First Lady Auxilia Declares She Is Yet To Do More, Could She Be Walking In Grace’s Shoes?

First Lady Auxillia Mnangagwa will scale up her philanthropic work which, among many facets, includes empowering women and girls.

She said this at Zimbabwe House yesterday while officially accepting to be patron of the Zimbabwean chapter of the Girl Guides Association.

Her current work, she said, dovetails with the national vision of creating an upper middle-income economy by 2030.

“For 2019, I am focusing on scaling up my efforts and including women and girl-child empowerment. My vision fits well with the sustainable development goals and His Excellency, Cde Emmerson Mnangagwa, for Zimbabwe to become a middle-income economy by 2030.”

The Girl Guides Association, which is dedicated to empower girls and women, is present in 151 countries. The local chapter was formed in 1912 to promote skills development, leadership and high moral standards.

Speaking after meeting the association’s local leaders, the First Lady said she had accepted being patron of the organisation because it engenders high moral standards in young girls.

“Officially, I am accepting to be your patron because there are many positive things about your association. I know the history of your organisation and the good reputation that it has built and the good morals that it seeks to promote. Girl Guides have been around for a long time, and I have always liked what they stood for. The time has come to revive and expand the work of the association and I want to be part of it. Young girls who grow up as Girl Guides are taught to have high morals, they are taught to respect their elders and to be dignified women,” she said.

Angel of Hope Foundation — the charity that she leads — also shares the Girl Guides Association’s vision to uplift the girl child, she added.

“The girl-child is always on my mind and that is why I have accepted to be your patron. My vision, in a nutshell, is the sustainable transformation of lives in an inclusive manner, leaving no one behind.”

Her Foundation, the First Lady said, will continue to give hope to the marginalised.

“The overall purpose of my office and of my foundation, the Angel of Hope, is to advocate for an enabling legal policy and resource environment that empowers the disadvantaged, the vulnerable and the marginalised people in our country. In my line of work, I have realised that the upliftment of livelihoods and the improvement of the quality of life of the vulnerable is a responsibility. Therefore, I work with Government ministries and departments, the private sector, United Nations organisations, well-wishers and some civil society organisations.”

Speaking at the same occasion, Girl Guides Association president Mrs Nyembezi Mbaya said in addition to offering various empowering programmes, the association also seeks to protect girls from societal hazards.

“Our main aim is to offer programmes for young girls and women, which provides them with opportunities to acquire skills for their development and advancement for them to be responsible citizens able to play a meaningful role in the society and beyond.”

Mrs Mbaya said her association has more than 28 000 members countrywide.

State Media

Teachers Have Not Notified Govt Of Any Job Action, State Media

TEACHERS have not officially notified their parent ministry of an intention to down tools when schools open on Tuesday, hence the Government is expecting schools to smoothly open for the first term of the year, an official has said.

In an interview yesterday, Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education, Mrs Tumisang Thabela said teachers have not given any notice to strike.

“We do not have any notice to strike. We have heard rumours of teachers plotting to strike. We sat down with them but they never told us of a strike. As a ministry we are ready for the first term and we are waiting to hear from those who are responsible for the welfare of teachers to tell us the way forward, whether they will give us the teachers or not,” she said.

The ministry is anticipating to add 3 000 more teachers this year. The development comes as reports indicated that a high-powered ministerial delegation will tomorrow meet civil servants representatives to discuss challenges faced by the workers.

Mrs Thabela added that the ministry has approved school fees increases for some schools that applied to the ministry although none has been given the green light to charge in foreign currency.

“Where schools have applied and followed due processes, they have been granted authority to increase fees. There is a circular that actually went out where the minister told schools that because of the realities on the ground we can’t say don’t increase fees but it has to be justified and there is a due process that they have to follow.”

Mrs Thabela said she could not say off hand, which schools have applied and granted the green light to adjust their fees.

A week-long survey by Sunday News revealed that apart from adjusting fees, some boarding schools are demanding part payment in foreign currency while some have gone a step further by demanding that parents buy groceries for their children. In the past, procurement of food and other necessities used by boarders was done by the school.

At Manama High School in Gwanda District, parents have been given a list of groceries to buy. According to the list each child should in addition to the fees bring 5kgs of rice, 5kg of sugar, 5 litres of cool drink and 5 litres of cooking oil. Other schools that have also demanded various grocery items include Usher High School in Matabeleland South’s Bulilima District.

John Tallach High School in Matabeleland North has asked parents to top up their fees by an additional $50. Other schools have simply increased their fees and sent notices to parents that if need be, there will be another top-up during the term.

Parents at David Livingstone in Ntabazinduna said the school increased fees from $580 to $850 per term.

“Last term we were paying $530 for term one, but we were recently called to a meeting where they told us the fees have gone up to $850.

They said this is to cushion the school since prices of most goods have gone up,” said a parent with a pupil at the school.

Methodist Church in Zimbabwe-run Thekwane High School in Bulilima had proposed that parents bring groceries last term but later changed goal posts saying they were yet to get approval from the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education on what position to take on the matter. According to seculars sent to parents by the school dated 2 January 2019, the school reiterated that it was still waiting for approval on the proposal.

St James High School in Nyamandlovu last term asked parents to provide groceries in order for them to augment what the school was providing as it was no longer adequate. It was, however, not revealed what the demands for this coming term would be. Some schools have reportedly demanded that parents settle part of their fees in foreign currency to guard against price increases.

Mrs Thabela, however, said when they approved the fees increases, they clearly specified that the schools must not demand a specific currency from parents but all working currencies.

“Demanding a certain currency is not acceptable. However, there are certain schools that are said to be doing it without our knowledge,” she said.

On groceries, Mrs Thabela said the ministry does not have jurisdiction over the issue as it was an agreement between parents and schools.

The nightmare for parents has not only been confined to boarding schools but across the board with some primary schools in Bulawayo especially former Group As having reviewed their fees. Most exercise and text books have also gone three to four folds up and the situation has been worsened by the high number of books some schools are demanding.

A random check revealed that a two quire counter book costs an average of $8 in most shops while a A4 32 page is going from $2 and a 72-paged book is going for $2,50. However, some vendors were also making brisk business by selling some of the books at prices lower than most shops.

Mrs Roseline Moyo, a parent whose child is starting Grade Three at Hope Fountain said education had become expensive and unaffordable for most parents.

“This year it is going to be difficult sending our children back to school, prices continue to go up and yet our salaries remain the same. My child is going to Grade Three, from the list I was given I am supposed to buy 30 exercise books with 10 two quire books, seven A4 72 page and 13 A4 32 pages, not mentioning the list of textbooks needed,” she said.

Mrs Patience Mphoko, a parent of a child starting ECD A at Mahatshula Primary School said she has spent more than $300 buying stationery and other requirements demanded by the school.

“I have spent $321 buying all the required material. It is not easy but for the sake of our children’s education we have to sacrifice. I bought Typek bond paper at $40, poster paint $10, paint brush $3, a pair of scissors for $2, Stickstuff $4, glue $5, file $2, mini laptop $150, reading text books go for an average of $15 each, manilla sheets $2,47 and wax crayons cost an average of $4,22,” said Mrs Mphoko.

Mrs Thabela said the ministry was not in charge of determining prices of stationery and uniforms.

State Media

Jonah Fabisch Explains Why He Wants To Play For Zimbabwe

Jonah Fabisch reveals why he wants to play for Zimbabwe
Jonah Fabisch has revealed why he wants to represent the Warriors in future.

The 17-year-old midfielder who plays for Hamburger SV and Germany’s U19s is the son of the late former national team coach Reinhard. He is eligible to feature for the country as his mother is from Zimbabwe.

In an interview with Sunday Mail, Jonah believes playing for the Warriors will be an honour to his father’s legacy on the local football scene.

“My father has a huge legacy here in Zimbabwe and I feel like I need to do this (play for Zimbabwe) in his honour,” revealed Jonah.

“I have been invited for German national youth teams but I haven’t yet made my decision on my senior national career. But I have got this strong attachment to Zimbabwe, it is my home country so I can say 90 percent I will play for the Warriors.”

The late Fabisch assembled the “Dream Team” which went for a record 12 games unbeaten at the National Sports in both the Africa Cup of Nations and World Cup qualifiers between 1992 and 1995. African football giants Cameroon and Egypt, as well as the likes of Angola, Togo, Guinea and South Africa, were some of the teams that were belittled by Fabisch’s gallant squad.

Jonah already holds a local passport and is available for national team selection in the future.

Meanwhile, efforts are also underway to process papers for another German-based striker Kelly Lunga, son to former Warriors forward Max, and red-hot Leyton Orient player Macauley Bonne.

State Media

Sandra Ndebele Fraudster Wanted By More Money Changers After Swindling Them Of More Money

ONE of the people accused of having robbed musician Sandra Ndebele- Sibindi of about $100 000 last year, is being sued by suspected illegal foreign currency dealers for swindling them of varying amounts of money.

Amanda Onwuchukwu, who is one of the women at the centre of the controversial Ndebele-Sibindi issue and is at large, is being sued by Mr Takaedza Takaedza for $11 000 in bond notes and Mr Hardmore Tsvangirai for US$19 000 for allegedly swindling them of the said amounts.

Onwuchukwu is reported to have been given the various amounts of money by both parties to change the money into US dollars and South African Rand. For Mr Takaedza, Onwuchukwu was given $11 000 in bond notes on 31 October last year and was meant to cross rate it to
US$4 000.

Mr Takaedza, according to High Court documents, claims to have communicated with Onwuchukwu through WhatsApp messages and can provide the messages in court as evidence.

Mr Takaedza in the suit alleges that Onwuchukwu had said she would pay back the money on 7 November last year but to this date has not and has since gone into hiding.

On the case involving Mr Tsvangirai, Onwuchukwu is reported to have swindled him of US$19 000, where she was meant to cross rate the money into Rand amounting to R292 500.

Tsvangirai is also being sued by one Farai Vengesu for US$11 500, which he reportedly advanced to him before being swindled by Onwuchukwu. It was reported last year that a woman from Emganwini suburb identified as Lindiwe Moyo allegedly defrauded Ndebele-Sibindi of $100 000 in a suspected illegal money changing deal that went sour.

The woman appeared in court and was ordered to pay back the money, while also being sentenced to do community service.

Moyo is reported to have connived with Onwuchukwu and a Simanga Gwemende to swindle Mrs Ndebele-Sibindi of the $100 000, before alleging that she lost the money to three suspects — two men and a woman — who had offered her a lift from Beitbridge to Bulawayo only to speed off without her, after they had taken a recess in Colleen Bawn.

State Media

Bread Shortages But 30k Metric Tonnes Of Wheat Held In Mozambique As RBZ Fails To Pay The Vessel

Aconsignment of 30 000 metric tonnes of wheat which was sourced from Lithuania by the Grain Millers’ Association of Zimbabwe (GMAZ) is stuck at Beira port in Mozambique after the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) reportedly failed to pay for the vessel.

The vessel, docked at the Beira port two weeks ago, needs US$12,2 million before it can offload the consignment of wheat. The RBZ has only managed to pay US$2,5 million to the London-based supplier, Holbud Ltd.

According to reports, the consignment is attracting daily demurrage charges of $17 000 pending receipt of full payment by the supplier whose charges will be passed on to GMAZ.

Holbud recently wrote to GMAZ chairperson Tafadzwa Musarara expressing the company’s exasperation at the failure by Zimbabwe to pay for the consignment.

“We are very disappointed as we have brought the vessel basing on various promises given to us and also given the fact that we have always been supporting Zimbabwe during tight situations like now. Please let us know at the earliest time when the balance payment will be made to us,” Holbud wrote.

“We request you to come down to London, UK, on January 8, 2019 to discuss on the next shipment and how the payment will be made as we will not be able to make similar provision for future shipment as our bankers are very upset with the delay in payment.”

Holbud is now the sole supplier of wheat to Zimbabwe after all the other companies cut off deliveries due to long delays in making payments.

Contacted for comment, GMAZ spokesperson Garikai Chaunza said the association was in the process of engaging the central bank and the government over the issue.

“As I am speaking now, the chairperson [Musarara] is engaging with Reserve Bank governor John Mangudya and Industry and Commerce minister Mangaliso Ndlovu over this urgent issue,” he said.

“He [Musarara] is also having marathon discussions with the supplier [Holbud] abroad and it is our hope that RBZ will do the needful. We will give further updates once these discussions are over.”

The country imports wheat to augment the local cereal which alone does not make good bread.

Bread manufactured by local bakers has 50% hard (imported) wheat.

Met Office Warns Of Floods

THE Meteorological Department has warned of floods in some parts of Gokwe in Midlands as the area is forecasted to receive heavy rains this week.

Speaking during a Civil Protection Unit (CPU) strategic meeting in Gweru on Friday, Met Department Midlands provincial manager Mr Tafirenyika Zinyowera said some parts of the province will receive heavy rains that would exceed 100mm per day.

Mr Zinyowera said people in low lying areas such as Gokwe should be on the lookout as there is a possibility of floods on Tuesday.

“We received heavy rains in the past few days. Gweru and Gokwe recorded 100mm, Zvishavane, Mberengwa also received around 57mm earlier this week.

“So next week we are expecting more heavy rains and we would want those in low lying areas such as Gokwe to be on the look out because from Tuesday onwards those areas are going to have incessant rains according to our weather forecast.

We are contemplating putting another weather station at Gokwe Nembudziya so that we know the exact quantities that those areas receive. If resources permit we would do that,” he said.

Mr Zinyowera said the rainfall pattern was not going to change much albeit El Nino was weakening.

He said the province should expect average to below average rainfall until the end of the summer cropping season.

“As for the rainfall pattern, it is not going to change much. We have noticed that El Nino is weakening but from January to March we are still expecting normal to below normal rains this season.

“Areas in the southern part of the province should expect below average rains,” he said.

Midlands Provincial Civil Protection Unit (CPU) chairperson Mr Thompson Siziba said the CPU will also be on high alert to ensure rapid response in case of floods.

“Usually what happens with Gokwe is that if Gokwe South receives heavy rains the main river Sengwa, also passes through Gokwe North enroute to the Zambezi so both districts can be affected. As CPU we will be on the lookout to ensure rapid response,” he said.

State Media

Valueless Bond Notes Source Of Zimbabwe’s Problems, Analysts

GOVERNMENT’S promise to avail foreign currency to the country’s largest beverages manufacturer, Delta Corporation, to avoid forex pricing is not sustainable, analysts have said.

Delta last Wednesday announced a new pricing system for all its products, pegged in United States dollars, in a move meant to keep the company afloat in the face of foreign currency shortages.

In apparent panic, government moved to convene a meeting on Thursday night, well before Delta effected its new forex pricing regime on Friday.

Economic analysts and business executives said the move by government to interfere in the Delta decision to price its products in the US$ was tantamount to meddling with market forces and would not work.

Economist and CEO Forum chief executive Kipson Gundani contends that government has no role in business and what it did on Delta’s issue was akin to price control.

“Government has no role in business. It is the role of business to do business. In other words, government is controlling the prices of Delta products.

Government is going against the market forces. History has shown us that such battles are never won,” Gundani said.

“The obvious will happen. Delta products will disappear and there will be shortages. It is common knowledge that government does not have forex. They cannot subsidise everything from fuel to beer and drinks. That is going against the basic laws of economics. The solution offered by government will not work.”

Other analysts said authorities feared that had this pricing regime been left to fly, the move could have seen more companies joining the bandwagon as most businesses are experiencing the same acute shortage of foreign currency.

While this seems to have offered a respite to Delta’s issue, the central bank has, however, been struggling to provide forex for procurement of fuel, drugs, wheat and bread makers’ raw materials.

The apex bank is currently having a headache in providing two million litres of petrol and three million litres of diesel per day with an estimated weekly requirement of $20 million to $25 million.

Delta company secretary Alex Makamure said on Friday: “As you have seen in the joint statement that it is written that the Reserve Bank will endeavour to avail forex. So it is an endeavour. These are promises as you know the country is facing a serious forex supply. So we will be working in the framework of that short supply.”

The beverages manufacturer owes $41 million to foreign suppliers and dividends worth $30 million to Anheuser-Busch InBev, the world’s largest brewer, which holds a 40% stake in Delta.

Delta’s strategic position in this economy is undoubted and authorities must proffer the best sustainable solution to ensure a conducive operating environment.

Mindful of the fact that when bakers increased the bread price to $2,20 last November the central bank promised in vain to up forex allocation to 80% from 35% to lure them to settle at $1,40. Seeing that no forex allocation was coming, bread makers are now set to increase prices again.

Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce chief executive Christopher Mugaga said government could reverse Delta’s move but at its own peril as that would lead to massive job losses.

“It means Delta has reached a tipping point on its ability to continue buying forex on the parallel market. If government reverses Delta’s decision, it will mean more job losses and a significant cut on all tax heads to government which includes VAT, excise tax, corporate tax and PAYE,” he said.

“Therefore, Delta’s stance can be interpreted as the beverage industry which is redollarising faster, not the firm, since Delta is a monopoly. Given the rate of growth and the size of the consumer facing industry in this economy, the impact will be transmitted to ordinary citizens whose salaries are still denominated in RTGS balances. This Delta move could spell more political friction into 2019 as government will be forced to review its interpretation of 1:1 in the coming Monetary Policy Statement.”

Delta directly employs 5 000 workers and has in excess of 20 000 indirect customers. It is one of the biggest counters on the local bourse and has invested over US$600 million in plant and equipment, vehicles and ancillary services since 2009.

In the run-up to the festive period, the company announced that it had shut down its soft drinks manufacturing plant due to shortages of imported raw materials.

Independent economist Eddie Cross said legally Delta could trade in any of the currencies that are a legal tender and the move to block it was going to drive inflation.

“It means that Delta will have to increase its prices in RTGS and buy the foreign exchange it needs to service its external liabilities on the open market. Other companies are already doing that and this is what is driving the inflation,” Cross said.

According to FBC Bank in its weekly snapshot, foreign exchange controls are failing to work in Zimbabwe and the country should immediately liberalise the foreign exchange market.

“[The] RBZ introduced a number of exchange control measures in the economy which includes centralising the allocation of foreign currency for imports on a priority basis, adopting the artificial exchange rate of 1:1 between the USD and RTGS dollars,” the bank said.

“Due to persistent deficits over the past five years the country has built a mountain of RTGS dollars to the tune of $22,5bln ($10bln in bank accs, $9bln in TBs and $2,5bln in RBZ overdraft). Our major challenge as a country is known beyond reasonable doubt that it is a currency crisis. We believe the fundamentals are still sound in Zimbabwe and these distortions in the market prices must be addressed immediately.”

Other analysts said Delta’s stance, which followed a similar move by Simbisa Brands late December, showed that authorities had chosen to bury their heads in the sand, pretending the bond note was trading at par with the US dollar, ignoring all the fundamentals and glaring facts on the ground suggesting otherwise.

Huge Delays At Beitbridge Border As Zimbabweans Go Back To Work In SA

THOUSANDS of South Africa-based Zimbabweans who are on their way back to the neighbouring country are being subjected to delays lasting up to five hours as SA immigration officials are overwhelmed and failing to cope with the inflow of travellers.

At one time between 5 and 7am on Friday, the officials reportedly downed tools accusing the travellers of being disorderly.

A Zimbabwean journalist on his way to his Lesotho base, Ray Mungoshi, said the delays were frustrating and for a long period all systems were at a standstill.

“We passed the Zimbabwean side within 30 minutes of entering the Customs area on the Zimbabwe side, but waited for more than three hours on the South African side,” Mungoshi said.

“The officials at one time stopped work accusing us of being disorderly. It was frustrating, especially knowing there was nothing one could do. The situation changed dramatically around 8am when the female team leader devised means to have motorists and their passengers served in one section while those travelling by bus were served in another section.”

Before that, he said, there was so much chaos a traffic jungle formed inside the SA Customs yard.

Thousands of Zimbabweans based in South Africa travel back home during the December holidays when they take a break.

An estimated 3 million Zimbabweans live in South Africa, having fled poverty and political instability in their country where the unemployment rate hovers above 80%.

Many Zimbabweans settle for low-paying jobs mostly on SA farms and industries although others have work permits and are employed at competitive salaries in that country’s job markets.

Yesterday morning vehicle queues on the Zimbabwean side stretched for close to a kilometre from the immigration offices.

Tempers flared and road rage was a common sight as motorists tried to jump the queues managed by a private security company hired by the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra).

Schools in South Africa open this coming week just like in Zimbabwe.

Money changers, water vendors and people selling foodstuffs made brisk business weaving between cars to trade rands for bond notes.

Beitbridge Immigration regional manager Nqobile Ncube on Wednesday said pressure had changed direction to the south but his office was ready for the challenge.

“It is not as much as just before Christmas and we are on top of the situation,” he said in a brief interview.

Meanwhile, several border jumpers were intercepted and brought back to Zimbabwe by SA officials last week.

The returnees were arrested at the entry gate after negotiating their way across Beit Bridge manned by police and members of the Zimbabwe National Army.

Standard

New Twist To Doctors Strike End, “We Never Accepted The Offer, Strike Still On. “

Mthabisi Anele Bhebhe

Zimbabwe Hospital Doctors’ Association (ZHDA) secretary-general Mthabisi Bhebhe told The Standard last night that a deal that had been reached between a group of doctors and the employer was unacceptable and as the association representing the health workers, they did not append their signatures to it.

“The person who signed the deal is only an Apex representative. He does not speak on behalf of the doctors. We refused to counter-sign the agreement because we do not agree with a number of issues contained in the so-called agreement. In short, the strike is still on. It is unfortunate that government wants to play to the gallery with facts,” Bhebhe said.

According to the deal that was signed by one T A Zigora representing government and a P Chivese on behalf of the workers, the striking doctors have 48 hours to return to work while disciplinary issues that had been raised against them would be dealt with by their seniors and not the Health Services Board.

The deal also stated that the doctors were not to be paid December salaries, but would be paid money in lieu of their leave days.

On vehicles for junior doctors, government agreed to give them $7 500 duty-free importation of vehicles through a loan scheme for junior doctors while their supervisors were to get $15 000 duty-free certificates and the senior medical doctors $30 000.

“Based on this agreement, ZHDA will engage its members who are on industrial action to go back to work within the next 48 hours,” reads part of the deal.

The deal also stated that donor-funded allowances would be paid in the currency the funder would have availed to government and the state undertook to review working hours for junior doctors. The state also agreed to review salaries for doctors in April, but rejected a proposal to pay the health workers’ salaries in foreign currency.

Standard

January Disease Kills 50 000

Government’s drive to replenish the national cattle herd as part of an elaborate effort to boost both the dairy and beef industry is being significantly pushed back by rising incidence of Theileriosis, or January Disease, a tick-borne infection that claimed 50 000 cattle last year.

The disease, which is caused by the brown ear-tick that usually thrives during the rainy season, is indiscriminate, affecting communal and A1 farmers.

Ordinarily, while dipping is considered effective in fighting the scourge, foreign currency shortages — worsened by rising competing demands —are making it increasingly difficult to import dipping chemicals.

Government needs an estimated $8,2 million to administer anthrax and foot-and-month disease vaccines annually.

Farmers in the affected areas are either failing to dip their cattle or dipping them in chemicals whose concentration is considered suboptimal.

Principal director in the Department of Veterinary Services (DVS) Dr Unesu Ushewokunze-Obatolu (pictured) told The Sunday Mail recently that local companies are not taking the initiative to manufacture the vaccines locally.

“2018 experienced high death rates among communal and A1 cattle in Theileriosis hotspots. Upwards of 50 000 herds were lost to this disease in the 2017-2018 summer.

“When dipping of cattle is effective, the disease disappears. Dipping failure occurs when animals miss treatment because the chemical is unavailable … (or) due to dipping concentration being suboptimal,” she said.

Local production

However, Government plans to scale up local production of the much-needed vaccines.

“Local industry has not yet taken the opportunity to venture into animal disease vaccine production, and most animal vaccines are imported.

“The Department of Veterinary Services hopes to begin incubating production of a range of animal disease vaccines in 2019. Presently, DVS produces a weak, but highly protective strain of Newcastle virus vaccine and vaccines against three cattle tick-borne diseases,” said Dr Ushewokunze-Obatolu.

Government, through an ambitious plan outlined in the Transitional Stabilisation Programme (TSP), intends to improve the size and quality of the national herd.

A $440 million facility backed by the private sector has since been put in place. Of the total resource envelope, $200 million will be committed to the beef and dairy sector, $42 million to poultry, $11 million to sheep and goats, and $30 million for piggery projects.

In order to track cattle movements and prevent stock theft, Government is also considering electronic ear tagging to the dip tanks of origin.

Furthermore, $25 million will be mobilised towards construction of dip tanks in unserviced areas, including maintaining the existing assets.

Beef cattle and dairy
Government is also doubling efforts to resuscitate the beef and dairy sector to meet domestic demand and export requirements.

TSP estimates that $63 million is needed to revive beef cattle production, of which $32 million would be for restocking.

It is envisaged that the exercise will involve providing heifers to farmers in predominantly livestock-producing areas and drier provinces such as Matabeleland North and South, and southern parts of Manicaland, Masvingo and Midlands.

Similarly, the Dairy Revitalisation Programme targets increasing the dairy herd to double the country’s raw milk production from 67 million litres in 2017 to 131 million litres within four years.

National milk demand presently stands at 120 million litres.

However, the country’s national dairy herd stands at 28 000 cows, down from a peak of 122 000 cows during the 1990s.

Zimbabwe imports about 60 percent of its milk requirements.

But Government’s resolve to capacitate local livestock farmers is quite apparent.

As at August 28 last year, 844 heifers had been distributed in Matabeleland North province, while 1 384 heifers were distributed in Matabeleland South.

In addition, a new artificial insemination technology with the capacity of producing 4 000 bull semen straws an hour will be commissioned soon.

The project, which is being spearheaded by the Chinhoyi University of Technology, will complement the Command Livestock Programme.

Disease control
It is believed that successfully pursuing the planned projects involves effectively dealing with the threats of animal diseases.

The Department of Veterinary Services said last week a new case of foot-and-mouth had been reported in Mashonaland Central for the first time.

Some animals in the province reportedly cross into neighbouring Mozambique to graze, where they usually come into contact with infected buffaloes.

But Government is already fencing some areas in order to separate them from national parks and also control animal movement.

About 60 kilometres of the 240-kilometre fence around Gonarezhou National Park has been fenced under the Livestock Special Programme.

In line with global commitments, DVS will also strive to eliminate dog-mediated human rabies; PPR (Peste des petits ruminants) or goat plague; and dedicate efforts to control foot-and-mouth disease.

State Media

Govt Finally Begins Decentralisation Of Passports Issuance

Home Affairs Minister Cain Mathema

Home Affairs and Cultural Heritage Minister Ambassador Cain Mathema
Sharon Munjenjema, Harare Bureau
Government is finalising modalities to de-centralise issuance of passports and civil registration documents to decongest provincial offices, our Harare Bureau has learnt.

This comes amid concerted efforts to improve the ease of doing business, as the country moves towards achieving a upper middle-income status economy by 2030. Speaking to our Harare Bureau recently, Home Affairs and Cultural Heritage Minister Ambassador Cain Mathema said Government’s ultimate goal was to ensure people acquire passports and other identity documents at district level.

“We are going to decentralise issuance of passport, birth certificate and national identity documents to the lowest district level. Issuance of passports will be increased because it is every Zimbabwean’s constitutional right to obtain the travel document. The whole administration of systems in Home Affairs ministry will be computerised.”

In a separate interview, Registrar General Mr Clemence Masango said the travel and identity document decentralisation plan was long overdue.

“People will pay the fee online, apply online and then download the form to present it physically to passport offices for capturing of biometrics. This also minimises chances of corruption,” said Mr Masango.

“We get reports of touts who assist people to jump the queue or ask for payment to facilitate quick processing of documents. If application is done online, we reduce such incidences.”

He said plans were on course to introduce an electronic queue management system and install CCTV cameras in order to monitor performance and movement of staff at the registry offices.

State Media

Knowledge Musona Visits TB Joshua To Get Help On Troubled Soccer Career

Knowledge Musona captured on t.v. receiving prayer at TB Joshua church

WARRIORS captain Knowledge Musona has turned to popular Nigerian televangelist, Temitope Balogun Joshua, popularly known as TB Joshua, for prayers after struggling with a recurring knee injury.

A video of the 28-year-old Anderlecht Belgium striker being prayed for by the charismatic preacher at the Lagos-based Synagogue Church of All Nations (Scoan) was circulating on social last week.

Musona’s prayer request

In the 46-second-long clip which is now on the video-sharing website YouTube, Musona is captured seated in front of TB Joshua, who is seen laying his hands on the football player’s knees, his chest and his head while praying.

The camera also zooms to someone standing behind the player holding a banner which states that the professional footballer is seeking deliverance from a knee injury and “career failure”.

The banner also states that the former Kaizer Chiefs and KV Oostende hitman has been struggling with the knee injury for the past five years.

After the prayer sessions, TB Joshua tells Musona to stand up, telling him: “Jesus has set you free.”

Musona stands up and starts jogging, saying: “Thank you Jesus. I’m free, I’m healed.”

It is not clear when Musona went to Nigeria and efforts to get a comment from the Zimbabwe captain were fruitless last week.

Musona is the latest in the growing list of professional footballers who have visited the Nigerian cleric.

Some of the players who have reportedly visited TB Joshua’s church for prayers include Manchester United youngster Angel Gomes, former Zambian international Given Singuluma and a host of Nigerian professional footballers.

Prominent Zimbabweans known to have sought healing from Scoan include the late former Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, Vice-President Kembo Mohadi, former cabinet minister Chris Mushohwe and former Zifa boss Cuthbert Dube.

Musona, who is affectionately known as the Smiling Assassin, has struggled to nail down a regular starting place at Anderlecht since moving from another Belgian side, KV Oostende, last June.

The talented player, however, appears to have received a lifeline after Anderlecht fired their coach Hein Vanhaezebrouck last month following a string of poor results.

The striker had been frustrated by lack of game time under Vanhaezebrouck since joining the club at the start of this season, making just three league starts and five substitute appearances for Anderlecht while also scoring one goal.

Reports prior to Vanhaezebrouck’s sacking suggested that Musona was contemplating returning to former club KV Oostende in the January transfer window.

Musona was also forced to respond to speculation linking him with a move back to South African side Kaizer Chiefs as he took to social media to quash rumours that he could be on his way back to South Africa in the January transfer window.

Anderlecht’s new technical director Frank Arnesen, however, appeared to give Musona and other players who struggled under the previous coach a lifeline.

Speaking at his first press conference after his unveiling on Thursday, Arnesen, who has previously served as director of football at English clubs Tottenham Hotspur and Chelsea, said Musona and others would be given a chance to prove their worth.

The former Danish international will work closely together with Anderlecht’s new sporting director Michael Verschueren and Swedish coach Par Zetterberg before the appointment of a new manager.

“My principle is that everyone must have a chance to show that we need him. My mission is obviously also to strengthen the team from the winter transfer window, in consultation with the future coach,” he said.

Arnesen said he would use the team’s upcoming winter training camp which starts in Spain this week to get to know the players and analyse the group better before the league resumes on January 18.

“That’s why I’m going to the winter training camp with Michael Verschueren to Spain, where I will have the time to thoroughly get to know and analyse the players.

“He will take the necessary time to get to know the technical staff better and to see what the weaknesses and strengths of the team are. That is not possible in one day,”Arnesen said.

Musona’s failure to nail down a place at his club was also becoming a big worry to Warriors coach Sunday Chidzambga, who is hoping to have his talisman fully fit when the Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon) qualifiers resume in March.

The Warriors face a defining match in their quest for back-to-back appearances at the Afcon finals when they host Congo-Brazzaville in March with any result, save for defeat, enough to book them a ticket to the showcase.

Standard

Top ZIMRA Officials In Massive Smuggling Racket

THE Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) 10 top managers have been named in an alleged $3 million cooking oil and chicken smuggling racket, which was reportedly swept under the carpet.

Documents gleaned by our Harare Bureau show that the scam, through which restricted goods were allegedly imported without Government’s authorisation, was unearthed at Beitbridge Border Post between 2011 and 2014.

Former Commissioner General Mr Gershem Pasi, who is also facing separate charges of criminal abuse of office before the courts, spilled the beans in a June 20 2014 letter addressed to Zimra’s Commissioner (Customs and Excise) Mr Happius Kuzvinzwa.

The allegations were initially detailed in a dossier that was compiled by Zimra’s loss control division. Although the damning documents were closely guarded, they only came to light recently.

It is claimed that the accused staffers would import cooking oil and chicken consignments without import permits from either the Ministry of Agriculture or the Ministry of Industry and Commerce. The two ministries confirmed the same to the investigators. Also noted is that no F45s were raised on entries that did not have permits or licences, yet it is mandatory to issue a F45 where there are missing required documents or any anomalies noted.”

It is believed that Zimra’s management’s discretion does not override Statutory Instruments as this amounts to criminal abuse of office.

Those implicated are Messrs Adrian Swarress — former regional manager for Beitbridge — who now heads Zimra Risk and Complaints division; Martin Muponda (Head — Audit and Domestic Taxes); Henry Nyamuromba (manager — Robert Gabriel Mugabe International Airport); Nikita Machinga (manager — Technical Services); and Ms Edna Mudzingwa (manager — International Affairs).

Others are Messrs Farai Makunike (Enforcement manager — Masvingo), Stern Ncube (Station manager customs — Bulawayo) and two supervisors — Messrs James Zisanhi and Tomeyi Sona. At the time the scandal happened, the accused managers were based at Beitbridge Border Post. According to Zimra documents, details of the scam only came to light after an audit through Asycuda World — a customs clearance system — unearthed that between 2011 and 2012, restricted goods like cooking and chicken cuts were imported without permits and licences.

Recommendations were made to drag the managers for a disciplinary hearing and recovery of any lost revenue. Contacted for comment last week, Zimra Commissioner (Customs and Excise) Mr Happius Kuzvinzwa said disciplinary action had been taken against the 10 managers whom he claimed were fired.

However, after being pressed to explain why they were still in office, he tersely noted that “the issue was dealt with and finalised”.

It is alleged that Mr Swarres facilitated the import of 266 196 litres of cooking oil and 21 tonnes of chicken cuts worth US$435 372,83 under B/E C89171 of 19/12/2012, while Ms Mudzingwa facilitated irregular deliveries of chicken cuts, flour, baking fats, vegetable fats and cooking oil valued at US$693 145,18.

Further, it is understood that Mr Nyamuromba also waived a Statutory Instrument to allow controlled goods into the country without import permits, which was in violation of both the law and Zimra’s code of conduct.

Similarly, Mr Makunike is accused of facilitating the irregular import of 216 552 litres of cooking oil valued at US$329 957.

However, the fraudulent imports only claimed the scalp of five Zimra officers — Tapiwa Masikati, Phibion Mutizira, Brassington Chitate, Chengetai Kumbula and Samson Chikombero.

But the 10 managers were not charged in accordance with the Zimra code of conduct despite recommendations by former Zimra bosses.

Chamisa Joins Call For DRC To Release Election Results

Own Correspondent|Zimbabwe Opposition MDC leader Nelson Chamisa has joined mass calls for the electoral body in the Democratic Republic of Congo to announce results of last Sunday’s chaotic elections.

In a Facebook post on Sunday morning, Chamisa challenges the commission in the DRC not to emulate acts of the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission, ZEC, which he accuses of rigging last year’s elections against him.

“The DRC Electoral body must release “accurate” results timely and not undermine the voice of the Congolese people. Kudos to the DRC Catholic Church bishops for standing with the truth.What ZEC did in Zimbabwe must never be a script worthy emulating. Africa change,excel and shine,” said Chamisa.

Chaos has hit the Southern Africa country since the run up to the election held last Sunday whose results have been withheld prompting intervention of the UN Security Council that has led in the call for the results to be released.

The Catholic church in the country has meanwhile released a statement claiming that an opposition candidate has won the election. Government has in the meantime cut off all internet and radio access in the country.

Massive Ship Carrying 3500 Nissan Vehicles On Fire And Adrift On The Pacific

Correspondent|A massive cargo ship carrying thousands of brand new Nissan cars remains ablaze and adrift in a remote corner of the Pacific Ocean after a catastrophic fire broke out on New Years Eve, according to the Associated Press.

Nearby merchant vessels responded to the distress call and rescued 16 crew members, while another five mariners are presumed dead.

The disaster is unfolding 2,000 miles northwest of Hawaii, where the Panama-flagged Sincerity Ace is listing, slowly drifting to the southeast, and at risk of sinking after its 21-member crew was forced to abandon ship just a few days into its journey from Japan to Honolulu. United States Coast Guard officials in Hawaii first received word about a “significant” fire on board early Monday morning, the exact cause of which has yet to be determined.

With the location out of helicopter range and the nearest rescue ships days away, the Coast Guard activated the AMVER (Automated Mutual-Assistance Vessel Rescue) alert system to request assistance from any private vessels in the area. Though the Sincerity Ace had drifted out of a shipping lane, five cargo ships responded and managed to save sixteen of the crew. An aerial search involving two Coast Guard HC-130 Hercules and a U.S. Navy P-8 Poseidon was also launched to look for additional survivors.

This time-lapse map animation by vesseltracker.com illustrates the heroic actions of the merchant vessels in stark and striking relief. The Sincerity Ace is plugging along until it suddenly loses power and starts to drift; within hours, it’s swarmed by Good Samaritans as ship after ship makes a close pass to assess the situation and offer aid.

The five victims reportedly ended up in the water when a lifeboat launch went awry. Four were later spotted floating unresponsive amid 15-foot seas—the ad-hoc rescuers were unable to save them—while the fifth remains missing after the Coast Guard suspended its search on Wednesday night. Tragic as it is to lose a single life, it’s also remarkable that sixteen mariners are alive right now after being forced to abandon ship in the middle of the Pacific Ocean with official rescue assets nowhere in sight.

“We are thankful for the assistance the crews of these merchant vessels have given us during this event, significantly reducing possible response time,” Lt. Duane Zitta at the Coast Guard Joint Rescue Coordination Center said, according to AP. “Their quick actions provided for the rescue of 16 members of the crew who would otherwise still be in the water and are continuing to aid us.”

Built in 2009, the 650-foot Sincerity Ace is equipped to carry 6,400 cars. It’s owned by a Japanese company called Shoei Kisen Kaisha, which has already dispatched salvage tugs to the scene. It’s not clear whether they’ll reach the stricken ship before it sinks. The company is also working to arrange transportation for the scattered survivors to return home.

Nissan confirmed to Automotive News that the ship was carrying about 3,500 of its vehicles, adding that its thoughts “are with the crew members as well as the safety of the rescue teams.” It’s not known yet if any other manufacturers had cars on the Sincerity Ace; the ports it visited in Japan in December are also used by Honda and Subaru.

CAF Confirms Dates For AFCON 2019, Will Zimbabwe Be There?

Own Correspondent|The Confederation of African Football has confirmed the dates for its continental national team showpiece event for 2019.

The Africa Cup of Nations will be held from 15 June until the 13th of July.

The host of the tournament has not been confirmed after Cameroon were stripped of the rights. South Africa in December confirmed that they had handed in a bid to come in as hosts. The other team is Egypt with the winning bid to be announced on 9 January in Senegal.

Zimbabwe sit on top of their group as they go into the final day fixture against Congo knowing a draw will be enough to book their place in the finals. That match will be played in Harare on 22 March as the 24 teams for the finals will be decided then.

Govt Serious On Getting Rid Of Green Bombers From Public Service This Time

THE Government has started processing benefits for more than 3 000 youth officers who were retrenched, while a number of empowerment programmes are being facilitated for them.

In a statement, the Public Service Commission acting secretary, Mr Simon Masanga, said the youths officially retired yesterday.

He promised that the Government would ensure a smooth transition and empowerment of the retirement of the youth officers.

In line with the Transitional Stabilisation Programme (TSP) and as pronounced in the 2019 Budget Statement by the Minister of Finance and Economic Development, Professor Mthuli Ncube, the Government has initiated the process of retiring 3 365 youth officers in the Ministry of Youth, Sport, Arts and Recreation.

“The youth officers will be paid their cash in lieu of notice pending retirement on January 4, 2019.

The Youth Ministry as the lead ministry in partnership with other Government institutions in particular the Ministries of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare, Women Affairs, Community, Small and Medium Enterprises Development and the Public Service Commission are facilitating access to a wide range of economic empowerment initiatives for the youth officers,” said Mr Masanga.

He said the empowerment programmes for the youths included, among others, enrolling at the Vocational Training Centres (VCTs) dotted across the provinces to be equipped with technical entrepreneurial life skills.

“The youths can also be assisted to access finance from the Empower Bank and Zimbabwe Women’s Microfinance Bank, among other financial institutions, to start up new business ventures or to grow existing businesses. Another option is to facilitate the youth officers to participate in other Government empowerment programmes, which include Command Agriculture, mining and value addition. Information on various investment opportunities will also be availed,” said Mr Masanga.

He added that during the same period, provincial and district workshops will be convened to assist the retired youth officers to access the ongoing empowerment programmes.

“The retired youth officers interested in the empowerment opportunities are advised to register through the Youth Ministry’s district offices throughout the country. Government wishes to extend its gratitude and appreciation to the youth officers for the 10 years they served the Government and wishes them well in their future endeavours.

“Government will do everything possible to manage the smooth transition of the retirement of the youth officers during this phase,” said Mr Masanga.

Last year, Treasury indicated that the retrenchment of the youth officers will cut Government expenditure on salaries by $30 million a year, resources which will be channelled towards development projects.

State Media

July Moyo Plagiarizes Chamisa’s Smart Cities Manifesto

Own Correspondent|The state run Sunday Mail today reports that Local Government Minister July Moyo has promised that government will start developing “Smart Cities,” beginning with the restructuring of the City of Harare’s high density suburb of Mbare a word for word plagiarizing from the opposition MDC’s local government manifesto.

The leader of the opposition, Nelson Chamisa has been talking of the Smart Cities policy from the time the opposition party launched its manifesto a month before the July 2018 elections which ZANU PF criticised as just a dream.

In a shock move, the ruling party has since winning the disputed election, been busy literally stealing ideas from the opposition manifesto.

Below is the state media coverage of the Smart Cities policy declaration by Minister Moyo:

Speaking to the Sunday Mail recently, Local Government, Public Works and National Housing minister July Moyo said Government was moving to remodel cities into international standards that match a middle income country.

“The President has said 2030 we have a vision to make this country a middle income one,” he said.

“What is a middle income country? You move from $700 per capita to say $3 000. If you put that amount to be the average income everyone is earning what then do you do with your environment?

“Housing, commercial and industrial standards will change according to the demands of people who have moved from $700 to $3000 in income.

“Will you continue to build them these high density buildings? Will you continue to have suburbs like Mbare in that state? We cannot, so we have prepared mentally that standards have to elevate to match the income of the people.” Government has embarked on a programme to elevate all cities, towns and suburbs to become self –sustainable at their different levels — the smart city concept.

The concept also involves harnessing latest technology to create smart outcomes for citizens and to generally improve their quality of life.

Minister Moyo explained how the smart city concept will take shape in Zimbabwe.

“When white people were building residential areas for themselves, they made them self- contained such that a person living in Mabelreign, for instance, has no need to come to the city centre to get what they need. They have almost everything there from sports amenities, shopping centres and even at one time a hotel.

“That is why we are moving to obliterate this dichotomy of high and low density.

Initially, Government is rolling out the smart city programme in Harare, Mutare and Bulawayo.

In Harare, the projects has begun with the facelift of blocks of residential flats in Mbare.

Both Harare City Council town clerk Engineer Hosiah Chisango and corporate communications manager Mr Michael Chideme said the smart city concept was on the priority list of the local authority as it dovetails with its 2025 world class city status bid.

“In Mbare there are some open spaces where we want to construct modern two to three bedroomed residential flats for middle income families. We want the ground floors to be open working spaces,” Engineer Chisango said.

“The second phase is to relocate people from the old flats into the new ones. Some flats will be destroyed completely, but others will be left for tourism purposes. However, as we implement this plan, no one will be left homeless,”

The new blocks of flats will be erected at Tsiga and on the open spaces near Remembrance House in the suburb.

Eng Chisango said houses near Rufaro Stadium which do not have ablution facilities were among those targeted for demolition.

He said the city would facilitate ways to make the new accommodation affordable while at the same time maintaining high standards.

Currently, people occupying Mbare flats are paying $10 monthly.

“We have commissioned studies to look at demographics. The reports say there are some people who can afford to pay for the decent accommodation and are willing to move into the new flats for convenience issues,” said the engineer.

“What is left is to go on the ground and engage the people, but we do not anticipate any problems because it is all about uplifting the livelihoods of the people.”

As the city moves to modernise the suburb, the popular Mbare Musika will be run down and new structures that match modern market standards erected.

Health centres and Rufaro Stadium will be refurbished while the city will also make room for the construction of other facilities that make the suburb self-contained.

“The two major roads that feed into Mbare have already been rehabilitated as part of the modernisation drive,” said Mr Chideme.

“We already have a food court that is being constructed near Matapi Police Station and, again, that is part of the regeneration. Eventually structures surrounding that food court will be forced to upgrade to match its standard.

“This exercise is continuous. We will not wake up one day and say let us now start modernising, but what we are currently doing is happening with the modernising plan in mind.

“We cannot construct structures and destroy them in 10 years to say we are now going to build state of the art facilities. The ones we are doing now should be international standard”

The city has already made budget provisions towards the smart city initiatives

Budget estimates finalised in October last year show that between $30 million and $35 million is needed to complete the project’s first phase.

However, there are fears the figure may rise owing to the fragility that has characterised the economy in the past few months.

The city is employing all kinds of joint ventures in order to achieve its modernisation vision.

Negotiations are also in the pipeline with banks such as BancAbc among others, to buy into the project.

Government, through the ministry of Finance and Economic Development, will also chip in with some funds.

The city hopes to have completed the first phase of the project by 2025.

One Now Needs To Part With $ 3 To Drink A Pint Of Beer!

 

HARARE – Beer drinkers may now need to think twice before downing the so-called wise waters.

This follows the steep increase in the price of clear beer – by more than 100 percent – hours after Delta Corporation Limited was forced to
reverse its decision to sell its products in hard currency.

A survey by the Daily News yesterday showed that a number of retail outlets have hiked prices of lager beers with 375ml bottles now retailing at $3, 50 from $1, 50, while a 750ml bottle which was initially pegged at $2, 50, is now selling at
between $6 and $8.

Even though most retailers are now selling at these new prices, Delta insisted yesterday that its wholesale prices have not changed.
“Our prices remain the same. We are still selling at the same price we provided in our circular,” Delta company secretary Alex Makamure said.

The Zimbabwe Stock Exchange-listed behemoth is principally the largest producer of lager beer,
traditional beer, Coca-Cola franchised sparkling and alternative non-alcoholic beverages.
It has investments in associate companies whose activities are in cordials and juice drinks, wines and spirits. On Wednesday, the company issued a circular to its customers announcing its decision to sell its
products in the elusive US dollars (USDs).

In terms of the circular, the wholesale price for a 375ml bottle of beer fetched 80 cents, while a 750ml bottle should sell at $1, 50.Daily News

Violent Protests Erupt Again At Bushiri Church, Cops On High Alert As Protesters Want To Burn It Down

Protests reignited on Saturday evening at the Enlightened Christian Gathering (ECG) church run by charismatic preacher Shepherd Bushiri in Pretoria West.

Gauteng police have increased their presence around the prophet Shepherd Bushiri-led ECG church in Pretoria, which has been targeted by protesters after three congregants reportedly died in a stampede last weekend, the South African Police Service (SAPS) said on Saturday evening.

“In terms of the protest now [Saturday], as it has been started, the police have been summoned to the scene and as you can see the Tshwane metro police is around. We are beefing up the manpower to make sure we are around this area and we get to the bottom of this matter,” SAPS Gauteng spokesman Lieutenant Kay Makhubela said.

“We want to understand what is their [protesters] problem now. We don’t know what prompted this. We believe that as the police engage with the community they will establish what the problem is,” he said.

The SAPS is investigating the death of three female congregants at the ECG church in Pretoria West on December 28. A case of defeating the ends of justice has been opened, relating to the removal of the bodies from the church premises.

“Remember, when an incident like this [deaths] happens, police are supposed to be the first to take over and make sure that investigations are conducted at the scene and have the bodies transferred to the government mortuary for postmortem. But because there was tampering of the scene, a case had to be opened and we are investigating that. The investigation is at a sensitive stage and we believe that we will make sure we bring the responsible people to book,” said Makhubela.

However, the charge was not laid against the charismatic preacher, contrary to some media reports.

“What I can tell you is that the case of defeating the ends of justice is opened. We are going to investigate to determine and find who is responsible for removing the bodies or to tamper with the scene of the bodies. After that we will know who is our suspect. At the moment we are investigating the case,” said Makhubela.

ECG spokesman Terrence Baloyi said the popular church was cooperating with the police probe.

“We shall cooperate with the police and observe the law.”

Baloyi said the ECG was currently on “recess” until January 20. The last service at the church was held on New Year’s Eve.

Earlier on Saturday, protests were reignited at the ECG church. The busy WF Nkomo (formerly Church) Street was blocked to traffic, with protesters allowing only minibus taxis to pass via a passage of burning tyres.

Several ECG members and vendors camping outside the venue fled as protesters descended on the area. Some of the ECG members quickly packed their bags and fled.

– African News Agency (ANA)

CAPS United Get Rid Of Jere From Club Administration

Correspondent|HARARE football giants Caps United have embarked on a restructuring exercise aimed at transforming the club into a commercial entity — a development which has seen chief executive officer Cuthbert Chitima resigning from his post.

CAPS United (Pvt) Ltd is 60% owned by Auto Mat — an investment vehicle controlled by club president Farai Jere, while Goal Star, owned by Nhamo Tutisani — controls a 40% stake.

With Jere now committed to his new post as PSL chair and Zifa board member, Tutisani has now taken over the day-to-day running of the club.

Although Tutisani could not shed light on the circumstances surrounding the resignation of Chitima, he told NewsDay Sport the club had taken a business approach in its quest to become a viable entity.

“As you are aware, Mr Jere is now the PSL chair and also a Zifa board member. He is now committed to PSL and Zifa, so I am now overseeing the running of the club. We want the club not to be just professionally run, but to be commercial. It should no longer be business as usual. We will be making an announcement soon,” Tutisani said.

It was not clear yesterday whether Chitima had been forced out, with the former Gunners boss, in his resignation letter, saying he had opted out to pursue other business opportunities.

“This serves to confirm and advise the Caps United FC, its valued stakeholders and the entire football fraternity that I have resigned as the chief executive officer of the institution, with effect from December 31, 2018. This has been necessitated by emerging business opportunities and commitments that I intend to pursue, and that won’t allow me to perform my duties well, considering how demanding the position is. I would like to take this opportunity to express my sincere gratitude to the Caps United stakeholders, board, secretariat, playing staff and most importantly the Caps United supporters for all the unlimited support and encouragement rendered during the three years that I served.

“It is worth mentioning that I am a passionate football lover, football supporter, a football professional and will always avail myself and provide all the support required for the club to successfully achieve its vision,” he wrote.

The Caps United family will be hoping that the new restructuring exercise that the club has embarked on shall bring better fortunes to the team after they finished a distant eighth position in the last campaign.

They are looking to make amends in the forthcoming season where they aim to win the league title.

This was in stark contrast to their performance in the previous season where the Green Machine won the championship, and went on to reach the lucrative group stage of the African Champions League, the first time the Harare giants had reached that stage.

Trevor Ncube Says MDC Has Let Them Down And Have A Right To Change Allegiance To ZANU PF

Correspondent|One of Zimbabwe’s leading publishers Trevor Ncube says he is one of those who has supported the opposition for decades financially and otherwise but it has been disappointing so it is his democratic right to change his mind.

Ncube was commenting on the spat between Zimbabwe’s richest man Strive Masiyiwa of Econet and Human Rights Watch executive director Kenneth Roth.

The two have been embroiled in an acrimonious exchange after Masiyiwa came to the defence of his wife Tsitsi who was forced to close her twitter account because of bullying. Masiyiwa accused Human Rights Watch Southern Africa director Dewa Mavhinga of being one of the bullies.

Roth came to Mavhinga’s defence and accused Masiyiwa of being a defender of Mnangagwa.

The tweet that sparked off the whole debate read: “Some outcries and actions in pursuit of justice seem and look so right until you discover the source of the outcry and sponsor of the cause. Take a step back and reflect on some of the things we consider ‘good and just causes.’ #FoodForThought”

Mavhinga responded: “If you are implying that all and any outcry & pursuit of justice is sponsored then that is really sad. When your husband pursued his fight to be licensed it was a just cause. In such position of privilege you should choose your words more carefully, lest it promote injustice.”

In his defence of Mavhinga, Roth tweeted: “Defenders of Zimbabwe Pres Mnangagwa don’t want to hear criticism of his government’s persistent repression so they pretend all critics are foreign sponsored. A cheap shot. Why not address the reality?”

Masiyiwa did not take kindly to Roth’s tweet and narrated how he had been hounded by the Zimbabwe government into exile, and how he had looked after leaders of the opposition while they were in exile in South Africa.

He said maybe Roth was upset by his call for sanctions on Zimbabwe to be removed because they were hurting the ordinary people.

Masiyiwa said he still stood by that position because sanctions were like a man trying to kill a fly with a hammer.

Zimbabwe has been under United States sanctions since 2003.

“Consider Mr Roth that it is possible that we Zimbabweans would like to have an opportunity [ON OUR OWN] to also evaluate some of the options and tools to bring peace, and true democracy. How will we achieve this, if you take it upon yourself to decide what we should think and what views we should hold or even who we should talk to without you passing withering judgement on us?

“What are you afraid of? How can you of all people tweet that Jonathan Moyo is a champion of democracy and call me a ‘defender of repression’. Come on man.”

Trevor Ncube tweeted: “I am 100% with @StriveMasiyiwa on this. For decades some of us supported the opposition MDC financially and otherwise. The opposition has disappointed many times. We have democratic right to change our minds. Sanctions are hurting all Zimbabweans @KenRoth.”

“We Used Juju To Evade Arrest,” Says Mutare Notorious Thugs From Mozambique

Correspondent|A NOTORIOUS five-member gang of Mozambican armed robbers who broke into several houses and raped women on 21 different occasions in Mutare’s low-suburbs used juju to try and evade arrest and foil dog tracking each time they made a hit.

This was revealed by one of the suspects, Ernest Chirara, following his recent arrest by police in the neighbouring country after he had committed a different assault crime.

After getting wind of his arrest, a team of detectives from Mutare Central comprising Inspector Nyakuwanikwa, Ass Insp Nyamawere and Constable Nkomo travelled to Mozambique and went to Manica District Police Headquarters.

With the blessings of Chief Inspector Geraldo the District Director of National Investigation Services, the Mutare team was given the opportunity to interview Chirara.

During the interviews he admitted to have committed the offences together with other four accomplices. The gang’s ring leader was arrested last year while the three other suspects are still on the run.

Chirara told the detectives that they targeted any house in the low-density suburbs where there was a satellite dish. He also revealed that the gang used juju to evade arrest and dog tracking.

The detectives have since applied for an extradition order with the Mozambican authorities to have Chirara be taken to Zimbabwe to answer charges of committing 21 rape and armed robbery cases in Mutare.

Chirara (32) who comes from Manica province is one of the five suspects who unleashed a reign of terror late last year by orchestrating a spate of robberies, break-ins and sexual abuse crimes that ravaged residents in the eastern border city’s low-density suburbs.

The criminals troubled law enforcement agents because each time they pounced on unsuspecting residents they took the loot to Mozambique through illegal crossing points along the porous border.

The gang’s alleged kingpin, Domingo Luiz Zuze, was arrested last year in Zimbabwe and is currently jailed at Mutare Remand Prison.

Chirara was on the run together with Joao Antonio Amisi, Kuda and Takudzwa.

“Mnangagwa Can Never Be A Khumalo,” Mthwakazi Fumes

Media Statement|Mthwakazi Liberation Front categorically rejects as pure lies and propaganda statement published by Mandla Ndlovu on Thursday 03 January 2018, aligning Zimbabwe President, Emerson Mnangagwa to the Royal lineage of the Khumalo of King Mzilikazi.

There is nothing new about Shona people claiming things that don’t belong to them. If they can’t beat them, they join them. Towards the recent elections of Zimbabwe, Nelson Chamisa went public and said the Joshua Nkomo family had given him their family knobkerrie that Dr Joshua Nkomo used to carry. What a lie it was?

The process of claiming good things is traced as far back as 1895-6 when the Matabele took up arms against Rhodes and his imperialist forces in the uprising. They cooked up their own heroes and heroines in the names of Kaguvi and Mbuya Nehanda. Today they can’t point where their heroes’ graves are. Similarly, Mnangagwa is a Khumalo today.

Why was he not Khumalo yesterday? Was he a Khumalo when he compared Mthwakazi people to cockroaches that needed DDT? Is this the same Mnangagwa who had Masuku Lookout and Dumiso Dabengwa on trumped up charges? Time has come for Mthwakazi to refuse and reject such blatant lies. It is, in fact, derogatory for such remarks to be made on our Royal family. Such must not be accepted on Mthwakazi soil and Nation.

As MLF we strongly condemn such lies which are bent on belittling our Royal house. We do not want to associate ourselves with such twisting of historical facts. Yes! Wishing is allowed but at times one has to know the limits. You can wish to be Khumalo but that will only be a wish nothing more.

We know this emanates from the pressure Mnangagwa and his Zimbabwe government is feeling from Mthwakazi restorationists and those calling for Mthwakazi independence. Let the writing be clear! Even if Mnangagwa was a Khumalo that would not stop Mthwakazi from her Independence demands. Zimbabwe cannot sweep the winds of change under the carpet.

Our independence is a demand.

Aluta Continua.!!!!
Vuka Mthwakazi Vuka!!!

David Coltart Tears Into Mthuli Ncube’s Foreign Currency Committee

Correspondent|Veteran MDC leader David Coltart has dismissed the nine-member foreign currency allocation committee appointed by the Minister of Finance and Economic Development Prof Mthuli Ncube announced last night.

Coltart said the committee will bring about increase in corruption.

“Not sure what is “inclusive” about Ncube’s forex allocation committee – not 1 representative of industry, tourism, mining, service/professional sector. Imagine just how susceptible this committee will be to corruption now. It literally decides who will survive -or not -the economic turmoil.”

Coltart further said the committee has no checks and balances.

“Arguably the most powerful body in Zimbabwe is now Finance Minister Ncube’s so called “inclusive” forex allocation committee. Aside from it not being inclusive at all it appears to have no checks and balances so will command disproportionate power which is equal to corruption.”

The committee was one of the reform measures announced in the National Budget Statement presented to Parliament on November 22 2018. The Budget proposed to “establish a strong inclusive framework, through an interim foreign currency allocation committee, with broader representation as was the case in the past”.

The members of the Committee are:

Office of the Presidnet and Cabinet.
1. Mr A. Chikondo

Ministry of Finance and Economic Development
2. Mr Z. R. Churu
3. Mr D. Muchemwa

Ministry of Industry and Commerce
4. Mrs F. Makombe

Ministry of Energy and Power Development
5. Col M Mudzinganyama

Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe
6. Mr A. Saburi
7. Mr F. Masendu
8. Mr G. Mawire
9. Mr E. Matiza

Music Icon Dan Tshanda Declared Dead On Admission At Sandton Clinic

Music fans are in mourning on Saturday after news broke that musician and producer Dan Tshanda passed away in Johannesburg after suffering heart failure at age 54.

He was reportedly certified dead on arrival at Sandton Mediclinic after suffering a heart attack.

News sites from African countries, particularly Zimbabwe and Botswana, where he was very popular, have also been reporting the news, with fans from across the continent tweeting messages of their loss.

Many of his local fans criticised South Africans for not celebrating Tshanda as much as neighbouring African countries do.

One of Botswana’s leading newspapers reported on Saturday evening that they confirmed the death with a family spokesperson. Moudy Modzielwana also told The Voice Online in Botswana that the musical icon suffered the heart attack at around 1pm in the afternoon.

“He was rushed to hospital where he was certified dead upon arrival. The doctors confirmed that he passed on after a heart failure,” he was quoted as saying.

According to music site music.org.za, Tshanda was born in Chiawelo, Soweto, though this report claims he was born in Venda and moved to Soweto.

After dropping out of school and working as a newspaper vendor for an Afrikaans newspaper and then as a taxi driver, he made a demo cassette of his early music with his first band.

Under the name Splash, Ray Phiri of Stimela fame later agreed to feature them as their support act whenever they had shows.

Splash’s first album, Peacock, was very successful in 1986. It was followed by numerous others.

“His music has crossed the borders into African countries such as Zimbabwe, Botswana, Namibia, Swaziland, Nigeria etc, and abroad, with activity in North America, Australia, England, France,” says the site.

The Citizen

Mapfumo Humiliates Dynamos Boss

Dynamos is not an individual’s team, team “iyi ndeyevanhu” (this team is for the people), so why not give the team back to the community.

Legendary Chimurenga music exponent Thomas “Mukanya” Mapfumo, concluded his “Peace Tour” with a show in Chitungwiza last Friday but there seems to be no peace to talk about at his beloved club Dynamos where spears have been sharpened for yet another fresh boardroom battle.

A storm is brewing at DeMbare where former president Solomon Sanyamandwe was last week sacked by controversial board chairman Bernard Marriot, with insiders at the perennially squabble-ridden club saying another shake-up is expected in the “not too distant future.”

While current chairman Isaiah Mpfurutsa appears to be safe, our sources say more changes will be effected in the executive amid reports that former vice chairman Philip Mugadza could also bounce back into the picture.

Sanyamandwe’s predecessor, Keni Mubaiwa who like the former is owed thousands of dollars by the debt-ridden club, is also being tipped to return to DeMbare as a board member. Sanyamandwe has declared that he will not go down without a fight.

“I know my crime was that I wanted to bring professionalism and good corporate governance at the club.

“I was also pushing for an audit, but I realized that an audit was the last thing wanted at the club.
“For now I am making necessary consultations before I launch a fight for justice. I have put in a lot of my own resources at the club and for individuals to just decide they no longer want me around, just like that, is not fair,” fumed Sanyamandwe.

The chaos at the club, is threatening to overshadow pre-season preparations, has not escaped Chimurenga music icon Mapfumo, a staunch DeMbare supporter and a man with a shared history with Dynamos’ incumbent leader Bernad Marriot.

Mukanya once employed Marriot as a guitarist back in the days. The 73-year-old Mapfumo, who was raised in Mbare where Dynamos was formed in 1963, called Marriot to order during an interview with The Sunday Mail last Friday.

Marriot has openly declared that Dynamos is his own property on the basis that he is the sole surviving founder member of the club formed in Sam Dauya’s house in Mbare some 53 years ago.
This is despite the fact that some key co-founders of the team like Nathan Maziti who has retreated to his rural home in Murehwa and Ernest Kamba are still alive.

“Marriot is a longtime good friend of mine. He was actually my guitarist back in the days, so I can be blunt with him. “He should change his ways, it’s sad that you hear today that Dynamos belongs to an individual when we all know the club was formed in Dauya’s house in Mbare for the community.

“Dynamos is not an individual’s team, team “iyi ndeyevanhu” (this team is for the people), so why not give the team back to the community.

“We all know big clubs in Europe like Barcelona and Real Madrid are owned by the supporters, so what is peculiar with DeMbare,” thundered Mapfumo.

The dreadlocked musician tried his hand in football when he sponsored former Premier Soccer League club Sporting Lions until 2005 when he left for the United States of America.

“The Sporting Lions project remains dear to me, I wanted to show people how a professional football club should be run and that’s why we bought kits from overseas and paid our players well.

“I have always been a football person, if you ask George Shaya, he will tell you we grew up together in Mbare.

“By the way, we would abscond sporting activities at Chitsere Primary only for George to end up being a soccer star later on,” revealed Mapfumo.

“It is baffling that by now DeMbare does not have its own club house and its own Stadium.
Dynamos should be the richest club in the country but now we hear of FC Platinum and Ngezi who have overtaken this football giant.

“I love Dynamos; I grew up supporting Dynamos”, Mapfumo said.
“Today you hear DeMbare belongs to Nhekairo, tomorrow the team belongs to Bernard Marriot but you can’t own Dynamos as an individual, this is an institution that is bigger than any individual.”

A fan of English Premier League log leaders Liverpool, “Mukanya” also spoke about his wish to see more Zimbabwean players plying their trade in major European leagues.

“I watched that Liverpool game we lost 2-1 against Manchester City (last Thursday) and I thought we were denied a goal, that ball crossed the line,” said Mapfumo with a chuckle.

“But on a serious note whenever I watch Liverpool I always wish Mane’ was Zimbabwean, I think by now we should have our own players in those major leagues like the English Premiership.

“I watch football all the time, even when I am in America I start watching soccer as early as 4am because of the time difference between America and Europe,” said Mapfumo.- state media

Dan Tshanda Dies

gone so soon…Dan Tshanda
Popular South African musician Dan Tshanda has died. In a statement, his record label said Tshanda died yesterday at a South African hospital after suffering from heart failure.

“Dalom Music is hereby confirming the passing away of music maestro Dan Tshanda today. He suffered a heart failure earlier at Sandton Mediclinic where he was declared dead. We will give more details at a later stage.”

Tshanda was the brains behind Dalom Music and the Splash hit machine, that had a number of musicians that include Patricia Majalisa, Dalom Kids, Matshikos and Peacock, among others. His music made a lasting impression in the region, especially in South Africa, Botswana and Zimbabwe where he was a regular performer. – state media

Mnangagwa Must Admit Failure-MDC

As Zimbabwe’s economy continues to
deteriorate, the opposition MDC has implored President Emmerson Mnangagwa to admit failure and open way for negotiations towards the setting up of a national transitional authority to
stabilise the country.

 

Following a month-old strike by junior doctors that has since been joined by other civil servants, including nurses and teachers who are demanding to be paid salaries in United States dollars, the Nelson Chamisa-led MDC said the
country was being held back by the “habitual dereliction of duty by those who stole an election”.

 

Addressing the media at the party headquarters in Harare yesterday, MDC spokesperson Jacob Mafume said since Mnangagwa came to power after the disputed elections on July 30 last year,
the country “is back to square one”.
“The MDC suggests that Mnangagwa admits failure and kick-start a process of national dialogue towards a lasting solution to the problems arresting our country,” Mafume said.

 

Mnangagwa is, however, on record saying he and his Zanu PF party have no appetite to enter into a coalition government with “losers”.

 

The president has, however, at one point —
speaking through his spokesperson George Charamba in an exclusive interview with the Daily News — said he was open to talks with Chamisa, on the strict understanding that the MDC leader
recognised him as president.Daily News

S.A Man Caught With 15 Zimbabwean Passports Tried To Bribe Cops

Johannesburg metropolitan police said they arrested a 41-year-old man on Thursday night found in possession of 15 Zimbabwean passports.

“It is alleged that he fraudulently stamps the passports at the Zimbabwean border to extend the stay of the holders of the documents in South Africa,” Johannesburg Metro Police Department spokesperson Wayne Minnaar said in a statement.

“He was also in possession of a passport in the name of a four-year-old South African girl which has been stamped many times.”

Minnaar said the suspect was stopped at a roadside checkpoint on Old Pretoria Main Road Midrand and detained at Bramley police station on charges of bribery and contravening the Immigration Act.

“He tried to bribe officers with R2 000,” Minnaar said.

— African News Agency/ANA

Temba Mliswa’s Sister Reads The Riot Act On Civil Servants

Correspondent|The Minister of State for Mashonaland West Provincial Affairs, Mary Mliswa has expressed concern over civil servants’ lack of commitment to duty and ordered departmental heads to whip their juniors into line.

Minister Mliswa engaged heads of departments from Mashonaland West and voiced concern over observations she made in respect of civil servants’ unethical working culture.

She told the provincial heads that the junior departmental staff spend more time on social media, discussing political issues and sharing non-essential information, while others have a penchant of disrespect to clients.

Minister Mliswa further reminded the provincial departmental heads to draw up plans for the implementation of the devolution process.

Zbc News online

Pretoria Residents Disrupt Bushiri Church Service Demanding He Leaves SA

Own Correspondent|The regular Friday night service at the Enlightened Christian Gathering Church of the charismatic Prophet Bushiri near the Pretoria showgrounds failed to take place as protesters blocked WF Nkomo Street.

According to reports, traffic was being diverted from the city’s CBD to bypass the protest action.

The self-proclaimed “prophet” has been in the news recently after three congregants died in a stampede at the church last Friday.

Bushiri and and church officials have been charged with defeating the ends of justice and of interfering with police work after the tragedy.

The protesters have been demanding to speak to Bushiri and will not let anybody enter the church before this happens.

“Twitter users have welcomed the protest, railing against Bushiri and calling for him to leave the country,” said the protesters in a message.

FC Platinum Announce Gate Charges For Pirates Clash

Correspondent|FC Platinum have announced the gate charges for their Champions League match against Orlando Pirates.

The Zimbabwe champions play their opening Group B match at Barbourfields Stadium in Bulawayo after Mandava failed to meet the minimum standards to host the encounter.

The game will be played on Saturday, January 12.

The cheapest ticket has been pegged at $5 while a VIP seat cost $10. The VVIP is going for $20.

FC Platinum reached the mini-league phase for the first in their history after going past CNaPs of Madagascar and Congolese side AS Otoho D’ Oyo in the preliminary and first round respectively.

Three Armed Teenagers Rob Police Officer

Correspondent|Three Kwekwe teenagers were on Wednesday arraigned on armed robbery charges after they waylaid a cop and a woman before robbing them of cell phones and cash on New Year’s Eve.

Cephas Ncube (18), Mtulisi Mtoyi (18) and David Mandebele (18) pleaded guilty to the charge before Kwekwe Magistrate Miss Vimbai Mtukwa.

Miss Mtukwa deferred the sentencing of the trio to a later date after they claimed they were all 15 years old, making it difficult for the magistrate to sentence them.

There was drama in court as they claimed police officers forced them to state that they were aged 18 years.

They, however, failed to produce identity documents and Miss Mtukwa referred them to a dentist for age estimation.

Ncube who is of no fixed aboard, claimed his documents were in Masvingo while Mtoyi who is originally from Gokwe said he did not have any while Mandebele said his were in Gokwe.

The State led by Mr Freddy Ndoro said on December 31, 2018 at around 7:45PM, the complainant, James Chaipa who is based at Kwekwe Central Police Station, was on his way home.

“The three accused armed with a machete and a catapult, ambushed him along Burma Road,” said Mr Ndoro.

He said they demanded cash and Chaipa gave up his G-Tel mobile phone and $200 as well as slippers and the trio disappeared into darkness.

The trio also used the same modus operandi and pounced on Efilda Phiri whom they robbed of $4, a Samsung mobile phone and groceries.

The duo separately made police reports at Kwekwe Central Police Station.

Following police investigations, the trio was arrested the following day leading to the recovery of Chaipa’s mobile phone and a pair of slippers in Mtoyi’s possession.

Phiri’s cellphone was also recovered.

Valerio Sibanda Urges Military To Remain Resilient

Correspondent|The Commander of Zimbabwe Defence Forces (ZDF), General Philip Valerio Sibanda has claimed that there were some detractors who wanted to manipulate the military for their personal gains and urged the military to remain resilient in maintaining peace and stability in the country.

In a New year message statement, Sibanda told the military to be prepared to play a major part in facilitating and supporting the various government programmes aimed at achieving vision 2030.

“Our officers, men and women of the ZDF were equal participants in doing all possible to maintain and promote a peaceful and stable Zimbabwe. This was despite the spirited efforts of our detractors to manipulate the military into doing ‘their bidding’ for their selfish ends,” Sibanda said.

He added that the military should know that the current challenges that are being encountered in the country are a passing phase.

“These challenges are not a good enough reason to lose focus and be ‘taken in’ by prophets of doom who have since independence in 1980 prophesied doom of one sort or another for our country,” he said.

Sibanda added that the defence forces’ focus should be on peace and stability in the country so that development can happen.

Beer Prices Sour Despite Delta Reversal Of US Dollar Move

Beer drinkers may now need to think twice before downing the so-called wise waters.

This follows the steep increase in the price of clear beer – by more than 100 percent – hours after Delta Corporation Limited was forced to reverse its decision to sell its products in hard currency.

A survey by the Daily News yesterday showed that a number of retail outlets have hiked prices of lager beers with 375ml bottles now retailing at $3, 50 from $1, 50, while a 750ml bottle which was initially pegged at $2, 50, is now selling at between $6 and $8.

Even though most retailers are now selling at these new prices, Delta insisted yesterday that its wholesale prices have not changed.

“Our prices remain the same. We are still selling at the same price we provided in our circular,” Delta company secretary Alex Makamure said.

The Zimbabwe Stock Exchange-listed behemoth is principally the largest producer of lager beer, traditional beer, Coca-Cola franchised sparkling and alternative non-alcoholic beverages.

It has investments in associate companies whose activities are in cordials and juice drinks, wines and spirits.

On Wednesday, the company issued a circular to its customers announcing its decision to sell its products in the elusive US dollars (USDs).

In terms of the circular, the wholesale price for a 375ml bottle of beer fetched 80 cents, while a 750ml bottle should sell at $1, 50.

Delta had made it clear that the issue of unavailability of foreign currency was threatening its operations with the company struggling to meet orders and in the case of soft drinks, being out of stock for prolonged periods.

However, government intervened, resulting in Delta withdrawing its notice to sell exclusively in hard currency following a tense meeting with Acting President Constantino Chiwenga.

“The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) will endeavour to provide the foreign currency required to ensure that Delta continues to trade on the current basis,” a joint statement by Delta and the apex bank reads in part.

The Confederation of Zimbabwe Retailers (CZR) confirmed the increases yesterday saying retailers hiked beer prices in anticipation of USD prices from Delta.

“What we discovered is that when Delta made the announcement that it will start selling its products in hard currency the market was left in shock and increased prices so that they can be able to restock,” said CZR president Denford Mutashu.

“The market was responding to these changes and was working with the parallel market exchange rate. Since the decision has been reversed, we believe the prices are also going to go down,” said Mutashu.

Mutashu said some retailers were still unsettled by the latest developments and are doubtful if the RBZ would be able to make available the promised foreign currency to Delta to enable the conglomerate to bring in imported raw materials for production.

“We are hopeful that if the situation normalises, the prices too will fall,” Mutashu said.

Beer supplies have been going down in recent months, as producers are struggling to get foreign currency to sustain their operations.

As the prices of beer continue to increase there are fears that people will turn to illicit drugs in a bid to get drunk.

Already, the Zimbabwean youths are at the centre of controversy over a record abuse of illicit drugs, which many have attributed to lack of employment.

Daily News

Congolese Have Done Their Part. Now’s SADC And The AU’s Moment Of Truth.

As the DRC counts votes from the presidential election, the regional and continental body will be crucial in determining the poll’s legitimacy.
DRC election: the country is now awaiting the results, after the long-delayed election on 30 December 2018.

When the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) finally went to the polls on 30 December, the vote was marred by chaotic scenes and logistical problems. The following day, the government shut down the internet to avoid speculation about the outcome. With provisional results expected on 6 January (though the electoral commission just announced this could be delayed), many in the Congo believe they are now just effectively awaiting the final step in the regime’s exhaustive plan to keep hold of power despite its huge lack of popularity.

The warning signs have been glaring for a long time. As far back as 2016, President Joseph Kabila was trying to change the constitution to allow him to stay in power after the end of his final mandated term. When these attempts failed, he simply disregarded it and declined to organise elections.

When the people protested vehemently by taking to the streets in towns and cities, the government responded with brutality. Security forces killed dozens, injured hundreds and detained many more. Young democracy activists were gunned down, including at church services, or killed in mysterious fires. The government’s sole aim was to quash any resistance to Kabila’s continued unconstitutional rule.

[“Every time we try, we get killed”: Confronting torture in the DRC]

Under internal and external pressure, the president finally agreed to a peace deal that involved holding elections in 2017. But he still had other cards in his political deck. First, he kept everyone guessing as to whether he would keep his promise (the elections were delayed another year to the end of 2018). Then, he kept people guessing as to whether he would find a way to stand in the elections himself (he eventually announced a successor on the final day to register as a presidential candidate). And finally, he allowed speculation to spiral over whether the elections would be free and fair.

Every indication suggests that they were not. Kabila’s two main rivals – Moise Katumbi and Jean-Pierre Bemba – were barred from entering the race. The regime stoked or at least tolerated various local conflicts that later created the pretext to postpone the vote in those areas or not hold it at all. And the regime stacked the deck by heavily funding Kabila’s handpicked successor, Emmanuel Ramazani Shadary, while banning rival rallies in opposition strongholds at the most crucial campaign moment.

The government also starved the Independent National Electoral Commission (CENI) of the resources it needed to conduct credible elections across the vast country. Ultimately, CENI’s preparations muddied rather than cleared the electoral waters. The body’s management was chaotic and did little to gain the public’s trust. Officials procured voting machines that proved controversial and botched the voter registration process, disenfranchising up to 16 million people by some accounts.

But the worst was saved for the last. A week before the election, then scheduled for 23 December, a depot holding election materials in Kinshasa was destroyed in a suspicious fire. This led CENI to delay the election by a week. A few days later, it announced the vote would be delayed in three opposition strongholds of Beni, Butembo and Yumbi till March 2019.

Election Day, when it finally came, was chaotic. Voting stations in many places did not open until the afternoon; some machines malfunctioned; and materials had not been delivered to several voting stations. Nonetheless, Congolese citizens defied the odds to turn out in large numbers.

What now?
The question many inside and outside the DRC have been asking is whether this was all worth it. Is a deeply flawed election, controlled every step of the way by a powerful regime determined to stay in power, better than no election at all? Congolese voters were damned if they participated and damned if they did not, but for many the answer was ultimately yes. President Kabila had outstayed his welcome and only an election – even if a faulty one – seemed to offer up the possibility of him stepping down. In the just-ended election then, the Congolese spoke loudly, albeit with a gag in their mouths and every obstacle in their way.

They did their part. Now, much responsibility shifts to the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and the African Union (AU), both of whom deployed observers. This is their moment of truth. They have long failed to rein in Kabila as he trampled on the constitution and people’s democratic rights, but their new respective leaderships have vowed to take a more active stance. Indeed, they pushed for the elections to be held on time, for example, and insisted that Kabila could not be on the ballot. But this alone is not enough.

Their observers have been entrusted with the responsibility of protecting the Congolese people’s vote and their leaders’ actions in the coming days will go a long way to determining the credibility (or lack thereof) of the entire process. SADC officials have said the vote “went relatively well”, but having watched how President Kabila and his regime acted in the months, weeks and days leading up to the long-awaited election, they have also seen how the government did – and is still doing – everything in its power to ensure the vote is not free and fair. SADC and the AU must now put the Congolese people first. They cannot afford to let them down, though few who have witnessed these bodies’ past actions – most recently in Zimbabwe – will be holding their breath.

– African Argument

Dialoguing the Zimbabwe Crisis: Mnangagwa Must Listen To The Nation

By Dr Tapiwa Shumba | The “lovely Zimbabwe, so wondrously adorned with mountains …” natural beauty, minerals and fertile soil; so inspires the Zimbabwe National Anthem whose silver jubilee we celebrate this year. This admiration, echoed by the preamble to the Zimbabwe Constitution, celebrates the “richness of our natural resources”.
Yet despite the panegyrics and eulogies of this beauty and wonder, Zimbabwe, the most endowed and peaceful, has citizens living as amongst or worse than those in countries ravaged by war and armed conflict.
How then, do we “overcome all challenges and obstacles that impede our progress … in search of new frontiers under a common destiny”?
The Zimbabwe situation typifies a rare resource curse hardly seen elsewhere. Contemporary history, suggests that resource-cursed countries deteriorate into chaos because of armed conflict precipitated by the desire for control. However, the Zimbabwe situation is a case where people in peace languish in poverty despite abundant resources.
Economists suggest Zimbabwe could make it on tourism alone. Yet in actual fact it can still make it without tourism because of the fertile lands for agriculture. That of course, is if you forget that the country has billions worth of mineral resources but still nothing to show for it.
The triple blessing of tourism, minerals and fertile land means Zimbabwe should never be poor. However, in the midst of such abundance of pigeons was thrown a cat of bad leadership. Zimbabwe might have a leadership curse. There is hardly any other way to explain it.
This makes the country go round in circles – move one step forward and then two backwards. Blame is not only for the political leadership or for the church leaders who live in flamboyance at the expense of the poor but, equally, the citizen who cannot lead himself out of exploitation.
Nevertheless, the epicentre of the current crisis is political leadership. When other countries are flourishing and enjoying through hard work, perseverance and unity, Zimbabwe remains stuck in a state of polarisation, hate, greed, lack of confidence and endless squabbles over political power.
Underneath these ills remains a suffering population consumed by poverty and terrible living conditions. Living in Zimbabwe is painful. The life expectancy corroborates this view.
The two main culprits with a common but differentiated responsibility for the state of affairs remain the two main political players, ZANU-PF and the MDC.
ZANU-PF as the governing party since independence is responsible for all the socio-economic ills bedevilling the country. The MDC is responsible for keeping ZANU-PF in power.
That being said, let us fast forward to 2019.
The situation in the country is dire, a truth that is common to everyone concerned. There are key reasons why ZANU-PF alone cannot resolve the current situation even if it had good intentions. Its President, Mnangagwa, suffers from a serious confidence and trust deficit. No one else other than himself created this deficit.
When Zimbabweans marched in November 2017 to remove President Mugabe, they did so under the belief that it would usher in a new inclusive approach to governance and nation building. There was unity. The people embraced and owned the process.
Indeed, that was the understanding across the divide before ED staged a coup in a coup to arrogate all the power and authority to himself. He is well aware that this treachery is the basis for the growing animosity and mistrust between him and the people; something he never needed and should have avoided. With this, he has risked turning his ‘heroic episode’ into villainous opportunism.  
Beyond this, ED made many empty promises to citizens and the international community that have not materialised. The new dispensation has in fact turned out to be the manifestation of the real power behind the old dispensation. The ‘Zimbabwe is open for business’ mantra is nothing more than just a charade.
Whatever the current government will try to do will be ‘jechared’ as long as ED is seen as governing by duress. Bravely so, it appears Zimbabweans are prepared to pay the price to force ED to heed their call for dialogue. A tug of war between the government and citizens is undesirable.
The main reason why the Government of National Unity of 2009-2013 performed better than this current government was not because of any wonders. At that time, the people identified themselves with the leadership and thus were willing to absorb some pains to grow the economy and build their lives – brick by brick.
No one is prepared to give the current government any chance. That is a deficit this government must acknowledge and own. It emanates from the many lies, shattered hopes, lack of accountability and transparency, corruption and abuse that the people suffered when they dared to trust this government.
The MDC and its President Nelson Chamisa though without State power, carries the hopeful hope, trust and confidence of the population. His election showing in Harare of close to 600 000 against ED’s paltry 100 000 epitomises the problem. Of course, Zimbabwe is not Harare alone, but anyone sensible knows what it means.
It is conceivable that a simple conversation between MDC President Nelson Chamisa and the striking doctors, for example, would have swiftly saved lives. What is currently playing out is an us versus them struggle.
Why can’t the exclusive strengths be brought together to take the country forward? Who is leading?
The current crisis will be perpetuated and lives possibility lost yet all the challenges could be resolved through dialogue and unity. Once the country is united, the current challenges are surmountable.
Dialogue does not mean a GNU. Dialogue means consensus on how to instil trust and confidence among the people; how to build sustainable institutions; how to strengthen the state; how to build a development orientated governance system; how to implement reforms for development; how to create a transparent programme to resolve the current economic challenges; and how to engage the international community. Of course, the mechanisms for implementing results of this dialogue are equally crucial.
Without sitting around a table and answering the crucial questions, political players are showing a lack of leadership and holding the country at ransom.
The people have bestowed leadership in the main political parties and that is the reason why these parties are jointly and severally responsible for the national interest.
Time is running out as Zimbabweans continue to suffer. It is running out, especially for ED who is now 76 years old and risks a legacy far worse than that of President Mugabe.
An inclusive sincere dialogue is unavoidable. Unity is crucial. Poverty is fertilising instability. Citizens are pinning their hopes on this dialogue. The longer it takes the more desperate the situation will become.
As it is, the burden to initiate dialogue rests with ED. He was placed in mora when Nelson Chamisa made the proposal. ED must put the country first, show leadership, initiate dialogue and most importantly, he must not succumb to the pressure and greed of those around him.
Dr Tapiwa Shumba writes in his personal capacity. shumbatapiwa@yahoo.com
 

Dialogue Key In Resolving Zimbabwe’s Multi-faceted Crisis

via Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition|Following the November 2017 military coup which ousted former President, Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe was plunged into a constitutional crisis and the situation further deteriorated following the disputed July 2018 polls.

The fact that the polls were presided over by a compromised electoral commission and were characterised by a number of irregularities and that the opposition disputed the outcome of the elections resulted in a legitimacy crisis on the part of President Emmerson Mnangagwa and his Zanu PF party.

In as much as the ruling party has often declared that they were overwhelmingly voted into power, the legitimacy crisis is a reality that has also come with negative implications on economic development as well as democracy.

After the discredited elections, Zimbabwe’s economy has been on a continuous downward trend characterised by foreign currency shortages, fuel shortages and price hikes that have relegated the majority into abject poverty while cash shortages continue to persist.

Given the current environment obtaining in Zimbabwe, economic revival and engagement with the International community remains a pipe dream while investors have developed a wait and see attitude.

Job actions in the public service have also worsened the rot in the country and events currently obtaining on the ground point out that the situation could worsen further.

CIZC is concerned that the government’s response to protests by civil servants and ordinary citizens has been brutal and in some instances, the government has labelled genuine actions by suffering Zimbabweans as ‘regime change protests’.

We remain concerned that in the current context, the ruling party Zanu PF has shown an obsession with power rather than the need to address the continued crisis in the country.

Zimbabwe’s situation requires that political leaders put people first and CIZC reiterates calls for a national dialogue to address the multi faceted crisis in the country.

Resolving the political crisis prevailing in Zimbabwe through multi stakeholder political dialogue is key in resuscitating the economy and engaging with the international community.

Source: Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition

Fuel Scam Unearthed In Nyanga

Motorists, transporters, farmers and the business community in Nyanga have called on the authorities to revoke licences of fuel service operators in the resort town who are hoarding fuel for resell at the parallel market and illegal export to other countries.

The motorists said they witness frequent supplies of fuel to the service stations but are dismayed by some operators who refuse to sell the fuel to locals at the official pumps and supply it to the black market.

They said such business practices are not only illegal but tantamount to sabotage at a time when the government is striving to resuscitate the economy by supporting fuel dealers with the scarce foreign currency.

It is alleged that only a few motorists are sold fuel at the official pump during the day and the rest is hoarded and filled in drums in the middle of the night for illicit trade, allegedly to the nearby Mozambique market.

Motorists called on the authorities to address the issue of prepaid account services as this was also being abused by service stations.

“It is very unfair that the reserve bank supports fuel suppliers with foreign currency but some operators cash in on the public and demand cash only and feed the black market. It is saddening, they deny us electronic money payments so that they get cash to resell on the illegal market. There is a network of illegal activities,” a transporter, Mr Bernhard Bore said.

“These are the people behind the illegal foreign currency dealings too,” he added.

Another motorist, Mrs Grace Nyamakanga called on the government to revoke licences of selfish business operators as they are working against the spirit of Zimbabwe is open for business.

One of the service station operators told the ZBC News that they were carrying out some tests at the pumps and could not say when they were going to normalise their operations. Another service station operator refused to talk to the press.

Zimbabwe Energy Regulatory Authority (ZERA) Acting CEO, Mr Eddington Mazambani said prompt investigations were underway and those found disregarding the law will have their licences revoked immediately.

A member of the Joint Operations Committee in the district revealed that they now have a list of suspects, adding that arrests are imminent.

Nyanga now has several black market points where fuel is selling at $6 per litre against the recommended prices of $1, 38 per litre for petrol and $1, 34 for diesel.

Zbc News online

Jah Prayzer Wants To Concentrate On Developing Young Zimbabweans In 2019

AS creatives waved goodbye to 2018 on entering the New Year, for some it marked the beginning of new things while for others it could be a continuation of where they left from the last season.

On the other hand, some artistes are keen to meet the missed 2018 targets hoping for a better fortune this season.

NewsDay Weekender caught up with some of the artistes who shared their New Year resolutions. Below are the excerpts from the interviews:

Jah Prayzah

High-flying musician Jah Prayzah, speaking through his manager Keen Mushapaidze, said they planned to go even bigger in terms of growth in music as well as their business this year.

“The year 2018 was generally a good one. So as part of our 2019 resolutions, we do not only wish to grow individually and as a business, but also help brighten the future of the kids across the nation,” he said.

“We are sure the computer laboratory project that Jah Jah (Jah Prayzah) is undertaking in Uzumba (his rural area) will be completed in the first half of the year, as we seek to also contribute in making the world a better place.”

Plot Mhako

Jibilika founder Plot Mhako said he was optimistic about 2019 despite the prevailing economic challenges that are putting a strain on several creative projects, given the limited funding opportunities and an audience with less disposable incomes.

“While the New Year presents a new window for us, we are, however, excited to be ushering in a new two-year vision and strategy for the reorientation of the organisation that will see us create new programmes aimed at more creative development at grassroots level, more sustainability projects and a raft of changes to the team,” he said.

Tafadzwa Mukaro

Gospel singer Tafadzwa Mukaro said she was excited and hopeful about 2019 because 2018 was an amazing year.

“I am currently working on a video to my recent single, Makata. This year, I am planning to release a six-track album accompanied by a DVD. On the album, I will also include collaboration for the first time,” she said.

“I will give it all in all my productions to ensure the best quality so that we preach the gospel to all corners of the earth. I wish everyone a great year, where the peace, love, joy and goodness of God continue to reign in our lives.”

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Carl Joshua Ncube

One of the country’s most-sought-after masters of jest, Carl Joshua Ncube, said this year he was taking control of his life and not letting the economy do the same to him.

“I am moving into a tent in a plan to start from scratch to buy a house. We have decided to only keep 51 items each and that is clothing, shoes, cables, chargers and adaptors,” he said.

Enisia Mushusha

United Kingdom-based talented Zimbabwean actress, dancer and choreographer Enisia Mashusha said her goal this year was to make a difference in people’s lives.

“Changing people’s lives is my goal this year and also refocusing on what I failed to do last year due to obstacles, and try by all means to work it out this year,” she said.

“We all have dreams, all we need to do is to keep pushing and to never give up, no matter the challenges we come across.”

Pah Chihera

Afro-jazz sensation Pah Chihera said this year, she would work hard to promote her brand.

“My approach this year is a bit different from the previous years, as I take my musical career to another level. I will also be releasing videos off my recently released album, titled Haitongwi Nedemo, recorded at Verenga Empire Entertainment, which I am signed to,” she said.

“We are going to be staging more shows across the country to reconnect with our loyal fans. We also promise some great collaborations. All we can say is watch this space.”

Bustop TV co-founder

Bustop TV co-founder and producer Lucky Aaroni said they would be exploring other exciting concepts to engage in throughout the year, as they would be creating new shows for Bustop TV.

“This year, we are going to be a bit radical and push the boundaries to entertain, inform, educate and provoke thoughts. We have already started working on our new web series, it is still in developmental stage,” Aaroni said.

Diamond Musica

Celebrated top rhumba outfit Diamond Musica leader Pitshou Lumiere said 2018 was a great year for the band as they combined their voices for a duet with music superstar Oliver “Tuku” Mtukudzi.

“2018 was a very good year for Diamond Musica. We did get very good support from our rhumba patrons who have been always there for us. We managed to do a good collaboration with our living legend Dr Oliver Mtukudzi, releasing the song Bhutsu, which is doing very well on our local radios and abroad,” he said.

“We are looking forward so that 2019 delivers good music. We also intend to stage big shows for our supportive patrons.”

Selmor and Tendai

Talented music couple Selmor and Tendai Manatsa said they will be chasing fortune more than fame this year.

“We will not be taking a break, but will just continue from where we left from last year; working whenever we can find work,” Selmor said.

Peter “Young Igwe” Moyo

Sungura singer Peter “Young Ingwe” Moyo said: “This year, I will be working on my new album, and I am putting things together so that I will register my clothing line, with the aim of making it big.”

Diana Samkange

Afro-jazz songstress Diana “MaNgwenya” Samkange said she would be releasing her fifth album titled Kumandinde, and she is hoping to spend more time on tour around the world.

NewsDay Weekender

Dembare Recruits Veteran Former Striker

EDWARD Sadomba is set for a sensational return to Dynamos, a decade after leaving the Harare giants and is part of a list of players that the club has identified to play a part in the rebuilding process they are undertaking, following their dismal performance last season.

No official comment could be obtained from the club, but NewsDaySport has it on good authority that talks have been ongoing between the two parties since the speedy forward left Libya two years ago, and a deal is said to be imminent.

Sadomba, who turned 35 on August 31, has already told close friends that he was set to sign a two-year contract with his old club, which would be his swansong to a successful professional career that started at Kambuzuma United in 2003.

“The negotiations have been on going. He has been talking to coach Lloyd (Chigowe), and he has agreed to sign a two-year contract. He should be signing the contract any day from now,” said a well-placed source.

Chigowe refused to comment on the issue, saying divulging information on their dealings in the transfer market could jeopardise negotiations.

He declined to divulge the names of the players that they were negotiating with until they had secured their signatures, revealing how they missed out on one of their major target Godknows Murwira, who would have joined the club last week before making a surprise U-turn to join FC Platinum on Wednesday.

“I’m not at liberty to disclose our dealings on the transfer market. We are on a rebuilding mission, so obviously there are some new faces coming in. But you will have to wait for the unveiling to know their identities. We don’t want to pre-empt anything because that might jeopardise the processes.

“We lost Godknows Murwira who had agreed on almost everything and we thought he would sign, but he joined FC Platinum. So wait for the official announcement by the team’s secretary-general (Webster Marechera),” Chigowe said.

Marechera confirmed that they were in the process of negotiating with prospective players, but also declined to give away the names.

However, other sources said at least four players were set to sign yesterday, including Sadomba and former Triangle and FC Platinum midfielder Hillary Bakacheza, and they would be part of the squad when they regroup for the start of pre-season training on Tuesday.

It is the capture of Sadomba though that could prove to be a major coup for Dynamos, who are looking to improve from their horrible showing last season, where they escaped relegation by a whisker.

The striker left his Libyan side Al-Hilal two years ago after the two parties agreed to mutually part ways, as the club had been rendered inactive on their domestic front due to civil unrest in that country. He has since been inactive.

His quality though is undoubted, having led the Glamour Boys to a league championship in 2007, before leading them to a group stage appearance in the Confederation of African Football (Caf) Champions League the following year.

Sadomba then broke new ground by becoming the first Zimbabwean football player to feature in the competitive and lucrative Sudanese topflight league after signing for Al-Hilal in Khartoum in 2009.

He was signed for €350 000 ($395 128) from Bidvest Wits, even before he kicked a single ball for the South African side.

While at Al-Hilal, he scored 98 times in 90 games since 2009. That time, he was also awarded the Golden Boot in both the Caf Champions League and the Caf Confederation Cup.

After three successful years at Al-Hilal, Sadomba briefly joined United Arab Emirates Pro League side Ittihad Kalba on a highly-lucrative loan deal at the start of the 2013 season, before moving to Libya to join Al Ahly Benghazi and later Ahly Tripoli. The move from Al Ahly Benghazi to Tripoli was reportedly worth over $1 million and saw Sadomba earning around $40 000 a month during his two-year stay at the club.

Sadomba rejoined Sudanese club Al-Hilal in May 2016, but left barely six months in his contract due to the political strife.

NewsDay

Breaking: South African Music Icon Dan Tshanda Dies From Heart Attack

Own Correspondent|South African music legend Dan Tshanda of splash and Dalom Music has passed on. Speaking to The Voice Online in a telephonic interview, a family spokesperson linked his death to heart failure.

Moudy Modzielwana told The Voice Online tha the musical icon suffered the heart attack at around 1pm this afternoon (05/01/2019).

“He was rushed to hospital where he was certified dead upon arrival. The doctors confirmed that he passed on after a heart failure,” he said.

Pressed further on whether the Venda music star had a history of heart problems Modzielwana said “No, he does not have such a medical history. He had just returned from a family vacation in Durban. He was just fine and did not show any signs that he was unfit.”

Asked about funeral arrangement the family spokesperson said “because it is still new the family is yet to decide. In our culture we normally don’t take long but because he was known by many people because of his craft, the arrangements may take a little longer but nothing has been decided yet, we will issue out a press statement,” he said

Hands Off New Harare, Shiri Warns Land Barons

Minister Perence Shiri

Government has warned people selling land within the new city boundary in Mt Hampden without consulting relevant authorities that they will be arrested.

Lands, Agriculture, Water, Climate and Rural Resettlement Minister Perrance Shiri told journalists yesterday that Government was also concerned that some people were undertaking massive developments within the 18 000 hectares set aside for the new city without permits.

“I am aware and deeply concerned that there are unscrupulous individuals who are currently selling land within the New City boundary without consulting authorities and undertaking massive developments without obtaining permits.

To those selling land, may I warn you that it is fraudulent to do such transactions on land earmarked for national interest projects,” Minister Shiri said.

State Media

The Options For Chamisa And The MDC

Opinion By Dumisani Nkomo|THE results of the elections and the outcome of the Constitutional Court did not go in favour of the youthful MDC leader Nelson Chamisa and his party, but there remain numerous avenues and options for both Chamisa and his party in the next five years.

It is important for the MDC to position itself as an effective opposition party whilst proffering itself as a viable alternative to the status quo. Failure to do so could result in the demise of both Chamisa and the MDC brand.
Electoral performance

First of all, it must be said that the youthful Chamisa did extremely well in a heavily uneven playing field. To have amassed over two million votes, barely a year after he had taken over the reins of the party was, indeed, a commendable achievement.

This was also achieved with a shoe-string budget and against an opponent with the glaring advantage of incumbency.

Having said this, it is not enough for the MDC to merely condemn the elections and outcomes as illegitimate, but they have to move on and reposition themselves if they are to stand a reasonable chance in the 2023 plebiscite.

Chamisa actually stands an incredibly good chance of winning the 2023 elections if he keeps his eyes on the ball and rids himself of all vestiges of hoodlum politics and over-confidence.

He is just 40 years old, but has exhibited great resilience and capacity traits by harnessing over two million votes against a man who has been in government for over 38 years.

He, however, has to make sure that he manages his political weaknesses, which may result in him being a political casualty, both within and beyond his party. The following may be crucial in this regard.

Restructuring grassroots base
The MDC has to first metamorphose into a singular political party with structures at the most basic village and township level in the whole country. They have to ensure that they have a solid membership base of at least one million in the 1 200 wards of the country.

This membership base must form the “fulcrum” or foundation of their core funding so as to reduce reliance on external funding.

A million members paying a dollar each per year is a million dollars and this, complemented by funding from the Political Parties Act, should be enough for basic core funding.

Critically, the strength of Zanu PF is in its structures and to ignore this strength would be an act of cardinal self-destruction and mass political suicide.

Chamisa and his party must, therefore, have a presence in every single village in the country and this means they would be able to field candidates in every single council and House of Assembly seat that is contested for.
This also means there would be sufficient election agents at every single polling station. The starting point for them would be an audit of all their structures and a four-year plan to strengthen these structures.

If they are to stand any chance in the elections, they should also have strongholds in resettlement areas as these are serious Zanu PF strongholds .

The MDC or whatever it would be called after it reconstitutes itself, must demonstrate that the Provincial and Metropolitan Councils, as well as rural and urban councils it runs, are a model of good governance, good resource stewardship and sound service delivery.

If they fail to do so, this may surely be a sign that as a government in power, they would fail. Chamisa and his top brass have to, thus, ensure that the party has a robust local governance framework focussing on deliverables and development.

The MDC must also maximise its presence in Parliament and not be reduced to an extension of Parliament fittings and furniture. They must make their presence felt in the august House in the same manner that the likes of Sidney Malunga, Lazarus Nzarayebani, Micah Bhebhe, Steven Nkomo, Ruth Chinamano and Byron Hove did in the 1980s.

Later on, we also had luminaries such as David Coltart, Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga, Blessing Chebundo, Tendai Biti, Jesse Majome and Tabitha Khumalo.

Failure to register their presence in Parliament to articulate the hopes of millions of Zimbabweans, who are already grovelling in grinding poverty would be tantamount to betrayal. Lessons could be learnt from the Democratic Alliance and Economic Freedom Fighters in South Africa.

Although Zanu PF enjoys a comfortable two-thirds majority, the MDC must make use of its presence in Parliament as an alternative front.
Democratic credentials

Chamisa must invest the next few years in reaching out to those that were hurt by his ascendancy to power, including Thokozani Khupe. This would demonstrate true statesmanship and maturity, which are both qualities he desperately needs.

Violent behaviour and quasi militia groups within the MDC must be dismantled and the primary election process cleaned up.

It is imperative for Chamisa to be an effective opposition leader and to also prove that if given the chance, he could govern well by proffering alternatives to the status quo and not just lambast Zanu PF and the government as people may soon get tired of that.

They must embrace the concept of developmental politics, which focuses on how people’s lives may be improved. This will greatly improve his political prospects in 2023.

Dumisani Nkomo writes here in his personal capacity

FULL STATEMENT: MDC Demands Talks With President Mnangagwa :

Media Statement|ZIMBABWE is back to square zero, the wheels have come off completely just five months after the sham election of July 30 2018 and over a year since the departure of Robert Mugabe.

The not so new actors have failed our people; the country finds itself in the prison of a deep structural economic crisis of malaise, capture, corruption, coercion and stagnation.

There is a huge fiscal crisis, lack of confidence, lack of trust, a crippling liquidity crisis, total social sector collapse and the old challenges of macroeconomic stability hitting rock bottom.

This is coupled by habitual dereliction of duty by those who stole the election, a shocking display of mediocrity and total misunderstanding of statecraft by some major players in government. Those with some idea lack the spine to look the beast in the eye and execute the necessary decisions which serve the interests of the working people in Zimbabwe.

In this statement the MDC wishes to address the following areas of urgent concern, President Nelson Chamisa will in the next few days address in detail the MDC Agenda of 2018 highlighting major steps Zimbabwe will have to take going forward.

1. The Political Crisis
2. The Economic Crisis
3. Social Delivery and labour unrest

It is the convergence of these three crises that have created a deadly cocktail that requires a major paradigm shift in the way the economy is run, the way of doing politics and the governance culture in Zimbabwe.

The Political Crisis
At the centre of the government’s failure to deliver is the legitimacy question following the false start of July 30 2018 which blew the opportunity to cure the legitimacy question. The MDC has made this point over and over again highlighting that the solution lies in President Chamisa’s five point plan.

Worsening this crisis is the confusion which is now manifest in the Zanu PF cockpit including its presidium. At one point the public is told that Dambudzo Mnangagwa is back on duty and the next day the government says he is still on leave while one Guvheya Chiwenga continues to sweat in the kitchen of power literally and metaphorically.

This confusion is toxic as it exacerbates an already volatile situation. A government at war with itself is the biggest enemy of the people.

This confusion is directly linked to the factional fights in Zanu PF especially the public spat in the Ministry of Information between Energy Mutodi, Monica Mutsvangwa and Nick Mangwana.

The Economy
The 2019 Budget has failed to cure structural challenges in the economy, instead the budget has created more confusion than answers especially in areas of the currency and its relationship with government tax.

The tripod exchange rates and pricing system owing to distortions caused by the bond note has reached the peak. Shortage of basic goods including fuel and cooking oil is worsening each passing day.Inflation is unabated causing more suffering to the Zimbabwean people, bread prices are set to go up once again. Actual figures are suppressed with government choosing to stay in denial and presenting a macro-economic framework with distorted figures even by the standards of the generous ZIMSTATS.

The budget deficit keeps ballooning, while there is no solution to the debt crisis while government keeps announcing new lines of credit most of which are funding non-capital ventures.

Zimbabwe suffers from massive corruption, nepotism and state capture. Recently a statutory instrument was gazetted merely to forgive taxes owed by a single Chinese company in a murky move with no official explanation to the people.

This happens in a situation where the government is taxing Zimbabweans to death, the introduction of the 2% tax completed the creation of a predatory robber state which pick pockets the poor.

The Social Crisis
The health sector has collapsed, there are no drugs in hospitals and a crippling industrial action by Medical Practitioners which has gone beyond a month.

The government especially Chiwenga has created a mess and failed in absolute terms to bring an urgent solution to the impasse, instead the government went to court and then prematurely suspended 530 Medical Practitioners.

Chiwenga even went on overdrive calling them names and referring to them as mere interns yet contradicting himself by saying the interns are not saving lives.

In diplomatic terms Mnangagwa accepts that his deputy has failed to deal with this issue therefore cutting his vacation short although no significant change has been seen.

Lives continue to be lost unnecessarily and the doctors have even stopped to attend to emergency cases.
The negotiations are being handled by insincere people who want to score cheap political points, the sector has become a risk to the workers who are supposed to work with no protective clothing.

There is a looming nationwide strike across the public sector with the government refusing to pay its workers in US dollars yet they are collecting various taxes in hard currency. They even afford to allocate forex to Delta Beverages, an economy cannot be run through attending only those who cry the loudest.

In the education sector a crisis is brewing as tuition is being charged in forex, uniforms are expensive and the parents have only RTGS sources of income. Teachers marched to Mthuli Ncube’s office towards the end of the year, there is a risk they are not returning to work.

The cost of living has increased, even the cost of going to work has become unbearable for workers and notices of industrial action have already been circulated.

Instead threats have been issued by officials from the Ministry of Information to the effect that repressive state apparatus will be unleashed to suppress labour’s exercise of its Constitutional rights in section 59 of the supreme law.

The MDC suggests the following urgent solutions

1. That Dambudzo Mnangagwa admits failure and kick starts a process of National Dialogue towards a lasting solution to the problems arresting our country.

2. That government fixes the health sector and save lives of Zimbabwean citizen.

3. That an honest, urgent economic recovery plan be produced and implemented.

4. That part of the US dollars generated by the government be used to pay public servants against a background of rising costs of living.

5. A lasting financial solution be adopted, the MDC has already stated that the following solutions be adopted.

i. Demonetization of the Bond Note;
ii. Securing and ring fencing existing RTGS balances in people’s banks;
iii. Strengthening the regime of multiple currencies in the short term;
iv. Joining the Rand Monetary Union;
v. Abolishing the Quasi Fiscal Activities of the Reserve Bank
vi. Resolving Zimbabwe’s national debt crisis
vii. Growing the economy through attracting foreign direct investment and creating a stable predictable policy environment

Jacob Mafume
MDC National Spokesperson

University, School Fees Remain Unchanged: Minister

THE Minister of Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Development, Professor Amon Murwira, has dispelled social media rumours that tuition fees for the Midlands State University had gone up.

Professor Amon Murwira said that no Government institutions could review school fees without approval, and further stressed that all State tertiary education institutions are not increasing school fees and should accept payment in local currency for Zimbabweans and foreign currency for foreigners.

“Those are fake reports circulating on social media causing panic. The correct position is that we did not approve a revision of tuition fees in State tertiary institutions,” said Prof Murwira.

He said all fees were revised annually by his ministry and any adjustments were communicated officially through his office.

“These are State-owned institutions and we cannot expect Government positions to be communicated through unreliable sources. School fees ordinances are signed by the minister and communicated officially,” he said.

Prof Murwira said State institutions complied with the law of the land and did not invent their own form of payment.

“We comply with the Government’s policy on forms of payment, which means these institutions continue accepting bank transfers, EcoCash and cash that they were using last year.

“Let it be clear that we have a policy that says foreign students only pay in foreign currency and this does not apply to local students. We do not demand foreign currency from local students. The only approved adjustment is that student on industrial attachment pay 60 percent of their school fees,” Prof Murwira said.

He urged stakeholders to report any institution that invents its own rules of payments so that it is corrected right away.

FULL TEXT: ZIMTA Declares Industrial Action

DECLARATION ON INCAPACITATION DATED 5th JANUARY 2019 We, the ZIMBABWE TEACHERS’ ASSOCIATION;

HAVING collated experiences and submissions from our membership across all the ten (10) provinces,

NOTING the concerns and grievances raised in those submissions and the recommendations thereof;

CONCERNED about the rapid deterioration of conditions of work of our members across the country and the effects thereof, inter alia;
a) Systematic erosion of the value of our members’ salaries,
b) Sharp rise of prices of basic commodities and transport fares yet salaries remain static despite the decline of their value, and
c) Charging of prices of certain commodities in hard currency (USD) such as medicines.
OBSERVING that we have forewarned the Government of those eventualities,

WORRIED by the Government failure to address any of these grievances and concerns despite previous engagements and discussion;

NOW THEREFORE GIVEN THE FOREGOING, it is thus declared as follows:
a) Our members are unable to report for duty with effect from the 8th of January 2019 due to incapacitation.
b) To enable the teachers to report for work and to subsist, we demand the payment of salaries in US Dollars.

Suspected ZANU PF Masvingo Residents Plan Demo Against MDC Councillors

Correspondent|Suspected ZANU PF aligned residents in Masvingo here have threatened to go and stage a sit-in at the Masvingo City Council offices in attempts to force the ouster of two MDC councillors accused of corruption.

Ward four and five councillors Godfrey Kurauone and Daniel Mberikunashe, who retained their seats in the July 2018 elections, are accused of withdrawing $800 each from council coffers ostensibly to attend an Urban Councils Association of Zimbabwe (UCAZ) workshop last year.

The two failed to attend the purported event and instead, went on to use the money to sponsor their party activities in Chiredzi and Mwenezi, during a tour of Masvingo province by MDC Alliance president Nelson Chamisa.

The Ministry of Local Government was notified of the acts and sources at the local authority said nothing pointing to an investigation or disciplinary action has emerged from authorities.

However, restless residents have expressed fear that the case which was unearthed three months ago may be swept under the carpet as no official communication has been made by the local authority on the matter.

Masvingo mayor, Collins Maboke refused to comment, directing all questions to Town Clerk Adolf Gusha who was not reachable when equal attempts to seek his remarks were made.

Last month, another group of over 50 residents petitioned Masvingo provincial affairs minister Ezra Chadzamira to rein in on the elected officials and bring the matter to finality.

The residents said it was time they took matters into their own hands as they have exhausted all channels for recourse.

“Council survives solely on money that we residents pay on a monthly basis to improve service delivery and not to line up elected officials pockets or sponsor political parties’ activities,” said an irate resident.

“What is now left is for us to have a sit-in demonstration at the civic centre as a sign that we residents are not impressed by the way the matter is dragging, and the two councillors should tender their resignations as they showed they are not trustworthy to occupy public office.”

A local lobby group, Masvingo United and Ratepayers Alliance distanced itself from the impending demonstration but said it is a constitutional right of any resident to demonstrate is one felt their rights were being infringed upon.

“Its Both A Circus And A Curse! There Cannot Be Economic Turnaround Under Zanu Pf”: Nelson Chamisa

By Own Correspondent| Opposition leader Nelson Chamisa has said the current regime does not have the capacity to turn around the country’s economic fortunes.

Chamisa likened hoping that Zanu Pf will change the economic situation in Zimbabwe to expecting donkeys to grow horns.

Said Chamisa:

“Expecting economic turnaround from this lot is expecting that donkeys will at one time grow horns. It’s both a curse and a circus!”

 

Unregulated Medicine Floods Zim As Costs Of Drugs Sky Rocket

Unregulated and unregistered medicines are reportedly flooding into Zimbabwe, with consignments of expired medicines being smuggled into the country through the country’s porous border posts.

Syndicates are allegedly taking advantage of steep United States dollar prices being charged by pharmacies following the collapse of the value of Zimbabwe’s surrogate bond notes and electronic money.

The high prices being charged have left patients at high risk, as they are resorting to cheap and unregulated medicines coming from neighbouring Mozambique and Zambia.

Samuel Gamanya, a pharmacist in Harare’s central business district, said the influx of unregulated medicinal drugs had been on the increase since November when there was an acute shortage of essential drugs.

“We have had unregulated drugs flooding the country since November 2018 after essential drugs became scarce, and later on when they were priced in the US dollar,” he told African News Agency (ANA).

“These drugs, we hear, have been smuggled through Chirundu and Forbes border posts,” he said.

Medical Control Authority of Zimbabwe (MCAZ) public relations officer Shingai Gwatidzo said the influx of unregistered drugs had been observed in the country and they were working with law enforcement agencies to curb the situation.

“What is commonly observed on the informal markets in Zimbabwe is an influx of unregistered medicines that are smuggled into the country. These end up being sold from unapproved premises such as street stalls, backpacks, tuckshops, unlicensed health shops, etc. Unregistered medicines, as their definition suggests, would not have been assessed to check their quality and safety profiles,” he said.

“This means that those that end up buying unapproved medicines from unlicensed sources are putting their health at risk because they are not guaranteed of safety, effectiveness, and of good quality.”

Gwatidzo said such medicines, as well as substandard and falsified medicines, were likely to harm patients’ health, “and even lead to death and may be ineffective towards the intended disease/condition”, adding this would ultimately lead to the undermining of confidence in medical products, healthcare professionals, and the Zimbabwe health system.

“Various measures are in place to try and control influx of unregistered medicines onto the Zimbabwe market. MCAZ is working together with law enforcement agents in conducting raids based on tip-offs,” he said.

— African News Agency/ANA

22y Old Man Rapes 88-year-old Granny – Court Papers

By Own Correspondent| A 22 year old Gwanda man has been hauled to court for raping his 88-year-old neighbour after he unlawfully gained entry into her bedroom hut in early morning.

Trust Ncube of Kafusi Village raided the woman while she was sleeping before raping her. He was not asked to plead when he appeared briefly before Gwanda magistrate, Mrs Nomagugu Sibanda facing charges of unlawful entry and rape. He was remanded in custody to January 17.

It is the state’s case that Ncube raped the old woman who stays alone on Wednesday at around 4am.

Revealed the state:

“Ncube went to the old woman’s home on January 2 at around 4am where he found her sleeping alone in her bedroom hut. Ncube forcibly opened the door to the woman’s bedroom and gained entry.

“He grabbed the old woman and dragged her out of her bedroom hut and raped her once before running away.

“The old woman fled to her neighbour’s homestead after Ncube had left and narrated what had happened. The matter was reported to the police resulting in Ncube’s arrest.”

New Year Headache For Andy Muridzo As Mai Keketso Demands $1,8k Maintenance

Andy Muridzo

By Own Correspondent| Musician Andy Muridzo’s ex-wife Mai Keketso real name Chido Manyange is claiming $1 800 maintenance for the welfare of the couple’s two minor children.

However, the matter failed to kick off after Muridzo through his lawyer Sioux Shako of Mudimu Law Chambers successfully applied for postponement.

The matter was heard by Harare magistrate Gladys Moyo. Muridzo and Mai Keketso broke up last November with Muridzo paying his divorce token to the in-laws.

Recently, the musician was granted a peace order against his former wife after she allegedly caused a scene at one of his shows and destroyed some of his property. In her submissions, Muridzo’s lawyer requested for a postponement so that she could go through the record.

Initially, Mai Keketso was against the postponement saying she wanted her children’s needs attended to urgently before consenting to the application. By consent, magistrate Moyo postponed the matter to January 10 for the hearing.

“Support Mnangagwa’s Vision Or Risk Being Fired”: Gvnt Officials Warned

By Own Correspondent| Zanu-PF Youth League has urged Government officials to fully support President Mnangagwa’s vision or risk being dismissed.

The youth league national executive management committee met in Harare for its strategic planning workshop where it also vowed it will not allow anyone to interfere with the constitutionally elected Government of President Mnangagwa.

In a statement Zanu-PF Youth League secretary for administration, Tendai Chirau said:

“All Cabinet Ministers, Permanent Secretaries, Principal Directors and other civil servants who are not supporting the vision of His Excellency President Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa should be relieved of their duties with immediate effect.

To ensure that these programmes are fully implemented, we call upon the leadership to avail the necessary funding, failure of which will be interpreted as sabotaging the President’s vision.”-StateMedia

Gvnt Reaches Flexible Payment Agreement With Importers

By Own Correspondent| Government has reached consensus regarding flexible payment arrangements with a unit of Trafigura Beheer BV and Independent Petroleum Group of Kuwait Ltd  that will ensure it stabilizes supplies.

The development comes amid a foreign-currency shortage that threaten the country’s economic growth.

Energy Minister Joram Gumbo said Government has struck a deal to extend payment periods for gasoline supplies to as many as six months from 30 days.

He said this enables Government to prioritize allocation of scarce U.S. dollars to strategic areas.

However, Gumbo said the situation will not stabilise overnight.-Bloomberg

Tight Cornered ED Succumbs To Civil Servants Pressure, Crisis Meeting With Union Leaders Set For Monday

ZIMBABWE’S restive civil servants have managed to nudge government into negotiations after they threatened to embark on a nationwide strike starting next week in protest over their poor salaries and the deteriorating economic situation in the country.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government, in a bid to avert a crippling strike, yesterday invited all heads of civil servants’ unions to a crisis meeting in Harare on Monday to address their welfare, amid threats by the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions and the opposition MDC to join the industrial action.

Labour and Social Welfare acting minister July Moyo said all union leaders must attend without fail.

“The meeting is part of the commitment of government to engage with all its employees in pursuit of developing common positions in relation to the improvement of employee salaries and generally resolve any matters that impact their conditions of service,” he said in a statement.

Government workers, particularly teachers, had threatened to down tools on schools’ opening day on Tuesday if government failed to pay them in hard currency or increase their salaries to at least $3 000.

Moyo said besides union leaders, the meeting would also be attended by Labour, Finance, Primary and Secondary Education, Higher and Tertiary Education ministers and the chairperson of the Public Service Commission.

The meeting comes at a time government has failed to resolve the doctors’ month-long strike over similar grievances.

Zimbabwe Teachers’ Association chief executive officer Sifiso Ndlovu said his union was already consulting structures to come up with a common position ahead of the Monday meeting.

“We are consulting and ready to talk with the employer on issues that affect our membership. We are ready for that important meeting,” he said.

Progressive Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe president Takavafira Zhou said although they had not yet been officially invited to the meeting, they viewed it as an attempt to stop the imminent strike.

“We wonder why the employer had to wait until the 11th hour to attend to our issues, when it is very clear that we raised these issues long back?” Zhou said.

“It is an attempt to stop the strike or any industrial action. But we will see how the issue pans out. If they invite us under Apex Council, we will not attend the meeting. That Apex thing is a useless thing, which has a tendency to massage the employer. But if we are called as independent teacher unions, we will attend.”

Apex Council chairperson, Cecilia Alexander was not reachable for comment last night.

— NewsDay

English Footballer Marcus Rashford Look-Alike Causes Social Media Stir

A 20-year-old Zimbabwean car salesman who has an uncanny resemblance to Manchester United and England forward Marcus Rashford has made such waves that Member of Parliament and former Zimbabwe Football Association(Zifa) President Doctor Phillip Chiyangwa invited the lad for a meeting and photo shoots.

The young man has caused a stir on the internet and various websites across Africa from Zimbabwe to Ghana have written something about him.

In Ghana locals have been fooled to believe he is a Ghanaian citizen.

This publication has verified that the trending pictures were actually taken in Harare and Zengeza, Chitungwiza.

The Marcus Rashford double has also been named as Ismail Austin.

Speaking to reporters Austin said he wants to use his new-found fame to develop grassroots football in Harare.

“It’s one thing to look like Rashford but it’s another to use the opportunity to change the lives of fledgling footballers who may not have the resources or platform to be seen…So we are working around the clock to leverage this opportunity to build a junior football platform and who knows we may indeed unearth Zimbabwe’s own Marcus Rashford,” he said recently.

-MyZimbabwe

Take The Blame For Your Failures, MDC Fumes

The Nelson Chamisa led opposition MDC has told President Emmerson Mnangagwa to stop blaming underhand forces for the instability ticking the health sector.

Addressing journalists at the party headquarters in Harare yesterday, MDC shadow health minister Henry Madzorera said President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government was paying lip service to the health sector by prioritising security ministries in its budget allocations.

“The government cannot and should not hide behind a figure and blame doctors for this complete collapse of health services,” he said.

“Government collects taxes from people, and government has a responsibility to distribute our tax revenue in a manner that allows every Zimbabwean to enjoy the highest level of health and well-being possible.”

Madzorera added: “It is government’s responsibility to allocate 15% of total government expenditure to health, to manage additional ear marked taxes like the health levy, the Aids levy, in a transparent and accountable manner that benefits all Zimbabweans, to deal with the corruption that is haemorrhaging not only the health sector, but the entire economy and to start to improve the conditions in which our people are born, live, work and age in order to create a healthier population.”

Junior doctors have been on strike for over a month now, demanding regular supplies of drugs and equipment to public hospitals and to be paid in United States dollars, among other grievances.

The strike enters its 36th day tomorrow and several meetings between government and the striking doctors, including one with First Lady Auxillia Mnangagwa held yesterday, have failed to break the deadlock.

Madzorera warned that government’s failure to handle the strike action would have devastating consequences on the country, as most of the doctors would leave for greener pastures

He said government did not need doctors to strike to realise that it has an obligation to buy drugs and other consumables required in hospitals.

MDC spokesperson Jacob Mafume said Zimbabwe was back to “square zero”.

“The wheels have come off completely just five months after the sham election of July 30, 2018 and over a year since the departure of President Robert Mugabe,” he said.

Teachers and members of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions have threatened to down tools next week.

The labour unrest coincides with the schools’ opening on Tuesday.

Newsday

Zanu Pf Youth League Implores Gvnt To Allow Pupils Without Uniforms To Attend School

By Own Correspondent| Zanu-PF Youth League Secretary for Administration Tendai Chirau has appealed to the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education to allow children to attend school without uniforms

Chirau made this call after an executive management committee meeting in Harare for the youth wing’s strategic planning workshop.

The youth league’s comments come in the wake of prices of uniforms, which have skyrocketed.

Said Chirau:

“In the wake of unjustified and wanton price hikes by retailers, the Youth League calls upon the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education to allow children whose parents cannot afford to buy school uniforms to attend school without uniforms. No child should be chased away from school for not wearing a school uniform.”-StateMedia

Killer T Norton Show Postponed

By Showbiz Reporter| The Killer To show previously slated for Norton today has been postponed. The organisers had at the time of writing not provided the new date details.

Below was the announcement:

POSTPONED! With tomorrow’s 80% chance of rain we’ve unfortunately been forced to postpone tomorrow’s concert to a date to be advised. I sincerely apologise to you all for any inconveniences caused & look forward to setting a new date as soon as possible.

Duduza Retraces Roots, Targets Dembare Rebuilding

Edward Sadomba is set for a sensational return to Dynamos, a decade after leaving the Harare giants and is part of a list of players that the club has identified to play a part in the rebuilding process they are undertaking, following their dismal performance last season.

No official comment could be obtained from the club, but NewsDaySport has it on good authority that talks have been ongoing between the two parties since the speedy forward left Libya two years ago, and a deal is said to be imminent.

Sadomba, who turned 35 on August 31, has already told close friends that he was set to sign a two-year contract with his old club, which would be his swansong to a successful professional career that started at Kambuzuma United in 2003.

“The negotiations have been on going. He has been talking to coach Lloyd (Chigowe), and he has agreed to sign a two-year contract. He should be signing the contract any day from now,” said a well-placed source.

Chigowe refused to comment on the issue, saying divulging information on their dealings in the transfer market could jeopardise negotiations.

He declined to divulge the names of the players that they were negotiating with until they had secured their signatures, revealing how they missed out on one of their major target Godknows Murwira, who would have joined the club last week before making a surprise U-turn to join FC Platinum on Wednesday.

“I’m not at liberty to disclose our dealings on the transfer market. We are on a rebuilding mission, so obviously there are some new faces coming in. But you will have to wait for the unveiling to know their identities. We don’t want to pre-empt anything because that might jeopardise the processes.

“We lost Godknows Murwira who had agreed on almost everything and we thought he would sign, but he joined FC Platinum. So wait for the official announcement by the team’s secretary-general (Webster Marechera),” Chigowe said.

Marechera confirmed that they were in the process of negotiating with prospective players, but also declined to give away the names.

However, other sources said at least four players were set to sign yesterday, including Sadomba and former Triangle and FC Platinum midfielder Hillary Bakacheza, and they would be part of the squad when they regroup for the start of pre-season training on Tuesday.

It is the capture of Sadomba though that could prove to be a major coup for Dynamos, who are looking to improve from their horrible showing last season, where they escaped relegation by a whisker.

The striker left his Libyan side Al-Hilal two years ago after the two parties agreed to mutually part ways, as the club had been rendered inactive on their domestic front due to civil unrest in that country. He has since been inactive.

His quality though is undoubted, having led the Glamour Boys to a league championship in 2007, before leading them to a group stage appearance in the Confederation of African Football (Caf) Champions League the following year.

Sadomba then broke new ground by becoming the first Zimbabwean football player to feature in the competitive and lucrative Sudanese topflight league after signing for Al-Hilal in Khartoum in 2009.

He was signed for €350 000 ($395 128) from Bidvest Wits, even before he kicked a single ball for the South African side.

While at Al-Hilal, he scored 98 times in 90 games since 2009. That time, he was also awarded the Golden Boot in both the CAF Champions League and the CAF Confederation Cup.

After three successful years at Al-Hilal, Sadomba briefly joined United Arab Emirates Pro League side Ittihad Kalba on a highly-lucrative loan deal at the start of the 2013 season, before moving to Libya to join Al Ahly Benghazi and later Ahly Tripoli. The move from Al Ahly Benghazi to Tripoli was reportedly worth over $1 million and saw Sadomba earning around $40 000 a month during his two-year stay at the club.

Sadomba rejoined Sudanese club Al-Hilal in May 2016, but left barely six months in his contract due to the political strife.

-Newsday

 

Education Minister Says Form 1 Boarding Places Are Still Available

By Own Correspondent| Deputy Minister of Primary and Secondary Education Edgar Moyo said 56 out of 258 boarding secondary schools in the country still have vacancies for Form One.

Moyo however said while online applications closed on December 21, parents whose children are yet to secure places should go to the remaining schools and physically apply.

Moyo said parents can first call provincial call centres where they can be advised on schools with places in their respective provinces.

He said the 56 schools are left with around 1 000 places. He added that the remaining schools will continue to enrol until schools open on Tuesday.

Said Moyo:

“We have 258 secondary boarding schools in the country and 202 are already full with only 56 still enrolling. There were 24 231 vacancies for Form Ones and 22 941 have been taken.

The online application was meant to reduce expenses of travelling to schools but unfortunately some parents could not secure places on time.”

Schools with places include Eveline Girls High, Founders, Gifford, Milton and Townsend High schools in Bulawayo, Gloag Secondary in Bubi, Fatima Secondary School in Lupane, Hlangabeza Secondary School in Nkayi, Matopo High School in Matobo, JZ Moyo High School in Insiza, Masase and Musume secondary schools in Mberengwa.-StateMedia

Teenager Cautioned And Discharged For Sodomising 9 Yr Old Boy

By Own Correspondent| A teenager from Filabusi has appeared in court for sodomising his neighbour’s nine-year-old son.

The accused (17) from Maturuwanga Village who cannot be named for ethical reasons approached the juvenile whom he found herding cattle and threatened to beat him up with a stick before sodomising him.

He was convicted on his own plea of guilty to aggravated indecent assault when he appeared before Gwanda regional magistrate, Mr Mark Dzira. The teenager was cautioned and discharged.

In passing his sentence Mr Dzira rebuked the teenager for engaging in immoral behaviour at a young age.

“You are still young and you shouldn’t commit crime at your age. A person of your age shouldn’t engage in such immoral activities. You have by your actions destroyed the future of this boy that you victimised,” he said.

Prosecuting, Mr Mncedisi Dube said the teenager met the boy who is a Grade Four pupil at Shamba Primary School on April 16 at around 4pm while he was alone herding cattle.

The teenager who was holding a stick threatened to use it to beat the juvenile if he did not give in to his demands. He forcibly removed the juvenile’s trousers and pants and went on to sodomise him.

“When the juvenile got home at around 6pm he narrated to his grandmother what the accused person had done to him.

“The matter was reported to the police resulting in the teenager’s arrest,” he said.

22 Yr Old Gwanda Man Hauled To Court For Raping 88 Yr Old Granny

By Own Correspondent| A 22 year old Gwanda man has been hauled to court for raping his 88-year-old neighbour after he unlawfully gained entry into her bedroom hut in early morning.

Trust Ncube of Kafusi Village raided the woman while she was sleeping before raping her. He was not asked to plead when he appeared briefly before Gwanda magistrate, Mrs Nomagugu Sibanda facing charges of unlawful entry and rape. He was remanded in custody to January 17.

It is the state’s case that Ncube raped the old woman who stays alone on Wednesday at around 4am.

Revealed the state:

“Ncube went to the old woman’s home on January 2 at around 4am where he found her sleeping alone in her bedroom hut. Ncube forcibly opened the door to the woman’s bedroom and gained entry.

“He grabbed the old woman and dragged her out of her bedroom hut and raped her once before running away.

“The old woman fled to her neighbour’s homestead after Ncube had left and narrated what had happened. The matter was reported to the police resulting in Ncube’s arrest.”

Govt Attitude Towards Health Will Never Improve Health Services Delivery Says Civil Society Organisations

Press Statement|CIVIL society organisations call upon the Government of Zimbabwe to urgently address the dire situation facing hospitals as a result of the strike by doctors.

The current impasse, that is now reaching the 36th day, is causing untold pain, suffering, unnecessary loss of life, and is an affront to the right to health care, the right to dignity and the right to life.

We have assessed the unpleasant situation on the ground at the different public hospitals around the country and note with great concern the deteriorating situation which is now a national crisis.

It is common cause that the challenges in our health sector have over the years been exacerbated by inadequate funding to the Ministry of Health and Child Care. The 2019 national budget is no exception, it only allocates 8,9 percent, way below the recommended 15 percent as provided in the Abuja Declaration.

This is unacceptable and will not improve the precarious situation in the public health institutions.

Inadequate financing has over the years crippled critical hospital functions, provision of essential medicines, availability of protective clothing for health personnel and the much-needed equipment including leading to the mass exodus of health professionals.

The work boycott by doctors, that commenced in December 2018, is not a new phenomenon and continues to gravely compromise access to health care for the most vulnerable people in Zimbabwe, who cannot afford private health care.

Of concern is the closure of some wards at the referral hospitals due to lack of adequate manpower as a result of the ongoing strike.

The critical situation negatively impacts on the efforts made to contain maternal mortality, manage chronic illnesses and contain the spread of water borne diseases that continue to recur in the urban areas in Zimbabwe.

It is alarming that emergency services are also no longer readily accessible at some hospitals. The absence of a full complement of doctors at state-run hospitals puts a heavy burden on the nurses and other support staff at these institutions.

Efforts by the government to engage recent inexperienced graduates from medical schools with limited practical exposure is very dangerous and puts the lives of innocent patients at risk.

The state has an obligation to ensure that citizens’ right to health care is not compromised but progressively realised. This calls for honest dialogue with the experienced doctors for immediate implementation of measures to resolve the impasse.

Civil society organisations hold the Government of Zimbabwe, particularly the Ministry of Health and Child Care and the Health Services Board responsible and liable for the depressing situation obtaining at the state-run hospitals, the unavailability of services at these institutions and any attendant loss of life.

Therefore, Civil Society calls upon government to;

• Urgently resolve and in earnest engage doctors to address the concerns raised to ensure that the situation returns to normalcy and ensure that the majority of our citizenry is able to access quality health care in line with the provisions of section 76 of the Constitution;

• Respect and fulfill its constitutional obligations to facilitate the meaningful enjoyment of the fundamental rights and freedoms by citizens and doctors alike;

• Ensure adequate funding of the health care sector as the right to health is an empowerment right, which if impaired, will dislocate the enjoyment of other rights and freedoms;

• Finalise the review of the Health Services Act and make the Health Services Board more accountable, efficient and independent.

Endorsed by;

Chitungwiza and Manyame Rural Residents Association
Citizens Health Watch
Community Water Alliance
Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition
Harare Residents Trust
Zimbabwe Association of Doctors for Human Rights
Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum
Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights
Zimbabwe Peace Project

Ginimbi Buries Brother Andrew Kadungure

By Own Correspondent| Brother to businessman Genius “Ginimbi” Kadungure Andrew, who died last Monday.

Andrew was laid to rest at his rural home in Domboshava yesterday. He was 28.

Scores of people including socialites, business executives, dealers and the Vice President’s wife, Marry Chiwenga, were among mourners who paid their last respects to Andrew. Ginimbi got to know about the death of his younger brother while on holiday.

“When we left Harare for the holiday with Genius, Andrew was recovering and we were surprised when we received the news that he had passed away,” said one of the family members.

Ginimbi said he was still in pain over the death of his younger brother.

“I’m still in pain that Andrew is no more, at the moment I am not in a position to say much because I am still mourning my young brother,” he said.

Speaking at the event, Marry Chiwenga described the death of Andrew as heartbreaking.

“We have been robbed one of our own, to me Andrew was a son because his mother is my aunt.

“Though we are mourning there is need for us to celebrate his life.

“The last time I saw him he was wearing stylish jeans and the boil on his head seemed to be getting better but it was God’s will to take him and when God takes, he doesn’t consult anyone.

“I would also like to take this opportunity to thank Genius’ wife Zodwa for looking after her mother-in-law as well as her brother-in-law Andrew.

“We need to honour her for her resilience and continuous support to the Kadungure family,” she said.

Andrew’s female friends, who attended the burial, mimicked the late dealer as they splashed wads of US dollars on his grave. Some poured expensive wine on Andrew’s grave while others could be seen `twerking’ while singing popular funeral songs.

Meanwhile, Andrew’s mother — Mbuya Kadungure — is unwell. The wheel-chair bound Mbuya Kadungure was assisted by aides during Andrew’s body viewing procession.

Ginimbi’s friends like Bodyslam, Tazvi “Chief J” Mhaka, rapper Mudiwa Hood, Chief Albert, Eddie Kebab were some of the notable faces who attended the burial, which attracted hundreds of mourners.

Thief Nabbed For Stealing Counter Books

By Own Correspondent| With only two days left before schools open, an unidentified man was nabbed with several counter books stashed in his pants.

The picture of the man with his loot who was apprehended has torched a social media storm with others suggesting that the man could have committed the offence due to the current economic hardships.

Others however alleged that the man could be a habitual thief who is in the habit of helping himself with goods which would be on demand for resale.

Help us identify this man or the place where this happened.

Take Blame For Labour Unrest, MDC Tells ED

Government should take blame for the collapse of the health sector and stop blaming the opposition for inciting doctors and other civil servants to go on strike, the Nelson Chamisa-led MDC has said.

Addressing journalists at the party headquarters in Harare yesterday, MDC shadow health minister Henry Madzorera said President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government was paying lip service to the health sector by prioritising security ministries in its budget allocations.

“The government cannot and should not hide behind a figure and blame doctors for this complete collapse of health services,” he said.

“Government collects taxes from people, and government has a responsibility to distribute our tax revenue in a manner that allows every Zimbabwean to enjoy the highest level of health and well-being possible.”

Madzorera added: “It is government’s responsibility to allocate 15% of total government expenditure to health, to manage additional ear marked taxes like the health levy, the Aids levy, in a transparent and accountable manner that benefits all Zimbabweans, to deal with the corruption that is haemorrhaging not only the health sector, but the entire economy and to start to improve the conditions in which our people are born, live, work and age in order to create a healthier population.”

Junior doctors have been on strike for over a month now, demanding regular supplies of drugs and equipment to public hospitals and to be paid in United States dollars, among other grievances.

The strike enters its 36th day tomorrow and several meetings between government and the striking doctors, including one with First Lady Auxillia Mnangagwa held yesterday, have failed to break the deadlock.

Madzorera warned that government’s failure to handle the strike action would have devastating consequences on the country, as most of the doctors would leave for greener pastures

He said government did not need doctors to strike to realise that it has an obligation to buy drugs and other consumables required in hospitals.

MDC spokesperson Jacob Mafume said Zimbabwe was back to “square zero”.

“The wheels have come off completely just five months after the sham election of July 30, 2018 and over a year since the departure of President Robert Mugabe,” he said.

Teachers and members of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions have threatened to down tools next week.

The labour unrest coincides with the schools’ opening on Tuesday.

-Newsday

Teachers Plot More Trouble For Mthuli Ncube As Schools Open Next Week

Teachers and other civil servants have taken their fight for better salaries to another level after announcing that they will camp at Finance Minister, Professor Mthuli Ncube’s Office “until their grievances are met”

In a communication in the hands of Zimeye, teachers said their protest will among other things push government to address shortages of teaching material for the new curriculum and salaries in United States dollars.

“We are demanding, Adequate learning material for the new curriculum, Salaries in United States dollars, 2018 annual bonus in full, Scrapping of the 2% tax.

“The participants in the salary camp will march with their POCKETS OUT signifying that they are broke, said Amalgamated Rural Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe.

The Union invited all citizens to join the fight by pulling their POCKETS OUT and post their pictures on social media accompanied with #salarycamp.

“The incapacitated teachers who will not be able to go to work if they are not paid in United States dollars will be conducting free lessons in front of Mthuli’s offices for the duration of the salary camp. Citizens who are keen to learn are invited to join our salary camp classes.

“ARTUZ notes that there will be a meeting on Monday 7 January 2018. We will deploy our negotiators to negotiate in good faith while the rest of our members patiently wait for the good news at Mthuli’s offices.

“We are encouraged by the timely response of government to Delta’s demand for foreign currency. We are confident that with more consistency and revolutionary discipline our demands will also be met,” added ARTUZ.

 

Relief For University Students As Govt Sticks To Old Fees Structure

Government has said all State tertiary education institutions are not increasing school fees and should accept payment in local currency for Zimbabweans and foreign currency for foreigners. There were social media reports alleging that State institutions, including the Midlands State University (MSU), had increased their tuition fees and were demanding hard currency from local students.

In a recent interview, the Minister of Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Development, Professor Amon Murwira, said no Government institutions could review school fees without approval.

“Those are fake reports circulating on social media causing panic. The correct position is that we did not approve a revision of tuition fees in State tertiary institutions,” said Prof Murwira.

He said all fees were revised annually by his ministry and any adjustments were communicated officially through his office.

“These are State-owned institutions and we cannot expect Government positions to be communicated through unreliable sources. School fees ordinances are signed by the minister and communicated officially,” he said.

Prof Murwira said State institutions complied with the law of the land and did not invent their own form of payment.

“We comply with the Government’s policy on forms of payment, which means these institutions continue accepting bank transfers, EcoCash and cash that they were using last year.

“Let it be clear that we have a policy that says foreign students only pay in foreign currency and this does not apply to local students. We do not demand foreign currency from local students. The only approved adjustment is that student on industrial attachment pay 60 percent of their school fees,” Prof Murwira said.

He urged stakeholders to report any institution that invents its own rules of payments so that it is corrected right away.

-State Media

Medieval Diseases Continue To Plague Zim, IS THERE AN END IN SIGHT?

With the rain season now in full swing, Zimbabwe continues to battle against medieval diseases such as cholera and typhoid with Gweru and Bulawayo becoming the latest cities affected by the waterborne infections raising fears of a repeat of the health problems experienced late last year.

Bulawayo town clerk Christopher Dube said the local authority had started rolling out awareness campaigns to avert outbreaks of waterborne diseases, particularly against the background of sewer pipe bursts.

Ageing infrastructure has been blamed for the constant sewerage bursts across the city, specifically in high-density suburbs, sparking fears of outbreaks of cholera and other water-borne diseases.

“Our health department is on high cholera and typhoid alert. We are conducting awareness campaigns to prevent outbreaks of any waterborne diseases, especially with the rains upon us,” Dube said.

The country’s second largest city has largely been spared of deaths related to waterborne diseases such as typhoid, cholera and diarrhoeal cases.

Government last year declared a state of emergency following the cholera outbreak that claimed more than 50 lives, and affected several thousands in most parts of the country, particularly Harare, although Bulawayo was least affected by the disease.

Meanwhile, First Lady Auxillia Mnangagwa, who was expected to officiate at the city’s clean-up exercise, failed to pitch as she was locked in meetings aimed at ending the doctors’ strike in Harare.

The clean-up campaign in Gweru was led by the Environmental Management Agency (Ema), with stakeholders calling on residents to keep their surroundings clean to avoid a resurgence of typhoid, which claimed over 10 lives in the city’s Mkoba high-density suburbs late last year.

“As Gweru, we are encouraged to take part in this national clean-up campaign by the past records, where we lost a significant number of lives due to diseases caused by lack of hygiene and uncleanliness,” Ema’s Midlands spokesperson Timothy Nyoka said.

“So many lives were lost due to typhoid last year, while in 2008, we had a deadly cholera outbreak. That is why a lot of stakeholders like police, NSSA [National Social Security Authority], Gweru City Council and the general residents came out in their numbers for the clean-up exercise.”

Gweru mayor Josiah Makombe said city fathers would be at the forefront of mobilising people to participate in the clean-up campaigns.

“We are all in support of the clean cities agenda and so we came here to lead from the front in the clean-up campaign,” he said.

“In this rainy season, if people do not live in clean spaces, we can easily be plunged into a health crisis, so we need to be very vigilant.”

-Newsday

“You Rule Zimbabwe But Your Heart Is Not In Zimbabwe”: Letter To President Emmerson Mnangagwa

Writes Farai Muguwu

Hello President ED Mnangagwa. I have traversed Zimbabwe and what a gem of a country we have! You have world class scenic areas from the mighty Victoria Falls, the sacred Matobo Hills, the majestic Great Zimbabwe Ruins; the pristine Lake Mtirikwi and a nearby national park.

You can find peace with yourself and with God at the gigantic lake Kariba – the world’s largest man made lake and water reservoir. You dont need a visa to get to Kariba – do you? To the Eastern Highlands I recently visited the out-of-this-world imposing Nyanga Mountains. I proceeded to Honde Valley Tea Estates which boasts of arguably the best rivers with fresh, unpolluted water in the country.

The tea estates themselves are a marvel to behold. What a beauty! To the South, the blue Chimanimani mountains are beckoning. Lets not forget the amazing Chinhoyi Caves. The whole country awaits to be discovered by you.

Please tell me the reason why you and your Father Robert Mugabe thinks the President of Zimbabwe must spend more than USD5 million tax payers money every January holidaying in the Middle East, with a large entourage. I also want to know why we never see any Head of State, even from Africa, coming to Zimbabwe on Holiday?

When in UAE or Malaysia, does it ever cross your mind that the things you enjoy in Asia are a product of patriotic decisions by leaders of that country – something you have failed to do for the past 38 years for your own country. Did you see any fuel queue there? How about road infrastructure? What did you see? How many construction cranes did you see? If you were in Dubai or passed through Dubai what did you make of Emirates? What about their new airport which is expected to handle more than 90 million passengers annually? Whilst there did you think of Robert Mugabe International Airport, i prefer to call it Harare International Airport for obvious reasons. Did you ever feel as leader of Zimbabwe you should have a burden to modernise your country and make us feel proud to be Zimbabwean again?

Oh, by the way, did you remember to go for medical check-ups? How is their health delivery system? Did you remember to ask how much your Doctor and nurses there earn per month? Are you aware that by holidaying in Asia with your massive entourage you are investing in the economy of the country you are visiting whilst robbing your poor country of the much needed forex? Its a fact you dint pay bond notes or rtgs to charter the flight nor to pay for the hotels in Asia.

When shall you guys ever grow up?Why do you fight so hard, to the point of spilling innocent blood, to rule a country you don’t love. Surely with all the crises afflicting your country, you think this was the best way to spend money? Mwari ave nemi President.

Today I also saw pictures of former Cabinet Minister Chombo enjoying himself with some women in Dubai. He is one of the ‘criminals’ you said were the target of the military intervention that brought you to power in November 2017, accusing them of corruption and causing so much suffering. The guy is still living large in the Middle East, enjoying his loot whilst the people of Zimbabwe continue to suffer.

You and your predecessor Mugabe are by far the most travelling Presidents in Africa. Do you ever feel ashamed when you compare Zimbabwe to the countries you visit.

How does it feel to charter an aircraft from Switzerland each time you want to travel abroad, your party having been in power for 38 years and being President of a country battling medieval diseases like cholera and typhoid and where water in the capital city has been declared unsafe and yet more than 4 million people continue to drink that unsafe water because they have no other alternative? I am very convinced your decisions are responsible for more than 50% of the 500 plus deaths being recorded in Zimbabwe daily. Do you really feel you are a Zimbabwean?

Am I correct to say though you ‘rule’ Zimbabwe your heart is not in Zimbabwe, just as was the case with Robert Mugabe who frequently visited the country for the 37 years of his reign. it is not a surprise that you ‘rule’ like an occupation force with no connection with the local people and extreme indifference to human suffering.

Delta And Doctors US Dollar Move Had Thrown The Bond Note Under The Bus

The bond note is increasingly suffering rejection from the corporate sector after Delta Corporation Limited went public on Wednesday saying it will be selling its products in hard currency.

Delta said the move was aimed at sustaining its operations in the wake of serious shortages of foreign currency.

Analysts told the Daily News yesterday that the move by Delta has far-reaching implications on the country’s tottering economy.

More companies are seen demanding greenbacks for their products, thus pushing the broader workforce to agitate for hard currency salaries.

Already, doctors, nurses and teachers have put their employer on the spot, saying their remuneration should be in foreign currency.

Writing on his blog The Big Saturday Read, United Kingdom-based Kent University law lecturer Alex Magaisa, said it is clear that both capital and labour have rejected bond notes.

“More companies will follow and more workers will take the doctors’ route. There is, it seems, an inexorable march towards re-dollarisation and the demise of the surrogate currency,” said Magaisa.

“It’s going to be a hard year but one in which, I think, the country will be forced to new settings. Because current settings have, quite frankly, become moribund,” he added.

It, however, remains to be seen how government will deal with the situation, as it has asked for a round-table meeting with Delta to address the matter.

Industry and Commerce minister Mangaliso Ndlovu has described the move as illegal, despite the fact that Zimbabwe allowed the use of multi-currencies in February 2009.

It was in 2016 when the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) introduced the bond note as an export incentive.

Its functions were subsequently expanded to ease the liquidity crisis which saw long queues developing in banking halls.

The bond note has been on a free-fall since the introduction of a new fiscal policy framework in October last year which saw the introduction of separate accounts for foreign currency and the Real Time Gross Settlement (RTGS) balances.

This created uncertainty over the future of bond notes, with the surrogate currency suffering heavy losses on the black market.

Yesterday, the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) said all companies selling their products in US dollars must also pay their workers in that currency.

ZCTU president Peter Mutasa told the Daily News that the main labour union has as far back as 2016 been campaigning against the bond note.

“While Delta has taken a unilateral decision, we understand that it has taken a fair stance which will enable it to sustain its operations. Salaries should be pegged in US dollars.

“If we are to follow Gresham’s Law, there are no two currencies that can operate at par. Delta is communicating the message that labour has always been communicating since 2016. It’s very unfortunate that all along business has been siding with government,” Mutasa said.

President of the Confederation of Zimbabwe Retailers Denford Mutashu, said re-dollarisation will result in price increases for those paying through electronic means.

Mutashu said businesses are now faced with a situation whereby they must consider viability and sustainability of their operations.

“As long as the foreign currency situation remains dire, the problem may persist. Delta has simply been bold to come out, otherwise most suppliers and manufacturers are doing it, including some that receive foreign currency from the Reserve Bank.

“Fuel dealers, schools, school uniform dealers, raw material suppliers etc are all demanding payment in foreign currency. If you look at the Delta model, they have many other suppliers along their value chain and most have been demanding payment in foreign currency both domestic and foreign. It makes the situation dire,” Mutashu said.

MDC official David Coltart, said Delta was bringing reality to the fore and that President Emmerson Mnangagwa and his team were out of touch with reality.

“The Mnangagwa regime and its sycophants are increasingly out of touch with the reality of the current economic situation. Fortunately, businesses have to confront this harsh reality and some have to guts to confront the absurd policies of this government. Amhlophe Delta,” he said in a Twitter post.

Daily News

Fabisch’s Son Agrees To Play For Warriors

Young Jonah Fabisch

Correspondent|Young Germany-based player Jonah Fabisch (right) will evoke the memories of his late father, former Zimbabwe senior national team coach Reinhard Fabisch, among local football fans by agreeing to play for the Warriors.

Reinhard Fabisch, who died in Germany on July 12, 2008 after a battle with cancer, rose to fame after assembling what became to be known as the “Dream Team”, a side which played a beautiful brand of football and attracted bumper crowds whenever playing at home at the National Sports Stadium in the early 1990s.

There will be a “Dream Team” flavour in the Warriors squad after Reinhard Fabisch’s son Jonah committed to play for Zimbabwe. The 17-year-old already has a Zimbabwean passport.

In fact, the late Reinhard Fabisch, easily the most celebrated coach of Zimbabwe’s national side, was in charge of the Warriors between 1992 and 1995. His “Dream Team” galvanised the patriotic fervour of a nation, although success eluded him.

The team comprised the likes of the late Benjamin Nkonjera, Francis Shonhayi (late), legendary goalkeeper Bruce “Jungleman” Grobbelaar, Peter Ndlovu, Ephraim Chawanda, John Phiri, Norman Mapeza, Rahman Gumbo, Agent “Ajira” Sawu, Henry “Bully” McKop, Vitalis “Digital” Takawira, Mercedes “Rambo” Sibanda (late) and Willard “Mawiii” Mashinkila-Khumalo (late) and Adam Ndlovu (late), amongst others, and so good was the team that even the mighty Indomitable Lions of Cameroon couldn’t break it easily.

Though the team never qualified for a major tournament, the epoch remains perched on the uppermost of those who saw them in action.

The team also laid a strong foundation for subsequent sides and qualification for the African Cup of Nations finals has now become a routine for Zimbabwe.

And Jonah Fabisch’s availability for the national team will inevitably evoke Reinhard Fabisch memories among local football fans.

Warriors technical team, led by team manager Wellington Mpandare, have been on a crusade to take aboard all players with Zimbabwean roots who ply their trade in different parts of Europe and convince them to represent the country.

Such efforts have already bore fruits with the likes of Tendayi Darikwa and Alec Mudimu having since been drafted into the senior national team where they have played key roles in the Warriors’ quest for qualification in this year’s AFCON finals to be staged between June and July at a venue to be determined by CAF next week.

Zimbabwe needs to avoid defeat against Congo Brazzaville at home on March 22 to be assured of progression to the biannual showpiece. After marathon meetings with Mpandare, Jonah Fabisch has expressed interest in playing for the Warriors.

He is currently one of the most sought-after prospects at Hamburger SV Under-19 side in Germany, having come through that team’s age-group teams since he was just 14. The team extended the contract of the teenager by four-years early last year in a bid to keep him as there was increasing interests from other clubs who wanted to sign him.

Jonah Fabisch has already represented Germany in the Under-18 age-group but has reportedly expressed his keenness to play for Zimbabwe. He has a Zimbabwean mother, Chawada Kachidza, who is a former hurdler from Mutoko but now lives in Hamburg, Germany.

She was at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics as a member of the International Athletics Associations Federation (IAAF)’s Future Stars programme.

Amid claims by one Mistry Chipere that he is the one who is facilitating for Jonah Fabisch to be in the Warriors team, Mpandare has come out strongly saying he should not seek relevance by claiming that they are the ones who are bringing all these stars from abroad.

“I can confirm that Jonah Fabisch’s papers are in order and he is ready if the Warriors technical team thinks that he can play a role in the team. But we have had problems with people who claim that they are the ones who are bringing these stars here,” said Mpandare.

“We have always had programmes to take aboard our players dotted around Europe. We have since managed to bring the likes of Darikwa and Mudimu.

“No one should claim credit for our efforts. In the case of Darikwa and Mudimu, let me put it on record that everyone knew well before that they were Zimbabweans but maybe it was just a case of the technical teams then not wanting to pick them.

“The current technical department has chosen to have them aboard and we made efforts to get them the documents and you hear some people claiming that they are the ones who brought the players.”

The former Gunners manager said he didn’t want to become personal but people ought to know that they do not own players.

Jere Rubbishes Ndebele Conspiracy Theories

PREMIER Soccer League supremo Farai Jere has rubbished social media reports that he is orchestrating the ouster of the league’s chief executive officer Kennedy Ndebele and replace him with his close ally Cuthbert Chitima who sensationally stepped down from the same post at Caps United last week.

Social media hawks went into overdrive soon after the unexpected resignation of Chitima, the former Gunners boss, as the head of secretariat at the Green Machine, claiming that the whole plan was to eventually catapult Chitima to the helm of the Premier Soccer League’s secretariat headed by the highly respected and one of the best football administrators to emerge in the country.

“That is all rubbish, why would I do that? Its not true at all,” said Jere when asked about the rumours doing the rounds that knives are out for the former Highlanders secretary and chairman, who has been at the helm of the PSL secretariat since 2011.

Ndebele became the second man to hold a similar post at the PSL after Chris Sambo who had quit back in 2006 and there was no substantive chief executive officer for the next five years until Twine Phiri became PSL boss in 2011.

Those preaching the ‘smart coup de tat’ gospel in the secretariat, claim Ndebele is being sacrificed for his alleged alliance with the losing PSL chairmanship candidate Lovemore Matikinyidze who lost by seven votes to nine against Jere in last year’s PSL elections.

Ndebele recently represented the PSL at the World Leagues Forum in Mexico where he rubbed shoulders with football bosses from around the world, an exposure that cannot then be allowed to go to waste.

WLF is a body of professional football leagues from around the globe.

The objectives of WLF are to help develop modern, effective governance structures within world football that respect football national bodies’ role, foster cooperation between the leagues and their member clubs through knowledge sharing and exchange of best practices with an emphasis on helping emerging leagues in their development and to represent the leagues and their member clubs on all matters of common interest towards sport and political institutions.

Membership is open to any football league that operates top level competitions in its country.

The leagues must have a legal structure and statutes of their own. They must also be financially independent with their own administration structure and a dedicated board.

State Media

Will Highlanders Fan Dump Twin Brother Pirates For FC Platinum?

Highlanders Fans closes associate themselves with Orlando Pirates.

CAF’s decision to move next week’s Caf Champions League between FC Platinum and Orlando Pirates from Mandava Stadium could prove advantageous to the visitors in terms of support.

The platinum miners home ground Mandava was condemned by Caf for failing to satisfy certain required standards, and the match will now be played at Barbourfields Stadium in Zimbabwe’s second largest city of Bulawayo which is 182 kilometers away from FC Platinum’s home town of Zvishavane.

“The Zimbabwe Football Association (Zifa) advises the football family that FC Platinum’s Total Champions League group match against Orlando Pirates will be played at Barbourfields Stadium in Bulawayo.

The Confederation of African Football (Caf) advised Zifa that FC Platinum’s traditional home ground, Mandava Stadium does not meet minimum requirements for this stage of Africa’s prestigious club competition,” Zifa said in a statement.

FC Platinum are likely to endure a hostile environment at Barbourfields, the home of Zimbabwean traditional giants Highlanders who fans split allegiance with Pirates.

Highlanders share the same black and white colours with Pirates as well as the crossbones salute. A huge number of Highlanders fans also wear Pirates shirts during every match.

Having played their group stage qualifying matches at Mandava, FC Platinum expressed anger at Caf’s decision.

“We are naturally depressed because it came as a surprise on the 11th hour that our Mandava venue might not meet the requirements of Caf,” FC Platinum media officer Chido Chizondo told The Herald.

Bulawayo And Gweru On High Alert For Cholera

BULAWAYO and Gweru city councils have scaled up the fight against waterborne diseases such as cholera and typhoid, following the onset of the rainy season.

Bulawayo town clerk Christopher Dube said the local authority had started rolling out awareness campaigns to avert outbreaks of waterborne diseases, particularly against the background of sewer pipe bursts.

Ageing infrastructure has been blamed for the constant sewerage bursts across the city, specifically in high-density suburbs, sparking fears of outbreaks of cholera and other water-borne diseases.

“Our health department is on high cholera and typhoid alert. We are conducting awareness campaigns to prevent outbreaks of any waterborne diseases, especially with the rains upon us,” Dube said.

The country’s second largest city has largely been spared of deaths related to waterborne diseases such as typhoid, cholera and diarrhoeal cases.

Government last year declared a state of emergency following the cholera outbreak that claimed more than 50 lives, and affected several thousands in most parts of the country, particularly Harare, although Bulawayo was least affected by the disease.

Meanwhile, First Lady Auxillia Mnangagwa, who was expected to officiate at the city’s clean-up exercise, failed to pitch as she was locked in meetings aimed at ending the doctors’ strike in Harare.

The clean-up campaign in Gweru was led by the Environmental Management Agency (Ema), with stakeholders calling on residents to keep their surroundings clean to avoid a resurgence of typhoid, which claimed over 10 lives in the city’s Mkoba high-density suburbs late last year.

“As Gweru, we are encouraged to take part in this national clean-up campaign by the past records, where we lost a significant number of lives due to diseases caused by lack of hygiene and uncleanliness,” Ema’s Midlands spokesperson Timothy Nyoka said.

“So many lives were lost due to typhoid last year, while in 2008, we had a deadly cholera outbreak. That is why a lot of stakeholders like police, NSSA [National Social Security Authority], Gweru City Council and the general residents came out in their numbers for the clean-up exercise.”

Gweru mayor Josiah Makombe said city fathers would be at the forefront of mobilising people to participate in the clean-up campaigns.

“We are all in support of the clean cities agenda and so we came here to lead from the front in the clean-up campaign,” he said.

“In this rainy season, if people do not live in clean spaces, we can easily be plunged into a health crisis, so we need to be very vigilant.”

NewsDay

Bus Crashes As Speeding Driver Fails To Stop At Police Roadblock

AT LEAST 53 passengers escaped death by a whisker on Thursday when a speeding Inter Africa bus they were travelling in failed to stop at a police-controlled roadblock along the Bulawayo-Masvingo Highway, resulting in the bus veering off the road and landing on its side.

Masvingo provincial assistant police spokesperson Sergeant Crispen Gwashu confirmed the freak accident.

He said the bus was travelling from Bulawayo to Masvingo when the accident happened at the 10km peg along.

Gwashu said out of the 53 passengers, two were admitted at Masvingo Provincial Hospital and were in a stable condition, while the rest sustained minor injuries.

They were all treated and discharged.

“The bus was coming from Bulawayo when the driver, who was speeding, failed to stop at the check point.

“There was a Nissan Navara vehicle which was at the check point and the driver side swiped the vehicle as he tried to manoeuvre the bus to the left side, resulting in it veering off the road and overturning,” Gwashu said.

He urged motorists to avoid speeding and exercise caution on the country’s highways.

The accident happened a few kilometres from the spot of another fatal road accident involving a commuter omnibus which overturned, killing five people on the spot on New year’s Eve.

Newsday

Retirement Due Nyarota Gets Another Media Appointment

VETERAN journalist and founding editor of the Daily News, Geoffrey Nyarota, has been appointed head of journalism and communication training at the Christian College of Southern Africa (CCOSA).

In a statement on Friday, CCOSA said Nyarota’s appointment was with immediate effect and would help the college produce some of the best scribes in the region.

An international award-winning journalist, Nyarota is not new to journalism classrooms after a stint at the now-defunct Nordic-SADC Journalism Centre in Maputo, which was designed for mid-career journalists in the region..

A fellow of the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University in the United States, Nyarota also served at Oslo University in Norway as a Guest Professor in the Department of Media Studies and Communication. He then served for four years on the board of the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at Oxford University in the United Kingdom.

He has written two books, with the latest titled The Graceless Fall of Robert Mugabe.

CCOSA was established in 1976 by American missionary, William K Warner.

Nyarota said he viewed his appointment as a challenge to take CCOSA’s journalism training programme to an even higher standard, working hand-in-hand with similar training institutions in the region and internationally.

“We will employ top-class journalists to produce a journalism graduate who will be the favourite recruit of editors in the region in terms of journalism best-practices and journalism ethics,” he said.

“The journalist we seek to train will be fully operational on different platforms — print, radio, television and digital, with a flair for investigative journalism.”

NewsDay

MDC Says Govt To Blame For Health Sector Collapse Not The Opposition

GOVERNMENT should take blame for the collapse of the health sector and stop blaming the opposition for inciting doctors and other civil servants to go on strike, the Nelson Chamisa-led MDC has said.

Addressing journalists at the party headquarters in Harare yesterday, MDC shadow health minister Henry Madzorera said President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government was paying lip service to the health sector by prioritising security ministries in its budget allocations.

“The government cannot and should not hide behind a figure and blame doctors for this complete collapse of health services,” he said.

“Government collects taxes from people, and government has a responsibility to distribute our tax revenue in a manner that allows every Zimbabwean to enjoy the highest level of health and well-being possible.”

Madzorera added: “It is government’s responsibility to allocate 15% of total government expenditure to health, to manage additional ear marked taxes like the health levy, the Aids levy, in a transparent and accountable manner that benefits all Zimbabweans, to deal with the corruption that is haemorrhaging not only the health sector, but the entire economy and to start to improve the conditions in which our people are born, live, work and age in order to create a healthier population.”

Junior doctors have been on strike for over a month now, demanding regular supplies of drugs and equipment to public hospitals and to be paid in United States dollars, among other grievances.

The strike enters its 36th day tomorrow and several meetings between government and the striking doctors, including one with First Lady Auxillia Mnangagwa held yesterday, have failed to break the deadlock.

Madzorera warned that government’s failure to handle the strike action would have devastating consequences on the country, as most of the doctors would leave for greener pastures

Bulawayo, Gweru on high cholera alert
He said government did not need doctors to strike to realise that it has an obligation to buy drugs and other consumables required in hospitals.

MDC spokesperson Jacob Mafume said Zimbabwe was back to “square zero”.

“The wheels have come off completely just five months after the sham election of July 30, 2018 and over a year since the departure of President Robert Mugabe,” he said.

Teachers and members of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions have threatened to down tools next week.

The labour unrest coincides with the schools’ opening on Tuesday.

NewsDay

Residents Disrupt Mnangagwa Clean Up Exercise Demonstrate Demanding Stands From Corrupt Council Officials

SCORES of disgruntled Mvurwi residents yesterday reportedly disrupted a clean-up campaign organised by the local authority, accusing council officials of denying them access to their allocated stands.

The residents, mostly vendors, claimed that they were allocated 1 500 residential stands in 2011, but have not yet been allowed to put structures on the stands.

Armed with drums and placards denouncing the alleged corruption, the angry residents under Kurai Self Aid Scheme forced council workers, who were cleaning up the town as part of the national clean-up exercise, to make a hasty retreat.

The housing scheme’s spokesperson, Gift Chikuse, accused council officials of plotting to grab the land and share it among themselves.

“We cannot clean the environment when we do not have our own houses after being denied access to build temporary structures by this rotten council,” Chikuse fumed.

The demonstrators also accused council of double allocating the stands and selling some of the land to land barons, among them top Zanu PF officials.

Chikuse claimed that over 150 stands bought by former Mazowe North MP, Chris Kuruneri to benefit Zanu PF supporters in 2002, were grabbed by one senior council official who then re-allocated them to other people.

Council chairperson Charles Hodobo described the demonstration as illegal and disruptive.

“As you can see, they are following us all over. We even tried to tell them to meet us after two hours since the clean- up exercise is only for two hours, but they refused,” Hodobo said.

“On Wednesday we summoned their spokesperson and a few of their representative to try and reach a consensus but they did not come.”

Mazowe North ward 27 councillor Fanuel Chigonero said residents should have participated in the clean-up exercise first before demonstrating.

“These residents lacked respect for the clean-up campaign which is a national event. We know it is their constitutional right to demonstrate but they should have respected the clean-up first,” Chigonero said.

NewsDay

Boarding Schools Demand Students To Bring Groceries To School As Part Of Fees Payment

SOME boarding schools are reportedly demanding that part of fees payment be in the form of groceries as they seek to cushion themselves against price hikes. Last term some boarding schools were forced to demand fees top-ups after prices of basic commodities shot up.

Schools open on Tuesday and some of them have applied to Government to increase fees.

It has emerged that some of the boarding schools are requesting that parents pay part of the fees in the form of groceries.

In an interview yesterday, Matabeleland South acting provincial education director Mr Lifias Masukume confirmed that some schools had approached his office requesting to have part of the fees paid in the form of groceries.

“Yes, they are waiting for that response. We are hoping that the request will be approved before schools open. Schools have given reasons why they want part of the fees to be paid in the form of groceries. Some schools said they had agreed with parents to provide groceries instead of hiking fees,” said Mr Masukume.

Some of the schools that are demanding groceries are Usher High School and Manama High School in Matabeleland South province.

The groceries list includes, among other foodstuffs, cooking oil, sugar beans, rice and sugar.

The Chronicle could, however, not independently verify the quantities that schools were demanding.

In Matabeleland North, the acting PED Mr Jabulani Mpofu said his province is largely rural and has not received many applications for fees hikes.

Primary and Secondary Education Deputy Minister Edgar Moyo said parents should pay what they paid last term as schools await a decision from Government on a new fees structure.

State Media

Civil Servants To Meet Government On Salaries Impasse

Minister July Moyo

THE Apex Council, the statutory body that represents civil servants in salary negotiations with Government, says it has not taken a position regarding collective job action next week, The Herald can reveal. The civil servants’ umbrella body met on Thursday and resolved to engage Government over their conditions of service. The Government has since scheduled a meeting for Monday.

In a statement yesterday, Acting Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare Minister July Moyo said invitations had been sent to members of the Apex Council and all registered public service staff associations to attend the meeting.

“Following the commitment made towards the close of 2018, Government has scheduled a meeting with all registered public service staff associations on 7th January, 2019 at 1000hrs at NSSA Building on the 11th Floor boardroom in Harare,” he said.

Minister Moyo said the meeting would discuss conditions of service for civil servants.

“This meeting is part of the commitment of Government to engage all its employees in pursuit of developing common positions in relation to the improvement of employee salaries and generally resolve any matters that impact their conditions of service,” he said.

Expected to attend the meeting are Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare Minister Dr Sekai Nzenza, Finance and Economic Development Minister Dr Mthuli Ncube, Primary and Secondary Education Minister Professor Paul Mavima, Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Development Minister Professor Amon Murwira and the chairman of the Public Service Commission Dr Vincent Hungwe.

A consultative meeting of the National Joint Negotiating Council was held last month where the workers presented a set of issues for discussion.

In an interview with The Herald yesterday, Apex Council secretary Mr David Dzatsunga said while they wanted their salaries to be improved, there was no position taken regarding a collective strike action.

“We met and came up with several resolutions. Those resolutions do not at all indicate that we have called for a strike yet. The reaction by Government will determine the next course of action we will take. We are waiting for a formal invitation from Government such that we discuss and know where we stand. It is not a secret that we want our salaries to be improved,” he said.

Minister Moyo said Monday’s meeting would consider the issues raised by the civil servants to map the way forward.

State Media