Gumbo Allays Fears Of Fuel Shortages

By Own Correspondent| Energy Minister Joram Gumbo has allayed fears of fuel shortages saying that the country has enough fuel for the next eighteen months.

Gumbo said the fuel shortages experienced from time to time are a result of failure by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) to avail foreign currency on time.

Said Gumbo in a statement:

“The contingency plan that we have put in place to augment or to complement what Government has put in place through RBZ with regards to the allocation of foreign currency, we have also been able to negotiate some facilities through IPG and Trafigura to provide us with some facilities that will actually see us getting through 18 months, which is about one-and-a-half years to supplement what Government does.

The stock-outs emanate from delays in foreign currency allocation. When foreign currency is eventually released, it takes some time to arrange the transport logistics to deliver fuel to the affected service stations.”

Mwonzora, Mudzuri In Trouble, Survives Ouster Plot Over Malaba Apology

DETAILS have emerged of a controversial meeting between MDC deputy president Elias Mudzuri and Secretary-general Douglas Mwonzora as well as Chief Justice (CJ) Luke Malaba, which has seen daggers being drawn against the two politicians.

Mudzuri and Mwonzora met Malaba and his deputy Justice Elizabeth Gwaunza at the Constitutional Court (ConCourt) in Harare where the two are accused by pro-party leader Nelson Chamisa supporters of tendering an apology to the chief justice.

This was after MDC Alliance MPs embarrassed Malaba during the swearing-in of new MPs in September.

Mwonzora and Mudzuri met Malaba soon after the ConCourt threw out Chamisa’s petition challenging President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s July 30 disputed election victory.

According to minutes of the meeting obtained by The Standard, the two wanted to mend relations between the opposition party and the judiciary following the acrimonious election dispute.

“The purpose of the meeting was to discuss the relationship between the judiciary as an arm of the state and political parties in view of recent developments and various statements on social media,” reads part of the minutes in our possession.

“It was emphasised that the purpose of the meeting was not to discuss any personalities or judgements made by the Constitutional Court.

“Hon Mudzuri thanked the Chief Justice for the meeting. He introduced the secretary-general Hon Mwonzora.

“He stated that the MDC has specific positions regarding the separation of powers, the judiciary, the Constitutional Court as well as the officers within the judiciary in particular the Chief Justice himself which it wanted to make clear to the CJ and his team. He called upon Hon Mwonzora to outline these.”

Mwonzora told the meeting that the MDC respected the doctrine of separation of powers between the executive, judiciary and the legislature, but was against the domination of one arm of the state over the others.

The two said their party had a right to criticise the behaviour of any arm of the state including the judiciary.

“That criticism should not be regarded as disrespect or contempt of that arm, but part of positive criticism, which is the cornerstone of any democratic system,” added the minutes.

Mwonzora and Mudzuri said their party stands for a truly independent judiciary, but for the judiciary to be truly independent it had to receive the necessary support from all the stakeholders.

They said the MDC would play its role both within Parliament and outside to make sure that the judiciary is not undermined and its independence preserved.

Mwonzora told the meeting that during the constitution-making process, the MDC was instrumental in the establishment of the ConCourt.

“The criticism of the Constitutional Court or any other court should be viewed as enhancing rather than diminishing its independence. Fair and objective criticism of the courts should be encouraged in Zimbabwe,” he is quoted as saying.

During the discussions, concern was raised over a number of articles on social media “maligning” the judiciary and the claims that the MDC was behind the messages.

In response, Mwonzora said the party only communicates through the office of the spokesperson and not social media.

“On the recent heckling of the Chief Justice by members of Parliament, Hon Mudzuri advised the meeting that this had not been planned by the party and appeared to have been a spontaneous reaction by the MPs to the Constitutional Court ruling in the presidential election petition,” the minutes added.

“However, the petition was clearly not a subject matter for discussion in the meeting as previously stated.

“The MDC assured the Chief Justice that the reaction of the MPs was not directed at him personally.

“He regretted it that an impression had been created in the state media that the reaction had been directed to him personally.

“He reiterated that the party and its president retained a lot of respect for the person of the Chief Justice and would maintain the distinction between the judicial officers, including the Chief Justice, and the decisions that they make.”

Malaba “thanked the MDC for the courtesy and respect that they had shown to the judiciary, the Constitutional Court as an institution and his person through this engagement”.

However, Mwonzora and Mudzuri’s opponents in the party are now using the meeting to push for their ouster.

The two, who have been linked to a group plotting to oust Chamisa, refused to comment on the matter.

-The Standard

 

No Opposition Leader Will Ever Rule Zimbabwe: Chiwenga

Vice-President Constantino Chiwenga yesterday vowed that MDC leader Nelson Chamisa will never take over as president, saying no opposition leader will ever rule the country.

Addressing Zanu PF supporters in Zvimba yesterday at a “thank you rally” organised for President Emmerson Mnangagwa, Chiwenga — who led the military coup against former president Robert Mugabe in November last year — launched an unrestrained verbal attack on Chamisa.

He described the opposition leader, who is an Apostolic Faith Mission pastor, as a false prophet and a “little bishop”.

The VP — who resurfaced last week after a long absence from public events amid reports that he was seriously ill — declared that there was no vacancy at State House.

“We hear that this young preacher is going around telling people that he is on his way to State House. That is wishful thinking,” charged Chiwenga.
“There is no vacancy at State House now and forever for opposition parties.”

He described Chamisa’s supporters as blind.

“We are saying [this] to you blind ones who could not see and voted for this little bishop — the false prophet. He elects himself and the fire refuses to light up. He elects himself and the birds return to the podium,” the VP said.

Chiwenga was referring to the Gwanzura Stadium incident where Chamisa struggled to light what his party described as a “democracy flame” and released 19 doves.

“This is what Jehovah says, we do not want to play with the name of Jehovah to that extent,” he said.

Meanwhile, Mnangagwa also fired a broadside at Chamisa, saying he was abusing the democracy ushered in following former president Robert Mugabe’s ouster by the military.

“We are doing government programmes to feed the nation like command agriculture and when some people are full, they abuse the democratic space we created for them. . . they must be warned that we are not fools,” he said.

Mnangagwa went on to compare Chamisa with MDC founding leader, the late Morgan Tsvangirai, whom he described as better than the youthful politician.
“Tsvangirai was better because he had Zimbabwe at heart. We differed with him, but he would give you his thoughts in a more mature manner,” Mnangagwa said.

Tsvangirai succumbed to cancer in February this year.

Chamisa immediately took to Twitter to mock both Mnangagwa and Chiwenga following their statements. “I am praying for sekuru Chiwenga,” he tweeted.

“He really needs grace. I thank him for acknowledging my faith and ordaining me a prophet.”

He said the VP sounded like Ian Smith with his “not in a thousand years mantra”.

He said Mnangagwa seemed to “miss my old man, the iconic MT, the man who taught me to fight oppression and injustice.”

-The Standard

 

ED Threatens Pharmacies

President Emmerson Mnangagwa has said pharmacies that demand foreign currency for medicine and medical provisions will lose their licenses.

The Head of State and Government said his administration would not stand by while the public was abused by greedy retailers who accessed foreign currency from the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, but then still demanded greenbacks from ordinary people.

At the first of his Presidential Thank You Rally at Murombedzi growth point in Zvimba yesterday, Zimbabwe’s leader also said he was firmly focused on socio-economic transformation and would from this week go around the country to launch at least 11 major projects.

Addressing thousands of people who turned out for the rally, President Mnangagwa said Government was taking tough measures on businesses that promoted economic hardships while pursuing profits.

“These pharmacies are charging in US dollars but their employees are not paid in US dollars. We sat down as Cabinet and directed the Minister of Health and Child Care, Dr Obadiah Moyo, to tell them Government is not happy with what they are doing.

“The majority of you who were now selling medical provisions, asking for US dollars, it’s not proper because you go and queue at the RBZ asking for foreign currency to import these drugs.

“There is no reason why you should, therefore, ask the public to purchase these drugs in foreign currency when you yourselves get it from the Reserve Bank.

“Those of you who do not heed this caution: danger is coming, we will withdraw your licences,” he said, drawing loud cheers from the crowd.

President Mnangagwa said he had told Industry and Commerce Minister Mangaliso Ndlovu to regularly engage business over pricing.

“Prices were going up left right and centre, but I called business leaders to State House, and immediately some of them reduced the prices. Fertiliser was increased from $35 to more than $100, but when I engaged with them, they said they would reduce it to $45.

“Most of the manufacturers and wholesalers are charging acceptable prices, but it is the retailers who have the biggest problem.

“I asked my young minister, Ndlovu, to meet with them and I am waiting for further details. But if they refuse to reduce prices then they will also lose their licenses,” he said.

The President said in line with Government’s focus on the socioeconomic sphere, Zimbabwe’s food security had been guaranteed thanks to Command Agriculture which ensured the Strategic Grain Reserve was adequately stocked.

He said Command Agriculture beneficiaries who had not abided by contractual obligations would be blacklisted until they honoured their debts.

“We are in our third year with Command Agriculture and it has been a tremendous success because we have eradicated hunger.

“We now have more than one million tonnes in the Strategic Grain Reserve so that means there is no family that will go hungry because you will receive the grain for free. You should work with your councillors, headmen and chiefs and they will assist you

“Every week (Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare) Minister (Dr Sekai) Nzenza briefs us on the food security situation because we want to make sure that no one goes hungry and all those in need of food aid can easily get it.

“We have enough grain to feed the people until next year and there should be no family in the country that should go hungry.”

The ruling party’s First Secretary added that the Presidential Inputs Scheme was non-discriminatory.

“The Presidential Inputs Scheme is not selective, it is open to everyone regardless of political affiliation,” he said. “We have 1,8 million families that … should all benefit from this programme which gives fertiliser and maize seed to every household. This should enable you to provide enough to feed the family at household level.

“Those in the opposition, MDC, are also free to benefit from this scheme. This programme is open for all and sundry.”

President Mnangagwa said his administration had enhanced democracy, and now everyone should focus on economic development, saying “none but ourselves will take the country forward”.

“Starting (this week) we will have several ground breaking ceremonies. There is going to be the new executive headquarters for Parliament on the 30th of this month.

“From there, we will go to the lithium mine project that will bring us billions (of dollars). I have a long list, at least 11 projects, on my table.”

The President said the $300 million availed for devolution in the 2018 National Budget demonstrated his Government’s commitment to inclusive development across Zimbabwe.

Present at the rally were Vice-President Dr Constantino Chiwenga, Zanu-PF National Chair Cde Oppah Muchinguri-Kashiri, and ruling party Politburo and Central Committee members among other officials.

-State Media

 

ED’s Mega Deals, A Case of ‘Garandichauya’

PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa seems to have taken a leaf from his mentor Robert Mugabe by signing investment deals worth billions of dollars — some opaque or dubious — that never see the light of day.

During Mugabe’s era, several deals were signed, especially with China raising hopes of a swift economic turnaround, only to disappear from the radar after the pomp and fanfare.

Since coming to power in November last year, Mnangagwa has been preaching the “Zimbabwe is open for business” mantra, promising to create an investor-friendly environment.

In the run-up to the July 30 elections, the president repeatedly claimed that Zimbabwe had attracted investment commitments amounting to over $16 billion since he took over power.

Some of the so-called mega deals that Mnangagwa signed were in mining, energy and tourism.

But as was during the Mugabe’s era, it is still so during the new dispensation.

Mega deals are signed with controversial companies or characters and are never implemented.

For instance, in May this year, government signed a $5,2 billion deal with a South Africa firm, Nkosikhona Holdings, for the production of over eight million litres of liquid fuels per day from coal in Hwange.

A groundbreaking ceremony for the plant was scheduled for June 1, 2018 while mining operations were expected to start in September, but none of that happened.

The deal was even granted national project status by Mnangagwa himself.

The deal raised eyebrows with analysts saying the South African company’s credentials were suspect.

Parliamentary portfolio committee on mines and mining development chairperson Temba Mliswa said it was a cause for concern that none of the deals had been implemented, almost a year after some of them were announced.

“It’s a cause for concern naturally because we expect those deals to be implemented,” he said. “Government also would not have done due diligence on those investors.”

Mliswa said failure to implement investment deals was common during the Mugabe era and the new administration seemed to be continuing with the tradition.

“These deals are critical in turning around the economy. They are a quick win,” he said. ‘The government should adopt a use it or lose it policy. We cannot continue like this.”

Mliswa also said government should review the indigenisation policy on platinum, saying it would be difficult for investors to put in their money in Zimbabwe.

Mnangagwa’s government amended the Mugabe-era Indigenisation and Economic Empowerment Act, which aimed to increase black Zimbabweans’ ownership of mines by preventing foreign entities from holding majority stakes.

The revised law exempts several sectors such as mining from the controversial 51% indigenisation threshold, but not diamond and platinum mines.

National Assembly speaker Jacob Mudenda said appropriate parliamentary committees would make follow-ups on progress in the implementation of the deals.

“What happens is that the appropriate committee will interface with the relevant minister or ministry to find out progress and that’s an ongoing exercise,” he said.

“It is the responsibility of the committee to interface with the relevant minister or ministry to find out progress.”

Bulawayo-based economic commentator Reginald Shoko said transition from commitment to implementation normally involved a lot of procedures and some of the deals would not sail through due to the prevailing economic challenges in Zimbabwe..

“There are also issues of too much red tape in government offices, which is affecting the ease of doing business,” he said.

“The delays have a serious impact on the confidence of investors in the economy, which has a negative impact on growth projections,” Shoko said.

“We are still lowly ranked in terms of competitiveness and ease of doing business.

“In short, we are still considered a risky investment destination. We will continue with high levels of unemployment and being a net importer of goods and services.”

The Southern and Eastern African Trade Information and Negotiations Institute (Seatini) recently raised a red flag over deals the government signed in the past few months, saying they were characterised by opaqueness and lack of public scrutiny.

“There are, however, discomforts emanating from the opaqueness of the processes leading to these major investment deals, as they are signed in boardrooms, with the public lacking key details to such deals,” Seatini said in a statement.

“There is no full disclosure of details and information on these deals, including full disclosure of the investors.

“Currently, there are limited forums for collective interrogation of these investment deals that are inclusive of communities and the civil society.”

Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services deputy minister Energy Mutodi insisted the deals were work in progress.

-The Standard

Zanu Pf Militia Gangs Oiled By Top Politicians, Activist Reveals

By Own Correspondent| A testimony by former Zanu PF activist Setfree Mafukidze has exposed the party’s militia gangs responsible for violence and terror on especially opposition supporters adding that these terror groups had guns.

Mafukidze, left Zanu PF during the purging of Gamatox faction that was aligned to Former Vice President Joice Mujuru.

His testimony comes at a time when another former Zanu PF youth league senior member and terror group leader Jim Kunaka gave a shocking detail of Zanu PF militia gang violence to the Kgalema Motlanthe Commission of Inquiry.

Mafukidze’s testimony reveals the various terror groups set up by Zanu PF nationally adding that some of the country’s current leadership led and oiled these terror groups.

Said Mafukidze:

“I often wondered where they got so much power and I later learnt they were financed and given adequate back up by various political Godfathers in Zanu PF who believed these young cadres would protect their powerful posts.”

Below is the full text by Mafukidze:

“I joined Zanu PF in 1997 having completed my Ordinary level the previous year and I was unemployed at the time. I had grown up an admirer of Robert Mugabe,the late Mozambican President Samora Machel, General Solomon Mujuru, Che Guevara, and Nelson Mandela.

I believed that if I wanted to be a politician the only party I could do that in was Zanu PF. I wanted in on the revolution and the transformation of the country from white rule to the black majority rules. I thought to myself that soon Mugabe would be gone and us the young take over.

I became very active in Zanu PF in the early 2000s around the time when the land reform exercise was at its peak. I believed Mugabe was right. I believed it was our land and we had to take it back and I believed we deserved all of it .

During the land reform I got to know of the existence of militia gangs in Zanu PF. I was based in Marondera at the time. There were two gangs of that nature in Marondera; one from the Dombotombo side known as The Leopards and another the Nyameni gang that had a code name Gudo.

The Gudo and the Leopard gangs were made up of young people who were fearless by their nature and they joined war veterans during farm takeovers and were very instrumental in the dispatch of violence, intimidation and displacing opposition political parties members.

The two Marondera gangs were very powerful and at first. I often wondered where they got so much power and I later learnt they were financed and given adequate back up by various political Godfathers in Zanu PF who believed these young cadres would protect their powerful posts.

It was not in me to be a member of such gangs. I always believed I had been educated and raised good enough to see what was wrong and right. By virtue of my involvement in Zanu PF youth league I ended up getting a lot of information relating to the gangs.

These gangs were never arrested by police because police feared them. If at all police arrested one gang member for whatever reason the whole gang would besiege the police station in protest. If that failed an emissary would be sent by The Godfathers to handle the situation.

Harare had Chipangano. It was empowered, well-resourced and seemed more organised (in gangster terms) it was the militant wing of ZPF Harare Province though they could be called in to assist in other Provinces. Jim Kunaka led it after its leader Ali Khan Manjengwa was shot dead.

Chipangano was powerful that they had guns. They ran commuter bus ranks, working with urban transporters association. They ran markets and collected enough money to fund themselves, if they ran short they would get funds from the Godfathers and Godmothers.

Kwekwe had what was known as Al Shabaab which was also a Militia affiliated to Zanu PF. It was behind a number of terror acts in the Midlands Province. It was and probably still is powerful because it has the money and influential politicians some of whom lead Zimbabwe today.

In Chinhoyi there was yet another gang known as Top Six wholly funded by Zanu PF kingpins and made sure that everyone tows the Zanu PF line there.

In Manicaland there was a gang which reported to and was resourced by the then all powerful Minister of State Security popularly known as Nine Fingers. The short of it is that Zanu PF was very much aware of the existence of terror militias and they sponsored them.

Anyone who wants to separate the Militia gangs I mentioned from the current crop of Zanu PF leaders is mistaken. They enlisted the services of these gangs when need arose, they used them to perpetrate some of the worst crimes and protected them.

In the next few days I will be discussing the activities of the Marondera gangs and who funded and protected them. Do not miss that one too. I will also explain how I met Jim Kunaka.

ZANU PF under the Mnangagwa administration has posed as a peaceful institution that has reformed from the one led by Robert Mugabe which was punctuated by terror.”

Top Finnish Business Executives Killed In Masvingo Plane Crash

TOP Finland listed firms confirmed Saturday evening that two top executives perished aboard the ill-fated Masvingo plane crash on Friday morning.

Among the passengers confirmed dead was 52-year-old Pekka Ojanpää, chief executive of the maintenance services and circular economy firm Lassila & Tikkanoja, Finnish media reported on Saturday.

Another of the crash victims was 51-year-old Heikki Vappula, director of forestry company UPM’s Biorefining business unit.

All of the Finns on board the ill-fated Cessna S206 aircraft were said to be men in their 50s. The pilot also died in the crash.

Reports indicate that the plane took off in cloudy conditions from an airfield near Chiredzi in the mountainous Masvingo province and was bound for Victoria Falls.

The victims’ bodies were transferred to the Masvingo hospital for forensic examinations.

Finland’s Safety Investigation Authority Otkes had not yet received any information from Zimbabwean officials about the crash, director Veli-Pekka Nurmi announced on Saturday.

“It seems that we will not get it, at least this weekend,” he added.

According to Nurmi, it does not seem likely that Otkes personnel will travel to the crash site, which is in rugged terrain, for an investigation. He noted that if the plane was manufactured in the US for example, investigators are likely to seek information in that direction.

The Otkes director said that it is quite typical for officials from different countries to cooperate on a flight crash investigation. He explained that the state in which the aircraft is registered and operated as well as the country where it was designed and manufactured all have a right to appoint a representative to take part in the investigation.

“And then there are participating states which get involved if their nationals are victims. This option only provides limited access to information. The right is restricted to information about the victims,” Nurmi pointed out.

“Typical of a light airplane crash”
Nurmi said that he had seen photos of the crash site in media reports and noted that they do not show anything unusual.

“Pretty typical traces of a light airplane crash. That’s what it looks like,” he said, adding that Cessna aircraft are reliable and widely used. He said that what can make a difference in aviation is how aircraft are maintained and serviced.

“Even good planes can malfunction if they are neglected and vice versa,” Nurmi declared.

— Yle Finland

Thokozani Khupe’s MDC Makes Suprise Visit To Gogo Tsvangirai

Gogo Tsvangirai

By Own Correspondent| Several party members from the MDC T led by Dr Thokozani Khupe made a surprise visit to the late Morgan Tsvangirai’s mother, Gogo Tsvangirai.

The team, comprising of the party’s Secretary General Nickson Nyikadzino nicknamed Cde Mao and MDC-T’s Harare and Mashonaland East provincial leadership surprised Gogo Tsvangirai when they arrived with a few groceries for the late icon’s surviving mother.

The MDC T leadership also visited the late founding father of the MDC T Morgan and his late wife Susan Tsvangirai’s graves as shown in the picture below:

 

 

Mugabe Bedridden In Singapore: ED

President Emmerson Mnangagwa yesterday revealed that his predecessor Robert Mugabe is now unable to walk, an indication that the 94-year-old’s health continues to deteriorate.

Mnangagwa told a Zanu PF rally in Zvimba’s Murombedzi area that Mugabe was receiving medical treatment in Singapore and would return home this week.
“He is now old. Of course, he now is unable to walk, but whatever he asks for we will provide,” he said.

Mnangagwa said Mugabe had been unwell in Singapore, but he was informed that he would return home on Friday.

Mugabe left Singapore almost two months ago.

“We are looking after him. He is the founding father of the nation of Zimbabwe. He is our founding father of a free Zimbabwe,” Mnangagwa said.

“For two months now, he has been in Singapore receiving treatment. He was supposed to come back home on October 25, but his health was not yet good.

“But I have received a message just now that he is now getting better and will come back on 30 November.”

Last week marked a year after Mugabe was forced to step down following a coup.

Mnangagwa became president on November 24 last year, ending Mugabe’s 37-year rule

-The Standard

 

Mnangagwa Told To Stop “Thank You Rallies” And Send Thank You Cards To Malaba And Chigumba

Own Correspondent|Zimbabweans have generally castigated President Emmerson Mnangagwa for carrying out his on going “Thank you” rallies that kicked off in Mashonaland West on Saturday.

Social media critics have all but declared the rallies as useless and waste of money. One critic attracted a lot of attention from readers on President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s Facebook page declaring that the President should not bother carrying out the rallies but merely send “Thank You Cards” to ZEC Chairperson Priscilla Chigumba and Chief Justice Luke Malaba “who delivered the presidential election victory to him.”

“That rally was a waste of time and money, you should simply have sent THANK YOU cards to Malaba and Chigumba, you owe them a lot, because Zimbabweans certainly did not put you where you are now, at the throne,” said the reader in response to Mnangagwa’s post about his rally.

Main opposition party the MDC Alliance and other opposition political parties declared that ZEC rigged the July 30 elections in favour of Mnangagwa while the MDC further castigated Supreme Court Judge, Justice Malaba of unfairly ruling in favour of Mnangagwa an MDC appeal against the election results.

Mnangagwa had written on his Facebook page shortly after the rally;

“Today I was in Murombedzi to thank the people of Mashonaland West for their support, and to update them on the steps we are taking to build a stronger Zimbabwe for all.

I explained how we are increasing our production of crucial crops such as grain, tobacco and soya bean; addressing the cost and ease of doing business to attract investment; and developing a new diamond policy that will be announced in the coming weeks.

As seen in Thursday’s budget, we are working tirelessly to restructure, reform and rebuild our economy, and I am confident that the measures we are enacting today will create a better and more secure future for generations to come.”

ZIFA Circus Continues As Kamambo Plots High Court Battle To Stop Chiyangwa Corronation

It’s six days before the Zifa elections, but the end of a battle between the disqualified aspiring office bearers Felton Kamambo and Gift Banda and the national association, led by businessman Phillip Chiyangwa, is nowhere in sight.

Aspiring Zifa president Kamambo and Banda, who was eyeing the vice-president’s position, both disqualified from taking part in the elections are refusing to throw in the towel until justice is served.

Three days ago, the appeals committee, dismissed as “a kangaroo court”, upheld the disqualification of the duo, who wanted to challenge Chiyangwa and his deputy Omega Sibanda respectively, by the electoral committee.

Fifa are dragging their feet on the matter and by Tuesday, Kamambo and Banda have vowed to approach the courts to stop elections from taking place next Saturday.

“We have exhausted all the possible channels in football so that our case can be heard. We have written to Fifa and the Ministry of Sports and if there is no favourable response by Tuesday, then we are exercising our constitutional right to approach the court of law,” Banda told Standardsport.

“We have to stop these elections. We can’t stand by and allow this fraud to go on. It has got to stop and it’s our responsibility to see that our football is clean and run in a proper manner.”

Banda was reacting to the appeals committee judgement, which dismissed their appeals on Thursday — 17 days after the appeal papers were submitted.

It is interesting to note that judgement in any appeal is supposed to be given not more than four days after submission of the papers.

But the appeals committee blamed Zifa for the mishap and Kamambo, who they accuse of paying the fee in bits and pieces, thus potentially causing the delay.

“We have raised it within our judgement that the secretariat should have presented the appeals before the appeals committee expeditiously. It’s a cause for concern. We only received the papers on November 20,” Tafadzwa Mazonde, who chaired the appeals committee, told reporters.

“But as you would appreciate we would assume there were certain modalities that were supposed to be made before the appeals were presented before us. For example, in the case of Mr Kamambo the payments were staggered, but the secretariat is in a better position to explain why they delayed.

“What is important to note in terms of the Zifa constitution is that there are no prescribed rules for the appeals committee so as a result the committee makes those rules as and when it sees.”

In wanton breach of the electoral code, subsequently raising eyebrows on their intentions, the appeals committee passed a judgement without even inviting the appellants to present their case.

Mazonde also declared that the apeals committe’s judgement was final and the appellants would have to correct the issues that caused their disqualification in time for the next election in 2022.

Chiyangwa and company have remained headstrong in the bid to bar Kamambo and Banda from contesting in the impending elections.

Other sources claim that the Zifa boss wants to cover up for the level of misappropriation of funds that is rampant in the association, which is always claiming to be bankrupt.

“I think the Chiyangwa led executive has a lot of skeletons in the closet and they can’t afford to have any new person take over the system. Do you know that all the money that Zifa receives goes into individuals’ accounts?” a source who refused to be named said.

“The money from Fifa and the Cosafa winners’ cheque was deposited into the account of Philemon Machana [the Zifa committee member in charge of finance] in South Africa. The money, which is in forex, is actually traded on the black market before it is turned into RTGS. If a forensic audit is conducted, heads will surely roll at Zifa. You can ask Machana about it,” the source said.

Efforts to get a comment from Machana were fruitless as his mobile phone was unreachable.

In another twist to the Zifa elections case, Banda is set to report Zifa for fraud after illegally raising the appeals fees to $10 000 up from the $3 000, which was unanimously agreed at the annual general meeting in February.

“On another platform, I am going to report them for fraud for raising the appeals fees. It’s well-documented that the fees were pegged at $3 000 at the AGM, but I wonder where the $10 000 came from,” said Banda.

The disqualification of Banda and Kamambo has even overshadowed the election, which hangs in the balance.

-The Standard

 

Sexually Harassed MDC MP Speaks Out

MDC Member of Parliament Lynette Karenyi, who was injured during last week’s chaos in Parliament, says the national assembly risks losing its integrity by allowing violence to be perpetrated against women.

Karenyi, who sustained injuries on her left arm and leg, said their treatment by the police was disrespectful and as women they felt violated.

“The speaker (Jacob Mudenda) failed us by allowing the police to come into parliament to forcibly remove us. There is no section of the law which says police should be called in if people refuse to stand up in the presence of the President,” she fumed.

The outspoken legislator said she was targeted because she had earlier raised an issue about alleged sexual harassment of female MPs by their male counterparts.

“The police were targeting specific people and I felt that it was because of the issue I had raised which exposed some male MPs,” she said, adding that the Zanu PF legislators were not happy that she had exposed the rot.

Karenyi said female MPs were constantly harassed by some male legislators.

“The young and new female members are now scared to even contribute because they will be harassed,” she said.

The legislator said at times they would shout obscenities and harangue the female legislators.

“I am one of the few who are not afraid to stand up and speak and that is why I raised the issue,” she said.

Karenyi said when President Emmerson Mnangagwa walked into the National Assembly for the budget presentation on Thursday, the MDC legislators remained seated.

“As usual, we did not stand up and the Speaker said because we had disobeyed orders to stand up, he was calling in the police,” she said.

Karenyi said there was no justification for Mudenda to call in the police because they were not making any noise and were calm.

“The police came in targeting people and I was also picked on,” she said. “They dragged me around and in the process my dress was drawn up exposing my legs. That is just plain disrespectful.

Karenyi claimed that she was stamped on and some people fell on top of her as she sat on the floor resisting being forced out.

She was taken to Avenues Clinic along with another female legislator, Tabitha Khumalo, who had collapsed during the melee.

A video which has since gone viral shows Khumalo losing her balance before collapsing on the ground.

Standard

Botswana Choppies Directors Dismiss Mphoko And Son From The Venture

THE battle for the control of supermarket chain, Choppies Zimbabwe, pitting former vice-president Phelekezela Mphoko’s family and its foreign business partners has taken a nasty turn after the Botswana investors barred workers from talking to the politician.

The Mphoko family is embroiled in an ownership wrangle with their Botswana-registered Choppies Distribution Centre (Proprietary) Limited business partners.

The boardroom war has spilled into the High Court with the Botswana-headquartered company seeking to bar the Mphoko family from interfering with operations of the business.

Botswana-based Choppies group CEO Ottapathu Ramachandran last week wrote a memo to local Choppies employees threatening them for dealing with the Mphokos.

The letter, dated November 19, came after Mphoko and his son Siqokoqela met Choppies employees at the company’s Bulawayo headquarters that morning to hear their grievances ranging from poor pay, sexual harassment, to unfair dismissal and racial attacks by their Indian managers.

“Kindly note that Mr P Mphoko and Mr S Mphoko do not have a financial or operational say in the business of Nanavac. We strongly request that all employees desist from dealing with the above-mentioned persons with immediate effect,” Ramachandran wrote in the memo.

“Any action taken as a result from the above-mentioned persons will be contrary to the company rules and procedures and disciplinary action will be taken against the responsible employee (s).”

Mphoko and his son insist they are the majority shareholders of Choppies Zimbabwe through their local investment vehicle, Nanavac, with 51%.

However, the Botswana investors say the Mphokos only own 7% shareholding. The foreign investors’ claim the Mphokos were only drafted into the business to by-pass the then 51% mandatory Indigenisation laws.

Mphoko argues his business partners want to take advantage of his political situation since he was fired from government and the ruling Zanu PF party.

The High Court is yet to make a ruling on the ownership dispute.

Mphoko’s lawyer, Welshman Ncube, told The Standard on Friday that the Botswana-based Choppies CEO was offside in saying the ex-VP had no financial or operational say in the running of the business.

“He has no right to write a letter like that as his claim that they have exclusive rights in managing the business is still pending at the High Court. They applied for exclusive rights and we opposed it,” Ncube said in a telephone interview adding: “he is trying to execute an order that has not been given.”

Choppies human resources manager Sipho Mpofu yesterday said he was on leave and could not comment while Ramachandran could not be reached for comment.

Meanwhile, Ramachandran’s memo has angered the Choppies national workers’ committee and their representative trade union, Commercial Workers’ Union of Zimbabwe (CWUZ).

This is amid workers’ claims of sexual harassment of female staff, unfair dismissals, low pay and racial attacks where some black employees are allegedly even called baboons by their managers of Indian origin.

“Your email does not address the bread and butter hostile issues that workers have been subjected to from unprofessional Indian managers. In our view, your email also threatens the workers just like the managers,” Zwelithini Malinga, the chairperson of the Choppies national workers’ committee, wrote in a letter dated November 20 addressed to Ramachandran that is also copied to the Choppies board of directors

“The Indian managers practice racism, sexual harassment of female staff, and vulgar language like Africans are baboons and monkeys, which is a violation of labour laws of Zimbabwe.”

Malinga on Friday said the workers’ committee wanted the directors to stop harassing employees in their boardroom war with the Mphokos, adding “as far as we are concerned, we know the Mphokos have 51% shareholding”.

The CWUZ weighed in with a statement: “We will not, as a trade union, tolerate that behaviour. The employees have a right to approach the Mphokos until the ownership dispute is resolved.

“The action by the workers’ committee to approach the Mphokos is correct since they are also the directors of the business as things stand.”

Standard

Smith Said “Never,” Grace Said “Never,” And Now Chiwenga Screams “Never!”

Own Correspondent|A ZimEye.com reader has warned Vice President Constantino Guvheya Chiwenga against declaring that MDC leader Nelson Chamisa will never rule Zimbabwe.

In a facebook response on an article on ZimEye.com, reader Baba Dee Chauruka warned Chiwenga that Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith once declared that black people will never rule Zimbabwe and he shortly after fell from power.

He wrote as follows:
“We heard that (Ian) Smith used to say no black person will ever rule Zimbabwe, then before 17 November (2017) Grace (Mugabe) used to say there is no vacancy at the state house..so never say never my Vice President because nyika ino yatigere ine mwene wayo kana iye akati chamisa ngaachitonga muchida VP musingade anongotonga.

Be careful of your words musaonererwe ne vanhu ndizvo zvakazourayisa Herod vanhu vati harisi inzwi remunhu inzwi ra Mwari. Its been a year since mapinda panyanga hapana chatati taona chinobutika chamati maita so far but only to remind us of the liberation struggle zvoita sekunge makaenda musango muri mega mukanosunungura nyika.

Chatinoda kunzwa kwamuri VP ndechekuti gore zvarakwana pasina industry yavhurwa but kutovharwa kwawo,muri kufungei nechimiro chiri munika medu parizvino..”

Nick Mangwana Says Mnangagwa Created 800k Jobs Since Taking Over From Mugabe

It is a year since President Emmerson Mnangagwa came into power after the army dislodged long-time ruler Robert Mugabe in dramatic fashion.

Mnangagwa, who bounced back a few days after being fired by Mugabe, promised to set Zimbabwe on a different trajectory of democracy and rapid economic growth.

He promised to be the total opposite of his mentor, whose legacy was economic ruin and dictatorship.

To take stock of Mnangagwa’s presidency, our senior reporter Veneranda Langa (VL) had a wide-ranging interview with Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services permanent secretary Ndavaningi “Nick” Mangwana.

Mangwana described the president’s first year in office as an overwhelming success, claiming 800 000 jobs had been created.

Below are excerpts from the interview.

VL: How would you describe President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s first year in office?

NNM: President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s first year in office has been very successful to the extent that his main thrust has been to deal with fundamental issues like, firstly, the fundamentals that improve our democracy, as well as economic fundamentals that will ensure there is an economic turnaround with regard to national aspirations as per vision 2030, whose aim is to turn Zimbabwe into an upper middle income country.

He was also very successful in instilling national culture to ensure that everybody comes together to embrace the national vision — not in a partisan manner, but as a national aspiration.

Vision 2023 does not look at who wins the elections in 2030. The point is that as a nation we should agree that Zimbabwe should be an upper middle class income economy in terms of changing the national culture and setting the tone for achieving vision 2023.

VL: There is a school of thought that Mugabe the person is gone, but Mugabeism remains and they cite unfair treatment of the opposition, compromised judiciary and rights violations, among other things. What is your reaction to that?

NNM: That is a false narrative in the sense that the opposition has particularly been very fairly treated, and in Zimbabwe there is an opposition that can do whatever they want.

However, whenever there is a court judgement which goes against the opposition, then people say that the judiciary is compromised — and that is a false narrative.

Judgements have actually been given against the president and an example is the case of the 27 people that have so far been arrested for corruption.

If the judiciary was indeed compromised, it would do a lot of good for the president if they were all convicted, but that is not happening.

If the evidence that is presented before the courts is not beyond the shadow of doubt and does not pass that bar, then the accused persons are acquitted, and that is not a compromised judiciary.

Everyone has a losing stake if they go to the courts. If you take 20 weak cases, then you will lose; but if they are strong, then you will get 20 judgements in your favour.

You cannot go to the courts with a very weak case and think that the judges will work miracles.

VL: In your view, why has the new government taken so long to realign the various laws to the constitution?

NNM: President Emmerson Mnangagwa was inaugurated at the end of August, and alignment of laws is a process.

The Ninth Parliament was sworn in on September 6 — that is only two months ago and you can see that there has been a lot of movement in the alignment of laws.

For instance, in my ministry there are already consultations being made with stakeholders in the information and media industry to align laws.

We want to involve everybody and use an all-inclusive approach, and if we did not consider that by now we would be presenting Bills before Parliament without the people’s input.

It is not a question of realigning the laws, but a question of what else do we want in those laws so that we widen them and strengthen the democratic space.

Right now, on our ministry’s Twitter handle we have already put in our proposals for the Access to Information and Protection to Privacy Act (Aippa) and we want three pieces of legislation to come from Aippa, and we are listening to what people are saying. So, alignment of laws is something that government is totally seized with.

VL: What do you consider to be the major highlights of Mnangagwa’s first year in office?

NNM: One of the major highlights is the appointment of the current Cabinet, which defied all political history.

It is a progressive Cabinet, is all, inclusive, and has taken in people from across the political divide and very competent people.

The free and fair elections on July 30 were a major highlight because people campaigned freely and international media was allowed in.

For 20 years it had never happened that international observers would be allowed to move freely and access polling stations as they did and those were some of the major highlights.

VL: In the run-up to the elections, Mnangagwa signed investment deals worth over $16 billion and the government promised that this would lead to a swift economic turnaround. Why has government suddenly gone quiet about these deals yet Zimbabweans are feeling the heat from a deteriorating economy?

NNM: Government has not gone quiet. You do not implement deals worth $12,2 billion in two months because those are long-term investments, which need everything to be in place, including funding itself.

In two months, government clinched the Karo Resources investment in Mashonaland West.

Go to Ngezi and see what is happening there. Actually, Karo Resources was operationalising that deal with the president last week.

A deal of $12,2 billion is a long-term investment, which needs everything to be in place, including funding itself.

These companies do not have bags of money — they go to look for partners and funding from banks and that funding is coming in.

Go to Hwange right now and see the Zesa projects, which are some of the deals.

Money is also coming in for the Cold Storage Company (CSC).

Investment is happening, but it is not happening overnight. Right now, 800 000 people have got jobs in a short period and it shows that this is not a joke.

VL: There are reports of bad blood between Mnangagwa and Vice-President Constantino Chiwenga and utterances by Zanu PF youths as well as former presidential advisor Chris Mutsvangwa seem to lend credence to those reports. What is the source ofthe friction? Are we witnessing a fight over the share of the spoils from toppling Mugabe?

NNM: There is no bad blood between these two people. People in Zimbabwe like drama, but there is no drama in the presidium.

In fact, I have the privilege to be with both Mnangagwa and Chiwenga in the same room and there is rapport and chemistry between them.

When it comes to comments about some people — I am not going to comment on any particular individual, but I would like to say that Zanu PF is a party, which has internal democracy and people are given the freedom to say their opinions and enjoy section 61 of their constitutional rights.

What they say is their personal opinions and is not the opinion of Zanu PF or the ministry of Information.

It is just an opinion of a person and it does not make it a Zanu PF position.

When persons hold personal opinions, it does not make it a government opinion or party position.

Mnangagwa and Chiwenga are actually friends. When you talk about spoils to share — what spoils? There are no spoils to share.

Zimbabwe is not a bounty where people get to share spoils.

The only thing that is there to share is a vision to be attained and responsibilities to be shared.

VL: Did the meeting between Mnangagwa and Mugabe that was mooted soon after the coup eventually happen, and if not, what is delaying it?

NNM: I am not aware of any meeting, or even that such a meeting was ever proposed.

We now have a president and a former president, but who says they should meet and do what? It is up to them to decide to meet or not. As far as I am concerned, whoever the president meets outside work is his business, and has nothing to do with how government operates.

Mnangagwa has a relationship with Mugabe and they can meet, but whatever meeting they have has nothing to do with news.

Actually, Mnangagwa can meet anyone in the country whenever he likes.

He met Trevor Ncube (Alpha Media Holdings chairman), and so whoever Mnangagwa meets is not a Mugabe issue.

Mugabe is now a retired old man at home and he can also meet anyone he likes. Even yourself, you can make an arrangement to meet him too.

VL: There are also claims in some quarters that the current arrests over corruptionrelated cases are targeting the president’s opponents. How genuine is the anti-corruption campaign?

NNM: Are you saying that Ginimbi (Genius Kadungure) and Wicknell Chivayo, former Health minister David Parirenyatwa and others that have been arrested for corruption are opponents of the president?

So who is the president’s opponent? Let me explain to you who the president’s opponents were during the July elections.

His opponents were the 22 presidential candidates who opposed his election, like Nelson Chamisa (MDC Alliance), Thokozani Khupe (MDC-T) and the other candidates.

Those were the opponents, but have they ever been arrested for corruption? Can you say Ginimbi who has been arrested is the president’s opponent?

VL: A year after the coup, we are yet to see the arrest of the so-called criminals that surrounded Mugabe. Was that statement mere rhetoric used to justify the military involvement in Mugabe’s ouster?

NNM: There was no coup, what coup? It was an intervention, and when the now Foreign Affairs minister Sibusiso Moyo said we were only after criminals, some of these criminals ran away, while others were arrested.

The thing was that during that time there was organised crime and they were destroying the country’s infrastructure with impunity.

There were criminal syndicates around roadblocks and no one knew where the money collected went.

There was organised crime in Zimdef projects and lack of transparency and accountability.

Even the Auditor-General’s reports indicate that there was a lot of pillage of natural resources, and you cannot deny it.

These criminals are either on the run, being arrested or appearing before the courts.

VL: Is the recently unveiled Zanu PF youth league slogan #ED2023 not a contradiction of the president’s pledge that his presidency will be about the economy first?

NNM: Zanu PF is a political party and the party constitution says that at every conference — of which we have one in December — the party shall affirm that the person elected at the previous congress is going to be the presidential candidate for the next election, which means this conversation is going to happen in 2019, 2020, 2021 and 2023 to pass the resolution that Mnangagwa is the presidential candidate.

Whichever person is chosen at congress, and then it means that conversation will continue every year.

There is, therefore, no contradiction between the presidential narrative and the constitutional narrative.

Standard

NPRC Needs To Deliver Genuine Healing To Zimbabwe

The National Transitional Justice Working Group (NTJWG) held a three-day symposium in Bulawayo that ended on Friday to set the tone for transitional justice in the country. The symposium was attended by National Peace and Reconciliation Commission (NPRC) chairperson Justice Sello Nare. Our chief reporter Everson Mushava (EM) had an exclusive interview with NTJWG chairman Alec Muchadehama (AM) on Zimbabwe’s transitional justice mechanisms and government’s commitment to the cause. Muchadehama said the symposium held, under the theme “Never Again — Setting the Transitional Justice Agenda in Zimbabwe”, was an invitation to the people of Zimbabwe to take some time, step back and reflect on how best to finally bring an end to violence and set the country on a genuinely new trajectory. Below are excerpts from the interview.

EM: What is the significance of the symposium being held in Bulawayo?

AM: It is that place of warmth, a place that is home to many Zimbabweans — the victims of many past and continuing atrocities — a place of untold suffering. With this richness, Bulawayo has become the birthplace of a national “Never Again” movement.

EM: Are you seeing any positive results from your 10 years of advocacy for transitional justice in Zimbabwe?

AM: We have to acknowledge that our context is very complex. This is a country where fear rules the day and the message of transitional justice is not so palatable for our government. There are temptations to tone down on principle to get government buy-in. This is because the government houses many perpetrators of human rights abuse and these are people with power. For them, they understand the message of transitional justice to mean prosecution, International Criminal Court and things like that, but transitional justice is not about individuals or witch-hunting.

EM: The government set up the NPRC to lay the foundation for transitional justice processes. What is your assessment of the commission’s commitment to transitional justice so far?

AM: There are a number of issues that we are worried about regarding the commission. The commission is still to assert its independence from the executive and this is proving to be difficult each day as the executive is visibly seen to be interfering with the work of the commission, especially through resource starvation. This is why it has been difficult for the commission to build its own capacity, infrastructure and independent secretariat.

We also see reluctance in the commission’s strategic plan to tackle hard transitional justice issues like justice and accountability, but rather preferring to pitch themselves as more of only a peace-building outfit.

We, however, acknowledge the vigilance of some commissioners who have, with minimum resources, gone out of their way to confront some merchants of violence in areas like Mount Darwin and others. We also note the goodwill of the commission in engaging civil society. When Zenzele Ndebele launched his (Gukurahundi) documentary here in Bulawayo, it was the NPRC that stood up and supported the initiative even when the state wanted to interfere with that process. There is great potential in the NPRC, if only the executive could get out of their way and let them have their own independent secretariat and independent offices to do what the constitution requires them to do.

EM: You started your campaign for transitional justice during Robert Mugabe’s administration and now we are under the new leadership of President Emmerson Mnangagwa. Is there any difference between the two in handling transitional justice?

AM: We were pleased that the new administration quickly signed into law the NPRC Act, which operationalised the NPRC. We were pleased when the president appointed a seasoned peace-builder, Clever Nyathi, as an advisor. These were good gestures. We were, however, deeply saddened with the August 1 killing of civilians by soldiers. We were saddened when the president evaded responsibility as this began to feel like the same old regime. We are very saddened with the way the [Kgalema] Motlanthe Commission has done its work, especially the failure to protect victims here in Bulawayo. We are not happy that government seems to be undermining independent commissions.

EM: Do you think a commission of inquiry is the best way of establishing the truth and achieving justice for the victims?

AM: There is no one way of establishing the truth and it is not up to us to choose for government. But we can, as a matter of principle, see problems with that step. As soon as that commission was established, we issued a guidance note. There were issues: the mandate of the commission was flawed. In principle, appointing a commission of inquiry to do the work which another constitutional commission is mandated to do is undermining such an institution. We would be happier with this investigation being done by the Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission or the NPRC.

EM: What do you think are the shortfalls of Mnangagwa’s approach considering the testimonies that have been given so far by civilians, doctors as well as the security establishment?

AM: The Motlanthe Commission appears more like a public relations job than a real investigation into human rights violations. Out of the more than 30 cases submitted by the Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission, only three have been invited. In Gweru, witnesses were brought in from as far as Chiundura. The secretariat of the commission is from the Ministry of Justice. There is no criterion on how evidence is collected. These are serious shortfalls.

EM: What do you mean by saying the appointment of the commission is a mere public relations stunt?

AM: There is no science to this. There are domestic institutions that are mandated to carry out such investigations. Abandoning such institutions and opting for foreigners says a lot about building local capacity for accountability. International principles of institutional reform require that we invest in building local capacity before we reach out. It then appears like the government is more worried about its international image than care for its people. We had reservations about the commission from the start.

We did not agree that this is the way to go. Some people went to court and the court found otherwise. The commander-in-chief is the president who appointed the same commission. When you appoint such a commission, there should be no controversy around it and how it is supposed to carry out its work and how it is going to carry out its investigations. Right now, there is no criteria used to decide whom to invite for questioning.

Some of the people they are calling are not stating facts, but opinions and half-truths, some of them coming to comment and tell outright lies.

EM: So with the many shortfalls you have noted, do you think the outcome of the commission’s report would be credible?

AM: There are places where commissions operate under very difficult conditions and they still manage to defeat the forces of adversity. The credibility of the outcome is based on adherence to principles of victim-centredness. Issues of ensuring effective remedy for victims come in. However, the commission cannot run away from the credibility of the process because these are also outcomes. Like the fact that people were victimised in Bulawayo and the commission did nothing to protect them. In short, we need to look at the whole picture, not just the report. The commission’s work is clashing with what the police are doing.

I know police arrested over 40 people, mainly MDC activists, for alleged violence, but police have not arrested any police officer or army personnel who participated, especially the people who shot, they are known. The suspicion is there, the commission is there to cover up criminal acts done in broad daylight. There was no need for a commission; the police could have done the investigations with the help of commissions such as the NPRC.

The police have dealt with worse violence. The police have the capacity to trace the weapon to know where it came from, therefore who used it. There is an attempt to gloss over the events.

Standard

Chiwenga Says “Little Bishop” Chamisa Will Never Be President Of Zimbabwe

Vice-President Constantino Chiwenga yesterday vowed that MDC leader Nelson Chamisa will never take over as president, saying no opposition leader will ever rule the country.

Addressing Zanu PF supporters in Zvimba yesterday at a “thank you rally” organised for President Emmerson Mnangagwa, Chiwenga — who led the military coup against former president Robert Mugabe in November last year — launched an unrestrained verbal attack on Chamisa.

He described the opposition leader, who is an Apostolic Faith Mission pastor, as a false prophet and a “little bishop”.

The VP — who resurfaced last week after a long absence from public events amid reports that he was seriously ill — declared that there was no vacancy at State House.

“We hear that this young preacher is going around telling people that he is on his way to State House. That is wishful thinking,” charged Chiwenga.

“There is no vacancy at State House now and forever for opposition parties.”

He described Chamisa’s supporters as blind.

“We are saying [this] to you blind ones who could not see and voted for this little bishop — the false prophet. He elects himself and the fire refuses to light up. He elects himself and the birds return to the podium,” the VP said.

Chiwenga was referring to the Gwanzura Stadium incident where Chamisa struggled to light what his party described as a “democracy flame” and released 19 doves.

“This is what Jehovah says, we do not want to play with the name of Jehovah to that extent,” he said.

Meanwhile, Mnangagwa also fired a broadside at Chamisa, saying he was abusing the democracy ushered in following former president Robert Mugabe’s ouster by the military.

“We are doing government programmes to feed the nation like command agriculture and when some people are full, they abuse the democratic space we created for them. . . they must be warned that we are not fools,” he said.

Mnangagwa went on to compare Chamisa with MDC founding leader, the late Morgan Tsvangirai, whom he described as better than the youthful politician.

“Tsvangirai was better because he had Zimbabwe at heart. We differed with him, but he would give you his thoughts in a more mature manner,” Mnangagwa said.

Tsvangirai succumbed to cancer in February this year.

Chamisa immediately took to Twitter to mock both Mnangagwa and Chiwenga following their statements. “I am praying for sekuru Chiwenga,” he tweeted.

“He really needs grace. I thank him for acknowledging my faith and ordaining me a prophet.”

He said the VP sounded like Ian Smith with his “not in a thousand years mantra”.

He said Mnangagwa seemed to “miss my old man, the iconic MT, the man who taught me to fight oppression and injustice.”

Standard

Chiwenga Says He Has No Presidential Ambitions

By Own Correspondent| Vice President Constantino Chiwenga has revealed that no- one can replace President Emmerson Mnangagwa even through the ballot.

VP Chiwenga said Mnangagwa will only  leave power when he feels it is time to go and when he has fully restored the country to its former glory.

Addressing ZANU PF supporters who had gathered for the ‘Thank You’ rally at Murombedzi Growth Point in Zvimba on Saturday, Chiwenga said:

“In all the coming elections, no one is going to remove Shumba Murambwi (President Mnangagwa). We are here until he feels it is the time to go and when we have fully restored our country to its former glory and when everything is in order.

No one must dream of being the President. We want our country to prosper and it is time to move the country forward. It’s no longer time for bickering and politics. From here going forward, we are now talking of politics of development, of building the country and moving the country forward.

Politics of child’s play will not help us in any way. Shumba Murambwi is there to stay because he is an anointed one from the King.

Never ever dream that after so and so years it will be your time, there is no vacancy, there is nowhere to get in. Listen and listen very carefully. To those who were howling in these last days, keep quiet and keep quiet forever.

We want to build a strong Zimbabwe that can move forward. There is nothing he has done wrong, the son from the Shumba clan.”

ZIFA Elections Hang In Balance

It’s six days before the Zifa elections, but the end of a battle between the disqualified aspiring office bearers Felton Kamambo and Gift Banda and the national association, led by businessman Phillip Chiyangwa, is nowhere in sight.

Aspiring Zifa president Kamambo and Banda, who was eyeing the vice-president’s position, both disqualified from taking part in the elections are refusing to throw in the towel until justice is served.

Three days ago, the appeals committee, dismissed as “a kangaroo court”, upheld the disqualification of the duo, who wanted to challenge Chiyangwa and his deputy Omega Sibanda respectively, by the electoral committee.

Fifa are dragging their feet on the matter and by Tuesday, Kamambo and Banda have vowed to approach the courts to stop elections from taking place next Saturday.

“We have exhausted all the possible channels in football so that our case can be heard. We have written to Fifa and the Ministry of Sports and if there is no favourable response by Tuesday, then we are exercising our constitutional right to approach the court of law,” Banda said.

“We have to stop these elections. We can’t stand by and allow this fraud to go on. It has got to stop and it’s our responsibility to see that our football is clean and run in a proper manner.”

Banda was reacting to the appeals committee judgement, which dismissed their appeals on Thursday — 17 days after the appeal papers were submitted.

It is interesting to note that judgement in any appeal is supposed to be given not more than four days after submission of the papers.

But the appeals committee blamed Zifa for the mishap and Kamambo, who they accuse of paying the fee in bits and pieces, thus potentially causing the delay.

“We have raised it within our judgement that the secretariat should have presented the appeals before the appeals committee expeditiously. It’s a cause for concern. We only received the papers on November 20,” Tafadzwa Mazonde, who chaired the appeals committee, told reporters.

“But as you would appreciate we would assume there were certain modalities that were supposed to be made before the appeals were presented before us. For example, in the case of Mr Kamambo the payments were staggered, but the secretariat is in a better position to explain why they delayed.

“What is important to note in terms of the Zifa constitution is that there are no prescribed rules for the appeals committee so as a result the committee makes those rules as and when it sees.”

In wanton breach of the electoral code, subsequently raising eyebrows on their intentions, the appeals committee passed a judgement without even inviting the appellants to present their case.

Mazonde also declared that the apeals committe’s judgement was final and the appellants would have to correct the issues that caused their disqualification in time for the next election in 2022.

Chiyangwa and company have remained headstrong in the bid to bar Kamambo and Banda from contesting in the impending elections.

Other sources claim that the Zifa boss wants to cover up for the level of misappropriation of funds that is rampant in the association, which is always claiming to be bankrupt.

“I think the Chiyangwa led executive has a lot of skeletons in the closet and they can’t afford to have any new person take over the system. Do you know that all the money that Zifa receives goes into individuals’ accounts?” a source who refused to be named said.

“The money from Fifa and the Cosafa winners’ cheque was deposited into the account of Philemon Machana [the Zifa committee member in charge of finance] in South Africa. The money, which is in forex, is actually traded on the black market before it is turned into RTGS. If a forensic audit is conducted, heads will surely roll at Zifa. You can ask Machana about it,” the source said.

Efforts to get a comment from Machana were fruitless as his mobile phone was unreachable.

In another twist to the Zifa elections case, Banda is set to report Zifa for fraud after illegally raising the appeals fees to $10 000 up from the $3 000, which was unanimously agreed at the annual general meeting in February.

“On another platform, I am going to report them for fraud for raising the appeals fees. It’s well-documented that the fees were pegged at $3 000 at the AGM, but I wonder where the $10 000 came from,” said Banda.

The disqualification of Banda and Kamambo has even overshadowed the election, which hangs in the balance.

Standard

Shock As Workers Representatives Demand Reinstatement Of Dismissed Green Bombers

Own Correspondent|The Apex council, a representative umbrella body representing civil servants has taken a swipe at government’s decision to retire at least 3000 youth officers who were retired on the basis that their wage bill was a burden to the fiscus as it gobbles $1.15 million a month.

The Apex council accused government of not following proper labour law procedure in regards termination of employment and retrenchment as enshrined in the constitution.

The council however ignored to consider how the youth were engaged into government service in the first place.

In a statement released by the Apex council over the weekend, government must have issued a notice given to the affected youth officers .

“It is shocking that government is intending to retire certain categories of civil servants (eg youth officers) by December 31 2018 and that without sufficient notice and against relevant existing status on retrenchment,” the council said.

In his 2018 budget presentation ,finance minister Mthuli Ncube proposed the retirement of close to 3000 youth officers by the end of the year.

Ncube noted that the youth officers‘ wage bill gobbled $1.15 million with each officer taking home $395 as remuneration.

This had become a burden to the fiscus and the termination of the officers will see government saving $13,8 million annually.

Ncube is working in cahoots with the Public Service Commission to accelerate the termination process with a deadline of December 31.

Two years ago, PSC recommended the abolishment of positions of youth officers in the Ministry of Indigenisation and Economic Empowerment, which was then under Patrick Zhuwao arguing that that most of them were gainfully employed somewhere and were therefore double dipping..

Eyebrows were raised again after a 2016 audit by the PSC revealed that there was no single project which these youth officers initiated in their respective areas despite being on the government pay roll.

“During the audit, evidence gathered indicated that youth officers claim ownership of projects initiated and managed by other extension workers at ward level,” the 2016 report by PSC read.

“In rural wards, most youth officers operate in the same ward where there are extension workers from several other ministries,” read part of the report then.

Ncube’s proposal is therefore among the raft of cost cutting measures that characterised his maiden budget presentation.

Mthuli Ncube Proposes To Collect Tax From Netflix, Facebook And Youtube

By Own Correspondent| Presenting his 2019 National Budget, Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube proposed to broaden his tax collection base bemoaning the fact that foreign operators are taking advantage of technology to provide services to local individuals withoit contributing anything to the fiscus.

Said Ncube:

“Mr Speaker Sir, technological advancements have enabled foreign companies, particularly satellite broadcasters and e-commerce platforms to provide local residents with services from offshore sources.

This income is subject to tax and the activity generating the income is actually paid from a source within Zimbabwe.

For the avoidance of doubt and in order to broaden the tax base, I propose to deem income earned by such non-resident service providers to be from a source within the country and liable to tax.”

Drama As Socialite Is Busted While Raping Maid

By Own Correspondent| A Bulawayo socialite-cum-property dealer was dramatically arrested last week in a planned midnight raid, where he was allegedly busted stark naked while raping his maid.

The accused (name withheld to protect identify of victim) was arrested at his home in Greenhill suburb, after the maid reported the matter to the police, who in turn set up a trap for the socialite.

He appeared before Bulawayo magistrate Ms Adelaide Mbeure where he is facing up to four counts of rape.

He was remanded to 7 December on $100 bail.

Prosecutor Mr Mageza Mafaro told the court that the socialite allegedly raped the girl on four consecutive occasions during the course of this month.

For the first count he is reported to have raped the girl on 13 November in the middle of the night.

The court heard that in another case he allegedly raped her in a similar manner on 14 November and for the third count, which was on 15 November, he sneaked into the girl’s room in the dead of the night, and raped her again. The girl then informed her sister of what had happened and she was advised to report to the police.

That is when police devised a plan to make an arrest, with the maid giving them information of his schedule and movement.

On the fourth count, it was stated that he allegedly went into the complainant’s room, only in his undergarments and crept into her blankets before raping her.

It was reported that police bust him while he was in action. The girl was taken to hospital for a medical examination, which would be produced in court during the trial.-Sunday news

Chiwenga Backs Mnangagwa To Finish His Term

Correspondent|Vice President Constantino Chiwenga has dismissed reports there is tension in the presidium, saying politics should be solely focused on national development.

Addressing a ZANU PF ‘Thank You’ rally in Murombedzi on Saturday, Chiwenga said President Emmerson Mnangagwa would complete his term so no one should think they had the opportunity to seize power.

Chiwenga’s speech comes as local media is awash with stories of an on-going power struggle between the VP and Mnangagwa over a power vacuum left after the ouster of former President Robert Mugabe in November last year.

A local weekly reported that security officials were concerned of an escalation between Mnangagwa and Chiwenga factions, which both apparently have highly “militarised” elements within.

More recent media reports claim Chiwenga is gathering support to move a motion to impeach Mnangagwa at Zanu PF’s 17th annual national people’s conference, which is due to be held this December.

M&T

BREAKING- Zanu Pf Retains Mutoko North Seat

By Own Correspondent| Zanu Pf has retained the parliamentary seat for Mutoko North after the party garnered 11 141 votes ahead of MDC’s 1 329 and National Constitutional Assembly’s 94 votes.

Zanu Pf was being represented by Rambidzai Nyabote, the MDC by Boniface Mushore and NCA by Edson Mugoma.

In the July 30 harmonised polls, Zanu Pf’s Mabel Chinomona garnered 16 902 votes while MDC’s Mushore got 3 151 votes and Shamu Kativu of the FreeZim Congress got 262 votes.

The seat became vacant after the elevation of Chinomona to the position of Senate President.

Chamisa Sends Signal, Announces 29 November As Demo Day

Correspondent|MDC president Nelson Chamisa has set aside Thursday 29 November as the date for National Demonstration.

Chamisa contends that he was rigged in the July 30 elections, and claims he deserves the keys to the State House despite losing the August 24 Constitutional Court challenge.

All the nine Concourt judges voted against him.

The national demo announcement follows a series of Thank You Rallies in which Chamisa consulted party supporters on the need to stage demonstrations.

It was not clear at the time of writing if the police have okayed the demonstrations.

More details to follow.

Police Commissioner General Mataga Dismissed From Police Services?

Own Correspondent|Exiled former Cabinet Minister and G40 member Professor Jonathan Moyo has hinted that out of office Police Commissioner General Godwin Mataga has been dismissed from the police force.

Moyo claimed that Matanga had been placed on forced leave and that he is not coming back to the force. He claimed that Matanga will be redeployed as an Ambassador and that he is going to be replaced by Deputy Commissioner General Stephen Mutamba.

Writing on his official Twitter page, Moyo said,

Godwin Matanga, Commissioner General of Police, has been sent on leave pending redeployment as an ambassador. This paves the way for the elevation of Deputy Commissioner General Stephen Mutamba, now Acting CGP. Changes at ZRP since the coup, have been dramatic & controversial!

Earlier this month, a number of senior Police Officers including former President Robert Mugabe’s nephew Deputy Commissioner General Innocent Matibiri were retired from the force. All officers in the ZRP who have reached 50 years of age are also being retired.

So far there is no official comment from the authorities on the position of Matanga who is however definitely not at work.

BREAKTHROUGH: 2 Men Climb Mysterious Mount Inyangani And Rubbish Ancestors’ Taboo About “Kutsakatika!”

By Dorrothy Moyo| Two men have defied the “sacred” tradition that says you will disappear if you climb to Mount Nyangani’s highest point.

The unnamed two in the below 4 year old video, announce that they have reached Zimbabwe’s highest point and nothing has happened to them. For centuries Zimbabweans have continued under a dark belief that the mountain is sacred and people will be punished if they tour its peaks. VIDEO BELOW:

Dynamos In Bizarre End To Disastrous Season

Nichrut………………………………………………………….3
Dynamos ………………………………………………………0

RODERICK Mutuma scored a brace as Dynamos were handed a drubbing by already relegated Nichrut at Ascot yesterday.

Ephraim Mwinga converted a late penalty to complete the rout. The record Zimbabwe Premiership champions had a poor campaign, flirting with relegation for the better part of the marathon.

Lloyd Chigowe was brought on an interim basis towards the end of the season to replace fired Lloyd Mutasa who had led the team into the murky waters of relegation. Chigowe managed to save the once Glamour Boys but is not guaranteed of getting the job on a permanent basis.

DeMbare supporters chanted Chigowe and his lieutenant Murape Murape’s names as if to endorse them for the team’s coaching job on a permanent basis. Some reports suggested Chigowe signed a contract with the Harare giants to continue at the helm in the 2019 season but the lanky coach dismissed the reports as false.

“That is bar talk, you know at Dynamos people just talk but there is nothing like that, I have not yet signed a contract. It is pure rumours and lies. Something is going on regarding the negotiations but nothing has been finalised as yet,” he said.

Chigowe also suggested that yesterday’s defeat was a sign that all is not well in the Dynamos camp.

“It was a horror show, there is a lot that was happening behind the scenes which I am not at liberty to share. But what was happening behind the scenes really affected the team’s performance,” he said.

While Dynamos settled first into the match against the Division One bound side, they failed to make their good start count.

Seven minutes before the breather, their former son Mutuma capitalised on a mistake by captain of the day, Godfrey Mukambi, to give the hosts the lead. Moments after the breather, Dynamos could have equalised but Tawanda Macheke failed to connect after he was set on goal by Brett Amidu.

Three minutes before the hour mark, Mutuma completed his brace with a diving header after a brilliant feed by another former DeMbare man Farai Vimisayi. Ten minutes from time, Macheke failed to score again after he was set on goal by Cleopas Kapupurike.

Mwinga converted a penalty in the 85th minute, which was awarded by referee Philani Ncube after a reckless Mukambi had fouled an opponent inside the box. Nichrut coach Michael Ngore was happy with maximum points, saying it is a good foundation for life in the unfashionable second tier.

“I just told the guys to go and attack and utilise their chances and I’m happy we showed we have a good platform to build on in Division One,” he said.

Meanwhile, Lloyd Chitembwe was conspicuous by his absence as Caps United wound up their 2018 Castle Lager Premier Soccer League season with a draw against Chapungu at the National Sports Stadium.

Chitembwe’s absence heightened speculation that the championship winning coach could be on his way to Ngezi Platinum Stars. Makepekepe technical director Nelson Matongorere further fanned the speculation by refusing to comment on Chitembwe’s whereabouts in a post-match interview.

Ngezi Platinum lost 0-1 to Black Rhinos, and officials indicated that they were now on the hunt for championship winning coach after parting way with Tonderayi Ndiraya with a few games before end of the season when it was apparent they would not snatch the title from FC Platinum.

State Media

Sexual Harassment And Sex For Jobs Exposed At AU Headquarters

AN internal investigation into sexual harassment claims at the African Union Headquarters in Addis Ababa has found widespread reports of mistreatment of women, especially interns, youth volunteers and short-term staffers who are “exploited for sex in exchange for jobs.”

The continental body will create a sexual harassment policy in response, a statement released late Thursday said, pointing out that the lack of a policy kept people from reporting mistreatment.

The findings are an example of complaints common in parts of the continent as young women, and sometimes men, face pressure from employers to exchange sex for promises of jobs or promotions, while unemployment is often high.

The AU launched the investigation earlier this year after receiving complaints from more than three dozen female staffers. At the time, AU Commission chair Moussa Faki Mahamat said “we have zero tolerance for this kind of behaviour.”

AU Commission chair Moussa Faki Mahamat
The new statement said interviews with more than 80 staffers revealed “almost unanimous confirmation of the prevalence” of sexual harassment, notably as senior staffers “make believable promises to young women that they will be offered contracts” as they style themselves as “king-makers” or gatekeepers.

A detailed report of the findings was not immediately available. The inquiry also heard staffers’ complaints of corruption, alleged nepotism and bullying by both male and female bosses.

The AU Commission chair will take “immediate action on urgent issues” such as acting appointments and will appoint a committee to look into 44 cases that the inquiry considered, the statement said.

Sexual harassment and favouritism based on family connections and business ties within the AU is a widely talked about topic among people in Ethiopia, where the continental body is based.

— AFP

Civil Servants To Be Paid Bonuses Before Christmas

Correspondent|ALL civil servants will receive their 13th cheques before Christmas, the Minister of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare, Dr Sekai Nzenza has announced.

“I will have to check when the dates will be released but for a fact the bonuses are coming this year in time for Christmas holidays. Again these dates depend on the Salary Service Bureau on how they will do the payments,” said Dr Nzenza.

Finance and Economic Development Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube in his budget presentation last week said this year’s bonus will be calculated basing on basic salaries only, unlike in the past where allowances were included.

“Traditionally, payment of the 13th cheque is computed based on basic salary, housing and transport allowances. For 2017, the budget incurred expenditure of US$174,6 million. However, as we embark on austerity measures focusing on enhancing the health of our public finances, the budget proposes a 13th cheque that is computed based on basic salary only (excluding housing and transport allowances). This proposal will yield financial savings of around US$75 million per annum,” said Prof Ncube.

Civil servants are however, not happy with the new formula, Apex council chairperson Mrs Cecilia Alexander revealed.

“While we welcome the payment of bonuses this calendar year, we completely reject the decision to pay bonuses based on basic salary as this amounts to a unilateral withdrawal of a benefit much against the law of the land,” she said.

Prof Ncube also announced that Government will retire all civil servants above 65 years of age and more than 3 000 youth officers.

Mayor And Deputy Mayor, Who Is Former Mayor, Clash In Public

Correspondent|KWEKWE Mayor Angeline Kasipo (pictured) and her deputy Shadreck Tobaiwa clashed bitterly over the adoption of the city’s $26, 9 million 2019 budget.

Kasipo last week urged adoption of the budget after finance committee chairperson Silas Mukaro had told councillors that the city is proposing an increase in tariffs.

The deputy mayor however, slammed the fiscal plan as “non-inclusive, anti-poor and insensitive to suffering rate payers”.

“We have heard the reading of the budget proposal from the finance committee chairperson. I am therefore calling for the adoption of the budget,” Kasipo said.

The motion was seconded by councillors Sherly Mutirwara and Betty Ndlovu before Tobaiwa interjected.

“We will not just adopt this budget without the input of our various stakeholders. We must consult with every stakeholder in Kwekwe so that we will have an inclusive budget,” said the deputy mayor.

“My other worry is that residents were not fully consulted. We cannot say we had a consultation meeting when we had less than 20 people turning up for the budget.

“That is not a reflection of what the people of Kwekwe want in this budget.”

The former city mayor said the budget should be sensitive to the suffering rate payers.

“We must not transfer all our financial burdens to the rate payers. As councillors we must be creative and come up with ways of raising revenue.

“Residents just like this council is, are also suffering we must be sensitive. It is outrageous that we increase our tariffs by over 250 % in this economy. We must trim this budget.”

Kasipo then called for a private caucus with her councillors away from the media glare though she indicated that nothing was going to change.

“I want the members of the media to excuse us a bit as we want to caucus. I however, must point out that not much is going to change from this caucus as the budget has already been adopted,” she said.

Meanwhile, acting town clerk Lucia Mkandla called for a realistic, rather than populist budget.

“I understand that as councillors you are here on the people’s mandate. I however, want to point out that we must have a realistic budget not a populist one,” she said.

“At the end of the day, if we take a dangerous path of adopting a populist budget, we will not be able to deliver services.

“Our budget must respond to the economic climate. We therefore call for councillors to be of sober mind when approaching issues as we are no longer in the campaign period; it’s time to be realistic.”

“I Have Not Joined ZANU PF,” Says Mliswa In Full ZANU PF Regalia

Correspondent|NORTON Member of Parliament Temba Mliswa has spoken on speculation he has rejoined ZANU-PF. Mliswa set tongues wagging after he was seen today at the Thank You rally organised for President Emmerson Mnangagwa at Murombedzi and appearing comfortable in full ZANU PF regalia.

Said Mliswa: “The beauty of being an Independent is having the freedom to support the good in each party. I was looking forward to my invite to the last MDCA event but nothing came…hopefully next time I’ll get the chance to wear red.”

Mliswa seemed intent on justifying his appearance at a ZANU-PF function by saying “When in Rome, do as the Romans do”.

“When in Rome do as the Romans….Hate or love J. Nkomo or RGM they are the founding fathers of Free Zimbabwe. It was refreshing to hear @edmnangagwa humbly acknowledge this,” he reasoned.

Earlier today, Mliswa had indicated he got an invitation to the ruling party’s first rally since the 30 July elections.

“On invitation to the @edmnangagwa function in Murombedzi today, myself & a Norton team will attend,” Mliswa gushed.

ZIMRA Backtracks On Foreign Currency Duty, Cars Can Now Be Paid For In Bond Notes

Correspondent|THE Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (ZIMRA) has backed off from insisting duty in forex, saying that importers of motor vehicles and other goods can now pay for their duty in RTGS, bond notes and other usual options. This comes as a major relief especially to car importers, the majority of whom were stranded at the ports of entry since Friday.

However, the relief only applies to importers who paid for the cars or whatever goods or before November 22, 2018, ZIMRA emphasized.

The revenue collector said individuals who imported vehicles on or before November 22, and whose cars are scheduled to arrive in Zimbabwe on or before January 3, 2019 can also pay duty through RTGS, bond notes or foreign currency.

On Thursday, Finance and Economic Development Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube said payment of motor vehicle duty in foreign currency would be mandatory from midnight last Friday.

In a statement yesterday Zimra said, “The payment of duty in foreign currency applies to any person or company importing goods designated as foreign currency dutiable that were purchased after the 22nd of November 2018;

“Goods purchased on or before 22nd November 2018 and consigned for export to Zimbabwe on or before 3rd January 2019; (and) motor vehicles imported under suspension of duty for use by physically handicapped persons.”

About 300 second-hand vehicles arrive at Beitbridge Border Post daily, with around 200 import entries are processed daily.

Zimbabweans spend roughly U$500 million on vehicle imports annually.

Queen Bee Drama As Mnangagwa’s Presidential Inputs Go On Sale In Zambia

UNSCRUPULOUS individuals in Binga District, Matabeleland North Province are allegedly crossing the Zambezi River to sell in Zambia farming inputs they received under the Presidential Inputs Scheme.

Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services Permanent Secretary Mr Nick Mangwana told Sunday News that the Government has received reports of rampant abuse of Presidential Inputs in Binga and a team has been tasked to sensitise communities in the district about the importance of the programme.

“I can confirm that there are people that are selling our inputs across the (Zambezi) river. There is a team that comprises Zanu-PF officials and local leadership made up of chiefs and other authorities to educate the locals,” said Mr Mangwana.

Government is targeting 1,8 million households for the Presidential Inputs Scheme for maize and sorghum and 400 000 for cotton in the 2018/ 19 agricultural season. For maize each household is getting 10 kilogrammes (kgs) seed maize, 5kgs sorghum seed, one 50 kg bag of Compound D and one bag top dressing fertiliser. Mr Mangwana said the team’s task was firstly to raise awareness and educate.

“Our focus right now is not a blame game. Our first focus is to educate the community because the last thing that we want as a Government is to put them in a bad light. It’s a perceived marginalised community as it is so if we take an attitude to say there are ignorant and a whole lot of other things, it won’t work. We will end up putting a negative spot on them, which is not our intention,” said Mr Mangwana.

He, however, said if the engagement process does not yield the intended results perpetrators risk being arrested and prosecuted.

Mr Mangwana said the abuse of various Government inputs support schemes has been going on in some communities across the country and when the Government launched the Special Grain Programme popularly referred to as the Command Agriculture Programme in 2016. Department of Crop and Livestock Production Matabeleland North provincial officer Mr Dumisani Nyoni said reports of farm inputs abuse have been received from virtually all the districts in the province over the years. Mr Nyoni also confirmed that some people in the province have been arrested for abusing input schemes.

“We have heard of people who have been arrested before, after having abused these inputs facilities especially the selling of fertilisers.”

Under the new regulations, provided in the Statutory Instrument 274 of 2018 gazetted recently, it is now a criminal offence to be found in possession of any agricultural inputs in excess of what the farmers need, unlawful sale, purchase and possession of agricultural produce or contracted crop and the misuse of farm inputs.

“Any farmer who, misappropriates any agricultural inputs or being in possession of any agricultural input in excess of what he or she needs to produce or contracted to produce . . . (or) any person who deals in or handles agricultural inputs or contract produce in contravention of a scheme contract, that is to say, purchases, receives, stores, sells, obtains, possesses or otherwise disposes of agricultural inputs (or) purchases, receives, stores, sells, obtains, possesses or otherwise disposes agricultural produce. Shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable to a fine not exceeding level 4 or imprisonment not exceeding three months or both such fine and imprisonment,” read part of the regulations. – state media

Tsitsi Masiyiwa Abolishing November Taboo: “But I Live In Midlands And I Have Never Heard About this Culture”

READER COMMENT FOR RECENT ARTICLE ON TSITSI MASIYIWA: By Titus Bhunu “I live in the Midlands and I have never heard about this culture in respect of the month of November.

“So what it means is that this culture is practised in some parts of country and doesn’t apply to the whole country. My question is who invented culture?

“My understanding is that it was invented by men and women who lived long before us. These regulations were meant to address challenges which were there then.

“The problem with the so called culture is that people don’t information on the reasons for certain practices. So as men and women living today lets talk about culture and invent our on culture based on our circumstances.”

Ncube’s Budget Is Usual Voodoo Economics to Cause Pain But No Gain And “Spike” in Avoidable Sufferings And Deaths

By Nomusa Garikai| On Wednesday 21 November 2018, Professor Mthuli Ncube, Zimbabwe’s minister of Finance, presented his maiden national budget. There are many things one can say about the budget, I will just say five things:

1) ”The spike in prices of goods and services appears to have receded, confirming that the main price hikes were a spontaneous response to uncertainty and confidence issues,” he said.  

What he should have gone on to say he had created most if not all the uncertainty with his ill-advised and downright foolish statements. He said Zimbabwe was going to phase out the Bond Notes only to contradict that a few days later. 

He then said “market forces” will determine the value of the Bond Notes relative to the US$ and other foreign currencies only to say the opposite a day or so afterwards. This caused serious panic in the economic and financial markets with the Bond Notes : US$ exchange jumping from the official 1:1 to as much as 10:1! 

If Zimbabwe had been a healthy and functional democracy Minister Ncube would have been forced to resign; Zimbabwe is Banana Republic and so he stayed. If anyone thought the above admission showed the Minister had learned his lesson the next statement shows he had not!

2) “The 2 917 Youth Officers who still remain on the payroll, are being retired and the posts removed from the establishment, by end of December 2018,” he said.

“At its 38th Meeting of 5 December 2017, Cabinet re-affirmed its decision to terminate employment contracts of 3 188 Youth Officers as previously resolved.”

President Mnangagwa had made a big song and dance about ending corruption, mismanagement, etc. that had become endemic under Mugabe’s reign. Now the nation learns that it was all hot-air the few Zanu PF youths laid off were those belonging to the rivalry G40 faction. 

Even if the regime finally act and laid off these Zanu PF youths, commonly known as the green bomber in reference to their traditional green uniforms and are nothing more than green flies laying life nuggets on the wounds of the sick nation; nothing much will change. 

The nation is painfully aware that President Mnangagwa has “redeployed” most of his former cabinet members, permanent secretaries, etc. on their last salary, perks everything. Only those considered to be G40 members have been laid off. In other words the nation is shedding off one set of blood sucking ticks only to inherit another! This is just a revolving door!

On the other big corruption issues such as the wholesale looting of diamond in Marange and Chiadzwa costing a staggering $15 billion, according to Robert Mugabe’s own admission; the regime has done nothing and the Minister said nothing. 

Talk of restoring certainty and confidence this Zanu PF regime has done precious little to win back the trust and confidence of investors and lenders, they saw the Minister’s blundering, the regime’s refusal to deal with the big issues of corruptions but worst of all the country’s failure to hold free, fair and credible elections.

Every report that has come out on Zimbabwe’s 30 July 2018 elections have all condemned them as flawed and illegal. President Mnangagwa and his junta rigged the election and thus confirmed Zimbabwe is a pariah state; no one wants to do business in a pariah state. 

3) ”In order to redirect scarce foreign currency to the productive sectors of the economy, the budget proposes that customs duty and all other taxes on imported motor vehicles be levied in foreign currency acceptable as legal tender, with effect from 23 November 2018,” said Professor Ncube.

Is government going to pay all its workers in foreign currency then?

Does this mean the Chemist, Shop owner, etc. have the green light to insist in being paid in foreign currency? After all, what is good for the goose is good for the gander! 

What is happening here is that those with the political and economic clout will be paid in US$ whilst the downtrodden are forced to accept Bond Notes. The economic burden of Zimbabwe’s economic meltdown is not being shared by all, the poorest of the poor are carrying it all and they are paying dearly for it – with their very lives! 

4) “Initially, the economy had been projected to grow by 6,3 percent in 2018 spurred by anticipated good performance in key sectors helping drive the country to an upper middle income economy by 2030,” said the Minister.

“There was, however, a slowdown in economic growth in the last half of the year on foreign currency supply and allocation challenges, exchange rate misalignments and inflationary pressures that affected mining, manufacturing and services. 

“As a result, Government reviewed downwards the growth projections to 4 percent for 2018. Notwithstanding, the economy currently remains resilient, with performance exceeding expectations.”

Zimbabwe’s spectacular fall from the middle income nation in 1980 to the poorest nation in Africa was accomplished in 25 years. In 1980 the country had a very robust strong industrial infrastructure, second to only to SA in subSahara Africa; they have all long shut down and Zimbabwe now imports 70% of nation’s needs. 

Our agricultural sector made the country the breadbasket of the region; that is all a very distant memory. For the last decade the nation has relied on imported food aid. We are starving in what is, for all intent and purposes, the Garden of Eden. A damning testimonial to the sheer incompetence of the men and women who have governed the country since 1980! 

“Government policy initiatives will see solid growth of 4 percent in 2018, that way sustaining revenue and exports performance above targets,” said Minister Ncube. 

How is that possible when you have done nothing to stop the criminal waste of human and material resources through gross mismanagement, rampant corruptions and whilst the country remains a lawless pariah state?

5) There is no doubt that Minister Ncube’s budget is a catalog of one economic hardship after another, especially for the 75% of the country’s population now living on US$1.00 or less a day. Many Zimbabweans will suffer and many will die of poverty related hunger, diseases, etc. 

What makes the situation totally intolerable is that none of the economic recovery the regime is promising will ever materialise because none of the basic requirement for such recovery are there. There will never be any meaningful economic recovery whilst corruption, vote rigging and all the other hallmarks of a pariah state remain firmly in place.

This is a austerity budget guaranteed to bring wailing, gnashing of teeth and death especially to the country’s poorest of the poor, the 75% already living on US$1.00 or less a day.  The suffering and deaths will all be in vain, there will be no meaningful economic recovery because nothing has been done to address the root cause of the economic meltdown – misrule. 

It is shocking that for one who professes to be knowledgeable in economics you should be presiding over the country’s continued pursuit of these failed voodoo-economic policies of the last 38 years. It seems, there is nothing some people will not do for the honour of being called Minister! 

This is a budget to tax the poor to death. It is not just the “spike in the prices of goods and services” you will be getting with your budget, Minister Ncube, but a “spike” in the numbers of avoidable suffering and deaths due to hunger, disease, lack of medicine, etc. – many will die with worthless Bond Notes in their pockets and accounts! Have you no shame! – SOURCE: zsdemocrats.blogspot.com

Mnangagwa Says: Pharmacies, Retailers to Lose Licences | WHAT’S THIS NOW?

By Farai D Hove| ZANU PF leader, Emmerson Mnangagwa yesterday said he will strip pharmacies and retailers of their licenses punishment for over pricing.

Mnangagwa who contradicted his own ministers, was speaking during his Mashonaland West rally.

He said Government was taking tough measures on businesses that promoted economic hardships while pursuing profits. “These pharmacies are charging in US dollars but their employees are not paid in US dollars. We sat down as Cabinet and directed the Minister of Health and Child Care, Dr Obadiah Moyo, to tell them Government is not happy with what they are doing.

“The majority of you who were now selling medical provisions, asking for US dollars, it’s not proper because you go and queue at the RBZ asking for foreign currency to import these drugs. There is no reason why you should, therefore, ask the public to purchase these drugs in foreign currency when you yourselves get it from the Reserve Bank. Those of you who do not heed this caution: danger is coming, we will withdraw your licences,” he said, drawing loud cheers from the crowd.

Mnangagwa said he had told Industry and Commerce Minister Mangaliso Ndlovu to regularly engage business over-pricing.

“Prices were going up left right and centre, but I called business leaders to State House, and immediately some of them reduced the prices. Fertiliser was increased from $35 to more than $100, but when I engaged with them, they said they would reduce it to $45. Most of the manufacturers and wholesalers are charging acceptable prices, but it is the retailers who have the biggest problem. I asked my young minister, Ndlovu, to meet with them and I am waiting for further details. But if they refuse to reduce prices then they will also lose their licences,” he said.

SATELLITE PICTURES: Mnangagwa’s Mansion He’s Building In Borrowdale

By A Correspondent| An opposition MP reveals that ZANU PF leader, Emmerson Mnangagwa is building a multi-billion-dollar private home while urging tightening of belts on Zimbabweans.

ZimEye takes a look at the massive property in this review – see satellite map below. The property sits on a massive 3.69 hectare piece of land that is opposite ChristChurch:

HON Virginia Zengeya took local government minister July Moyo to task during Ministers’ Question time in parliament last week. She said “I am giving reference to the construction of the private residence which is a multi-billion-dollar property which is being constructed for His Excellency, Hon. Mnangagwa in Borrowdale off Crowhill… ”

She was however shot down by Speaker Jacob Mudenda.

“Order! Hon. Member, the question does not arise,” Mudenda told Zengeya.

“No Vacancy At State House”: VP Chiwenga

By Own Correspondent| Vice President Constantino Guvheya Chiwenga has warned those harbouring presidential ambitions that there is no vacancy at State House since sitting President Emmerson Mnangagwa was appointed by God.

VP Chiwenga said those thinking of taking over power should think again as the ruling party was as united as ever with President Mnangagwa at its helm.

Chiwenga told hundreds of party supporters at a “Thank You” rally at Murombedzi Growth Point that President Mnangagwa has a fresh mandate he got from the people who voted him into office.

Said Chiwenga:

“President Mnangagwa is making things right in the country and he wants to make things right. So no-one should ever dream that tomorrow will change anything and they will wake up leading the country or things will change in another direction.

We now want to fix this country and make things right…We cannot continue chasing the politics day in and day out. We are just coming to thank you and my leader is here to thank you..But going forward, we are going to be talking of developmental politics of building the country.

Whether someone is in opposition or wherever they are, we are saying (Shumba Murambwi, referring to Mnangagwa) will always be at the helm of the country because he is ordained by the King.

He was chosen to be there so do not think that if it goes this way, if all goes well i will take over. There is no vacancy, no space, you cannot be anywhere. Do you hear me properly? Be quiet and be quiet forever. He did nothing wrong .You will never get any leader like him (Mnangagwa) who fears God, who follows the word of God.”

“We Are Working Tirelessly To Restructure, Reform And Rebuild Our Economy”: Mnangagwa

By Own Correspondent| President Emmerson Mnangagwa has expressed confidence in the measures being undertaken by government promising that these newly enacted measures will create a better and more secure future for generations to come.

Mnangagwa said his government was working tirelessly to restructure, reform and rebuild the country’s economy.

Posting on his official facebook page, Mnangagwa expressed optimism with the new measures thanking the people of Mashonaland West for voting for him overwhelmingly in the July 30 polls.

Said Mnangagwa following his first “Thank You” rally at Murombedzi Growth Point in Zvimba:

“Today I was in Murombedzi to thank the people of Mashonaland West for their support, and to update them on the steps we are taking to build a stronger Zimbabwe for all.

I explained how we are increasing our production of crucial crops such as grain, tobacco and soya bean; addressing the cost and ease of doing business to attract investment; and developing a new diamond policy that will be announced in the coming weeks.

As seen in Thursday’s budget, we are working tirelessly to restructure, reform and rebuild our economy, and I am confident that the measures we are enacting today will create a better and more secure future for generations to come.”

ED Invest In Lavish Borrowdale Home

President Emmerson Mnangagwa is building a majestic house in the leafy Borrowdale suburb in Harare, which is likely to become his retirement home.

The Daily News crew visited the president’s new home being built on an expansive piece of land with exotic bricks and other accessories fit for a king.

It is not clear how the project is being funded but government insiders claim it is bankrolled by the fiscus with the president expected to pay back the monies.

Recently, opposition legislators tried to table a motion in Parliament to discuss the palatial mansion under construction.

MDC Member of Parliament Virginia Zengeya asked Local Government minister July Moyo during Question Time in the National Assembly what government policy was with regards to the president using State funds to build a lavish mansion.

“I am giving reference to the construction of the private residence which is a multi-billion-dollar property which is being constructed for His Excellency, honourable Mnangagwa in Borrowdale, off Crowhill,” she said amid loud interjections from Zanu PF backbenchers.

Speaker of the National Assembly Jacob Mudenda swiftly stopped her in her tracks. “Order! Honourable member, the question does not arise,” Mudenda told Zengeya.

Mnangagwa has a modest house in Greystone Park in Harare, has a farm in Kwekwe called Sherwood and a rural home in Mapanzure near Zvishavane.

Contacted for comment yesterday, presidential spokesperson George Charamba declined to be drawn into commenting about the MDC’s motion in Parliament, saying he was not a Member of Parliament.

“Talking about what he is doing by way of investments, that’s really another ballgame altogether. And don’t behave as if the president will be in that State House until his last days on this earth,” Charamba said.

“So there is a distinction between a facility which is availed to him by virtue of the fact that he is the head of State, a sitting head of State and then his investments which he does as VaMnangagwa (Mr) in his private capacity. I laughed when I saw that debate.

This man, have you been to his farm?” Asked if he was referring to Sherwood, Charamba said: “Please, just ask him to invite you to his farm you will see the farming wonders he is doing there.”

Asked if he was suggesting Mnangagwa was a “master farmer”, Charamba, tongue-in-cheek, retorted: “Well, that sounds colonial. I don’t want to use a colonial term. What I know is he is one of the foremost farmers in this country.

If you go to GMB where he delivers his produce, if you hear the figures and then you compute that into dollars and cents. That land has no rest.” Charamba said Mnangagwa was a very successful maize, soya and wheat farmer and was earning good money from his farming venture that qualifies him to build a home for himself through hard work and thrift.

“With level of output at his farm and that he has been in government from 1980 and that he is a lawyer, I would not bother to pay attention to a motion which talks about his capacity to build a home for his family. I mean, it’s ridiculous. It’s ridiculous, yes,” Charamba told the Daily News.

“There is serious production there and his young brother manages the farm. You know he was doing between seven and 10 tonnes per hectare. The general average that is being done in this country at most has been three to five t/ha.”

-Daily News

ED Finally Moves Into State House

President Emmerson Mnangagwa, has moved into the residential side of the State House, called Zimbabwe House, but shunned the official lavish apartment in favour of a cottage reserved as a guest house.

Instead of moving into the opulent apartment that his predecessor Robert Mugabe called home before decamping to his Blue Roof mansion in Borrowdale in the dying years of his presidency, the former spy chief has moved into a modest guest house in what is being touted by his spin-doctors as the latest example of the president tearing up the rule book and rejecting the pomp and ceremony associated with the rule of the fallen despot.

Mugabe’s 37 uninterrupted years in power were brought to an inglorious end when the military launched Operation Restore Legacy on November 15 last year, which saw the nonagenarian and his then influential wife, Grace, being placed under house arrest and later the teetotaller being toppled in the soft coup.

The new Zimbabwe president seems so eager to distance himself from his disgraced predecessor that he has partially abandoned one of the job’s major perks: the main house at the Zimbabwe House presidential palace, from which Mugabe conducted his imperial presidency.

However, the sprawling property has undergone extensive renovations, with the whole complex repainted. Mnangagwa’s move to abandon the main house for a cottage seems to be part of an attempt to be a more down-to-earth president. In other words, the opposite of what critics saw in Mugabe’s presidency.

There have been suggestions that Mnangagwa could be spurning occupation of the main house at Zimbabwe House for superstitious reasons. Some have claimed he wanted a cleansing ceremony first. But presidential spokesperson George Charamba explained that he rejected the option of living in a sumptuous official residence, instead opting for a modest cottage, because he does not need a big house.

“H.E. (His Excellency) and his family, you know his children are all grown now, so he decided that he lives in a smaller house from that whole complex, that is the one that was refurbished. So that’s where he is staying,” Charamba confirmed to the Daily News.

He said the president does not need a big house because most of his children were married with kids and have started their lives elsewhere.

Charamba rejected speculation around the bizarre frugal move to live in a guest room at a time the main house was vacant.

“But surely a home must be proportionate to your needs. You want him to live in the extravagant mansion for what? What will he be doing there?” Charamba asked rhetorically.

Since his ascendancy to the throne on August 26 after a disputed, blood-soaked election, Mnangagwa took his sweet time to move into the official State residence — remaining at his relatively modest home in the northern suburb of Greystone Park of Harare, which security officials rejected as both unsafe and unsuitable for the country’s new leader.

Mnangagwa’s move is unusual to be sure. Presidents the world over hardly abandon official residences.

And leaders, both democratic and autocratic, recognise the residences and their grandeur as symbols of their office and its might.

Mnangagwa own the modest Greystone Park house in Harare, a farm in Kwekwe called Sherwood and a rural home in Mapanzure near Zvishavane.

-Daily News

Latest On Mutoko By Election- Zanu Pf Deploys “Sabhukus” As Election Agents

ZESN

By Own Correspondent| A local non governmental organisation the Zimbabwe Election Support Network (ZESN) has reported that Zanu Pf has deployed traditional headmans as part of the party’s election agents.

In a statement issued mid day (Saturday), ZESN reported that polling stations were set up in accordance with the requirements of the law to ensure that voters mark their ballots in secret.

In their report, ZESN observed a high numbers of assisted voters especially the elderly and illiterate in Mutoko North.

“For instance, at Kawere Primary school in Ward 4, 21 voters had been assisted to vote and 5 turned away by 9:30 AM. At Hunda Village Tent, as at 9 AM, 5 voters had been assisted to vote while 2 were turned away. At Botsanzira Preschool, 9 people had been assisted to vote by 8AM whilst at Ndemera Business Centre of the 15 who had voted by 9:50AM, 12 were assisted to vote.”

Below is the full statement by ZESN:

ZESN Mid-day Situational Statement on Mutoko North By Election

24 November 2018 – Mutoko North – As part of its comprehensive efforts to observe the Mutoko North National Assembly by-election, the Zimbabwe Election Support Network (ZESN) has deployed over 76 election observers to the 54 polling stations, ward and constituency collation centres in the constituency.

This midday Situational Statement is based on reports received from 54 static observers stationed at all the polling stations in Mutoko North and mobile observers roving around the constituency.

Voting is still on-going and ZESN is observing the voting process throughout the day, the counting process at the end of the day and the collation of results at the ZEC Constituency Collating Centre. By midday the following are the observations so far:

Set up and Opening of Polling Stations
ZESN observers have reported that polling stations were set up in accordance with the requirements of the law to ensure that voters mark their ballots in secret. Essential voting materials such as ballot boxes, ballot papers, ZEC stamp, indelible marker ink, biometric voters roll with pictures were reported to be present at all polling stations.

Furthermore, observers reported that 100% of the polling stations opened on time and had started processing voters by 7:15AM. 100% of the polling stations were reported to be easily accessible to everyone, including people with physical disabilities.

Assisted and turned away voters
ZESN observed high numbers of assisted voters especially the elderly and illiterate in Mutoko North. For instance, at Kawere Primary school in Ward 4, 21 voters had been assisted to vote and 5 turned away by 9:30 AM. At Hunda Village Tent, as at 9 AM, 5 voters had been assisted to vote while 2 were turned away.

At Botsanzira Preschool, 9 people had been assisted to vote by 8AM whilst at Ndemera Business Centre of the 15 who had voted by 9:50AM, 12 were assisted to vote. Reasons for turned away voters include having photocopies of their IDs and turning up at the wrong polling stations.

For example, at Gwanza Baptist Church, a female voter was turned away for not appearing on the voters roll, she had assumed that when she moved residency from Mutoko East to Mutoko North her name would be transferred.

Role of traditional leaders
In the run up to the by-election, ZESN reported on the partisan involvement of traditional leaders in campaigns and in food aid distribution in Mutoko North.

The participation of the traditional leaders has continued with some of the village headsman (Sabhuku) reported to be election agents for ZANU PF in this by-election. ZESN notes that the participation of traditional leaders in partisan politics is in contravention of the Traditional Leaders Act.

Party Agents
Political Parties and candidates are allowed to have one election agent inside the polling station and an additional agent stationed within the vicinity of the polling station.

Of the three contesting parties in Mutoko North, only ZANU PF and the MDC Alliance have deployed election party agents comprehensively with the NCA deploying very few polling agents.

Turnout
ZESN observed short queues in the morning with the majority of voters being elderly women. The processing of voters by the polling officials was observed to be efficient.

Polling Officials
There is an average of 7 polling officials at each polling station in Mutoko North Constituency.

Conclusion
ZESN notes that polling stations are still open and encourages all registered voters in Mutoko North Constituency and Chegutu East Local Authority to go out and exercise their right to vote peacefully.”

Chamisa Prefers Mwonzora Than Aggressive And Combative Biti

Chamisa Saves Mwonzora From Expulsion

MDC Alliance’s secretary- general Douglas Mwonzora survived the chop and escaped with a ‘last warning’ at the party’s national council meeting held on Friday in an outcome that came as a shocker as his head was believed to be on the guillotine.

Impeccable sources told the Mail and Telegraph that  Mwonzora headlined the tense meeting as a litany of allegations of gross indiscipline  were levelled against him.

“There meeting was more like a Mwonzora meeting because he was the topic of discussion as he was accused of all sorts of indiscipline including disrespect for the president (Chamisa) and secretly working with ZANU PF among other allegations, there was a general consensus that Mwonzora must go but Wamba (Chamisa) surprisingly had a final decision to let him stay but he warned him,” revealed our source.

Why did Chamisa save Mwonzora?

Given the tension that has developed between Chamisa and Mwonzora, there was no reason for the MDC Alliance leader to stop Mwonzora from being purged in a hitted national council meeting on Friday.

Insiders say Chamisa’s move was calculative because he realised that purging Mwonzora would pave way for his estwhile nemisis, Tendai Biti, who is the only capable candidate to take over since he has been readmitted into the party.

When Chamisa reshuffled the leadership of the party he kept Biti at bay and appointed him a ceremonial vice chairperson, a post that is less influential.

Sources say Biti’s appointment was meant to keep away from the throne. “Biti is very aggressive and once given an influential post he can wiggle his way to the throne so Chamisa had to play his balls carefully,” said the source.

“It is this fear that informed Chamisa’s decision to stop Mwonzora from being purged,” added the source: “Mwonzora is a better devil than Biti.”

“Chamisa realised that if he expels Mwonzora, Biti is the most qualified candidate for the secretary-general post and he knows that Biti is more power hungry than Mwonzora and he (Biti) also has a large following and is too vocal meaning Wamba will have problems in controlling the party. So he decided that it’s better to have a weakened Mwonzora than a strong Biti.

“The SG  post is the most powerful position in the party and Biti as a former finance minister has links to fund his campaign. Remember Biti is the one who used to lead a a grouping within the party called Team Yamdara where he handled funds that came from a local business mogul (name withheld) during our last congress.Chamisa knows that Biti is an intelligent fool anogona kumhanya nechinhu (to take over),” explained the source.

The submission by our source renders Mwonzora ‘a necessary evil’ for Chamisa to maintain his political hegemony.

MDC Alliance spokesperson Jacob Mafume confirmed that Mwonzora was discussed but hastened to say an “amicable solution” was reached.

“Yes, the issue of party discipline came up for discussion.Senior leadership eventually gave guidance to junior members on the way forward.We are a democratic party capable of resolving our internal democracy,” he was quoted as saying.

-Mail and Telegraph

Chinotimba Pleads For Price Control At Parliament Lamenting Exorbitant Costs Of Coca Cola, Sadza

By Own Correspondent| Vocal Buhera South legislator Joseph Chinotimba expressed outrage over the price of food at Parliament, lamenting the cost of a bottle of Coca Cola and a plate of sadza.

Chinotimba said it is unacceptable that legislators were being forced to pay $4 for the fizzy drink at the Parliament canteen.

Speaker of Parliament Jacob Mudenda reminded Chinotimba to go through proper channels in raising his grievances.

Mudenda also reprimanded other legislators for applauding Chinotimba and challenged them to read the Standing Rules and Orders.

Complained Chinotimba:

On a point of privilege according to Section 68. The price of goods is increasing and I have noticed that the origins of all these price hikes is emanating from Parliament.

Parliament is selling the soft drink coca cola for a $1 and yet Delta did not increase anything. In the hotels also where Members of Parliament are staying, those same coca cola drinks are being sold at $4 yet again Delta did not increase the price of its products.

I lay the blame squarely on the administration of Parliament especially those who are in the administration of welfare of Parliamentarians. As Members of Parliament, we talk to the public and they are complaining of price hikes of these food stuffs.

Again, here at our Members’ Dining we are buying sadza for $3 and coca cola for $4. As Parliament, we are the perpetrators of the increase of these prices. I am begging you Mr. Speaker; let us protect the Members of Parliament.

If the providers of canteen services at Parliament are not satisfied with the amount that they are getting and therefore feel they should increase prices so that the Members of Parliament suffer, do away with them. It is either that we provide our own food or we get alternative service providers. I thank you.”

Mugabe Seeking Medical Services In Singapore For The Past Two Months, President Mnangagwa Reveals

Robert Mugabe and wife Grace

By Own Correspondent| President Emmerson  Mnangagwa has revealed that former Zimbabwean leader, Robert Mugabe is in Singapore for the past two months where he is seeking medical attention.

Addressing hundreds of party supporters gathered for his first “Thank You” rally following his election victory in the July 30 harmonised elecetiona, Mnangagwa said he had received a message confirming that Mugabe was much stronger and he would be returning back home on November 30.

Said Mnangagwa:

“We are taking care of him (Mugabe). He is old now. Its been two months now and he is in Singapore.

He would have come back on October 15 last month but it was communicated that he is not too well and we were told that he needed another month to get better… But word came last night that he is much stronger and will come back on November 30.

He can no longer walk but we will take care of him.  Whatever he asks, we will provide.”

Mwonzora Survives Expulsion, As Party National Council Breathes Fire Over Indiscipline

MDC Alliance’s secretary- general Douglas Mwonzora survived the chop and escaped with a ‘last warning’ at the party’s national council meeting held on Friday in an outcome that came as a shocker as his head was believed to be on the guillotine.

Impeccable sources told the Mail and Telegraph that  Mwonzora headlined the tense meeting as a litany of allegations of gross indiscipline  were levelled against him.

“There meeting was more like a Mwonzora meeting because he was the topic of discussion as he was accused of all sorts of indiscipline including disrespect for the president (Chamisa) and secretly working with ZANU PF among other allegations, there was a general consensus that Mwonzora must go but Wamba (Chamisa) surprisingly had a final decision to let him stay but he warned him,” revealed our source.

The ‘cold war’ between Mwonzora and Chamisa is an open secret and the tension between them is so visible that one can cut it with a knife.

Mwonzora and Chamisa tiff genesis

The tiff between the two dates back to the party’s national congress held in 2014 when Mwonzora defeated Chamisa for the secretary-general post and he (Chamisa) had to be saved by the late president Morgan Tsvangirai’s benevolence when he  smuggled him into the presidium via backdoor in order to maintain his hold on power.

Tsvangirai ‘threw the constitution outside the window’ in an undemocratic fashion and unilaterally appointed Chamisa a vice president.

The cold war reached its tipping point when Mwonzora insinuated that he was going to contest for presidency in the party’s national elective congress set for next year  on a date yet to be announced.

He (Mwonzora)  confirmed his position in an interview with the Mail and Telegraph last month.

“I have read speculative reports in the newspapers and that still remains speculation but I have my rights as a member of the party and the rights I know I have include the right to elect office bearers or to be elected as an office bearer so I will make my decision when the time comes,” he told this publication then.

Basing on such party dynamics, many expected Chamisa to expel Mwonzora on Friday but sources say it was actually Chamisa who ‘saved’ and gave him a ‘last warning’ verdict.

Congress build up

MDC Alliance is heading towards an elective congress and murmurs within the party suggests Chamisa wants to eliminate all form of competition and be endorsed as  the party’s leader.

After Tsvangirai’s death Chamisa swiftly moved in, ringfenced his position which the National executive had to endorse as the youthful leader ‘ avoided’ a congress where he was likely to face vice president Elias Mudzuri, the then vice president Thokozani khupe and possibly Mwonzora.

The build up to the congress is opening a cane of worms as internal strife is threatening the MDC social fabric with supporters now torn amid the centre as some are now backing “the mature Mwonzora.”

Insiders say Mwonzora is holding on to the constitution as he manuovres his way through the landmines ahead of the congress.

“Mwonzora is sticking to the constitution and that is why he cannot be expelled. The allegations which are leveled against him are purely a constitutional crisis because his decisions are informed by what the MDC supreme law says,” opined the source.

“However, some who are close to Chamisa want the youthful leader to disregard the constitution and keep on politicking.”

The infighting has spilled into the social media where senior party officials clash and vent their anger.

Why did Chamisa save Mwonzora?

Given the tension that has developed between Chamisa and Mwonzora, there was no reason for the MDC Alliance leader to stop Mwonzora from being purged in a hitted national council meeting on Friday.

Insiders say Chamisa’s move was calculative because he realised that purging Mwonzora would pave way for his estwhile nemisis, Tendai Biti, who is the only capable candidate to take over since he has been readmitted into the party.

When Chamisa reshuffled the leadership of the party he kept Biti at bay and appointed him a ceremonial vice chairperson, a post that is less influential.

Sources say Biti’s appointment was meant to keep away from the throne. “Biti is very aggressive and once given an influential post he can wiggle his way to the throne so Chamisa had to play his balls carefully,” said the source.

“It is this fear that informed Chamisa’s decision to stop Mwonzora from being purged,” added the source: “Mwonzora is a better devil than Biti.”

“Chamisa realised that if he expels Mwonzora, Biti is the most qualified candidate for the secretary-general post and he knows that Biti is more power hungry than Mwonzora and he (Biti) also has a large following and is too vocal meaning Wamba will have problems in controlling the party. So he decided that it’s better to have a weakened Mwonzora than a strong Biti.

“The SG  post is the most powerful position in the party and Biti as a former finance minister has links to fund his campaign. Remember Biti is the one who used to lead a a grouping within the party called Team Yamdara where he handled funds that came from a local business mogul (name withheld) during our last congress.Chamisa knows that Biti is an intelligent fool anogona kumhanya nechinhu (to take over),” explained the source.

The submission by our source renders Mwonzora ‘a necessary evil’ for Chamisa to maintain his political hegemony.

MDC Alliance spokesperson Jacob Mafume confirmed that Mwonzora was discussed but hastened to say an “amicable solution” was reached.

“Yes, the issue of party discipline came up for discussion.Senior leadership eventually gave guidance to junior members on the way forward.We are a democratic party capable of resolving our internal democracy,” he was quoted as saying.

-Mail and Telegraph

ED Reveals That Mugabe Cannot Walk Anymore, Is He Justifying Coup?

By Own Correspondent| Acknowledging that former president Robert Mugabe remains Zanu Pf’ s most decorated icon and the country’ s founding father, President Emmerson Mnangagwa told party supporters that Mugabe could not walk anymore.

Mnangagwa revealed this at his first “Thank You” rally in his predecessor’s backyard at Murombedzi Growth Point in Zvimba, Mashonaland West.

He pledged to continue looking after the deposed leader whom he described as a “founding father of a free Zimbabwe and liberation icon”.

Said Mnangagwa:

“Allow me to acknowledge you Chief Zvimba……We are here as your leaders after an invitation from Mashonaland West.. On November 24 last year we started the second republic and I was its leader.

The day has coincided with this day at national level where we are meeting here in Mashonaland West for the first time since November 24 2017. I would like to believe that it is not coincidence, but it has a meaning. …..The first battles were also fought here in Mashonaland West at Chinhoyi….But the main word i want to say while on this soil is I want to thank the leadership from 1962 which included Robert Mugabe as leader and commander. We call him (Mugabe) the founding father of the nation of Zimbabwe. He is our founding father of a free Zimbabwe.

There were others who had other thoughts. You are allowed to do that within the confines of your homes with your wives but when you get outside those homes you are supposed to acknowledge him and say he is our founding father.

We thank you Chief Gushungo for giving birth to a liberation icon. Until last year when he was surrounded by the enermies and we kicked them away and he is now free. We are taking the revolution forward. Those who had surrounded him had nothing revolutionary.

The birth of our independence was a result of the armed struggle with a liberation purpose. We are taking care of him (Mugabe). He is old now. Its been two months now and he is in Singapore. He would have come back on October 15 last month but it was communicated that he is not too well and we were told that he needed another month to get better… But word came last night that he is much stronger and will come back on November 30.

He can no longer walk but we will take care of him.  Whatever he asks, we will provide. I am saying this while here in Zvimba.”

 

Does Zim Need An AG Who Fails To Comprehend Basic Constitutional Matters?

NATIONAL, BUSINESS, BREAKING

NATIONAL, BUSINESS, BREAKING

The Attorney-General of Zimbabwe (AG), Advocate Prince Machaya, has generated further storm in respect of his bold contention yesterday when he said there is no conflict between s 213 of the Constitution of Zimbabwe and s 37 of the Public Order and Security Act (POSA) in relation to who the power to order the deployment of members of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces (ZDF) to assist police in the maintenance of law and order, is vested.

The issue is whether the constitution is the supreme law of the land or an Act of Parliament can change the address of power and authority to order the deployment of troops in the maintenance of law and order.

In terms of s213 of the Constitution, the President, as Commander-in-Chief of the defence forces, is the only one vested with the power to authorise their deployment in support of the police in the maintenance of public order.

However, in terms of s 37 of POSA, it is the Minister of Defence who is vested with the power that the Constitution reserves for the President.

It provides that the Minister may authorise the deployment of defence forces upon receiving request from the Minister of Home Affairs for the purposes of suppressing civil commotion or disturbances in any district.

“The AG is a creature of the Constitution and being the government’s chief legal advisor who function among others is to promote, protect and uphold the rule of law, it is disturbing that Adv Machaya could possibly hold the view that explicit wording of the Constitution can be varied or altered by a subsidiary law to permit the conflict to be resolved outside the spirit and letter of the Constitution.

It is the case that in terms of the Constitution of Zimbabwe, the authority of the President is derived directly from the will of the people whereas the Minister of Defence possesses no such direct nexus with the people in whose name executive authority ought to be derived,” said Mr. Elvis Mugari, the Founder and President at Combined Restitution Association for Zimbabwean Youths.

Mr. Stanley Dube, the Station Manager of the www.the1873fm.com radio platform, said: “The AG is compelled in terms of s 114 of the Constitution to the chief guardian of the rule of law. It is disturbing that he is oblivious of the limitations imposed by s 2(1) of the Constitution that reads as follows: “This Constitution is the supreme law of Zimbabwe and any law, practice, custom or conduct inconsistent with it is invalid to the extent of the inconsistency.”

In the premise, the AG knows or ought to know that POSA to the extent that it confers the authority and power contemplated in s 213 to the Minister of Defence, such authority and power is of no force and effect.

Neither the President nor Parliament can delegate this authority without amending the Constitution.”

Mr. Tapiwa Chitando said: “It is significant that the AG made these averments yesterday while giving oral evidence before the Commission of Inquiry into the August 1 post-election violence that claimed six lives and left a trail of destruction in central Harare.

In this matter, the AG said that: “My understanding of these provisions is that the two should be read in a complementary sense in that the Constitution is the supreme law of the land and POSA, being an Act of Parliament, should be read subject to the Constitution,” yet could then disturbingly conclude that: “Perhaps it could be better phrased, but I do not think it’s an issue of the provision of POSA requiring alignment of the Constitution,” when his job is precisely to protect the rule of law.

The wording of the Constitution is deliberate and specific that the only person vested with this power is and ought to be the President in his capacity as the beneficiary of the people’s sovereign power.”

Tables Turn Against Supa Mandiwanzira

In what could be one of the most dramatic high profile corruption cases this year, it has emerged that former Netone chief executive officer Reward Kangai is one of the key State witnesses to testify against former Information, Communication, Technology minister, Supa Mandiwanzira who is facing criminal abuse of office charges after he allegedly single-handedly awarded an over $5 million consultancy services contract for NetOne to Megawatt Energy a company linked to him.

Mandiwanzira appeared in court on Wednesday and was granted $2000 bail, ordered to surrender his passport, title deeds amounting to $100 000, not to interfere with State witnesses, report to Borrowdale police station and to continue residing at his given address.

He will be back in court on November 30.

Interestingly, one of the State witnesses Kangai was fired from Netone in October 2016 on allegations of corruption and on December 28 he wrote a letter to President Mnangagwa accusing Mandiwanzira of abusing his office. He dubbed the letter “The birth and growth of a cartel in the ICT Sector in Zimbabwe.”

Mandiwanzira rubbished these allegations saying that they were “discredited allegations by a fired former CEO implicated in corrupt activities by a PWC forensic audit.” He was later to be cleared by the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC).

After several years of out of court accusations and counter accusations, November 30 will be the first time for the two to come face to face in the court of law.

Meanwhile, this publication has gleaned a letter dated November 2 2015 addressed to Mandiwanzira (copied to Kangai) and authored by Megawatt chief executive officer Xiaodong Li in which Netone was obliged to pay $1million consultancy fees to Megawatt.

“The meeting further confirmed that Huawei has undertaken to pay Megawatt’s $1million consultancy fees. A such, rather than providing a discount of $30 million to Netone, Huawei will provide a discount of $31 million to enable Netone to pay the $1 million to Megawatt” read part of the letter.

According to the documents seen by the Mail and Telegraph, Megawatt then issued another invoice of $4 million which included “success fees.”

The document also states that: “Given that all parties have agreed to the discount amount, we believe the price renegotiation to be complete. Megawatt has thus fulfilled the mandate set by the ministry. It is on this basis that we intend to submit an invoice to the ministry for the success fee to NetOne later this week. The invoice will also include the consultancy fee as mentioned above and therefore the total value of the invoice to be submitted to NetOne will be four million dollars (US$4 000 000),”

However, Mandiwanzira’s lawyers Advocates Thembinkosi Magwaliba and Brian Hungwe, instructed by Selby Hwacha of Dube, Manikai & Hwacha said their client maintains that Megawatt offered consultancy services at no cost to Government.

“He (Mandiwanzira) also advised them that the consultancy led to the recovery of tens of millions of dollars for NetOne,” his lawyers wrote in a statement issued on Tuesday.

-Mail and Telegraph

Chamisa Saves Mwonzora From Expulsion

MDC Alliance’s secretary- general Douglas Mwonzora survived the chop and escaped with a ‘last warning’ at the party’s national council meeting held on Friday in an outcome that came as a shocker as his head was believed to be on the guillotine.

Impeccable sources told the Mail and Telegraph that  Mwonzora headlined the tense meeting as a litany of allegations of gross indiscipline  were levelled against him.

“There meeting was more like a Mwonzora meeting because he was the topic of discussion as he was accused of all sorts of indiscipline including disrespect for the president (Chamisa) and secretly working with ZANU PF among other allegations, there was a general consensus that Mwonzora must go but Wamba (Chamisa) surprisingly had a final decision to let him stay but he warned him,” revealed our source.

The ‘cold war’ between Mwonzora and Chamisa is an open secret and the tension between them is so visible that one can cut it with a knife.

Mwonzora and Chamisa tiff genesis

The tiff between the two dates back to the party’s national congress held in 2014 when Mwonzora defeated Chamisa for the secretary-general post and he (Chamisa) had to be saved by the late president Morgan Tsvangirai’s benevolence when he  smuggled him into the presidium via backdoor in order to maintain his hold on power.

Tsvangirai ‘threw the constitution outside the window’ in an undemocratic fashion and unilaterally appointed Chamisa a vice president.

The cold war reached its tipping point when Mwonzora insinuated that he was going to contest for presidency in the party’s national elective congress set for next year  on a date yet to be announced.

He (Mwonzora)  confirmed his position in an interview with the Mail and Telegraph last month.

“I have read speculative reports in the newspapers and that still remains speculation but I have my rights as a member of the party and the rights I know I have include the right to elect office bearers or to be elected as an office bearer so I will make my decision when the time comes,” he told this publication then.

Basing on such party dynamics, many expected Chamisa to expel Mwonzora on Friday but sources say it was actually Chamisa who ‘saved’ and gave him a ‘last warning’ verdict.

Congress build up

MDC Alliance is heading towards an elective congress and murmurs within the party suggests Chamisa wants to eliminate all form of competition and be endorsed as  the party’s leader.

After Tsvangirai’s death Chamisa swiftly moved in, ringfenced his position which the National executive had to endorse as the youthful leader ‘ avoided’ a congress where he was likely to face vice president Elias Mudzuri, the then vice president Thokozani khupe and possibly Mwonzora.

The build up to the congress is opening a cane of worms as internal strife is threatening the MDC social fabric with supporters now torn amid the centre as some are now backing “the mature Mwonzora.”

Insiders say Mwonzora is holding on to the constitution as he manuovres his way through the landmines ahead of the congress.

“Mwonzora is sticking to the constitution and that is why he cannot be expelled. The allegations which are leveled against him are purely a constitutional crisis because his decisions are informed by what the MDC supreme law says,” opined the source.

“However, some who are close to Chamisa want the youthful leader to disregard the constitution and keep on politicking.”

The infighting has spilled into the social media where senior party officials clash and vent their anger.

Why did Chamisa save Mwonzora?

Given the tension that has developed between Chamisa and Mwonzora, there was no reason for the MDC Alliance leader to stop Mwonzora from being purged in a hitted national council meeting on Friday.

Insiders say Chamisa’s move was calculative because he realised that purging Mwonzora would pave way for his estwhile nemisis, Tendai Biti, who is the only capable candidate to take over since he has been readmitted into the party.

When Chamisa reshuffled the leadership of the party he kept Biti at bay and appointed him a ceremonial vice chairperson, a post that is less influential.

Sources say Biti’s appointment was meant to keep away from the throne. “Biti is very aggressive and once given an influential post he can wiggle his way to the throne so Chamisa had to play his balls carefully,” said the source.

“It is this fear that informed Chamisa’s decision to stop Mwonzora from being purged,” added the source: “Mwonzora is a better devil than Biti.”

“Chamisa realised that if he expels Mwonzora, Biti is the most qualified candidate for the secretary-general post and he knows that Biti is more power hungry than Mwonzora and he (Biti) also has a large following and is too vocal meaning Wamba will have problems in controlling the party. So he decided that it’s better to have a weakened Mwonzora than a strong Biti.

“The SG  post is the most powerful position in the party and Biti as a former finance minister has links to fund his campaign. Remember Biti is the one who used to lead a a grouping within the party called Team Yamdara where he handled funds that came from a local business mogul (name withheld) during our last congress.Chamisa knows that Biti is an intelligent fool anogona kumhanya nechinhu (to take over),” explained the source.

The submission by our source renders Mwonzora ‘a necessary evil’ for Chamisa to maintain his political hegemony.

MDC Alliance spokesperson Jacob Mafume confirmed that Mwonzora was discussed but hastened to say an “amicable solution” was reached.

“Yes, the issue of party discipline came up for discussion.Senior leadership eventually gave guidance to junior members on the way forward.We are a democratic party capable of resolving our internal democracy,” he was quoted as saying.

-Mail and Telegraph

Temba Mliswa Donates 2 Cows To President Emmerson Mnangagwa

By Own Correspondent| Independent legislator for Norton Temba Mliswa has donated two cows to President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

Mliswa, who was part of the delegates who attended Mnangagwa’s first “Thank You” rally at Murombedzi Growth point in Zvimba today (Saturday) donated the two cows making 11 the total number of cows given to Mnangagwa by Zanu Pf stalwarts.

Other provinces which also donated cows include Chegutu which donated 2 cows while Kadoma donated 3 heifers and 1 bull.

Former president Robert Mugabe was showered with gifts such as heifers at events including Zanu Pf rallies during his tenure as the country’s leader in what analysts described as bootlicking by party heavyweights.

Kangai Readies For Battle Against Supa Mandiwanzira

In what could be one of the most dramatic high profile corruption cases this year, it has emerged that former Netone chief executive officer Reward Kangai is one of the key State witnesses to testify against former Information, Communication, Technology minister, Supa Mandiwanzira who is facing criminal abuse of office charges after he allegedly single-handedly awarded an over $5 million consultancy services contract for NetOne to Megawatt Energy a company linked to him.

Mandiwanzira appeared in court on Wednesday and was granted $2000 bail, ordered to surrender his passport, title deeds amounting to $100 000, not to interfere with State witnesses, report to Borrowdale police station and to continue residing at his given address.

He will be back in court on November 30.

Interestingly, one of the State witnesses Kangai was fired from Netone in October 2016 on allegations of corruption and on December 28 he wrote a letter to President Mnangagwa accusing Mandiwanzira of abusing his office. He dubbed the letter “The birth and growth of a cartel in the ICT Sector in Zimbabwe.”

Mandiwanzira rubbished these allegations saying that they were “discredited allegations by a fired former CEO implicated in corrupt activities by a PWC forensic audit.” He was later to be cleared by the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC).

After several years of out of court accusations and counter accusations, November 30 will be the first time for the two to come face to face in the court of law.

Meanwhile, this publication has gleaned a letter dated November 2 2015 addressed to Mandiwanzira (copied to Kangai) and authored by Megawatt chief executive officer Xiaodong Li in which Netone was obliged to pay $1million consultancy fees to Megawatt.

“The meeting further confirmed that Huawei has undertaken to pay Megawatt’s $1million consultancy fees. A such, rather than providing a discount of $30 million to Netone, Huawei will provide a discount of $31 million to enable Netone to pay the $1 million to Megawatt” read part of the letter.

According to the documents seen by the Mail and Telegraph, Megawatt then issued another invoice of $4 million which included “success fees.”

The document also states that: “Given that all parties have agreed to the discount amount, we believe the price renegotiation to be complete. Megawatt has thus fulfilled the mandate set by the ministry. It is on this basis that we intend to submit an invoice to the ministry for the success fee to NetOne later this week. The invoice will also include the consultancy fee as mentioned above and therefore the total value of the invoice to be submitted to NetOne will be four million dollars (US$4 000 000),”

However, Mandiwanzira’s lawyers Advocates Thembinkosi Magwaliba and Brian Hungwe, instructed by Selby Hwacha of Dube, Manikai & Hwacha said their client maintains that Megawatt offered consultancy services at no cost to Government.

“He (Mandiwanzira) also advised them that the consultancy led to the recovery of tens of millions of dollars for NetOne,” his lawyers wrote in a statement issued on Tuesday.

 

Supa Mandiwanzira In Trouble, Former NetOne Boss Planning To Nail Him

In what could be one of the most dramatic high profile corruption cases this year, it has emerged that former Netone chief executive officer Reward Kangai is one of the key State witnesses to testify against former Information, Communication, Technology minister, Supa Mandiwanzira who is facing criminal abuse of office charges after he allegedly single-handedly awarded an over $5 million consultancy services contract for NetOne to Megawatt Energy a company linked to him.

Mandiwanzira appeared in court on Wednesday and was granted $2000 bail, ordered to surrender his passport, title deeds amounting to $100 000, not to interfere with State witnesses, report to Borrowdale police station and to continue residing at his given address.

He will be back in court on November 30.

Interestingly, one of the State witnesses Kangai was fired from Netone in October 2016 on allegations of corruption and on December 28 he wrote a letter to President Mnangagwa accusing Mandiwanzira of abusing his office. He dubbed the letter “The birth and growth of a cartel in the ICT Sector in Zimbabwe.”

Mandiwanzira rubbished these allegations saying that they were “discredited allegations by a fired former CEO implicated in corrupt activities by a PWC forensic audit.” He was later to be cleared by the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC).

After several years of out of court accusations and counter accusations, November 30 will be the first time for the two to come face to face in the court of law.

Meanwhile, this publication has gleaned a letter dated November 2 2015 addressed to Mandiwanzira (copied to Kangai) and authored by Megawatt chief executive officer Xiaodong Li in which Netone was obliged to pay $1million consultancy fees to Megawatt.

“The meeting further confirmed that Huawei has undertaken to pay Megawatt’s $1million consultancy fees. A such, rather than providing a discount of $30 million to Netone, Huawei will provide a discount of $31 million to enable Netone to pay the $1 million to Megawatt” read part of the letter.

According to the documents seen by the Mail and Telegraph, Megawatt then issued another invoice of $4 million which included “success fees.”

The document also states that: “Given that all parties have agreed to the discount amount, we believe the price renegotiation to be complete. Megawatt has thus fulfilled the mandate set by the ministry. It is on this basis that we intend to submit an invoice to the ministry for the success fee to NetOne later this week. The invoice will also include the consultancy fee as mentioned above and therefore the total value of the invoice to be submitted to NetOne will be four million dollars (US$4 000 000),”

However, Mandiwanzira’s lawyers Advocates Thembinkosi Magwaliba and Brian Hungwe, instructed by Selby Hwacha of Dube, Manikai & Hwacha said their client maintains that Megawatt offered consultancy services at no cost to Government.

“He (Mandiwanzira) also advised them that the consultancy led to the recovery of tens of millions of dollars for NetOne,” his lawyers wrote in a statement issued on Tuesday.

-Mail and Telegraph

ED Praises ‘Founding Father’ Mugabe

Jane Mlambo| President Emmerson Mnangagwa has praised former head of state, Robert Mugabe saying he led the liberation struggle and is the founding father of a free Zimbabwe.

Addressing party supporters at Murombedzi Growth point today Mnangagwa thanked Zvimba for giving Zimbabwe, Mugabe.

“I want to thank the traditional leadership for giving us former President Mugabe . . .He is our founding father of a free Zimbabwe. Those who had other ideas should know that he is the founding father.

“He led us in the war of liberation. We are now going forward with the revolution. Those who had surrounded the former President had no roots in the revolution.

“Those who fail to walk the correct line of the revolution will fall by the wayside. We thank Chief Zvimba for giving us former President Mugabe. We are looking after him as our elder.

“He is out of the country at the moment and we expect him back on November 30. We thank Mash West because it has shown that it is pure Zanu-PF.

Mnangagwa has initiated Thank You rallies and is expected to visit all the 10 provinces of the country in the same style Chamisa is doing.

ED Says He Will Continue Going to Parly And MDC MPs Will Continue Being Kicked Out

Jane Mlambo| Emmerson Mnangagwa has dared opposition MDC parliamentarians saying he will continue going to parliament threatening that if MDC MPs refuse to stand up they continue being kicked out.

Gweru Town Clerk Package Riles Residents

WOMEN Coalition of Zimbabwe (WCoZ) Midlands Chapter has rallied a thousand residents in Gweru to demand an explanation from the city’s mayor Josiah Makombe on why the local authority decided to give former town clerk Daniel Matau a $400 000 golden handshake at a time when the city was struggling to provide services to ratepayers.

The coalition submitted a petition with the signatures of 1 000 residents.

WCoZ, led by Midlands Chapter chairperson Alice Maqata, demanded to know how the cash-strapped local authority would finance the package.

“We, the undersigned Women Coalition of Zimbabwe, together with the people whose signatures are appended in support of the cause, hereby present a petition, noting the following… NewsDay of October 15 states that Gweru City Council has extended a $400 000 golden handshake to former town clerk Daniel Matau,” part of the petition read.

The women expressed concern over how the council, which is owed over $58 million by residents and is struggling to settle its own debts, would raise the $400 000.

“GCC is on record saying it is owed $58 million by residents. We have it on good record that GCC owes ZESA $28 million… In the spirit of transparency and accountability, we demand to know how GCC intends to finance the golden-handshake,” the coalition said.

Terms of Matau’s severance package indicated in a deed of settlement entered into between council and Matau’s legal team from Chitere and Chidawanyika Legal Practitioners showed that the former town clerk would also get a residential stand, a commercial stand and his Jeep Cherokee official vehicle, among other benefits.

Makombe confirmed that he had received the petition and said he was still studying it.

“I am yet to read the petition in full. This Friday, I have an engagement and will be out of office. So, perhaps, I will be able to give a comprehensive comment on Monday,” he said.

-Newsday

George Charamba Is Zanu PF After All

Jane Mlambo| George Charamba, the deputy chief secretary in the office of the President and cabinet, who recently clashed with the opposition after blaming Nelson Chamisa for the 1st of August violence that resulted in the death of six civilians has been spotted at Emmerson Mnangagwa’s Murombedzi rally clad in Zanu PF regalia.

Despite the constitution prohibiting civil servants from meddling in politics, Charamba has shown little regard for it and has continued to pass comments denigrating the opposition even though his position requires him to be apolitical

View image below….

 

WATCH LIVE: The Clearest Evidence That Soldiers Opened Fire And Killed Civilians Willy Nilly

VIDEO LOADING BELOW…

By Simba Chikanza| The clearest evidence has emerged showing that soldiers on the 1st August 2018 opened fire on civilians and mere passerbys.

ZimEye from today, Saturday begins profiling the content which shows that the events of the 1st of August were not at all one of soldiers opening fire on protesters. They were clearly military level terrorism on harmless civilians.

VIDEO LOADING….

Earlier in the week ZimEye.com revealed that the massacre was plant and announced over 8 months before in December 2017 and it was on the 15th of that month around 1 p.m. when Emmerson Mnangagwa presided over the first declaration that the Zimbabwe defence forces is going to be deployed to change the electoral result of the 2018 elections so that it reflects one better than the 1980 outcome. (SEE VIDEO)

Meanwhile civic group, Pachedu wrote saying:  “Here is the solid evidence that the military shot civilians on August 1.

“Look closely! You will see the victim running & then later, after being shot twice.”  VIDEO LOADING BELOW…

Tsitsi Masiyiwa Wants To Abolish November?

By Lynette Eceolaza| Expressing her views on Twitter during the week, Strive Masiyiwa’s wife, Tsitsi said: “Zimbabwe it’s okay and acceptable to get married in November. It’s perfectly acceptable to renew your marriage vows in the month of November. “So remember this and keep it firmly in mind: The Lord is God both in heaven and on earth, and there is no other.”

Why should Tsitsi Masiyiwa want to tell people to disregard our traditions against the sacred month of November?

November is scared and we should respect this…Why does she think she should have a final say or advise on our custom and traditions that we should disregard? Does she think having money should make us listen to her? Is she oblivious of the fact that there is no race or tribe without their traditions? The English , the Scottish, Spanish, to name a few still follow their traditions. Why on earth do you want us to disregard ours?

Let us be identified by our traditions, probably the only things left. Please do not rob us of our beautiful traditions.

Even Christians have their traditions and I am sure God would want us to keep ours.

How do we and our children identify ourselves? How do you say I am Zimbabwean and how can anyone identify you as Zimbabwean? Of course by observing our traditions. We have been robbed of many things , please don’t do this to us. Let us leave a legacy for our children. Proudly Zimbabwean African, I want to be identified as such among my other African, Kenyan, Malawian, black African etc.

“Investigate The Bullet In His Leg If Soldiers Didn’t Shoot Him”

By Own Correspondent| Giving oral evidence before the Kgalema Motlanthe led August 1 Commission of Inquiry (Thursday), a 19 year old boy who still has a bullet lodged in his leg said he was not shot by soldiers but could not disclose who shot him.

Simeon Chipokosi however told the Commission that he still had a bullet lodged in his leg 4 months after he was shot.

Citizens took to twitter calling on the Commission to investigate the bullet in Chipokosi’s leg and establish the owners of the gun which shot the boy.

We publish below some of the comments:

 

 

Another Bus Accident

Correspondent|ANOTHER accident yet again. A Tatenda Safaris bus traveling from Hwange to Gweru has been involved in an accident as it approached Mpilo Hospital in Bulawayo, according to information from residents in the neighborhood.

The driver of the bus, which was carrying a Roman Catholic Church Choir heading to Gweru, lost control and the bus landed on the side.

Details on any casualties are still sketchy at the moment. A City of Bulawayo fire tender can be seen at the accident scene.

More details to follow…

Chamisa Dismiss Mthuli Ncube Budget As An Economic Horror Script

THE opposition MDC yesterday said Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube’s silence on currency distortions in the 2019 National Budget presented on Thursday demonstrated government’s reluctance to deal with the root of the problems that have seen prices pegged in the local bond note shooting through the roof.

Observers have also expressed concerns that the pricing of basic commodities would remain beyond the reach of the majority of citizens earning their keep in bond notes.

Retailers have resorted to pegging their prices in United States dollars — which are currently scarce on the market — while customers wanting to pay in bond notes or plastic money have to pay the US dollar price.

MDC spokesperson Jacob Mafume said his party believed the budget was a self-conflicted document, with nothing to celebrate as most of the reforms proposed were built on quick sand.

Ncube presented his budget with a raft of reforms meant to cut spending and inspire confidence in the local economy — something which some analysts said was a positive move — but failure to deal with currency discrepancy is set to make life difficult for the majority of citizens.

“The lack of clarity on currency issue is at the centre of the multi pricing system and a decisive Minister ought to bite the bullet and make a decision on the matter,” party Mafume said.

“Yet, Mthuli, in his budget, ignores the distortions being caused by the bond note. He proves beyond reasonable doubt that he is scared of the raw State power which is in the hands of Zanu PF hardliners and securocratic oligarchs, who need to maintain a printing Press of sorts for purposes of patronage.”

Mafume described government’s proposal to arrest run-away expenditure as “pub talk”, as they will continue printing bond notes so that they can fund Zanu PF activities and the lifestyles of the elite.

Mafume said Ncube should have proposed the demonetising of the bond note and revert to a proper multi-currency regime, outlining a path towards joining the rand monetary union.

He said there was a foreign currency crisis in the country because of the unproductive environment affecting Zimbabwe’s industrial sector.

The opposition also said it was disturbed by the marginal allocation to independent commissions and failure to deal decisively with the land issue, among other topical matters.

“With all due respect, this budget is a continuation of the old order of economic lethargy, economic destruction, corruption and patronage. It does not even address the issue of the usurious 2c a dollar this government is fleecing from innocent Zimbabweans.

“The token reduction of 5% from the salaries of the well-heeled is so measly it will not make any positive impact,” he said.

Other stakeholders who spoke to NewsDay Weekender said the requirement on car importers to pay duty in hard cash made no sense, given that workers did not receive their salaries in hard cash.

Vendors Initiative for Socio-Economic Transformation (VISET) described the budget as “an economic horror script”, especially for those eking out a living in the informal sector.

“Hence, we state at this stage that the 2019 Budget is an instrument of economic attack on the poor and struggling masses while simultaneously opening up Zimbabwe for massive exploitation by foreign capital,” said VISET executive director Samuel Wadzai.

He said the budget dashed whatever hopes they had of seeing informal sector players evolving into big formal businesses.

“The policy pronouncements via the national budget have dealt a heavy blow on the formalisation of the informal sector drive. A cocktail of taxes and payments demanded by government will only push the informal sector into retreat,” he said

Combined Harare Residents Association Mfundo Mlilo said the budget was full of contradictions, and Ncube failed to take the bold steps needed to deal comprehensively with the country’s soci-economic challenges.

He also said there was insincerity on the budget allocations and priority was misplaced.

“The budget is contradictory because on the other hand, it attempts to give a corrective diagnosis of the Zimbabwean problems, but on the other, he cherry picks what to address. The minister understands the problems that we are in, but when you go into the contents of his statement, you don’t see any commitment to deal with the real problems,” Mlilo said.

-Newsday

Wait A Second! Mthuli Ncube Didn’t Prioritize Your Health In His 2019 Budget

FINANCE minister Mthuli Ncube has been criticised for failing to prioritise the funding of health in the 2019 budget, with health lobbyists dismissing it as a mere ‘ritual’ and a piece meal, which falls short in addressing the comatose health delivery system, plagued by drug outages and poor infrastructure.

Although the allocation of $694,5 million (9,3%) is an increase of 33% from last year’s, it is still a far cry from the target of 15% set in 2001 by members of the African Union during a conference in Abuja, Nigeria.

Pitted against galloping prices for drugs, often charged in foreign currency, and an acute shortage of essential equipment in public health facilities as well as key staff, the amount is a far cry from the target of $1,3 billion, which the ministry requires to function properly.

In his presentation, Mthuli said “focus will be on ensuring that the referral system is re-established”.

Community Working Group on Health chief executive Itai Rusike said the allocation was inadequate.

“The massive increase in essential drug costs, drop in drug purchase by low income people and a fall in use of essential health care services are all issues that need looking into,” he said.

Rusike said the state of health services’ near-collapse is directly related to government misplacing its priorities.

Health lobbyist Fungisayi Dube, of the Citizens Health Watch, said the budget demonstrated that government did not prioritise health services.

“The budget sounds more like just a process or ritual that needs to be done. If the government really appreciated the challenges in the hospitals, they would have given a meaningful allocation,” she said.

Dube said it was disappointing to note that there had not been a deliberate effort to address maternal health challenges against a backdrop where “2000 women die every year due to maternal deaths”.

She, however, appreciated the pharmaceutical duty rebate on essential raw materials for drug manufacturing.

“We just hope it will be sustained to make menstruation easy and bearable for women. We want to see if this will really reduce the costs we incur every month,” she said.

Health rights and social equity expert Rutendo Bonde said it was a daunting task to prioritise health, among so many competing urgencies.

“However, what is good in this budget is significant investment in some other areas like measures to support local pharmaceuticals. For how long can we run a health delivery on imported drugs?” she said.

The situation at most public health facilities continues to spiral out of control, with institutions struggling to function on a shoe-string budget.

This has also resulted in staff getting demotivated and in turn lump it on the patients, who bear the brunt of it all.

-Newsday

We are Not Sex Objects Mr Speaker Sir: Lynette Karenyi

MDC Alliance female legislators have complained before the Speaker of the National Assembly Jacob Mudenda over sexual harassment in the House by Zanu PF legislators Tafanana Zhou (Mberengwa North) and John Paradza (Gutu West).

Manicaland proportional representation MP, Lynette Karenyi, on Thursday raised a point of order as the leader of the MDC Alliance women’s assembly, complaining about the verbal abuse that she and another femal MP Joanna Mamombe (Harare West) had been subjected to.

“I represent women out there and my presence here is encouraging other women to stand up and fight for our space, but I have realised that if I do not say this out, most of the women can’t stand up and speak,” Karenyi said.

“I have received reports from my fellow colleagues that they are also experiencing sexual harassment, and I strongly feel that there is a difference between heckling and sexual harassment, and I decided to stand up and say it out to encourage other women to stand and speak.”

She said gestures and utterances by Zhou and Paradza — who allegedly commented on female MPs’ body features — were tantamount to sexual harassment.

“As female MPs, we take such moves as disrespectful, because we are not sex objects, but we are legislators and we deserve respect,” Karenyi said.

When Karenyi was contributing to debate in the National Assembly last week, Zhou and Paradza, who usually sit far in the back benches, heckled Karenyi and labelled her a fourth wife.

On the other hand, whenever Mamombe posed questions to ministers, the same male legislators called her a prostitute.

“Our male counterparts should treat us with respect, because we are mothers and MPs. We should feel free to stand up and debate without being given or being labelled, as we are not wives of such MPs,” Karenyi said.

“This sexual harassment continues every day when we step inside this Parliament. Mamombe and I are the recipients of this sexual harassment from these two male MPs, and this must stop.”

She said the male MPs’ behaviour was not only a violation of women’s constitutional rights, but was also un-parliamentary.

“Since Parliament has the duty to represent women, we want respect, and it is our constitutional right to be here as MPs,” Karenyi said.

Mudenda said such occurrences should be reported to the police, adding that he would verify the matter and act.

-Newsday

ZEC Fails To Disclose Source And Number Of Ballot Papers For Mtoko By Election

By Election Resource Centre Zimbabwe|Zimbabwe is set to conduct the first House of Assembly by-election on the 24th of November 2018, following the July 30 harmonized elections. While conventional observation of the pre-election environment and polling day environment has and will reveal a largely peaceful electoral atmosphere, such findings tell very little about the nature of the election that is about to be conducted. It must be acknowledged that the history of by-elections in Zimbabwe has been broadly peaceful and characterized by limited voter turnout compared to harmonized elections. The limited voter turnout has been attributed to the limited competition and interest in by-elections in the country by political parties and voters alike.

The manner in which by-elections are conducted often does not reflect the electoral trends that will characterize the next major election but reflect the attitude towards electoral reforms. The ERC contends that by-elections are a safe arena to test changes to improve how elections are conducted.

The peaceful atmosphere that has characterized the pre-election environment in Mutoko North is highly commendable. It is hoped that the high levels of political tolerance witnessed can be sustained through strengthening institutions and mechanisms that ensure the safety and security of persons during all elections. Peace, tolerance and security of persons during elections must not be at the benevolence of those with the capacity to deploy mechanism that threaten the same peace, tolerance and security of persons. Adequate institutional frameworks, systems and procedures must be instituted and strengthened to make them functional beyond the by-election.

The ERC further noted improvements in the administration of electoral processes including the conduct of voter education by the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) and civil society organizations and the release of the voters’ roll to election stakeholders ahead of the elections in comparison to the July 2018 elections. In the case of voter education, it is encouraged that efforts by ZEC be extended as far as possible to improve the reach and impact of the voter education exercise. Voter education for the Mutoko North by-election only commenced on the 12th of November 2018, less than two weeks before polling day. On the voters’ roll the ERC noted that no voter registration process was conducted before the closure of the voters’ roll ahead of the by-election contrary to the legal provision that voter registration must be a continuous process. ZEC is encouraged to fully embrace the legal provisions relating to voter registration and make available the complete biometric voters’ roll for inspection by voters and election stakeholders.

It was also noted that election officials were recruited and trained to administer polling day ahead of the Mutoko North by-election. The ERC has always encouraged ZEC to administer the recruitment and training of all electoral officials in a transparent manner which can be accessed by observers for purposes of meeting international best practices. Such a change did not happen ahead of the by-election.

The ERC also noted that the by-election had not been made accessible to persons who qualify for postal voting as no invitations were publicly issued for citizens to apply to vote by post. While by-elections rarely invite attention including from potential postal voters, all relevant legal provisions should be followed in the administration of elections without exception. The administration of postal voting must also be accompanied by relevant transparency and accountability measures such as informing the stakeholders on how many applications were received, how many of the applications were successful and how many ballots papers were issued for postal voting. The credibility of Zimbabwe elections lies in a consistent, legal, transparent and accountable administration of all electoral processes.

Finally, ahead of polling day, ZEC was still to share information detailing; how many ballot papers were produced for the by-election, where the ballots were printed and stored and how many ballots would be released on polling day. This information is essential for purposes of verifiability of the election and results.

While the ERC acknowledges efforts by ZEC to conduct by-elections consistent with the provisions in the Electoral Act, it remains concerning that key provisions that could enhance the credibility of our elections continue to be ignored regardless of explicit recommendations that were shared by invited international observers after the July 2018 elections. The ERC encourages ZEC to seriously consider reviewing the administration conduct of all future elections in full fulfillment of its constitutional and legal obligations.

At the center of the credibility of future elections in Zimbabwe lies constitutional and legal obligations relating to the transparency, verifiability and accountability of the administration of all electoral processes. Four months after the disputed harmonized elections, Zimbabwe appears to have forgotten nothing and learnt nothing in terms of elections. Reform must begin now.

Source: Election Resouce Centre (ERC)

It Is Illegal And Uncostitutional For The Police To Enter The Chambers Of Parliament And Arrest Or Remove MPs

Expert Opinion|For the second time in two years, members of the Zimbabwe Republic Police were called into the House of Assembly chambers to remove opposition Members of Parliament (MPs).

On 26 October 2016, police were called in to remove an opposition MP Costa Machingauta for “dressing inappropriately”. He was wearing a jacket with the Zimbabwean national flag colours at the height of the #ThisFlag movement.

When the Deputy Speaker asked him to leave and he refused, the Sergeant-at-Arms was instructed to remove him, but fellow MPs protected Machingauta, and the Sergeant-At-Arms enlisted the services of the police. History repeated itself again on 22 November 2018 when, during the 2019 budget announcement, police were called in by Speaker Advocate Jacob Mudenda to evict opposition MPs for defying his order that MPs should stand up for President Mnangagwa as he entered the chamber. According to the Speaker, he would not have anyone disrespecting the President.

Beyond this disrespecting and insulting the President issue being overstretched and taken too far in this country, fundamentally worrying is the perpetuating of a serious breach of the Constitution in allowing police to enter the chambers of Parliament. Compounding the worry is that it is the Head of Parliament – the Speaker himself, who is leading this lawlessness and constitutional violation. Parliament is tasked in section 119(1) and (2) of the Constitution to protect the Constitution and promote democratic governance in Zimbabwe, but also to ensure that provisions of the Constitution are upheld by the state and all its institutions.

The Head of Parliament cannot therefore be seen to be undermining Parliament, for in so doing he is undermining the ability of Parliament to police other branches of government.

Can MPs be temporarily removed from Parliament for unruly behaviour?

Yes. Members of Parliament who cause disturbances may be forcibly removed from the chamber if need be, but only through Parliament’s own processes and personnel. According to Standing Order Number 110 “Any member who disregards the authority of the Chair or persistently and wilfully disrupts the business of the House commits an offence for which he or she may be suspended from the service of the House”.

Order 108 addresses disorderly conduct in the chamber. Standing Order Number 112 states that “Any member who wilfully disobeys any lawful order of the House and any member who wilfully or vexatiously interrupts the orderly conduct of business in the House shall be guilty of contempt”.

Further to the rules, the Privileges, Immunities and Powers of Parliament Act [Chapter 2:08] grants Parliament the powers to hold members in contempt of Parliament. All those are avenues for Parliament and the presiding officer to deal with errant MPs. The presiding officer will of course first have to inform the concerned MPs which rule(s) those MPs are “wilfully” disobeying or on the basis of which the MPs are in contempt.

Can they be removed by the police?

Never. The rules of Parliament, as perfectly understood, do not give any authority to the invasion of a police force or details into the chamber. There is no such provision. Beyond rules, within the precincts of Parliament police officers cannot come in to interfere with MPs, as an incident of the separation of powers. An executive-controlled force cannot interfere with discharge of duties by an MP in Parliament.

Arguments of condoning chaos in Parliament when law enforcement is not used are misplaced. When Members of Parliament cause chaos, existing rules provide presiding officers with the authority and legal means to act fairly but decisively against perpetrators. Parliament has a Sergeant-at-Arms who enforces law and order in the chamber.

If the Sergeant-At-Arms is overwhelmed, then Parliament has security to step in and assist – not the police. And a caveat is apt right there: “engaging in robust, raucous and even chaotic debate in Parliament does not disrupt proceedings. Making it altogether impossible to participate in any form of debate does”. So even those existing mechanisms are not a wanton weapon for political use or abuse.

In the October 2016 incident, then Deputy Speaker Mabel Chinomona attempted to invoke section 25 of the Privileges, Immunities and Powers of Parliament Act [Chapter 2:08] (“arrests without warrant”):

“Any person who creates or joins in any disturbance in or within the vicinity of Parliament whilst Parliament is actually sitting may be arrested without warrant on the verbal order of the Speaker and kept in the custody of an officer of Parliament or a police officer until a warrant is issued for his detention in prison”.

She went on to state that “I did not call in the policemen to arrest but to help the Sergeant-at-Arms to remove the person only – just that”. With respect, that is a wrong understanding and usage of section 25. Section 25 cannot be invoked to unleash police on MPs on the House floor.

In the Act, where a provision refers to Members of Parliament, the provision expressly says so. In fact, the definitions section of the Act defines “member”, a term which carries a distinct meaning from “person”.

A “person” within this context is someone who may find himself in Parliament but not a Member of Parliament. There are several provisions within that statute that use the terms “member”, “person” and “officer of Parliament” within the same provision. This makes it clear that these terms are referring to different classes of individuals. By way of example, one can look at sections 4; 5; 7; 14; and the Schedule to the Act.

However, one may also, quite legitimately, argue that the specific mention in certain sections that “person” excludes “a member” may mean that in other instances, “person” may include a member.

For this, one can point to section 5(2) which states that “Subsection (1) shall, subject to section thirteen, not apply to a person, other than a member, […]”. Then section 18(1), for instance, specifically mentions that “No member or person who is the employer, a partner or in the service of a member, whether in the practice of the profession of legal practitioner, parliamentary agent or otherwise […]” but goes on in section 18(2) to say “A person who contravenes subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence and liable […]”. That “person” in 18(2) would no doubt encompass the “member” or “person who is the employer, a partner or in the service of a member”.

Should this latter interpretation be correct, then section 25 falls foul of section 148 of the Constitution. It is unconstitutional. I say this, of course, cognisant of the rule of interpretation in law that enjoins that interpretation falling within constitutional bounds should be preferred over one that does not. Whatever the case may be, the Constitution can never be superseded by a subsidiary statute. The import is that either way, police can under no circumstances enter the chambers of Parliament to remove or arrest MPs, not even to go in and put MPs to order – whatever that may entail.

As for the difference that the Deputy Speaker attempted to draw on arrest versus removing from chambers, that does not lend to her case. The point is not what form or manner of order a police officer comes in to enforce, but that a police officer cannot at all enter the chambers to enforce anything.

Why would section 25 be unconstitutional?

Parliamentarians enjoy immunity. The immunity is absolute. Section 148 of the Constitution provides for the privileges and immunity of Parliament as follows:

“1. The President of the Senate, the Speaker and Members of Parliament have freedom of speech in Parliament and in all parliamentary committees and, while they must obey the rules and orders of the House concerned, they are not liable to civil or criminal proceedings, arrest or imprisonment or damages for anything said in, produced before or submitted to Parliament or any of its committees.

2. An Act of Parliament may–
a. provide for other privileges, immunities and powers of Parliament and its Members and officers;
b. define conduct which constitutes contempt of Parliament, whether committed by Members of Parliament or other people; and
c. provide for a right of reply, through the Speaker or the President of the Senate, as the case may be, for persons who are unjustly injured by what is said about them in Parliament;
but no such Act may permit Parliament or its Members or officers to impose any punishment in the nature of a criminal penalty, other than a fine, for breach of privilege or contempt of Parliament.”

The Statute contemplated by the Constitution is the Privileges, Immunities and Powers of Parliament Act [Chapter 2:08]. It provides in section 5 that:

“(1) There shall be freedom of speech and debate or proceedings in or before Parliament and any committee and such freedom shall not be liable to be impeached or questioned in any court or place outside Parliament.
[…]

(3) It is declared for the avoidance of doubt that a member shall not be liable to any civil or criminal proceedings, arrest or imprisonment or damages for anything said in, produced before or submitted to Parliament or any of its committees.”

These provisions are rooted in the facilitation of Parliament to conduct its business in speech and deeds without any fear or restriction and without any interference. Freedom of speech is critical to the process. The conduct of parliamentary business is principally through a deliberative process – in one form or another. Inclusivity and accommodation are key, including of different kinds and forms of political expression. MPs in fact have the right to protest as an incident to their freedom of expression, whether in Parliament chambers or outside.

This means their freedom of expression and their right to protest inside Parliament are far reaching and wide. Their protest can in fact be the way they choose to express representation of the people who elected them. Democracy is tolerant. And democracy can be messy.

These are the virtues and beauties of the system of governance we have adopted unto ourselves. This can only change if we renegotiate the social contract, that is, the Constitution that establishes our system of governance.

The tendency to use the security sector to assault rights, freedoms and privileges runs counter to our democracy. As the South Africa Constitutional Court has ably articulated, “Parliament is also entrusted with the onerous task of overseeing the Executive. Tyrannical rule is usually at the hands of the Executive, not least because it exercises control over the police and army, two instruments often used to prop up the tyrant through means like arrest, detention, torture and even execution. […] Needless to say, for Parliament properly to exercise its oversight function over the Executive, it must operate in an environment that guarantees members freedom from arrest, detention, prosecution or harassment of whatever nature. Absent this freedom, Parliament may be cowed, with the result that oversight over the Executive may be illusory.”

Parliament should thus be able to conduct unrestrained debate about matters of public importance. It is for this reason that immunity from criminal and civil sanctions is accorded to MPs to remove the fear of repercussions. It is for that very reason that Parliament is given the power to regulate its own conduct and processes.

The import and purpose of section 25 of the Act, if it is accepted to allow the arrest and removal of MPs from chambers by the police, runs counter to these democratic virtues, and diametrically counter to constitutional dictates. That provision effectively allows a member to be arrested for what he or she says or does on the floor of Parliament. Such is the broad and wide-sweeping nature of the provision.

By no means is this to suggest MPS can be disruptive without consequence. Mechanisms for control exist. Without addressing the underlying political motives, one may recall the bill of attainder passed by a Parliamentary Committee that imprisoned the late Roy Bennet at Chikurubi after the infamous confrontation with the then Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa in 2004 on the floor. Our Constitution has since changed, however; it now proscribes criminal sanctions beyond a fine for contempt of Parliament.

Standing Orders of Parliament? Code of Conduct and Ethics for Members of Parliament?

Never mind what those rules say about protesting Members of Parliament; no rule can at any rate and in any event trump constitutional rights and dictates. Even if there were a violation of the rules, the presiding officer cannot enforce compliance by breaking the Constitution.

The power of Parliament to regulate its procedures and proceedings can never fall outside the four corners of the Constitution. The Constitution is clear and emphatic: it is the supreme law of the land superseding all (section 2(1)), and the obligations of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights are binding to all and sundry, state and non-state, juristic and non-juristic, branch of government and department of state (sections 2(2) and 44).

As to the nature of Standing Orders, section 139(3) of the Constitution demand that “The procedures and processes of Parliament and its committees, as provided for in Standing Orders, must promote transparency, must encourage the involvement of members of all political parties in Parliament and the public, and must be fair and just”.

The obviously worrying pattern of targeting opposition MPs in the unlawful use of police over them is reflective of our country’s toxic politics. No national interest can be served by this. Once voted into Parliament, MPs become constitutional office bearers, discharging national duty.

Parliamentarians being the direct representative of the people – the ones in whose name state power is exercised, it follows that assaulting members’ privileges and immunities is an assault on the very people on whose ticket they are in Parliament.

The illegality of using police in Parliament is not without precedent. When members of South Africa’s Economic Freedom Fighters were ejected from the National Assembly by plain clothes police officers during President Zuma’s State of the Nation Address in February 2015, at the orders of Speaker Baleka Mbete, the Democratic Alliance took the matter for judicial determination.

The Western Cape High Court ruled in Democratic Alliance v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others 2015 (4) SA 351 (WCC) that section 11 of the Powers, Privileges and Immunities of Parliament and Provincial Legislatures Act 4 of 2004, a provision substantially similar to our section 25 of the Immunities Act, was unconstitutional insofar as the word “person” encompassed MPs, and to the extent that section 11 permitted a member to be arrested for conduct that is protected by the Constitution. This was held to infringe the immunities provisions of the Constitution as well as free speech.

Importantly, the court found that: “The primacy of a Member of Parliament’s right to freedom of speech and more particularly the right to articulate the needs, views and political and economic attitudes of their constituency freely and without fear has been constantly recognised by our Court”. On referral to the Constitutional Court for confirmation of the declaration for invalidity, the Constitutional Court in Democratic Alliance v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others 2016 (3) SA 487 (CC) confirmed the constitutional infringement, and chose to cure the constitutional variance by reading-in the words “other than a member” after mention of the word “person” in section 11 of the Act.

This meant the provision would continue to operate to non-members who do not enjoy Parliamentary immunity. The import of this is that whatever formulation is given to the word “person” in our statute, it is unconstitutional to use that section to unleash the police in Parliament to arrest or remove Members of Parliament. However one takes it, that conclusion is inescapable at law.

Advocate Mudenda is a lawyer. A lot of politicians in Zimbabwe are. Are we not supposed to get better governance in procedure and substance then? Alas. But I would give them the benefit of the doubt and courteously attribute their behaviour to failure to read the law.

Yet, unfortunately, the truth is that some of them know the law and they are aware when they are violating it. Just that they don’t give a rat’s ass. We are disrespecting and devaluing our institutions.

Source: Musa Kika
Practicing lawyer interested in constitutional and administrative law. Holds an LLB from KwaZulu-Natal, a LLM from Harvard and is a PhD Candidate in Constitutional Law at the University of Cape Town.

Kubatana.com

I Want To Know Who Shot My Wife: Sylvia Maphosa’s Husband Demands Answers

By Jane Mlambo| Husband to the late Sylvia Maphosa, one of the victims of the 1st of August shootings by soldiers in the central business district of Harare has demanded answers from government on who shot his wife.

Mr Maphosa who appeared before the commission of Inquiry said his wife was a prayer warrior who never participated in politics.

Oliver Mtukudzi Hospitalised

Own Correspondent|Highly placed sources have revealed that ace Zimbabwean musician Oliver Mtukudzi has been taken ill in a local hospital and in the process of being repatriated to a South African hospital.

Though the information is still a bit sketchy, the sources indicated that the superstar is not in a critical condition though in need of expert attention.

More details will be made provided as they become available.

Mthuli Ncube’s Economic Reforms Built On Quick Sand:

THE opposition MDC yesterday said Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube’s silence on currency distortions in the 2019 National Budget presented on Thursday demonstrated government’s reluctance to deal with the root of the problems that have seen prices pegged in the local bond note shooting through the roof.

Observers have also expressed concerns that the pricing of basic commodities would remain beyond the reach of the majority of citizens earning their keep in bond notes.

Retailers have resorted to pegging their prices in United States dollars — which are currently scarce on the market — while customers wanting to pay in bond notes or plastic money have to pay the US dollar price.

MDC spokesperson Jacob Mafume said his party believed the budget was a self-conflicted document, with nothing to celebrate as most of the reforms proposed were built on quick sand.

Ncube presented his budget with a raft of reforms meant to cut spending and inspire confidence in the local economy — something which some analysts said was a positive move — but failure to deal with currency discrepancy is set to make life difficult for the majority of citizens.

“The lack of clarity on currency issue is at the centre of the multi pricing system and a decisive Minister ought to bite the bullet and make a decision on the matter,” party Mafume said.

“Yet, Mthuli, in his budget, ignores the distortions being caused by the bond note. He proves beyond reasonable doubt that he is scared of the raw State power which is in the hands of Zanu PF hardliners and securocratic oligarchs, who need to maintain a printing Press of sorts for purposes of patronage.”

Mafume described government’s proposal to arrest run-away expenditure as “pub talk”, as they will continue printing bond notes so that they can fund Zanu PF activities and the lifestyles of the elite.

Mafume said Ncube should have proposed the demonetising of the bond note and revert to a proper multi-currency regime, outlining a path towards joining the rand monetary union.

He said there was a foreign currency crisis in the country because of the unproductive environment affecting Zimbabwe’s industrial sector.

The opposition also said it was disturbed by the marginal allocation to independent commissions and failure to deal decisively with the land issue, among other topical matters.

“With all due respect, this budget is a continuation of the old order of economic lethargy, economic destruction, corruption and patronage. It does not even address the issue of the usurious 2c a dollar this government is fleecing from innocent Zimbabweans.

“The token reduction of 5% from the salaries of the well-heeled is so measly it will not make any positive impact,” he said.

Other stakeholders who spoke to NewsDay Weekender said the requirement on car importers to pay duty in hard cash made no sense, given that workers did not receive their salaries in hard cash.

Vendors Initiative for Socio-Economic Transformation (VISET) described the budget as “an economic horror script”, especially for those eking out a living in the informal sector.

“Hence, we state at this stage that the 2019 Budget is an instrument of economic attack on the poor and struggling masses while simultaneously opening up Zimbabwe for massive exploitation by foreign capital,” said VISET executive director Samuel Wadzai.

He said the budget dashed whatever hopes they had of seeing informal sector players evolving into big formal businesses.

“The policy pronouncements via the national budget have dealt a heavy blow on the formalisation of the informal sector drive. A cocktail of taxes and payments demanded by government will only push the informal sector into retreat,” he said

Combined Harare Residents Association Mfundo Mlilo said the budget was full of contradictions, and Ncube failed to take the bold steps needed to deal comprehensively with the country’s soci-economic challenges.

He also said there was insincerity on the budget allocations and priority was misplaced.

“The budget is contradictory because on the other hand, it attempts to give a corrective diagnosis of the Zimbabwean problems, but on the other, he cherry picks what to address. The minister understands the problems that we are in, but when you go into the contents of his statement, you don’t see any commitment to deal with the real problems,” Mlilo said.

-Newsday

Health Lobbyists Worried Over Mthuli Ncube’s Health Budget Allocation

FINANCE minister Mthuli Ncube has been criticised for failing to prioritise the funding of health in the 2019 budget, with health lobbyists dismissing it as a mere ‘ritual’ and a piece meal, which falls short in addressing the comatose health delivery system, plagued by drug outages and poor infrastructure.

Although the allocation of $694,5 million (9,3%) is an increase of 33% from last year’s, it is still a far cry from the target of 15% set in 2001 by members of the African Union during a conference in Abuja, Nigeria.

Pitted against galloping prices for drugs, often charged in foreign currency, and an acute shortage of essential equipment in public health facilities as well as key staff, the amount is a far cry from the target of $1,3 billion, which the ministry requires to function properly.

In his presentation, Mthuli said “focus will be on ensuring that the referral system is re-established”.

Community Working Group on Health chief executive Itai Rusike said the allocation was inadequate.

“The massive increase in essential drug costs, drop in drug purchase by low income people and a fall in use of essential health care services are all issues that need looking into,” he said.

Rusike said the state of health services’ near-collapse is directly related to government misplacing its priorities.

Health lobbyist Fungisayi Dube, of the Citizens Health Watch, said the budget demonstrated that government did not prioritise health services.

“The budget sounds more like just a process or ritual that needs to be done. If the government really appreciated the challenges in the hospitals, they would have given a meaningful allocation,” she said.

Dube said it was disappointing to note that there had not been a deliberate effort to address maternal health challenges against a backdrop where “2000 women die every year due to maternal deaths”.

She, however, appreciated the pharmaceutical duty rebate on essential raw materials for drug manufacturing.

“We just hope it will be sustained to make menstruation easy and bearable for women. We want to see if this will really reduce the costs we incur every month,” she said.

Health rights and social equity expert Rutendo Bonde said it was a daunting task to prioritise health, among so many competing urgencies.

“However, what is good in this budget is significant investment in some other areas like measures to support local pharmaceuticals. For how long can we run a health delivery on imported drugs?” she said.

The situation at most public health facilities continues to spiral out of control, with institutions struggling to function on a shoe-string budget.

This has also resulted in staff getting demotivated and in turn lump it on the patients, who bear the brunt of it all.

-Newsday

Mudenda Cornered Over Sexual Harassment Of MDC Female MPs

MDC Alliance female legislators have complained before the Speaker of the National Assembly Jacob Mudenda over sexual harassment in the House by Zanu PF legislators Tafanana Zhou (Mberengwa North) and John Paradza (Gutu West).

Manicaland proportional representation MP, Lynette Karenyi, on Thursday raised a point of order as the leader of the MDC Alliance women’s assembly, complaining about the verbal abuse that she and another female MP Joanna Mamombe (Harare West) had been subjected to.

“I represent women out there and my presence here is encouraging other women to stand up and fight for our space, but I have realised that if I do not say this out, most of the women can’t stand up and speak,” Karenyi said.

“I have received reports from my fellow colleagues that they are also experiencing sexual harassment, and I strongly feel that there is a difference between heckling and sexual harassment, and I decided to stand up and say it out to encourage other women to stand and speak.”

She said gestures and utterances by Zhou and Paradza — who allegedly commented on female MPs’ body features — were tantamount to sexual harassment.

“As female MPs, we take such moves as disrespectful, because we are not sex objects, but we are legislators and we deserve respect,” Karenyi said.

When Karenyi was contributing to debate in the National Assembly last week, Zhou and Paradza, who usually sit far in the back benches, heckled Karenyi and labelled her a fourth wife.

On the other hand, whenever Mamombe posed questions to ministers, the same male legislators called her a prostitute.

“Our male counterparts should treat us with respect, because we are mothers and MPs. We should feel free to stand up and debate without being given or being labelled, as we are not wives of such MPs,” Karenyi said.

“This sexual harassment continues every day when we step inside this Parliament. Mamombe and I are the recipients of this sexual harassment from these two male MPs, and this must stop.”

She said the male MPs’ behaviour was not only a violation of women’s constitutional rights, but was also un-parliamentary.

“Since Parliament has the duty to represent women, we want respect, and it is our constitutional right to be here as MPs,” Karenyi said.

Mudenda said such occurrences should be reported to the police, adding that he would verify the matter and act.

-Newsday

Mthuli Ncube’s Budget “An Insult To Rural Teachers” – ARTUZ

Media Statement Rural Teachers Union in Zimbabwe|Amalgamated Rural Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe, ARTUZ is irked by the anti-worker budget presented by the Finance Ministry. The Union is calling for the third phase of the fight for salaries in United States dollars. This protest will also push for the restoration of bonus in full. Schools will shut down from 29th to 30th of November as teachers withdraw their labour in protest against the unfair labour practice of the government.

ARTUZ has set up a task force to engage other civil servants to join the protest.

The Finance Minister, Honorable Mthuli Ncube has aggravated civil servants woes by once again attacking welfare of the government workers. The Minister yesterday slashed government workers bonus and maintained that salaries will continue being paid in Real Time Gross Settlements, RTGS. He further introduced foreign currency import duty for vehicles. The workers have no option but to fight back.

Bonus for Civil servants is now going to be 100% of the paltry basic salary only. The average civil servant earn between 280 to 300 dollars as basic salary. In essence the government workers will receive an average of 290 dollars as 2018 bonus. This is a big blow to the workers who used to earn a 100% bonus on gross earnings. The gross earnings include allowances such as housing and transport allowance. The average civil servant received 500 dollars bonus in 2017 and the new development is a significant slash.

It must be noted that the annual bonus has always brought liquidity relief to the workers whose monthly incomes are often eroded by debt. The majority of civil servants are saddled by debt as they are forced to borrow to cover their monthly overheads. The real bonus is gone.

In October the Finance Minister officially confirmed that the United States dollars is not at par with our virtual Zimbabwean dollar which is in the form of RTGSs. The net effect has been the erosion of the Zimbabwean dollar by 350% on the market. In 2012 the government and its employees agreed on a salary structure that was to be paid in the United State dollars. The employer has unilaterally reversed the agreement in a clear case of unfair labour practice.

The government has introduced foreign currency duty for importation of vehicles. In short Civil servants are no longer allowed to import vehicles. This comes at a time when government is not improving provision of efficient public transport.

It is now clear that the incumbent government will not stop at anything to rob the working class of its humanity. Fighting back is now an imperative for all workers.

Source: Amalgamated Rural Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe (ARTUZ)

Mnangagwa Invades Mugabe’s Backyard For His First “Thank You” Rally

President Emmerson Mnangagwa

By Own Correspondent| Zanu Pf leader and President Emmerson Mnangagwa will today ( Saturday) address his first ever “Thank You” rally in former deposed leader Robert Mugabe’s rural home, Zvimba.

The rally, set to be held at Murombedzi Growth Point, will see Mnangagwa addressing party supporters and thanking them for voting him overwhelmingly in the July 30 harmonised elections which opposition MDC claimed were rigged in favour of Zanu Pf.

Zanu-PF Mashonaland West provincial chairman Ziyambi Ziyambi told a Provincial Coordinating Committee meeting in Chinhoyi recently that the province was honoured to be hosting the president’s first rally.

Said Ziyambi:

“The President is going to have a rally at Murombedzi Growth Point this Saturday to thank the people for voting overwhelmingly for him and Zanu-PF.

It’s the first rally and I think he is going to have other such rallies throughout the country. We feel excited, humbled and honoured that he chose to start in Mashonaland West province.”

Ramaphosa Reshuffles His Cabinet

JOHANNESBURG. – President Cyril Ramaphosa has made big changes to his cabinet, the first time since appointing his executive in February when he took over as South Africa’s head of state.

On Thursday he announced that Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams will head up the communications ministry, as well as oversee the department of telecommunications.

President Ramaphosa says the two departments will be merged after the 2019 elections. Ndabeni-Abrahams was the deputy minister of telecommunications.

Nomvula Mokonyane, who was the minister of communications, is now the minister of Environmental Affairs.

The former minister of telecommunications Siyabonga Cwele is the new minister of Home Affairs.

The changes to President Ramaphosa’s executive happen on the day where he was due to reply to an application, brought against him by the DA.

The opposition party went to court to challenge his appointment of Bathabile Dlamini as the Minister in the presidency and Malusi Gigaba into the Home Affairs ministry.

Dlamini, however, has survived the changes to President Ramaphosa’s cabinet.

President Ramaphosa had two vacancies to fill, following the death of Environmental Affairs Minister Edna Molewa and the resignation of Malusi Gigaba from his role as Minister of Home Affairs.

Molewa died on September 22. A month later President Ramaphosa appointed former Reserve bank governor Tito Mboweni as finance minister, after accepting the resignation of Nhlanhla Nene.

Nene’s resignation came after it was revealed during his testimony at the Zondo commission of inquiry into state capture that he lied about meeting the controversial Gupta family, which is at the centre of allegations into large-scale looting in government.

In November Gigaba, after attempting to stage a fight to keep his job amid calls to step down, resigned a day before Ramaphosa was due to take “appropriate action” against him as per the recommendations made by Advocate Busisiwe Mkhwebane.

The Public Protector’s investigation had found he had lied in court, violating the Executive Members’ Ethics Act. This was in relation to the Fireblade aviation saga.

Both the Supreme Court of Appeal and the Constitutional Court also upheld an earlier finding that Gigaba had lied to the High Court.

Earlier this year President Ramaphosa indicated during his maiden state of the nation address that he was not happy with the size of his cabinet and would seek to reduce its size, merging some departments in the future.

Political analysts have however said the reshuffle has not met the country’s expectations.

“I don’t think it was a reshuffle … The reshuffle didn’t signal a major exit which was expected in the country.”

Ralph Mathekga said there was nothing significant about President Ramaphosa’s reshuffle.

“The biggest entry was Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams. It is very interesting that people like Nomvula (Mokonyane) are staying in Cabinet. People wanted to see Minister Bathabile (Dlamini) out of the Cabinet.”

“Minister Bathabile Dlamini didn’t perform well in her portfolio. She has demonstrated peculiar capabilities,” he said.

Another political analyst, Levy Ndou said the removal or reshuffling of Dlamini would have sparked outrage against President Ramaphosa within the ANC.

Ndou claimed the president would probably not have made any changes had it not been for the death of Molewa and the recent resignation of former Home Affairs minister Malusi Gigaba.

“If this was a football game, the reshuffle would have been called a forced replacement. When (Edna) Molewa died, there was no replacement. Gigaba resigned, President Ramaphosa could not leave the home affairs department vacant.

“He had no other choice but to ensure that Gigaba is politically replaced. Other than that, the president would not have acted.”

Many people were expecting Dlamini to face the chop, but this was a “forced reshuffle”, Ndou continued.

– News24

Stage Set As MDC Takes On ZANU PF In Mtoko By Election

All is set for Mutoko North Constituency and Ward 16 Chegutu Rural District Council by-elections today.

The Mutoko North seat fell vacant after the elevation of the former Member of Parliament for the constituency Mabel Chinomona to be Senate President, while the Ward 16 Chegutu council seat fell vacant due to death.

Addressing journalists yesterday, the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) acting chief elections officer Mr Utoile Silaigwana said they made adequate preparations for the elections and sufficient polling officers and relevant stakeholders were on the ground ahead of today’s polling.

In Mutoko North Constituency, there are three contestants for the parliamentary seat: Rambidzayi Nyabote of Zanu-PF, MDC-Alliance’s Boniface Mushore and Edison Mugoma of NCA.

“We have 23 295 registered voters in Mutoko North and 765 voters in Ward 16. We are using the international standards of printing 5 percent more ballot papers. ZEC also invited all political parties contesting for training on the electoral process.

“We have invited nine observer groups, including the British and American embassies and local observers,” he said.

Mr Silaigwana said the 2018 voters’ roll will be used for these by-elections and not the 2013 as alleged by other organisations.

He dismissed allegations that there were some duplications on the voters’ roll and confirmed that some voters were over 100 years old.

“There are people over 100 years old and yes, it is possible to have them on the voters’ roll. They have a right to vote,” he said.

State Media

Roller Coaster Acie Lumumba Attacks The MDC, Says The Opposition Party Is Clueless

Own Correspondent|ZANU-PF activist Acie Lumumba also known as Gerald William Mutumanje has attacked the opposition MDC Alliance for continuously questioning President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s legitimacy in parliament.

The loud mouth activists who has been roller coasting in and out of ZANU PF torched a storm on social media Twitter when he said that MDC supporters live a painful existence because their elected MPs and leaders have no plan at all apart from protesting in Parliament and “ranting on Twitter”.

Said Lumumba: “If I was not Zanu PF I would be so angry with MDC for not having a real plan neither. Outside of Biti’s big worded rants on Twitter & the ladies who where performing street theatre nezuro, what’s your plan really? MDC supporters must live a very painful existence. God help Zim.”

Lumumba is not new to controversy. In October, he literally had the whole nation glued to his Facebook LIVE video broadcast where he named Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe directors as being involved in corruption at a grand scale.

This was after Lumumba had been hired by Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube as Chairperson of the Ministy’s communications taskforce under controversial circumstances, a decision which was reversed within a week after big hawks in government criticized Lumumba’s tactics.

Later on, it was revealed that Lumumba had been paid a $40,0000 bait to play to the whims of one ZanuPF faction.

Deputy Minister Says We Will All Die But Highlanders Football Club Will Never Die

Deputy Minister of Industry and Commerce, Bulawayo businessman and philanthropist Raj Modi says while human beings are mortal Highlanders football club is immortal.

Highlanders FC 90 Year Celebration banner declaring the club will be there forever.

The Deputy Minister, made the declaration in his eulogy to the departed former Highlanders board member Jonathan Sayi Moyo who died at Mater Dei Hospital on Friday night last week and was laid to rest at Lady Stanley Cemetery on Wednesday.

“Go well son of the soil. Go well baba Sayi Moyo. Death comes to all of us but Highlanders will never die,” said Modi who on Sunday confessed his love for the Bulawayo football giants as he passed his condolence message to the Highlanders and Moyo family when news of the demise of the former board vice chairman filtered through.

The Bulawayo giants have long been known to have been supported by iconic business persons in and around the country as well as abroad.

A number of corporates have also been charmed by the administrative acumen at the club that has been passed from generation to generation much to the envy of its competitors. The club has also religiously followed its constitution, a key requirement in terms of good corporate governance.

Speaking at the funeral service held at the Brethren in Christ Church in Bulawayo on Wednesday, board chairman Luke Mnkandla said the club had embarked on a programme to document the history of the institution.

“We engaged figures like ubaba uPatisa Nyathi so that we could come up with a document that will tell the life story of Highlanders and its people like the gentleman we are mourning today who were providing vital historical knowledge towards that project and it’s really a huge loss that he is gone,” said Mnkandla.

In 2016 Moyo was one of the board members together with Mnkandla that led the team when they visited the grave of one of the founder members of the club, Prince Albert Khumalo in Gwatemba area, Filabusi.

State Media

“80% Zimbabweans Use Traditional Medicines”: Medical Research Council Of Zimbabwe

Herbs

By Own Correspondent| The Medical Research Council of Zimbabwe (MRCZ) has claimed that about 80% of the Zimbabwean population use traditional medicines.

The organisation however claimed that Zimbabwe still had challenges in scientifically proving the effectivenes and scientific properties of these herbs in order for them to be internationally recognised and certified.

The MRCZ said most herbalists in Zimbabwe use rituals and dreams when diagnosing their patients making it difficult to scientifically prove their effectiveness.

While addressing a forum hosted by MRCZ recently, the organisation’s chairperson Charles Nhachi said:

“Despite our beliefs, we have somehow and always used traditional medicines from time to time and I can say that about 80% of the Zimbabwe population is using traditional medicine.

One of the challenges we are facing is that most herbalist use rituals and dreams to make their diagnosis which make it difficult to scientifically prove.”

$53 Million Set Aside To Compensate White Commercial Farmers, (No Word On Compensation Of Victims Of ZANU PF Political Violence.)

THE Government is working on compensating white former commercial farmers whose land was acquired under the land reform programme since 2000 with a budget of $53 million having been set aside to speed up the process.

The Minister of Finance and Economic Development Professor Mthuli Ncube, in his 2019 National Budget Statement on Thursday, said the Government has put in place structures to determine the extent of its obligations in addressing the issue.

“Government is committed to finalising the issue of compensation to white former farm owners who were affected by the land reform programme, in accordance with the country’s law and commitments under the various bilateral agreements and the constitution. This work is on-going and will be finalised in the next few months,” he said.

“In this regard, various mobilisation strategies and finance mechanisms are being explored in consultation with all stakeholders. Cognisance is being given to the fact that the resources required to compensate and put closure to this important issue, are obviously beyond the capacity of the fiscus,” he said.

“In the interim, the 2019 budget proposes to avail $53 million towards payment of compensation to white former farm owners, whose disbursement will be targeted.”

President Emmerson Mnangagwa is on record saying the Government will continue compensating white former commercial farmers who lost land through the land reform programme.

He said the Government is raising funds from the fiscus to pay the farmers.

“That is an ongoing exercise. In terms of our law we are obligated to compensate any developments on land which was compulsorily acquired under the land reform programme. Some farmers have already been compensated, but the large number of them has not and we are continuously raising funds on the fiscus for that compensation, although the persons affected are not too happy because the pressure’s very strong,” he said.

The President said he will not breach that commitment by Government to continue honouring the compensation on the improvements on land as a result of the land reform programme.

He however, said the principle of repossessing the land cannot be challenged or reversed.

The Commercial Farmers’ Union recently posted on its website, saying the Government has invited over 1 000 white farmers to collect compensation for farms that were repossessed by the State under the land reform programme.

There are approximately 200 white commercial farmers still farming countrywide. President Emmerson Mnangagwa has since pronounced that white former commercial farmers willing to come back were free to do so, but had to apply for land like anyone else.

In his November 2017 inauguration speech, President Mnangagwa singled out the agriculture sector and charged it with the important responsibility to become the engine for socio-economic recovery and growth for Zimbabwe.

He said it is mandatory for black and white farmers to work together in harmony towards formulating winning strategies to attain a breadbasket status for the country.

Government has since directed that all remaining white commercial farmers be issued with 99-year leases, a marked policy shift from the previous arrangement where they could only get five-year leases.

State Media

Zanu Pf’s Tafanana Zhou And Kindness Paradza In Sexual Harrassment Storm

By Own Correspondent|  Zanu Pf legislators for Mberengwa North and Makonde have been implicated in allegations of sexual harrassment against opposition female legislators in parliament.

Addressing parliament shortly before the presentation of the 2019 Budget (Thursday), the MDC Women’s Assembly chairperson Lynette Karenyi accused the duo of sexually harrassing female legislators including the current youngest legislator in parliament Joana Mamombe.

Said Karenyi:

“There is sexual harassment happening in this August house. It took me courage to stand up as a woman and i am representing women out there who may not otherwise speak out.

I am speaking out because I have realised that if I do not say this out, not most of the women can stand up and speak. I have received reports from my fellow colleagues that they are also receiving the same sexual harrassment. I strongly feel Mr speaker that there is a difference between heckling and sexual harassment and the reason I have decided to stand up and say it out is to encourage other women to stand up and speak.

The moves and utterances by some of the MPs and i am going to shame them, honourable Zhou Tafanana  and honourable Kindness Paradza on the body on the bodies of female members of parliament to me is sexual harassment.

As female members of parliament, we take such moves as disrespectful.We are not sexual objects but we are members of parliament and we deserve respect. Our male counterparts must treat us with respect because we are mothers and MPs.

We should feel free to stand up and debate without being given names or labelled. We are not wives of such members of parliament.This sexual harrasment continues everyday as we step into this parliament. Myself and Honourable Joana Mamombe, we have been called names.”

Mpilo Hospital CEO Survives Horror Crash

MPILO Central Hospital Chief Executive Officer, Mr Leonard Mabhandi, cheated death after his vehicle was involved in a head-on collision with another near the 10km peg along Gweru-Kwekwe highway, police said yesterday.

Mr Mabhandi, who was alone in his car, escaped with a cut on his left leg but his Jeep Cherokee is a write off after the crash that happened on Thursday around 6PM.

The driver of the Nissan X-Trail he collided with died on the spot while two other passengers are battling for life at Gweru Provincial Hospital.

Four other vehicles crashed into each other resulting in a pile up that blocked the highway for close to an hour.

Contacted for comment, Mr Mabhandi said the driver of the X-Trail was attempting to overtake four vehicles including a haulage truck.

“I was driving towards Kwekwe and as I was going up the fly-over just after Redcliff turnoff, I saw the vehicle coming towards me after it failed to overtake the haulage truck and other vehicles. There was little time for me to react and a head-on resulted,” he said.

Midlands Provincial Police Spokesperson, Inspector Joel Goko confirmed the accident.

“I can confirm the death of one person at Redcliff fly-over where a Gweru-bound vehicle failed to overtake a haulage truck resulting in a head on collision.

“The driver of the Nissan died on the spot while two other passengers were ferried to Kwekwe District Hospital where they were further referred to Gweru Hospital where they are said to be in critical condition,” said Inspector Goko.

He said the accident could have been avoided.

“We want to urge motorists to exercise extreme caution on the roads and adhere to road rules and regulations. This is a result of human error and it can be avoided if people exercise caution,” he said.

Redcliff turn-off has become a black spot and a cleansing ceremony was late last year conducted at the area to “rid it of accident-causing spirits.”

State Media

Executive Air Not Linked To Masvingo Air Crash Plane

Own Correspondent|A private aviation company, Executive Air, has distanced itself from a fatal crash that killed at least three people in the southern city of Masvingo on Friday.

The state-owned Herald newspaper had earlier reported that Executive Air had one of its light aircraft involved in the fatal crash.

But, in a statement, Executive Air said: “First, we would like to issue our most sincere condolences to the family and friends involved in today’s fatal aviation incident near Masvingo.

“We would like to confirm that this incident did not involve Executive Air in any way – ownership, operation or maintenance.

“Our entire fleet and crew are safe and accounted for.”

Pictures on social media showed parts of the aircraft strewn around.

ZimEye.com can confirm that the aircraft in question belonged to Buffalo Range Pvt Limited not Executive Air. The aircraft was also a Cessna 206, not Cessna 182 as initially reported.

Chaos At Beitbridge Over Foreign Currency

There was confusion at Beitbridge Border Post yesterday with luxury vehicle importers refusing to pay import duty in foreign currency in line with the new Government regulations as proposed by the Finance and Economic Development Professor Mthuli Ncube in Thursday’s budget announcement.

In his 2019 annual budget statement, the minister proposed that with effect from yesterday importers were liable to pay duty in foreign currency for vehicles and specified goods.

“In order to redirect scarce foreign currency to the productive sectors of the economy, the budget proposes that customs duty and all other taxes on imported motor vehicles be levied in foreign currency acceptable as legal tender, with effect from 23 November 2018,” said Prof Ncube.

The measure will however not apply on commercial motor vehicles and vehicles for use by the physically challenged.

“However, on compassionate grounds, a transitional mechanism will be put in place to cater for motor vehicles and designated goods that were purchased on or before 22 November 2018 and consigned within a maximum period of six weeks. The exemption will be granted on the basis of recommendation by the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) and approved by Treasury”, said Prof Ncube.

When the news crew visited Manica Transit Shed yesterday, car importers especially those who had their vehicles delivered and purchased before the announcement of the budget statement said they were waiting on Zimra to clarify their case.

They said although Value for Duty Purposes (VDP) and duty percentages of 96 percent had not changed, it was unfair for Government to charge duty in foreign currency considering that the late duty calculations at the transit shed was not of their making.

“Government must reconsider its position. The delay in duty calculations is not of our own making and we cannot be punished for that. The vehicles were delivered early and Zimra is overwhelmed with processing the entries. This should not burden importers,” said a car dealer identified only as Mike.

He said it was absurd that the Ministry of Finance was requesting that they make written submissions to seek authority to pay duty for their vehicles using the RTGS method. Zimra officials were not accepting payments of duty on vehicle imports pending further clarification from their Commissioner General Ms Faith Mazani.

The parastatal’s spokesperson, Mr Francis Chimanda could not respond to enquiries by end of day yesterday.

A border official said, “Zimra is still consulting their head office on the way forward on the grace period to pay duty through the usual RTGS method, with respect to those who had already shipped the vehicles to the two transit sheds Manica and Malindi before the new regulations.”
There is a general feeling among importers that the Minister’s policy was haste and should have given people a grace period of at least two months to prepare themselves.

In separate interviews, Zimra officials said the new regulations had a lot of technical challenges affecting its implementation.

“Technically, all vehicles whose duty had not been calculated by midnight on 22 November are liable to pay duty in foreign currency under the new regulations. However, we have a challenge with people arguing that most of their vehicle had been shipped prior to the new regulations. We have to consult further”, said one Zimra official.

The permanent secretary in the Ministry of Finance and Economic Development Mr George Guvamatanga did not respond to calls and text messages sent to his mobile phone.

A total of 300 second hand vehicles are delivered at Beitbridge Border Post, and around 200 import entries are being processed per day. On average, a modest vehicle attracts import duty of between $2 500 and $5 000. Further, Zimra collects at least $8,5 million monthly from vehicle imports at Beitbridge. However, as a result of the panic mode a few weeks before the announcement of the annual budget statement, daily imports from the neighbouring country have increased to between 500 and 700 cars.- State Media

VIDEO: Zimbabwean Shot Dead In SA

A Man believed to be from Bulawayo’s Entumbane suburb was shot dead in South Africa in a botched robbery, an incident that was captured on camera.

The incident occurred on Monday at about 10AM while the man – identified only as Crymore – was with accomplices who fled in a getaway Toyota Corolla.

Sources who identified the deceased said he is from Entumbane suburb. However, there has been no one at a house said to be his family home, since Wednesday.

In a 10 second video that has been widely circulated on social media platforms, Crymore is seen running towards a car which was reversing to fetch him with a gun-wielding man hot on his heels.

Crymore, clutching a small black bag that he is said to have snatched from his pursuer, almost makes it into the getaway car.

The gunman shoots him in the head when he has one foot in the vehicle and his partners in crime speed off, leaving him dead.

The man who allegedly shot Crymore was filmed in two separate videos narrating that he had been robbed by the same gang more than once.

He said the deceased wanted to steal his “navigators” describing them as very expensive.

“Last year they took it, now they wanted to take it again. I parked my car there, after parking my car I went to the ATM booth then I saw him opening the door. The same thing happened on the 6th of September last year,” narrated the shooter.

“My bag with navigators and a lot of money was stolen. I cried like a baby when they went away in a white Corolla. Today I saw him when he took the bag, so I said to myself last year I didn’t have bullets and I bought them and vowed to myself that this cannot happen again.”

The irate shooter said he had become a serial victim of the same group of people who were stealing from him and he had to take matters into his hands. -state media

Chiwenga And Mnangagwa Lock Horns

The stage is set for a bruising turf war between Zanu PF leader Emmerson Mnangagwa (pictured) and his ambitious deputy Constantino Chiwenga at the ruling party’s annual conference to be held in Esigodini, Matabeleland South province, next month, as their rival camps sharpen daggers ahead of the high-stakes showdown.

Mnangagwa and Chiwenga are locked in a battle to control the party and the state, a year after the two protagonists joined forces to topple former president Robert Mugabe.

In recent years, the Zanu PF annual conferences became platforms for factional fights among party leaders.
Despite their public posturing meant to paint a picture of unity and harmony, Mnangagwa and Chiwenga have been fighting each other behind the scenes, including through proxies.

One of the manifestations of that has been the ongoing battle to control the state media platforms, critical platforms for the control of the narrative and information dissemination.

A tug of war has erupted between Information Minister Monica Mutsvangwa as well as permanent secretary Nick Mangwana, on one hand, and deputy minister Energy Mutodi on the other, over the removal of current Zimpapers editors and appointment of new ones.

The ongoing clashes are fuelled by personal, policy and political differences among the players involved. The fight between Mnangagwa and Chiwenga is also playing out among war veterans amid an attempt to boot Mutsvangwa out the association. Mutsvangwa is in Mnangagwa’s faction.

According to senior Zanu PF officials who spoke to the Zimbabwe Independent this week, the Esigodini conference is likely to be an explosive affair, especially in light of recent thinly veiled verbal exchanges between Mnangagwa and Chiwenga.

Chiwenga, who was the face of the military coup which ousted former president Robert Mugabe last year, harbours presidential ambitions and wants Mnangagwa to relinquish the post in 2023 to pave way for his ascendancy.

Mnangagwa has, however, moved to consolidate his power base by, among other actions, removing Chiwenga from the Defence ministry and his backers from government, leaving him exposed and vulnerable.

Chiwenga’s allies are particularly peeved by Mnangagwa’s backers who recently launched a new slogan “#ED2023 pfee”, which is a clear indication that they want him to run for another term. The slogan was launched at a Zanu PF Youth League conference held in Harare late last month.

“This has caused great friction in the party and considering that plenary discussions at the congress will debate issues around the state of the party, it could really be interesting because the other side is not taking it lying down,” one source said.

Party insiders also said Chiwenga’s supporters were getting increasingly concerned that Mnangagwa was moving to limit Chiwenga’s influence in Zanu PF and the government.

“In the first place, Mnangagwa realised that he was brought into power at the back of the coup which Chiwenga led and he therefore owed him some respect that is why he gave him too much room to exercise authority in the period before elections. But since then, things have drastically changed for him,” an official said.

“Also in respect of that, there appeared to have been a solid understanding between the two when they ganged up against Mugabe but it is turning out that what bound them then was a common adversary in the form of the former president and his wife. You will remember that from 2015, Mugabe had started to criticise the army generals, warning them that they should stop interfering in political activities.

“He clearly pronounced this at the Victoria Falls conference in December of that year. It was well-known and thus it is now clear that Chiwenga had his own ambitions as much as Mnangagwa had his own. They came together because they had a common agenda to remove Mugabe.

“When it came to the actual removal, Chiwenga played a key role as he controlled the instruments of state coercion. He could however not take the presidency himself because there was a need to bring in a civilian face for legitimacy purposes and that’s where Mnangagwa was useful,” the source said.

Chiwenga made his mind publicly known during a meeting with senior party members at his home in Hwedza where he subtly warned he would not allow people to personalise the party and the state, warning that doing so was very dangerous.

Mnangagwa took advantage of officiating at the Zanu PF youth conference to, also subtly, hit back saying he knew of some leaders who were gathering people around and saying things that are not acceptable. He warned the party would not hesitate to discipline or expel such people.

However, Zanu PF spokesperson Simon Khaya Moyo denied rifts in the party.

“That is wishful thinking,” he said. “Preparations for the conference are going on very well and we will be having the mother of all conferences. Anyone anticipating drama will be disappointed.” – Zimbabwe Independent

LATEST- Plane Crash Pilot Finally Named

Professional hunter and Buffalo Range Safari director Barry Style has been named as the pilot of a Cessna 182 aircraft that crashed Friday morning.

There were no survivors.

Initial reports by The Mirror newspaper suggested three people had been killed but the number of reported deaths has since risen to five as it emerged four Finnish citizens were on board in addition to the Zimbabwean pilot.

Style was flying the tourists from Buffalo Range to Victoria Falls.

Distressing images of the crash site circulated on social media platforms late morning as news of the crash quickly spread.

The names of the Finnish victims are being withheld until the next of kin are notified by the Finnish Embassy which is aware of the situation.

Styles also served as director at the Chiredzi River African Wildlife Trust and is said to have left behind a young family.

Zimbabwe has suffered a dark November characterised by vehicle collisions, fires and train derailments.

At least 47 people were killed near Rusape after two buses collided while another 32 were burnt alive after a bus carrying mostly cross border traders was engulfed in flames after a suspected gas cannister leak.- Mirror

Young Warriors Date Young Mambas In AFCON Qualifiers

 

Terrence Mawawa|Zimbabwe’s Under-23 team will play Mozambique in the second round of the Afcon Qualifiers.

The Young Warriors received a bye in the first round and will start their campaign with an away fixture on the 20th of March 2019. The second leg will be played four days later at home.

If Zimbabwe manage to win in the tie against their eastern neighbours, they will play in the final qualifying round set for June.

The U-23 tournament will be held in Egypt from 8-14 November 2019 and eight teams will take part including the hosts.

Meanwhile, Mozambique progressed to the second round after beating eSwatini ( Swaziland) on away goal rule following a 1-1 aggregate scoreline.

FC Platinum Fined

Terrence Mawawa|Champions, FC Platinum, have been fined by the Premier Soccer League following an incident that occurred after their home game against Herentals on September 15.

The Zvishavane-based side breached the Rules and Regulation Order 31.1.15 by failing to provide adequate security to the match officials after the fans deflated the tyres of their cars. The club will pay a $1500 fine.

However, $500 has been suspended on condition that FC Platinum will not repeat the same offence during the 2019 season. A total of $1000 together with the cost of the hearing shall be paid before November 30.

Ngezi Platinum player Liberty Chakoroma was also found guilty by the disciplinary committee.

Chakoroma assaulted the referee after their game against Herentals at Baobab Stadium in the Chibuku Super Cup first round played on September 22.

The defender received a three-match ban which he will carry over to the 2019 season. Further, the player has been ordered to pay the costs of the hearing.

His team has also been slapped with a $1 250 fine following the incident of which $250 has been suspended until the end of the 2018 season on condition the club does not commit the same offence.

Mnangagwa Flouted Parliamentary Rules When He Entered August House Wearing Zanu PF Regalia- Mutseyami

By Terrence Mawawa|MDC A Chief Whip Prosper Mutseyami has declared that there is no Parliamentary rule that compels MPs to rise when a President enters the august house.

See below part of Mutseyami’s statement:There is no rule that says when a President is entering Parliament, MPs must rise.

Regalia is not allowed in Parliament, therefore, Mr Mnangagwa disrespected the house when he
entered the August House wearing a Zanu PFscarf.

Police, the CIO and military are not supposed to get into Parliament.

The MDC is disturbed by the continued use of force by this government – a clear failure to break from their violent past. We insist that this illegitimate government will kill just to maintain the grip on power but as the MDC, we will keep the pressure until they give in to the will of the people. We will continue to pursue every democratic right to
ensure the people’s hope is not destroyed. A clean, caring and respectful government is what the people of Zimbabwe deserve.

Behold the New! Change that delivers.Hon Prosper Chapfiwa Mutseyami MDC Chief Whip

Impeach Mnangagwa For Failing To Uphold Constitutionalism: Opinion

 

Jeffryson Chitando|Parliament should impeach President Emmerson Mnangagwa for his failure to uphold the Zimbabwean Constitution.

President Mnangagwa must be impeached for failure to identify and fire the person who ordered and deployed the army to the street on 1 August 2018.

The evidence presented by Mr Machaya the Attorney General before the Commission of Inquiry on the 1 August Violence suggests that the President must have been aware of the deployment of the army or someone must have “staged a palace coup” on his authority.

If Mnangagwa fails to fire the person who ordered the army to into the streets without his blessing and constitutional authority then he is only a ceremonial President of Zimbabwe.

Parliament must impeach him for Zimbabwe does not have room for a ceremonial President .

Parliament must also impeach Mnangagwa for his failure to implement devolution of power.Its now four months after elections and Provincial Council members have not yet been officially sworn in.According to the constitution they should have elected their Provincial Minister but the President has acted otherwise and violated the constitution by appointing Resident Ministers.

The President must also answer to impeachment charges of failure to implement the 50:50 constitutional provisions on women appointment to cabinet posts.