice from his elders Tuku, Thomas Mapfumo and Nicholas Zakaria.

Macheso did a rendition of Tuku’s song “Tichasangana Kudenga” and this moved mourners who joined in. Then it was time for Neria’s lead actress Jesesi Mungoshi to say a few words about the departed hero.

As she took to the podium emotions got the better of her, after regaining her composure she told the crowd about how the late musician was her source of inspiration.

Dub poet Albert Nyathi did a poem to salute the late hero and many people applauded his celebratory words that showed his poetic prowess.

Guest of honour was Defence and War Veterans Minister Oppah Muchinguri-Kashiri, who read President Mnangagwa’s speech and highlighted how Tuku preached unity in most of his songs and urged young musicians to emulate him.

She said Tuku led by example when he sang “Hatidi Hondo”, which is a call for peace.

When people had saluted Tuku through speeches, it was time to lay the hero to rest.

Celebratory songs were sang as the hero’s body was taken to its final resting place. The events at Madziwa will no doubt continue to be the subject of many discussions in the area and beyond.

State Media

Four Jailed For Burning Police Station During #ShutdownZimbabwe Protests

Protests

By Own Correspondent| Four people who took part in the #ShutdownZimbabwe protests early this month were on Friday jailed for a combined five years behind bars by a Mbare Magistrate.

Johannes Sigauke (42) of Zone 1, Hopley Farm, was jailed for three years for stealing a solar battery and torching Southlea Park Police Station and two police vehicles while the other three were sentenced to two years apiece for impersonating members of the Zimbabwe National Army and assaulting a Harare businesswoman whom they tried to rob.

Sigauke appeared before Mbare magistrate Stanford Mambanje, who initially sentenced him to 60 months in jail term before suspending 12 months on condition of good behaviour.

Sigauke however pleaded not guilty to the charges levelled against him but he was convicted after a full trial.

In passing sentence, Mambanje said the accused deserved a custodial sentence because he had committed a serious offence that endangered the safety of the general public and caused irreparable loss to the State.

The court heard that on January 14 Sigauke and his accomplices, who are still at large, went to Mbudzi roundabout armed with logs and stones and barricaded the road with burning tyres and boulders.

They besieged Southlea Park Police Station, started throwing missiles and stones before setting two police vehicles on fire.

The vehicles were reduced to shells.-StateMedia

ZACC Investigates MDC Councilors, MPs Over $60million Tender Scam

By Own Correspondent| The Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (Zacc) has opened an investigation against 23 MDC councillors and two National Assembly members implicated in a $60 million tender scam.

Other charges are related to the sell of stands to MDC councillors in a self-enriching scam.

When contacted by The Sunday Mail, Zacc Commissioner in charge of investigations Mr Goodson Nguni confirmed the investigations.

He said ZACC was keen to interview the opposition members, some of whom who are no longer with the Bulawayo City Council, including Njube MP and MDC-Alliance Bulawayo provincial chair Gift Banda.

The investigation stems from a Bulawayo City Council report compiled by an investigating team made up of Ministry of Local Government, Public Works and National Housing top officials.

The Government investigation team headed by Local Government, Public Works and National Housing Ministry director engineering services, Engineer Hungwe, unearthed that council awarded a $59, 6 million tender to Terracotta without following proper procedure.

It was revealed that Terracotta won the contract in 2015 for the rehabilitation of Basch Street Terminus (Egodini) ahead of Pearl Properties which had charged $30 million and Road Port which quoted $3 million. 

Nguni said Zacc was investigating why Terracotta was given a contract ahead of Pearl Properties.-StateMedia

Presidential Guard Soldier Hauled To Court For Burning Bus During #ShutdownZimbabwe Protests

By Own Correspondent| A Zimbabwe National Army (ZNA) officer Takunda Lawrence Madamombe (22) on Saturday appeared at the Harare Magistrates Court facing charges of public violence after he was caught burning a Zupco bus and stealing a motor cycle during the recent #ShutdownZimbabwe protests.

Madamombe who is attached to the Presidential Guard, State House, pleaded not guilty to the charge when he appeared before provincial magistrate Francis Mapfumo.

He is charged together with, Dennis Maguri (29) of Rydle Ridge Park and Kudakwashe Gapare (22) of Whitecliff North, who also pleaded not guilty to the charge.

It is the state’s case that on January 14, 2019 at around 10am Madamombe and his accomplices together with 200 others still at large, were at Whitehouse Shopping Centre along the Harare-Bulawayo Road where they connived to engage in acts of public violence.

They allegedly barricaded roads with boulders, burnt tyres and threw missiles at the motoring public after which they stopped a Zupco bus with registration number AEG 3955 which was proceeding to Harare.

It is the state’s case that they ordered the bus crew and its passengers to disembark after which one Emmanuel Chari, who is already in prison over the same matter, drove the bus and parked it about 40 metres away from the main road where it was set ablaze.-StateMedia

Gvnt Clarifies On Chamisa Ban From Tuku Funeral, “He Is Simply A Drama Queen”

By Own Correspondent|Permanent secretary in the Information ministry Nick Mangwana has described opposition leader Nelson Chamisa as a drama queen out to seek attention following reports that he was barred from attending the late Dr Oliver Mtukudzi’s memorial music gala at the National Sports Stadium.

On Saturday, Chamisa was not allowed entry into the National Sports Stadium with his motorcade, as he was stopped by security agents.

However, Mangwana said Chamisa was not barred from entering the stadium arguing that he was treated like everyone else, including Government ministers, who were not allowed to enter the stadium in their vehicles.

Said Mangwana:

He was not barred. All other dignitaries including ministers were parking their cars outside and walking in. But Chamisa refused and wanted to drive in. Security protocol did not allow this and he walked away. He was not denied entry. Chamisa is being a drama queen. A prima donna out to attract attention for the sake of it. Government has no business barring people from funerals or any functions, but protocol has to be followed. We are not a chaotic Government.

Police Launch Manhunt For Opposition And CSO Leaders Over #ShutdownZimbabwe Violence

By Own Correspondent| The Zimbabwe Republic Police has since launched a manhunt for at least 27 MDC-Alliance officials and activists, including their civil society partners, for allegedly organising #ShutdownZimbabwe protests which later turned violent.

Suspects on the police wanted list include, activist Promise Mkhwananzi, Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition (CiZC) chairperson Rashid Mahiya, Kuwadzana East Member of Parliament Charlton Hwende and party spokesperson Jacob Mafume. 

Police spokesperson Assistant Commissioner Paul Nyathi yesterday said they wanted to interview the above mentioned people with regards to the violent disturbances.

Said Nyathi:

As police we are keen to interview 27 suspects in connection with rampant looting, incitement on social media and destruction of property, which occurred between January 14 and 16 this year. Anyone with information on their whereabouts should contact any nearest police station.-StateMedia

BUT WHERE’S THE EVIDENCE? State Jails 3 For Impersonating Soldiers

The ZANU PF government which has a long history of faking cases of prosecution and conviction for mere political expediency, has jailed the below 4 people 3 of whom were slapped with convictions for allegedly impersonating The Zimbabwe national Army. There was no corroborating evidence presented to prove the latter allegation.

State Media – Four people who took part in the violent MDC-Alliance “shutdown” early this month were on Friday jailed for a combined five years at the Mbare Magistrates’ Courts.

Johannes Sigauke (42) of Zone 1, Hopley Farm, was jailed for three years for stealing a solar battery and torching Southlea Park Police Station and two police vehicles while the other three were sentenced to two years apiece for impersonating members of the Zimbabwe National Army and assaulting a Harare businesswoman whom they tried to rob.

Sigauke appeared before Mbare magistrate Mr Stanford Mambanje, who initially sentenced him to 60 months in jail term before suspending 12 months on condition of good behaviour.
Sigauke pleaded not guilty, but was convicted after a full trial. In passing sentence, Mr Mambanje said the accused deserved a custodial sentence because he had committed a serious offence that endangered the safety of the general public and caused irreparable loss to the State.

The court heard that on January 14 Sigauke and his accomplices, who are still at large, went to Mbudzi roundabout armed with logs and stones and barricaded the road with burning tyres and boulders.

They besieged Southlea Park Police Station, started throwing missiles and stones before setting two police vehicles on fire. The vehicles were reduced to shells.- state media

Massive SendOff For Mtukudzi

State Media – It was a rare scenario in local music and in the history of national heroism. The Bindura-Mt Darwin highway was a sea of colours as thousands of people gathered at Oliver Mtukudzi’s homestead in Madziwa, Mashonaland Central province.

Mtukudzi’s fans came from all walks of life to bid farewell to their hero. He was the first musician to be declared a national hero and his burial in Madziwa as per the wishes of his family did not deter people from showing their love to the man who made history in the country’s showbiz scene.

The activities in Madziwa began on Saturday night when a contingent of the musician’s followers arrived from various parts of Mashonaland Central.

Others came from Harare and Norton to salute their hero. Mashonaland Central was Tuku’s home province. His fans from areas like Shamva, Bindura, Mt Darwin and Rushinga made sure that they gave their hero a befitting farewell.

Music lovers from all walks of life also gave Tuku a memorable send-off.
A stage was set about 200 metres from the musician’s homestead. As people trooped in to pay their last respects, attention shifted towards the stage at around 9pm on Saturday.
Musicians took turns to salute Tuku with energetic performances and the homestead reverberated to song and dance.

It was an excellent way of saluting a hero who had shown great artistry on stage. Yesterday morning saw all roads leading to Madziwa and with numbers swelling, parking became a challenge as vehicles continued to extend for several kilometres on both sides of the highway.

Musicians, politicians, sportsmen, entertainers and villagers gathered for merrymaking. Celebrating a hero and a superstar who has left an indelible mark.

Instead of shedding tears, many decided to celebrate his life and share their experiences with him. Burial proceedings began towards mid-morning with Tuku’s widow, Daisy, giving a touching speech.
She revealed how the departed hero made a mark in her life and how his hardworking culture has been passed on to the family and musicians after him.

Family spokesperson Victor Rukainga revealed how Tuku began his career. He said the musician was in love with his art and began playing homemade guitars when he was young.

“He started playing guitars made out of ‘Olivine’ tins. I knew that he had the talent because of his passion for music. When he got a job, he bought a good guitar with his first pay,” he said.
“His parents did not know that he was doing music. He tried to hide it because it was not acceptable to pursue music.

“When his popularity started growing, he took his close relatives to one of his shows and they were surprised. He gave his best performance.”

He revealed that the Municipality of Bindura at one point disappointed Tuku when they failed to avail an appropriate place for him to build his arts centre.

Pakare Paye Arts Centre, which is in Norton, was meant to be in Bindura, but the authorities were not co-operative.

The family spokesperson then called Mtukudzi’s daughters to the podium. Sandra Mtukudzi said her father taught them the importance of unity. She saluted her mother Melody Murape for inspiring them to work hard even when things seemed bleak.

Selmor Mtukudzi then led her sisters and mourners in singing “Mumweya Nemuzvokwadi”.
Alick Macheso was then given a chance to salute Mtukudzi on behalf of other musicians. Macheso said Tuku was a father in the music industry and they had worked together on a number of projects. He said he has taken advice from his elders Tuku, Thomas Mapfumo and Nicholas Zakaria.

Macheso did a rendition of Tuku’s song “Tichasangana Kudenga” and this moved mourners who joined in. Then it was time for Neria’s lead actress Jesesi Mungoshi to say a few words about the departed hero.

As she took to the podium emotions got the better of her, after regaining her composure she told the crowd about how the late musician was her source of inspiration.

Dub poet Albert Nyathi did a poem to salute the late hero and many people applauded his celebratory words that showed his poetic prowess.

Guest of honour was Defence and War Veterans Minister Oppah Muchinguri-Kashiri, who read President Mnangagwa’s speech and highlighted how Tuku preached unity in most of his songs and urged young musicians to emulate him.

She said Tuku led by example when he sang “Hatidi Hondo”, which is a call for peace.
When people had saluted Tuku through speeches, it was time to lay the hero to rest.

Celebratory songs were sang as the hero’s body was taken to its final resting place. The events at Madziwa will no doubt continue to be the subject of many discussions in the area and beyond.- state media

Mutodi Says Chamisa Told Him MDC Will Not Support Any More Demos Against ED, Is This True?

By Paul Nyathi

MDC Scoffs At Zanu Pf Conduct

By Own Correspondent| Opposition MDC has scoffed at the Zanu Pf led government conduct where security details exhibited deliberate attempts to stop the MDC leader Nelson Chamisa from paying his last respects to music icon and national hero Oliver Mtukudzi.

In a statement issued Sunday, MDC national spokesperson Jacob Mafume said barring Chamisa from attending Mtukudzi’s funeral and burial was not only taboo according to Zimbabwean customs and tradition but it was a clear sign of desperation by President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s administration.

Said Mafume:

Twice the Zanu PF government blocked President Chamisa from attending funeral proceedings of International icon Dr Oliver Mtukudzi.

Not only did they block President Chamisa but also Dancehall superstar Wallace Chirimuko popularly known as Winky Dee.

These acts are not only a show of desperation and disrespect but are taboo.

That a stranger can come to a neighbor’s funeral and then be the self appointed clearance guard who decides who must pay last respects is unheard of especially in Zimbabwean society.

Sowing division at a life of a unifier is flummoxing.

The lies and injustice in return for law abiding and peace loving conduct is contempt of the highest order.

The MDC takes this opportunity to thank the people of Zimbabwe who showed utmost respect to the late icon Dr Oliver Mtukudzi, a man who earned every drop of the waters of respect Zimbabweans and the globe continue to pour.

We also express our gratitude to the family who embraced everyone who so wished to pay condolence and pay respect to the late icon despite race or creed.

Jacob Mafume
MDC National Spokesperson

Nkosana Moyo, Urges Zimbabweans To Continue Expressing Discomfort With Mnangagwa’s Government Until 2023.

Nkosana Moyo

LOSING presidential candidate and Alliance for the People’s Agenda (APA) leader Nkosana Moyo (NM) says President Emmerson Mnangagwa and his Cabinet have shown that they have no idea how to run the country. He told our senior report Obey Manayiti (OM) last week that the socio-economic problems facing the country would serve as a warning for people to vote wisely in future. Below are excerpts.

OM: Zimbabwe is in a crisis at the moment. There is a crackdown against opposition figures, their supporters and ordinary citizens. What is your take on the situation prevailing in the country?

NM: To some extent the crisis is not new. it has been with us since Zanu PF has been running this country. I think what we need to interrogate a bit more is what has happened since the coup in November of 2017. What was presented to the world at that point is a then a united Zimbabwe which was given space to express itself as a population. There was incredible unity demonstrated internally by all sectors of society, to demonstrate against what has been going on, but we need now to take a pause and ask ourselves: So what has happened since 12 months ago? At that time we saw the demonstration where virtually there was no police around, but nobody, not one person reported either an injury, violence or looting. Fast-forward to today, people go out there and attempt to communicate with their government to say we are suffering and we want to express ourselves as happened in November so that you can do something about it, and the response that the population receives is brutality. We need to pause and take stock of this. These are the same people who said it’s a new dispensation.

Like I said, the crisis has been in the making for a long time, way beyond the past 12 months, but what people were expecting is that this last period since November 2017, in this new dispensation, people expected something being done about this crisis and clearly nothing has been done.

OM: President Emmerson Mnangagwa came into power first in November 2017 and then in September 2018 after being declared the winner of the July 30 presidential poll by the Constitutional Court. Do you think he has the capacity? Is he the right man for the job?

NM: On the basis of the evidence in front of us and in front of the population, the answer must be no. I am not making a statement about President Mnangagwa as a human being. I am making it as an assessment of what you and I see on the street. Life has not improved, but not only that, the more worrisome thing is that nothing is being done that makes sense. And nothing that is being done has been done in a manner that seeks firstly to mobilise the support of Zimbabweans so that they understand what the game plan is. Things are being imposed on them whereas what we expected from a leadership that understands how to make people tighten their belts is that you make them see the plan and explain it. What we are seeing is an imposition of something that has not been presented or debated to the people and what does that mean? You cannot execute a turnaround plan and not explain to the people for them to understand the nature of the plan and the time frames involved to withstand this pain before things get better.

OM: Transitional Stabilisation Programme, a raft of austerity measures being implemented by the government. Do you think this is going to work? Is this the right prescription for our problems?

NM: Let’s say I am going to build a house and the components of building a house include a foundation and a roof but you and I would intuitively understand that the sequencing of this plan is important for the project to be successful. That is not what is happening here. It’s not enough to identify the components of what needs to be done, it is also incredibly important to understand the sequencing in order for a successful project to be executed.

Zimbabweans have suffered a deteriorating economy over the past four decades. The outcomes of that as we know are that there is very high unemployment level well above 80%. This means Zimbabweans have no means of making a livelihood at any level that can be considered to be satisfactory. On the one side you have a population whose purchasing power has been severely undercut. On the other side you have an economy whose factories have closed down because of the conditions in the country and we have said we want to revive the economy, attract investment in the country. When you revive an economy, the basis on which you make an investment in a particular geography is based on a demand for the goods that you are going to sell. If there is no demand you cannot invest and make money, you will invest and lose all your money. If you are going to invest in an economy where the people already have a diminished ability to buy, you need to make sure that you don’t make it worse by increasing taxes. When Mthuli Ncube took over, we have seen them further undermining Zimbabweans’ ability to buy. So it follows therefore that when an investor looks at a business case for investing in Zimbabwe, the observation is that there are no people who are going to buy, therefore, there is no need to build a factory in Zimbabwe.

OM: So the government is taking a wrong path?

NM: They are not sequencing in the right order and what that leads to logically is that you begin to doubt if they understands or whether they are being honest in terms of their intentions. Mthuli Ncube is a professor and he is not stupid, so the question has to be asked on why he is doing this. Why is someone like Mthuli participating in something that is irrational?

OM: What is your assessment of Mthuli Ncube as a Finance minister so far?

NM: I don’t want to judge people on the basis of who they are. I am saying to you let’s understand the evidence. I have explained that if one needs to invest, they look at the capacity of people to buy. We have a government which wants investors to come but they are starting off by depriving this market of the ability to buy which means investors cannot come to Zimbabwe.

OM: So the question remains, is he the right man for the job?

NM: The evidence will seem to imply that both the President and his Cabinet, broadly speaking, do not know what they are doing.

OM: What would you have done differently, suppose you had the chance?

NM: What are the problems that have brought us to where we are? I think answering that question requires us to go a little bit back. Close to 40 years we have been fed that Zimbabwe has been destroyed by sanctions. Firstly, the sanctions were put because we took over our farms but the manner in which we did that, of killing people is the one that called for sanctions. We need to understand that sanctions were applied to Zimbabwe but we need to understand why they were applied. When you take an action you must assess how other people are going to react. If you are not strong enough don’t do things that are going to make you killed unless if you believe in martyrdom. A leader has a right to decide on martyrdom on behalf of the whole population. So we need to understand that President Mugabe’s methodology of implementing land redistribution was not smartly thought-out and that is why sanctions were applied.

Secondly, in my opinion what has destroyed Zimbabwe is not sanctions even as I concede that sanctions by their nature are meant to hurt but we need to understand they were applied in aptitude of our lack of strategic thinking. More importantly this country has been destroyed by us as Zimbabweans and not by sanctions and two elements in particular — corruption which is at the top of this administration and assembling the best brains in Cabinet. We don’t believe for whatever reason that we must assemble our best team. We don’t have the best team yet we think we can still go to compete and win, something is wrong in our thinking. That is what I call meritocracy, which means you form a team that is based on the talent and experience available to you but we seem to do the opposite.

OM: You spoke about sanctions not being the problem. This comes at a time when there is a crusade campaigning against the sanctions. Don’t you risk going against the grain on this one?

NM: I never said sanctions must not be removed. I said the reason why this country is on its knees has nothing to do with the sanctions primarily.
Secondly, a lot of the reasons which have been given for the renewal of sanctions have got a lot to do with human rights. Why can’t we remove that? It doesn’t need money. We want re-engagement with the world, we want sanctions to be removed and we have been told the conditions like human rights and freedom of association, but yet we still kill people on the streets.

OM: On the crackdown, what do you think about the picture that we have portrayed to the outside world? Are people going to take Zimbabwe seriously?

NM: The fact is we used an army to go and kill people and this is a fact, therefore, the world has seen the reality. There are all sorts of images circulating of people who have been shot and brutalised. This is fact and that is what the investors have seen. If you are an investor and coming to invest in a space like this, the likelihood of you investing in an environment where the government does not respect its people is high. Again we are shooting ourselves in the foot.

OM: And the idea of shutting down the internet, what is your take on that?

NM: Everywhere in the world there are people who abuse the internet. You have to find ways of regulating these things in a more acceptable way in this day and age and not shutting it down. This country’s communication infrastructure is very patchy and a number of people who were inconvenienced are not the ones who were abusing the internet.

OM: President Mnangagwa has expressed willingness to work with other stakeholders. Are you willing to work with him?

NM: Why does he want to do that? It is only in September that was he inaugurated and he has a majority in Parliament. What exactly is stopping him from running the country? We need to understand his agenda?

OM: Do you have a role to play in the country to ease the situation in the country?

NM: No, again you are going against what democracy is. The people chose a particular individual, party and a particular programme and elections are supposed to come after every five years. When the five years comes, hopefully the population will have experienced success or failure and then act accordingly. When you say do you have a role, you are now mudding the waters, you are confusing the process. The focus is to continuously hold them to account on the basis of the promises they made. The debate now should be President Mnangagwa you promised such and such things and why is that not happening? Now he is denying that there is violence and yet people are dying. People must go and ask him. There is a framework of how democracy works?
OM: Given everything that you have explained, what is the possible way forward for Zimbabwe?

NM: Between now and 2023, people should continue expressing their discomfort to the government of the day which they chose. As a citizen I will tell you that the government is doing the wrong things. They have no clue on what they are doing. On the engagement with the rest of the world, if you promise that we are going to be different, the other countries will then ask you to demonstrate the difference. The government now needs to be clear and demonstrate that what they are saying and what they are doing is one thing. If you say Zimbabwe is open for business but you haven’t dealt with corruption and hiring competent people, there is violence everyday then the world will ask if you are the new dispensation.

Standard

https://www.thestandard.co.zw/2019/01/27/mnangagwas-govt-failed-nkosana-moyo/

Call For Christians And Churches To Engage The Political Crisis And Violence In Zimbabwe

The church and the media are perhaps the most influential institutions today. That is why their activities have come under close scrutiny by a concerned public. As government watchdogs, the two institutions should enjoy the integrity of Caesar’s wife.

In the last couple of days, some of the most vocal social media bloggers and influencers have painted leading political figures and some church leaders as ungodly after the recent violence and looting that left people dead and many businesses ruined in Zimbabwe and so contributed in polarising the country.


August 1st killings still fresh in our minds

The recent violence in Zimbabwe comes hot-off-the-heels of the Motlanthe-led inquiry into post-election violence which failed to point an accusing finger at who was at fault for the August 1st killings. With that still fresh in our minds more people have been killed and injured by the military under the Mnangagwa government and the question now is why is the church silent about all these abuses?

The argument is that the church should be at the forefront of castigating those perpetrating these acts of abuse and violence.

Indeed, the church must be seen to be addressing the issues raised, including tribalism, lack of inclusivity in public appointments, insecurity and corruption in Zimbabwe.

I know much has been written on the internet/social media platforms but this piece by my friend, Lennon Manyengawana, (https://www.onwardchristianmagazine.com/where-is-the-church-in-all-this-does-the-church-understand-its-role-in-zimbabwean-politics/) is one of those must reads.

Pointing out corruption is not an illegality

The Government and The Church in Zimbabwe seem to speak the same language and are quick to challenge the citizens to channel their grievances through “the right channels” (you would think complaining or pointing out corruption is an illegality). The citizens have been drowned by the call for dialogue from both the church and government and the empty postures of a willingness to listen by the Mnangagwa Government. But it is foolish to forget that in Parliament, tyranny of numbers would not allow for any meaningful debate. The odds are against anyone hoping to talk Zanu PF into anything that makes them release the tight grip they have on power.

We have also seen the pulpit being used to attack political opponents and prayers held for those currently in office. Most of whom have been perpetrators of the blood-letting which Zimbabwe has witnessed since independence.

Suggested ways to engage

Here are 5 ways in which I suggest Christians and churches must engage in order to try and resolve the deepening crisis in Zimbabwe.

1. Don’t ignore.

Silence, in itself, is a statement.

In some cases, it may be a powerful expression of wisdom, but this is not that case. To say nothing, to pray nothing…is to communicate that it’s not a big deal. To say nothing, to pray nothing…is to tell your congregants – especially your congregants who have been brutalised, at the hands of the police and army “Come on we are not political. You’re taking this too seriously. Suck it up. God is in control. Let’s just worship Jesus. It’s all about Jesus.”

2. Name it.

Now, let me be clear. I don’t know all the details – not just because I am in the diaspora and almost oblivious to the intrinsic realities that took place on the ground in the past weeks but because the full details have yet to be shared, shown, distributed – let alone the integrity of those details.

But when it’s all said and done. When all the finger pointing and screaming subsides; When the focus on the looting and violence gets rightly placed back at the crux of the matter, what we have left is:

the deaths of unarmed civilians, long suffering citizens of Zimbabwe. Let that sink in.

Because of the sins of corruption, mismanagement of national resources, and mis-governance and the abhorrent history of brutality in this country, we still fight the myth of the suspicious, scary unarmed citizens with a regime change agenda inspired by our erstwhile colonisers.

3. Explain that this is a justice issue.

Because unarmed Zimbabweans citizens are dead.

Because unarmed civilians are brutalised and injured by the police and the army.

Because only the corrupt politicians are wealthy.

Martin Luther King, Jr.’s words are apropos – even still today – and especially to the Church:

Men often hate each other because they fear each other; they fear each other because they do not know each other; they do not know each other because they cannot communicate; they cannot communicate because they are separated.

Religion deals with both earth and heaven, both time and eternity.  Religion operates not only on the vertical plane but also on the horizontal.  It seeks not only to integrate men with God but to integrate men with men and each man with himself… Any religion that professes to be concerned with the souls of men and is not concerned with the slums that damn them, the economic conditions that strangle them and the social conditions that cripple them is a dry-as-dust religion.

4. Explain that this is a body of Christ issue.

For some– especially those who are benefiting from corruption in Zimbabwe, this is simply news. But for the long-suffering majority – especially in the unemployed youths whose futures are blighted by corruption – this is something entirely different.

In the brutalised citizens, they see a familiar story.

All too common of a story.

An ongoing common story that seems to have no end.

Some may call it a nightmare.

In events that took place mid-January, they see the 1st of August 2018 violence. In the innocently killed victims, they see a son, a husband, a father, a nephew, or perhaps…even themselves.

So, I ask again, if our Zimbabwean sisters and brothers in Christ are angry, grieving, hurting, and mourning…can’t we at least listen, seek to understand and mourn with them?

Are we the body of Christ or not?

We lament…

5. Explain the hope and invitation of the Gospel…

This is our unique contribution as followers of Christ. It’s not our contribution because in itself, it is the hope of the Gospel.

There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus. – Galatians 3:28

God has a call and invitation to the body of Christ and we can’t ignore this. If the events that have taken place since the so-called ‘new dispensation have not convicted you to take this invitation and call truly to heart, I urge you to pour a bucket of cold ice over yourself and WAKE UP.

I can write so much more but let me leave you with these thoughts:

This isn’t a one time call to stand against corruption and bad governance.

It shouldn’t just be a one time message to get the Christians and the Church to engage with the Politics of Zimbabwe.

This is about the church – the body of Christ, the bride of Christ – to truly take these words to heart and commit themselves to the long and laborious journey of living into the fullness of the image of God.

It’s about asking hard questions and committing to harder steps.

It’s about justice, peace, and human flourishing.

In short, it’s about the Kingdom of God and I can’t think of a more compelling reason.

And lastly, pray.

Reconciliation is painful because in essence, we have to confess to our collective brokenness.

And this is why … reconciliation … requires prayer. It’s a long journey and commitment but to do and engage without prayer is to convince ourselves that we can do this on our own.

Truth is we can’t do this on our own.

Pray for all involved. Pray for families of those killed in political violence. Pray for the police officers and the soldiers used to brutalise citizens. Pray for all law enforcement. Pray for the churches in Zimbabwe. Pray for all of us. We can’t do it alone.

Lord, in your mercy bless the Zimbabwean individual as you have blessed the land, we call Zimbabwe.

Report Focus News

Young Zimbabwean Artist Draws Massive Portrait Of Oliver Mtukudzi, This Will Blow You Away.

Liberty Shuro with the work of his hand.

By Paul Nyathi|A young Zimbabwean artist has produced probably the best local artefact to remember the late great musician Oliver Mtukudzi with.

Artist, Liberty Shuro has drawn a million dollar worth picture of Tuku with his own hand and paraded it on his Facebook page.

The beautiful piece of art produced by the young artist.

After finishing the art, Shuro wrote on his Facebook page:

One of African giants has once again fallen. We are saddened by the unfortunate event which has robbed us of a great musician, icon, philanthropist . True to his sound & word, through music, he touched on many lives, positively influenced the world. To me he was more than a mentor, a father, a role model. The world is both mourning and celebrating such an inspirational icon. He will never be replaced by any other. I am sorry to the Mtukudzi Family.

As an artist, I have created this gift to immortalize our icon Dr Oliver Mtukudzi as he shall forever be remembered. His work & influence will always be alive in us all until end of times for generations and myriads of days to come. Help me pay this tribute through my drawing.

I will always remember what he taught us, “if you do not do you, the world has lost you”.

Rufu_ndimadzongonyedze

One wise legendary icon.

Official: Zimbabwe Named As 2019 COSAFA Cup Hosts

Official: Zimbabwe named as 2019 COSAFA Cup hosts

Own Correspondent|COSAFA has confirmed that they have approved Zimbabwe’s candidacy to host the 2019 regional tournament in May.

The competition which will see the Warriors defend their title on home soil is set to start on the 19th of May and runs until the first of June.

“The Zimbabwe Football Association have agreed to act as hosts for the competition, and COSAFA is now waiting on the necessary government guarantees needed to rubber-stamp the event,” reads the statement posted on COSAFA website.

“The tournament will serve as vital preparation for those Southern African sides who reach the 2019 African Nations Cup finals, which will be held in Egypt from June 14-July 13.”

Zimbabwe last hosted the COSAFA Cup in 2009 when they won the trophy after beating Zambia 3-1 in Harare.

Pastor Orders Church Members To Strip Naked So The Holy Spirit Can Enter Freely

A pastor in Ghana, has caused a stir on social media after photos of him and his half-naked church members emerged online.

The photos which were posted online on January 22 showed worshipers taking off their clothes while the pastor preached.

Nyaikae who took to Twitter to share the photos of people lying on the floor with their clothes nearly taken off completely, the religious leader had instructed the congregation to strip down.

Pastor allegedly orders worshippers to strip to their underwear during prayers
The pastor and his congregants Photo source: Twitter/Nyaikae

According to him, the pastor had told his followers they had to strip to their underwear because it would allow the holy spirit to enter them without difficulty.

“Pastor tells worshipers to remove clothes so that holy spirit can penetrate easily,” he captioned the post.

The Twitter user failed to give details as to where and when the incident took place and who the religious leader is.

But due to other other crazy religious practices like in these 12 photos which have been witnessed in times past, many social media users believed Nyaikae and they immediately slammed the pastor.

Danrich thought the pastor’s action shows the world was coming to an end:

Sylvia called for the pastor’s arrest:

Yvette S. Patrick lamented about the people’s belief in such pastors:

Bhlo KhofoSA told the pastor to be ashamed of himself:

Ghanaian Media

“Barring President Chamisa An Act Of Disrespect And Desperation,” MDC

President Nelson Chamisa following proceedings at Oliver Mtukudzi burial from within the members of the public after being bundled in by the crowd when soldiers wanted to block him outside.

MDC Media Statement|Twice the ZANUPF government blocked President Chamisa from attending funeral proceedings of International icon Dr Oliver Mtukudzi.

Not only did they block President Chamisa but also Dancehall superstar Wallace Chirimuko popularly known as Winky Dee.

These acts are not only a show of desperation and disrespect but are taboo.

That a stranger can come to a neighbor’s funeral and then be the self appointed clearance guard who decides who must pay last respects is unheard of especially in Zimbabwean society.

Sowing division at a life of a unifier is flummoxing.

The lies, the injustice in return for law abiding and peace loving conduct is contempt of the highest order.

The MDC takes this opportunity to thank the people of Zimbabwe who showed utmost respect to the late icon Dr Oliver Mtukudzi, a man who earned every drop of the waters of respect Zimbabweans and the globe continue to pour.

We also express our gratitude to the family who embraced everyone who so wished to pay condolence and pay respect to the late icon despite race or creed.

Jacob Mafume
MDC National Spokesperson

The More Mnangagwa Says “A New Zimbabwe,” The More It Looks Like The Old Mugabe Zimbabwe, Opinion.

Opinion By SA Writer, Journalist Redi Tlhabi|While Zimbabwe was on fire, president Emmerson Mnangagwa was abroad telling the world it was open for business. The irony of preaching openness whilst the entire country was cut off from the whole world, is striking, writes Redi Tlhabi.

I know a young Zimbabwean mother who works in Johannesburg. It is a tough and thankless job, cleaning a fancy gym; wiping the sweat from the exercise equipment, making sure every client has a fresh and crisp towel and that the floors, toilets and showers are pristine.

I cannot say she loves her job. It is what it is. It puts food on the table and ensures that her children, who are being cared for by a relative back home, lack for nothing. But for her to achieve this most basic human endeavour, she has to live and work in South Africa – an often unwelcoming country.

She puts up with the xenophobic, racist slurs; the condescending stereotypes, the disrespect, from young and old. She is uprooted and lives with the chilly winds of displacement. Her host country uses bureaucracy, documentation and inefficiency to punish her and remind her that she does not belong.

By making her wait and wait and wait for processing, her status is akin to that of a stateless person. But this young mother battles through it because that is what she has to do.  Her country, Zimbabwe, has nothing to offer.

But three weeks ago, it offered her violence. Like many migrant labourers, she trekked home to prepare her children for the start of the new school year. She was proud because although she had not seen them for a year, she had a lot to show for her absence. Her labour had produced new, crisp school uniforms, stationery, toys, litres of cooking oil, jumbo packs of snacks, maizemeal, flower, rice, beans.

She was proud. But all of this is now a distant memory. What she remembers are soldiers shooting dead a young man, right next to her. She remembers being pulled out of a moving car and being prevented from accessing public transport to return to work.

The children could not attend school as soldiers shut them down, whilst brandishing machine guns that she had only ever seen on television. Weapons of war, aimed at innocent citizens who were tired, weary and fearful of the impact of a 150% fuel price increase. Their lives are already fragile and burdensome.  The increase was their undoing.

Any reasonable citizen would be angry at this steep increase, whatever the justification and rationale for it. But that is not what the paternalistic state expected. It wanted total obedience and acquiescence. It wanted total acceptance of its decisions, and not once felt the need to negotiate and cajole. The people had to trust the government and relent.   

When it could not achieve this, it exacted acceptance of this unfair increase by using brutal force; arresting and in some cases, murdering citizens. It did so behind closed doors. It shut down social media and imposed a blackout on the flow of information. The state did not want the world to witness its shameful acts. 

Why shut down communication channels if all you are doing is within the confines of the law and the frameworks of decency and fairness? It justifies this brutality by claiming opposition elements are destabilising the country and fuelling violence. The opposition does not command the army and has no authority to control borders, shut down schools and mow people to the ground.

The army is still preventing people from moving freely. A government that has nothing to offer its people, is jeopardising the livelihoods of its citizens, knowing very well that it cannot absorb them into its non-existent labour market and lifeless economy.

While the country was on fire, the president, Emmerson Mnangagwa, was abroad telling the world that Zimbabwe is open for business. The irony of preaching a message of openness whilst the entire country was cut off from the whole world, is striking!

Mnangagwa eventually returned home, but it was too late, the crisis had long fermented and the dead were buried, struck by the bullets of his army. He promised to crack down on wanton violence, blaming everybody; citizens, opposition parties, community leaders, religious leaders, the youth, the army. This of course ensures that nobody actually takes accountability, nobody gets punished because all are responsible. A state of paralysis ensues.

After blaming the entire citizenry, he added, “It is a betrayal of the new Zimbabwe.” The “new Zimbabwe” looks very much like the Zimbabwe that was ruled and ruined by Robert Mugabe, with Mnangagwa by his side.

The African Union has predictably shown no leadership, issuing lame platitudes. South Africa, whilst it cannot dictate to a sovereign country, can speak out and demand a respect for human rights, free speech and an end to violence. South Africa should have demanded that the Zimbabwean army vacate the border and allow the free movement of people, some of whom merely wanted to return to work. South Africa should have cared enough to reach out and hear the voices of ordinary people.

The young mother slept in the bush for two days, with no food and water. She chose the bush, because it was safer than her home. Mnangagwa’s army was knocking door to door, rounding up young people, accusing them of stirring up the violence.

A government that fears its youth and shuts down social media because it does not like the resounding message, is not a government of the people.  

Mnangagwa tweeted, “Chaos and insubordination will not be tolerated.” The people have been warned.

– Redi Tlhabi is an award-winning author, journalist and talkshow host.

Madziva People Pushed The Gate Down To Let Chamisa In, Next Must Be Gates To State House

Paul Nyathi|As news spread that people attending the on-going Oliver Mtukudzi burial in Madziva Village pushed through government security and the army to open the gate for opposition leader Nelson Chamisa to attend the burial, a ZimEye.com live streaming viewer has challenged Zimbabweans to emulate the move by the villagers and push Chamisa through into State House.

According to the viewer, the mourners have given Zimbabweans an example of what should be done to push for change in the country.

The mourners gathered up and pushed away from the entrance state security agents and soldiers who were for no reason denying the opposition leader access into the venue of the burial.

On Saturday, a Chamisa lead motorcade was denied entry into the National Sports Stadium where a tribute musical concert was being held for Tuku.

Follow ZimEye.com live on the official Facebook page for the latest at Tuku’s burial.

Shocking Civil Society Analysis Of Govt Brutality On Citizens, “Protesters Were Chamisa’s Hired Thugs”

Anglistone Sibanda and his alleged ZANU PF sponsored Civil Society and Churches Collective members demonstrating against MDC Parliamentarians recently.

Own Correspondent|Chairman of the newly set up Civic Society and Churches Collective, Apostle Anglistone T Sokhulu Sibanda has written to state media giving a shocking perspective on the on-going brutality on citizens by state security forces.

According to him, the actions of the army are justified despite the world wide condemnations that are being made by a cross section of people.

Sibanda, who last year got the wreath of the country when he said his organisation was in full support of the 2% government tax on electronic money transfers, accused the opposition MDC of instigating the public protests that saw more than twelf people liked by the army and over five hundred heavily beaten and maimed by the soldiers and state security operatives.

The full outline by Sibanda reads as follows:


I CONDEMN all forms violence and the use of force on anyone and do remind people that human life is sacred and nobody has a right to injure, inflict pain or take away another person’s life.

The actions by thugs and terror gangs as well as the instigators are not only barbaric, old fashioned and evil, they are in fact satanic and unacceptable in our nation. They are counter developmental and invite God’s judgment upon a nation. Zimbabwe is going through yet another sad spate of history when thugoracy or mobocracy reigns supreme and leaves a trail of destruction.

When thugs and thieves hijack the citizens’ space and purport to be ordinary citizens, having been hired by evil power hungry politicians who would rather have the whole country razed down in order to caress their egos, logical thinking and human rights gets trampled upon and the country thrown into a crisis, where the poor become poorer and suffering of the masses is perpetuated to the advantage of greedy and selfish politicians.

When one dares write or say the truth, they are rubbished and attacked, they are cyber bullied by the cyber bulls whose shallow minds have no common sense but a fixation of their souls in grabbing power by all means necessary, indeed the end justifies the means. The current economic challenges in Zimbabwe is not just an economic crisis but a political crisis where illegitimate contenders of power use citizens as tools to claim legitimacy.

The country is thrown into a quandary by thieves and looters of varying degrees and stature and the impact of the stealing, looting and wanton destruction is felt not by the same looters but by the ordinary citizens whose voices get silenced violently and rights thrown into abyss by those contending for political power. Monday 14 of January will go down in history as the black day when citizens’ rights were taken away first by hired thugs, hoodlums and hooligans who flooded the roads, blocking traffic, burning tyres, destroying property, looting shops in the neighbourhood and burning them down, stoning police officers to death in the name of democracy.

All that was a well planned strategy aimed at pushing Nelson Chamisa into Government via the back door under the guise of “ordinary citizens” sadly using children in the process and instilling such a bad culture into their mindsets. Where did this begin? Did it start after the Head of State and Government announced fuel price hikes? If l may divert your attention a bit, is fuel in Zimbabwe the most expensive in the world as people have been made to believe? Certainly not, the hullabaloo is politically motivated.

Fuel had become the cheapest in the world going for less than US0.40 per litre, implying huge losses on Government and the importers, creating an unsustainable situation. What boggles the mind is that the MDCA and its partners, ZCTU knew the truth that the fuel price adjustments were necessary and inevitable but chose to play politics and hoodwink citizens into action through pressing a social media panic button and cyber criminals sending fake news to cause public panic and despondency.

For example, there were photoshopped pictures of Mazoe orange crush going for $29.99 circulating on Whatsapp but no one saw that in reality. Mazoe orange crush is going for $6-$8 in most shops. The real issue at hand is the issue of salaries that have been eroded by the price hikes and the argument over the payments of salaries in USD which is not sustainable because the country is not exporting enough. On those issues I support the labour unions and urge the Government to act urgently in addressing the genuine labour issues.

However, on the fuel price hikes, anyone using their right mind to think without polluted political lenses would know that our fuel had become too cheap and the country was running a huge loss. Who triggered the violence, is it Government through announcing price hikes? I refuse to be myopic and shallow, we Zimbabweans have a very short memory and we seldom analyse events and statements and link them to a broad understanding of geo-political situation. We always tend to isolate incidents and events when those are in fact systematic and well orchestrated.

The bloody stay away did not just happen, it is a result of several months of planning and large sums of money that have been put together. It is the effect of a well oiled and well funded system that seeks to destabilise the country and make it ungovernable.

Those who dare to remember would recall the spirited comments by Chamisa in the run up to July 31 elections where he said “we will not accept any result whose winner is not ourselves”. The notion of making the country ungovernable was put into play and we are witnessing that script being played and becoming a reality.

The country is being made ungovernable by the MDC and its partners hiding behind “citizens.” If indeed they are not involved, why does Chamisa call those who have been arrested for arson, murder, looting etc “political prisoners”? Since when do thieves and arsonists become political prisoners if they have not always been political activists. Chamisa has infact claimed ownership of those people and must be held to account. He has exposed himself and his friends who are hiding and if indeed those in hiding are innocent citizens why are they hiding?

The truth is that the violent protests were well planned way before elections when activists went for trainings and what we see unfolding is the result of the trainings.

When Linda Masarira wrote and even went to testify before the Motlanthe Commission that activists were trained in Cape Town and in Livingstone on how to mobilise citizens into action, she was insulted, ridiculed and cyber bullied but the truth is that the violent protests are not just an ordinary citizens reaction to fuel price hikes but a well planned strategy that is being implemented to get Nelson Chamisa into Government by all means necessary. Sadly it seems the Government did not anticipate that.

I watched hooligans in action at Entumbane in Bulawayo where the popular “thwala okukwanisayo” happened and having been a leader of one of the influential residents associations, met with some of our members and discussed about what was happening. Judging from the comments, those youths that led the violence were not ordinary citizens as the world had been made to believe.

There are certain traits, patterns and behaviours that are known of the people of Bulawayo and those youths do not fit in the Bulawayo societal trends. It is vividly clear that those thugs who blocked kombis were first fewer that the majority who wanted to go to work. If they had not enlisted the services of those thugs from Cabatsha squatter camp where MDC leaders (names withheld for fear of victimisation) usually bus jobless, homeless and desperate people to use in either rigging their primaries or as tools for violence, the stay away would have flopped.

Indeed the state could not sit down and fold hands. The world and indeed some of you in the diaspora and a majority who have no correct information of what has been happening under cover, have been fooled into believing that the protests were innocent.

Yes, the strike by doctors and teachers etc, is purely a labour issue but has also been hijacked by regime change elements who want to use the economic crisis that has been brewing over 20 years to hoodwink citizens into overthrowing a constitutionally elected Government.

The next period of changing a Government is in 2023 through an election and anything before that is illegal and proponents must know that the charge for that is treason. They cry loud about the rule of law, they must prove that they believe in the rule of law by following the law and wait for 2023. In as much as the constitution guarantees the right to protest and petition in a peaceful manner, the same constitution also mandates the Government with a responsibility to protect the same citizens and property. In as much as no investor would come into a country where the Government shoots at innocent civilians, no investor would come into country where there is lawlessness, violence, looting, where ordinary citizens become thugs and militias that rob other citizens.