Confusion Rocks Cholera Crowdfund…Health Ministry Calls It A Fraudulent Scheme

By Paul Nyathi|THERE seem to be discord around the cholera crowdfund initiative amidst indications that the Ministry of Health and Child Care (MoHCC) has professed ignorance over the existence of such an initiative, describing it as a fraudulent scheme.

The ministry of health says they were not aware of any crowdfund and they were not running any at moment and whoever is claiming to have partnered with them is a fraudster.

According to an online health services provision watchdog Healthtimes, the Ministry of Health’s Public Relations Officer Donald Mujiri issued a statement warning citizens and stakeholders from donating into the crowdfund allegedly launched by the new Minister Of Finance Mthuli Ncube.

“Please note that there are social media false claims which are fraudulently claiming that the Ministry of Health and Child Care has set up a crowdfund to further fight cholera. Be informed and advised that any funds going towards the cholera outbreak are officially communicated through the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Health and Child Care Retired Major General Dr Gwinji and the Public Relations Department,” Mujiri is quoted as having said in a official statement.

Last week the Minister of Finance announced in a social media post that his Ministry had agreed with the Minister of Health to set up a crowdfund to help fight the ravaging cholera epidemic.

“Together with my colleagues at Min of Health, we have set up an auditable emergency crowdfund to further efforts to fight cholera to date. Together we can win! Min Of Finance Cholera Crowd Fund:
EcoCash Biller Code 140286; CBZ Treasury, ACC 21537300017, Selous REF: FIGHT CHOLERA,” wrote Ncube.

ZimEye.com has since established that the account number and biller code belong to the Ministry of Finance.

An official in the Ministry of Health who spoke to ZimEye.com on Monday confirmed that there was no official communication within the Ministry regarding the crowdfund.

“We have no record of the fund at all within our set up and nothing to the effect has been communicated to us. We also got to know of it through social media,” said the source.

ZimEye.com is following up the matter with the Ministries concerned and will provide more details as they become available.

WHAT WILL MNANGAGWA SAY TODAY?

Emmerson Mnangagwa is today expected to deliver his first State of the National Address (SONA) and officially open the first session of the Ninth Parliament during which he will set the legislative agenda.

Mnangagwa will this morning address a joint sitting of the National Assembly and Senate.

Preparations for the event were in place yesterday, while a number of roads around Parliament Building will be closed to motorists during the proceedings.

Speaker of the National Assembly Advocate Jacob Mudenda said everything was in place for today’s event.

“Everything is in place and we are looking forward to the event,” he said.

The legislative agenda is expected to be dominated by laws that enhance the country’s attractiveness to investors and streamline investment laws to smoothen the ease of doing business.

The Ninth Parliament is expected to be seized with amending Chapter 14 of the Constitution to streamline the structure of Provincial and Metropolitan Councils as part of the devolution being advocated by Mnangagwa and his Government.

Mnangagwa has already indicated that Government’s thrust is to consolidate economic reforms that started with the coming in of the new dispensation.

During his inauguration speech, he reiterated that the focus of his administration was on the economy. Parliamentarians have also embraced the policy direction given by the President and pledged to speed up the passage of laws in the august house.

Parliament is dominated by zanu-pf which retained its two-thirds majority in the just-ended harmonised elections.

Before addressing the legislators, the President is expected to inspect a guard of honour mounted by members of the Zimbabwe National Army while there will be a flypast by the Air Force of Zimbabwe as per tradition.

Following the President’s address, the Ministry of Local Government, Public Works and National Housing will host the traditional luncheon for legislators.

Roads that will be closed today are Nelson Mandela Avenue at Sam Nujoma to Simon Muzenda streets, Third Street at Jason Moyo Avenue, George Silundika Avenue at Third Street, St Mary’s Lane and Nelson Mandela Avenue, Kwame Nkrumah from Sam Nujoma to Simon Muzenda streets and Samora Machel Avenue and and Sam Nujoma Street.

The roads will be closed from 6am to 3pm.

State Media

TOUCHING VIDEO: 7y Old Boy Leads Historic Mass Protest Against Parents Over Excessive Use Of Cellphones

A 7 year old boy in Hamburg, Germany has led a successful mass protest against parents on excessive of cellphones.

The protest march was peaceful and was covered by several journalists from the area.

The development comes as it was revealed that children who grow under parents who are addicted to cellphones, develop health challenges as they grow.

“I don’t like it that my dad is always playing around with his phone,” six-year-old Ylvi Schmitt, who was at the protest, told Frankfurter Allgemeiner Zeitung.  Her father admitted that he needed to “take a good look at himself.” (VIDEO – story continues below)…

 

What science says about technology and parenting

Jenny Radesky, a pediatrician at the University of Michigan Medical School, studies the effect of technology on relationships between parents and children. According to a paper she published in Pediatric Research with Brandon T. McDaniel of Illinois State University, the more parents reported instances of “technoference”—technological devices interfering with social interactions—the more behavioral problems their kids had. The causation was not clear: either parents turn to tech as a form of escapism from children’s issues, or parents steeped in tech have kids who are more likely to misbehave.

In the two-year study, which included 183 parents with a child under five years old, parents with high technology use were predictive of small but significant behavior problems in kids, with kids escalating being more hyperactive, easily frustrated, and having more temper tantrums. The study also found that parents may become less responsive to their children because digital distractions give parents less exposure to reading their children’s emotions. “Parents who frequently use mobile devices during parent-child activities showed lower understanding of their child’s mental states and intentions,” it concluded.

Conversely, bad behavior from kids resulted in adults turning to technology, potentially for stress relief, suggesting the potential for a nasty spiral: kids behave badly because they don’t get much attention, driving their parents to digital distraction, thus resulting in more bad behavior. The study notes: “Clinically, our results suggest that mobile devices and other digital technology are potentially serving stress-relieving purposes for parents, but at the same time potentially displacing opportunities for parent-child connection important to child health and development.”

Of course, parents may be more likely to lose themselves in social media because it’s all so new to them. Meanwhile, young people are already over Facebook, and seem to be showing some signs of some social media fatigue overall. The Guardian cited one survey of 9,000 slightly older internet users (18-24) from the research firmAmpere Analysis found that attitudes towards social media had changed a lot in two years. In 2016, 66% of young people agreed with the statement “social media is important to me,” compared to only 57% in 2018.  Meanwhile, social-media use among adults is surging: Among the 45-plus age bracket, the share who say they value social media has increased from 23% to 28% in the past year, according to the Ampere survey. (Note that self-reported survey responses are not always the most reliable.)

There may be an upside to all this parental distraction. Sherry Turkle, a professor in the Science, Technology and Society program at MIT and the author of Reclaiming Conversation: The Power of Talk in a Digital Age, told Quartz that she is more hopeful for the next generation because of the undesirable example adults are setting for young people. “They know what it felt like to have parents who had no time for them and turned instead to their phones,” she said. “That sense of cost and loss, more than any notion of ‘discipline,’ is what I think is going to get us to another place.”

The pint-sized protester

Emil Rustige told the German press he got the idea for a demonstration from an anti-fascism protest he attended in May. He saw that he could take a stand, and suggested the idea to his parents, who decided to support him. His father, a 37-year-old pediatrician, registered the demonstration with the police. While the family didn’t think it would garner much attention, almost 400 people expressed interest on Facebook, and many German media outlets reported the story.

Emil’s father, Martin Rustige, told Spiegel Online (link in German): “What Emil is reproaching me for is those moments when he’s with me and is perhaps communicating with me and I’m completely absent and doing something else.”

“I don’t like it that my dad is always playing around with his phone,” six-year-old Ylvi Schmitt, who was at the protest, told Frankfurter Allgemeiner Zeitung (link in German). Her father admitted that he needed to “take a good look at himself.”

As with many other countries, tech addiction is a hot topic in Germany. Media outlets and commentators have honed in on the damage parents can inflict on their kids by being glued to their smartphones—from accidents that happen when parents aren’t paying attention to negatively influencing children’s development. ”If parents do not respond to their children’s eye contact, there are research studies that show that children react with physical and hormonal stress,” psychologist Catarina Katzer told public broadcaster (link in German) Mitteldeutsche Rundfunk.

In January 2017, the Youth and Family Office in the town of Augsburg, Bavaria, ran a “Talk to your child!” poster campaign urging parents to put their phones away and give their children eye contact and ample attention.

While it is easy to imagine that Emil’s protest is a publicity stunt straight from his social-media-savvy parents, his father was quick to point out the whole thing doesn’t exactly make them look good. “I’m the one who will be at the back of the demonstration—with my head bowed, because I’m the one he complains about,” he told Der Spiegel. – SOURCE: Quartz

Cholera And Typhoid Will Just Continue Recurring In Zim – BBC

Questions are still being asked 10 years on about why a preventable disease keeps recurring. The answer is evident during a quick tour of the affected suburbs.

Dotted around Glen View, you hear and see gurgling streams of what looks like water. But the stench is a giveaway that this is in fact waste from burst and blocked sewage pipes.

Stagnant pools of sewage have been allowed to collect in front of homes. Children play nearby.

Health authorities say that blocked sewers left unattended have contaminated water supplies. Health Minister Obadiah Moyo blames the opposition-run city council for the crisis. He says the blocked pipes were reported months ago but never fixed.

New Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube lays out his plan September 9, 2018
Prioritising macroeconomic stability and building… September 7, 2018
“As the health ministry we will not allow the city to sit on the their laurels,” he told reporters after touring a health facility.

But the problem runs deeper.

For years, refuse collection has been erratic with mounds piling up around most of Harare. Tap water supplies have also been unpredictable.

It has forced citizens to dig their own shallow wells and boreholes. Many of these have since tested positive for cholera.

The water infrastructure has been left to decay for decades. Water pipes are cracked, rotting and need to be replaced.

As a stop-gap measure, the new finance minister Mthuli Ncube has created an emergency crowdfunding campaign to fight the disease.

Some hail it as an innovative model to help overcome Zimbabwe’s many challenges. Many others believe it is an admission of failure from a government which they say has misplaced priorities.

They point to the government’s reported budget of $20m (£15m) worth of loans earmarked for new luxury vehicles for ministers.

As the blame-shifting continues, cholera rages on challenging President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government.

It is one of his biggest crises since coming into power last November and the outbreak leaves a dent in his efforts to attract investors.

An international book fair has already been cancelled, while vendors are being moved from the streets in a politically sensitive and potentially volatile move.

The International Committee of the Red Cross describes the situation as incredibly complex. A double blow, as most of the areas affected had already been battling typhoid – another waterborne disease.

Fixing the water system will mean fixing the economy first, following years of economic decline under former President Robert Mugabe.

Zimbabwe spends more than 80% of its revenue on civil servants’ salaries, leaving little left for anything else.

The Infrastructure Development Bank of Zimbabwe (IDBZ) estimates that the country needs to invest $26bn (£20bn) over a period of 10 years to upgrade its infrastructure.

This is money the country does not have, and it is unable to borrow it from the IMF or World Bank until it settles its arrears.

Already businesses and churches have stepped in to try and stem the crisis, by paying for water deliveries, buckets and water treatment tablets.

But without a long-term plan, financial investment and above all political will, this preventable disease will return again and again to claim more victims.

BBC

Street Vending Effectively Banned

Government will not allow vending at undesignated areas and sites without toilets and other requisite infrastructure as this is contributing to the spread of diseases such as cholera, which have claimed many lives, Women Affairs, Community, Small and Medium Enterprises Development Minister Sithembiso Nyoni has said.

Speaking at a meeting with representatives of vendors’ organisations at her Kaguvi Offices in Harare yesterday, Minister Nyoni said her ministry will collaborate with other ministries to create conducive areas for trade.

Minister Nyoni’s statement comes as small groups of illegal vendors yesterday continued to engage in running battles with the police as they refused to leave the streets.

“Nobody will be allowed to vend anywhere anymore especially where there is no water and toilets because that is a health hazard. We are hoping that we will work together with the Ministries of Local Government, Public Works and National Housing, Health and Child Care and other ministries to make sure that you are allowed to do your business in healthy and more conducive areas,” she said.

“We are facing a crisis of cholera and a lot of you have been affected by this. I wanted to consult you so that we map a way forward so that we avoid the old mistakes. When we parted ways a few months ago you were beginning to rise as the informal sector.”

“Let me be very blunt. We are no longer going to have vending anywhere, everywhere. Let us be as organised as we had started to be. So those are the points of my agenda that I would like us to discuss.” She urged vendors to cooperate with Government to prevent and eliminate cholera and any related diseases.

Minister Nyoni said there were some vendors cooking everywhere and selling vegetables outside the designated areas, risking spreading diseases.

“If retail is your gift I would like you to grow from a vendor to a tuck shop, to a small shop and to a supermarket. If you are part of this ministry I would like you to vend with a bigger aim and we will classify you appropriately as vendors with an aim and vendors who just want to make money and go,” she said.

“We will create weekend vending sites like we are doing in Bulawayo for those who want to make quick money and send children to school.”

Zimbabwe Informal Traders chairperson Mr Arthur Muromba blamed Harare City Council for not attending to sewer bursts across the city.

“Council needs to attend to areas like Mbare Musika and inspect fruits, which are being brought to the market. They also need to upgrade the place because it is in a deplorable state. Whenever there is an outbreak vendors are the first to be blamed. We, however, encourage vendors to practice highest standards of hygiene,” he said.

Vendors Initiative for Social and Economic Transformation executive director Mr Samuel Wadzai said it was not time for blame game, but to find solutions.

“We are ready to play our part. It is more to do with water. It is our responsibility as leaders to tell our vendors to operate in clean areas. We are, however, against any intervention implemented without vendors. We believe the evictions are too early,” he said.

He said informal traders should be able to contribute to the economy.

State Media

All Set For Mnangagwa’s SONA And Parliament Opening

PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa is today expected to deliver his first State of the National Address (SONA) and officially open the first session of the Ninth Parliament during which he will set the legislative agenda.

The President will this morning address a joint sitting of the National Assembly and Senate.

Preparations for the event were in place yesterday, while a number of roads around Parliament Building will be closed to motorists during the proceedings.

Speaker of the National Assembly Advocate Jacob Mudenda said everything was in place for today’s event.

“Everything is in place and we are looking forward to the event,” he said.

The legislative agenda is expected to be dominated by laws that enhance the country’s attractiveness to investors and streamline investment laws to smoothen the ease of doing business.

The Ninth Parliament is expected to be seized with amending Chapter 14 of the Constitution to streamline the structure of Provincial and Metropolitan Councils as part of the devolution being advocated by President Mnangagwa and his Government.

President Mnangagwa has already indicated that Government’s thrust is to consolidate economic reforms that started with the coming in of the new dispensation.

During his inauguration speech, he reiterated that the focus of his administration was on the economy. Parliamentarians have also embraced the policy direction given by the President and pledged to speed up the passage of laws in the august house.

Parliament is dominated by zanu-pf which retained its two-thirds majority in the just-ended harmonised elections.

Before addressing the legislators, the President is expected to inspect a guard of honour mounted by members of the Zimbabwe National Army while there will be a flypast by the Air Force of Zimbabwe as per tradition.

Following the President’s address, the Ministry of Local Government, Public Works and National Housing will host the traditional luncheon for legislators.

Roads that will be closed today are Nelson Mandela Avenue at Sam Nujoma to Simon Muzenda streets, Third Street at Jason Moyo Avenue, George Silundika Avenue at Third Street, St Mary’s Lane and Nelson Mandela Avenue, Kwame Nkrumah from Sam Nujoma to Simon Muzenda streets and Samora Machel Avenue and and Sam Nujoma Street.

The roads will be closed from 6am to 3pm.

State Media

Mthuli Ncube Secures $250m To Import Essential Goods

ZIMBABWE has secured a US$250 million line of credit from Gemcorp Capital, an international independent investment management firm focused on emerging markets, for the importation of essential commodities.

In a joint statement, the central bank, the Treasury and Gemcorp said the five-year loan facility would enable the importation of essential and intermediate goods to support the economy.

The facility comes at a time when the country is facing serious foreign currency shortages, largely resulting from poor exports and subdued foreign direct investments.

Zimbabwe also saw its foreign currency requirements increasing since the beginning of the year, largely attributed to improved economic performance, but with no corresponding generation of the hard currency.

This is, however, expected in the short term.

In the long term – when productive capacities are fully utilised – the country is expected to export more and the trend will be reversed.

“The Ministry of Finance and Economic Development, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe and Gemcorp Group are pleased to announce that they have signed a $250 million commercial loan facility.

“This five-year facility will enable the importation of essential and intermediate goods to support the Zimbabwean economy,” reads part of the statement.

Minister of Finance and Economic Development Prof Mthuli Ncube welcomed the development saying “granting of the facility by Gemcorp is a strong signal by foreign investors of their growing confidence in Zimbabwe. I expect more investors to follow suit”.

RBZ Governor Dr John Mangudya said the line of credit came at an appropriate time to shore up foreign currency liquidity after the end of the tobacco selling season.

“This, together with other facilities that we have secured, should go a long way to meet the import requirements for essential products and services for the national economy,” he said.

Commenting on the investment, Atanas Bostandjiev, founder and chief executive of Gemcorp Group, said, “with this facility, we are financing and coordinating the delivery of essential goods to help support the Zimbabwean economy. The trade finance gap in Africa remains significant and is an enduring constraint to economic development. The Gemcorp Group remains focused on working with local partners and borrowers across Africa and the rest of the emerging markets to provide creative funding solutions and foster trade and investment in the region”.

The Gemcorp Group comprises a London-based fund manager (Gemcorp Capital LLP) and a physical commodities trader (Gemcorp Commodities Trading). It focuses on emerging markets with a special interest in Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America and Eastern Europe where the group has established itself as a reliable long-term partner for sovereigns and growth focused private companies.

State Media

Old New Dispensation, Police Back On The Road

Staff Reporter|The infamous Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) are back on the road after being kicked out at the change of hands between former President Robert Mugabe’s regime to the so called new dispensation under President Emmerson Mnangagwa through a soft coup in November last year.

The removal of the heavy handed police was met by wild celebrations with people believing that indeed the Mnangagwa era was coming up with fresh governance after police on the road made life extremely difficult for Zimbabweans through wanton ticketing and bribes.

News that police have relaunched a countrywide blitz on the roads under the pretext that it’s an operation targeting unregistered vehicles and motorists who are flouting traffic regulations have brought gloom to motorists and ordinary citizens who are quite aware of what the return of the police means.

Police claim that the mass return of roadblocks is to fish out unregistered vehicles in the wake of a spate of armed robberies countrywide as criminals are using such vehicles to evade arrest.

Although police could not avail statistics of vehicles they had impounded so far, some roadblocks have been mounted in and around the city centres targeting such vehicles.

Police indicated that they will only release the impounded vehicles once the owners have registered them. Some of the vehicles will also undergo vetting to ascertain whether they had also been used in the commission of crime or not.

State media reports that on Monday a large number of cars were being impounded at the City centre roadblocks, while detectives were also moving around the city looking for unlicensed vehicles.

The development comes after Police Commissioner-General Godwin Matanga recently said the force will launch a massive crackdown targeting unlicensed drivers and unregistered vehicles in a nationwide blitz that will signal the return of roadblocks.

Comm-Gen Matanga made the announcement at this year’s World First Aid Day commemorations held at Morris Depot, Harare.

He said the days for those driving without licences and those driving unregistered vehicles were now over.

“By the powers vested in me by the President (Emmerson Mnangagwa), I would like to warn members of the public that starting on Monday, police will launch a massive operation to get rid of unlicensed drivers and unregistered vehicles,” Matanga said.

“Those caught on the wrong side of the law will have their cars impounded, while the law will take its course on unlicensed drivers.”

In October last year, Government warned that it would impound vehicles that had no number plates, while offenders would either be imprisoned or fined.

Govt In Panic Search For $57m For Cholera Which Was Avoidable Through Prevention

By Paul Nyathi|State media reports that government has launched an appeal for $57 million to contain the cholera outbreak at a time when 30 lives have already been lost and many more still coming what with at least 5 000 people seeking treatment.

The cholera outbreak certainly did not hit Zimbabwe by surprise especially Harare as all the warning shots of the impending epidemic were seen as far backbas 1990 but nothing was done to prevent the outbreak.

The development comes against the backdrop of Emmerson Mnangagwa’a office ordering the Zimbabwe electricity supply authority, ZESA to dish out $52 million to convicted fraudster Wicknel Chivayo (in addition to an earlier $7 million).

Besides the warning shots, government never committed to improving the health budget to prevent the cholera outbreak despite the hard lessons from the 2008 outbreak that killed thousands of people throughout the country. What happened to the adage that “prevention is better than cure?”

No investments were made into the decaying water and sanitation infrastructure that was evidently a time bomb for a cholera and typhoid outbreak in most major urban centres with the capital city top on the list.

Officially launching the appeal in Harare yesterday, chairperson of the inter-ministerial committee on cholera July Moyo said the health sector requires at least $51 million to assist about 50 000 patients.

Moyo said the City of Harare requires as a matter of urgency, at least $6 million to revamp sewer and water reticulation infrastructure in the hotspots of Glen View and Budiriro something that was known over the last ten years.

“The health sector had put in a budget of $63 million, but some monies have since come in from other partners, leaving a gap of $51 million.

“The immediate requirement for infrastructure for Harare was $12 million, but we have also since received about $6,2 million from Government but gaps still exist. This ($12 million) will enable water to start flowing in the hotspot areas.”

The minister said local authorities were faced with a number of challenges, which include, “illegal” settlements, where provision of services such as potable water and garbage collection is limited.

He said the areas also had contaminated water sources i.e boreholes, old sewer and water reticulation systems and rampant food vending.

Minister Moyo said Government has however, put in place a number of initiatives to respond to these challenges.

These measures, according to Minister Moyo, include infrastructure maintenance, intensification of health education, setting up of cholera treatment camps and dealing with vendors.

“My appeal is in two forms, material and financial support to plug the gaps we have.

“We need assistance to cover the gap that is there in upgrading the sewer and water system. We also need assistance on refuse collection and solid waste management,” said Minister Moyo.

Speaking at the same occasion, Health and Child Care Minister Dr Obadiah Moyo said the current cholera outbreak was becoming difficult to contain because of the dual existence of bacteria that causes typhoid and that which causes cholera, coupled with increased cases of drug-resistant cholera and typhoid.

“The emergency of antimicrobial resistance has been threatening current efforts to contain both typhoid and cholera outbreaks, Alternative antibiotics are expensive and not easily available. The situation has been further complicated by some patients affected by both vibrio (bacteria that causes cholera) and salmonella (bacteria that causes typhoid) as well as E coli (another bacteria).

“This could have contributed to the increased deaths at the onset of the outbreak,” said Dr Moyo.

Dr Moyo said a number of organisations, corporates and even Zimbabweans living in the diaspora had since availed their assistance in the fight against cholera and typhoid.

According to the Ministry of Health and Child Care, as of Monday, 30 people had died of cholera while 5 836 others were treated of suspected cholera.

Of the 30 people who died, 20 died within a health facility. Although suspected cases have since spread to other parts of the country such as Chitungwiza, Buhera, Gokwe, Shamva, Masvingo and Bulawayo, the epicentre remained Glen View and Budiriro.

On typhoid, 11 deaths and 6 675 cases were recorded in Harare and Gweru.

Typhoid and cholera are both water and food borne diseases, which are caused by consuming food or water contaminated with feacal matter. Both diseases are highly infectious and can pass on from one person to the other, if proper hygienic practices are not adhered to.

Drama As Govt After Giving Wicknel Chivayo $59mln, Now Appeals for $57mln Cholera Money

July-Moyo
Barely a few weeks of Emmerson Mnangagwa’a office ordering ZESA to dish out $52 million to convicted fraudster Wicknel Chivayo (an addition to an earlier $7 million), government has launched an appeal for $57 million to fight cholera.

Government has launched an appeal of at least $57 million to effectively contain the current cholera outbreak that has so far claimed 30 lives and left over 5 000 others under treatment.

Officially launching the appeal in Harare yesterday, chairperson of the inter-ministerial committee on cholera Minister July Moyo said the health sector requires at least $51 million to assist a projection of 50 000 patients while local authorities require at least $6 million to be able to revamp sewer and water reticulation infrastructure in hotspots of Glen View and Budiriro.

Minister Moyo, quoted by the state Media, said a detailed list of requirements and a final figure would be availed tomorrow as they were still consolidating national requirements from both local authorities and the health sector. –

$10 Million Set Aside For Mbanje Processing

At least $10m has been set aside for the establishment of Zimbabwe’s first ever medicinal cannabis production facility in Mazowe, Mashonaland Central.

Operating under the firm, NIRCAN ZW Ltd, a subsidiary of the NIRCOM A.S.I.G, the consortium has already applied to Government for a Medical Cannabis Cultivation and Growing Licence for Export.

Government in April this year announced that individuals and businesses could apply for licences to cultivate cannabis for medicinal or scientific purposes.
According to sources, former Health and Child Welfare Dr David Parirenyatwa had, in principle, agreed to the application by NIRCAN ZW Ltd.

Issuance of the licence will lead to the establishment of the Medical Cannabis and Growing Centre in Mazowe.
According to documents gleaned by The Herald recently, NIRCAN ZW Ltd has set aside $10m for the project’s first stage.

The budget includes $4m for the basic assumption, which includes cultivation and growing centre with a gross size of 50 000 square metres.
This would also include the establishment of one Greenhouse growing unit and an outdoor growing unit.

The budget also includes working capital of $4,5 million for the first year and $1m set aside for miscellaneous expenses.

State Media

Police In Major Embarrassment Attempting To Charge Chamisa MDC Over 1 August Shootings

By A Correspondent| Drama has become the order of events in the case over the 1 August shooting which Vice President Constantino Chiwenga blamed MDC supporters for killing the victims.

On the 2nd August, VP Chiwenga speaking to ZimEye.com, went on to claim that the bullets which killed and injured many were produced by teargas.

The latest development is that of a mentally disabled man police arrested and suddenly began claiming that he was found in possession of a red T-shirt.

Mr David Gemu (27) from Eastview in Arcturus Road Harare who is a well known mentally challenged, bisexual individual, has been at the remand juvenile detention since 1st August 2018.

The police have claimed that David was caught at the Joina city with a bag full of stones.

They also claimed that he was found in possession of an MDC t shirt and became violent, beating people during the 1st August 2018 protest when 6 innocent people were shot by the army in cold blood massacre style.

The man is scheduled to appear in court today.

There was as at the 13th September, no evidence availed to support the allegations of possessing an MDC t shirt.

David has been heading to court on three occasions 16th August, 30th August and 4th September 2018 with no legal representation because his family initially did not know where he was and had already pleaded guilty.

ZLHR went to see David last week Friday 7th September 2018 and are giving him legal advice. He is likely to appear in court with others on the 18th September 2018.

Man Brutally Assaulted Over Radio Volume

A man (52) from Mangwe District in Matabeleland South has been admitted to hospital in critical condition after a 21 year old man brutally attacked him over radio volume during a beer drink.

Mthokozisi Sibanda of Lydedard Farm Compound allegedly struck Sithembiso Sibanda with an unidentified object and he sustained several body injuries.
Mthokozisi wanted the volume of the radio to be turned louder while the elderly Sithembiso said it was already too loud.

The incident occurred at around 8PM on Saturday at their farm compound.
Matabeleland South police spokesperson Chief Inspector Philisani Ndebele said the suspect was arrested while the injured is battling for life in hospital.

“We are investigating a case of attempted murder of a man who was hit several times with an unknown object and he sustained severe body injuries. He was rushed to Plumtree District Hospital but due to his serious condition, was further transferred to Bulawayo for further management.

“The matter was reported to the police and the suspect was arrested. He is in custody and will appear in court soon,” he said.

Chief Insp Ndebele appealed to the public to desist from violence which has resulted in endless cases of murder and serious injuries.

“We warn members of the public to desist from violence. Some matters just need talking rather than fighting. We encourage people to engage third parties when in disputes instead of fighting. Youths are warned to refrain from drug and alcohol abuse because no-one in his proper senses can attack anyone over radio volume.

“Recently, we received cases of murder and attempted murder over petty issues, things which are not at all worth losing lives over, such as murder over bath soap, a dog, a shovel, a knife, $1 and beer. Surely we can’t continue to lose lives or people getting injured over such petty issues, matters that can be resolved with the word of mouth,” he said.- state media

ED’s CHINA DEALS NOW: Mnangagwa Says Cabinet Decisions To Be Made Public

President Mnangagwa yesterday chaired the first Cabinet meeting under the Second Republic where he introduced a new approach on the conduct of Government business and tasked the new Ministers to identify at least five quick-win and high impact projects that improve the livelihoods of the people.

Under the new approach, ministers are expected to make presentations during the course of a Cabinet meeting while decisions will be communicated to the nation every Wednesday to ensure transparency.
All the projects will be strictly monitored and implemented under 100-day programme cycles. Giving his opening remarks during the meeting, President Mnangagwa said the new Ministers—a blend of new talent and experience—should lead the transformation process.

“You should be aware of the mammoth task before us, that is, to lead the transformation process, on our trajectory to become a middle income economy by 2030, characterised by job-rich economic growth and a globally competitive society,” he said.

“Each portfolio should now identify a minimum of five quick-win and high impact projects in order that work on them commences in earnest. Where appropriate, it is permissible to go beyond the five, subject to approval by Cabinet.”

President Mnangagwa said Ministers were expected to speak with one voice. “Our approach will entail four or five Ministers making presentations during the course of a Cabinet meeting like this one until the 100-day cycle ends,” he said.

“The decision taken by Cabinet will be communicated to the nation every Wednesday after we have met. Thus, the Minister of Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services (Monica Mutsvangwa), will issue a press statement in the presence of the Chief Secretary (to the President and Cabinet, Dr Misheck Sibanda) and the implementing ministers. This will help us entrench transparency and a culture of responsiveness as we seek to transform the quality of life of our people.”

President Mnangagwa said the 100-day cycles would continue and new ministers should embrace them as the norm of doing business in Cabinet.

“Since the advent of the new dispensation on the 24th of November, 2017, we adopted a new methodology of ensuring that Government Ministries and agencies deliver quality services to the people through the Integrated Results Based Management System with its accompanying Rapid Results Approach,” he said.

“We also adopted the 100-day programme cycle as a new model of doing business to support our drive to attain Vision 2030. The 100-day programme cycle helped us to accentuate the rapid and efficient implementation of priority projects with an immediate impact on the livelihoods of our people. Going forward, we should continue to apply the 100-day cycles as a way of doing business in Government supported by the monitoring of performance outcomes using the Executive Electronic Dashboard. This means that, at the click of a button, projects performance tracking has been made easy across Cabinet, Ministries and parastatals.”

He said workshops would be held to enable Ministers to familiarise themselves with the 100-day cycle.

“In the coming week, while I will be away on international business at the 73rd Session of the United Nations General Assembly meeting, half-day workshops will be organised to enable all Ministers to adequately acquaint themselves with the essential components of the 100-day cycle, the Integrated Results Based Management System, The Results Rapid Approach and the Executive Dashboard. A similar exercise will be conducted for permanent secretaries and other senior Government officials.”

The Cabinet now has new faces after President Mnangagwa dropped several big names from previous administrations.

Mnangagwa’s dream team is expected to address a host of challenges, from persistent fiscal and balance of payments deficits to infrastructural and social decay accruing from the previous administration.

Government is currently seized with overcoming the cholera outbreak which has so far claimed 30 lives.- state media

CHOLERA TESTS: Bulawayo Is Negative 10/12

Lab tests have ruled out cholera in 10 of the 12 people from Bulawayo who had been admitted to hospital on fears that they had contracted the disease.

Bulawayo City Council director of Health Services Dr Edwin Sibanda yesterday said the local authority was awaiting lab results for two more people who were admitted to Thorngrove Infectious Diseases Hospital yesterday but 10 have been discharged.

“For the specimens that were sent to the laboratory; we have at least 5 negative Rapid Diagnostic Tests and we have at least 3 negative culture for vibrio cholerae, salmonella typhi and shigella. This simply means that there is no evidence that the admitted patients have cholera or typhoid,” said Dr Sibanda.

He said council was still in contact with the discharged patients as they will still be monitored.
“Residents are reminded that cholera is an individualistic disease as it is highly dependent on one’s hygiene. They should continue practising hygiene and ensure they wash and eat properly cooked food,” added Dr Sibanda.

Meanwhile, a teacher at a school in Tsholotsho, Matabeleland North is suspected to have contracted cholera after visiting Harare amid reports that four cases have been reported in the province.

In an interview yesterday, Matabeleland North Provincial Medical Director Dr Alfred Muchara said
three of the cases were not linked to the cholera epicentre in Harare while the fourth one involved a teacher who had recently visited the capital.

“We have so far recorded four suspected cases, two in Hwange district, and one from Umguza and today we had the fourth one from Tsholotsho District,” said Dr Muchara.

“The two cases we had in Victoria Falls and Umguza have no links to Harare but the most recent one in Tsholotsho there is a link with Harare. The patient travelled to Harare.”
The PMD said parents and guardians should not worry about the suspected infected teacher as she has been quarantined.

In 2008, about 4 288 people died from cholera in Zimbabwe.
The recent outbreak which has killed about 30 people in Harare has also forced two schools in Gwanda in Matabeleland South to shut down as learners do not have a safe water source after a community borehole they relied on broke down.

Learners and teachers at Mkwidzi Primary and Secondary Schools in Shake Ward were collecting water from a dirty stream which they shared with livestock.
The school closed on Thursday last week following a meeting between parents and community leadership.

The councillor of the ward, Nobukhosi Malila said efforts to repair the borehole were underway.
Government has since set up a cholera treatment centre in Gweru as part of its preparedness to fight the water borne disease which has been recorded in Harare and Gokwe North.

Midlands provincial medical director Dr Simon Nyadundu refuted claims that suspected cholera cases have been detected in Gweru.

“No cholera case has been detected in Gweru as of now. We have just set up a cholera treatment centre at an infectious disease hospital in Ascot as part of preparedness for cholera,” he said.
Dr Nyadundu who is also the coordinator for the Gweru typhoid outbreak committee said city of Gweru is still fighting typhoid outbreak which was declared last month.

Typhoid left about 2000 residents requiring treatment and eight dead. “There has been a general steady decrease in new typhoid cases in Gweru and we are now prepared for any suspected cases of cholera,” he said.

Gweru town clerk, Ms Elizabeth Gwatipedza, said her local authority will just be on the lookout for any suspected cholera cases.

Masvingo Provincial Medical Director, Dr Amadeaus Shamu, yesterday confirmed that one case suspected to be coming from Harare had been recorded in the province.

“I can confirm that we received one case of suspected cholera. The victim is receiving treatment at Masvingo General Hospital and was coming from Harare’s Glen View suburb on his way to South Africa,” said Dr Shamu.

He said that people travelling from the cholera affected areas like Harare were supposed to be disinfected first before travelling to reduce the transmission of the disease.- state media

After Blowing $400 million On Dodgy Trains Which Can’t Move, NRZ’s Mavima Is Promoted To Ministerial Job

By Farai D Hove| The man who early this year blew $400 million on dodgy trains which cannot move on Zimbabwe’s rails, the Railways of Zimbabwe (NRZ) board chair, Larry Mavima, has resigned as the parastatal’s chairman after being promoted to a Senatorial post for Shurugwi-Zvishavane; having also been appointed Minister of State for Midlands province.

The trains Emmerson Mnangagwa commissioned in February under a $400 million investment deal in Bulawayo, have not moved an inch. The locomotives Mavima bought are incompatible with Zimbabwe’s rail system. NRZ general manager Lewis Mukwada revealed saying “Out of the consignment of 10 locomotives we received, there are some that are in use. We have deployed four of those on the Harare-Bulawayo section. The challenge is that some of them are heavy and they can’t move on some of our sections.”

Other sources said, “The wagons and coaches, some of which were delivered in February, have not been used on any day. The challenge is that their thickness and weight is not compatible with the railway line used in Zimbabwe…South Africa and other countries in the region have upgraded their systems from the 45kgs on a metre specification for their rail equipment to about 54kgs per metre in terms of the weight on their railway… Our railway lines are not made to that specification.”

But Mnangagwa has promoted Mavima making him a minister.

Mavima became board chair in March 2016, replacing Engineer Alvord Mabhena who was relieved of his duties in November 2015.

Minister Mavima said in line with the Constitution of Zimbabwe, he had voluntarily resigned upon being sworn in as a Senator.

He told the state media, “I have voluntarily resigned as board chair of the National Railways of Zimbabwe. The law actually prohibits any members in the executive to hold directorship in State-owned companies so I have since resigned upon being sworn in as a Senator for Shurugwi-Zvishavane,” he said in an interview.

“I have actually handed over my responsibilities at NRZ to my deputy chairman Brigadier General William Dube until a new chairman is appointed by the Minister of Transport and Infrastructural Development (Biggie Matiza).”

During his tenure at the helm of NRZ, Minister Mavima said the board and management did a lot of work to turnaround the strategic entity, which is about to reach financial closure for the $400 million recapitalisation deal. Last year, NRZ and the Diaspora Infrastructure Development Group (DIDG)/Transnet entered into a $400 million deal to fund the parastatal’s rehabilitation project, which involves renewal of plant, equipment, rolling stock, track signalling and telecommunications infrastructure as well as information technology systems.

“We have done a lot of work in respect of recapitalisation of NRZ of which he (Brig Gen Dube) was part of. I would urge him to continue with the process that we started, which has yielded significant results for NRZ and to see that financial closure is achieved as soon as possible in as far as recapitalisation is concerned,” said Minister Mavima.

The strategic entity, which now requires about $1,9 billion in the long-term to fully recapitalise its operations, took delivery of railway equipment in February on lease terms under an interim arrangement with DIDG/Transnet while it awaits financial closure to the $400 million recapitalisation project.

Leased equipment under the interim solution comprises locomotives, wagons and passenger coaches. The equipment is meant to boost the NRZ’s capacity to move freight which had dropped drastically as result of obsolete equipment.

During its glory days in the 1990s, NRZ was moving 18 million tonnes of freight annually but the figure nose-dived to 3,1 million tonnes in 2017. In the first quarter of the year, the parastatal surpassed its revenue target of $18 million for the period by five percent on the back of the trust NRZ’s customers continue to build in the company.

Minister Mavima said his new office would work with various opportunities that exist in the mineral, agricultural, and commercial sectors to position the Midlands as the industrial power hub of Zimbabwe.

Mnangagwa Admin Clears Vendors From CBD, Accuses Them Of Spreading Cholera

The government has intensified the fight against cholera and typhoid in Harare, and enforced the ban on all illegal vending activities in the central business district (CBD).

There was heavy police presence in Harare’s CBD yesterday, with vending activities minimal.

Harare City Council Spokesperson, Mr Michael Chideme said citizens must make use of legal vending sites in their respective residential areas and decongest the central business district.

Failure by the local authority to collect garbage in the CBD has however been cited as another challenge that requires urgent attention.

The council is already working on repairing toilets and ensuring safe water provisions so that Harare soon returns its Sunshine City status.

Environmental Management Agency (EMA) Spokesperson, Mr Rambwai Mapako said more still needs to be done by stakeholders and the citizens at large who must adopt a new culture of keeping the environment clean.

At busy bus termini like Simon Muzenda and Copa Cabana and Market Square, there was a semblance of sanity as only registered companies for food and drink were in operation.

Apart from fighting the epidemic, the exercise will guarantee cleanliness in the CBD. – State Media

Mnangagwa Delighted To Chair Second Republic Cabinet

By Own Correspondent| President Emmerson Mnangagwa has expressed optimism in his newly appointed cabinet ministers adding that the team was getting to work in a move aimed at addressing the country’s socio- economic woes.

Mnangagwa said his administration was poised for victory in combating the cholera outbreak which had so far claimed 30 lives.

Said Mnangagwa following his first cabinet meeting held today in Harare:

“Transform Economy From Consumption To Investment Driven Economy”: Economist

Prosper Chitambara

By Own Correspondent| Newly appointed Finance minister Professor Mthuli Ncube has been urged to implement fiscal reforms to transform the country’s economy from a consumption driven to investment driven economy, Economic analyst and LEDRIZ Senior Researcher, Prosper Chitambara has said.

Chitambara called on the new administration to focus on fiscal consolidation reforms.

Said Chitambara:

Zimbabwe Secures $250m Liquidity Support from UK Firm

Jane Mlambo| Zimbabwe has secured a $250million line of credit facility from Gemcorp Group, a London-based investment group focused on emerging markets.

The five-year facility will enable the importation of essential and intermediate goods for Zimbabwe, Gemcorp said a statement released Monday.

Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube said the “granting of the facility by Gemcorp is a strong signal by foreign investors of their growing confidence in Zimbabwe. I expect more investors to follow suit”.

Atanas Bostandjiev, founder and CEO of Gemcorp Group, said: “With this facility, we are financing and coordinating the delivery of essential goods to help support the Zimbabwean economy. The trade finance gap in Africa remains significant and is an enduring constraint to economic development. The Gemcorp Group remains focused on working with local partners and borrowers across Africa and the rest of the emerging markets to provide creative funding solutions and foster trade and investment in the region”.

In May this year, Britain’s CDC broke the UK’s lending drought to Zimbabwe with a $100 million credit line to private companies, via Standard Chartered Bank.

Gripped by a liquidity crunch, Zimbabwe is desperate for lines of credit to fund essential imports. As foreign currency shortages worsen, the backlog for foreign payments has swelled to over $600 million. The crisis has stalled Zimbabwe’s efforts to revive industry and attract fresh foreign investment.

The closure of the tobacco trading season usually means that the foreign currency crisis will get deeper, and Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe John Mangudya conceded on Monday that this $250 million deal came just in time.

“(The credit line) is coming at an appropriate time to shore up foreign currency liquidity after the end of the tobacco selling season. This, together with other facilities that we have secured, should go a long way to meet the import requirements for essential products and services for the national economy,” said Mangudya, who first mentioned talks with Gemcorp in a briefing to Parliament in May.

Gemcorp’s Bostandjiev is a former partner at Goldman Sachs and also a former executive of VTB, the Russian investment bank that Zimbabwe has previously courted for financial support. Earlier this year, Gemcorp was part of a deal to raise $116million for Africell, the West African telecoms provider. Gemcorp also recently secured a $150million for power expansion in Angola.

-Newzwire

 

Drama As Police Arrest A Mentally Disabled Man And Accuse Him Of Being A Violent Chamisa Supporter Possessing A Red T Shirt On 1 August

By A Correspondent| Drama has become the order of events in the case over the 1 August shooting which Vice President Constantino Chiwenga blamed MDC supporters for killing the victims.

On the 2nd August, VP Chiwenga speaking to ZimEye.com, went on to claim that the bullets which killed and injured many were produced by teargas.

The latest development is that of a mentally disabled man police arrested and suddenly began claiming that he was found in possession of a red T-shirt.

Mr David Gemu (27) from Eastview in Arcturus Road Harare who is a well known mentally challenged, bisexual individual, has been at the remand juvenile detention since 1st August 2018.

The police have claimed that David was caught at the Joina city with a bag full of stones.

They also claimed that he was found in possession of an MDC t shirt and became violent, beating people during the 1st August 2018 protest when 6 innocent people were shot by the army in cold blood massacre style.

The man is scheduled to appear in court tomorrow.

There was as at the 13th September, no evidence availed to support the allegations of possessing an MDC t shirt.

David has been heading to court on three occasions 16th August, 30th August and 4th September 2018 with no legal representation because his family initially did not know where he was and had already pleaded guilty.

ZLHR went to see David last week Friday 7th September 2018 and are giving him legal advice. He is likely to appear in court with others on the 18 th September 2018.

Zambian Doctors Perform First Ever Brain Surgery

Dora Siliya

By Own Correspondent| Zambian doctors last Friday performed the first ever brain tumour surgery, the Chief government Spokesperson, Dora Siliya has said.

In her congratulatory message to the team who performed the surgery, Siliya, who doubles as the Information and Broadcasting Services minister revealed that the patient was recovering well.

Said Siliya:

Oncologists suggest that surgery is the primary treatment for brain tumors that can be removed without causing severe damage.

They assert that many benign (non-cancerous) tumors are treated only by surgery while most malignant (cancerous) tumors, however, require treatment in addition to the surgery, such as radiation therapy and or chemotherapy.

Biti Warns Of Economic Meltdown

By Own Correspondent| Former Finance minister who is also the current legislator for Harare East constituency, Tendai Biti has warned that unless structural reforms are undertaken, the country’s economy is poised for a meltdown.

Biti, who also doubles as the MDC Alliance deputy national organising Secretary identified the budget deficit as one of the main reasons for the country’s economic woes urging the government to address this anomally.

Said Biti:

Cholera Update: Pictures from Glen View

A cholera patient receiving treatment at Glen View poly clinic
A Glen View resident fetching water, portable water is still very scarce in Harare suburbs
A school child in Glen View passing through flowing sewer
Garbage is still a major concern in Glen View despite a cholera outbreak that has claimed 30 lives
A parent admnistering salt and sugar solution to a child with diarrhea while waiting for treatment at Glen View poly clinic
A City of Harare garbage truck in Glen View today

 

Health Ministry Commends Hard Work Being Put In Cholera Fight

Staff Correspondent|Deputy Minister of Health and Child Care Dr John Chamunorwa Mangwiro has commended the hard work being done by doctors, nurses, health workers and the nation at large in trying to contain cholera outbreak in the country.

“I am happy with the progress that I have seen at this hospital it shows that everyone is working hard so as to end cholera in the country. There is need for correction of the problem other than just crying,” he said.

Dr Mangwiro said this yesterday when visited all the cholera camps in the Harare to asses and monitor the situation.

Dr Mangwiro first visited Beatrice Road Infectious Diseases Hospital (BRIDH) where he managed to speak to all the patients who had come to get treatment and those few who were admitted at the institution’s camp site.

At BRIDH most of the patients were males and children and were stable responding well to treatment and most of them were already at point of discharge. There were also some few patients who were waiting to be transferred to other hospitals as they had been tested negative to cholera but had come with fear of the worst in mind.

He said it was his duty as a deputy Minister and as a doctor to see to it that cholera is contained. He also encouraged all the patients to take their medication as advised by their health care providers so that they recover quickly.

Dr Mangwiro also managed to examine other patients as well as talking to the nurses and doctors on duty on the progress of containing the outbreak.
Deputy Minister was later joined by the town clerk Mr Hosiah Chisango at Glenview Poly Clinic. They managed to tour the camp together, only a few patients were admitted and a few suspected cases tested positive to cholera.

The team consisting of the Deputy Minister and town clerk proceeded to Tichagarika shopping centre. There were no food vendors operating at the area they all had complied to the Ministry of Health ‘s call for them to stop cooking and selling food at the shops in order to stop the spread of cholera.
They had to look at the area were pipes had burst leading to the outbreak, they had been repaired.

Mr Chisango promised to have continuous monitoring and maintenance of the pipes to avoid unnecessary blockages in the future.

At Budiriro Clinic there were only two female patients admitted and the sister in charge said they were happy with the progress made so far in trying to contain the outbreak before it became a disaster.

Dr Mangwiro urged all doctors and nurses not to do things casually, but always do the correct thing in their work in order to contain situations like outbreaks and avoiding the spread of diseases.
So far 30 people have died since the cholera outbreak.

City Of Harare Suspends Officials Who Attempted To Swindle Masiiwa Cholera Donation

By Paul Nyathi|The City of Harare has announced that it has immediately suspended council officials who inflated prices on cholera fighting equipment in an effort to swindle money donated for the cause by Econet Wireless.

“Harare Acting Town Clerk Engineer Hosiah Chisango this morning suspended some officials suspected of inflating prices for goods and services to be used in the fight against cholera.

Engineer Chisango has since informed Mayor Councilor Herbert Gomba and relevant stakeholders,” said the City in its official Twitter page.

The local authority reacted after Econet Director Strive Masiiwa revealed his outrage in a social media post on Monday morning.

The company offered $10 Million to be used in the fight against cholera which has killed 30 people in Harare and infected over 4000.

Below is the post by MasIiwa which attracted a huge reaction throughout the world everyone condemning the shocking level of corruption at the council.

“Reflection:
One of the saddest things that happened last week when Econet announced that it had set aside $10m to help with support to buy medicines and materials, was the number of suppliers, and even officials in some of the affected municipalities who tried to defraud our company by offering things at highly inflated prices!

Gloves worth $3, were suddenly worth $65!

That is just so pathetic!

I have told my people to prepare lists of anyone who willfully tries to exploit the situation. After this crisis is over we will go after them on this platform. Naming and shaming them.”

ZimEye.com is yet to get an official comment from the Mayor of Harare Herbert Gomba on the matter.

Dembare Midfielder Insults Fans After Being Substituted

 

Terrence Mawawa|
Dynamos midfielder Gift Saunyama yesterday insulted supporters
by allegedly lifting the middle finger before uttering unprintable words.

After being substituted in Dembare’s 1-0 defeat to Harare City the player showed lack of seriousness by walking slowly to the touchline as if the team was leading.

“We urge the technical team to guide their players because as we stand we do not want to see that

 

player in the team,” fumed a Dembare supporter.

Billiat Grabs Brace As Mighty Kaiser Chiefs Bury Capetown City

 

Terrence Mawawa| Warriors forward Khama Billiat grabbed a brace as Soweto Giants Kaiser Chiefs thumped Capetown City 4-1 in a one sided ABSA Premiership tie on Saturday.

Billiat, Matthew Rusike and Butholezwe Ncube were on target in the ABSA Premiership for their respective teams at the weekend.

Billiat earned the Man of the Match award after scoring a brace in Kaizer Chiefs’ first victory of the season.

Rusike who once played for Chiefs scored the consolation for City with a header in the first period while Billiat netted Amakhosi’s second goal in the 50th minute before he added another one in the 79th minute.

Midfielder Willard Katsande also featured in the clash. Teenage Hadebe, however, was not part of the squad.

Government And City Of Harare Scale Up Cholera Fight

The Minister of Local Government, Public Works and National Housing July Moyo says government, together with the Harare City Council, has scaled up their rapid response in curbing the spread of cholera in the Harare Metropolitan province.

In a statement released this afternoon updating the nation on the progress made so far, Minister Moyo said his ministry, together with the Ministry of Health and Child Care, has engaged private partners to supply affected areas with clean water, assist in refuse collection and mend burst sewer pipes.

He added that the government has since released $6.7 million for urgent health related needs with the portion of the amount set to assist the city council in maintaining infrastructural requirements.

On improving sanitation in the capital, Moyo highlighted that government has also released $500 million to kick-start clean-up campaigns while insisting that vendors would not be allowed to operate in the central business district until the outbreak has been contained.

“It has become imperative that all types of vending be banned with immediate effect. The joint operation system has since been activated to assist in the removal of the vending public. May I also take this opportunity to urge a few way ward vendors who are playing hide and seek with the law enforcement agents to comply. I am aware that there are some vendors who were operating with permits from the City of Harare. I direct that the law enforcement agents should amicably dismantle the stalls they are operating from,” said Minister Moyo.

The Minister also indicated that a directive has been given to all Ministers of State for Provincial Affairs to closely and continuously monitor and assist local authorities in addressing some of the key drivers of the outbreak.

“As a way of unlocking more assistance from local and international organisations, the government of Zimbabwe will be making its appeal on 17 September 2018 at the National Sports Stadium VIP lounge at 15:00 hours,” he said.

Moyo said the compilation of a consolidated cholera outbreak response plan has made it possible to highlight sustainable immediate, medium and long-term solutions to such outbreaks.

“Rugby Scoreline” Recorded As Black Rhinos Gore Mutare City Rovers

Terrence Mawawa| Army side Black Rhinos put seven past struggling Mutare City without reply in a league encounter at the National Sports Stadium yesterday.

Tafadzwa Jaravani opened the scoring in the 12th minute before Wellington Taderera (41′) and Allen Gahadzikwa (45′) stretched the lead before the half time.

Gahadzikwa completed his brace on the hour to make it 4-0 while Lot Chiunga (65′), Masimba Mambare (67′) and Macdonald Makuwe (71′) also managed to put their names on the scoresheet as Chauya Chipembere recorded the biggest win by any team in the league this season.

Jonathan Moyo: Mnangagwa SecondHand Republic Witnessed Today In Bulawayo

The exiled Prof Jonathan Moyo today slammed Emmerson Mnangagwa’s leadership labelling his regime the SecondHand Republic.

This was when Bulawayo journalist and CITEs founder Zenzele Ndebele was ordered to turn up at the CID Law And Order offices.

The police said they want to question him in connection with a documentary on Gukurahundi, it emerged.

Below was Prof Moyo’s tweet:

Mighty Warriors Lose Crucial Encounter To Uganda

Staff Correspondent|The Mighty Warriors failed to secure automatic qualification to the semi-finals of the 2018 COSAFA Women Championship after they lost 2-1 to guest nation Uganda.

Zimbabwe needed at least a draw to finish on top of Group C, but the defeat saw the east African country reach the knockout stages instead with seven points while the Mighty Warriors took the second position with six. They now hope to qualify as the second-placed runner-up.

The teams went to the halftime tied in deadlock. A few chances were created during the period with the Mighty Warriors getting the best of it but could not utilise them.

Felistas Muzongondi went close as the second half resume but her effort from a set piece in the 53rd minute sailed over the bar.

Uganda then got into the lead on the hour through substitute Juliet Nalukenge. The Crested Cranes doubled their advantage in the 79th minute courtesy of captain Tracy Akiror who headed in a cross.

As the game went into the injury time, Rutendo Makore pulled one back for the Mighty Warriors.

However, the come back was too late too little to save the day as the game ended 2-1 in favour of Uganda.

In another Group C match played on Monday afternoon, Nambia beat Swaziland 4-1.

Hungwe “Bunks” Chadzamira Inauguration Party

Josiah Hungwe

Terrence Mawawa|Former Masvingo State Minister Josaya Dunira was a surprise absentee at his successor Ezra Ruvai Chadzamira’ s inauguration party.

The lavish inauguration party has been held at the Civic Centre in Masvingo today.

The veteran politician Hungwe’ s absence was striking to the eye and ruling party officials were at pains to justify his failure to attend the inauguration.

“Cde Hungwe is expected to join us anytime from now.He will be with us shortly.He has indicated that he has a tight schedule but he will be here soon,” claimed a senior Zanu PF official.

Addressing thousands of Zanu PF supporters at the inauguration party the President of the Chiefs Council Fortune Charumbira applauded President Emmerson Mnangagwa for offloading tired political figures.

Journalist Summoned To CID, Law And Order Over Gukurahundi Documentary

By Own Correspondent| A Zimbabwean journalist has been summoned to the CID Law and Order Section over a yet to be launched documentary on Gukurahundi.

Zenzele Ndebele who presented himself to the ZRP’s Law and Order Section this afternoon was accompanied by Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights Lawyer ( ZLHR) Jabulani Mhlanga.

Wrote Ndebele on twitter:

Ndebele is set to launch his documentary on Gukurahundi next week at the Rainbow Towers in Harare.

No Reforms Without Reformers: Biti

Jane Mlambo| Opposition legislator and deputy chairperson of the MDC, Tendai Biti has lashed at the President Emmerson Mnangagwa government saying the spike in prices proves that without structural reforms, Zimbabwe will enter another meltdown.

“The spike in prices with bread rising to $1.10 and cooking fat to US$, evident that unless structural reforms are undertaken Zim enters another meltdown. Budget deficit at center of meltdown and requires boldness to deal with the same. Sadly there can never be reform without reformers,” tweeted Biti.

Biti said the budget deficit that is at the center of the meltdown requires boldness to deal with it which he says can never be without reforms.

Churches set up cholera, typhoid response fund

Jane Mlambo| THE Zimbabwe Council of Churches (ZCC) has established a cholera and typhoid response fund to deal with the outbreak of the twin waterborne diseases that have claimed 28 lives in Harare and affected thousands others.

The outbreak has spread to other cities, with Bulawayo recording its first cholera case on Friday.

This is the first time in over a decade for Bulawayo to record a cholera or typhoid outbreak despite erratic water supplies in the country’s second largest city.

The ZCC said it was seized with the matter and was establishing a cholera and typhoid response fund to deal with the outbreak and prevent its further spread.

“Throughout the state of emergency on cholera and typhoid, the ZCC will rally its member churches in efforts to prevent deaths, ameliorate the suffering and contribute towards lasting solutions to address the root cause of recurrent outbreaks,” the ZCC said in a statement yesterday.

“In particular, the ZCC will participate in stakeholder consultations in order to contribute to a collective way forward, provide pastoral resources to help pastors to be relevant as they minister in affected areas, medical institutions and bereaved families, establish a cholera reporting centre to collect and share information from churches in affected areas, establish a cholera/typhoid response fund to assist the affected families and communities.”

Government last week declared a state of emergency following the cholera outbreak and on Thursday released $1 million to fight cholera, while also launching an international appeal for funding towards the pandemic.

There have been counter accusations on who was to blame for the latest cholera outbreak.
The opposition – that runs several councils and municipalities across the country – blames central government for frustrating efforts to ensure resources are channelled to addressing sewer and reticulation challenges – a major source of the outbreak.

Others, however, blame the opposition for incapacity, thus resulting in recurrent cholera and typhoid cases.

“The church would wish to state that this is not a time for finger-pointing or political point-scoring; it is a time to unite. It is a time to do our utmost to meet the needs of families and communities who have been affected or are at risk of the outbreak. What affected families and communities need now is a united and well-coordinated national effort to decisively address this national emergency,” ZCC added.

-Newsday

Chamisa Is Not a Custodian of Legitimacy: Mangwana

Jane Mlambo| The ruling Zanu PF has castigated MDC President Nelson Chamisa over his refusal to accept the 2018 election result saying the 40-year old is not a “custodian of legitimacy”.

Mnangagwa appointed his cabinet last week with Chamisa calling for a dialogue amid economic turmoil that has raised fears of return to the 2008 hyper-inflationary situation.

In a telephone interview with 263Chat on the back of Chamisa’s call for a dialogue, Zanu PF Secretary for Legal Affairs, Munyaradzi Paul Mangwana was adamant that legitimacy to rule the country lies with the citizens of Zimbabwe through an electoral process.

“Legitimacy comes from the people of Zimbabwe through an electoral process. It does not come from Chamisa. Mnangagwa’s legitimacy came from the Constitutional Court,” he said.

“You don’t go to an election to rule with an opposition. You go to an election so that people make a choice as to who do they want to lead the country. The people of Zimbabwe gave President Emmerson Mnangagwa and Zanu PF that mandate.

“Zanu PF has more than two thirds majority, so it does not need anyone else to rule the country because it got the mandate from the people”

Mangwana added that Chamisa was not the referee in the July 30 elections and should abide by the declarations made by the referee charging that he should not give himself more significance than he deserves.

“Chamisa was not the referee in the election, there is a referee called ZEC and Chamisa being a lawyer need to understand that and should abide with its declarations.

“We don’t need Chamisa to move the country forward. We need to implement President Mnangagwa’s economic policies together with his cabinet.”

Chamisa tried in vain to challenge Mnangagwa victory in the constitutional court last month with the highest legal institution in the country ruling in favor of Mnangagwa saying the applicant failed to provide primary evidence to back his claims.

The electoral process was marred by irregularities with the electoral mother body being caught offside as it changed presidential results more than twice leaving the electorate with many questions than answers.

Protest broke out in Harare central business district claiming at least six lives after the military used live ammunition to disperse civilians a development that left Mnangagwa with many questions at the international stage.

However, posting on his micro blog twitter today, Chamisa’s spokesperson Dr Nkululeko Sibanda urged President Mnangagwa to address legitimacy issues in order for the country’s economy to return to its feet.

“The one thing that anyone who is interested in the Zimbabwe economy must address is the illegitimacy of the current government. Illegitimate President Mr @edmnangagwa must address the shame of his ZEC and ConCourt appointed leadership,” he said.

The opposition party insists the election was stolen thereby throwing Mnangagwa’s legitimacy under the bus something that the 75 year old leader aggressively sought in order to lure foreign direct investment.

Over the weekend, the city fathers in conjunction with the Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) resumed their cat mouse fight with the vendors’ with the latter having their wares being confiscated.
-263Chat

BREAKING- 11 Perish As Zambian Bus Crashes In Limpopo

By Own Correspondent| Eleven people died while 9 others are reportedly in a critical condition when a Zambian bus crushed in Polokwane, South Africa Monday morning.

Limpopo Department of Transport spokesperson Matome Moremi confirmed the accident and said eight women and three men died.

“Thirty people survived with slight injuries, but an additional nine, including a driver, were critically injured. One of the injured has been airlifted to Polokwane Hospital.

There were no other vehicles involved,” said Moremi.

The preliminary assessment was that a wheel may have burst on the bus, causing it to lose control and roll off the highway over a trench.

Heavy lifting equipment had to be brought out to free the injured and the deceased.

The bus was branded Royal Africa Logistics.

The crash occurred on the N1 in a southerly direction, between Mokgopone and Mokopane.

“The report that we have is that it was a bus coming from Zambia to Gauteng,” said Moremi.

He added that so far, the injured people on the bus verbally confirmed that they were from Zambia.-News24

“I Have Got A Lot Of Cash,” Boasts Mnangagwa Aide As Cholera Ravages Nation

Terrence Mawawa| The chairperson of the Zimbabwe Commercial Sugarcane Farmers Union, Admore Hwarare, who has close business and political links with President Emmerson Mnangagwa has been jeered at for boasting of having a lot of money at a time the government is battling to contain the ravaging cholera outbreak.

Speaking at the inauguration party for Masvingo Provincial State Minister Ezra Chadzamira at the Civic Centre today Hwarare boasted of being a rich person, triggering the ire of thousands of Zanu PF supporters and local residents.

“As you can see, I am wearing a very expensive suit.Nobody here is wearing such an adorable and expensive suit as mine.

As a farmer I have a lot of cash and that is a fact.I have decided to donate one tonne of sugar to the ruling party,” said Hwarare.

Angry ruling party supporters shouted at Hwarare , telling him to channel his money towards the eradication of cholera.

Mnangagwa Delighted At Chairing First Cabinet Meeting After July 30 Polls

Jane Mlambo| President Emmerson Mnangagwa has expressed delight at presiding over the first cabinet meeting saying he is gettin to work to overcome the cholera outbreak.

In a Twitter post soon after his first cabinet meeting since assuming a new mandate following the June 30 harmonised elections, Mnangagwa said he is getting straight to work and fighting the cholera outbreak.

 

Chadzamira Was Rewarded For Refusing To Be Bullied By Grace Mugabe:Matuke

,

Terrence Mawawa|Deputy Minister of Labour and senator for Gutu District Lovemore Matuke has revealed that in Zanu PF party members are rewarded for bootlicking.

Matuke told Zanu PF supporters at Masvingo Provincial State Minister Ezra Chadzamira’ s inauguration party at the Civic Centre today, Mnangagwa rewarded the outspoken politician for his undoubted loyalty to the President.

Matuke also described Chadzamira as a brave man who was tormented and persecuted by former First Lady Grace Mugabe.

“We all know that Chadzamira is a brave man. He was suspended for refusing to be bullied by those who were in power.

The man was harassed for a long time but he stood his ground and refused to be intimidated by those who had taken over executive powers,” said Matuke.

Cholera, Typhoid and The Politics of Urban Control

By Vivid Gwede| Let sleeping dogs lie, they say.
This attitude has been taken on both sides of the political aisle between Zanu-PF and MDC Alliance, following the outbreak of cholera, which has claimed about 28 lives mainly in Harare.

Some maturity, or political correctness, has meant the avoidance of blame-game between the MDC Alliance, which controls the city council, and Zanu-PF, which runs the meddlesome local government ministry and central government, as everyone focuses on dealing with the cholera epidemic.

But history cannot be wished away.

Looking at the messy situation in the largest city, Harare, in terms of burst sewer and water pipes, this was a disaster simply waiting to happen.

In fact, at the onset of every hot season, it is either typhoid or cholera to break out, both medieval hygiene-related diseases.

A political struggle between the two political gladiators over power and resource control, since about 2000, in Harare, in particular, and cities countrywide, in general, has brought service delivery on its knees.

To be specific, Zanu-PF has done its damned best, through successive local government ministers, to sabotage the opposition controlled-councils’ efforts and deprive them of both decision-making power and resources.

It is a long story, whose short summary, however, is that when elephants fight the grass bears the burden.

Now ordinary residents know hell hath no fury like a ruling party snubbed.

From the removal of executive mayors, appointment of unelected commissions, and recurrently divesting councils of control of roads and water fees, to meddling in the appointment of town clerks, Zanu-PF has been in an all-out war of sabotage.

Add to this, the failure by central government, over almost four decades, to provide adequate money to capital infrastructure investment for the renovation and expansion of sewer and water reticulation systems to cater for the growing urban population.

In fact, through the cynic contraptions of state parastatals, meant to dilute the power of councils such as the ZINARA and ZINWA, central government has not only failed to financially support local government, but repeatedly milked it.

All this, narrow-mindedly in the name of seeking to sabotage the opposition and eventually retain control of urban areas in some future elections.

It has been a scotched-earth policy in which morals and humanitarian considerations have been thrown into the abyss.

But with the blaming of vending, a direct result of failure to create jobs, one hopes this will not be another chance to blame the victim.

As municipal police and national police have been unleashed to drive out vendors from the streets by force, it appears they have become scapegoats for the cholera outbreak, including those who sell second-hand clothes.

Hopefully, this will not be an excuse for another Murambatsvina to be launched by a government, which also knows too well of its questionable legitimacy and fears the presence of vendors can be a springboard for citizen unrest.

It is as true that, with the imminent approach of the rain season, the proliferation of vending can exacerbate the cholera outbreak, as it is that the informalisation of the economy is a result of bad national governance.

In a double victimhood, those who have been rendered jobless by the governance crisis will also find that their means of survival is about to be criminalised by the failing authorities.

The other pertinent issue is how the central government has also failed to fund the health system, with each year’s health allocation falling short of the 15% quota of the country’s budget as stipulated in the Abuja Declaration of 2000.

Thus, with the repeated outbreak of these medieval diseases, the norm is that the government has been found ill-prepared financially and always needing to extend a begging bowl Oliver Twist-style.

Yet, what the government has been efficient at is the hiring of expensive planes for the elites’ funerals.

When the poor die of curable diseases in the ghettoes suddenly the government begs the same impoverished population through crowdfunding schemes.

Yes, it is not right to blame each other of witchcraft at village funerals, but as anti-colonial revolutionary, Amilcar Cabral, memorably said, it time “to look into each other’s eyes.”

Evening Kick off for /DR Congo AFCON Qualifier

Jane Mlambo| The Warriors will host DR Congo on Tuesday 16 October at 7 PM (1900 hours) at the National Sports Stadium in Harare, according to the Zimbabwe Football Association (ZIFA)

The tie comes three days after the reverse match away in Kinshasa on 13 October at 7.30 PM.

Obert Gutu Slams,”Those Who Wish To Assume Power Due To Economic Demise”

 

Terrence Mawawa|MDC T deputy president Obert Gutu has slammed what he has described as desperate elements hoping to assume power due to the country’ s economic woes.

Gutu has been involved in heated social media war with angry Zimbabweans who accuse him of desperately trying to revive his dwindling political career.

“Some misguided Zimbabweans are celebrating what they claim to be a steep rise in the prices of basic goods and commodities.If you think
you will get into power just because the prices of basic goods and commodities are rising,then
you can dream on.Your dream will soon be over,” tweeted Gutu.

He also wrote:”Will opposition legislators forgo their new cars and
propose that the money budgeted for the cars be put

Obert Gutu

towards fighting cholera and other more pressing national issues?”

Woman On A Mission? Khupe Invited To Speak On Zim Situation In Sri Lanka

 

Terrence Mawawa| MDC T leader Thokozani Khupe is in Sri Lanka where she is attending a Global Parliamentary Forum, a party official has said.

Khupe is expected to present a paper on the situation in Zimbabwe.”President of @MDC_T @DrThoko_Khupe is currently in Sri Lanka at The Global Parliamentarians Forum for Evaluation.

#EvalColombo2018 Evaluation is tool, used for measuring the maximum utilization of
resources for development purposes, eg accountability and good governance,” tweeted MDC T Spokesperson Linda Masarira.

Bootlicking Fails to Yield Results As Mnangagwa Snubs Owen Mudha

Jane Mlambo| President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s recent cabinet and party appointments featured curious inclusions and exclusions.

After taking over power late last year following a military backed intervention Mnangagwa retained most of the individuals who formed former President Robert Mugabe’s administration for the past 37 years.

And in what was interpreted as rewarding loyalty, Mnangagwa dished top government posts to cronies regardless of competency.
One of the most curious such appointments was the elevation of Gokwe-Kana legislator Owen Ncube to Midlands Provincial Affairs Minister.

Mudha, as Ncube is widely known in his Kwekwe home town, replaced then provincial affairs minister Jason Machaya who is currently answering abuse of public office charges in the courts.

At every opportunity Ncube always indicated his appointment was down to loyalty to the Mnangagwa family.

“I was appointed to the position of Minister by President Mnangagwa and you cannot be appointed if you are not loyal,” Ncube said in April.

However, when Mnangagwa appointed his new ministerial after the disputed July 30 elections, Ncube found himself being axed from government.

Some of the big names to miss out on cabinet were accommodated at the Zanu PF headquarters but not Ncube.

Mnangagwa appointed Larry Mavhima – another key ally – as the new Midlands Provincial Affairs Minister.

“I appointed a diverse, dynamic, youthful and streamlined cabinet, with the skills and experience required for achieving our goals.
“Now it is time to get to work,” Mnangagwa said of his appointments.

There is speculation however that Ncube may be considered for an ambassadorial role.
-Newzimbabwe.com

Meet South Africa’s cheapest prostitute who charges only 5 Rand per round

“Im killing myself, this life is useless without clients”

These were the words of a self-confessed sex-smith shouting from the top of a bridge.
After an attempt to end her life, she set in the sun between a railway and the bushes where she showcases her fornication business to every man that passes on the path that crosses the railway.

When no man passes through, she speaks to herself demanding money from clients who paid her.

After midday, she apparently goes from shack to shack in Phomolong Mamelodi East Tshwane asking for condoms.

The behaviour of this thigh vendor has worried local women for some time.

The women claim to have sought help for the adultery engineer without any success.

They said they are afraid the prostitute could be very depressed and needs help.

Resident Martha Rankapole (48), said she fears that one day the ‘No under 18 entertainer’ will succeed in killing herself.

“I think years of abuse at the hands of her clients has traumatised her.

“She has been beaten and picked by passer-by’s many times.

“After such incidents she disappears for some time and comes back to the streets when she has healed,” she said.

She said the woman is in no state to be a hooker. She certainly is South Africa’s cheapest prostitute, with her price list starting from just R5 per round.

“She is not in a good state of mind, she cannot negotiate and we hear that sometimes she tells people that she charges 5 rand per sex round, she needs help,” she said.

Rankapole said attempts to get her family have failed.

“She tells us different names every day, I hope men become sympathetic and stop buying her services,” she said.

The SunTeam visited the prostitute who said she was mrs nyaope and she was speaking to herself.

The ‘forbidden-fruit-vendor’ told the SunTeam to stop asking her questions, but rather buy her services.

“I have a 10-year-old child that I’m looking after, I work under the bridge and I’m happy,” she said.

Her behaviour resembled that of an unstable woman, as she would change her statements.

She said she does not need help, as she has devoted her life to addiction, making money and she not prepared to quit.

“You should stop taking pictures of me and give me money. I’m the president of my life and I’m dangerous as well,” she said.

-DailySun

Churches Join Fight Against Cholera, Sets Up Cholera And Typhoid Fund

By Own Correspondent| Zimbabwe Council of Churches (ZCC) has joined the fight against cholera through the establishment of a cholera and typhoid response fund.

The cholera outbreak which was first recorded on 6 September 2018 in Harare has so far claimed at least 30 lives and it has since spread to other cities.

Bulawayo which had not recorded a cholera incident in Ten years recorded its first on Friday.

In a statement, the  ZCC said it was seized with the matter and was establishing a cholera and typhoid response fund to deal with the outbreak and prevent its further spread.

Read the ZCC statement:

“Throughout the state of emergency on cholera and typhoid, the ZCC will rally its member churches in efforts to prevent deaths, ameliorate the suffering and contribute towards lasting solutions to address the root cause of recurrent outbreaks.

In particular, the ZCC will participate in stakeholder consultations in order to contribute to a collective way forward, provide pastoral resources to help pastors to be relevant as they minister in affected areas, medical institutions and bereaved families, establish a cholera reporting centre to collect and share information from churches in affected areas, establish a cholera/typhoid response fund to assist the affected families and communities.”

WATCH- LIVE Jazz Artist Releases Song On Cholera Titled “Hutsanana”

By Own Correspondent| Jazz musician, Brian Nyahuma has released a song on cholera titled “Hutsanana”.

The 4.29 minute long track is urging citizens to practice hygiene and reduce the spread of the disease which has so far claimed 30 lives.

Said Nyahuma in an exclusive interview with ZimEye:

“Artists have a role to play in society and this is my way of ensuring that I play my part in helping fight the spread of cholera.

The song was motivated by the need to conscientise society on the importance of hygiene. I hope itvwill reach as many people as possible so that it helps in reducing the spread of the disease.”

Born Brian Ngonidzashe Nyahuma, the Harare based musician is an Afro Jazz Artist, whose music is a fusion of Jazz and local Zimbabwean traditional music.

Nyahuma grew up in Kambuzuma where he did his primary education at Wadzanai school and secondary education at Kambuzuma high 1.

He started playing Marimba at the age of 10 yrs and was crowned best Marimba player while he was in both primary and secondary school.

He was at one time offered to join the fanous Hohodza group, but his parents did not approave of his music career hence the offer was turned down by his parents.

Nyahuma recorded his first single “Uri Muroyi” in 2004 and went on to do his first album “So They Say” in 2007 with tracks like “Uri Muroyi, Ndisiye Ndiende, Zungairwa” among others.

In 2009, he released his second album titled “Ndingatii Zvangu” with tracks like “Ndichachengetwa Nani, Unosvika Rinhi and Chiuya” among others.

The album also featured a number of seasoned artists including  his producer Mono Mkundu, Blessing Mparutsa,Enock Piroro and Philip Svosve.

In 2011, he recorded another album titled “Hausi Wega” which received a huge air play on local radio stations. Some of the favourite tracks “Mandipa, Hakuna Mumwe (a duet with Rute Mbangwa) and Uchandida Chete” made it in the top 50 video count down for 2012.

“Yambirika/ Listen” was the fourth album to follow in 2013 the same year he formed his band The African Pride a six member outfit.

He also did a collaboration with Alexio on a song entitled “Mukana” together with other songs like “Yambirika Listen, Nyakubereka, Tarirai and Vechidiki Manyanya”.

He also released “Toyambukira, Vechidiki Manyanya, Rugare ,Idai Vachipo and Save life” which promotes saving life by donating blood through working with National Blood Transfusion Zimbabwe

Nyahuma is currently working on his new 6th album titled “Rwendo/ My Journey” which is set to be released sometime this year.

 

Mugabe’s Son-in-Law Under Probe

Jane Mlambo| President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s anti-corruption unit has reportedly opened investigations into former President Robert Mugabe’s son-in-law, Simba Chikore’s involvement in the botched ZimAirways deal, NewsDay can reveal.

Highly-placed sources told NewsDay last week that Chikore, married to Mugabe’s daughter, Bona, is the subject of an investigation over his involvement in the purchase of aircraft under a ZimAirways deal.

“He (Chikore) is being investigated for his role in the deal, but it seems the whole issue could suck in Mugabe himself or better still, his wife (former First Lady Grace). Chikore is said to have been engaged as a consultant in the ZimAirways deal at a time he was employed as Air Zimbabwe’s chief operating officer.

“You will remember that deal was supposed to be part of the resuscitation of the national airline, but it was later revealed that ZimAirways was part of a private company owned by individuals. It is an intricate web that we are trying to understand,” the source close to the investigation said.

Thabani Mpofu, who heads Mnangagwa’s anti-graft unit, was not available for comment.

Transport ministry secretary George Mlilo referred questions to the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (Zacc).

“Zacc have all the information. Talk to them. But I can confirm that we are aware that the planes are owned by the government,” he said.

ZACC commissioner in charge of investigations Goodson Nguni confirmed the anti-graft body has a report on the matter.

“Indeed, we have received a complaint regarding that issue and we are investigating it. I cannot say much at the moment suffice to say it is alleged he employed people without permits and that he (Chikore) has been purporting to work for the government of Zimbabwe, but does not have a contract yet he exercised executive power at ZimAirways,” Nguni said, adding information available showed that the shadowy airline is a government entity.

Former Transport minister Joram Gumbo early this year confirmed that Chikore was a consultant at ZimAirways, but indicated that the latter only got involved after he resigned from Air Zimbabwe.

Information gathered shows that Chikore negotiated on behalf of the local company in the deal that involved the purchase of aircraft from Malaysia.

The Malaysian government had reportedly grounded the MH series after two major incidents in 2014.

Zimbabwe, looking to jump-start a struggling national flag carrier, offered to buy the planes, triggering a scandal that might have prejudiced the country of millions of dollars.

“From what has been gathered thus far, the government on behalf of a private entity the Zimbabwe Aviation Leasing Company, paid about $110 million, but only $50 million was received by the Malay authorities,” another source said.

-Newsday

MDC’s Komichi Trial Set For Next Month

Jane Mlambo| The trial of MDC vice president Morgen Komichi’s on charges of violating the country’s electoral laws is set to commence early next month.

Komichi was hauled before the courts after he allegedly interrupted the 2018 election results announcement by Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC).

The opposition politician is being represented by Jeremiah Bamu and Obey Shava of Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR).

Prosecutors say he illegally stormed the ZEC Command Centre in Harare and declared that the results being announced by the elections agency were fake.

Komichi is denying the allegations.
He recently appeared before Harare magistrate Rumbidzai Mugwagwa who indicated that the trial would start on October 3.
-Newzimbabwe.com

Corruption Accused Chombo Gets His Passport Back

Jane Mlambo| Former Finance minister Ignatius Chombo’s fraud trial was last week postponed pending a High Court’s decision on an application challenging his arrest.
Through his lawyer, Chombo applied for a permanent stay of prosecution in several criminal cases, arguing that he was unlawfully arrested.

Last week a Harare magistrate ruled that the trials, which were supposed to start last month, be stopped awaiting the top court’s ruling.

The cases were deferred to October 22.
During last week’s hearing, the court also agreed to temporarily release his passport as he intends to travel to unspecified destination

He was ordered to surrender the travel document on next court appearance.
Chombo was arrested last November as the military staged a coup which ousted then President Robert Mugabe.

The former treasury chief has complained in court that he was tortured by soldiers upon his arrest and detained for over a week.
The former Zanu PF politician said although he was not beaten, the experience of being detained in solitary confinement while being blindfolded was a traumatic.

Chombo, a long-serving local government minister under Mugabe, is facing several fraud and criminal abuse of office charges with the alleged offences dating back to the 1990s.
-Newzimbabwe

Mvurwi Residents Fights Arbitrary Water Disconnections

Jane Mlambo| Mvurwi residents have engaged in a campaign code named #OperationVhuraMvura to force the Zimbabwe National Water Authority (ZINWA) to reconnect residents to water supply following what they described as a spate of arbitrary disconnections in the town.

In a statement released today, Combined Mvurwi Residents Association (COMRA) said they are calling for a national moratorium against arbitrary water disconnections to contain the current cholera outbreak that has so far claimed 30 lives.

“Majority of shop owners and households had their water arbitrarily disconnected by ZINWA officials in Mvurwi.

“The move to reconnect water has enjoyed huge support from the local councillor who accompanied Combined Mvurwi Residents Association (COMRA) to ZINWA offices,” said COMRA official Mr Kambala.

According to COMRA, ZINWA officials in Mvurwi arbitrarily disconnected water at the market place opposite the beer hall, 6 months ago leaving residents with nowhere to get water since the nearby borehole has been condemned.

Community Water Alliance which advocates for citizen’s right to water, lambasted ZINWA for using illegal means to force payment.
The water movement insisted that ZINWA should confine itself to raw water issues and leave Local Authorities with the responsibility of potable water supply.

“Community Water Alliance is calling for a national moratorium against arbitrary water disconnections in response to cholera outbreaks,” said CWA.

Mvurwi residents have opted to engage the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights for legal advice and representation against arbitrary water disconnections in their town.

Zanu PF Should Swallow Pride and Embrace Chamisa

Jane Mlambo| Information deputy minister, Energy Mutodi who yesterday scoffed at MDC President Nelson Chamisa’s demand for dialogue could be misfiring as the state of affairs in the country needs collective effort to take the country forward.

Mutodi who spoke to a local publication said, “The country does not move on the basis of dialogue between winners and losers, rather it moves because the institutions of the State are in place. I can tell you these are already in place and working. The President recently appointed his Cabinet that will help him formulate and implement government policy over the next five years.

“He doesn’t need legitimacy from a losing presidential candidate. Chamisa is only one of 22 candidates who lost in the election. He is desperate for a Government of National Unity (GNU) kind of arrangement, but the President is on record saying it is not necessary at the moment. President Mnangagwa is busy running the country, he has respect for the opposition, but honestly, he has no time to waste,” Mutodi said.
Mutodi said Chamisa should use his party’s legislative representation to push for reforms.

The Donald Trump-led United States government enacted Zidera in 2003 to force then President Robert Mugabe to reform and respect human rights.

A few months ago, the law was amended to add signposts that Mnangagwa’s administration must meet before the sanctions are removed.

Foreign Affairs minister Sibusiso Moyo last week indicated the amendment was a “step in the right direction” and Zimbabwe will continue to engage the US in order to have the restrictive measures removed.

Chamisa called for help at home and abroad to bring the political protagonists to the negotiating table.

“I am calling on the international community and the church to help resolve the political crisis. I am not saying Mnangagwa must hand over power to me right away, but I am saying he cannot ignore a party that has 112 representatives in the legislature, controls 81% of all urban local authorities, challenging the result of the presidential election as well as the two-thirds majority claimed by Zanu PF,” the opposition leader said, arguing talk of a GNU was premature.
“There has to be a discussion on the fundamental issues affecting Zimbabwe. The idea of a Government of National Unity should be a result of dialogue. Any talk of this now will be a case of putting the cart before the horse.”

Zimbabwe’s economic and social problems seem to have deepened after the disputed election exacerbated by a devastating cholera outbreak.

-Newsday

“Rainy Season Likely To Worsen Cholera”: Warns Health Practitioners

By Own Correspondent| Zimbabwe Environmental Health Practitioners Association(ZEHPA) President Patrick Mirirai has called on government to improve in the staff compliment of environmental health practitioners as a way of managing new outbreaks which are predicted to increase during the rainy season.

ZEHPA President, Mirirai said studies have proven a strong relationship between the rains and cholera, hence the Ministry of Health and Health Services Board should employ environmental health personnel as a matter of urgency.

The  Health experts believe that the rain is likely to worsen the cholera outbreak which has claimed about 30 lives to date.

They also are of the view that the rainy season is closely linked to the spread of cholera as sewage and soil components containing the bacteria are most likely to be transferred from one place to the other by flowing water.

Said Mirirai :

“We also urge the Ministry of Health and local authorities to improve the staff complement of environmental health practitioners which is extremely thin at the moment.”

Drama As Cops Engage in High-Speed Chase With Grace’s sister

Jane Mlambo| The arrest of former First Lady Grace Mugabe’s elder sister, Shuvai Junior Gumbochuma last Friday, was not without drama as police had to engage in a 24km high-speed chase with her son, Moses, behind the wheel as he allegedly tried to whisk her away from the law enforcement agents.

The 36-year-old lad was finally arrested together with his mother after police summoned reinforcements and blocked their getaway car. While his mother was promptly brought to court that same day on fraud charges and granted $500 bail, Moses had to endure a night in police cells, only to be brought to court on Saturday, charged with obstructing the course of justice.

Harare magistrate Tilda Mazhande granted him $50 bail and remanded the matter to September 28. Prosecutor Linda Gadzikwa told the court that on September 14 this year, a team of detectives met Gumbochuma at an undisclosed place outside Harare and introduced themselves.

Gumbochuma was informed of the land-related fraud charges she was facing and the detectives told her that she was under arrest, but she declined to be led to Harare Central Police Station.

The State alleges Gumbochuma got into her vehicle, which was driven by her son and drove towards Harare. The detectives allegedly followed behind the vehicle and summoned a reinforcement team comprising of more than five detectives to intercept the accused’s vehicle.

They were stopped at the 24km-peg toll gate along the Harare-Masvingo Highway, where Gumbochuma was ordered to disembark, but she allegedly refused to comply as her son also defied orders to switch off the vehicle engine.

Moses allegedly tried to drive off, but was blocked by the detectives. It is alleged Moses started shouting that her mother was not going anywhere and that he would not leave his mother.

-Newsday

Vimbayi Tsvangirai Slams Water Tender Allegations, “What Tender?”

By Paul Nyathi|Tsvangirai’s daughter MP Vimbayi Tsvangirai has come under fire following allegations that her company was awarded a $10 million water treatment tender and they failed to fulfill their obligations.

This follows the cholera epidemic outbreak which has gone rampant in her Glen View constituency and has claimed several lives thus far.

Vimbayi however slammed the allegations on Twitter

“What Tender, Were? Tender is given by the Tender Procurement Board. So what Tender did they give me? Why are some Zimbabweans so blind to cheap counter intellingence. Do you think Mr Chombo and Cde Mugabe would give a 10million dollars Tender to a Tsvangirai child? If the propagandists get us our missing 15 billion cholera would be history. ” she tweeted

Journalist Detained For Covering ZRP , Harare City Council “Vendors Off The Streets” Exercise

By Own Correspondent| The Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) (Sunday) detained Deutsche Welle correspondent, Columbus Mavhunga for covering an exercise where the forces and Harare City Council (HCC) were removing defiant vendors off the streets.

Mavhunga was forced into the police truck and forced to escort the ZRP as they went about their operation while at the same time forcing him to delete his footage.

Speaking to ZimEye, Mavhunga narrated how he was picked up at Rezende bus terminus and became part of the 7 truck convoy of police officers who went all over town engaging in running battles with the defiant vendors.

The officers refused to let him go and also do his work.

“I was not charged but they told me that my crime was  filming them as they arrested vendors and confiscated their wares.”

One police officer identified as Donald Bito was adamant that Mavhunga should delete his footage before they could let him go.

Efforts to get a comment from the police were futile by the time of writing.

Police Spokesperson Senior Assistant Commissioner Charity Charamba is on record saying that in the new dispensation, the police would not harass or intimidate journalists but would let them do their work

Speaking at a media workshop organised by MISA Zimbabwe, commissioner Charamba said the harassment of journalists belonged to the Former president Robert Mugabe era.

However, in the new dispensation barely a day after another journalist Sylvester Tapfumanei was assaulted by police officers while covering the operation of removing vendors off the streets of Harare, Mavhunga was harassed and detained for doing his job.

 

 

AFCON Qualifiers, Another Referee Bribed To Throw Match

Namibian referee Jackson Pavaza, who handled the match that Ivory Coast won 2-1, reportedly communicated to CAF that he had been offered a bribe and told the Namibian media about the story.

The Rwanda Football Federation have denied allegations that they bribed a referee who handled their 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier match against Ivory Coast on September 9 in Kigali.

Pavaza made the bribery allegations on September 11, where he claimed Rwanda tried to bribe him and other officials, who were also Namibian.

The Rwanda Football body explained that on September 7, after the Match Coordination Meeting chaired by Match Commissioner Mike Letti from Uganda, the four Namibian match officials were paid $247 as extra expenses incurred by the quartet as confirmed by the Namibian Football Association (NFA) as mandated by article 36 & 37 of the 2019 CAF Africa Cup of Nations Qualifying Regulations.

Rwanda explained that Ruhamiriza, alongside General Secretary Uwayezu Francois Regis, prepared a total of $948 to be shared among the four officials with each set to be reimbursed $237. The officials went to Hotel des Milles Collines where the match officials were staying and gave them their extras as they had requested.

The Rwanda FA has further stated that what really happened was miscommunication on the exact amount of money that was demanded by Pavaza in his initial communication to Ruhamiriza, which should not be taken as form of bribery as alleged by the referee.

“With extensive knowledge of CAF Regulations, FERWAFA can never and will never be indulged in any form of corruption that goes along the way in jeopardizing the high level of integrity and professionalism of the game,” added the FERWAFA communication.

“CAF has not contacted us yet over the matter,” he concluded.

Rwanda are bottom of Group H in the qualifiers after losing 2-1 away to Central Africa Republic and at home against the Ivory Coast. Guinea top the group with six points from two games.

We Will Roll Out Protests to Force Zanu PF to the Negotiating Table: Chamisa

Jane Mlambo| Opposition MDC Alliance leader Nelson Chamisa has insisted that his party will roll out a programme of peaceful protests as part of efforts to force Zanu PF to the negotiating table.

In an interview with a local publication yesterday, Chamisa, who came close to upstaging Mnangagwa in presidential elections two months ago, losing by just over 6% of the total votes after the Zanu PF leader was declared winner with a slim 50, 67%, said while his party was girding for “peaceful protests”, he still believes his nemesis should engage him to avert a national crisis.

“You have heard that we are consulting our supporters in order to roll out a programme of peaceful protests as part of efforts to nudge Zanu PF towards the negotiating table, but we believe this is a very unnecessary exercise,” he said.

“We have a wounded nation. We are leading a divided nation, a people divided in every facet of life from the church to family. Our country needs healing and President Mnangagwa must understand that the idea of a political zero-sum game will not help anyone. Our country needs dialogue,” Chamisa said.

The youthful opposition leader challenged Mnangagwa’s victory at the Constitutional Court, arguing that the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission had connived with the ruling party to rig the July 30 poll in the Zanu PF leader’s favour, but the country’s highest court threw out his petition for lack of merit.

However, Chamisa has insisted he won the presidential election and has challenged dozens of results won by Zanu PF in the legislative polls. Yesterday the MDC leader said he was ready to talk and had five points of departure.

“Dialogue is a national necessity. I must warn Zanu PF and Mnangagwa that the zero-sum game will not work. Our country needs legitimacy, we need time-bound comprehensive reforms, peace building, nation building and national healing around human rights, international engagement to rid ourselves of the pariah tag, as well as an emergency economic rescue package.

“Our people are suffering and once we are agreed on all this, we can take this to the international community and say this is what we are going to do as Zimbabweans. This could help open up lines of credit, increase international confidence in the country and allow for the removal of such things as Zidera (the Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act),” Chamisa said.
-Newsday

Simba Chikore Is An Imposter Pilot: Lawyer

Jane Mlambo| Harare lawyer Phillipa Philips, who has represented Former President Robert Mugabe’s son in law, Simba Chikore in the past said she had since stopped doing so over what she said were integrity issues.

In an interview with a local newspaper, Philips said Chikore was an imposter who has never presented his papers to prove he is a captain.

“I have heard he is being investigated, but I no longer represent him,” Philips said.

Asked to elaborate on why their relationship broke down, Philips suggested Chikore was an “imposter.”

“He keeps insisting he is a captain, but has never shown or proven that he is one. Those that worked with him at Air Zimbabwe and Qatar Airways say he never qualified. These issues of integrity, I value very much and he seems to think he can do anything because he is politically connected,” the lawyer said.

Zimbabweans Not Willing To Take Up Hangman Job Offer

Despite government’s frantic efforts to recruit a hangman, Zimbabweans have frowned upon the job offer even though unemployment is above 90 percent.

In this Question & Answer with the Daily News’ Tendayi Madhomu, the minister of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs, Ziyambi Ziyambi (pictured) speaks on this and other issues.

Q: How far is the Constitution alignment process from completion?
A: We have some outstanding Acts and the Attorney General is coordinating the process.
Home Affairs have not aligned any Acts in the past five years; the Citizens Act, the Immigration Act all need to be aligned with the new Constitution.

The ministry of Information also has some outstanding Acts, like Aippa.
This ninth Parliament will have to do a clean-up of the work that is remaining.
We have our vision that we need to follow; of improved governance and respect for human and property rights.

The Marriage Act also needs to be amended. The Constitution says one may get married at the age of 18, but other laws are saying 16 years; the marriages Acts need to be revamped.

Q: What improved measure has your ministry taken in the fight against corruption at the courts?

A: The Judicial Service Commission (JSC) has moved magistrates to alternative stations as a way of curbing corruption. Magistrates have also been trained to deal with corruption cases comprehensively.

It is part of our Vision 2030 to be able to fight corruption with a strong arm. We want to adopt an electronic management system to track processes; this makes it easy to fight corruption.

In fact, we want this system to be adopted in all sectors of the economy, so that we are able to meet the 2030 vision of becoming a middle-income economy.

Q: The ministry has been recruiting magistrates, court interpreters etc this year; has this improved the efficiency in your ministry?

A: Yes, we have been recruiting since January this year, after being granted permission by treasury. Of course we haven’t reached the numbers we had wished for, due to budget limitations but right now the JSC has finished training of new magistrates.

Q: President Emmerson Mnangagwa recently signed a Prisoners Exchange Programme deal with President Xi Ping of China, what does it entail?

A: I will not say much about this, since the Commissioner-General of prisons, Major General Paradzai Zimondi is still in China. When he comes back he will be able to answer all your questions.

Q: Have we had such programmes before? A: It is not new, we have such a programme already running with Botswana, and we hope to have the same with all our surrounding countries.

Q: How many Zimbabwean prisoners do we have in China?
A: I don’t have the exact numbers, but we do have our prisoners in China and we also have Chinese in the local prisons.

Q: Does such a programme not infringe on the rights of prisoners?
A: No, it does not infringe on prisoners’ rights, it simply involves exchange or movement of imprisoned nationals to their countries of origin.

Q: Turning to the issue of the death penalty, how many inmates are currently awaiting the hangman’s noose?

A: I don’t have the exact number of inmates awaiting execution. We have not been executing for a while. Under section 48 – Right to life, our Constitution does allow for the death penalty, depending on the circumstances.

A court may permit the death penalty to be imposed only on a person convicted of murder in aggravated circumstances. Of course, the sentence cannot be imposed on women, persons who are aged less than 21 or older than 70 years.

Q: But the president strongly despises the death sentence?
A: The death penalty stands, as long as it is in the Zimbabwean Constitution, despite our president’s feelings towards this.

Q: Does the country have a hang man at present?

A: The hangman has not been found. No one has appetite for the job.

Daily News

Chamisa Advises Mnangagwa To Dialogue

By Own Correspondent| Opposition leader, Nelson Chamisa has called on President Emmerson Mnangagwa to negotiate with him to avert a national crisis.

Chamisa advised President Mnangagwa to consider dialogue with thr opposition or face the real prospect of driving the country down the abyss.

Said Chamisa:

“Dialogue is a national necessity. I must warn Zanu PF and Mnangagwa that the zero-sum game will not work.

Our country needs legitimacy, we need time-bound comprehensive reforms, peace building, nation building and national healing around human rights, international engagement to rid ourselves of the pariah tag, as well as an emergency economic rescue package.

Our people are suffering and once we are agreed on all this, we can take this to the international community and say this is what we are going to do as Zimbabweans.

This could help open up lines of credit, increase international confidence in the country and allow for the removal of such things as Zidera (the Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act.”-DailyNews

Who Are The Real Cholera Outbreak Culprits

A festering cholera outbreak has killed at least 28 people in a short period. Government is blaming the Harare municipality and the local authority says it’s government. And conspiracy theorists think a prowling Chemical Ali has planted the vibrio cholerae bacterium to kill people for some weird reason.

The third theory is as interesting as it is bizarre. You will remember Ali Hassan Abd Al-Majid, the former Iraqi Defence minister and head of intelligence services. He was nicknamed Chemical Ali for the mass killing of Kurds in the 1980s and 1990s using chemical weapons. Here, some people seem convinced that there is at least one person who is in the business of tossing the cholera bacterium into our sewers whenever there is a disputed election.

The theorists bring a sexy argument to the podium, and it goes like this: There are people who want to use disease outbreaks like cholera to undermine Zanu PF governments. The outbreaks are meant to bring pain and death to a lot of people and then make the surviving ones very angry so that they can rise up against the administration. This happens when there are acutely disputed elections in which the opposition would have apparently won, but had the ballots stolen from them.

You see, this is what happened in 2008, they say. When Morgan Tsvangirai beat Robert Mugabe in the March elections, Zanu PF started maiming and killing people ahead of the June 27 run-off. Tsvangirai pulled out of the run-off in cowed protest, Mugabe ran on his own and got a fresh mandate as president, but the result was widely condemned. This time around, something similar happened. Nelson Chamisa still insists he beat Emmerson Mnangagwa on July 30. The Constitutional Court may have ruled that Chamisa had no case challenging Mnangagwa’s victory, but the fact remains that the presidential poll result was hotly disputed. That made Chemical Ali so, so angry, never mind who he or she might be.

And there is another awkward similarity between the 2008 and 2018 outbreaks that points to the involvement of Chemical Ali, the conspiracy theorists add. The last outbreak occurred in August, two months after the run-off. The current one is coming in September, two months after the July polls. That must be the time Chemical Ali needs to scout for sewer pipes in which to place the cholera bacterium, they say.

What the theorists conveniently forget to tell us, though, is that Chemical Ali, if ever he or she existed, is not the one who goes around blocking sewers, ripping sewer pipes and starving residents of water. That means the real blame lies elsewhere. Obadiah Moyo, the new Health minister, last week decided to dump the buck at the Harare City Council doorstep. He accused the municipality of failing to attend to burst sewer pipes in Glen View and Budiriro, which so far form the epicentre of the outbreak. Then Herbert Gomba, the new mayor, struck back and said it was in fact government that was failing to provide the necessary resources to fix the pipes.

The truth is plain enough to see. Both the municipality and government are squarely to blame. You need to locate the drivers of cholera first for this to stick. Cholera outbreaks have social, economic and political dimensions to them. You easily get them when there is poor access to health care, relevant infrastructure is wanting, there is overcrowding and people are poor. Economic problems like the current cash shortages, lack of foreign currency to buy water chemicals and the inability to motivate employees through sustainable salaries worsen the situation. And where you have political instability, bad governance and misplaced priorities as well as prevalent corruption, cholera finds a good home for itself. Chemical Ali can only step in when the conditions are good to go.

Gomba has been with the Harare municipality for a long time and knows what I am talking about here. We are still to get answers as to what happened to the $144 million loan that was sourced from China about a decade ago. What we know, though, is that the municipality didn’t get the full loan as it was busy bungling things. It failed to adequately rehabilitate old and install new sewer and water reticulation equipment as was supposed to be the case. What we also know is that the municipality went about buying luxury cars that hardly had anything to do with the rehabilitation and upgrading of the works. We know too that a big chunk of the money was used to pay hefty salaries to people working on the projects and little was set aside to buy much-needed water chemicals. Had that loan been properly handled, the sewer and water supply systems would be in far better shape.

Both government and the municipality just don’t know how to arrange their priorities. As a result, resources have wound up at the wrong destinations and at the wrong time. Take Mnangagwa, for instance. He recently chartered an expensive Gulfstream 650 plane to ferry former first lady Grace Mugabe from Qatar so that she could attend her mother’s funeral. The last time I checked, that money was drawn from government and is said to have run into millions.

More inHome
That means such a huge bag of money being used to benefit just one person. If that money had been used to repair burst sewer pipes and buy water treatment chemicals, the risk of cholera would have been minimised significantly and the deaths we have seen so far averted. But that is not all. Over the months and years, government has been busy putting money where it mustn’t go. There was no point, for instance, spending hundreds of thousands of dollars buying cars for chiefs when it was well known that people were literally swimming in sewage in most of the south-western suburbs.

Chemical Ali is not the one who has been settling people illegally and causing overcrowding in places that don’t have piped water or toilets. The Zanu PF government has been doing that to win voters in urban areas. But then, councillors have been doing something similar, criminally selling land to hapless home-seekers and turning a blind eye to illegal settlements.

Vendors now choke the streets of Harare, providing fertile ground for the spread of diseases like cholera. Yes, the vending malaise is fed by high levels of unemployment and stinging poverty. But who is responsible for this? What do you get when you adopt a useless surrogate currency like bond notes, against all the advice from experts? The economy goes into coma, more jobs are lost and the centre fails to hold. That is bad governance. Add to that municipal and government corruption in the awarding of tenders critical for health delivery, good water distribution and sanitation and the time bomb explodes.

The Standard

Police Chase Grace Mugabe Sister For 24km Before Arresting Her

The arrest of former First Lady Grace Mugabe’s elder sister, Shuvai Junior Gumbochuma last Friday, was not without drama as police had to engage in a 24km high-speed chase with her son, Moses, behind the wheel as he allegedly tried to whisk her away from the law enforcement agents.

The 36-year-old lad was finally arrested together with his mother after police summoned reinforcements and blocked their getaway car. While his mother was promptly brought to court that same day on fraud charges and granted $500 bail, Moses had to endure a night in police cells, only to be brought to court on Saturday, charged with obstructing the course of justice.

Harare magistrate Tilda Mazhande granted him $50 bail and remanded the matter to September 28. Prosecutor Linda Gadzikwa told the court that on September 14 this year, a team of detectives met Gumbochuma at an undisclosed place outside Harare and introduced themselves.

Gumbochuma was informed of the land-related fraud charges she was facing and the detectives told her that she was under arrest, but she declined to be led to Harare Central Police Station.

The State alleges Gumbochuma got into her vehicle, which was driven by her son and drove towards Harare. The detectives allegedly followed behind the vehicle and summoned a reinforcement team comprising of more than five detectives to intercept the accused’s vehicle.

They were stopped at the 24km-peg toll gate along the Harare-Masvingo Highway, where Gumbochuma was ordered to disembark, but she allegedly refused to comply as her son also defied orders to switch off the vehicle engine.

Moses allegedly tried to drive off, but was blocked by the detectives. It is alleged Moses started shouting that her mother was not going anywhere and that he would not leave his mother.

This led to their arrest.

Zim metro

Man Rubs Man*ood On Woman In Bread Queue

By A Correspondent|AN attempt by a 26-year-old Kadoma man to quench his sexual appetite on a female stranger in a bread queue on Saturday last week backfired on him after he was arrested for indecent assault.

Samsom Madhuri (26) appeared at the Harare Magistrates’ Courts on Saturday facing allegations of rubbing his manhood on a woman’s backside while queuing for bread in the city centre.

According to the State, Madhuri, who is not known to the complainant, was not asked to plead when he appeared before magistrate Tilda Mazhande who remanded him to today for bail application.

It is the State’s case that on September 14, the complainant, who was not named to protect her identity, was queuing for bread at a bakery along Bank Street and Madhuri was behind her.

The State alleges Madhuri rubbed his manhood on the complainant’s backside and messed her up.

She immediately screamed and alerted other people in the queue who apprehend Madhuri and handed him to police.

Linda Gadzikwa appeared for the State.

Grace Mugabe Health Deteriorating, Hurried Back To Singapore Hospital

By Paul Nyathi|Former First Lady Grace Mugabe’s health is reported to be deteriorating very fast amid reports that doctors are giving her a little chance of survival.

Sources close to her indicate to media that her battle with an appendectomy operation in 2015 in Singapore is failing, and that it could be a matter of time before she loses the fight.

Speculation was rife that Mugabe’s life is in danger, but it turns out that Grace is the one fighting for her life.

Grace Mugabe underwent an operation to remove her appendix in 2015, and sources say she has been having a pain discomfort ever since.

“Doctors have have been trying to correct the problem ever since, and on her last trip they re-opened the operation and closed her up again,” according to sources quoted by online media.

Three years ago, Grace spent several weeks in Singapore, reportedly for an operation to remove her appendix, yet the private Zimbabwe Independent newspaper, citing family sources, said she actually had surgery for colon cancer.

Colon cancer is a very dangerous ailment, which claimed the life of the country’s former prime minister, Morgan Tsvangirai, in February this year. Tsvangirai died in a South African hospital at the age of 65.

“The truth is not being openly told,” said the doctor based in Hong Kong. “Mrs Mugabe is very ill, her days are numbered. She was told back in 2014 by her specialists that she had little time left. The people of Zimbabwe might be shocked to witness Mugabe burying his wife. You are a christian nation, and this is the time your prayers are needed for your first lady.”

Other government informants in the capital said the former first lady was strong and had been putting up a brave face all along, “but she is in pain”. President Emmerson Mnangagwa is footing the former first couple’s medical bills, and has directed that their air travel arrangements to their Singapore doctors be upgraded.

Mugabe and his wife, Grace, were on Sunday flown to Singapore in a chartered plane for their latest round of medical check-ups.

The couple and their aides left on a plane chartered by the Zimbabwe government in the early hours of Sunday – just days after a decision to hire a Gulfstream private jet to bring Grace home for her mother’s funeral sparked national outrage.

The Gulfstream jet was reportedly hired for hundreds of thousands of dollars. The government went on to pick the bill for the burial of Idah Murufu, Grace’s mother who died aged 83.

The Mugabes’ latest trip – which the Zimbabwe government will argue is part of Mugabe’s pension dues – comes as the country battles a new cholera outbreak that had killed at least 30 people in Harare by Sunday.

In its response to the cholera crisis, the cash-strapped government has turned to crowdfunding. Donor agencies and corporates have carried most of the weight, notably Econet Wireless which availed $10 million.

The irony of the Mugabes’ latest medical trip will not be lost on the cholera victims and their families as they deal with the consequences of urban infrastructure and health facilities collapse – all of which took place under Mugabe’s 37 years in power, abruptly ended by a military coup last November.

After 60 Years In Politics Sipepa Nkomo’s Only Regret Is Tendai Biti

FORMER vice-president of the Joice Mujuru-led National People’s Party Samuel Sipepa Nkomo says his political career, spanning nearly six decades, had so many ups and downs, but the lowest dip was when he, together with other former MDC-T ‘rebels’ led by then secretary-general Tendai Biti, walked out on party founder, the late Morgan Tsvangirai in 2014, accusing him of being a dictator and failing to dislodge then President Robert Mugabe in three successive polls.

Sipepa Nkomo and his colleagues were eventually recalled from Parliament before their eventual split, which saw him joining Mujuru’s NPP. Last week, the former Water and Climate minister in the 2009-2013 unity government severed ties with Mujuru after the opposition party’s poor showing in the July 30 poll and also announced that he was quitting active party politics to concentrate on church activities.

Southern Eye reporter Silas Nkala (SE) on Wednesday had an interview with Sipepa Nkomo (SSPN), where he outlined his future plans after quitting politics.

Below are excerpts of the interview.

SE: Now that you are retired from politics, what would you say is the decision you regret most in your political career?

SSPN: I think the biggest mistake that I did was to leave the MDC-T with Biti, resulting in our being expelled from Parliament. To me, that is the biggest mistake that ever happened, but otherwise, my thinking was that we were right.

SE: You do not regret being part of NPP?

SSPN: No, I do not regret being in NPP, but I regret my association with other legislators in the MDC-T which led to our expulsion from Parliament and from MDC-T. That is what I regret. Now that the People’s Democratic Party that we had formed has disintegrated, I do not regret being in the NPP. I think it had a lot of opportunities and if we had done things properly, it would have done well.

SE: Many people have blamed Zanu-PF infiltrators for causing most splits in opposition parties, do you subscribe to that?

SSPN: I think it’s correct. Do not play with the Central Intelligence Organisation. (Former President Robert) Mugabe created that for a purpose, that is why at the start of a campaign period for an election, there is mushrooming of political parties and as soon as the elections are over, they disappear. I believe some of these parties are sponsored by the regime (Zanu-PF). Infiltration has happened, even in NPP, and MDC. It has happened in all political parties; it has happened. This I think they copied from Russia. Even looking at some of them, we can tell that so and so might be a CIO operative.

SE: Do you think the opposition has any chance of winning the polls as long as Zanu-PF is still active?

SSPN: My honest opinion is that the progressive opposition political parties, need to come together inspite of infiltration. Because if all political parties you know — there were 22 political parties who claimed to be opposition — so if all of them came together and selected one presidential candidate, they would have won against Zanu-PF. Can you see Chamisa had two million voters and Mnangagwa had just over two million votes, so if all had come together, the opposition would have won.

SE: Now you have retired from politics, what are your future plans?

SSPN: First of all, I think I also regret my involvement in politics. It made me neglect some of my church duties, because I would not be involved in my church duties as politics would take me all over. Secondly, I am going to be writing a book of the 58 years I was in politics, 14 years in prison. No one has written anything about what was happening inside prisons and detention at that time. So I intend to write a book. This book will include my 58 years in politics. I obtained my first degree in prison. I will do two things, my duties at church, the Seventh Day Adventist and writing a book.

SE: Most of the politicians, when they retire from politics, say they will be going into farming and I thought you will be doing the same thing. Do you have a farm?

SSPN: I do not have a farm.

SE: Why don’t you have one?

SSPN: I was not Zanu-PF, I have never been Zanu-PF in my life and even if I wanted to have the farm, I did not want a situation where a farm is taken from someone and given to me. I did not want that. So I cannot be involved in something like that. They were taking these farms from whites.

Southern Eye

Churches Join The Fight Against Cholera

THE Zimbabwe Council of Churches (ZCC) has established a cholera and typhoid response fund to deal with the outbreak of the twin waterborne diseases that have claimed 30 lives in Harare and affected thousands others.

The outbreak has spread to other cities, with Bulawayo recording its first cholera case on Friday.

This is the first time in over a decade for Bulawayo to record a cholera or typhoid outbreak despite erratic water supplies in the country’s second largest city.

The ZCC said it was seized with the matter and was establishing a cholera and typhoid response fund to deal with the outbreak and prevent its further spread.

“Throughout the state of emergency on cholera and typhoid, the ZCC will rally its member churches in efforts to prevent deaths, ameliorate the suffering and contribute towards lasting solutions to address the root cause of recurrent outbreaks,” the ZCC said in a statement yesterday.

“In particular, the ZCC will participate in stakeholder consultations in order to contribute to a collective way forward, provide pastoral resources to help pastors to be relevant as they minister in affected areas, medical institutions and bereaved families, establish a cholera reporting centre to collect and share information from churches in affected areas, establish a cholera/typhoid response fund to assist the affected families and communities.”

Government last week declared a state of emergency following the cholera outbreak and on Thursday released $1 million to fight cholera, while also launching an international appeal for funding towards the pandemic.

There have been counter accusations on who was to blame for the latest cholera outbreak.

The opposition – that runs several councils and municipalities across the country – blames central government for frustrating efforts to ensure resources are channelled to addressing sewer and reticulation challenges – a major source of the outbreak.

Others, however, blame the opposition for incapacity, thus resulting in recurrent cholera and typhoid cases.

“The church would wish to state that this is not a time for finger-pointing or political point-scoring; it is a time to unite. It is a time to do our utmost to meet the needs of families and communities who have been affected or are at risk of the outbreak. What affected families and communities need now is a united and well-coordinated national effort to decisively address this national emergency,” ZCC added.

Chamisa Says Mnangagwa Just Has To Talk To Him Or See The Country Collapse

OPPOSITION MDC Alliance leader Nelson Chamisa has called on President Emmerson Mnangagwa to “come to the negotiating table” or face the real prospect of driving the country down the abyss.

In an interview with NewsDay yesterday, Chamisa, who came close to upstaging Mnangagwa in presidential elections two months ago, losing by just over 6% of the total votes after the Zanu PF leader was declared winner with a slim 50,67%, said while his party was girding for “peaceful protests”, he still believes his nemesis should engage him to avert a national crisis.

“You have heard that we are consulting our supporters in order to roll out a programme of peaceful protests as part of efforts to nudge Zanu PF towards the negotiating table, but we believe this is a very unnecessary exercise,” he said.

“We have a wounded nation. We are leading a divided nation, a people divided in every facet of life from the church to family. Our country needs healing and President Mnangagwa must understand that the idea of a political zero-sum game will not help anyone. Our country needs dialogue,” Chamisa said.

The youthful opposition leader challenged Mnangagwa’s victory at the Constitutional Court, arguing that the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission had connived with the ruling party to rig the July 30 poll in the Zanu PF leader’s favour, but the country’s highest court threw out his petition for lack of merit.

However, Chamisa has insisted he won the presidential election and has challenged dozens of results won by Zanu PF in the legislative polls. Yesterday the MDC leader said he was ready to talk and had five points of departure.

“Dialogue is a national necessity. I must warn Zanu PF and Mnangagwa that the zero-sum game will not work. Our country needs legitimacy, we need time-bound comprehensive reforms, peace building, nation building and national healing around human rights, international engagement to rid ourselves of the pariah tag, as well as an emergency economic rescue package.

“Our people are suffering and once we are agreed on all this, we can take this to the international community and say this is what we are going to do as Zimbabweans. This could help open up lines of credit, increase international confidence in the country and allow for the removal of such things as Zidera (the Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act),” Chamisa said.

But the government yesterday scoffed at Chamisa’s proposal, with Information deputy minister Energy Mutodi saying Mnangagwa will not “waste time” negotiating with the opposition.

“The country does not move on the basis of dialogue between winners and losers, rather it moves because the institutions of the State are in place. I can tell you these are already in place and working. The President recently appointed his Cabinet that will help him formulate and implement government policy over the next five years.

“He doesn’t need legitimacy from a losing presidential candidate. Chamisa is only one of 22 candidates who lost in the election. He is desperate for a Government of National Unity (GNU) kind of arrangement, but the President is on record saying it is not necessary at the moment. President Mnangagwa is busy running the country, he has respect for the opposition, but honestly, he has no time to waste,” Mutodi said.

Mutodi said Chamisa should use his party’s legislative representation to push for reforms.

A few months ago, the law was amended to add signposts that Mnangagwa’s administration must meet before the sanctions are removed.

Foreign Affairs minister Sibusiso Moyo last week indicated the amendment was a “step in the right direction” and Zimbabwe will continue to engage the US in order to have the restrictive measures removed.

Chamisa called for help at home and abroad to bring the political protagonists to the negotiating table.

“I am calling on the international community and the church to help resolve the political crisis. I am not saying Mnangagwa must hand over power to me right away, but I am saying he cannot ignore a party that has 112 representatives in the legislature, controls 81% of all urban local authorities, challenging the result of the presidential election as well as the two-thirds majority claimed by Zanu PF,” the opposition leader said, arguing talk of a GNU was premature.

“There has to be a discussion on the fundamental issues affecting Zimbabwe. The idea of a Government of National Unity should be a result of dialogue. Any talk of this now will be a case of putting the cart before the horse.”

Zimbabwe’s economic and social problems seem to have deepened after the disputed election exacerbated by a devastating cholera outbreak.

Newsday

Supa Mandiwanzira Wanted By Police For Illegal Take Over Of Nyanga Hotel

A PRIVATE company, Tatipano Properties, which has been linked to former Information Communication Technology minister Supa Mandiwanzira, has been taken to court for allegedly using fraudulent documents to buy Village Inn Hotel in Nyanga from a judicial manager.

In their High Court application, the hotel’s proprietors, Edward and Fanuel Buwu, cited Village Inn, judicial manager Shepherd Chimutanda, Tatipano Properties and the Chief Registrar of Deeds as defendants in the case.

Buwu is seeking the High Court to cancel the agreement of sale entered between Tatipano Properties and Chimutanda, arguing the judicial manager acted unilaterally without the consent of the hotel’s shareholders.

In a police report, Buwu claimed he was surprised by the hostile takeover when summons had already been served on one Munemo, “who had signed the ‘purported’ agreement of sale as a representative of Tatipano Properties (Private) Limited and the Honourable Supa Mandiwanzira, to try to stop the transfer of the hotel in the former minister’s company”.

Buwu claimed he reported the matter to the police on September 3 after he met Tatipano Properties representatives led by one R Mandiwanzira (former hotel manager), who is said to be the elder brother to the Nyanga MP and a woman whose identity was not made known to the complainant.

According to the summons dated August 23, 2018, Buwu said Chimutanda admitted to flouting the rules of judicial management, but allegedly claimed that it was too late to reverse the sale.

Buwu said Tatipano Properties was advised of the alleged illegal transaction, but ignored the advice.

He further said that Tatipano Properties had since paid $850 000 to Chimutanda without the consent of the hotel’s board members.

They hotel owners also want the court to stop the parties from transferring the property into Tatipano Properties’ name, insisting that Chimutanda had lodged fraudulent documents at the Chief Registrar of Companies’ office.

Newsday

Mugabe Son In Law In Trouble Over Zim Airways Corrupt Deal

PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa’s anti-corruption unit has reportedly opened investigations into former President Robert Mugabe’s son-in-law, Simba Chikore’s involvement in the botched ZimAirways deal.

Highly-placed sources told NewsDay last week that Chikore, married to Mugabe’s daughter, Bona, is the subject of an investigation over his involvement in the purchase of aircraft under a ZimAirways deal.

“He (Chikore) is being investigated for his role in the deal, but it seems the whole issue could suck in Mugabe himself or better still, his wife (former First Lady Grace). Chikore is said to have been engaged as a consultant in the ZimAirways deal at a time he was employed as Air Zimbabwe’s chief operating officer.

“You will remember that deal was supposed to be part of the resuscitation of the national airline, but it was later revealed that ZimAirways was part of a private company owned by individuals. It is an intricate web that we are trying to understand,” the source close to the investigation said.

Thabani Mpofu, who heads Mnangagwa’s anti-graft unit, was not available for comment.

Transport ministry secretary George Mlilo referred questions to the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (Zacc).

“Zacc have all the information. Talk to them. But I can confirm that we are aware that the planes are owned by the government,” he said.

Zacc commissioner in charge of investigations Goodson Nguni confirmed the anti-graft body has a report on the matter.

“Indeed, we have received a complaint regarding that issue and we are investigating it. I cannot say much at the moment suffice to say it is alleged he employed people without permits and that he (Chikore) has been purporting to work for the government of Zimbabwe, but does not have a contract yet he exercised executive power at ZimAirways,” Nguni said, adding information available showed that the shadowy airline is a government entity.

Former Transport minister Joram Gumbo early this year confirmed that Chikore was a consultant at ZimAirways, but indicated that the latter only got involved after he resigned from Air Zimbabwe.

Information gathered shows that Chikore negotiated on behalf of the local company in the deal that involved the purchase of aircraft from Malaysia.

The Malaysian government had reportedly grounded the MH series after two major incidents in 2014.

Zimbabwe, looking to jump-start a struggling national flag carrier, offered to buy the planes, triggering a scandal that might have prejudiced the country of millions of dollars.

“From what has been gathered thus far, the government on behalf of a private entity the Zimbabwe Aviation Leasing Company, paid about $110 million, but only $50 million was received by the Malay authorities,” another source said.

Harare lawyer Phillipa Philips, who has represented Chikore in the past said she had since stopped doing so over what she said were integrity issues.

“I have heard he is being investigated, but I no longer represent him,” Philips said.

Asked to elaborate on why their relationship broke down, Philips suggested Chikore was an “imposter.”

“He keeps insisting he is a captain, but has never shown or proven that he is one. Those that worked with him at Air Zimbabwe and Qatar Airways say he never qualified. These issues of integrity, I value very much and he seems to think he can do anything because he is politically connected,” the lawyer said.

Newsday

ZANU PF Minister Battles To Justify The Unconstitutional Appointment Of Ministers Of State

By Paul Nyathi|Local Government Minister July Moyo has defended President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s unconstitutional appointment of Ministers of State for Provincial Affairs.

Moyo whose Ministry is tasked with the formulation of local government legislation that will guide operations of the devolution of power constitutional provisions battled to explain in an interview with state media over the weekend how the ministers will fit into the operations of the provincial councils.

Moyo, like his collegue the Minister of
Justice tried hard to dispel a conflict of operation between Provincial Councils and Provincial Ministers of State.

“The Provincial Minister is a minister appointed by the President in terms of the constitution in terms of what mandate they are given. They are part of the executive of the National Government.

“They are de-concentrated to the provinces through the decentralisation principle so that at least there is Government near the people. So that is the minister.

“He is an executive of Central Government. He is appointed in the same manner as a minister who is running a ministry. He is appointed in the same manner as a Minister of State in the Office of Vice President (Kembo) Mohadi’s office or (Constantino) Chiwenga’s. He is appointed in the same manner deputy ministers are appointed,” said Moyo.

“The President is given powers to appoint his executive and that’s what he has done. The provincial council becomes the Parliament of that area in our view. It has powers to legislate certain aspects that are particular to that area and the constitution also allows them in some cases to look after tourism, planning and co-ordination.

“But that co-ordination requires that they look at Bulawayo as a unique place but if you are in Matabeleland North you have local authorities such as Victoria Falls, Lupane, Nkayi, Umguza, Binga, Bubi and Hwange. Those need to be co-ordinated by these provincial councils because there are certain services that are going to cut across the boundaries of these authorities so co-ordination and planning is necessary and that is what the provincial councils are called upon to do.”

According to the constitution, provincial councils will elect their own chairpersons who will be approved by the President and will carry out exactly the same tasks that the minister has alluded to the Minister of State.

Nineth Parliament Officially Opens Tomorrow

IT is all systems go for the official opening of the First Session of the Ninth Parliament and State of the Nation Address by President Mnangagwa on Tuesday, Speaker of Parliament Advocate Jacob Mudenda has said.

The SONA will be the first by President Mnangagwa in his capacity as the Head of State and Government following his election into Office on July 30.

Both the official opening and the SONA will be done during a joint sitting of the National Assembly and Senate at Parliament Building in Harare.

In an interview on Sunday, Adv Mudenda said all was set for the two events.

“All systems are in place and we are looking forward to the event and it should move according to the schedule,” he said.

“The stakeholders particularly the judiciary have been invited and several other organisations from the civic society as well as representatives of constitutional commissions. We hope the honourable Members of Parliament will treat the occasion with the dignity it deserves.”

In his address, the President is expected to outline policy direction and the legislative agenda of the first session, which speaks to his vision of radical economic transformation.

President Mnangagwa’s policy objective is to enhance the country’s attractiveness to investors and streamline investment laws to reduce red tape.

Zanu-PF has a commanding two thirds majority in Parliament which helps it to enact laws that dovetails with President Mnangagwa’s Vision 2030 that seeks to transform Zimbabwe into a middle income economy in the next twelve years. Zimbabwe has been lagging behind in terms of development compared to other countries in the region.

President Mnangagwa is on record saying in the Second Republic politics will take the back seat while economic development takes centre stage.

To ensure smooth flow of proceedings during the official opening of the Ninth Parliament, some access roads have been closed.

The closed roads are the stretch of Nelson Mandela Avenue between Sam Nujoma Street and Simon Muzenda Street, the corners of Third Street and Jason Moyo Avenue, George Silundika Avenue and Third Street, St Mary’s Lane and Nelson Mandela Avenue.

Judges, diplomats accredited to Zimbabwe, service chiefs and captains of industry are also expected to attend the event.

As per tradition during the official opening ceremony, President Mnangagwa, will inspect a guard of honour mounted by members of the Zimbabwe National Army before he delivers his address to outline the legislative agenda.

A fly past by the Air Force of Zimbabwe is also expected to coincide with the playing of the National Anthem.

Following the President’s address, the Ministry of Local Government, Public Works and National Housing will host the traditional luncheon for legislators.

State Media

Chamisa’s Lawyer, Mpofu Wins Massive USD 9mln For Mining Client

Thabani Mpofu

THE FAMOUS lawyer of MDC Alliance leader Nelson Chamisa, Thabani Mpofu has won another case, for a mining client.

The massive victory is worth $9 554 215.

The Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (ZIMRA) has been caught on the wrong side of the law in collecting revenue and the High Court has ordered it to pay back $9,5 million it unlawfully garnished from the client, a local mining company.

The taxman, in violation of the law, imposed fines to the tune of $9 554 215 on Zimbabwe Platinum Mines (Pvt) Ltd for alleged Customs and Excise Act infractions.his was despite the fact that the company was contesting the charges. Zimplats, through Advocate Thabani Mpofu, successfully challenged decision by ZIMRA at the High Court.

Justice Esther Muremba recently nullified the fines and ruled that Zimra had no power to impose fines in cases where the alleged violation of the Customs and Excise Act have not been admitted.

“In the result, it is hereby declared that:
(a) The second respondent (Zimra) has no power to impose a fine, where a contravention of the Customs and Excise Act has not been admitted.
(b) The fines imposed by the second respondent are null and void.
The respondents are hereby ordered to refund to the applicant all fines that were imposed and collected from it.
Each party is to bear its own costs.”
The judge said ZIMRA imposed fines on Zimplats when it was crystal clear that the firm was not admitting to the infractions.

Facts are that Zimplats, which was involved in mine development operations between 2009 and 2013, periodically applied to be granted customs duty rebates on goods that were used in the operations.

In terms of Section 144 of the Customs and Excise Act (General) Regulations, Zimplats applied for and was granted customs duty rebates for the period stretching from 2009 to 2010. In December 2010, Section 144 was repealed.

Unaware of the development, Zimplats continued applying for rebate using the repealed piece of legislation. In 2011, the rebate application was denied by Zimra.

A meeting was held with Zimra bosses and it was agreed that the mining firm should reapply in terms of Section 138 of the Customs and Excise Act (General) Regulations. In February 2013, ZIMRA’s investigations department queried why the firm was applying for rebates under Section 138 of the regulations.

Zimra subsequently stopped processing Zimplats’ applications.
“On October 14 2013 ZIMRA’s investigations department wrote to the applicant saying all rebates claimed after the five-year period set out in the Mining Agreement were contrary to law and that the applicant should pay the rebated customs duty, import value added tax, interest and penalties.

“On 21 November 2014, the first respondent (ZIMRA) issued three special warrants for the recovery of the rebated customs duties,” reads the summary of the case.
ZIMRA argued that the company was not entitled to be granted rebates from 2011 to 2013 because the five-year period set out in the Mining Agreement had expired.

It also argued that Zimplats was not entitled to rebates between September 2009 and May 201 because its mining area was not listed in any statutory instrument during that period.
In the three warrants, ZIMRA claimed principal amount of $28 664 861 with interest in the sum of $6 898 258.

In addition, three fines were imposed on the company for the customs infractions to the tune of $9 554 215.-state media/additional reporting

Does Zimbabwe Need A New Parliament Building? Why Blow $140mln On Dross?

$140 Million is being blown by the government for a new parliament building at a time when the nation is struggling under all sorts.

In discussions Monday morning, Mr Wilfred Moyo said ” the current building was originally for less than 100 mps and now it is like a crowded kombi.”  FULL COMMENT ROLL:

 

Drama As Mnangagwa’s Health Minister Dodges Questions Over His Fake Qualifications

VIDEO LOADING BELOW…

By A Correspondent| Below were the dramatic moments when the new Health Minister, Obadiah Moyo was confronted over his fake “medical doctor” papers.

ZimEye has established that Moyo who calls himself a medical doctor, there’s no such status, and the man’s claim to medical fame is only as. far as being the late First Lady Sally Mugabe’s dialysis technician in the events that led to his sudden death in January 1992.

The development comes as the minister was alleged to have also falsified cholera death toll statistics. A man whose mother was killed by discourage last week made these jaw-breaking revelations.

SEE VIDEO ROLL:

 

 

DOES THIS MAKE SENSE? – $140 Million For New Parliament Building Before Cholera Crisis Is Contained

At a time when the country should have had simple dam works way back in 1996, failure of which has opened the door for the scourge of cholera to hit the nation, more than 140 million dollars are being blown for the purpose of building a new Parliament Building. Hundreds of millions more have gone to purchasing brand new foreign made vehicles for Chiefs and Zanu PF officials.

Earlier in July, government revealed that they have sat on the crucial dam works for more than 22 years to date as they spend billions on luxuries.

To date more than 30 people have been killed by the cholera scourge and last week Friday a family victim declared that government is not telling the truth on the statistics.

While all this is taking place, government has gone ahead to, before all other things, construct a new Parliament building.

State Media FULL TEXT:

Construction of the new Parliament Building in Mt Hampden is expected to commence soon after China identified a contractor, Speaker of the National Assembly Advocate Jacob Mudenda has said.

Adv Mudenda said construction would be completed between 18 and 24 months.

Addressing the media after a courtesy call by outgoing Chinese Ambassador Huang Ping last week, Advocate Mudenda said the infrastructure required to start the project was in place. Ambassador Huang paid the courtesy call to say goodbye to Parliament at the end of his term of office in Zimbabwe.

“More exciting for Parliament is the assurance by His Excellency the Ambassador that the contractor has been identified and approved by the government of China to come to Zimbabwe and construct the new Parliament of Zimbabwe at Mt Hampden,” said Adv Mudenda.

“As Government, we have completed the civil works and other infrastructure such as new roads, electricity supply and water reticulation. The infrastructure required to start the construction of the Parliament is in place.

“Knowing the work ethic of the Chinese in terms of completing their projects in record time, without compromising on quality, Parliament should be completed in a space of between 18 months to two years.”

Adv Mudenda said he was also excited that President Mnangagwa was addressing glitches that had been stalling the implementation of several other projects. He hoped Finance Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube would find funds to pay debts Government owes the Chinese government to accelerate the implementation of mega projects.

Adv Mudenda thanked Ambassador Huang for the number of projects he was able to complete during his tenure.

“During his stay here, we witnessed a number of important projects that he was able to push in terms of implementation. One outstanding project that comes to mind is the Kariba South Power Station, which he advised me is now producing 300 megawatts of electricity. This will go a long way in ensuring that we do not experience blackouts in our towns, industry and homes.

“The other project that has been signed between our Government and the Chinese government is for improving the Hwange Stage 7 and 8 power generation. It was commissioned by His Excellency President Mnangagwa just before we went into our elections.

“We are excited, especially for the people of Matabeleland North as it will create about 3 000 jobs. Some houses for the workers will be constructed thereby contributing to the creation of jobs. President Mnangagwa is keen to see that as many jobs as possible are created around these major projects,” he said.

Ambassador Huang said he was hoping that more projects would be financed in Zimbabwe to realise President Mnangagwa’s vision of Zimbabwe becoming a middle income economy by 2030.
He congratulated Adv Mudenda on his re-election as the Speaker of Parliament.

“I am very happy with the results. Politically, our traditional good relationship has been upgraded to comprehensive strategic partnership and cooperation. This is the highest political positioning of China’s foreign relationship with Zimbabwe.

“Economically speaking, we have seen the increase in trade and investment especially in completion of big projects.”

Cholera Death Toll Shoots Up To 30

The number of people who have died of cholera has risen from 28 to 30 as Government, Harare City Council, the police and other stakeholders continue to make concerted efforts to curb the spread of the disease amid calls to declare the pandemic a state of disaster.

Government has increased the supply of water, drugs and other non-food materials to affected areas. It is monitoring the situation. Health and Child Care Minister Dr Obadiah Moyo yesterday confirmed the death of two more people. Recorded cases have reached 5 463.

“The total number of deaths has risen by two to 30 people who have died of cholera. Control measures remain in place.

“We are increasing water supplies and medication to the affected areas following assistance from various partners. We have also received drugs and protective clothing,” said Dr Moyo.
He commended the Harare City Council and the police for removing illegal food vendors from the streets.

Dr Moyo said development partners were assisting with provision of water bowsers, medical supplies and other non-food items. “The containment plan continues. Everything is in place and we continue to monitor the situation,” he said.

Government last week declared the cholera outbreak in Harare a state of emergency due to the rising number of people dying or falling sick from the bacterial infection.

In a statement yesterday, Local Government, Public Works and National Housing Minister Cde July Moyo said because of the magnitude of the public health emergency, a recommendation had been made to President Mnangagwa to declare the cholera menace a state of disaster.

“Subsection (1) of Section 27 of the Civil Protection Act Chapter 10:06 provides that if at any time it appears to the President that any disaster is of such a nature and extent that extraordinary measures are necessary to assist and protect the person affected or likely to be affected by the disaster in any area of the country, the President may in such a manner as he considers fit, declare that with effect from a date specified by him, a state of disaster exists within an area or areas specified by him in the declaration.

“The City of Harare is facing a plethora of challenges, notably insufficient safe water supplies, frequent sewer pipe bursts, uncollected refuse and rampant illegal vending. This has negatively impacted on public health in the city exposing residents to diarrhoeal disease outbreaks, an upsurge in typhoid fever cases and sporadic outbreaks of cholera,” he said.

Minister Moyo said there was need to put in place strategic measures to manage the drivers of these outbreaks, notably water supply situation, the dilapidated sewer systems, waste management and illegal vending challenges.

“Given the foregoing demonstration on the magnitude of the public health emergency a recommendation has been made to His Excellency, the President, that the cholera menace in Harare Metropolitan Province and any other parts of the country be declared a state of disaster,” he said.
The current cholera outbreak was first reported in Glen View and Budiriro.

Cases linked to the Harare outbreak have been reported in some parts of Manicaland, Mashonaland East, Mashonaland Central, the Midlands and Masvingo..- state media

Boy Assaulted For Failing To Pay Prostitute

NATIONAL NEWS

A 33-year old Zvishavane sex worker has been dragged to court for allegedly forcing a 15-year-old boy to have sex with her and assaulting him for failing to pay $5 for services rendered.

Litah Chivovoro (33) of Council-park Zvishavane appeared before Regional Magistrate Morgan Nemadire facing charges of indecent assault and having sexual intercourse with a minor.
She pleaded guilty and was remanded in custody to September 28.

“I admit to the charges and I am sorry. I only needed money to take home. However, the boy had refused to pay me after I gave him the service. I got angry since I was drunk and failed to control myself hence I assaulted him.’’

The court heard that on August 27 at Mberengwa Business Centre, Chivovoro met the complainant and lured him from a motor vehicle he was seated in.

It is alleged that Chivovoro dragged him to her house and forcibly slept with him. She demanded money from him after the act. She went on to assault the boy until he paid up.

The case was reported to the police leading to her arrest.

Mrs Faith Mwale represented the State.

Man Sets Own Granpa Alight

A 21-year old man from Bulawayo allegedly doused his maternal grandfather with petrol and set him alight leading to his death, after accusing him of bewitching him.

Kudzai Munemo, a Bulawayo Polytechnic student from Cowdray Park suburb, is alleged to have committed the horrific offence on September 7 at around 7PM and the old man succumbed to severe burns last Wednesday while admitted to the United Bulawayo Hospitals (UBH).
Kudzai had an altercation with his grandfather, only identified as Mr Munemo, at his grandparents’ home in Gwabalanda suburb.

He was allegedly accusing Mr Munemo of being a wizard who was supernaturally blocking his path to success in life.
During the heated argument, Kudzai allegedly went outside and returned armed with a bottle of petrol.

Sources close to the incident said he poured it on the old man who fled while the highly flammable liquid dripped from his clothes.

“Kudzai pursued him with a box of matches. He struck a match and threw it on his grandfather, instantly setting him on fire,” said a source. The source said Kudzai fled while his grandfather, who was engulfed in a huge ball of flames, screamed for help.

Bulawayo police spokesperson Chief Inspector Precious Simango confirmed the incident.

“We are dealing with a case in which a male adult aged 21 set his grandfather alight after dousing him petrol. He is in police custody and is assisting with investigations,” she said.

“On September 7, 2018 at around 6:45 PM, the informant, who is the complainant’s daughter, was in the kitchen when she heard the accused who is the complainant’s grandson having a misunderstanding in the sitting room, accusing the complainant of bewitching the family”.

Ms Munemo, Kudzai’s mother, allegedly found her son already holding a two litre bottle of petrol, threatening to burn his grandfather.

“She tried to snatch it away from him but he poured it all over his grandfather. In the process, some of the petrol spilled onto her clothes,” said Chief Insp Simango.
Ms Munemo ran out of the house fearing that her son might light a fire, setting them alight as petrol is highly flammable.

Mr Munemo ran away from the scene using the kitchen door, and Kudzai allegedly went after him using the sitting room door.

He caught up with his grandfather outside and set him alight using a match stick. Ms Munemo ran away from the scene in fear as she also had some petrol on her clothing.
The old man, who was on fire, screamed in agony for help and a neighbour who was only identified as SaTanaka rushed to the scene and used sand to put out the flames.

Kudzai fled from the scene and was arrested by police officers at his home in Cowdray Park suburb.

Mr Munemo’s son rushed him to UBH where he died last Wednesday. Chief Insp Simango urged the public to desist from violence when solving disputes. Kudzai is expected to appear in court today.-state media

Cholera: 10 Quarantined In Skies

The number of people who have been quarantined for cholera in Bulawayo has risen to 10 from three on Friday amid revelations that the city’s infectious disease hospital — Thorngrove — can hold no more than 100 patients.

One more suspected case was recorded in Umguza, Matabeleland North which brings to 11 the number of feared cases in the region. The water borne disease, which broke out in Harare at the beginning of the month, has claimed at least 30 lives.

Bulawayo City Council director of health services Dr Edwin Sibanda yesterday said half of the quarantined people were probable cases of cholera awaiting lab results confirmation.
The results are expected today.

Speaking during an emergency meeting organised by Bulawayo Provincial Affairs Minister Judith Ncube at Mhlahlandlela Government Complex yesterday, Dr Sibanda said the city last had a confirmed cholera case in 2008.

“So far we have 10 suspected cases, all of whom are at Thorngrove Hospital in an isolated ward. There is a mix of ages and patients are aged from 18 to 63,” he said. “Five of them are probable cases as they were in contact with affected areas and they have signs and symptoms that spell cholera.”
Dr Sibanda said the other five have profuse diarrhoea although they have not been out of Bulawayo.

“The province uses Thorngrove as a screening facility for infectious diseases although our lab facilities need boosting. As of today we did not have a confirmed case but we have put in place thematic committees to ensure we do not have an increase of these suspected cases,” he said.

The thematic committees will include Minister Ncube, representatives from BCC, Mpilo Central Hospital, United Bulawayo Hospitals and other stakeholders around the city. Dr Sibanda said the city does not have adequate science experts to ensure there are rapid tests which will help determine cholera infection.

Mpilo Central Hospital clinical director Dr Solwayo Ngwenya said cholera is deadly and members of the public should be aware that it can kill within hours.

“We want the people of Bulawayo to know that cholera is deadly and prevention is better than cure. They need to wash their hands and practise high levels of hygiene because we will not be able to contain an outbreak in the city. In our deliberations with the Minister, we made it clear that we need the Ministry of Health and Child Care to immediately unfreeze the hiring of scientists as it is crucial that we have them now,” he said

Dr Ngwenya said the media also had a role to disseminate information on hygiene.
“We also encourage people to rush to hospital whenever they suspect they may have cholera as taking home remedies may prove deadly,” he said.

Matabeleland North provincial medical director Dr Alfred Muchara said the Umguza patient was on treatment. “We have one suspected case in Umguza and we await lab test results to confirm if it is cholera. Measures are in place to ensure there is no spread of cholera in the communities,” he said.
Minister Ncube will today meet stakeholders including the business community to come up with strategies to avert cholera in Bulawayo. Cholera broke out in Harare on September 1 this year with 5 463 cases and 30 deaths having been recorded so far.

Members of the public are urged to wash hands before and after eating or using the toilet. They should also eat hot food and avoid eating at undesignated places. Breast feeding mothers are also encouraged to wash hands before and after feeding their babies.- state media

Ugandan Academic Insults Museveni On His Birthday, Wishes He Had Died At Birth

By Paul Nyathi|Probably Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni’s number one critic, Makereke University research fellow Stella Nyanzi has once again come trailblazing on the long serving statesman insulting him and his mother Esiteri in a birthday message circulated on her Facebook page.

Museveni turned 74 on Saturday with a lot of Ugandans wishing him good health and many years. On Sunday morning Nyanzi however had different feelings on the President sending him a birthday message wishing he had died at birth and spared Ugandans from suffering under his rule.

Nyanzi has not been kind to Museveni criticising him strongly for his hard handedness on Ugandans. She was recently arrested after she said Museveni and the first lady were “a pair of buttocks.”

The highly insulting birthday message sent to Museveni as a poem which has shocked the world reads as below:

(Please note that the language used in the poem is highly insensitive.)

Yoweri, they say it was your birthday yesterday.

How bitterly sad a day!

I wish the smelly and itchy cream-coloured candida festering in Esiteri’s cunt had suffocated you to death during birth.
Suffocated you just like you are suffocating us with oppression, suppression and repression!

Yoweri, they say it was your birthday yesterday.

How painfully ugly a day!

I wish the lice-filled bush of dirty pubic hair overgrown all over Esiteri’s unwashed chuchu had strangled you at birth.
Strangled you just like the long tentacles of corruption you sowed and watered into our bleeding economy.

Yoweri, they say it was your birthday yesterday.

How nauseatingly disgusting a day!

I wish the acidic pus flooding Esiteri’s cursed vaginal canal had burnt up your unborn fetus.
Burnt you up as badly as you have corroded all morality and professionalism out of our public institutions in Uganda.

Yoweri, they say it was your birthday yesterday.

How horrifically cancerous a day!

I wish the infectious dirty-brown discharge flooding Esiteri’s loose pussy had drowned you to death.
Drowned you as vilely as you have sank and murdered the dreams and aspirations of millions of youths who languish in the deep sea of massive unemployment, and under-emplyment in Uganda.

Yoweri, they say it was your birthday yesterday.

How traumatically wasted a day!

I wish the poisoned uterus sitting just above Esiteri’s dry clitoris had prematurely miscarried a thing to be cast upon a manure pit.
Prematurely miscarried just like you prematurely aborted any semblance of democracy, good governance and rule of law.

Yoweri, they say it was your birthday yesterday!

How morbidly grave a day!

I wish that Esiteri’s cursed genitals had pushed out a monstrously greenish-bluish still-birth.
You should have died at birth, you dirty delinquent dictator…
You should have died in birth, Yoweri Kaguta Museveni.

…….
If you want to beat me for my heartfelt birthday poem, come and find me at my home. Ask the bodabodamen to direct you to Mama Stella’s house with a red gate. I refuse to be gagged!

Substance Abuse Major Cause Of Cape Town Fires

Staff Correspondent|The City of Cape Town says statistics for the last three-and-a-half years show substance abuse and negligence feature far too prominently as a cause of fires.

Between January 2015 and June 2018 authorities recorded 511 fire-related deaths in the region.

The City’s JP Smith says: “More than half of the victims were adult males, nearly half of all the fatalities happened over weekends and nearly 60% of them between midnight and 6 am. Time and again, substance abuse and negligence play a major role in the number of fires our staff respond to.”

Meanwhile, officials are investigating the cause of a shack fire that broke out in the Mandela Park informal settlement in Hout Bay in the early hours of Sunday morning which left a woman dead.

Media Are Exerting Unnecessary Pressure On Us : Mapeza

FC Platinum players celebrate

Terrence Mawawa|FC Platinum coach Norman Mapeza has said the media are heaping unnecessary pressure on his charges.

FC Platinum opened a five-point lead at the top of the Castle Lager Premier League with a 2-0 win over Herentals.

The victory was sweetened by Ngezi Platinum Stars’ 1-0 away loss to Yadah.

“We are running our race as FC Platinum, we are not looking at what other teams are doing,” said Mapeza.

“It’s you the media who talk about the five-point gap, but for us, we are focusing on each game as it comes. We are not worried about what is happening to Ngezi Platinum.”

Rodwell Chinyengere struck twice in the second half to take his tally to 13 goals, having scored six goals in the last three matches.

Herentals had shown resilience in the first half, aided by an organised defence but a lapse in concentration on two occasions led to the Students’ downfall.

The win gave FC Platinum some breathing space with seven matches to go before the end of the season.

We Lost To A Better Side: Madinda Ndlovu

Terrence Mawawa| Highlanders FC coach Madinda Ndovu has conceded that his team lost to a better side.

His side lost 2-0 to ZPC Kariba on Saturday.

Tawanda Nyamandwe and substitute Borniface Zuberi scored in either half as Kauya Katuruturu completed a double over their southern rivals. The defeat was Bosso’s second in a row after they lost to Mutare City Rovers in the previous round.

“ZPC Kariba were the better team, and they deserved to win,” Ndlovu said.

“We have lost six points in a row now, and it’s not good. Both sides were involved in midweek fixtures and we played under the same conditions, so there are no excuses. We have to regroup.”

Highlanders remain in sixth position on the table with 39 points. They face Yadah at home in the next round.

Mthuli Ncube Is A Genius: Obert Gutu

 

Terrence Mawawa

MDC T deputy president Obert Gutu has urged the nation to give new Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube a chance to turnaround the waning economy.

Gutu who has been subjected to a barrage of attacks on various social media platforms for “singing from the Zanu PF” hymn book has described Ncube as a genus who should be given the chance to prove his mettle.

“Mthuli Ncube is one of the sharpest brains I have ever known since our time at Fletcher High School back in the day.Pretenders,latter-

Obert Gutu

day intellectuals and fraudsters…just zip it!!!

Give Mthuli a chance.He will shine like a star,” tweeted Gutu.

Rigging Does Not Pay: Biti

 

Terrence Mawawa

MDC Alliance principal Tendai Biti on Friday took a swipe at the Emmerson Mnangagwa led government for failing to deal with the cholera outbreak decisively.

Biti said the illegitimate government was clueless about solving the country’s health woes.

“How does an illegitimate gvt that is spending millions on private jets , luxury vehicles , institutional capture and corruption suggest crowd
funding for cholera to a battered population.

This is a potent cocktail of stupidity and naivety #RiggingDoesNotPay,” wrote Biti on Twitter.

ZIMSEC Prints Exam Papers In UK To Avert Cheating

 

Terrence Mawawa| The Zimbabwe Schools Examination Council (ZIMSEC) is reportedly printing examination papers in the United Kingdom to combat widespread cheating.

The exams body which has been plagued by leakages is outsourcing the printing to minimise the leaking of papers, a ZIMSEC official has revealed.

ZIMSEC board chairperson, Eddie Mwenje told a weekly the move would avert cheating.

“We are outsourcing and we have
always been outsourcing and this is
not the first time.

Zimsec examines quite a number of students and there is Grade 7, Form 4 and A’ Level and that is quite a lot.
The printing facility that we are setting up in Norton is almost complete and therefore, this is the reason why we could not print all stuff here. We are printing some of the stuff with our other machines, but we couldn’t print everything and that is why we have to do outsourcing externally as well,”said Mwenje.

ZIMSEC sources also revealed the move was meant to combat leaking of exams.

Broke Government Increases Tollgates

NATIONAL, BUSINESS, BREAKING

 

Terrence Mawawa| The cash- strapped government of Zimbabwe will soon increase tollgates in a desperate bid to boost its revenue base, it has emerged.

The Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure Development George Mlilo has revealed that the government will be establishing
five new tollgates by mid-October.

This will leave five tollgates outstanding from a list approved by
the government in 2015.

“We are now working on connecting the tollgates to the main system and this-we will start doing (this) week. We are putting finishing touches such as lighting, rumble strips and we expect the five tollgates to start operating by mid-October.

The five new toll gates will be located at Magamba along the Chivhu-Nyazura Road, Collen NATIONAL, BUSINESS, BREAKINGBawn in Triangle, Mapfurudzi (Mt Darwin),
Lothian (Roy Shops in Masvingo) and Triangle,” said Mlilo.

Bruce Grobbelaar Haunted By Freedom Fighter He Killed During The War

Former Liverpool and Zimbabwe Warriors goalkeeper Bruce Grobbelaar has opened up on the daunting images that continue to haunt him from his time during the Chimurenga war.

Grobbelaar made over 400 appearances for Liverpool over a distinguished career but before making his name, he spent time on active National Service.

The former stopper fought during the Rhodesian Bush War and recalls the time he was first forced to shoot and kill a member of the opposition.

“I still remember the first time I had to kill someone. I can still see his eyes. I looked at him, my pulse pounding in my ears and the first thing I had to do was just pull the trigger then drop. I felt nothing but relief that I shot him before he shot me,” he reveals in his new book A Life In A Jungle, which is being serialised in the Mail on Sunday.

Liverpool legend Bruce Grobbelaar
Grobelaar admits there are further distressing images ‘burnt into his memory’ from his time with the army.

Recalling a raid in Mozambique, the 60-year-old adds: “We found out they were burrowing and had to come out somewhere and we worked out that was on the Pafuri River. We called for air strikes. They came and dropped the bombs in the river and killed them.

“We had to go into the river to get the bodies out, to see how many people had been killed. But their corpses attracted crocodiles so while we were taking them up the river, we had to put our guns under and shoot at the crocodiles.”

The Mirror

Lawyers Claim Zimbabwe Is Far From Being A Democratic State

Press Statement|Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) joins the rest of the world in commemorating the United Nations International Day of Democracy and urges government to ratify, domesticate and implement the provisions of the African Charter on Democracy, Elections and Good Governance (The Charter).

Commemorated annually on 15 September, the International Day of Democracy, which is being commemorated under the theme “Democracy under Strain: Solutions for a Changing World”, is meant to raise public awareness about democracy and to promote and uphold the principles of democracy.

International Day of Democracy is also an opportunity to highlight the values of freedom and respect for human rights as essential pre-conditions for democracy.

Democracy provides the natural environment for the protection and effective realisation of human rights.

The theme for International Day of Democracy is a reminder to governments everywhere that the hallmark of successful and stable democracies is a universal value based on the freely spoken and expressed will of people to determine their own political, economic, social and cultural systems.

In Zimbabwe, it is disheaterning that democracy is showing greater strain.

While President Emmerson Mnangagwa signed the African Charter on Democracy, Elections and Good Governance early this year, it is disheartening that government has not moved to ratify, domesticate and implement its provisions.

The African Charter on Democracy Elections and Governance seeks to promote adherence by African states to the universal values and principles of democracy and respect for human rights premised upon the supremacy of the Constitution and respect for the rule of law and is one of the key instruments that will advance democracy, peace and security in Zimbabwe, the region, and the continent as a whole.

While the decision to sign the African Charter on Democracy, Elections and Governance, is a progressive step to promote democracy in Zimbabwe, ZLHR is perturbed by the continued delay in ratifying and domesticating the provisions of the African Charter On Democracy, Elections and Governance. The African Charter on Democracy Elections and Governance can only be meaningful if the government takes concrete steps to ratify and domesticate all the provisions.

It is saddening that International Day of Democracy is being commemorated when Zimbabwe is emerging from a disputed election, where many citizens living in the diaspora were disenfranchised after they were not allowed to vote in the harmonised elections in violation of the Constitution and several regional instruments of which Zimbabwe is a state party.

Equally worrying is the use of excessive force and the killing of citizens during protests by members of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces (ZDF), who used excessive force to disperse some protestors and innocent by standers on 1 August 2018.

Further, ZLHR is concerned about the persecution of human rights defenders who are being targeted and prosecuted after the 2018 harmonised elections.

Therefore, ZLHR calls upon;

• Government to implement legal and administrative reforms to create a conducive environment that guarantees the respect and enjoyment of democracy and fundamental human rights and freedoms.

• Government to ratify and domesticate the African Charter on Democracy, Elections and Good Governance.

• Government to speed up alignment of laws with the Constitution and ensure adherence to principles of democracy and constitutionalism.

It’s A Secondhand Republic, Jonathan Moyo Blasts Mnangagwa

Jane Mlambo| Former cabinet minister and fierce critic of President Emmerson Mnangagwa, Professor Jonathan Moyo has continued his relentless attack on the new Zanu PF government describing it as a secondhand republic constituted of the same old workforce that served ex President Robert Mugabe.

In a Twitter post, Professor Moyo said:

Cholera Outbreak In Harare: A Direct Consequence Of Hydropolitics, Corruption And Governance Failure – Opinion

Opinion article By Rev Anglistone T Sibanda|The recent outbreak of cholera and typhoid in Harare is an embarrassing scenario in a country that has so much potential leap to into being one of Africa’s leading economies.

That growth would be characterized by a total eradication of poverty related epidemics such as typhoid and Cholera.

Every citizen is now on high alert and all forms of media awash with information about cholera but we seldom do an introspection to find out why we have cholera in this day and age and seek strategies to deal with those causes.

The outbreak of a nineteenth century disease that is sadly killing the poor and innocent civilians, is a direct outcome of hydropolitics, corruption and poor governance.

The governments, both at local level i.e. Harare City Council and the Government of Zimbabwe are squarely to blame for killing innocent children and poor citizens.

In my view, the Human Rights Commission should do a detailed investigation into the causes of Cholera and hold the authorities to account.

In his analysis on the genesis of Bulawayo’s water problems, Prof Mucha Musemwa argues that the problems of water in the country’s second largest city are a result of politics, in what he terms “disciplining the dissident city”.

I therefore draw a parallel to assert the view that Musemwa presents and transmit the same argument to the context of Harare.

The formation of the MDC in 1999 saw the ushering in of a new era and a new political dispensation in a city that had been controlled by ZANU PF since independence.

The urban voters in the country’s cities switched their political allegiance to the new political party that had been backed by the country’ biggest labor movement, the ZCTU.

The dispensation created a rift between the rural and the urban voters where the rural voters, having benefitted from the fast track land redistribution exercise whose wounds on the economy we still lick to date, became die- hard ZANU PF strongholds.

While the rural voters benefited from the land reform and did nothing significant on those farms, save hunting the wildlife and destroying the infrastructure, the urban voters saw the collapse of industry and massive unemployment .

The winning of the Local government seats by the MDC created a situation where the President Mugabe and his ZANU Ministers lived and conducted most their business within an MDC controlled council area.

Time would not permit me to chronicle the long debacles and enormous tensions between the “godfather of local government destruction” , Dr Ignatius Chombo and the Harare Councillors that saw the dismissal of the councilors at some point and the darkest days during the Mzvare Sekesai Makwavarara Commission.

What followed was a directive by cabinet to implement the amendments that had been made in 1997 on the Water Act.
The Water Act had been amended to replace the Water Act of 1971 and one of the progressive changes that were introduced was the change from the policy of water being a social good and the adoption of a policy that made water to be an economic good.

According to the new water act, all water belongs to the President, hence all water is national water, thus abolishing a white farmer monopoly over water rights.

The priority date system was abolished and water rights were debunked from land rights enabling communal people to also have water rights.

The changes in the law also created a parastatal, the Zimbabwe National Water Authority (ZINWA).

This new water authority was tasked with a vast mandate of being the sole body responsible for the development and management of all water bodies in Zimbabwe.

Manzungu argues that ZINWA lacked institutional capacity to meet the daunting task.

In a bid to “democratize” water bodies management, the Act created Catchment Councils where members are generally appointees of the minister of Water. The appointment of chairpersons of Catchment councils and other members remained a prerogative of the minister, creating room for politicization of water.

In the case of Local authorities like Harare, Bulawayo, Mutare, Masvingo etc that were run by MDC, it meant that once ZINWA took over the management of their water reticulation systems, ZANU PF was in fact controlling the water supplies to the cities by proxy.

In the case of Harare, the Wars between HCC and Minister of Local Government exacerbated the situation and in fact saw two powerful ZANU PF ministers ganging up against the MDC council; the minister of local government and the minister of Water and in some instances the minister of energy.

The minister of Water, in terms of the Water act and the ZINWA act controls all the water bodies through ZINWA and as such political machinations and shenanigans saw Harare go dry while surrounded by lakes.

The Situation created a sprouting of boreholes and a threat to the water table as well as numerous water processing companies that sell ‘safe drinking water’, which means that safe drinking water became a prerogative of those who can afford to buy purified water.

An investigation into the ownership of most of those companies is imperative; l suspect some of those who are supposed to be ensuring efficient service delivery may be having conflicted interests in the mineral water business.
In such a situation, they may be benefiting from the situation they created and Harare may never have affordable, clean, safe and portable water running through the taps as water barons may not want that to happen as it militates against their business interests.

The equipment at Morton Jeffery Waterworks got dilapidated and obsolete and ZINWA had no capacity to repair.
We have always been told by consecutive ministers of water that there is government investment and at some stage funding from China for the refurbishment of Morton Jeffrey waterworks equipment and yet there has been no results.
The equipment and the infrastructure has over the years collapsed and has become too small to supply the ballooning population and there has so far not been any substantive plan to address the situation of population versus services gap.

The Harare situation is further compounded by the fact that the planning of the city created a situation where sewage effluent easily flows to the water bodies meant for domestic use.
The flowing of raw sewage into Lake Chivero, Manyame and other rivers polluted and contaminated the water bodies, thus demanding large volumes of treatment chemicals and astute and sound management, which has not been found thus far due to corruption, nepotism and other isms that militate against the principle of sound management and good governance.

There were reports of supplies of wrong chemicals and fears of cheap quality chemicals being supplied by bogus companies owned by those who are well connected.

With ZANU PF controlling ZINWA that supplies cities with water while the MDC controlled the local authorities, it therefore meant that he who controls the Water bodies sought to influence the politics in the city via backdoor, resulting in some Surbubs in Harare going for 15 years without running water; what Musemwa calls “disciplining the dissident cities” by ZANU PF government.

To exacerbate, further compound and intoxicate the situation, soon after the infamous Operation Murambatsvina, ZANU PF members who were well connected and protected by the state and the party started becoming land barons and formed dubious Cooperatives at some points supported by the local government minister.

Organizations aligned to ZANU PF such as Rev Obadiah Musindo’s Destiny of Africa Network and several others became main actors in distributing housing stands in unserviced areas to canvass for votes for the party.

This unorthodox land allocation by land barons created wanton destruction to the ecosystems and some MDC councilors followed suite in the quest to get rich at the expense serving the people and allocated desperate citizens residential stands in wetlands and other protected areas that are meant to create natural buffers.

Natural buffers are meant to protect and sustain the environment: trees are to clean the air by absorbing carbon dioxide while natural filtration systems occur underground to purify underground water.

The massive and spontaneous proliferation of houses in poorly planned and un serviced lands saw people digging septic tanks and installing Blair latrines at close range with wells and boreholes, contaminating underground water in the process.

The taking away of Water management by ZiNWA through the ZINWA Act, also took away HCC’s source of revenue making the local authority unable to meet its service delivery obligations.

With massive unemployment, people failed to pay their bills and HCC had challenges of billing systems and government in its populist approachs directed HCC to scrap bills for residents and we celebrated and went to vote unknowingly we were celebrating the coming of cholera.

Large numbers of people have resorted to the informal sector to earn a living, creating a colossal problem of overcrowding in the city where vending is done anywhere and everywhere at anytime by anyone and there is no infrastructure nor facilities such as toilets to maintain hygiene.

In the case of vendors in illegal spaces in Harare, both the MDC and ZANU PF are equally guilty.

The harassment of vendors by the Harare City Police became politicized with the former “supporting vendors” who are in reality a problem in the streets and created a time bomb for such diseases as Cholera due to populist politics.

Responding the MDC’s backing of illegal and dangerous vending practices, the ZANU PF government went to the extreme and deployed the police and the army to try and control vending which had become in fact a State Security threat.

Both parties may not be willing to end the problems that push people into the street as they often use them as tools for political activities.

We all saw how the same vulnerable people were manipulated and used by ZANU during their Anti Mujuru “Tsunami Rallies” or “Munhu wese kuna Amai” demonstrations in Harare.

Civil Society was also not to be outdone and began Vendors Associations who really do not care much about vendors but created a livelihood for the directors who got opportunities to travel around the world and living in five star hotels on behalf of the poor and vulnerable vendors who are risking their lives in cholera prone environs trying to survive.

True to the fears of the state, the same vendors have been used in the MDC aligned social movements such as #Tajamuka in mobilizing for “Citizens action” that has a political outcome to benefit the MDC.

The recent pre election results announcement violence that left at least 6 people dead is one example of Civil Society – MDC conflation, oblivious or totally uncaring about the dangers of illegal vending in the Lagos style that Harare has become.

As Chambers noted; poverty in Africa benefits the politicians and sustains them in power or opens doors for them to go into power.

Poverty weakens resilience and coping capacities, increasing vulnerability: the more poor you are the more susceptible they become and epidemics such as cholera are prone in poverty stricken areas.

The cumulative effect of corruption, hydropolitics and political instrumentalization of disorder as Chabal and Daloz accurately described such a situation, is such epidemics as Cholera and typhoid that sadly is killing poor and innocent citizens.
Those in power and those are seeking power create the conducive environment for cholera to break out are safe in hotels or highly protected homes with sophisticated water purification systems and some even import spring and mineral water for themselves and when they or their close family members fall sick, they fly out to other countries for treatment while innocent children in Budiriro, Glen view etc are dying like flies.

They then come to funerals or send condolence messages and few donations and end there, yet we keep electing them and even fight against each other over them.

In light of these views, therefore submit that both ZANU PF and the MDC assisted by various versions of Civil Society groups are guilty for creating cholera in Harare due to their policies and political shenanigans and Citizens have to judge them accordingly.

I therefore suggest the following as ideas towards ending Cholera and saving lives.

1. urgent address of the currency or liquidity issues.
2. A serious, radical and robust intervention on the economy to create jobs and reduce the influx of people in the streets and reduce poverty levels.
3. Adherence to the Tibaijuka Report recommendations on Habitat issues to create sustainability, eliminate red tape and bureaucratic bottlenecks in housing delivery.
4. Urgent policy review:
The Water act and the ZINWA act must be amended and ZINWA become a watchdog regulating authority on quality and safely while letting local authorities and private players to handle the development of infrastructure and management of water.

The regional town and planing act of 1976 must be amended to sanitize and liberate the habitat access for citizens.

5. Radical action against corruption-land barons must be arrested and government sanitize the housing sector.
6. Depoliticization of land, water and local governance.
7.Access to primary healthcare and other social services must be improved at all levels.
8.Citizen education on health and hygiene must systematic and structured to enable effective monitoring of communities.
9. We need a strong, vibrant, objective and none partisan civic society to monitor and put pressure on governments (local and central )
Nineteen century epidemics must be extinct in modern society and it is our role and responsibility to make sure we save lives as citizens and government at all levels.

Anglistone Sibanda is a devepment practitioner and consultant, human rights and peace activist, social commentator and entrepreneur specializing agriculture, renewable energy development and sustainable infrastructural development.
Director of Shalom Project, a Faith Based Civic group and CEO of UnaPower Project P/L group of consultants; he writes in his personal capacity.

Supa Mandiwanzira Speaks On His Arrest

By A Correspondent|Member of Parliament for Nyanga South, and former minister of ICT and Cybersecurity, Supa Mandiwanzira has scoffed at social media reports alleging that he is on the run and skipped the country, fearing prosecution.

Social media posts went viral on Sunday claiming that Mandiwanzira had been apprehended at the Zambian border post while tying to flee the long arm of the law.

The rumours did not however say what Mandiwanzira was wanted for by the police.

Speaking to weekend online media in an interview, Mandiwanzira said that he also learning on social media that he had been arrested.

“I’m actually in Zimbabwe and flying out of the country late this afternoon, I will be back in good time for the official opening of parliament by HE the president,” said Supa.

He could however not be drawn to give details of where he was flying out to, but had indicated that he is willfully making a personal visit out of the country and will be back soon.