Mugabe Health Mystery Unraveled

  • Tightly guarded secret

  • For the first time in years, there is great doubt Mugabe will be fit to stand as the party’s presidential candidate in 2018

unraveled…Robert Mugabe

The Source/Staff Reporter – Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe left the country for medical checks in Singapore, days ahead of a planned Monday strike by civil servants who will join state health workers who walked out of hospital wards two weeks ago.

Mugabe’s spokesperson told state media the 93 year old leader left for “a scheduled medical review” in Singapore early on Wednesday. The southeast Asian island city state hosts Mugabe’s preferred infirmary amid increased speculation about his health, which remains a tightly guarded secret.

Zimbabwe’s sole leader since independence in 1980 frequently dismisses speculation about his health and has responded to calls for his retirement by announcing another run in next year’s presidential poll.

For the first time in years, there is great doubt within Zanu PF as to whether President Robert Mugabe will be fit to stand as the party’s presidential candidate in 2018. Mugabe (93) has been showing signs of frailty for a long time and often comes out struggling to walk. The President’s Mugabe frequently travels to Singapore for treatment at the state-of-the-art Gleneagles Hospital. Government sources last year said he has been spending less time in his office due to a combination of old age and ill-health which has slowed him down over the years. Mugabe’s infirmity has been amplified in recent times since his dramatic fall at Harare International Airport in January 2015 while returning from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, where he had taken over the rotational African Union chairmanship. After the fall, Mugabe stunned the nation in September 2015 when he read a wrong speech during the official opening of the Third Session of the Eighth Parliament. He read the same speech he had delivered during the State of the Nation Address that he had presented before Parliament a month before in August.

He also showed signs of worsening frailty when he stumbled backwards before being assisted by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and aides to scale a small step while attending the India-Africa Forum Summit in New Delhi in October.

 

 

  • Doctors Strike

As Mugabe flew out yesterday un-announced, his government was scurrying to contain growing discontent within the state workforce.

Doctors in Zimbabwe’s state hospitals went on strike on February 15, to press for more pay and in protest against poor working conditions. The doctors’ job action was this week joined by nurses at public hospitals, who walked out of work to push for 2016 bonus payments and to push for improved working conditions.

The strike by health workers has paralysed service at under-staffed state medical facilities, already groaning under the burden of poor funding from government.

Teachers, who make up the bulk of the civil service, have warned they will join the strike on Monday, if the government does not set dates for the payment of the 2016 bonuses.

Finance Minister Patrick Chinamasa, who twice tried to scrap the bonus only to be publicly embarrassed by Mugabe, will now have to deal with a problem he thought he had fixed, in the absence of the boss who gainsaid him and kept it alive.

Chinamasa, faced with a mounting budget deficit which reached $1.2 billion in 2016, unsuccessfully pushed for various reforms — including suspending the 13th cheque for two years — to reduce a government wage bill which gobbles up 90 percent of total revenue. The state has been struggling to pay its workers’ basic pay, let alone meet a 13th cheque entitlement.

Mugabe called Chinamasa’s proposals ‘disgusting’ and promptly reversed them, but has not proffered clues on how the funds would be raised. Instead, he has maintained a conspicuous silence as civil servants clamour for the bonus payments.

Mugabe has also not publicly addressed the doctors’ strike.

In a statement on Thursday, Chinamasa said a meeting to try and resolve the health sector crisis had been scheduled for the same day.

“Notwithstanding the continued withdrawal of service by some members of the health service, I wish to advise that the Health Service Bipartite Negotiating Panel will be meeting on Thursday, 2 March 2017 and hopefully will reach an amicable position critical for the restoration of services within and across our public health institutions,” Chinamasa said.

However, government’s sectoral approach to the issue is unlikely to succeed in averting a full-scale civil service strike.

While Chinamasa spoke of a Thursday meeting with health worker representatives, his Labour ministry counterpart Prisca Mupfumira appeared on state television Wednesday night, saying the government would hold yet another meeting with the body representing all state employees.

The parties have held a series of inconclusive meetings, with the unions rejecting the government’s offer of residential stands in lieu of cash bonus payments.

The government’s protestations that it cannot afford to meet its workers’ demands are unlikely to find sympathy from civil servants when viewed within the context of its budget-busting expenditure on foreign travel and cars.

According to Treasury data, the government’s foreign travel expenses amounted to $44.9 million as of November 30 2016, against the budgeted $20.7 million. Expenditure on vehicles, plant and mobile equipment, at $38.6 million, was nearly 10 times the budgeted $3.9 million, the figures show.

As tensions continue to rise, the state-controlled flagship Herald on Thursday published pictures of houses it said belonged to union leaders in “medium to low density suburbs.” The paper ran an article accusing union chiefs of enjoying ownership of prime real estate, while “denying their membership the opportunity to possess residential stands.”

One of the accused officials, Raymond Majongwe who leads a teacher’s union, took to Twitter to deny the paper’s accusation, saying he only rented the property in a modest middle income suburb.

The government’s jitters about the planned civil servant strike are understandable.
Last year, a strike by government workers underpinned what became the biggest protest against Mugabe in recent years, when it was complemented by grassroots protest movements that used social media to organise a hugely successful nationwide shut-down on July 6.

UK Zimbabwean Hero In Danger Of Deportation

The Zimbabwean man based in the UK’s Manchester who recently saved two kids from a house fire is in danger of deportation.

Robert Chilowa, 46, a carer, made headlines last February when he ran to the scene of the blaze in Withington, Manchester, one Friday morning wearing only his pyjamas.

Speaking to the Sun newspaper Chilowa explained his heroic act, “I followed where the scream was coming from and I got to the house and saw there was fire.

“I wasn’t even wearing my shoes. I ran out the house in my pyjamas and headed to where the noise was coming from – which was only three houses away. ‘I turned around and there was this young girl there lying on the floor and she pointed at the window to say, “please can you save my brother and my sister – ask them to jump?”

He added: ‘I wasn’t scared for myself…I just didn’t want to see those little kids die.
‘It was so smoky and it was blazing hot so I couldn’t actually see very well. ‘I just outstretched my arms and shouted up to the kids “please jump into my hands”. ‘The boy jumped first and I caught him and put him on the grass. Then the girl jumped as well and I caught her in my arms.

But, according to an online petition posted by one Ananias Chakwizira, Chilowa, who has been in the U.K. since 2001, is now “facing deportation from a country he now calls home”.

Below is the petition to stop the British government from deporting Chilowa. 

Robert Chilowa has been in the U.K. since 2001 from Zimbabwe ,but he is facing deportation from a country he  now calls home. In February 2017 he saved lives of children from a burning house in Withington ,Manchester. It is through his bravery and the will to help others that he sacrificed his own life to help lives from a burning house. One of the Home Office requirements for being granted a status is good character, this act of bravery is good character especially in today’s world whereby he could have chosen to be a bystander and take pictures from afar. Please sign this petition to help Robert Chilowa to stay in this country and make the Home Secretary, Amber Rudd consider her decision .  Robert did not commit any crime but saved lives , he deserves recognition not psychological persecution from the Home Office. Let’s save this gentle giant.

Please find here the video soon after his act of bravery when he was interviewed by the BBC.

Please sign the petition to stop the deportation of Chilowa

Hospital Roof Collapses


Johannesburg – Rescue workers are struggling to find patients who may be trapped after a roof collapsed at a South African hospital.

The fifth-floor rooftop gave way at the entrance to Charlotte Maxeke Hospital in Johannesburg. Journalists suggested security guards and patients waiting for transport home could be among those trapped under the rubble.

Social media footage shows witnesses frantically digging at the huge mound of bricks and metal with their bare hands.

The size of the hospital means a full-scale evacuation would be difficult, according to local reports.

The roof that collapsed was reportedly from the fifth floor and emergency services are on scene to assess the damage.

Paramedics have been called to the hospital after a roof collapsed at a South Africa government hospital. It is understood injuries have been reported, some people are trapped and emergency services are attending to people at Charlotte Maxeke Academic Hospital.

According to City of Joburg, the roof on the main entrance collapsed and a search and rescue team is on location. Reports on social media confirm that there is chaos at the hospital with eyewitnesses claiming it is difficult to evacuate patients and people visiting the hospital. – Mirror/Agencies

Manicaland Warlord Mutasa Bares All

ONE of Zimbabwe’s veteran politicians, Didymus Mutasa (DM) took some time this week to chat, in his personal capacity, with the Financial Gazette News Editor, Nelson Chenga (NC) over many issues, including the recent fallout in the Zimbabwe People First (ZPF) party. Below are excerpts from the interview.

NC: Nyathi (Mutasa’s totem) it’s good to see you. How are you?
DM: Oh I am great, how are you yourself?
NC: I am very well Nyathi. I notice that you have a very interesting ringing tone these days on your cell phone. You have the gospel tune Mhepo inoperekedza. What inspired you to choose that particular song as your ringing tone?
DM: (laughs) I set it (ringtone) by mere mistake. Someone wanted to share with me that song and in the process of getting it, it ended up where it is now and people have been asking about it. And honestly, I don’t know how to remove it (more laughs).
NC: You have had quite an illustrious career and you have written a book called Rhodesian Black Man Behind Bars. Do you have any plans to write another sequel of your life journey since independence in 1980?
DM: Definitely, but I seem not to be finding the time as you can see that instead of resting at my age, I am still running around doing exactly the same things that I have been doing the whole of my life. I hate, let me repeat, I hate injustice and I will fight it wherever I might find it. I found it as regards the Tangwena people and we fought it successfully to the extent that the late Chief Tangwena became a very important person in this country. Before independence, we were fighting against the white people’s government in this country which was not just. I started fighting for justice in 1946 when I was 11 years old by trying to let our people see that there was something wrong in this country. I got that revelation from the treatment of my father by the native commissioner. The whites were very arrogant and they were oppressors. When I later worked for the white government during the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, I realised even more injustices as regards the differences in salaries. Blacks used to get half of what whites were earning in nursing, for instance, and we fought it successfully… At one time I was detained in solitary confinement because of my activism. And during that time I learnt a lot about human beings. I got to understand what a human being is and I realised that our people are afraid, they are very, very afraid of challenging injustice. Right up to today people are still living under situations that are totally undesirable. They could free themselves if they free themselves from that fear.
NC: You sacrificed quite a lot for this country, have you enjoyed any fruits of that sacrifice?
DM: No! No! I am still fighting because there is no justice and it is a lie that any educated person who is not a member of ZANU-PF is happy. No one is happy because the situation is just bad. No one should ever lie to themselves that we are in a free country. There is no freedom in this country. And I doubt if there is anyone, even in ZANU-PF, who is enjoying the situation we are currently experiencing.
NC: You are slowly being stripped of all your assets through debts. How much do you owe and what effect is this having on your net worth?
DM: I don’t owe anyone anything. They are taking me to court fraudulently and I have asked from this lawyer (Nyakutombwa Mugabe Legal Counsel) an itemised bill of the things they claim they did, but they haven’t given me. Unfortunately, the justice system in this country is complicated in that to be in court you have to have a lawyer and the process of affidavits and all is just something else. We have very good judges who are very straight forward, but the system is just too complicated. To appear in court you need a lawyer, and the lawyer needs money. And I had a lawyer who now wanted money for work he had not done. The work I know, was done by (Tendai) Biti and the rest of the work was done by (Mbizvo) Muchadehama (Makoni Legal Practitioners) and not this Nyakutombwa Mugabe Legal Counsel; no! And they are demanding US$26 000 and I am asking them, US$26 000 for what? I am demanding an itemised bill which they are not giving me.
NC: Can there be some politics at play here?
DM: I don’t know whether its politics or not, but I am only telling you what is happening. They even went as far as to lie that I locked the Sheriff of the High Court out of my house. I was not even there and when they later came back when I was at home I let them in and they took whatever they wanted and I never fought them. I answered every question they asked me…And for goodness sake that is happening in Zimbabwe today; in a country where a lot of blood was shed for our freedom… This is shameful. But I am glad that it happened to me because I am able to tell you what happened and to complain. But it is happening to a lot of other people, who can’t complain; who cannot be visited by reporters like you and tell them why their properties are being taken away. This is terrible, terrible, very terrible! And when I say lets fight against this, I don’t mean physically. I am a non-violent person and I have always advocated for non-violence.

NC: You must have helped a lot of people make it through in life during your lengthy tenure in government, with some of them now owning big businesses in Zimbabwe today. Have they abandoned you seeing how creditors are descending on your assets without them chipping in to assist you?
DM: They are scared to help me. I have a case of a businessman who approached me wanting to assist me till my farm and he begged me to never ever tell anyone that he had assisted me. Two of them, three of them have approached me and that is the fear I have been describing. It’s very serious. They are very scared. What is happening now is happening in exactly the same manner as it happened when I got arrested in the 1970s by the (Ian) Smith regime. The fear I was talking to you about exists… But as we fought, many in ZANU-PF had hoped that the Zimbabwe People First (ZPF) would win (the forthcoming poll) and then they would have come later and reap where they didn’t sow.
NC: Being a war veteran yourself, why is there so much bad blood between the war veterans?
DM: I really don’t know, but what I think is what I would describe as corruptive leadership; corruptive political leadership. Why should anyone have all these people(bodyguards) behind them to protect them, from what? All leaders, even those in the opposition have selfish interests and always seek protection. Protection from what in your own country? I move around unprotected and if I get killed by Zimbabweans, fine, I don’t care.
NC: What is your comment on how war veterans have been treated so far?
DM: They have been treated very badly and they don’t have the correct leadership. Their leaders should come out in the open and demand an audience with President Mugabe and all the political leaders in the country because they fought for the freedom of this country… but unfortunately if they do that they will be tear-gassed after being provoked. I have been telling my fellow war veterans that we should approach the President and assure him that we don’t want to harm him, all we want is a better Zimbabwe. We just want to assist him.
NC: Is this why you phoned him last year?
DM: That is very true. I used to talk to him almost every day and so why should I not talk to him now? I merely wanted to talk to him about these issues. He probably mistook it as if I was seeking to come back to ZANU-PF. But no, there is no ZANU-PF to return to, it’s in pieces.
NC: In 2014, you were at the forefront of a cabal that stood by Joice Mujuru when she came under attack in ZANU-PF, which eventually led to your dismissal. Do you still feel you were right in your decision to support her given the bad blood that now exists between you?
DM: There is no bad blood between me and Amai Mujuru although I don’t know why she expelled me. Did she expel me because she alleges I wanted to sleep with her? Did she expel me because I wanted to steal her money? Otherwise there is no bad blood between us. Similarly there is no bad blood between me and President Mugabe nothwithstanding the fact that he has not explained to me why he expelled me.
NC: Was Emmerson Mnangagwa, the man who benefited the most from the purge, involved in your persecution? Who else was behind it?
DM: The truth is I don’t know and I don’t want to lie. The person who expelled me from ZANU-PF was President Mugabe. I have nothing to do with all the others who might have played a part in my expulsion.
NC: Professor Jonathan Moyo once remarked that it’s cold outside ZANU-PF; are you feeling the cold?
DM: (laughs) That’s a very wrong assumption. It’s actually the opposite. If I was still in ZANU-PF I would currently be very ashamed to be associated with that party. In other words, he (Moyo) was saying there is nothing to be ashamed of being associated with the rot that ZANU-PF has brought about. Can anyone be proud to be associated with ZANU-PF in its current state?
NC: You are one of those people who went out of their way to lure Professor Moyo back into ZANU-PF in what became his second coming. What did you see in him that led you to beg him to return to the revolutionary party? Do you regret it?
DM: The man is very hard working. He is the one who, in 2012 or there about, wrote the manifesto that gave birth to Zim-Asset. He is such an intelligent man. If we can have such brains like Jonathan Moyo and we use them properly, this country would be one of the best. But if then you misuse them, how can you be better as a country when you misuse brains like Jonathan Moyo and many others. They are there free of charge for you to use, but you misuse them.
NC: So you don’t regret to have helped bring back Moyo back into ZANU-PF?
DM: Nooo! No! No because he is a brain to reckon with; and a brain to use and not to misuse. And if you use him properly, that would be good. There are others, but don’t misuse them.
NC: In very few words, what led to the fallout in the Zimbabwe People First?

DM: There were some decisions that were made by the National Committee that we wanted implemented. One of those things was the removal of Dzikamai Mavhaire from organising party activities because there had been many complaints about him from the structures. We then advised Mai Mujuru to find him another job instead. And we agreed. Mai Mujuru did not act immediately and we asked her the reason and she said she would act on it. Then she called me the other day from her house saying Mavhaire was at her house so should she tell him the National Committee’s decision to reassign him to another post, and I said of course yes tell him. Then soon after that conversation I heard that she had actually called for a press conference at her house to fire us.
NC: Will the current problems in ZPF end soon enough for the party to prepare for the 2018 elections?
DM: Yes, our side of the party is preparing and we will be ready.
NC: But you are currently fighting over the name of the party?
DM: It’s ours. The name is ours and we are taking the issue to court because we are the ones who started this organisation.
NC: But Mujuru is already active on the ground; she is all over the place using the ZPF name.
DM: She is all over destroying herself and if she had taken our advice she would not be doing that. We told her that “old woman you don’t know anything so can you step aside and let those who know do the job, and you just relax like a queen bee”. But she refused to listen to us.
NC: What did you actually mean by referring to her as queen bee?
DM: (Laughs) That was just figurative speech to implore her to just step aside and rest while the party takes care of things. We indicated that this job was very different from what she used to do in government and so that is why we had asked her to step aside.
NC: So are you saying she took that out of context?
DM: Certainly! Certainly, yes!
NC: Has ZPF approached Mliswa or anyone else for that matter regarding leadership of the party?
NC: No, that’s not true. We never ever approached him. I mean, why should we approach a leader of another political group to come and lead our political group? He was in it before and went away complaining.
NC: Are there any particular individuals you have approached to lead the party?
DM: Yes of course there are.
NC: Who in particular?
DM: No I can’t tell you that.
NC: Are these individuals from within or outside the country?
DM: Some are within and some from outside, but these names will only be announced at a later date when we are ready.
NC: But does Mliswa qualify?

DM: (laughs) No I don’t know; the committee will have to decide that. We are scanning as a group.
NC: When you were asked in 2015 on your 80th birthday whether it was not high time you retired you said it was actually time for you to take up more responsibilities because you were now wiser. Do you still feel the same?
DM: If there weren’t these injustices happening today I should have retired long back to my home in Rusape. I have never seen such a beautiful place like Rusape. Our leadership, our political leadership is not serving the interests of the people. There is too much corruption… and many of the leaders don’t even understand that they are in leadership to serve the people.
NC: What chances do you and the opposition in general have against ZANU-PF and President Mugabe come 2018?
DM: Can’t you see the corruption that is going on there (in ZANU-PF)?
NC: So are you saying corruption in ZANU-PF is good enough reason for people to vote for the opposition?
DM: Corruption is sitting right in the midst of ZANU-PF. For instance, what happened to the US$15 billion diamond money? Should we accept that the money simply vanished and that is it? Is it not this money that they are now using for their campaigns?
NC: You have also been accused of looting of the diamonds. What is your comment?
DM: How can you go to fight for freedom and then come back to steal from the very thing that you were fighting for?
NC: You have claimed before that ZANU-PF has been cheating during past elections. Is ZPF or any party for that matter capable of stopping the ruling party from the alleged cheating?
DM: That is why NERA (National Electoral Reform Agenda) is engaging the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission to create a conducive environment for free and fair elections.
NC: But government has already sidelined the UNDP is procuring the biometric voter registration kit.
DM: Then the regional and international community should come to our assistance.
NC: When they have never come to the country’s assistance over past electoral disputes?
DM: (Mockingly) Now that there is Donald Trump in America things could be different.
NC: So you reckon Trump may get involved in Zimbabwe’s internal affairs?
DM: No I don’t know, but he is a straight forward man.
NC: Zimbabweans are wary of the security forces’ involvement in the country’s politics. You have been a state security minister yourself before. In the event that the opposition outrightly wins next year’s elections, how is the security establishment likely to react?
DM: I am sure if they have their country at heart they will act in the best interest of our country.
NC: You have indicated before that President Mugabe is now powerless and some “vultures” around him have usurped his power. Who are those “vultures”?
DM: I will respond by giving an example. People had to demonstrate against Vice President (Phelekezela) Mphoko for staying at a hotel. Was that demonstration wrong? We have leadership in this country that is selfish and is serving own interests.
NC: Did you ever actually get to know President Mugabe in person? If so, what sort of person is he?
DM: He was a very good man.
NC: He was; what do you mean he was?
DM: He was a good man until some people came along. I will end it at that.
NC: President Mugabe says there appears to be no one capable of leading this country in both ZANU-PF and the opposition. What is your comment?
DM: Well, our dear old man should not say that. There are many in this country who are capable of leading. We have very capable leaders. (laughs) He says there are no capable people when he has stayed for 37 years in power; why didn’t he train someone to be a capable leader?
NC: In the event that President Mugabe suddenly decides to leave office today, what do you think will happen in ZANU-PF?
DM: Ah there would be fights. There would be real physical ones, not these ones you are seeing. They will fight each other because nobody has trained them to be good leaders, as such they have no time for others.
NC: You and the opposition and many others seem to have a common enemy. Why are you all failing to work together?
DM: We are actually working together as NERA and there are others working as CODE (Coalition of Democrats) and we should be able to finally come up with a single (presidential) candidate whom we will all support for 2018. We should be able to bring all opposition parties together. The situation that pertained in the 1960s persists up to today. As I have been working among the opposition I have been asking people: ‘Why do we keep fighting each other because what we want is exactly the same so let’s get together and fight together’; and I am glad that is what is going on right now. But what pains me is to fight against who? To fight against ZANU-PF; ZANU-PF which was fighting for the freedom of this country and is now the very same party that is denying others freedom. And the opposition have got to organise themselves to fight against them; an African government for that matter. It doesn’t make much sense. It doesn’t. But I support those who are fighting for justice because I am for justice. If it were possible the government should come from a grouping like NERA because it represents the people’s aspirations.
NC: In the past, you have described MDC-T leader Morgan Tsvangirai as a sellout. Do you still hold this view?
DM: No I don’t speak like that of other people. In fact, I like Morgan Tsvangirai very much because he is very courageous. I like him as well because he has done as much as he can do under very difficult conditions and anybody who calls him a sellout, I don’t think they know what they would be talking about.
NC: Are you willing to work with him in a coalition to dislodge ZANU-PF and President Mugabe from power?
DM: Yes I will work with him in a coalition. I am working with him now and I used work with him in the Government of National Unity and I used to speak very frankly each time he was being unfairly criticised.
NC: How would you want to be remembered?
DM: As Didymus Mutasa (chuckles).
NC: Thank you very much for your time Nyati.
DM: Thank you too.

 

Mnangagwa’s Escape

Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa could escape from trouble and swiftly replace President Robert Mugabe if the latest developments succeed to his side.

Mnangagwa’s supporters — who go by the moniker Team Lacoste — say they are encouraged by President Robert Mugabe’s recent hint that the warring ruling Zanu PF could hold a special congress to choose his successor.

This comes after Mugabe suggested during his 93rd birthday celebrations in Matobo at the weekend that his deeply-divided party could hold an extra-ordinary congress if he felt it was time to call it quits.

Mnangagwa’s supporters — including war veterans and vocal businessman-cum-politician, Energy Mutodi — have been making loud calls for Mugabe to pave the way for the Midlands godfather at both party and government levels.
Welcoming the idea of a special congress, which he called for last month to deal with Zanu PF’s succession riddle, Mutodi told the Daily News yesterday that the spirits of the VP’s supporters had been lifted by Mugabe’s hint.

“Since he (Mugabe) has said he does not want to impose anyone on the people, the elective extra-ordinary congress is the only way to go.

“We cannot fathom the fact that some amongst us are still calling for him to stand in 2018. Surely when do they want him to rest? A good leader cannot plan to rest in his grave. A good leader earns respect by allowing others to lead while he takes rest.

“A bad leader, however, thinks that no one is better than himself. When Sir Alex Ferguson left Manchester United with the best premier league record, he was not too old to lead but he realised that he needed to rest and give others a chance,” Mutodi told the Daily News.

“Nelson Mandela was also not too old to lead when he retired for (Thabo) Mbeki. The same can be said about Sam Nujoma, Julius Nyerere, (Ian) Khama and even (Eduardo) Dos Santos of Angola who will not seek re-election in 2018,” he added.

However, the Zanu PF youth league has warned that it will block any attempts to force Mugabe to retire — insisting that he should die in office.

“The youth league, in conjunction with the women’s league, cannot imagine voting for any other elder who is not Mugabe, unless nature takes its toll on him.

“So, even if the president were to say I am tired, let us go for a special congress, we will persuade him to still lead us,” a fired-up Zanu PF youth league leader, Kudzanai Chipanga, told the Daily News earlier this week.

“Anyone who wants to take over from him in Zanu PF will have to make do with a party without two crucial party wings because the youths and women will not follow him,” he added.

Insiders have previously told the Daily News that the key youth and women’s leagues are working with a party faction going by the name Generation 40 (G40), which is rabidly opposed to Mnangagwa succeeding Mugabe.

But the G40 has also been supporting calls for Zanu PF to hold an extra-ordinary congress, in line with a women’s league resolution that was first put on the table two years ago, to have one of Mugabe’s two deputies pave way for a woman — in what analysts widely agree is a move targeted at crushing Mnangagwa’s mooted presidential aspirations.

Speaking at his 93rd birthday celebrations in Matobo, in Matabeleland South last Saturday, a tired-looking Mugabe said Zanu PF could stage an extraordinary congress to choose his successor if he decided to retire.

“If Zanu PF says I should go I will . . . For your own information, I never canvassed for any position, I rose up to my position . . . let the people judge for themselves . . . We don’t want imposition (of leaders) at all.

“People have said that I should choose a successor but that is what is called imposition. I don’t want and will never impose. This is the job of congress to choose those who will then come up and the party will elect.

“Whatever position you seek must be a position you get upon a proper election by the people . . . People who are busy forming their own groupings saying VaMugabe must go I ask myself where should I go,” Mugabe said.

Mnangagwa has been under the cosh in Zanu PF for the past few months for allegedly working fervently to stampede Mugabe out of power before the nonagenarian’s current presidential term ends in 2018.

Things became worse for him when he hosted sacked Zanu PF officials at his rural home during the festive season, with his party foes alleging that this was in fact a meeting organised to plot the immediate ouster of Mugabe from power.

Grace also recently took a veiled dig at Mnangagwa during her rally in Buhera, when she attacked Zanu PF bigwigs angling for her husband’s job, and mocked them on their alleged lack of “leadership qualities”. Daily News

Goreraza Shoots Into Tsvangirai

By Stanley Goreraza | I’m desperately trying to understand why Morgan Tsvangirai would encourage his supporters to join Zanupf. Is it not the same as urging people to join Boko Haram to avoid getting killed? What happens when they March off to kill, won’t they be expected to tag along and also kill?

Is the Mdc really that short on ideas and strategies because it sounds like something a Grade school pupil would suggest! Is that the best you can come up with as a party? Is it not sensible to craft strategies which turn Zanupf supporters into Mdc supporters and prevent Mdc supporters from turning into Zanupf supporters? When Mdc supporters join Zanupf, will they not at some point be forced to act and obliterate the few remaining Mdc numbers? And what if they develop a taste and love for Zanupf and what it does,what will become of the MDC?

Is the thinking of the MDC calculated and thought out or is it the opposite?

You are entrenching fear and perpetuating it to your own great disadvantage. Instead, you should teach rural people that it is not ok to do something you do not want to do. It is not OK to live in fear and it is Very OK to be openly Mdc. We don’t want a culture of lying and liars and joining what is bad for no good comes out of what is bad. You are also condoning the politicization of food distribution and encouraging those who practice it.
Is this the end depth of your thinking? If it is then hey, what a shame! – Stanley Goreraza.

Bond Notes Torture Vendors

Government’s surrogate currency known as bond notes has negatively affected vendors at the country’s biggest informal market of Mbare in Harare, Parliament heard yesterday.

Vendors at the bustling market told the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Small to Medium Enterprises (SMEs) that the bond notes have a tendency to be devalued by their suppliers when they seek to replenish their stocks.

“The introduction of bond notes has really affected us. When we go to buy stocks to places like South Africa using the Rand we have to exchange the bond notes on the black market.
“Some people reject the bond notes and in the instances where they are accepted they devalue the currency which leaves a huge dent on our pockets,” Memory Taonenguwo, secretary for Mbare Musika women’s League said.

The SMEs also said that they were facing challenges with plastic money. “We do not want to use mobile money transfer as a means of buying and selling because sometimes the charges are too high,” Agnes Watungwa said.

“We are proposing charges of less than 3%. Currently we are charged between 10 to 15%, which is unprofitable when dealing with perishable goods. We cannot afford to borrow from banks right now because their rates are also beyond our reach. If we borrow, to a greater extent we are bound to fail to pay them back and the banks will end up suing us. Our businesses are unpredictable, we sell perishable goods hence they rot and profit is not guaranteed.”

The committee, which was on a tour of the market collecting views on the Movable Property Bill, also heard that vendors and people in the informal sector had challenges accessing cheap finance to fund their businesses.

“If the Movable Property Bill is to be passed we would be very glad. Some of us we have got more than 50 cattle that the banks can actually use as collateral but cannot borrow money from banks because we do not have properties such as houses and payslips,” Abel Dzotizei said.
The Movable Property Bill seeks to allow the use of assets such as cattle as collateral in financial transactions. Newsday

XENOPHOBIA: Zuma Envoy Confronted In London

President Jacob ZUma’s envoy to the UK was yesterday confronted by two Zimbabweans based in London on xenophobia and below was part of the footage which features community firebrand Martin Chiyanga as he presented an official protest statement:

Manyenyeni Defends Byo Mayor’s Car Splurge – “Job An Impossible Mission”

Harare mayor Bernard Manyenyeni has jumped to his Bulawayo counterpart Martin Moyo’s defence, over the latter’s acquisition of a top-of-the range car a year before elections.

Manyenyeni took to social media to argue that Bulawayo residents needed to accept the car, which will be used by successive mayors going forward.

While acknowledging Moyo’s mounting troubles over the vehicle, Manyenyeni said he has had to use alternatives.

 “For Harare, I have used council pool cars from council departments almost my entire time as Harare mayor. I still arrive wherever I need to get to and occasionally we ‘make a plan’,” Manyenyeni said, adding he sometimes uses a ramshackle car.

Manyenyeni, however, indicated Bulawayo has the capacity to buy its mayor the expensive car.

“The City of Kings (Bulawayo) is our second largest city and is bigger than some government ministries which are headed by ministers and deputies with two cars which they walk away with – no excuse, but just to compare. The mayor heads the best-run municipality in the country – having enjoyed significant levels of independence from central government for many years,” he said.

Manyenyeni added that Bulawayo has also largely been spared Harare’s run-ins with the Local Government ministry.

“This has allowed the Bulawayo city managers to be very professional – with obvious results. Bulawayo politicians across the divide have (in the past) defended their municipality to run without too much politicking from Harare.

Their mayor is probably busier than most MPs and some ministers. ‘His’ current car has seen its better days.

“I know that black BT50 Mazda double-cab well. Mayoral jobs in Zimbabwe are impossible missions – largely because of the rough political terrain, the non-executive template, and poor resources (collection and management),” he said.

According to Manyenyeni, there was failure to understand the “underlying” issues to service delivery, adding “three or so council managers (out of nearly 50 of them) can gobble the same cost per month as all 45 councillors and mayor combined”.

The Harare mayor has had a proposal to reduce salaries of city executives blocked by councillors.

“Our residents don’t even bother to understand that … we are just labelled as one greedy bunch. I don’t know how many times I have been accused of enjoying my big fat salary,” he said.

While arguing he has had to defer Harare’s purchase of the mayor’s $200 000 executive car, he had reduced the budget to $70 000, Manyenyeni told Bulawayo residents.

“To the residents and ratepayers, please, receive the new mayoral (not mayor’s) vehicle without protest. Look after it well … it is yours and it does not really kill service delivery, check out the numbers!” Manyenyeni said.

Moyo took delivery of the Mercedes Benz recently, causing an uproar in the city. – Newsday

More Tension As South-Africa Deports Nigerians

Nigerian media reports that the South African government has deported at least 97 Nigerians for various offences, as bilateral tensions seem likely to heighten between the two countries over “xenophobic attacks”.

According to Premium Times, the deported Nigerians arrived in the west African country on Monday night “in a chartered aircraft… from Johannesburg”.

They were made up of 95 males and two females.

A BBC report said that the department of home affairs had since confirmed the reports, with Spokesperson Mayihlome Tshwete saying that hundreds of undocumented foreign nationals had been deported.

Tshwete reportedly said that the majority of those deported were from the Southern African Development (SADC) region.

Others included citizens from Pakistan, China, Bangladesh and Somalia, “so it would be unfair to single out Nigerians”, Tshwete was quoted as saying.

Tshwete’s remarks came as Nigerians claimed that they had been unfairly targeted in recent attacks against foreigners.

Media reports quoted senior special assistant to Nigeria’s president on diaspora matters, Abike Dabiri-Erewa as saying: “They [Nigerians] have been arbitrarily raided … More [deportations] will likely follow.”

But, speaking during an interview with News24, an official from South Africa’s department of International Relations and Cooperation (Dirco), said it was important for foreign nationals to follow the law if they wanted to stay in the country.

“Why is it that one country feels targeted by the South African government? In any case, the Nigerians were only part of a large percentage of foreigners who were deported. You can’t break the law in another country and expect the government not to do anything about it,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

A Nigerian delegate was reportedly set to visit South Africa soon to ascertain the “true state of affairs” regarding both Nigerian and other foreign nationals living in SA.

Outbreaks of xenophobic violence were recently reported in Johannesburg and Pretoria.

Reports indicated that more than 20 shops were targeted in Atteridgeville, outside Pretoria, and at least 12 houses were attacked in Rosettenville, south of Johannesburg.

Angry residents raided what they called drug dens, telling the tenants they did not want them living there.

They also called for “pimps” to release prostitutes and send them back home. – News24

The Defiant Mawarire Sets Tongues Wagging

The intrigue surrounding clergyman, Evan Mawarire, never ceases to grab anyone’s attention.


Days before Mawarire disappeared into South Africa following months of heightened political temperatures over his highly-charged social media protests against the ZANU-PF government’s rule, the maverick cleric’s popularity had soared after being arrested and released on a technicality.

The State failed to charge him for inciting public violence under the Public Order and Security Act (POSA) of 2002 following his involvement in calling for a nationwide work boycott which successfully shutdown the whole country on July 11 and 12 last year.

During the trial, the State tried to alter the charges to that of subverting a constitutionally elected government, but that too failed leading to his release from custody.

The social media following Mawarire had amassed back then had been so phenomenal that his sudden disappearance left many followers dejected.
But six months later, Mawarire has resurfaced from the United States after his disillusioned followers had packed their bags and moved on. Returning from a self-imposed exile recently Mawarire fell straight into the waiting hands of State security agents at the Harare International Airport.

He has appeared before the courts to face charges of subverting a constitutionally elected government and has been released on a US$300 bail after spending a few days in remand.

And his sudden return from the US has set tongues wagging both at home and abroad as many a Zimbabwean questioned the wisdom of his return.
His revelation last week that he would not mind running for the country’s top job has excited those of his followers who still believe in him.
If the need arises or if it becomes necessary for me to participate in the elections I really want to be available for that,” he told reporters outside court last week.
I believe it is my duty as a citizen to serve my nation in that way… I haven’t made that decision as yet but certainly I don’t want that door to be closed.” That slightest hint that he may want to throw his hat into the ring may embolden those behind his persecution. It may also pollute the atmosphere in the opposition camp, where every leader would want to lead the country one day.

Instead of standing with Mawarire at this critical juncture in his life as an activist, opposition leaders might distance themselves from him, seeing he has become a competitor. Be that as it may, his supporters are happy to have him around.
Perhaps it could explain why he took the bold decision to come back home knowing full well that the thought police would be waiting for him.
About his return, Mawarire denies a rumour doing the rounds that his visa had expired. He also denied that he went to the US on a green card, an immigration process of becoming a permanent US resident. The green card serves as proof that its holder, a lawful permanent resident, has been officially granted immigration benefits, which include permission to reside and take employment in the US.
I have a personal visa which is still valid. I can travel to the US tomorrow on that visa if I got my passport back,” said the clergyman, whose bail conditions include passport forfeiture.
He said his family would return home when it is safe for them to do so.
One of the reasons why we left the country was that they were harassing my family. Mobs of people would come to my place and harass them. Even when I was arrested at the airport, the people who arrested me asked me to disclose the whereabouts of my wife and children, but they are not part of what I am doing. I decided that it was wiser that they stay where they are safe until such a time when it would be safe for them to come back home and be with us,” he said.

He also added that he never applied for asylum as some have previously suggested, stating that he was always determined to come back home. He hoped that his return would inspire scores of Zimbabweans living outside the country to return and try to solve the country’s problems along with the others.

To say I sought asylum is an absolute lie. I never applied for it. If you followed my communications from the time I left, you would realise that I have always wanted to come back home. I was not fooled or pushed by anyone to return. I am a Zimbabwean by birth. I needed to use my return to inspire all Zimbabweans who have fled the country because of economic hardships or any other cause to come back home so that we work together to improve the situation. This is the season when we need each other more than ever,” he explained.

But for any student of history, answers to topical present-day issues are never far away because history almost always repeats itself. Mawarire’s arrest mirrors the arrests of the nationalists during their fight against colonial rule.

Without any weapons of war, decades ago President Robert Mugabe, the late vice president Joshua Nkomo and many other nationalist were detained for years by the late Ian Smith regime for merely demanding equal rights between the black majority and racist minority white people. That the same script is repeating itself in the same country and in the same interesting milieu has been described by analysts as sad to say the least.

Political observers, however, expressed optimism that Mawarire could have his Lazarus moment if he keeps the faith of his convictions.
The Lazarus moment phrase is borrowed from the biblical narrative of a character called Lazarus who was dead for four days, but was brought back to life by Jesus Christ. But given how things have changed over the past months to lopsidedly skew against all voices of dissent it is difficult to even imagine Mawarire’s defence team of Harrison Nkomo and Fadzai Mahere achieving much.
And even if they did manage to win him his freedom, the many followers that once followed him seem to have made other plans in the past six months that he was in self-imposed exile. Political analyst, Otto Saki, recons that the problem lies with a cowed Zimbabwean citizenry and not with Mawarire.

Many of us are used to cowing in our cocoons, be overly critical of the few that have taken great personal risks to raise the political cost of the predatory and poor governance. In fact, we place the burden of making Zimbabwe better on their shoulders, not ours and after that, we condemn them. We have a theory for every move they make. We fail to identify with their cause because we think it is money-driven or counter-intelligence plots, never that they desire for a better Zimbabwe,” Saki lamented.

The campaign is once again on the global radar because of the punitive arrest,” he added. Political commentator, Rashweat Mukundu, believes Mawarire could still salvage something from his waning political movement, although he is likely to face a rutted road.

The change of fortunes which we have witnessed on his return suggests that he is entering into an entirely new game which demands more from him in terms of organisation and mobilisation. Mawarire will end the year 2018 (when there are general elections) either as somebody or a nonentity,” Mukundu opined.
The great teacher, history, too is not short on examples of promising political phenomena that fatally miscalculated situations and ended up in sheer embarrassment.

Mavambo/Kusile/Dawn leader, Simba Makoni and youthful former British Labour Party leader, Ed Miliband, are examples of political stars whose brightness only shone brightly and went out. Indeed, even as observed by satirical American writer, Chuck Palahniuk in his 1999 book, Survivor, modern day events are nothing more than new patterns underlain by old patterns. The satirical book has a paragraph which poetically goes like this: “There are only patterns, patterns on top of patterns, patterns that affect other patterns; patterns hidden by patterns; patterns within patterns. If you watch close, history does nothing, but repeat itself.

What we call chaos is just patterns we haven’t recognised. What we call random is just patterns we can’t decipher. What we can’t understand we call nonsense. What we can’t read we call gibberish. There is no free will. There are no variables.”
In the same vein, while what both Mawarire and the State are up to might be difficult to decipher or understand, they and their actions are part of the Zimbabwean narrative: A history that does not benefit present, but future generations; the generations whose futures, maybe Mawarire and a few others are genuinely fighting for.
Or maybe not! – Fingaz

Mugabe Health Scare | FRESH DETAILS

President Robert Mugabe reportedly sneaked out of the country early yesterday for medical check-up in Singapore, with his entire family having already left on Monday, top government said.

First Lady Grace reportedly flew out of Harare on Monday to organise a charter flight for the 93-year-old leader, who is believed to have been in bad shape.

Presidential spokesperson, George Charamba did not respond to questions sent to him by journalists. He, however, confirmed to the State media that Mugabe indeed left the country for a “scheduled” medical review in Singapore.

“His excellency the President left this morning for Singapore for a scheduled medical review. We expect him back in the country next week,” Charamba was quoted as saying last night.

Vice-President Phelekezela Mphoko is the acting President.

Sources told NewsDay that the First Lady flew out on Monday to organise a charter flight from Dubai as Mugabe was reportedly unable to use Air Zimbabwe.

“It’s a tricky health situation. The usual Boeing 767 is awaiting a C-check (major aircraft service) which requires over $150 000. The airline does not have this kind of money now,” an official said. “He could also not use the Boeing 737 because it would require stop-overs every four hours to refuel and other technical check-ups.”

Mugabe and his children who are reportedly in Dubai, have become visitors to Zimbabwe spending most of their time out of the poverty stricken country run-down by the Zanu PF leader’s policies.

Although it could not be established which airline Mugabe had flown, the Zanu PF strongman reportedly left the country around 2am yesterday.

“He left at 2am this morning (yesterday) after being delayed for hours because he was supposed to have flown out just after Cabinet (on Tuesday) but the chartered plane arrived late. The President could also not travel commercial because of health reasons. Vice-President Phelekezela Mphoko is acting President,” another source said.

A source at the Harare International Airport also confirmed Mugabe had stealthily left the country using a chartered plane.

“There was heavy security and people were not allowed around the runway at the time he left. The plane came from outside. It’s definitely not an AirZim because their planes are all here,” NewsDay was told.

Efforts to get comment from Air Zimbabwe chief executive officer, Ripton Muzenda drew a blank, as his mobile phone went unanswered while board chairperson Chipo Dyanda was not picking her phone.

While officials claims, Mugabe frequently travels to the Far East to have eye-check-ups, there are reports that he is afflicted by not only old age but also prostate cancer.

During celebrations to mark his 93rd birthday in Matabeleland South’s Matobo district last week, Mugabe looked jaded and frothed at the mouth as he gave his speech.

Mugabe just recently returned from a month-long annual holiday from the same part of the world, which according to insiders also included routine medical check-ups.

Government business comes to a standstill whenever the President is away. Cabinet has met on three occasions since his return including this week before another jaunt.

The Zanu PF leader’s continued trips outside the country have been blamed for bleeding an already desperate situation.

Mugabe is expected back in the country on Monday. – Newsday

British Come To Mugabe’s Aid

MORE than 1,4 million villagers in 11 districts are set to benefit from a £12 million grant availed by UK’s Department of International Development (DFID) for the extended rural Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) programme.

Speaking during the announcement of the new grant, teputy representative for Unicef Zimbabwe, Jane Muita said access to safe water and adequate sanitation remained critical to the realisation of fundamental human rights.

Muita said poverty assessment research shows that improved access to water is the most important element to the creation of strategies that alleviate poverty.

“Lack of access to water, sanitation and hygiene remains a major concern to Unicef, as it has a great bearing on the health and wellbeing of women and children,” she said.

A strong gender imbalance exists in rural areas, where women and girls do the great majority of manual and management work for water and sanitation services at the household level.

“These activities can deprive women of time to engage in economic activities to enhance their livelihoods and compromise the girl child’s ability to reach her full education potential,” Muita said.

DFID head of mission, Annabel Gerry said the grant will improve the lives of some of the poorest people in Zimbabwe and mitigate the risk of catastrophic diseases.

“The programme has already improved access to drinking water for over three million people across 33 rural districts of Zimbabwe,” Gerry said.

Under the first phase of the Rural WASH programme 1 620 new boreholes have been drilled; 1 600 schools have access to adequate gender sensitive sanitation facilities; 2 500 villages have been declared Open Defecation Free; 32 piped water schemes rehabilitation and over 10 000 boreholes have been rehabilitated.

Permanent secretary in the Water, Climate and Environment ministry and also chairperson of the National Action Committee (NAC) for WASH, Prince Mupazviriho said the grant will greatly assist the country to achieve the SDGs targets that require government to ensure safe water and dignified sanitation for all.

According to Unicef, at least 32% of people in rural Zimbabwe do not have access to improved sources of drinking water, while about 52% do not have access to safe sanitation facilities. – Newsday

Harare Runs Out Of Water

MOST parts of Harare’s Central Business District have been dry for the past two days after council experienced technical challenges at Warren Control.

Harare City Council spokesperson, Michael Chideme confirmed the local authority was facing water supply problems in the city centre, the northern suburbs, Msasa and the heavy industrial area.

“Warren Control had a power failure and this affected our delivery lines into the city,” Chideme said.

“We are currently working on the technical faults and expect complete restoration of water supplies by 1 March (yesterday).

He said the western and southern suburbs and Mbare were not affected by the shortages as they get their water directly from Prince Edward and a direct feed from Morton Jaffray. – Newsday

Mugabe Rescues Mutasa

LEADER of a faction of the Zimbabwe People First (ZPF) party, Didymus Mutasa, could recover his top-of-the-range Range Rover Sport with a market value of about US$75 000 following claims by the Office of the President and Cabinet (OPC) that it was wrongfully attached by the Sheriff of the High Court as it was still on their asset register.

The former State security minister in President Robert Mugabe’s office had his assets attached by the Sheriff of the High Court on February 12 and are set to be auctioned to recover a judgment debt owed to a Harare law firm, Nyakutombwa Mugabe Legal Counsel.

The law firm represented Zimbabwe’s first black speaker of Parliament when he tried to block the ruling ZANU-PF party from expelling him two years ago. Mutasa was among hordes of former vice president Joice Mujuru’s sympathisers who were either axed or suspended from ZANU-PF for plotting to unseat President Mugabe using unconstitutional means. He was later to withdraw his court action, preferring to re-launch his political career under ZPF, which has since split into two factions.

It emerged this week that the OPC, through CMED (Private) Limited — a wholly-owned State enterprise that administers the Transport Purchase Fund on behalf of the Civil Service Commission and Treasury — is laying claim to the Range Rover sports utility vehicle attached from Mutasa’s home, in the up-marked Umwinsdale suburb.
The OPC allocated the vehicle to Mutasa in 2013, a year before he was given his marching orders for hobnobbing with Mujuru.

It has since written to the sheriff of the High Court advising them that the vehicle could not be attached since it was State property.

Although the sheriff of the High Court, Mcdoff Madhega, declined to comment on the issue, saying he was not authorised to speak to the Press, a senior partner with Nyakutombwa Mugabe Legal Counsel, Tafadzwa Mugabe, confirmed the latest development.

“We received correspondence from the Office of the President and Cabinet through CMED.

They are advising us that they would be instituting interpleader proceedings wherein the sheriff will seek an order of the High Court to declare who the owner of the vehicle is. We are still waiting for the papers,” he said.
An interpleader is a suit pleaded between two parties to determine a matter of claim or right to property held by a third party.

Mutasa has also roped in his wife, Gertrude, in a fresh bid to recover the movable assets attached by the sheriff, which include three sets of leather sofas, a coffee table, dining table, eight chairs, two fridges and two water tanks, among others.

They have since filed a joint urgent chamber application at the High Court in which Gertrude is the first applicant while her husband is the second applicant. Nyakutombwa Mugabe Legal Counsel and the sheriff of the High Court are cited as the first and second respondents, respectively.

In his application, Mutasa concedes that the vehicle was still State property, although he has an option to purchase it — an alternative which government has not yet activated.

“The Range Rover vehicle is second applicant’s ministerial issue. It is still registered in the name of the State although I have an option to purchase it. It is therefore State property which cannot be attached or executed upon, let alone removed. I have not yet been given the go ahead to purchase it,” Mutasa states in court papers.

Attachment of State assets is prohibited under section five (2) of the State Liabilities Act.

Party of the Act reads: “Subject to this section, no execution or attachment or process in the nature thereof shall be issued against the defendant or respondent in any action or proceedings referred to in section two or against any property of the State, but the nominal defendant or respondent may cause to be paid out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund such sum of money as may, by a judgment or order of the court, be awarded to the plaintiff, the applicant or the petitioner, as the case may be.”

Legal experts said the State’s involvement in the case was curious as its actions could benefit Mutasa, who has a legitimate claim to the vehicle in terms of government policy on vehicles. Until their fallout in 2014, Mutasa was one of President Mugabe’s closest allies.

In an interview with the Financial Gazette last week Mutasa maintained there was no bad blood between him and the ZANU-PF leader “although he has never explained to me why he expelled me”.

On Tuesday, there were, however, no indications that Nyakutombwa Mugabe Legal Counsel would back off. The law firm still insists it acted lawfully.

It argued that the Range Rover was almost repossessed by the OPC in February, 2016, and they intervened objecting to its retake without due process on Mutasa’s behalf.

In the meantime, Mutasa and his wife are, for the second time, seeking rescission of a High Court judgment which ordered the former ZANU-PF secretary for administration to pay outstanding legal fees amounting to US$26 900 to Nyakutombwa Mugabe Legal Counsel last year.

The latest application follows an earlier one which was thrown out by Justice Priscilla Chigumba on February 16.
The Mutasa couple also filed a different application on the same day, arguing that the value of the attached assets far exceeded the US$26 900 being asked for by the lawyers.

The urgent case is being handled by High Court judge, Justice Amy Tsanga, who heard the case in her private chambers a few hours after Mutasa’s new lawyers, Mwonzora and Associates filed his papers.
In the application, Mutasa’s wife argues that the law firm ‘fraudulently’ attached her assets as she had contributed to their acquisition from her own earnings.

She also argues that she was never part of the legal proceedings and therefore was being wrongfully deprived of her assets.
“I have been married to the second applicant for 47 years. During that period, I have been gainfully employed as well and directly or indirectly contributed to the acquisition of the assets. Further, these matrimonial assets are indivisible as they were jointly acquired,” she argues.

“The property attached and subsequently removed partly belongs to me as I took part in their acquisition as a productive and gainfully employed spouse. Even when the second applicant was in political detention during the armed struggle, I remained fending for the family and laying the foundation for the acquisition of all the matrimonial assets that we have as a family.

“I was never a part of the legal proceedings between the respondent (the law firm) and the first applicant. I was not aware that there was a judgment that would affect me until I became aware of the same on the 10th of February 2017 when the second respondent ( sheriff) visited our homestead armed with the writ of execution against the property,” she further states.

In the same application, Gertrude is also seeking to have the default judgment which empowered the deputy sheriff to attach the property to be stayed.

“Now that my interests were affected, I made an application for rescission of the default judgment so that I can be accorded an opportunity to defend myself in this suit. I have worked hard in my life to acquire them. I am therefore a person affected by the judgment. To this end, I pray that the execution of the default judgment be stayed until the application I have filed is heard by this honourable court,” she contends.

Gertrude further reasons that Justice Chigumba erroneously dismissed the urgency of the earlier application and raises allegations of fraud.

“From the application I have filed under HC1482/17, it is clear that this default judgment was obtained by fraud and was erroneously granted by the honourable court.

“I am a business woman venturing inter alia in horticulture. I need to use my vehicles and fridges for my business,” she argues.
Mutasa engaged the Automobile Association of Zimbabwe for valuation of the two vehicles and argued that Nyakutombwa Mugabe deliberately deflated the price of the Range Rover Sport to US$15 000 when its actual price was US$75 000.
The Land Rover Discovery, they argued, is valued at US$40 000 but the law firm had pegged it at US$15 000.

“According to papers brought by the second respondent, the judgment debt is US$26 919, 25. However, the second respondent has attached and removed property worth more than US$120 610. Even by the figures he has put, which are wrong, the total amount of goods removed is US$36 000 which is about US$10 000 over the judgment debt. The injustice caused by the attachment is so glaring that the malice of the respondent is clear,” he argues in his own papers.
The law firm is, however, defending its case.

“He (Mutasa) requested an itemised bill which was provided on several occasions at his request through e-mails. He queried the bill but did not take it to taxation, which meant that the judgment would be executed as it was given,” states the law firm in its opposing papers defending the value of properties that were attached.
Justice Tsanga heard the case at 16:00 hours on Tuesday, February 21 and is expected to hand over judgment today. – Fingaz

Tsvangirai Sued For Breach Of Promise

The case in which Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, is being sued for allegedly failing to pay for political consultancy allegedly rendered by a Harare man in the run-up to the 2013 harmonised elections will be heard in the Labour Court next week.

Justice Lilian Hove will on March 6 hear a case in which Moreprecision Muzadzi, president of little known Voice of the People party, is seeking the court’s permission to sue Tsvangirai out of time saying he could not have instituted legal proceedings earlier because he had confidence that a person the former Prime Minister’s stature would act in good faith and honour his side of the bargain.

Muzadzi claims his consultancy services to Tsvangirai involved lobbying leaders of all opposition parties in Zimbabwe not to contest the 2013 presidential elections, but to rally behind the MDC-T candidate, on the understanding that Tsvangirai would pay him in cash and kind, which promise Tsvangirai has since reneged on.

“I did a job for Morgan Richard Tsvangirai from January 2013 to July 2013 as a negotiator for his opposition grand coalition project for his presidential candidature in 2013 presidential elections,” wrote Muzadzi in his founding affidavit.

Muzadzi said he together with Kisinoti Mukwazhe, the leader of another microscopic political outfit, the Zimbabwe Democratic Party, managed to get leaders of at least 16 opposition parties to agree to stand aside in favour of Tsvangirai in the 2013 presidential election.

Muzadzi said together with Mukwazhe, they were each promised US$7 800 and a Nissan NP200 vehicle by Tsvangirai.

He claims the embassies of Australia, the United States of America and the head of the European Union delegation in Zimbabwe were supporting the clandestine project.

However, the deal later did not materialise, resulting in Tsvangirai refusing to pay for the services rendered.

Muzadzi said a follow up on Tsvangirai showed that the former trade unionist was unwilling to pay for the work done for him, hence his belated decision to approach the Labour Court.

“The applicant didn’t want to tarnish the reputation of the former prime minister of Zimbabwe over the ‘paltry’ allowances (US$7 800 and Nissan PN200),” said Muzadzi.

Under Zimbabwean law, claims of a labour nature usually prescribe after two years, which is the reason why Muzadzi has applied for condonation of late noting of his appeal. Fingaz

Women Lost Breasts In “Fake Cancer Diagonoses”

A cancer surgeon needlessly removed women’s breasts possibly to improve his earnings at trial heard on Tuesday.

Dr. Ian Patterson operated on ten patients despite knowing it was unnecessary, and repeatedly lied to his victims about their condition saying they have cancer and it must be removed, it was claimed on Tuesday.

Prosecutor Julian Christopher said the 59 year old Doctor had his own obscure motives for the deception. He said he may have inflated his workload to keep up his image of being at the top of his game or simply enjoyed the power of making people think their lives were in his hands.

Mr Christopher added saying, ” he may have wanted to earn extra money by doing extra operations and follow up consultations all of these being private  some funded by insurance, some finding the money themselves.”

Patterson who denies 20 counts of wounding with intent, is said to have carried out the needless breast operations on 9 women and a man some of whom had multiple procedures from 1997 to 2011.  The youngest alleged victim Leanne Joseph was unable to breastfeed after her milk ducts were removed when she was 25. She was told the procedure was a small price to pay for her life despite a scan showing her breasts were free of cancer, Nottingham Crown Court heard.  Patterson from Altrincham, Greater Manchester worked in the West Midlands for Heart of England NHS Trust and private Spire Healthcare. The trial continues. – metro.co.uk

Mugabe My Inspiration – Chidyausiku

President Mugabe is a great pride of the nation and a source of inspiration to many people including his enemies, Retired Chief Justice Godfrey Guwa Chidyausiku has said.
He made the remarks at a farewell dinner hosted for him by the Judicial Service Commission in Harare on Tuesday.

Justice Chidyausiku’s tenure of office ended on Tuesday after serving as the head of Judiciary for 16 years after reaching the mandatory 70 years of age last week. He told the gathering that President Mugabe’s sense of propriety was beyond reproach.

“I do not think there is anybody in my generation who fails to be inspired by His Excellency, the President,” said Justice Chidyausiku. “He (President Mugabe) is the kind of person who inspires people whether you like it or not, even his enemies talk well of him.

“He is the single Zimbabwean, I can say who has provided more inspiration to me than anybody else.”

The former Chief Justice said during his tenure as either a judge, Attorney-General or Chief Justice, President Mugabe never influenced his decisions.

“On occasions, I did brief him on what was going on,” said Justice Chidyausiku.
“He just listened without comments and he would never ever attempt to influence you.”
The former Chief Justice took the occasion to reflect on his successes and challenges he faced during his more than 40-year-long career, as a lawyer, attorney-general, and in the judiciary.

He spoke of the decentralisation of the High Court, the work he left unfinished, transformation of the Judicial Service Commission and the decisions made by his bench.
He highlighted the role he played in the land reform programme as a major achievement in his career as Chief Justice.

Justice Chidyausiku expressed no regret on the landmark decision he made on the land case, which ended up at the disbanded Sadc Tribunal in Namibia. The Retired Chief Justice said he belonged to the generation that fought the liberation struggle to correct the historical land imbalances.

“The most satisfying thing to me is the role that I played in the land reform programme,” he said.

“Some people believe the judiciary was not independent because some of the judgments were perceived to be in favour of the Government.

“But the real reason is, I belong to that generation that fought for this country. And that is what really impressed my perception, not that I wanted to please anybody.”

The former Chief Justice said both his paternal and maternal grandfathers Chief Chinamhora and Chief Chiweshe respectively, lost land to the colonial regime.
To this end, he said, it would have been betrayal to the ancestry if he had not performed a key role in the land reform programme, as the head of the judiciary.

Justice Chidyausiku singled the discord over his successor as the biggest disappointment in his professional career.

“There are times when things are not going the way they should. One of them (disappointments) is the way we are quarrelling about my successor,” he said.

“It’s a big disappointment, but it is nothing that we cannot overcome. I am sure we will overcome it without any difficulty. My view is, there is really no dispute, there is really no issue. With the passage of time, things are going to fall into place.

“I would have wanted to leave one, very united judiciary that is fearless, independent and with the back bone of steel.”

Justice Chidyausiku was appointed as Zimbabwe’s new Chief Justice in July 2001.
Born on February 23, 1947 in Domboshava, Chief Justice Chidyausiku attended Mutake School at Makumbi Mission, and then St Ignatius College in Chishawasha.
He got a place at the then University of Rhodesia from 1968 to 1972 where he read law. He then went into private legal practice.

At the 1974 general election, Justice Chidyausiku won the Harare African Roll Constituency, standing with the unofficial support of the African National Council which had been set up by Zanu, Zapu and Frolizi. He acted in opposition to the government of Ian Douglas Smith.

Justice Chidyausiku stood down at the 1977 election. In the 1980 election, Chief Justice Chidyausiku was elected as 12th on Zanu-PF’s list for Mashonaland East Province when Zanu-PF won 14 seats.

He was Deputy Minister in the then Ministry of Local Government and Housing and of Justice from 1980, and was promoted to be Attorney-General in 1982.

Chief Justice Chidyausiku was later promoted to be a judge and served as chair of the constitutional convention charged with drafting a new Constitution for Zimbabwe in 2000.
After the resignation of former Chief Justice Anthony Gubbay, Chief Justice Chidyausiku was named as Zimbabwe’s new Chief Justice in July 2001. – State Media

Tsvangirai Aide Accuses ZRP Cops Of Lying

Terrence Mawawa, Mutare| A senior official of the Morgan Tsvangirai led MDC has accused the police of lying that he evaded arrest.

MDC Manicaland Provincial chairperson, David Anthony Chimhini said claims by the police he evaded arrest were baseless. The police last week claimed Chimhini evaded arrest during an unsanctioned NERA demonstration last year.

Chimhini was initially arrested following the NERA demonstration and was released after the court ruled that the case would proceed by way of summons. Chimhini said he was shocked when the police claimed he ran away during the NERA demonstration.

“The police said I took part in the NERA demonstration and went into hiding but that is not true.I have always been around because the state said I would be called to court by way of summons. I will therefore wait to hear from them,” said Chimhini.
Party sources said the police got angry when Tsvangirai expressed concern at the presence of cops at a meeting he addressed in Mutare.

“Honourable Chimhini was called by the police who said he was facing charges of barring officers on duty from attending the meeting that was addressed by President Tsvangirai. The police later accused Honourable Chimhini of running away from the law enforcement agents,” said Takudzwa Magwere, the MDC Provincial Youth Organising Secretary.

Mnangagwa Loses Presidency (acting)

Mugabe breaks baton protocol

Vice President Emmerson Mnangawga yesterday lost the Acting Presidency to his counterpart Phelekezela Mphoko at a time when Mnangagwa was the right person on the rotational swap.

Eyebrows were raised when President Robert Mugabe skipped Mnangagwa preferring Mphoko who takes over as state boss for the second time running following Mugabe’s breaking of the baton protocol.

Mugabe’s unannounced medical trip to Singapore.

Mugabe left Zimbabwe unannounced to Singapore for medicals. His spokesman George Charamba however claimed the trip was planned saying these were scheduled medical checkups. The President’s declared itinerary however had no such listing prior to yesterday.

Analysts speculated on why the ailing 93 year old chose to jump his aide of 40 years running, Emmerson Mnangagwa, the latter who Mugabe is under pressure from war veterans to handover power to. This month marks 7 months after Mugabe was ordered to resign and handover to Mnangagwa.

 

Mnangagwa cannot be trusted

But Mphoko has told Robert Mugabe that Mnangagwa cannot be trusted.

Mnangagwa must be stopped, Mphoko says. Mphoko warned that once Mugabe closes his eyes there is no more trust in Zimbabwe.

Speaking in December last year in an announcement which the Mnangagwa controlled state broadcaster ZBC attempted to twist and muzzle, Mphoko openly backed the Dick Mafios Declaration which seeks to dislodge Mnangagwa through a stripping of President Mugabe’s powers of appointment, the powers upon which Mnangagwa’s future hangs.

His words were also trumpeted by Professor Jonathan Moyo who added saying in writing: “Anyone who aspires for higher office must seek the people’s mandate via elections & not idiotically treat an appointment as an anointment.

“What is idiotic? Entitlement based succession is what is idiotic. President Mugabe was elected & not anointed. His term of office is live.

“Driven by their sense of entitlement, power hungry successionists & their clueless media mouthpieces are fatally allergic to elections. Sad!”

Mphoko and Moyo are Ndebeles whose tribe was brutalised by Mnangagwa during the early 1980s. Mphoko now sides with the First Lady Grace Mugabe’s G40 faction which stands to lose all once President Mugabe shuts his eyes out for eternity.

Speaking for the first time, Mphoko said there will be horror, sorrow – no trust at all in Zimbabwe after President Robert Mugabe’s death. He pointed out that  Mugabe is the pivot of trust holding the nation together. – ZimEye

Fake Cops To be Freed From Jail

The High Court has ordered the release of three bogus cops who were last year each sentenced to five years in jail after they used fake police identification cards to mount illegal road blocks and extort $70 from two motorists.

Zibusiso Sikhosana (23) and Brian Mbewe (27) both of Greenhill and Marvellous Ndlovu (23) of Cowdray Park were convicted of extortion and impersonating a police officer by magistrate Mr Stephen Ndhlovu who sentenced them to an effective three years imprisonment after conditionally suspending two years.

Justice Nicholas Mathonsi, who was sitting with Justice Maxwell Takuva during the criminal appeals court, set aside the sentence. The judge said the sentence imposed by the lower court did not fit the offence committed by the trio.

He said the three men were supposed to have been fined or given community service.

“This is a case in which the penal provision being applied allowed the sentencer to impose a fine. The offenders were youthful first offenders who committed the offence under the influence of intoxicating liquor and they only extorted $70 which is no doubt a very small. Of that amount $50 had already been repaid to the complainants at the time of the conviction,” he said.

Justice Mathonsi substituted the sentence with 12 months in jail for each of the trio.

He suspended six months for five years on condition that they do not within that period commit a similar offence.

Of the remaining six months, the judge set aside three-and-half months on condition they jointly and severally restituted the two complainants $20.

Justice Mathonsi said since the three men had already served two-and- half months, they were entitled to immediate release.

The court heard that on November 23, last year at around 7PM, the three men were travelling in a Honda Fit along Nketa Drive when they mounted a fake police vehicle check point and stopped motorists. Sikhosana and Mbewe waved at Mr Tapiwa Pikirai, a prison officer stationed at Khami Remand Prison to stop.

They produced fake police identity cards and told him that they were plain clothes police officers conducting an operation targeting illegal pirate taxis.

The court heard that the bogus traffic police officers told Mr Pikirai that they were taking his car to the Vehicle Inspection Department (VID). Mbewe asked Mr Pikirai if he had any money on him, and he produced a $50 note.

Upon receiving the “fine”, they got out of the complainant’s car and told him to drive off.

Mr Pikirai saw the trio at another place soliciting a bribe from a different motorist and then teamed up with him to report them to the police.

On the second count, the trio extorted $20 from Mr Lawrence Zingwevhu of Nketa 8 suburb. They used the same method of impersonating a police officer. – State Media

Now Criminal To Beat Up Kids At Home Or At school

The High Court has issued a landmark ruling outlawing beating of children at school and in homes.

Justice David Mangota held that parents and teachers must not lay their hands on children even if they misbehave.

Recently another High Court judge Justice Esther Muremba, ruled out caning of juveniles as judicial punishment, but the decision now awaits confirmation at the Constitutional Court.

Justice Mangota also declared unconstitutional Section 69(2) (c) of the Education Act which permits corporal punishment.

Sections 3 to 7 of the Education Disciplinary Regulations 1985 contained in Statutory Instrument 362 of 1998, was declared to be in violation of the Constitution.

Justice Mangota will write a detailed judgment giving reasons for his decision. However, the matter will be sent to the Constitutional Court for confirmation.

Constitutional law expert Mr Tendai Biti, filed the court application at the High Court in June last year on behalf of a parent whose child was being beaten by a teacher at Belvedere Primary School in Harare.

Mrs Linah Pfungwa, with the support of Justice for Children’s Trust, filed the court application arguing that corporal punishment was a form of violence and must be abolished. She indicated in her affidavit that her daughter who was in Grade One, was severely assaulted with a rubber pipe by her teacher identified as Mrs Chemhere.

The reason for the punishment, Mrs Pfungwa said, was that the girl’s reading book had not been signed by guardians as confirmation that she had done her homework.

“My child suffered major bruises and I took photographs and pictures of the same. She had deep bruises on her back and she could hardly sleep properly.
“I posted the pictures of my daughter on our WhatsApp group for other parents to observe and it turned out that other children had also been assaulted.”

Mrs Pfungwa and other family members approached the headmistress at Belvedere Primary School with the complaint and she undertook to investigate.

The woman’s lawyers even wrote to the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education complaining before filing the court application.

Mrs Pfungwa argued that that corporal punishment was inhuman. “I believe corporal punishment is violence against children and I do not believe that children should be subjected to any form of violence. I further believe that corporal punishment is a physical abuse of children.

“It amounts to deliberately hurting a child, which causes injuries such as bruises, broken bones, burns or cuts..”

She also argued that corporal punishment in schools was dangerous because it was administered indiscriminately without any measure of control.

At home, Mrs Pfungwa said, she did not beat up her child.

“If my child misbehaves, I ground her by denying her access to television as well as denying her pocket money or other goodies like sweets and presents.

“If she does well, I reward her by presents or extra hours of watching television.

“My child is well-behaved and well-brought up simply as a result of the dialogue that I use as a means of discipline,” she said. – State Media

Police Harass Tourists

Tourists have added their voice to growing concerns over the heavy presence of Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) details on Zimbabwe’s, roads, with over half of respondents in a Zimbabwe National Statistical Agency (Zimstat) survey saying they felt harassed.

The harassment also includes confrontations with officials from the Department of Immigration and the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (ZIMRA)’s customs office, according to the visitor exit survey (VES) released on Tuesday.

The VES polled 38,680 foreign tourists over a 12 months period between 2015 and November 2016.

Harassment by the police constituted the highest percentage of the reasons not to recommend the country to potential tourists, at 43.2 percent, followed by harassment by ZIMRA officers at 14.7 percent.

Harassment by Immigration stood at 8.7 percent, according to VES, which recommended immediate action against ruthless treatment of tourists by public officers.

It noted that even though the number appeared small, it had affected revenue inflows into the country.

“In order to retain reputation of Zimbabwe being a hospitable nation there is need to ensure continuous training of frontline personnel who interact with visitors creating the first and last impressions on the destination such as Immigration, customs and police,” Zimstat said in the report.

Zimstat did not ask tourists the type of harassment they received at Zimbabwe’s 10 ports of entry, including airports.

But there has been outrage by tourism industry players in the past nine years following the heavy deployment of police officers on the roads.

They are reportedly harassing motorists including tourists and using sharp metal objects to destroy wheels of motor vehicles to force drivers to stop on roadblocks.

The smashing of windscreens is a common occurrence.

The police force is reportedly generating millions of dollars per year through vehicle enforcement, which has been condemned by senior judges in Zimbabwe.

The Zimbabwe Council for Tourism (ZCT), which represents the country’s major tourism players, condemned the groundswell of harassment and warned that the industry had lost substantial revenue due to the actions of the police.

Industry estimates say the industry, which generates about $800 million per annum, could easily breach the $1 billion mark if a range of hurdles, including the frequent security checks, were addressed and enough financial resources were deployed to finance marketing.

The Ministry of Tourism and Hospitality Industry was allocated $2 million for the 2017 fiscal year.

“We don’t have to beat about the bush in terms of the damage that is done by (police) roadblocks to the product,” said ZCT chief executive officer Paul Matamisa.

“If you are going to Bulawayo and there are 20 roadblocks you spend time stopping on 20 roadblocks. In other countries you do not see so many roadblocks on roads to tourist resorts. That has to be dealt with effectively. They are doing tremendous damage to the tourism industry,” he added.

A police spokesman at the meeting said the police had received numerous complaints of public harassment on highways and had started taking measures address the problem.

He said, however, that the ZRP has not specifically received complaints pertaining to foreign tourists.

“We take seriously the complaints. We investigate each and every complaint that comes to us. We have set up a customer care service spearheaded by our public relations department to teach our officer how to handle the public,” said the spokesman. – The Source

SDA Church ‘Killer’ Faces Fresh Charges

One of the four armed robbers that allegedly killed a security guard at a Seventh Day Adventist (SDA) church-run primary school in Bulawayo’s Pelandaba suburb last month, was back in court yesterday facing charges of possessing a gun without a licence.

Martin Dlamini (36) of New Magwegwe whose hand got fractured last month during his arrest, is still in plaster.

Police arrested Dlamini last month with Tomson Phuthi (40) of Mabuthweni suburb, Ndabezinhle Mpofu (25) of Old Pumula suburb and Onious Bhebhe of Old Magwegwe suburb for allegedly killing Mr Burton Sikalonga and savagely attacking Mr Vusumuzi Tshuma who were guarding the school’s premises.

Dlamini pleaded not guilty to possessing a gun without a licence and the magistrate Mr Tinashe Tashaya remanded him in custody to March 14.

Prosecuting, Mr Nkathazo Dlodlo said on January 23, police received a tip off that Dlamini had a gun.

“Police carried out a search at his place of residence leading to recovery of a star pistol and one live round of ammunition hidden in a disused refrigerator in his kitchen,” he said.

Mr Dlodlo said Dlamini initially admitted ownership of the firearm.

The state said it could produce the star pistol and bullet as exhibits in court.

Mr Sikalonga died on admission to Mpilo Central Hospital following the attack while his workmate Mr Tshuma sustained injuries.

The four robbers who were allegedly armed with a gun, stole three laptops, five SDA T-shirts and nearly $300 at the school and church which are on the same premises.

The court heard that the suspects struck Sikalonga with an iron bar on the head and all over his body before stabbing him with a hunter’s knife on January 17 at around 3AM.

The four accused who are facing murder charges were last month remanded in custody to March 17. – State Media

Horror As Man Sets Wife On Fire While Son (7) Watches

A Gweru man allegedly doused his wife with paraffin and set her on fire resulting in her death while the couple’s seven- year old son watched.

Eddy Mpofu was allegedly angry after his wife, Bongani Nyathi received a message on her phone.

The boy testified that he saw his father dousing his mother with paraffin before setting her on fire but Mpofu maintains that his wife committed suicide.

Gweru Magistrate Mr Musaiwona Shotgame sitting as a coroner heard that Nyathi died after her husband, attacked her in August last year.

The couple’s seven-year-old son told the coroner that Mpofu found him and his mother at the shops.

“At the time he entered the shop my mother received a text message and my father demanded to be given the phone.

“My mother gave him the phone and he started asking her who had sent her the text message. “Father gave back the phone to my mother and he proceeded to a bar.

“When he came home later that evening my father refused to eat, locked the door and started beating my mother demanding to know who had sent her the text message.

“He pushed her against the wall, took a bottle that contained paraffin and poured it on her before he lit a match.

“My mother who was now on fire screamed for help, that is when my father took a blanket that was on the bed and covered her.

“He called for a car which rushed my burnt mother to the clinic,” said the child.

Mpofu said he had a domestic dispute with his wife that led to a fight.

“My wife then went on to pour paraffin all over her body and lit herself up with a match. I then put out the fire by covering her body with a blanket and took her to the hospital,” he told the coroner.

The inquest continues on March 20. – State Media

ZRP Cops Chase Tourists Away

In yet another major setback for Zimbabwe’s international standing, the Zimbabwe National Statistics Agency (ZimStat) yesterday released a damning report in which 10 000 tourists complained about the police — with 500 of them promising never to return to the country again, citing harassment by law enforcement agents.

At the same time, 14 358 tourists also condemned the sorry state of the country’s roads, which they branded as “very poor” in a visitor survey conducted by the government at the country’s 10 ports of exit between July 2015 and June 2016.

This comes as Zimbabwe’s tourist industry, already battered by the country’s poor international political standing, is struggling to attract visitors because of its uncompetitive product offering and the complaints of harassment by police on the country’s roads.
ZimStat’s tourist survey findings come amid the outcry by locals that pervasive, bribe-seeking police roadblocks are making travelling by car in the country an impossible mission.

“Roads were rated poor and very poor by 42,4 percent of visitors. Similarly, police services were rated poor and very poor by 25,1 percent of the visitors.

“Visitors who had no intentions of visiting again or recommending destination Zimbabwe to others were asked for the reasons and the major one cited were high prices (63,2 percent), harassment by police (43,2 percent) and poor infrastructure and other facilities which accounted for 31,1 percent,” the survey concluded.

A cross section of Zimbabweans, including Parliament and the Zimbabwe Tourism Authority (ZTA), has regularly raised serious concerns about the heavy presence of police on the roads, saying it was a hindrance to both the growth of the tourism sector and commerce generally.

Zimbabwe boasts of having some of the world’s most renowned tourist destinations, including the majestic Victoria Falls and scenic Eastern Highlands attractions among many others.

However, poor local infrastructure and the ubiquitous police roadblocks have seen deep-pocketed international tourists giving the country a wide berth, in favour of other regional destinations like South Africa and Mauritius.

“We have observed as Parliament that there is no law concerning roadblocks and they are just being erected willy-nilly.

“Tourists driving from Beitbridge to Victoria Falls on average go through about 20
roadblocks. They have been checked at the border and passed through customs and immigration,” National Assembly Speaker Jacob Mudenda complained last year.

“In Tanzania, road blocks have been reduced from 58 to 15. In Kenya, they used to have 35 police road blocks between Mombasa and Malawi but by 2013 all road blocks had been removed.

“Now you bring an investor from outside and they land at Harare International Airport, they go through Customs and Immigration and just as they leave the airport, where there is our independence banner there is a road block!

“Can this investor be a criminal in that five metres they have travelled? Come on, this does not make sense. Let us not be our own enemies against strengthening the ease of doing business,” Mudenda added.

In a desperate bid to maintain acceptable occupancy levels, one of Zimbabwe’s most popular hotels, Leopard Rock, last year took the unprecedented step of re-imbursing tourists their money which they would have spent on paying traffic fines en route to the hotel.

Last week, the High Court ruled that there was no law that allowed police to confiscate licences and impound vehicles of drivers who refuse to pay spot fines.

In the High Court application filed by Andrew Makunura, who was represented by Tonderai Bhatasara, in which he sought an order barring police from demanding spot fines, and that he be given back his driver’s licence, police made the welcome concession that paying spot fines was optional.

Judge Esther Muremba subsequently ruled that spot fines were illegal.
“In their plea, the defendants (including Home Affairs minister Ignatius Chombo and Chihuri) denied that when the plaintiff failed to pay the spot fine he was detained or compelled to pay it as paying a spot fine is optional to motorists who are willing to do so.

“The defendants averred that spot fines have already been declared to be unconstitutional in terms of the old Constitution and as such they (defendants) have no reason to disrespect the law,” Muremba noted. – Daily News

Govt Begs Civil Irate Civil Servants For Dialogue

Government has made an undertaking to pay its workers the 2016 bonuses. There is no reason to doubt Government’s commitment to honouring this obligation given that over the years it has paid the civil servants the 13th cheque which is part of their conditions of service.

It is a fact that many companies long stopped paying bonuses because the economy is underperforming. Companies have been able to forgo this luxury because at most companies a bonus is not part of the conditions of service but just a “thank you” paid to workers for a good performance.

In 2015 Government was forced to stagger the payment of bonuses because of cash-flow challenges resulting in some civil servants being paid their 2015 bonuses mid last year. The situation has not changed much and as such Government is likely to stagger the payment of the 2016 bonuses given the fact that more than 80 percent of its monthly revenue is gobbled by salaries.

Government has since last year held several meetings with the workers’ representatives with a view to coming up with the best way of addressing the issue of bonus payment. The Minister of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare Cde Prisca Mupfumira, the Minister of Finance and Economic Development, Cde Patrick Chinamasa and the Reserve Bank Governor Dr John Mangudya have been meeting the workers’ representatives to explain challenges Government is facing as a result of reduced revenue inflows into its coffers.

It is because of this realisation that Government tabled three options of paying bonuses which are the residential stands, cash stipend coupled with non-monetary benefits and property investment bonds. After the engagement meeting between Government and workers’ representatives on January 25, workers’ representatives said they wanted to consult their constituencies regarding the new Government offer on bonuses.

Government was therefore taken aback on Monday when civil servants unions under the banner of Apex Council announced that they want to hold a demonstration over delays in paying bonuses. Following this announcement, nurses at some Government hospitals on Tuesday downed tools demanding that Government should announce the dates for the payment of bonuses.

Minister Mupfumira has once again said Government is committed to paying the promised bonuses and was more than ready to meet the workers representatives next Monday as scheduled. We want at this juncture to appeal to workers to give dialogue a chance as stated by Minister Mupfumira.

Industrial action is not the solution to the problem at hand but instead it will worsen the situation.

Civil servants, we want to believe, are aware of the cash-flow challenges facing Government and taking industrial action will therefore be irresponsible on their part. The workers’ representatives should seriously consider the non-monetary benefits as opposed to insisting on cash which Government does not have. – State Media

Mnangagwa Aide Freed

freed…Godfrey-Tsenengamu

Former Zanu-PF Mashonaland Central youth chairperson Godfrey Tsenengamu, who is facing allegations of subverting a constitutionally elected Government or alternatively undermining the authority of the President, was yesterday freed on $100 bail.

Tsenengamu also stands accused of contravening the Public Order and Security Act by holding a press conference without notifying the regulating authority.

High Court judge Justice Priscilla Chigumba ordered Tsenengamu to surrender his travel documents at the clerk of court’s office.

He must report at Waterfalls police station every Friday until finalisation of the criminal case and was barred from interfering with witnesses and investigations.
Tsenengamu was represented by Harare lawyer Mr Zivanai Macharaga, while Mr Tapiwa Kasema from the National Prosecuting Authority appeared for the State.

Tsenengamu will be back at the Harare Magistrate’s Court on March 9 for routine remand.
The politician unsuccessfully challenged placement on remand before a Harare magistrate.

Allegations against Tsenengamu arose on February 20 when he convened a public meeting at the Media Centre in Harare without notifying the responsible authorities.

The court heard that he went on to publicly and unlawfully make statements urging war veterans across the country to push President Mugabe out of office through unconstitutional means.

He was quoted as telling journalists that it was time to go public about the “succession thing because some of us have since identified our candidate and its none other than Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa…” – state media

Zimra To Attach Properties Of Tax Defaulters

CIO boss’ wife, Willia Bonyongwe…Zimra boss

Zimbabwe’s tax agency says it will start attaching properties belonging to defaulters to recover up to $2,5 billion in unpaid taxes spanning back to 2009.

The Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) acting commissioner, domestic taxes Regina Chinamasa, told journalists on Wednesday that the authority was this year targeting to recover at least 20 percent of the tax debt.

“We try to create a balance in our debt recovery measures, in as much as government wants money we are also cognisant of the fact that companies need to survive. We ask them to come up with payment plans so that they liquidate their debt,” Chinamasa told a tax seminar.

Zimra Acting Commissioner General Happias Kuzvinzwa said: “We can only garnish you and we can attach moveable property but you have not heard of Zimra attaching property, all you have heard up to now is the garnishment. Our patience is soon running out, we will start attaching property for unpaid taxes”.

In 2016, Zimra collected $1,11 billion in outstanding debts. The Corporate Income Tax debt last year went up to $751, 49 million from $474, 97 million in 2015 while the Pay as You Earn debt was $662,16 million from $591,89 million in 2015.

In October 2014, Zimra gave an amnesty to defaulters to allow them to regularize and catch up on tax payments but the authority said the response was underwhelming.

Last year annual gross collections amounted to $3,4 billion, falling four percent short of the $3,6 billion target. – The Source

Sino Zimbabwe Sales Crumble

INCESSANT rains being experienced across the country have disrupted operations at Sino Zimbabwe Cement Company (SZCC) which has lost about 50 percent of business since the beginning of the year, management has said.

The company, a joint venture between the Zimbabwean and Chinese governments, has projected a further decline in sales this quarter citing different factors including liquidity challenges.

SZCC managing director Mr Wang Yong told Business Chronicle that their challenges were exacerbated by the continued smuggling of cheaper cement mainly from South Africa.
“We have recorded low business since the beginning of this year because of the heavy rains the country has been receiving. There is minimal activity taking place in the construction industry hence the low uptake of cement. We also have other factors, which are already prevailing in the economy, which include the cash shortages and the continued smuggling of cement products mainly from South Africa,” he said.

“Compared to the first two months of last year our sales have gone down by 50 percent and judging by reports we are still going to experience more rains this month (March) and therefore sales will still be depressed.”

Mr Yong, however, was optimistic that business would pick up in the second quarter of this year.

“Our traditional peak demand for cement starts from April that is when projects will then take off. We are hopeful that the economy will improve spurred by the good harvests which we are expecting this year and this will have a positive impact on industry as there could be disposable incomes to undertake other projects,” he said.

SZCC is the third largest cement producer in the country after Pretoria Portland Cement and Lafarge. The Gweru-based firm produces 400 000 tonnes of cement per year and commands a 25 percent market share.- state media

Barack and Michelle Obama to be paid $65million for their Biographies

It sure does pay to be the president.

Former President Barack Obama has inked a $65 million deal for his memoir, a joint agreement that also will include a book written by former first lady Michelle Obama.

It is the highest amount ever paid for a presidential memoir.

The deal, announced Tuesday by publisher Penguin Random House, will pay for the global rights to two books to be written separately by the former president and his wife, according to the Financial Times.

Knopf, a division of Penguin Random House, paid $15 million for the rights to Bill Clinton’s 2004 memoir “My Life” when he left the White House, while George W. Bush made an estimated $10 million for his book “Decision Points,” which was published by Crown in 2010 — a Penguin Random House imprint that has previously published books by both Obamas.

“We are absolutely thrilled to continue our publishing partnership with President and Mrs. Obama,” Penguin Random House CEO Markus Dohle said in a statement.

“With their words and their leadership, they changed the world, and every day, with the books we publish at Penguin Random House, we strive to do the same. Now, we are very much looking forward to working together with President and Mrs. Obama to make each of their books global publishing events of unprecedented scope and significance.”

The unique dual arrangement is for books that are among the most anticipated in memory from a former president and first lady. Barack Obama is widely regarded as one of the finest prose stylists among recent presidents, and has written the million-selling “Dreams from My Father” and “The Audacity of Hope.”

Michelle Obama has given few details about her time as first lady: Her only book is about food and gardening, “American Grown,” released in 2012.

The publisher did not immediately say which imprint the books would be released through. Titles, publishing dates and other details about the books also were not immediately available.
– Associated Press/FoxNews

Mujuru Party Officially Splits

Zimbabwe People First (ZPF) elders — Rugare Gumbo and Didymus Mutasa — have said they will not fight former ally Joice Mujuru over the party’s name but co-exist as separate political entities using the same name.

Gumbo told the Daily News yesterday that while he and Mutasa were the founders and custodians of ZPF, his camp will not approach the courts in an attempt to block Mujuru from using the party name.

“If they think they can hold a congress, they can go ahead, it is their democratic right and we will not make any attempt to stop them because we are going to have ours in May, if all goes well,” Gumbo said.

“What is a fact and cannot be wished away is that we formed this party and we remain its bona fide owners after she (Mujuru) had failed in the mandate we had given her to lead us,” he said.

“Now the reality is that we head ZPF. Anything they want to do in the name of a congress is a circus and that is why we will not challenge them,” Gumbo said, adding “we have other serious issues to worry about than to think about what other parties are doing”.

This comes as Mujuru — who no longer sees eye-to-eye with Gumbo and Mutasa following a fallout over her leadership — has reportedly drafted a list of preferred lieutenants to take up key positions in her camp, ahead of their convention.

These include Samuel Sipepa Nkomo and either John Shumba Mvundura or Elliot Kasu as her two deputies.

While Mujuru’s ZPF spokesperson Jealousy Mawarire has said the congress is set for end of March or beginning of April, the exact date is expected to be announced tomorrow after a national executive council meeting.

He, however, said “the fact that we are going for national convention means that all positions, including that of the president down to the lowest position, are vacant and anyone can contest because we are a democratic party”. – Daily News

Bond Note Value Drops


The trading value of bond notes dropped yesterday. In Bulawayo at the famous so called, “world bank” location where people buy foreign currency traders were selling USD100 for 107 Bond Notes.

1979 CHANGE-FLOODS: Kasukuwere Declares National Disaster


The government has declared a national state of disaster following heavy rains which pounded most parts of the country since the onset of the rain season.

Speaking to the state broadcaster ZBC News, after a cabinet meeting, the Minister of Local Government, Public Works and National Housing, Saviour Kasukuwere confirmed the declaration saying several modalities are being put in place to mobilise funds to help flood victims and repair infrastructure.

The incessant rains have since claimed lives, destroyed bridges, roads, schools and thousands of homesteads.

Kasukuwere revealed that damage by the floods will cost millions of dollars, adding that it now requires the government to partner with the private sector and non-governmental organisations to mend the destroyed infrastructure.

Meanwhile, calls have been made for more emphasis on ensuring that the displaced residents are relocated to safe places and assisted to rebuild their homes after the situation normalises.

Speaking during the handover of a donation of 1000 loaves to the Sipepa community of Tsholotsho, the Minister of State for Matabeleland North Province and Senator for Tsholotsho, Ambassador Cain Mathema noted that action was needed to ensure that the same people were not affected by floods in the future by way of moving them to higher ground while dams are constructed in the flood prone areas.

He paid tribute to all who had taken an effort to assist the people of his area.

Chairman of the Landa John Nkomo Memorial Trust who were the facilitators for the donation and son to the country’s late Vice President, Mr Jabulani Nkomo said his organisation had embarked on the mission of helping the people of Tsholotsho as a way of protecting the philanthropic legacy of his father.

Bakers Inn area manager, Mr Muzingaye Ndlovu said his organisation felt it has a moral obligation to assist the people of Tsholotsho.

President Robert Mugabe recently extended a helping hand by donating 10 000kg of mealie meal to the affected Tsholotsho residents.

South African launches first wide body aircraft on Johannesburg-Vic Falls route


A South African Airways (SAA) Airbus A330 jetliner touched down at Victoria Falls International Airport Wednesday afternoon, becoming the first wide boarded aircraft to land in Zimbabwe’s prime resort town after the December completion of a $150 million expansion programme.

The expansion work stretched the airport’s runway to four kilometres, from about one and half kilometres, giving it capacity to handle long haul aircraft and trebling the airport’s annual passenger capacity to 1,5 million.

The facelift turned Victoria Falls into one of Africa’s best airports according to local officials, who said more flights this year.

Ethiopian Airlines will begin flying into Victoria Falls later this month, while Kenya Airways will in May launch a direct flight between Nairobi and Victoria Falls which will also link to Cape Town, South Africa.

Turkish Airlines has also indicated intentions to operate flights into the resort town. BA’s Comair also flies daily into the town from Johannesburg, South Africa.

SAA’s 222 seater aircraft touched down at 1220 hrs and was greeted with the traditional water cannon salute, before lifting off an hour later with 188 passengers, giving SAA country manager, Winnie Muchanyuka the confidence that the Victoria Falls/Johannesburg route would be viable.

She said Wednesday’s maiden flight could be the start of big things to come for the airline on the route, promising that should demand continues to rise, SAA was prepared to deploy the bigger A346 airliner.

Africa’s largest airline, which has flown daily to Victoria Falls from Johannesburg using a 150 seater plane, also flies daily into Harare from South Africa, as well as into Bulawayo, Zimbabwe’s second capital.

“Operating a wide board aircraft into Victoria Falls was only a dream three months ago,” said Muchanyuka.

“We are the first airline to partake the new facilities at Victoria Falls using a wide boarded aircraft. We saw the demand and the push on our seats. We could see that the numbers were increasing year by year. There is great potential in Victoria Falls. We see it through the numbers that are coming,” she said.

Givemore Chidzidzi, chief operating officer at the Zimbabwe Tourism Authority, said accessibility had been one of the handicaps affecting the local tourism industry. He said the arrival of bigger planes would improve tourist arrivals into the country.

“If we don’t address the issue of accessibility, we have a problem,” he said. – The Source

High Court Judge Slams ‘Power Hungry’ Magistrates

A High Court judge has blasted magistrates, describing them as “little kings and queens” who have a proclivity for power in their areas of operations where they have influence and likely to corrupt the judiciary system if let loose.

Bulawayo High Court judge Justice Francis Bere made the scathing remarks as he quashed a sentence imposed on a Gweru teenager who was convicted of unlawfully detaining his 16-year-old girlfriend and sentenced to 15 months in jail.

The matter had been brought to the High Court for review.

Abundance Sibanda (18) of Mkoba suburb was sentenced to an effective nine months in jail by a Gweru provincial magistrate for unlawful detention of his lover.

Justice Bere said magistrates wield so much influence and power which if not properly used was likely to corrupt the entire judiciary system.

“I must hasten to say that the office of the magistrate occupies a central role in the administration of both the civil and criminal justice system. Because the magistrate’s court is usually the court of first instance, the magistrate wields so much influence and power, which if not properly used can result in the corruption of the whole system.

“Magistrates are regarded as little kings and queens in their areas of operation and therefore it is important that they exercise extreme restraint and caution in executing their duties to avoid the possible abuse of power they hold, especially when dealing with a youthful and unrepresented accused person,” said the judge.

Justice Bere said it was wrong for the magistrate to opt for a prison term without first exploring the possibility of a fine.

“There is a need to treat youthful offenders with a measure of extreme mercy and to differentiate their treatment from those of mature individuals. The penalty provision in the charge preferred against the accused person in this case does in fact provide for a fine or imprisonment where the kidnapping or unlawful detention was not committed in aggravating circumstances,” he said.

The judge said it was clear that Sibanda did not use violence when he unlawfully detained the complainant.

“It is equally true that despite age, the victim appeared to have prevailed over the accused by deliberately refusing to immediately go back to her place and opting to return after the weekend. It cannot escape the mind of the court that despite her age, the victim showed signs of maturity that went beyond her age when she persuaded the accused to take her to his place,” said Justice Bere.

The judge said the sentence imposed on Sibanda was too harsh under the circumstances.

“The court in this case is clearly at large as regards the sentence. The court a quo’s sentence is set aside and substituted with a sentence to pay a fine of $150 in default of payment to undergo 20 days imprisonment,” ruled Justice Bere.

The judge said Sibanda, having already served a period in excess of the alternative period of imprisonment, is entitled to automatic release.

The court heard that on January 2 this year, the complainant, a Form Two pupil, visited her boyfriend at his home in Mkoba 16 after school and the two lovers stayed together until evening.

They spent the weekend together until January 23 when Sibanda decided to visit his parents in Shangani. When the complainant returned home her parents quizzed her about her whereabouts and she revealed that she was with her boyfriend. A report was made to the police leading to Sibanda’s arrest. – State Media

MUGABE HEALTH: President Airlifted to Singapore

George Charamba

President Robert Mugabe has been airlifted to Singapore.

The 93 year old leader is battling with a series of age related health challenges.

But his spokesman, Mr George Charamba, said his exit is all to do with medical checks he says are scheduled.

Charamba also played down speculation saying Mugabe at the time of leaving was expected back in the country early next week.

“His Excellency the President left this morning for Singapore for a scheduled medical review. We expect him back in the country early next week,” he said.
Vice President Phelekezela Mphoko has since been appointed the Acting President.

Age Limit For Presidential Candidates Scrapped

The Gambian parliament has scrapped the constitutional age limit on presidential election candidates.

The change comes after Gambian president Mr Adama Barrow (pictured) faced criticism over his decision to nominate 68-year-old Fatoumata Jallow Tambajang as his vice president.

A constitutional amendment that came into force in 1997, prohibits anyone over 65 years from running for The Gambia’s highest office.

According to the constitution, the vice president must fulfill the qualifications required for a president, which made Tambajang over age.

The constitutional change adopted by parliament will allow Mr Barrow to name Tambajang officially to the vice-presidency. -AFP

Jailed Mnangagwa Aide Freed | BREAKING NEWS

Former Zanu-PF Mashonaland Central youth chairperson Godfrey Tsenengamu, who is facing allegations of subverting a constitutionally elected Government or alternatively undermining the authority of the President, was yesterday freed on $100 bail.

Tsenengamu also stands accused of contravening the Public Order and Security Act by holding a press conference without notifying the regulating authority.

High Court judge Justice Priscilla Chigumba ordered Tsenengamu to surrender his travel documents at the clerk of court’s office.

He must report at Waterfalls police station every Friday until finalisation of the criminal case and was barred from interfering with witnesses and investigations.

Tsenengamu was represented by Harare lawyer Mr Zivanai Macharaga, while Mr Tapiwa Kasema from the National Prosecuting Authority appeared for the State.

Tsenengamu will be back at the Harare Magistrate’s Court on March 9 for routine remand.

The politician unsuccessfully challenged placement on remand before a Harare magistrate.

Allegations against Tsenengamu arose on February 20 when he convened a public meeting at the Media Centre in Harare without notifying the responsible authorities.

The court heard that he went on to publicly and unlawfully make statements urging war veterans across the country to push President Mugabe out of office through unconstitutional means.

He was quoted as telling journalists that it was time to go public about the “succession thing because some of us have since identified our candidate and its none other than Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa…” – State Media

Vendors To Bolster Civil Servants Strike

Social movements have said they will join a planned protest march by civil servants in order to put pressure on the government to address the social and economic problems facing the country.

Civil servants will on Monday next week embark on a strike over government’s failure to commit to paying them their 2016 bonuses.

Already the cash-strapped government is looking into the possibility of paying civil servants with residential stands, a move workers unions were not comfortable with. Social movements, who have been in hibernation since last year’s series of sporadic protests, have jumped to support the job action.

“A national shutdown has long been overdue. The Zanu PF government’s mis-prioritisation needs to be challenged. How can they spend millions on President Robert Mugabe’s senseless birthday when civil servants have not been paid? We are endorsing the strike and urging all progressive forces to support the strike. Mugabe must go as a matter of urgency and national security,” Promise Mkwananzi of Tajamuka/Sesjikile said.

National Vendors’ Union of Zimbabwe leader, Sten Zvorwadza said its members will stand in solidarity with colleagues from other sectors in order to pro-actively engage in governance issues rather than being passive citizens.

“It is commendable to see groups of people coming together as citizens to demand their rights as it is mandated by the Constitution of Zimbabwe. It is a healthy culture that should be encouraged and exercised as a constitutional right without harassment or being brutalised by the enforcement agents,” he said.

Patson Dzamara, brother of the abducted activist, Itai, said: “I will join the civil servants on their strike against exploitative labour practices by their employer, the government of Zimbabwe. We must continue to stand against all forms of exploitation and repression and will identify with all sectors of society which resist evil and stand up for good.”

He said the crisis in Zimbabwe was multi-faceted, hence, the response to it has to be equally multi-dimensional. Newsday

‘Ngwena’ Causes Chaos In Parliament

Tempers flared in Parliament yesterday after Gokwe-Nembudziya MP, Justice Mayor Wadyajena (Zanu PF) interjected fellow Zanu PF MP, Sarah Mahoka (Hurungwe East)’s speech over use of the word ngwena (crocodile).

Mahoka had claimed in Shona that schoolchildren in some parts of the country were being mauled by crocodiles, as they crossed flooded rivers to school. Wadyajena interjected her, asking, “which crocodile are you referring to”?

Ngwena is a term used in Zanu PF circles to refer to Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

This did not augur well with Mahoka, who warned Wadyajena against trivialising Parliament business, but Wadyajena kept interjecting, demanding her to be specify the type of crocodile she was referring to. Buhera South MP Joseph Chinotimba (Zanu PF) later intervened and asked Acting Speaker Melody Dziva to order the two ruling party legislators to discuss their differences outside the House. After more than 15 minutes of heckling, Dziva then ejected Wadyajena. Newsday

Jo’burg Mayor Is “Xenophobic And Arrogant” – Migrants

Zimbabwean migrants in South Africa have blasted Johannesburg mayor, Herman Mashaba, describing him as “xenophobic and arrogant”, after he allegedly displayed a hostile attitude towards them during a meeting held at his offices yesterday.

The meeting was expected to find ways to end hostilities between South African citizens and foreigners based in Johannesburg. Ngqabutho Mabhena, chairman of the Zimbabwe Community in South Africa (ZCSA), said the meeting ended in a deadlock, as Mashaba turned hostile and attempted to politicise the issue.

“On December 19 2016, we joined the African Diaspora Forum (ADF) to hand over a memorandum to the mayor of Johannesburg, following his xenophobic utterances,” he said.

“Today (yesterday), we were part of the meeting in the mayor’s office with ADF, as a follow up to the December 19 memorandum and the recent xenophobia attacks. Our meeting this morning did not achieve anything at all. The mayor of Johannesburg is xenophobic and arrogant. He seeks to deal with issues outside his mandate as part of the Democratic Alliance political programme for 2019.”

The meeting comes after a fresh round of xenophobic attacks preceded by an anti-immigration march in Pretoria on Friday last week and the continued looting of foreign-owned small shops in Pretoria and parts of Johannesburg at the weekend.

Mabhena said Mashaba was insisting on the “documentation of foreign nationals before protecting undocumented migrants in and around the city of Johannesburg”.

“This, in our view, is reactionary, as he seeks to recruit migrants into his political agenda. While we support the call for the documentation of migrants, we reject the call that undocumented migrants are involved in criminal activities. Most undocumented migrants are abused and exploited by their employers, who force them to work long hours for a little pay,” he said.

Mabhena added that the ZCSA would continue to work with South African President Jacob Zuma’s government in seeking a solution to the migration challenges facing that country.

“As the Zimbabwe Community in South Africa, we will continue working with the Department of Home Affairs on documentation issues,” he said.

Meanwhile, local human rights group, ZimRights has called on Sadc to urgently intervene and stop the xenophobic attacks happening in South Africa.

“ZimRights condemns the recent acts of xenophobic violence on African migrants, who include Zimbabweans in South Africa.The physical violence, destruction of property and abuse of African foreigners constitutes a violation of human rights, which the South African authorities and society must end urgently,” ZimRights said in a statement yesterday.

“The Southern Africa Development Community (Sadc) must take the issue of the migrant population and the human rights problem of xenophobic violence as a regional problem that South Africa needs to solve together with source countries. The xenophobic violence should be looked at from all sides as a hate crime and symptom of a genuine migration flow exacerbated by skewed regional development.

“For Zimbabwean migrants, there are push factors that drive them to South Africa such as the economic and governance deficiencies, which resulted in about 200 000 Zimbabweans, leaving the country and getting officially registered under the Special Dispensation Permit that expires on December 31, 2017. Equally, outside Sadc, other African countries where migrants come, such as Nigeria, have security concerns.” newsday

Olinda Seeks Prophet’s Help To Win Stunner Back – BREAKING NEWS

Seeing how dangerously unstable Olinda is, it was out of the public interest and most importantly, health and safety concerns that ZimEye decided to release the latest conversation with her relatives…

True to revelations that she has a split personality, a behaviour that has repeatedly manifested itself even on camera, Olinda Chapel has suddenly sought the help of a preacher so to get back Stunner.

Newsreaders will remember how Olinda performed drama on ZimEye.com in a live video -stream when she swung from one extreme straight to the other. She would declare and swear she is divorcing Stunner and travelling to Zimbabwe to remove her belongings, but in the same conversation after being grilled, would quickly move to begin longing for intimacy with him, Desmond Chideme, the same man she has on the hand just labelled a dreadful man.

Yesterday afternoon, Olinda wrote to Harare preacher Apostle Takura Gaadzikwa (also known as Try Emmanuel), asking for a prophecy if she can perchance recover her marriage.

“Will my marriage be restored?,” she asked.

The development comes after Olinda who has on live video threatened to harm Stunner, had her relatives reveal to ZimEye that she is an unstable person who has a double personality. They went ahead to dismiss speculation that her condition was caused by Stunner. She was always like that, “was never abused” before and she was raised well, they said.

Seeing how dangerously unstable Olinda is, it was out of the public interest and most importantly, health and safety concerns that ZimEye decided to release the conversation with her relatives.

Meanwhile, the preacher responded to the plea by writing this morning saying: “NOMMATER WHAT ONE HAS DONE. NOMMATER HOW YOU SEE THEM. GODS ARMS ARE OPEN FOR ALL. NEVER DESPISE SOMEBODY WHO RUNS TO GOD FOR HELP. GOD HAS HIS OWN WAYS OF CALLING HIS OWN. #REMEMBERPAULSCALLING” 

 

Grace Mugabe’s WhatsApp Messages Leak, All Blows Open

THE nasty fight between First Lady Grace Mugabe and Lebanese businessman, Ahmed Jamal, over a $1,35 million diamond ring, has taken a new twist with threatening WhatsApp chats between the two submitted in court as exhibits.

Jamal claims he had his three Harare properties illegally seized by Grace and her son, Russell Goreraza, after a diamond ring deal went sour.

In the affidavit, Jamal attaches WhatsApp chats he claims to have had with Grace.

Part of the messages quotes the First Lady as having said: “Threaten as much as you want, the property is gone, you have to come to terms with that you can abuse me but you owe me, you won’t force me to wear that thing…

“So why worry abusing me, you know it, all it’s your house, why not come and live in it! You only talk about your property what about my money … Stupid. Don’t ever think you will enter this country again (sic).”

In the massages, Grace accuses Jamal of being abusive, saying this will not solve anything.

“Can you please stop writing me, I don’t want any communication with you from now please,” she wrote.

Jamal denies threatening her, saying he had many houses around the world and only wanted what was his.

“It’s ok ma’am you are the First Lady in Zimbabwe and you rule.

“But one thing for sure, your $1m we don’t need. You can sure ask Dr Mhlanga and Rozana, I have never … safe if you change your mind, you can collect it from our office in Dubai.

“We are asking you to ask your people that break into our premises to leave my house. If any damages are done, we will have to let them pay for all (sic).”

It is not clear who Mhlanga and Rozana are.

Jamal, in the affidavit, then argues, police, in seizing his properties, were acting on directives from Goreraza and Grace, the first and second respondents, respectively, who had indicated their willingness to take over “properties associated with me in Zimbabwe”.

“I attach, hereto, as Annexure A1 threads of messages exchanged between the second respondent (Grace) and myself, where she goes by the moniker Rowesai Virimai.”

Jamal cites Chihuri, Senior Assistant Commissioner Thulani Ncube in his capacity as the Officer Commanding CID Law and Order and Superintendent Nyambo Viera, who is also attached to the Law and Order section as co-respondents.

“This is an application in terms of Order 13, Rule 87(2)(b) of the High Court Rules, 1971 and in terms of the Common Law for orders; joining the respondents in their respective capacities as fourth, fifth and sixth respondents in the matter under case number HC12497/16,” Jamal said through his lawyers Mtetwa and Nyambirai Legal Practitioners.

Jamal said he was of the view that the involvement of the top cops would necessitate the proper and full resolution of the dispute between him and the First Family.

The businessman also accuses Grace of abusing her status as First Lady, adding she had “scoffed” at the provisional court order issued on December 21 last year ordering her and her son to vacate all the properties they had seized.

Jamal claimed Grace taunted him, declaring she was in-charge of the country, adding the First Lady had also victimised his workers in the process.

While Grace has claimed the properties seizure was a police action that had nothing to do with her, Jamal argued to the contrary.

“Instead, I immediately received a text message from the second respondent (Grace) to leave her son (Goreraza) out and to do my papers in her name, a clear indication that she had seen the letter of demand.

“There was no claim, then, that this was a police operation, as is now claimed by Grace Mugabe and her son,” Jamal claimed, adding Grace had boasted she was immune from prosecution.

“I have no doubt that the actions of the police are motivated by their misplaced loyalty to the first family in fragrant breach of their constitutional obligations and the rule of law as there is no law that permits them to occupy properties without some form of court sanction.”

The business mogul further averred that he was convinced that Grace was involved in the property takeover from day one, as indicated by her “mocking me”.

The matter is set to be heard in the motion court today before High Court judge, Justice Lavender Makoni. – Newsday

Zinara Begs for $50Million To Repair Roads


(The Source) – Zimbabwe has mobilized $14,5 million out of the $100 million it needs to urgently repair its road network damaged by heavy rains, Transport and Infrastructural Development minister, Joram Gumbo has said.

The southern-African nation is currently experiencing above normal rainfall caused by Cyclone Dineo, which has damaged most of the country’s roads and bridges, particularly in the southern part of the country.

Gumbo told journalists on Wednesday that up to $100 million was required to carry out the emergency repairs.

“The Ministry of Finance has to date raised $14,5 million of the $100 million that is required for the emergency road repair programme, and this is being availed to all the road authorities- Department of roads, Urban Councils, District Development Fund (DDF) and Rural District Councils (RDCs),” he said.

“The Zimbabwe National Road Authority (Zinara) will also contribute $50 million to the financing, they are approaching the banks for loans.”

Gumbo said some of the work is expected to start as soon as the rains stop.

He later told Parliament that the ministry also had $5,5 million worth of bitumen at the Beitbrige Border Post from Japan to be used for road construction.

He said “all rural roads in the country are a state of disaster,” and that his ministry is also looking at assisting the City of Harare to rehabilitate urban roads that are severely potholed due to incessant rains that worsened the potholes.

Mangoma In Trouble, Took Wrong Money

Government has ordered former Energy minister, Elton Mangoma to reimburse part of the allowances he received amid allegations that he was erroneously paid after termination of his services in 2013.

In a letter dated January 31 this year and addressed to Mangoma, the Civil Service Commission (CSC) alleged that the Renewal Democrats of Zimbabwe party leader continued to receive allowances payable to Cabinet ministers between August 23 and 31 2013 due to late notification of termination of his services.

According to the letter, which was signed by Stephen Dihwa, on behalf of the Secretary for Energy and Power Development, Mangoma is expected to reimburse $1 064,61 to the government.

“The SSB [Salary Services Bureau] raised a surcharge of $1 064,61 in respect of salary and allowances overpaid for the period stated August 23 2013 to August 31 2013 . . . and to the late notification of termination of your services as minister,” part of the letter read.

But Mangoma yesterday questioned why it had taken the SSB so long to realise that they had overpaid him.

“The SSB should actually be paying me monies owed to me by government for my services as Energy minister. I am equally shocked that they want money from me and it is not the other way round,” he said.

Dihwa could not be reached for comment, as he was said to be in a meeting.

Mangoma was among top MDC-T officials appointed Cabinet ministers in the inclusive government, which also included Zanu PF and MDC. – Newsday

Drama As Fake Cop Mounts Roadblock At State-House

A 27-YEAR-OLD Harare man, who allegedly mounted an illegal police roadblock near State House, where he demanded spot fines from traffic offenders, appeared in court on Saturday charged with attempting to rob a newspaper delivery van.

Martin Ndoorwi was remanded in custody to March 9 by magistrate, Josephine Sande.

Ndoorwi is being charged alongside Innocent Pamire (32) and Khadri Amin (43), who are yet to appear in court.

Allegations are that on February 24 this year, a Patriot newspaper driver, Milton Shumba and his wife, Elizabeth Chuma were driving past State House along Borrowdale Road, when they were blocked by the suspects’ car, forcing them to stop.

The State alleged Ndoorwi, who was clad in police uniform, got out of the car, while the other suspects remained in their getaway vehicle.

Ndoorwi allegedly accused Shumba of driving past a red traffic light.

Ndoorwi and Chuma then jumped into Shumba’s car and ordered him to drive back to State House.

On approaching the State House entrance, Ndoorwi allegedly ordered Shumba to drive towards Harare Botanical Gardens, alleging that they wanted to use the back entrance.

The State alleges the suspects demanded to drive the vehicle themselves, but Shumba refused after suspecting that they were criminals.

The suspects then wrestled with him in a bid to grab the vehicle, before Shumba lost control of the vehicle and hit a pavement.

After the accident, Ndoorwi and Chuma allegedly jumped off and took to their heels, before members of the public gave chase and arrested the former.

The other suspects, who were in the getaway car, sped off with Shumba’s wife, whom they later dropped in Mt Pleasant.

Ndoorwi later implicated Pamire, Amin and two other suspects only identified as Gondo and Joe. He also allegedly led police officers to his house, where a riot police jacket, three riot trousers and one webbing belt were recovered.

Pamire was arrested at Pamuzinda in Kuwadzana and he led to the recovery of the getaway car and the subsequent arrest of Amin, who was found in possession of a police identity card in the name of a Constable Zondo, and a pair of handcuffs.

Nancy Chandakaona appeared for the State. – Newsday

More Hospital Chaos As Nurses Go On Strike

NURSES at public hospitals yesterday joined striking doctors to pile pressure on President Robert Mugabe’s cash-strapped government to honour its undertaking to pay them 2016 bonuses and improve their working conditions.

Doctors downed tools a fortnight ago over similar demands.

The nurses’ strike came after the Zimbabwe Nurses’ Association (Zina) wrote to the government last week demanding specific dates for their 2016 bonus payments, among other grievances.

Zina secretary-general, Enoch Dongo, yesterday told NewsDay that nurses at Harare Central Hospital were the first to heed the strike call.

“Yes, we have downed tools because the government was not showing commitment to pay us our bonuses,” he said.

“Our job is a bit different from any other job, we cannot handle patients well when our morale is low. So we decided that the nurses, who are not psychologically prepared to do their jobs should stay at home to avoid making mistakes that could put patients’ lives in danger.”

Dongo said he was informed that nurses at Parirenyatwa Group of Hospitals held a meeting yesterday and resolved to join the strike starting today.

He said nurses have had several concerns, but the issue of bonuses broke the camel’s back. Some of the concerns, Dongo said, included poor staff grading, short staffing and poor working conditions.

“Nurses have several challenges, but the issue of bonuses has triggered this action. The ministry has postponed meetings to deliberate on the issue and instead, claim they are conducting consultations to get feedback on those who want to be paid by residential stands, a process we conducted a long time back and concluded that we want cash payment.”

NewsDay visited Harare Central Hospital and observed that most patients were being turned away by a skeletal staff manning the hospital and supported by student nurses.

The rest of the civil service has threatened to go on strike on Monday over the outstanding bonus issue. – Newsday

Teen Jailed For Stealing From Boyfriend

Terrence Mawawa, Mutare | A local juvenile and her friend connived to steal cash from the latter’ s boyfriend in a dramatic incident.

Bridget Mhlanga (18) and her friend (14) were convicted of stealing $6500 cash from Mhlanga’s boyfriend, Dawn Mazendure. The two appeared before Mutare Magistrate, Tracy Muzondo facing theft charges.

The court heard that on October 30, last year, Mhlanga and her friend were cleaning Mazendure’ s house. The minor searched Mazendure’s tool box and found $6500 and she connived with Mhlanga to steal the cash.
The two then shared the cash and Mhlanga got $3000 while the teen got $3500.
The two went to the city centre where the minor gave the cash to one Tafadzwa while Mhlanga gave part of the cash to one Ambitious Machite.

On November 4 Mazendure checked his tool box and discovered that the cash was missing.
He questioned Mhlanga who revealed she had connived with her friend to steal the money. After investigations only $240 was recovered.
Magistrate Muzondo sentenced the two to 24 months in prison and six months were suspended on condition of good behaviour. However, the minor will serve her sentence when she turns 18. The rise in crime cases of such magnitude has been largely attributed to the rising socio-economic challenges in the country.

Mugabe Fire Mahofa And Hungwe

Terrence Mawawa, Masvingo| At least 17 Zanu PF MPs here have called on President Robert Mugabe to fire Masvingo State Minister, Shuvai Ben Mahofa and Psychomotor Minister Joyasa Dunira Hungwe for gross incompetence.

The MPs held a caucus meeting at Flamboyant Hotel in the ancient city last week. The legislators, mainly G-40 members resolved to urge Mugabe to fire Mahofa and Hungwe, both Team Lacoste members. Mahofa angered the MPs when she told party members to vote against sitting legislators in Chiredzi District.

Party sources said perceived G-40 member, Daniel Shumba led the deliberations. Chiredzi West MP, Darlington Chiwa described Mahofa as a hopeless loser.

“At least 17 MPs held a caucus meeting at Flamboyant Hotel.The MPs made their intentions clear, they want President Mugabe to fire Mahofa and Hungwe for gross incompetence,” said a party official.
Mahofa also chaired a meeting in Rhodhene where she blasted G-40 members. “Minister Mahofa chaired a meeting in Rhodhene and she indicated that the lazy MPs were soiling the image of the party,” party sources revealed.

Despite being trounced in the recent intra party elections, the G-40 is determined to eclipse Mahofa and Hungwe seen as the chief movers in the Team Lacoste camp.The G-40 is said to be sympathetic to First Lady Grace Mugabe while Team Lacoste is believed to be behind Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

Mnangagwa Aide Insists Mugabe Must Step Down

Former Zanu PF Mashonaland Central youth chairperson, Godfrey Tsenengamu, who is facing charges of subverting a constitutionaly-elected government, insists President Robert Mugabe must retire to make way for his deputy, Emerson Mnangagwa, arguing such utterances have nothing to do with toppling the 93-year-old leader from power.

Tsenengamu said his remarks during a recent Press conference in Harare, were mere political statements that had so far been misconstrued by the law enforcement agents, who have since sought to drag the government into simple party politics.

In his bail statement filed last week, Tsenengamu said Mugabe was the Zanu PF leader, while Mnangagwa was also from the same party.

He said calls for Mugabe to step down in favour of his deputy should not be interpreted as calling for uprisings.

Tsenengamu reportedly said: “The ball is now in your hands, the war veterans, the same way you removed Sithole to replace him with Mugabe. We now want you to lead us so that Mnangagwa becomes the next party president, going forward.”

Through his lawyer, Zivanai Macharaga, Tsenengamu told High Court judge, Justice Priscilla Chigumba, his quoted speech was simply talking about replacing Mugabe with Mnangagwa as a party president.

“What was being discussed wasn’t State President, but party president. There is a difference between political party and State Presidency. It is not a crime to advocate the removal of a party president, but when it comes to State President, one has to look if the removal is unconstitutional or not,” Macharaga said.

“President is defined in terms of section 89 of the Constitution as, ‘the President is the Head of State and Government and Commander-in-Chief of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces. The President described by statutes is not a political party president, but State President.”

Tsenengamu further said although he was being charged for making reference to a party president, he made reference to Mugabe and Sithole, “while it is not clear which Mugabe and Sithole are being mentioned”.

“Let’s say he is talking of President Mugabe, who is a Zimbabwean and Zanu PF president, while Sithole is former Zanu PF president, whose history says he was replaced by Mugabe as Zanu PF president, this will only go to show that the replacement of leadership that he was talking about is a political party president,” his lawyers said.

The matter was supposed to be heard yesterday, but prosecutor, Tapiwa Kasema sought postponement to today to enable him to file the State’s response.

Meanwhile, another bail application involving incarcerated Kariba-based Remnant Church cleric Patrick Philip Mugadza, who is alleged to have committed a criminal offence by prophesising that Mugabe would die on October 17 this year, was yesterday further postponed to March 8 this year.

The postponement of the matter followed an application by Mugadza’s lawyer, Obey Shava, who told the court he needed time to file a fully transcribed court record before the matter could be heard.

Prosecutor, Editor Mavuto, is appearing for the State. – Newsday

Floods Rage As Lundi High School Is Closed

Lundi Girls High in Mwenezi District has been shut down while bridges in Mberengwa have been destroyed leaving nine districts inaccessible as floods continue to ravage the southern parts of the country.

The Civil Protection Unit has since urged communities living in low lying areas to be prepared to move to higher ground as there is still a risk of flooding in the country with most parts expected to receive more rainfall.

The Zimbabwe National Army (ZNA) was called to rescue 270 pupils and 23 staffers after water threatened the structural integrity of hostels at Lundi High School.

The girls were marooned on Sunday night before being evacuated to the Reformed Church in Zimbabwe (RCZ)buildings for safety on Monday as water levels in the swollen Runde River rose to unprecedented levels, spilling into their hostels. Mwenezi District Administrator Ms Rosemary Chingwe said a rescue team comprising soldiers came to the school around 9PM on Monday and managed to rescue 23 employees who were marooned as their houses were surrounded by water.

She said although the situation is almost under control with the levels in Runde River having subsided, infrastructure like homes, roads, bridges and some toilets at some schools was destroyed by the heavy rains.

“The situation is under control after 270 girls were marooned but evacuated from their hostels to the nearest RCZ church. The 23 staff members including the matron whose houses are located on the same side with the girls’ hostels were also marooned but were rescued by the soldiers who went to the school around 9PM on Monday. They were initially evacuated into classrooms,” said Ms Chingwe.

She called on the Government to attend to infrastructure in the district as a number of activities are now at a standstill following widespread destruction.

“Infrastructure such as roads, toilets and some schools and clinics has been destroyed. Some areas are no longer accessible because small bridges have been swept away,” Ms Chingwe said.

“Coordination of rescue efforts at Neshuro Business centre where local authority and some Government offices are located including the district CPU offices is now difficult given the damaged roads. These rains have caused untold destruction in the district and I am told the situation is even worse in districts like Chivi where families were left homeless”.

Elsewhere, a humanitarian disaster is looming in Mberengwa West as the district has been cut off from other areas following the destruction of two high level bridges — Jeka-Chegato and Mwenezi along the Mwenezi River.

The Government says it needs about $500 000 to repair Mwenezi Bridge so that humanitarian aid can move in and villagers access other areas for health assistance and other social amenities.

As of yesterday, 4 000 homesteads, houses and Government structures had been destroyed by the floods which have also destroyed crops and livestock.

Pupils are reportedly not attending school while villagers and patients are failing to access Mnene District Hospital because the district has been cut off from the rest of the country.
Brave pupils and parents are using a makeshift but dangerous ladder balancing on the remains of Mwenezi Bridge to reach schools and the hospital.

Mberengwa West — the hardest hit district by torrential rains — has nine wards which are no longer accessible after flooding which has cut communication in the entire district.
The Minister of Transport and Infrastructure Development, Dr Joram Gumbo, who is also the Member of the House of National Assembly for the area, said Mwenezi Bridge was a major priority for the district to return to normal.

Midlands Provincial Roads Engineer, Mr Stephen Kamutema, said: “Equipment for the repair of the bridges is already on the ground. We are waiting for the rains to stop so that we start backfilling”.

Meanwhile, Tsholotsho district administrator, Ms Gladys Zizhou, has said floods are now affecting communities in Tsholotsho South.

“We’ve been evacuating people from communities affected by floods in Tsholotsho North but people in Tsholotsho South are now coming forward seeking assistance as their homesteads are being destroyed by the rains.

“Areas affected are wards 10, 11, 14 and 15. These include Dinyane, Gariya and other parts under Chief Gampu,” she said.

Ms Zizhou said a team of assessors was visiting the affected families and identifying what they need so that they can be assisted. She appealed to well-wishers to donate in cash and kind to the affected families.

CPU deputy director Mrs Sibusisiwe Ndlovu yesterday said low lying areas that include Tsholotsho, Muzarabani, Middle Sabi, Malipati and Chiredzi should be primed for evacuation.

“There is still a risk of flooding in the country as most parts are still receiving heavy rainfall. The ground is saturated and most of the rainfall received is being converted to runoff. Therefore, there are still chances of flooding in most of the low lying areas of the country.

“Communities living near all major rivers such as Mzingwane, Runde, Save, Shashe, Limpopo, Bubi and Mwenezi are urged to remain on high alert and monitor the situation closely and be prepared to move to high ground if the need arises,” said Ms Ndlovu.

She urged the public to desist from crossing flooded rivers. The Zimbabwe National Water Authority (Zinwa) corporate communications and marketing manager Mrs Majorie Munyonga said the national dam level average was now at 71,5 percent up from 65,5 percent.

“The majority of the major dams monitored by Zinwa are now full and spilling. Major gains have been recorded in dams such as Mzingwane Dam which is now full, Tokwe-Mukorsi Dam which is now 49 percent full and Inyankuni at 74,5 percent.

“The national dam level average stands at 71,5 percent up from 65,5 percent. The increasing number of spilling dams raises the risk of flooding in areas downstream of such dams,” said Mrs Munyonga. – State Media

Abuse of Office As Kombayi Debt Is Exposed

Fired Gweru Mayor Councillor Hamutendi Kombayi allegedly victimised council employees to the extent that they were afraid to pursue the recovery of about $400 000 the former mayor’s companies owed to the local authority in unpaid bills.

An independent tribunal that recommended the firing of Clr Kombayi made the allegations in a report.

“It is alleged that the Mayor (Kombayi) abused his office by victimising council employees not to pursue recovery of money owed to council by accused and his companies which amount to $425 023,” reads part of the independent tribunal’s report.

Meanwhile, the local authority was allegedly prejudiced of thousands of dollars in illegal plan approvals and permits for subdivisions by an officer from the section of Town Planning.
In his progress report on the cash strapped local authority, the Minister of Local
Government, Public Works and National Housing, Cde Saviour Kasukuwere, alleged that open spaces in Gweru were converted into residential stands by the Town Planning section with some stands encroaching into road ways.

He said the then Acting Director of Engineering Services was left by council and management to run the department unsupervised and pocketed money from illegal stands sales.

“One of the worst breakdowns of systems in the city of Gweru was in the area of development control and spatial planning. City officials had a culture of creating stands willy-nilly to the extent that most of the open spaces were converted into residential stands and some stands encroached into road ways.

Normal controls were non- existent. The town planning laws were violated as the acting director of Engineering Services was left to run the show unsupervised giving him the opportunity to pocket monies paid for plans and subdivisions he approved,” said the Minister.

Those who did not make the requisite illegal payments, he said, had their plans thrown away.

“Today internal control systems are now in place and the backlog on plan approvals has since been cleared. The chaos in the town planning section resulted in council being deprived of significant income from approval of plans and permits for subdivisions, money that should have been spent on council projects,” he said.

Minister Kasukuwere said an IT company would be engaged to capture all properties within the city boundaries and rate them so that all residents contribute to the council coffers for service delivery to improve further.

Last week, the minister fired the mayor and Clr Kenneth Sithole for gross misconduct, incompetence and mismanagement on the recommendation of an independent tribunal headed by Mr Isaac Muzenda.

The tribunal held hearings following the suspension of 15 Gweru councillors in August 2015.
The other 13 councillors have since returned to work. – State Media

Mugabe Minister “A Secret Assassin,” Outburst Erupts

Education Minister Lazarus Dokora has been tagged a secret jihadist preying on young children to indoctrinate them for religious fundamentalism, just after the Mugabe cabinet minister claimed that Zimbabwe’s first religion at independence in 1980 was Islam.

The development came as teachers and parents booed Dokora during a public meeting on Monday. He stated that Islam is Zimbabwe’s “re-designated indigenous religion.” His 1980 claim was dismissed by several teachers.

Dokora last year banned the Bible and voluntary club Scripture Union before reinstating the organisation following protests after falsely claiming that it is part of the education curriculum. 

Speaking on Monday, Dokora listed the Islamic religion as number one for Zimbabwe while pushing Christianity down to number (4) four.

While addressing panelists at a function covered by ZimEye.com, Dokora responded saying (VIDEO LOADING):
“And then of course there were the questions raised that: ‘is my my child going to be taught Islam?, is my my child going to be taught indigenous religion?’ said Dokora.

He continued saying, “in 1980 the curriculum that we fashioned for the republic, includes Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, Christianity, Bhudiism,” he voiced while using his fingers to elaborate the importance by order.

He emphasised saying, “I was a teacher, I was just a teacher in the classroom, and those were introduced at Grade 2.”

He reiterated his comment saying that the curriculum has always had the religions in the order laid out according to his list.

“Do you think we should take these themes and teach them to ECB?  Can I follow your thread, because you think its a new thing, and I am trying to get you to appreciate that it has always been there in the formula (order) that I have described to you..” WATCH THE FULL VIDEO BELOW:

Mugabe’s Govt Threatens EU Over US$5 Million Fund

Western governments have escalated machinations to influence next year’s harmonised elections by funding ‘dubious’ opposition projects and fomenting instability in the country using civil society organisations.

This comes in the wake of a surprise donation of US$5 million to the civil society by the European Union ostensibly to strengthen democratic participation and accountable monitoring by non-governmental organisations in Zimbabwe.

Government yesterday said that it was following the events with interest. The donation was announced by the EU embassy in Harare in a statement on Monday.

The Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Information, Media and Broadcasting Services, Mr George Charamba, yesterday said Government was on the lookout for all nefarious and underhand machinations by the West ahead of the polls.

Said Mr Charamba: “The beast is in heat again. We are slowly inching towards elections and the Westerners are back with their mischief except they don’t know we are watching. We are also aware of their involvement in other areas including fomenting instability in the labour market.”

Political analyst Mr Godwine Mureriwa said the Western funding was aimed at aiding the opposition campaign especially in rural areas where they were perennial dismal performers.
“The timing of the funding is perfect for the opposition,” said Mr Mureriwa.

“The funding is being used as a basis for uniting opposition parties to form a coalition and this is why you see both (Morgan) Tsvangirai and (Joice) Mujuru were making desperate overtures to come together despite their organic ideological differences. Given their deep rooted interests in Zimbabwe’s political affairs, the EU also wants to have a formidable force outside the opposition structures to do the campaign especially in rural constituencies.

“They (EU) have elections in my mind and the civil society is just being used as a smokescreen to shield the real political agenda.”

In their statement the EU said: “The European Union in Zimbabwe has strengthened its support to civil society with a fresh call for proposals to promote democratic participation, good governance and accountability as well as dialogue amongst the different stakeholders in the country.

“In total, the EU provides 5 million EUR (5 315 000 USD) for proposals that address one of the two specific objectives.”

The first component is directed at Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) that seek to enhance the role of civil society in the promotion of transparency, good governance and accountability to meaningfully participate in policy dialogue. CSOs that furthermore address gender equality and the rights of marginalised groups are particularly encouraged to apply.

“For this component, the EU provides EUR 3.5 million (3 720 500 USD).  The second specific objective for which proposals are invited is to strengthen civil society’s watchdog role in the implementation of the National Indicative Programme (NIP) focal sectors of governance and institution building, health and agriculture-based economic development for improved, accountable and effective development outcomes as well as sustainability. For this objective, the EU provides EUR 1.5 million (1,594,500 USD).”

The EU embassy in Harare had not responded to questions sent to it. An embassy official who spoke to this publication said he would only respond today.

Since 2000, Western governments have been funding opposition campaigns through non-governmental organisations. It is unfortunate that the funding has not yielded the desired results. The electorate is alive to what the local opposition stood for and beyond that much of the donor fund was used to fatten pockets of a few activists.

After the 2013 harmonised elections, the United States government admitted that donor funds were abused in Zimbabwe and withdrew most of its funding thereby plunging most opposition leaders into destitution. – State Media

Windfall For Suspended Zanu PF Councillors

Three Zanu-PF councillors in Gweru who were last week acquitted of gross misconduct will receive about $15 000 in backdated allowances.

Clrs Tiripapi Chipondeni, Charles Simbi and Joas Tsanyau will get allowances dating back to August 15, 2015 when they were suspended.

The Minister of Local Government, Public Works and National Housing, Cde Saviour Kasukuwere, said the councillors were entitled to the allowances following their acquittal.
An independent tribunal headed by Mr Isaac Muzenda investigated 15 councillors for alleged gross misconduct, incompetence and mismanagement of council funds.

The three councillors are each set to get $4 750 for the 19 months they were on suspension while 10 MDC-T councillors will get nothing after having being found guilty of some of the charges they were facing.

“The three councillors will be paid their allowances backdated to the date they were suspended because they were found not guilty by the independent tribunal. Those who were found guilty but were reprimanded will get nothing from the council,” said Minister Kasukuwere.

The minister last week fired Gweru Mayor Hamutendi Kombayi and Clr Kenneth Sithole after a recommendation from the tribunal. He said by-elections will be held in the wards left vacant after the firing of the two MDC-T councillors.

“The town clerk (Ms Elizabeth Gwatipedza) will work on modalities to the effect that the council by-elections are held in the vacant wards,” said Minister Kasukuwere. – State Media

UK Woman Caught In Sex Storm With Zim Based Taxi Driver Half Her Age

A 20-year-old taxi driver revealed that he regrets having sex in the car with a United Kingdom based 42-year-old city businesswoman who allegedly seduced him. The businesswoman, could neither confirm nor deny the allegations of having sex with the taxi driver only identified as Danny referred reporters to her lawyer one Nyamupfukudza who said Danny was making false allegations since they had lodged theft charges against him.

“There are theft charges allegations against Danny we lodged at Hatfield police station so we would rather not pre-empt investigations that the police are doing. This is just a tit for tat case, we filed theft charges against him which have text messages as evidence so he is fighting back,” he said.

Danny said after having unprotected sex with Debra he contracted a sexually transmitted disease.

“Having sex with Debra is the worst decision I have ever made in my life because it has now complicated a lot of things. I started knowing Debra in 2013 after she returned from the UK and she hired my car and I transported her to her rural home in Chihota. Since then whenever she came home she would always call me to go with her to different places. We became so close that even her family knew about me since she would even call me from the UK instructing me to do certain things for her poultry project. Last year in November she returned from the UK and went to Chihota, on our way back we started having a discussion about sex. We started telling each other our sexual fantasies and then she asked me to pass by one of her stands in Chitungwiza. When we got there she inspected her stand and as we were about to leave she then started opening my zip fondling my private parts. At first I was not in the mood but she went on to seduce me until we ended up going to the backseat where we had unprotected sex. A week after the incident, I discovered that I had contracted as STI,” claimed Danny.

He went on to say that Debra promised that she was going to buy him a car as compensation for infecting him.

“She then went back to UK and whilst she was there I then told her about the sickness, she then started sending me money for medications as well as for looking after my family. When the sickness became serious she then promised to buy a car which I was supposed to use as a taxi but up to now she hasn’t bought it,” he said.

Danny added that when Debra returned from the UK, he was surprised after she made false allegations against him.

“I am now being victimized by this woman after I told her that I was going to lodge a complaint about the issue. She has lodged a complaint against me accusing me of stealing 40 litres of paint,” he said. – State Media

Civil Servants Win As Broke Govt Says Will Pay Bonuses

Protesting civil servants have won their battle against the government at least so far after the state yesterday came out saying it is committed to paying their full 2016 bonuses.

The government however said those calling for industrial action should give dialogue a chance.

Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare Minister Prisca Mupfumira, made the revelations yesterday.

Her remarks follow threats by civil servants under their umbrella body, the Apex
Council, to embark on industrial action if their bonus promises are not honoured.
Government has been offering stands for bonuses, a gesture some of the workers turned down.

Mrs Mupfumira said the threat to down tools was unfortunate as it was not only retrogressive, but defeated all efforts that had been made towards creating effective dialogue over the bonus issue through the National Joint Negotiating Council (NJNC).

“Government has received news of a threat to embark on an industrial action by the civil servants Apex Council over the non-payment of bonuses with surprise,” she said.

“Government remains committed to honouring the payment of bonuses as announced by His Excellency President R.G Mugabe. Civil servants have always been engaged through the NJNC or directly by myself as the Minister of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare and my colleagues the Minister of Finance and Economic Development Hon. P Chinamasa or Reserve Bank Governor Dr John Mangudya where the reasons for the delayed payment of civil servants bonuses have always been explained fully,’’ she said.

Mupfumira said Government was ready to engage the workers and give feedback on March 6, the proposed date for the next meeting.

She said the Apex Council should be mindful of the meeting they held on the 25th of January where they resolved to consult their constituencies and said follow up meetings could not be held on the agreed date as one of the key stakeholders was not available.

Mupfumira’s words come after nurses from various Government health institutions countrywide yesterday downed tools demanding that their employer announce dates for payment of bonuses.

The nurses who join junior doctors who have been on strike for the past two weeks, are also demanding managerial positions in the public health system, which are currently reserved
for medical doctors.

They are also demanding an upward review of the nursing establishment and revision of their grading system.

A visit to Harare Central Hospital yesterday, showed that a few nurses from the maternity and paediatric departments were attending to patients while the casualty and out patients departments was manned mostly by student nurses.

It was business as usual at Parirenyatwa Central Hospital while reports from Rusape, Karoi, Mutare and Chinhoyi indicated that most of the nurses did not report for duty.

In an interview yesterday, Zimbabwe Nurses Association general secretary Mr Enock Dongo, said their members wanted Government to announce bonus dates instead of continued postponement of meetings.

“Members have agreed that they will only return to work when their issues are solved. So far, no engagement has taken place,” he said.

In their letter addressed to the Health Services Board, the nurses also demanded Government to review its structure, which currently gives priority to medical doctors at the expense of other professionals such as nurses.

The nurses are also demanding Government to review nursing posts as a matter of urgency as more and more graduates are becoming redundant soon after training.

“The process of reviewing staff establishment is long overdue. Over 4 000 of our members are still roaming the streets despite having trained and qualified,” said Mr Dongo. He said until these grievances were addressed, their members would consider returning to work.

Meanwhile, the Zimbabwe Hospital Doctors Association has welcomed the move by nurses to down tools calling on Government to urgently address challenges affecting the health sector.

ZHDA president Mr Farai Munatsi said while they had reservations on some of the issues raised by ZINA, their decision to join medical doctors was testimony to continued neglect to issues affecting the health sector. The latest development by nurses to down tools is likely to affect the health service delivery system in a big way since nurses form the bulk of health workers in Zimbabwe and are also the entry point to healthcare. – State Media

Woman Evicted For 47cent Debt

THE Bulawayo City Council (BCC) has issued a 30-day eviction notice to scores of Mabutweni residents- including a woman who owes the local authority 47 cents- to vacate the municipality-owned houses.

The eviction letters are dated February, 23 and the residents are supposed to have left the houses by March, 23.

In the letters, the council accused the residents of leasing out the houses in breach of their agreements with council.

The residents have denied that they are sub-letting the houses.

Council also cited delays in paying rent as another reason leading to the municipality repossessing the houses.

“The rent is not paid by the 7th of the following month and there is no explanation and that amounts to breach of the agreement…..You owe the council the sum of $0.47,” read the eviction notice to one of the residents.

“Could you therefore show cause why council cannot repossess and re-allocate the property to deserving persons on the council waiting list within a month of this notice. Failure to respond council will proceed to repossess and re-allocate the property without further reference to you.”

The affected residents have since approached the area councillor Lot Siziba to express their displeasure.

In an interview yesterday, Clr Siziba said it was illegal for the council to evict the residents.

He said some of people that have been given eviction letters know no other home except the Mabutweni houses.

Clr Siziba said the eviction of the residents was a result of corruption in the council’s housing department.

“I’ve raised this issue more than once. How does the council know that these people are not the owners of these houses? How did it conduct its audit to make conclusions that these people are not occupying these houses,” said Clr Siziba.

He said he has engaged human rights lawyers to investigate the matter.

“I will be presenting this to both the full council meeting and the Town Clerk (Mr Christopher Dube) because these people have nowhere to go.

“The council should not repossess a house because its owner has died and children are now occupying the houses. Where are the children supposed to go?” he said.

Mr Dube said residents occupying municipality houses should abide by the city’s by-laws.

He said plans were on course to transfer the houses to individuals but before that breach of ownership such as sub-letting of the houses remained illegal. – State Media

Shock As Firms Employing Foreigners Are Raided In SA

South Africa’s Home Affairs department has started raiding companies employing illegal foreigners around Gauteng Province to diffuse xenophobia related violence targeted at mostly Africans in the neighbouring country.

In April 2015, they also launched a similar operation dubbed ‘Fiela’ when confronted with a similar situation. The department is reported to have intensified the raids last week succumbing to calls by the instigators of the mayhem claiming that immigrants contributed to escalating social economic imbalances south of the Limpopo River.

The attacks, which are driven mainly by afrophobia, have been more pronounced in Pretoria where many Africans in that country are living in state of fear.

Home Affairs spokesperson, Mr Thabo Mokgola, said yesterday there was nothing sinister about the inspections they were conducting as they were in line with the law.
He said organisations or businesses in that country were bound by the law to ensure that at least 60 percent of the employees should be local citizens.

“There is nothing sinister about the inspections and the enforcement of the law.
“People should be documented and where there are violations, we won’t hesitate to enforce the law by weeding out the culprits,” he said.

In the last few weeks, tensions have been increasing around Gauteng, where immigrants were attacked and some had their shops looted forcing President Mr Jacob Zuma and his

Home Affairs Minister, Mr Malusi Gigaba, to intervene.

Mr Gigaba met with 35 African ambassadors and High Commissioners in Johannesburg last Friday, where he reaffirmed his government’s zero tolerance to xenophobia related violence against fellow Africans.

President Zuma also met his minsters of justice, crime prevention and security last Wednesday, where he set up an inter-ministerial committee on migration to tackle the new wave of violence in the neighbouring country.

“We strongly condemn the acts of violence and call upon citizens and non-nationals to exercise restraint, unite against crime and work with authorities to bring perpetrators to book,” he said.

President Zuma said it was wrong to solely blame foreigners for all criminal activities in South Africa.

In an interview yesterday, Zimbabwe Exiles Forum Chairperson, Advocate Gabriel Shumba said Zimbabweans and other foreigners around the Gezina and Sunnyside in the City of Pretoria were among those raided by home affairs officials.

“The raids apparently started last week. This is unfortunate in that it coincides with the advent of xenophobia attacks,”he said.

“Whilst the law is clear about issues of legal status. Let’s remember that invariably, those with valid papers have been frustrated when trying to renew them”.
Adv Shumba added that the behaviour of some law enforcing agencies deliberately or unwittingly fuels xenophobia either in acts or omissions.

He added that it was politically wrong to start or intensify searches for documentation when the situation was still volatile.

“Instead, all of us should be working towards prevention, healing, early warning and combating recurrence among other issues. There should be dis-juncture between rhetoric and practice. At present we need the fire of afro-phobia doused,” said Adv Shumba. – State Media

Drama As Woman Screams Rape In Court

A man  from Matobo was yesterday acquitted of raping his “under-age” girlfriend who was said to be 12 years old when it was proved in court that she is 19.

The woman further destroyed the State’s case when she said the two were lovers.

Methuseli Ncube (30) had pleaded not guilty to a rape charge.

He told the court that he was in a relationship with Simangaliso Nkala.

“She insisted that we have sex. She told me that she was 16 years old. I suggested that we wait till she turned 18 but she laughed at me saying I’m not a real man.  I’m the only one who sees her as an underage girl. She said she had slept with men before,” said Ncube.

He said he finally gave in to her taunts and slept with her in August last year while he was accompanying her to her grandmother’s home.

“She sent two children to fetch me. On our way she said she was tired and wanted to rest. She suggested that we sit behind a rock. That was when we slept together. I realised that she was not a virgin. I used a condom but she mocked me for doing so,” he said.

Bulawayo Regional Magistrate Mrs Sibongile Msipa-Marondedze acquitted Ncube after Nkala testified that they were lovers.

Nkala said she had consented to having sexual intercourse with Ncube.

“We slept together on several occasions. On the reported date he accompanied me and my younger brother home. Along the way we diverted into the bush leaving my young brother by the roadside. We didn’t have sex,” she said.

“I crafted the allegations because my parents were coercing me to tell them what happened. Had my younger brother not snitched on me I wouldn’t have mentioned to my parents that I was in a relationship with Ncube,” said Nkala.

Prosecuting, Miss Caroline Matanga told the court that on September 4 last year, Ncube met Nkala on their way from church.

“Complainant was in the company of her younger brother. Accused grabbed complainant by her back and carried her into the bush. They left complainant’s younger brother by the roadside. He raped her once then sent them home. Complainant’s younger brother told his mother what he had seen and complainant said she had been raped,” said Miss Matanga. – State Media

“Islamic Jihad” for Zimbabwe: Mugabe Minister Finally Speaks

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Primary and Secondary Education Minister Lazarus Dokora was booed and labelled a Jihadist and a Fundamentalist when he ranked Islam as the number 1 religion for Zimbabwe.

Minister Dokora claimed to parents and teachers yesterday that at independence in 1980, Islam was Zimbabwe’s first religion also calling it the nation’s “re-designated indigenous religion.”

The minister last year banned the Bible and voluntary club Scripture Union before reinstating the organisation following protests after falsely claiming that it is part of the education curriculum.

Speaking yesterday, Dokora listed the Islamic religion as number one for Zimbabwe while pushing Christianity down to number 4.

While addressing panelists at a function covered by ZimEye.com, Dokora responded saying (VIDEO LOADING):
“And then of course there were the questions raised that: ‘is my my child going to be taught Islam?, is my my child going to be taught indigenous religion?’ said Dokora.

He continued saying, “in 1980 the curriculum that we fashioned for the republic, includes Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, Christianity, Bhudiism,” he voiced while using his fingers to elaborate the importance by order.

He emphasised saying, “I was a teacher, I was just a teacher in the classroom, and those were introduced at Grade 2.”

He reiterated his comment saying that the curriculum has always had the religions in the order laid out according to his list.

“Do you think we should take these themes and teach them to ECB?  Can I follow your thread, because you think its a new thing, and I am trying to get you to appreciate that it has always been there in the formula (order) that I have described to you..” WATCH THE FULL VIDEO BELOW:

BLOODGUSH HORROR: Long Prison Sentence For UK Zimbo Who Slit Woman’s Throat Open

A Zimbabwean man convicted of attempting to murder his estranged wife’s aunt in a Milton Keynes car park has been told to expect a ‘very long’ prison sentence.

Farai Kambarani, 26, was found guilty by a jury at Luton Crown Court of attempting to kill Ruth Nayamazana. He was convicted (Feb 23) by a majority of 10 to 2 after nearly five hours of deliberations.

During his trial the court heard he was upset after his wife Tadiwa and child moved from their home in Wolverhampton to live with her uncle and his social worker wife in Milton Keynes.

Judge Philip Bartle QC said he was adjourning sentence so Kambarani could be assessed by probation officers on whether he was considered dangerous.

But the Judge told him: “You have been convicted of a very serious offence indeed and the prison sentence I pass will be a very long one.”

The defendant was remanded in custody. He was also found guilty by unanimous verdicts of criminal damage and stalking his former partner.

The court had heard that the 34-year-old victim drove into the Saxon Gate car park, opposite Milton Keynes council offices, just after 8am on August 22 last year.

Kambarani shunted his car into the back of hers.

In the witness box she said Kambarani punched her in the head 10 or 20 times.

When she was on the ground, she said he pulled out a small knife with a silver blade and used it against the side of her throat. She added: “He moved the knife up and down. I was screaming. I thought he was going to cut my throat. The blood started gushing out.”

In his closing speech, the defendant’s barrister Sebastian Gardiner said: “It was a brutal attack and caused an unpleasant injury.

 

“He was slashing at her indiscriminately, but that does not mean he intended to kill her.”

His client had admitted wounding with intent, but denied he was guilty of the more serious charge of attempted murder.

The defendant had moved to the UK from Zimbabwe, in November 2014. His wife and child left him in Wolverhampton in June last year and moved into her uncle’s home in Milton Keynes.

Two months before the attack, Ruth Nyamazana said Kambarani had come to her home and was ‘furious and angry.’

She told the jury: “He said, ‘You have stopped me seeing my child. You don’t want me to see my child. Who do you think you are?’”

Mrs Nyamazana said he punched a glass panel on her front door and smashed it.

Farai Kambarani, of Ashfield Road, Wolverhampton, pleaded not guilty to attempting to murder Ruth Nyamazana.

He also denied damaging a glass panel in the front door at her home on June 27 last year.

In addition, he pleaded not guilty to stalking his wife Tadiwa between June 3 and August 23 last year, which included sending messages to her via WhatsApp and by accessing her Facebook accounts and trying to change the password.

He will be sentenced on March 21. – Milton Keynes.co.uk

The last time these floods hit Zimbabwe was in 1979 when Ian Smith was washed away

The last time these angry floods hit Zimbabwe was in 1979 when Ian Smith was washed away and a new country emerged.

By Chris Tongogara| The last time these angry floods hit Zimbabwe was in 1979 when Ian Smith was washed away and a new country emerged. Just before, it was a never ending economic and bloody chaos, and suddenly the same waters brought in a new nation as people both black and white kissed a smashing new country. It was anger enmeshed in throbbing joy, at last.

Operation Zero Hour.

How it all happened: Joshua Nkomo’s ZIPRA was vitiated by a long-standing debate on military strategy. It was not a sudden Moscow diktat which created the most secret ZIPRA plan: Operation Zero Hour.

This envisaged a co-ordinated general offensive on several fronts simultaneously. Five regular battalions with artillery support were to seize bridgeheads in the northern front at Kenyemba, Chirundu and Kariba to enable ZIPRA troops to cross with armour and artillery. At the same time attacks were to be mounted on the airfields at Kariba, Victoria Falls and Wankie, which would be secured to enable the transfer of ZIPRA MiGs from Angola. The principal objective was to enable regular troops to seize and hold the strategic rear bases along the border in support of the offensive to be launched from within Rhodesia.

Offensive at the start of the 1979 rainy season.

As the offensive moved in-country, guerilla units already in place would sabotage transport links to undermine the Rhodesian counter-offensive, which would be further slowed by urban warfare. Zero Hour was planned for the start of the 1979 rainy season,

October or November. Far from encouraging this plan, the Soviets refused to release ZIPRA pilots in training in the USSR. Rhodesian raids on the army being assembled on the Zambian border delayed Zero Hour, which was ultimately aborted by the Lancaster House talks.

By end of December 1979, Zimbabwe had come and it came with rain. The new Zimbabwean nation that is coming is coming with angry rains. It has come!, Mrs Mugabe, as you watch with your two eyes!

Mugabe Birthday Bash Shames His Opponents | OPINION

John Sigauke | The 21st February Movement celebrations have come and gone, leaving some misguided secessionists elements with eggs on their faces. Prior to the annual event that marked the 93rd birthday of a revolutionary icon and an African Statesman, Mthwakazi had attempted to incite the people of Matebeleland South, Matobo in particular, which was the venue of the celebrations, to boycott the commemorations and demonstrate against same.

The call was absolutely stirred by narrow-mindedness and tribal drive. “The people of Matebeleland South please go and demonstrate near the birthday bash venue at Matobo,” wrote Mthwakazi in a press statement prior the celebrations. Indeed, people of Matebeleland South went to the bash not to demonstrate but to celebrate the birthday of their iconic leader.

It is interesting that not even a single person heeded that divisive and mischievous call from the people who want to see Matebeleland and Midlands regions getting political independence and territorial sovereignty. What was even more exciting was that even the authors and architects of the boycott and demonstration call did not heed their own call. Probably after second thoughts, they realised that the call was unnecessary. After spending a month urging people to boycott and demonstrate, Mthwakazi and the like-minded must now realise that they will never be successful in dividing Zimbabweans.

Perhaps money was expended in that futile project and the benefactors of Mthwakazi must now be conscious that they are pouring money into a bottomless pit. Zimbabweans will never be divided on tribal basis. As early as Friday, villagers from Matobo were already at the venue waiting for the grand birthday celebrations of their icon the following day. Some of them endured long distances where they even crossed flooded rivers, risking their lives just to be part of the historic celebrations.

According to the villagers, as portrayed in interviews with some of them, the day is a worthy cause that must be respected by every Zimbabwean across every divide one can imagine. “We feel honoured as residents of this area to host such a grand occasion. We wish this event could be hosted again in this area. Of course there are people who don’t want to see good things happening in this country but a sane Zimbabwean will not pay attention to nonsense such as a call to boycott or demonstrate against a noble function like this. “The Gukurahundi issue is a closed chapter which we should only remember as part of our history.

Dwelling on the issue of Gukurahundi for eternal, as it seems to be the agenda of certain people, will sidetrack us as a nation from focussing on our developmental needs. Imagine my brother that the child who was born during the tail of the disturbances is now in his or her mid thirties. Do you think this discourse helps him or her in any way? No Ways,” emotionally said Kholwani Nkala, a local businessman. The secessionists have been misleading ordinary citizens from the Matebeleland and Midlands regions that they are being marginalised. Some of the people from these regions who later had opportunities to visit other regions had to change their perceptions. Many a times, some ended up admitting that their area was far much better.

Even if one goes to Zvimba district where the president hails from, they will be surprised to see that it is an area that is not in any way different from any other area in Matebeleland region or anywhere else in Zimbabwe. So the issue of marginalisation is being raised by people who have not been to other parts of the nation. President Mugabe’s government is an ethically and tribally sensitive administration.

He makes sure that every region is fairly represented in government to an extent that regional balancing takes precedence to merit, in the appointment of government officials. One of the vice-presidents comes from Matebeleland region and that post has been reserved for that region ever since the unity accord was signed. This set up does not exist in other political parties. For example, The MDC-T has four members in its presidium but only one comes from Matebeleland region and the rest are of Karanga ethnic.

There are many government ministers who come from Matebeleland region, some of whom entrusted with very critical portfolios. So the issue of marginalisation is inconsequential. People must cherish the legacy of unity that Father Zimbabwe left for Zimbabweans. His dream was to see the people of Zimbabwe united notwithstanding their tribal and ethnic differences. It will be a show of great respect if people treasure the legacy that Father Zimbabwe left for this country.

He signed the unity accord and nobody can reverse it unless the man himself resurrect and rescind his signature. The unity accord is like a will that can only be changed by its writer. Anyone who does not have his signature on the unity accord is not qualified to change it. Even the likes of Dumiso Dabengwa who claim that they have revived ZAPU, are day dreaming. The only authentic ZAPU was the one that Dr Nkomo led and that ceased to exist in 1987 when the unity accord was signed.

Tsvangirai Too Drunk To Hear Villagers Warning On Mugabe Terror | OPINION

Talking to Morgan Tsvangirai is like talking to a drunkard; he hears everything you have said but, judging from his reply, none of it registered.

“Pastors, chiefs, headmen, village heads, war veterans, women and ordinary villagers all spoke to endemic fear and intimidation being orchestrated by Zanu PF. Since the run-off violence of 2008, Zanu PF continues to emasculate communities, particularly chiefs and headmen, coercing them to frog-march people to vote for Zanu PF in the next elections,” reported Luke Tamborinyoka. The MDC-T leader is in Mashonaland East on his on-going countrywide meet the people tour.

“The community leaders said the national challenge was to unlock the fear planted in the villages and local areas where people were not free to express themselves.

“The underlying factor in Mash East is endemic fear and, as one pastor told President Tsvangirai, fear is a demon that needs to be exorcised ahead of the next elections.”

Well the people could not have been more explicit as what they believe is the BIG ISSUE in Zimbabwe politics is today!

“In his response to the various inputs, President Tsvangirai told the opinion leaders that 2018 provided everyone with an opportunity to vote in a new government that would address their concerns,” reported Luke.

Tsvangirai is not even address the problem of fear but assumes it has been dealt with already!

The people of Mashonaland East are saying, which is what the whole nation has been saying too all along, is how is MDC going to stop Zanu PF rigging the election using fear, vote buying and a multitude of other dirty tactics? The one thing that has stopped MDC winning elections in the past was Zanu PF’s blatant voting rigging and, unless something is done about this, Zanu PF will rig the 2018 elections too.

“I saw grassroot support Tsvangirai addressing 11 people!” commented Pardon on WhatsApp.

It is easy to see why people are deserting MDC; the party is not listening to the people and they are getting sick and tired of being ignored! Zanu PF’s acts of intimidation, harassment, beating, etc. are real and so too is the people’s fear. MDC-T leaders should know Zanu PF’s modus operandi well enough by now to know fear is a big factor in Zimbabwe politics. So, MDC-T’s failure to come up with workable solution to the problem is a measure of the party’s breath-taking incompetence.

Vote rigging is the greatest problem in Zimbabwe today and has been for decades. Tsvangirai & co. failed to deal with this problem during the GNU when they had the golden opportunity to do so. The failed to get even one reform implemented in five years and the nation has paid dearly for it!

What is more, they do not seem to realise that nothing of any substance can ever be accomplished in Zimbabwe until implement the reforms, stop the vote rigging and have free, fair and credible elections. Tsvangirai is not helping the nation by not only failing to tackle the problem head-on but worse still by introducing unnecessary diversions taking the nation’s attention away from the primary task of implementing the reforms.

“The community leaders in Mash East said they were behind the proposed alliance (of opposition parties), on condition it was led by tried and tested leaders and that it was able to rally the nation towards change,” Luke reported.

Again, one has to ask: how will a coalition stop Zanu PF rigging the election and address the people’s problem of fear?

Following the July 2013 rigged elections, Tsvangirai and his MDC friends promised the nation they will never again participate in any future elections until meaningful reforms are implemented. They have since realised that they will never get Zanu PF to implement any meaningful democratic reforms and have thus decided to participate in the 2018 elections regardless, just to win the few seats Zanu PF gives away as bait.

The creation of an opposition coalition will have marginal gains for the opposition, there is no evidence to suggest the coalition is the game-changer. Zanu PF won the 2013 elections and recent Bikita West by-election with a warping 62% and 78% of the votes respectively. Fielding a single opposition candidate will not have changed the result.

Indeed, MDC-T is using the opposition coalition as a smokescreen to hide the party’s failure to get even one reform implemented and yet still want to contest the elections, contrary, to the party’s own congress resolutions of “No reform, no elections!”

It is great that many Zimbabweans are finally realizing that Zimbabwe’s culture of political violence and vote rigging are the “demons that needs to be exorcised ahead of the next elections”. We must not tire in our demand for the demons to be dealt with BEFORE the next elections. We must not allow ourselves to be fooled by these sell-outs politicians who are pretending coalition building will solve all Zanu PF’s vote rigging tactics. This country cannot afford another five years of this Zanu PF misrule.

 

SADC leaders warned Tsvangirai & co. against contesting the flawed 2013 elections with no reforms but they were too drunk on the gravy train good life to hear. This time it is the MDC members themselves who are warning the party to “exorcise the fear demons before the elections”; but again no one is listening, the promise of a seat on the gravy train has them punch-drunk already!

 

Khama Billiat Robbed At Gunpoint In South Africa | LATEST

Mamelodi Sundowns star Khama Billiat reportedly escaped an armed robbery at an Engen in the early hours of Tuesday morning.

Sunday World reports that Billiat was at an Engen garage in Kyalami, north of Johannesburg when six gunmen entered armed with AK-47 rifles.

 The report adds that the Zimbabwean was buying prepaid electricity at the time and had his watch and wallet taken.

“It’s very unfortunate and sad that such crimes occur in our country. We are very happy though that Khama is not injured or harmed in anyway,” Sundowns spokesperson Thulani Thuswa is quotes as saying.

“I spoke to him [Billiat] not so long ago and is he also happy to have escaped with his life. I asked him and he said he was going to put in petrol and buy some minor stuff, including prepaid electricity.”

The Zimbabwean is currently injured nursing a dead leg and will miss the next few games according to his coach Pitso Mosimane. – kickoff.com

Pensioners’ Horror | LIVE

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Zimbabwe’s elderly pensioners have been pushed into a life of shocking abject poverty as the government fails to pay them 4 years running.

The pensioners, most of whom have retired to their rural homes, are still receiving monthly stipends, some as low as $40, a sizeable chunk which disappears on transport travelling to travel to town-centres to collect their pensions.

ZimEye in this special explores the plight of over 3,000 of them who are under the Zimbabwe Progressive Pensioners Trust.

The organisation’s chairperson Mrs Gertrude Zunde, speaks to ZimEye:

Dynamos Chairman Arrested For Assaulting Journalist

Staff Reporter |Dynamos Football Club chairman Bernard Marriot was arrested for assault at the National Sports Centre on Sunday after his team lost 1-3 to rivals Caps United in a Commanders ZNA Charities Shield semi final clash.

Details were still sketchy, at the time of writing but it is alleged that Marriot assaulted a journalist in full view of police who whisked him away to the nearest Police Station.

No report has yet been made public on the outcome of the arrest. Dynamos officials who spoke to ZimEye.com would not disclose details on the arrest which was done in full public view.

Mujuru In Leadership Imposition Storm, Handpicks Own Deputies

Shyleen Mtandwa | Troubled Zimbabwe People First President Joyce Mujuru is headed for more trouble as allegations emerge that she plans to impose her close ally as National Executive members of the party.

Discontent in the party came after a list of people purported to be earmarked to be “elected” into in top six positions was leaked in the social media.

Mujuru failed to do justice to the leaked information when she all but confirmed the list by driving party members to accept the aged trio of Ambassador John Mvundura, Samuel Sipepa Nkomo and Dzikamai Mavhaire as her First and Second Vice Presidents and National Chairman respectively.

Mujuru made the matter obvious when she told party members in a poorly attended rally in Bulawayo that as party President she will not be able to work with a young Vice President who will need orientation but would prefer elderly persons who have been in politics for many years.

The party goes for its inaugural elective congress within the next few weeks and a list of the top six officials who are going to be “voted” for at the Congress was last week leaked out of the party’s closets by a social media political analyst code naming himself “The Fox.”

The list puts Mujuru as the President deputised by her elders Ambassador Mvundura and Sipepa Nkomo with equally aged Dzikamai Mavhaire taking the National Chairmanship position an arrangement which has been heavily criticised by people within and outside the party.

Current Presidential spokesperson Gift Nyandoro formerly with the Tendai Biti led PDP is listed as the potential Secretary General while Mujuru’s most loyal supporter Bulawayo Provincial Chairlady Pastor Esnath Bulayai is expected to come in as the party Treasurer General.

Political commentators and analysts have already tagged the proposed leadership of the party as the weakest that the new party could have come up with in comparison to the leadership in the other political parties in the country.

The commentators are lambasting Mujuru for fighting to remove Mugabe who she accuses of old age and claiming to have failed to work with founding elders Rugare Gumbo and Didymus Mutasa for their age yet she has roped in the three veteran politicians of similar advanced age to be her immediate right hand people.

Several analysts who commented on Mujuru’s team described her as exhibiting signs of leadership insecurity on her part forcing her to want to rely and hide behind the influence of the old politicians.

A source within the party who spoke to ZimEye.com said that the team of six which Mujuru was building was designed by Mujuru and Mavhaire who are literally running the party on their own. The source said the team was not built on merit but on specific design by the two and Sipepa Nkomo who joined them at a later stage.

According to the source Mavhaire picked his long standing friend and colleague in ZANU PF Ambassador Mvunduru for the first Vice President position while he brought in Sipepa Nkomo who he recruited into to the party on a specific promise for Vice Presidency.

The source further reveals that in the scheming, Sipepa Nkomo was given a chance to pick one of his former PDP members into the top six where on he hand picked Nyandoro to be the Secretary General. The reliable source said that Nkomo’s initial choice was former PDP Deputy National Chairman Washington Sibanda but was turned down by the caucus as the Secretary General position was “reserved” for someone from Harare Province which saw Nyandoro as the obvious choice to come in with Sipepa Nkomo.

Sibanda has since been set up to be appointed as the Deputy National Chairman by Mujuru at the Congress according to the source.

In her own reserved appointment gap Mujuru is reported to have then picked on her long standing loyal backer Bulayai who is currently the Bulawayo Provincial Chairlady to the position of Treasurer General.

According to the source Mavhaire has already completed marketing the arrangement into the provinces and the set up is guaranteed of getting at least seven provinces nominating them unopposed for endorsement at the upcoming congress.

According to the proposed party electoral rules a person nominated by at least six of the ten provinces into the top six of the party is automatically elected into the position. Mavhaire’s planned campaign is said to have failed to get through into Mashonaland Central, Mashonaland East and Matabeleland South provinces where the provincial chairpersons are reported to have outrightly rejected the imposition of the candidates into the members.

Do Not Threaten Us – Minister To Civil Servants

Government yesterday said it will continue soliciting views from civil servants on whether or not they want residential stands for their 2016 bonuses despite threats by union leaders to stage a demonstration. Unions under the banner of Apex Council met yesterday and announced they would be holding a demonstration over delays in bonus payments. 

Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare Minister Prisca Mupfumira said the survey being conducted by the Civil Service Commission would inform Finance and Economic Development Minister Patrick Chinamasa on what decision to take. The unions demanded immediate payment of the bonuses.

Minister Mupfumira said the employer had a right to solicit for worker’s views as not all civil servants were unionised.

“We expect the results from the CSC survey tomorrow (today) and this is for Minister Chinamasa to get a view of what people are saying on the ground,” she said.

“We felt the views of those outside Apex Council have to be captured also, hence the survey and this is helpful to both parties. We will simply tell Minister Chinamasa to consider what would have come out of the survey. They can threaten to strike, but as long as they follow laid down procedures there is no problem. We will continue to dialogue with them and we do not tolerate threats.”

Some civil servants have since indicated that they prefer stands to cash, which come at zero deposit, as payment for their bonuses.

Minister Mupfumira said Minister Chinamasa was away, hence the decision to shift the dates of the meeting between Government and the union leaders.

“We are told the key stakeholder, Minister Chinamasa, is away and would be available on
March 1, hence our decision to move the meeting to March 6,” she said. “No one is playing politics because we cannot meet when the holder of the purse is not around.”

The meeting was initially scheduled for February 20 before being moved to yesterday and postponed to next Monday.

The meeting will also involve Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Governor Dr John Mangudya.
Apex Council members yesterday said they would go ahead with their demonstration.
They described the Government survey on bonuses as “a phony”.

“Observing that Government has been shifting dates of meeting willy-nilly without due notice to the unions, disgruntled with Government practice of informalising crucial meetings on important issues such as the 2016 bonuses and collective bargaining, aggrieved by the unsolicited attacks on union leadership and undue interference with our members in contravention of Section 65 of the Constitution, the undersigned Apex Council members hereby serve due notice to Government that civil servants will hold a demonstration on Monday the 6th of March demanding immediate payment of our 2016 bonuses as per tradition and a stop to the public attacks on unions by Government,” Apex Council said in a statement.

Government recently offered its workers three payment options for 2016 bonuses, which included residential stands, a cash stipend coupled with non-monetary benefits and property investment bonds.

The employer is operating on a “shoe-string” budget and has been shifting the workers’ pay dates.- State Media

Zvorwadza Finally Cleared

National Vendors Union of Zimbabwe (Navuz) leader Sten Zvorwadza was yesterday removed from remand in a case he is alleged to have threatened to burn a local five-star hotel.

Zvorwadza was removed from remand by Harare magistrate Victoria Mashamba after considering that the State witnesses were not availing themselves for court.
She advised the State to proceed by way of summons.

Allegations against Zvorwadza were that on June 26 last year, he took a seat in the hotel foyer and began shouting that he wanted to have breakfast.

Hotel management informed the police before he was ordered to leave the hotel.
Zvorwadza reportedly refused to leave the hotel and instead shouted: “You police are always disturbing my peace and abusing me. I am spending my money but you are after me.”

Zvorwadza allegedly demanded that Vice President Phelekezela Mphoko check out of the hotel because he was wasting taxpayers’ money. He is alleged to have threatened to burn the hotel.

Nurses To Go On Strike

The chaos that is ravaging public hospitals is set to plumb new depths after nurses issued a notice yesterday to join medical doctors in striking over their poor working conditions.

This comes as the strike by doctors enters its third week, forcing government to deploy army medics to try and mitigate the mayhem at major public hospitals, after the State failed with its ill-advised threats to force the doctors to return to work.

At the same time, the leadership of civil servants’ unions has also warned the government that their members are fed up with its endless promises to address their grievances, including paying them their bonuses.

“We were supposed to have met with government over the bonus issue today (yesterday) and that meeting was postponed to March 6, apparently because (Finance minister Patrick) Chinamasa went on leave,” the secretary general of the nurses association, Enock Dongo told the Daily News yesterday.

“This postponed meeting was itself supposed to have been held on February 20, and even that one was supposed to have been held much earlier.

“Our constituency has now told us that if we do not come back with bonus dates, they will be forced to engage in industrial action and not offer their services.
“Already, the nurses are overworked because they are short-staffed … and government should look into employing more nurses as they are burnt out.

“We also have a lot of issues that we have been calling for since last year that have not been addressed,” Dongo added.

Meanwhile, the president of the Zimbabwe Hospital Doctors Association (ZHDA), Edgar Munatsi, said they were continuing with their strike until the government acted on all the issues they have raised.

“The truth is there is no agreement. During Friday’s meeting, finance told us that they will look into the issues and look at how much it will cost them to increase call allowances, and they have not got back to us yet. For now our priority is the allowance,” Munatsi said.

Health ministry permanent secretary Gerald Gwinji said the doctors’ strike had exerted a lot of pressure on public hospitals, which were already struggling under the weight of a myriad other problems, including the shortage of drugs and continued under-funding by the government.

The doctors went on strike three weeks ago to press the government to honour its promises of improving their working conditions.

But stung by the strike, the government threatened that it was going to terminate the services of all doctors who continued to stay away from work — a threat that miserably failed to achieve the desired result.

Doctors want the government to revise upwards, to a minimum of $720 on call allowances for the least paid doctors, and that the Health Services Board urgently implements the agreed duty-free framework for all government doctors.

Despite the humongous problems bedevilling the public health sector, President Robert Mugabe’s misfiring government has once again allocated a measly budget to hospitals and clinics this year.

In his budget presentation in December, Chinamasa reduced the vote for health from $331 million to a disappointing $282 million — a figure that falls way short of meeting the big demands of the public health sector.

Recently, hospitals warned that they were left with two weeks’ supply of a major drug used during surgical operations — after major drug supplier, GSK, pulled out of the Zimbabwean market last year.

Last year, major referral hospitals also had to suspend many services as a result of the shortage of drugs, including painkillers — exposing how much things have fallen apart in the country since the early 2000s. -Daily News

VIDEO: Islam Is Zimbabwe’s 1st Religion, Says Dokora

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Staff Reporter| Primary and Secondary Education Minister Lazarus Dokora was booed and labelled a Jihadist and a Fundamentalist when he ranked Islam as the number 1 religion for Zimbabwe. Minister Dokora claimed to parents and teachers yesterday that at independence in 1980, Islam was Zimbabwe’s first religion also calling it the nation’s “re-designated indigenous religion.”

The minister last year banned the Bible and voluntary club Scripture Union before reinstating the organisation following protests after falsely claiming that it is part of the education curriculum.

Speaking yesterday, Dokora listed the Islamic religion as number one for Zimbabwe while pushing Christianity down to number 4.

While addressing panelists at a function covered by ZimEye.com, Dokora responded saying (VIDEO LOADING):
“And then of course there were the questions raised that: ‘is my my child going to be taught Islam?, is my my child going to be taught indigenous religion?’ said Dokora.

He continued saying, “in 1980 the curriculum that we fashioned for the republic, includes Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, Christianity, Bhudiism. I was a teacher, I was just a teacher in the classroom, and those were introduced at Grade 2.”

He reiterated his comment that the curriculum has always had the religions in the order laid out according to his list.

“Do you think we should take these themes and teach them to ECB?  Can I follow your thread, because you think its a new thing, and I am trying to get you to appreciate that it has always been there in the formula (order) that I have described to you..” WATCH THE FULL VIDEO BELOW:

WATCH THE FULL VIDEO BELOW:

Grace Mugabe Positions To Succeed Hubby

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe marked his 93rd birthday last week by squashing any thought he plans to resign or not seek re-election.

“If I feel that I can’t do it anymore, I’ll say so to my party so that they relieve me,” he told state broadcaster ZBC-TV. “But for now I think, I can’t say so. The majority of the people feel that there is no replacement, actually. No successor who to them is acceptable, as acceptable as I am.”

That last statement might be true, given the lack of a strong opposition figure in Zimbabwe. However, the president’s age means that sooner rather than later, Zimbabweans will have to choose another leader, and the succession battle in the ruling ZANU-PF party has heated up.

There are two camps that are openly vying for the presidency: Generation 40, or G40, and Team Lacoste. Generation 40 — which refers to the party’s young members — is allied to the president’s wife, Grace Mugabe, while Team Lacoste backs Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

Lacoste is a reference to the clothing company that uses a crocodile as its logo. Mnangagwa was nicknamed “the crocodile” for his alleged role in planning the Gukurahundi massacres of the early 1980s, in which 20,000 opposition supporters were killed.

President Mugabe has acknowledged the existence of the two rival camps and their feuding, and has ordered them to “stop it.” But in his 93rd birthday interview, the Zimbabwean leader spoke glowingly of his wife, describing her as “well-seasoned,” of “very strong character,” and “very much accepted by the people.”

That Grace Mugabe has the president’s favor is also evidenced by the fate of anyone she identifies as a threat to the president. Joice Mujuru was deposed as vice president in 2014 after the first lady accused her of wanting to overthrow Mugabe.

More recently, Mnangagwa and his supporters have been a target of the first lady’s wrath.

“We have seen people wearing T-shirts with Zimbabwean flags labeled Lacoste, and when we asked them, they said Lacoste is a perfume. We are not fools. Do not take us for fools,” she said. “They will not take over from Mugabe. I will rather put him in a wheelbarrow to work because we have realized that those we thought were being groomed as leaders are sell-outs.”

Who is Grace Mugabe?

Grace Mugabe, whose maiden name is Marufu, was born on July 23, 1965, in Benoni, South Africa. Previously married to Stanley Gorezeza, a defense attache in Beijing, Grace started an affair with President Mugabe, who is 40 years her senior, while working as his secretary. The president was married to then-first lady Sally Mugabe, a Ghanaian, who died in 1992 from kidney failure.

Grace Mugabe has one child from her first marriage, and three children with President Mugabe. The Mugabes recently became grandparents, to a child born of their daughter, Bona.

Grace Mugabe is both loved and loathed by Zimbabweans. Some supporters call her Amai, literally meaning “Mother of the Nation” in the local Shona language. Others have nicknamed her “Gucci Grace” or “First Shopper,” a reference to her alleged love of shopping.

Recently, reports that she had purchased a diamond ring worth $1.3 million sparked an uproar in Zimbabwe. The United Nations says nearly two-thirds of Zimbabweans live below the poverty line, and four million need food aid due to a moribund economy and long drought.

But, many describe the first lady as an astute and influential business woman, who is behind the success of the family’s Alpha Omega Dairy farm.

She is also described as a philanthropist, because of the orphanage she started and a large school complex built with the help of the Chinese government.

The succession debacle

Grace Mugabe’s political rise has been a source of consternation for opposition figures, as well as some ZANU-PF officials, who call her a lightning rod.

But party Youth League Secretary Kudzai Chipanga told a Harare newspaper, “We cannot imagine a situation where we do not have our president. But should we be forced into that situation, we would second someone with the name Mugabe because that name is sellable. Our people have gotten addicted to that name and they will easily vote for such a name as long as it has been forwarded by ZANU-PF.”

The first lady seems to agree, telling a rally last week, “Even if God decides to take away Mugabe, we will have his name on the ballot and millions of people will vote for his corpse.”

Grace Mugabe still faces opposition from veterans of the country’s 1970s liberation war. In 2014, the chairman of the Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans Association, Jabulani Sibanda, was expelled from the ruling party after he accused President Mugabe of plotting a “bedroom coup” by seeking to elevate his wife to the presidency.

The director of the Zimbabwe Democracy Institute, Pedzisayi Ryhanya, says President Mugabe still calls the shots and the first lady must not be discounted.

“It may be undesirable to them [the war veterans], it may be undesirable to a lot of people, but the fact of the matter is that the president holds a lot of power and influence,” he told VOA. “And it appears from what is happening, his will may actually see the light of day.” – VOA

Former Judge In Nasty Divorce Fallout

FORMER High Court judge, Justice Moses Chinhengo, has approached the High Court seeking a decree of divorce against his wife, Josephine Judith Hatidani Chinhengo (nee Chatikobo) over irreconcilable marital disputes.

Chinhengo filed his divorce papers sometime in September last year, seeking termination of their 20-year-old marriage, which was blessed with two minor children.

In his declaration, through his lawyers Mhishi Legal Practice, Justice Chinhengo said the parties have since lost love and affection towards each other and have not been living together for the past four years.

“The marriage relationship between the parties has broken down irretrievably to such an extent that the parties can no longer live as husband and wife, more particularly in that…the parties have been continuously incompatible over important marital issues, which issues have not and remain unresolved,” the judge said.

“There are no reasonable prospects for the restoration of a normal marriage relationship between the parties.”

Chinhengo further said upon the court granting a decree of divorce, it would be in the best interests of the couple’s children that he be granted custody of the minors, with his wife being granted reasonable access to them on school weekends and public and school holidays.

“It will be just and equitable that the minor children of the marriage be maintained as follows:- that both parties contribute 50% of the children’s school fees, levies, top-ups and any other school- related expenses until university or the children become self-supportive, whichever occurs first.

“That both parties contribute 50% of the children’s medical aid with a reputable medical aid society and that both parties be ordered to contribute 50% of clothing and groceries for the children up to university or become self-sufficient, whichever occurs first.”

The former judge also said he was seeking an order to share proceeds of stand number 457 Nhungu Street, Old Windsor Park, Ruwa, in the ratio 70% and 30% respectively saying he acquired the property through resources he mobilised prior to the parties commencing a relationship.

He urged the court to grant his wife a Mitsubishi vehicle and all the movable assets at the couple’s matrimonial home.

In her response, Josephine, through her lawyers made a counterclaim in which she dismissed assertions that the parties had lost love and affection for each other.

“This is disputed that the parties have lost love and affection for each other. It is the plaintiff (Chinhengo) who has lost love and affection for the defendant (Josephine) and has moved out of the matrimonial home,” she said.

Josephine urged the court to grant her custody of their minor children and that the Ruwa property be sold and proceeds shared equally.

The matter is set to be heard today before High Court judge Justice Hlekani Mwayera. – Newsday

Mugabe Petitioned Over HIV Testing

A LOCAL Aids service organisation has petitioned President Robert Mugabe to flex his Executive powers and declare compulsory HIV testing for all citizens, as a last ditch attempt to halt the spread of the disease.

The Citizens Aids Survival Trust (Cast) said this drastic action would initiate the process of ending death and destruction of “an entire black human race in sub-Saharan Africa and Zimbabwe in particular”.

The petition, which was signed during a Press conference last Friday, stated that the Constitution empowered Mugabe to curtail certain human liberties for the sole purpose of containing the spread of infectious, contagious and communicable diseases.

“The threat of destruction of our people is the biggest single matter of national interest. The right to safety and security from all manner of threats is enshrined in the Constitution of Zimbabwe,” the organisation’s executive director, David Chiweza said.

He said Cast had, for the past 27 years, advocated for the institutionalisation of mandatory HIV testing.

In 2013, during a Sadc meeting in Malawi, Mugabe raised a storm when he openly suggested that the region should adopt forced HIV and Aids testing to curb the endemic.

“While there is need to respect rights of individuals, there is need to subject everyone to examinations because those who volunteer are not the ones who have been infected,” Mugabe said then.

Meanwhile, the organisation also petitioned the President to dissolve the entire board of the National Aids Council for failing to come up with effective mitigatory strategies against the disease.

“They are bereft of ideas and have negated their constitutional and legal duty to use the power vested upon them to apply their minds to stopping the spread of HIV,” Chiweza said. _ Newsday

CIO Operative Threatens To Kill Tsvangirai Supporters

Terrence Mawawa, Masvingo | Overzealous Police details and CIO operatives disrupted an MDC -Tsvangirai door to door march here on Saturday.
The march was meant to recruit new party members in Masvingo Urban Constituency ahead of the 2018 polls. Party officials who spoke to ZimEye.com on condition of anonymity yesterday said two officers from the Police Internal Security Intelligence (PISI), a CIO operative and war veterans confiscated party documents at Rujeko A Shopping Centre, ward 7, Masvingo Urban Constituency.
The police the army and the CIO have played a pronounced role in crushing dissent in the past elections. According to MDC officials in Rujeko Suburb, the door to door exercise sent a clear message to the regime despite the disruption of the programme by the police and we CIO.
“We can say the programme was successful despite the setback. The incident that happened on Saturday reflected the shocking level of partisanship in the police and the CIO,” said a party official. According to party members, the CIO operative produced a pistol and threatened to shoot two youths.
“The level of idiocy displayed by the CIO operative and the police stunned us.The cops claimed the march had not been cleared by the police,” said a party member. The CIO operative also allegedly reminded the MDC supporters about the 2008 violence.

Mujuru Leads A Party Of Thugs – Nkomo

Staff Reporter | The Joyce Mujuru led Zimbabwe People First Vice President hopeful Simon Sipepa Nkomo has described the party he joined from the Tendai Biti led People’s Democratic Party late last year as having the most undisciplined members he has ever worked with in his long political history.

Addressing party members at the end of a Matabeleland North provincial council in Bulawayo over the weekend, Sipepa Nkomo was short of calling the party members in the Matabeleland region thugs as he condemned the members for their conduct on social media platforms and aggression against each other.

Sipepa Nkomo who narrated his long political history to the members said that he has never encountered the kind of behavior he is meeting within the ZimPF membership particularly the youth from Matabeleland regions. Nkomo said that the youth in the party were extremely disrespectful of elderly authorities like him who will find it very difficult to work with if they do not change their attitudes and behaviour.

The Former Water Affairs Minister in the inclusive government left the Morgan Tsvangirai MDCT in 2014 ironically also describing the members of the country’s biggest opposition as being undisciplined and violent. The Seventh Day Adventist Church elder last year defected from the Tendai Biti led PDP where he was the Vice President claiming that the party lacked vibrant leadership and foresight. Speaking to ZimEye.com after the close of the meeting some party members took a swipe at Sipepa Nkomo for his attack on the party members describing him as being of advanced age and failing to cope with the new generation of politicians he found in the party.

Grandpa Bashes Wife, Daughter For Failing To Feed Dogs

Terrence Mawawa, Buhera | A 63-year-old man from Mashinya Village under Chief Nyashanu, Buhera ran amok and assaulted his wife and daughter for failing to feed the dogs.
Jossom Oria Mashinya claimed he was under the influence of alcohol when he committed the offence. He appeared before Murambinda Magistrate Dennis Mangosi facing three counts of domestic violence. Mashinya told Magistrate Mangosi he was under the influence of alcohol such that he was not conscious of what he was doing.
The court heard that on February 3rd at around 9am Mashinya arrived at the family homestead and took a fan belt and assaulted his daughter Lilian Mashinya(26). He then assaulted his wife Felistus Madawo with a hoe handle. He accused the two of failing to feed the dogs .
Mashinya assaulted his wife again on February 5.He accused her of attempting to poison him.The matter was reported at Murambinda Police Station leading to Mashinya’s arrest. Mashinya told the magistrate he had no intention to assault his wife and daughter. “It was not my intention to assault my wife and daughter.
I was under the influence of alcohol. I regret what I did,” said Mashinya. Madawo ‘ s relatives accused Mashinya of being abusive . “The man is very abusive despite his advanced age.I think he deserves to be punished,” said a family relative.

Trump Envoy Pledges Good Relations With Mugabe

UNITED States envoy, Harry Thomas Jr, has pledged to maintain cordial working relations with President Robert Mugabe’s government, although the Zanu PF leader recently expressed scepticism over newly-elected American President Donald Trump’s stance towards Zimbabwe.

Thomas Jr made the remarks last week during commemorations of the Black History Month organised by the Zimbabwe United States Alumni Association (ZUSAA).

“I am glad that President (Robert) Mugabe wants to have a good relationship with his counterpart, our 45th president,” he said.

“I want to say that we will maintain our policies here,” he said citing continued US support for health and humanitarian assistance, exchange programmes and the construction of the $200 million new embassy complex in Harare.

“America’s commitment to Zimbabwe has remained strong including through the President’s Emergency Plan for Aids Relief, which was started during President (George) Bush’s administration,” he added.

Black History Month, which is also known as African American History Month, is celebrated in February to recognise the rich heritage and vast achievements of African Americans throughout the course of American history.

Thomas Jr, who is in his second term as US diplomat to Zimbabwe, has served other countries such as Philippines and Bangladesh, India; Kaduna, Nigeria; and Lima, Peru. He also once served as director for South Asia at the National Security Council at the White House.

Mugabe recently told State media that he was unsure of how Trump would conduct himself on issues affecting Zimbabwe, especially after his predecessor, Barack Obama renewed travel and economic sanctions on the First Family on the eve of his departure. – Newsday

Man Uses Fake O’Level Certificate to Get Enrolled

Meanwhile, an 18-year-old man who failed last year’s Ordinary Level examinations was arrested at Goromonzi High School while seeking to be enrolled for Lower Sixth form using a forged results slip.

Dick Chikadza’s Zimbabwe School Examinations Council (ZIMSEC) 2016 O-Level results slip had two Us, two Es, two Ds and a C and he did not sit for Computer Studies.

He replaced the results with five As, two Bs and a C.

Chikadza pleaded guilty to charges of presenting a forged certificate or diploma to a prospective employer or institution of learning with intent to gain employment or admission.

He appeared before Harare magistrate Mr Lazini Ncube and will be sentenced today.

The complainant in the matter is ZIMSEC represented by its assistant security officer, Mr Lee Banda.

Prosecutor Ms Francesca Mukumbiri told the court on February 13, Chikadza went to Goromonzi High School seeking to enrol for Lower Sixth.

He tendered the forged results slip to the school officials. Suspecting that the results slip was fake, Goromonzi contacted ZIMSEC.

According to Mr Banda, Chikadza sat for his exams at Oriel Boys High School and had only one pass in Integrated Science. He was immediately arrested. – state media

Man Prints Fake $5 Bond Notes Inside Harare House | COURT PAPERS

A Harare man has appeared in court for allegedly printing bond notes at his house.

Mr Elton Nyamudahondo (33) of Sunningdale 2 was hauled before Harare magistrate Ms Tilda Mazhande yesterday being charged with possessing articles for criminal use. He was arrested for allegedly printing counterfeit $5 bond notes at No. 4836 in Dzivarasekwa Extension in Harare.

The investigation officer, Detective Assistant Nyasha Makanisa, opposed granting Nyamudahondo bail describing him as a flight risk.

Asked by Nyamudahondo’s lawyer, Mr Clemence Takaendesa, why the police wanted to investigate the matter further, Asst Det Makanisa said there was a link they wanted to pursue.

“What is the link?” asked Mr Takaendesa.

In response Det Asst Makanisa said it might prove that the accused committed the offence.

“There are no investigations otherwise you would not have brought the accused on a full docket and he would not have appeared in a trial court?” inquired Mr Takaendesa.

“If we are allowed to make follow- ups it might prove that the accused was printing fake bond notes,” replied Asst Det Makanisa.

The matter was adjourned to today for bail ruling.

Prosecuting, Ms Stylon Marufu alleged that on Saturday, February 25, detectives from CID Homicide Harare received information that the accused was printing counterfeit $5 notes at his house.

The court heard that detectives went to Nyamudahondo’s house but failed to locate him.

It is alleged police gathered information that the accused was at No. 4836 Dzivarasekwa Extension in Harare.

Upon arrival at that house, detectives spotted the accused seated on a bed in a bedroom.

The court heard that he was holding a sheet of munic paper on which were printed four $5 counterfeit bond notes.

There was an HP Office Jet 5601 scanner in the room. Nyamudahondo was subsequently arrested.

The police recovered 31 $5 finished bond notes, 103 $5 semi-finished bond notes, 47 plain sheets of munic paper and 6 HP cartridges on the bed the accused was sitting on.

– state media

1979 Floods Suddenly Hit Zimbabwe as Grace Mugabe Looks On

……

The last time these angry floods hit Zimbabwe was in 1979 when Ian Smith was washed away and a new country emerged.

By Chris Tongogara| The last time these angry floods hit Zimbabwe was in 1979 when Ian Smith was washed away and a new country emerged. Just before, it was a never ending economic and bloody chaos, and suddenly the same waters brought in a new nation as people both black and white kissed a smashing new country. It was anger enmeshed in throbbing joy, at last.

Operation Zero Hour.

How it all happened: Joshua Nkomo’s ZIPRA was vitiated by a long-standing debate on military strategy. It was not a sudden Moscow diktat which created the most secret ZIPRA plan: Operation Zero Hour.

This envisaged a co-ordinated general offensive on several fronts simultaneously. Five regular battalions with artillery support were to seize bridgeheads in the northern front at Kenyemba, Chirundu and Kariba to enable ZIPRA troops to cross with armour and artillery. At the same time attacks were to be mounted on the airfields at Kariba, Victoria Falls and Wankie, which would be secured to enable the transfer of ZIPRA MiGs from Angola. The principal objective was to enable regular troops to seize and hold the strategic rear bases along the border in support of the offensive to be launched from within Rhodesia.

Offensive at the start of the 1979 rainy season.

As the offensive moved in-country, guerilla units already in place would sabotage transport links to undermine the Rhodesian counter-offensive, which would be further slowed by urban warfare. Zero Hour was planned for the start of the 1979 rainy season,

October or November. Far from encouraging this plan, the Soviets refused to release ZIPRA pilots in training in the USSR. Rhodesian raids on the army being assembled on the Zambian border delayed Zero Hour, which was ultimately aborted by the Lancaster House talks.

By end of December 1979, Zimbabwe had come and it came with rain. The new Zimbabwean nation that is coming is coming with angry rains. It has come!, Mrs Mugabe, as you watch with your two eyes!

‘Mum Killer’ Gets Free Bail

A MAN from Mzilikazi suburb in Bulawayo who was arrested last month for allegedly killing his mother after accusing her of bewitching his late daughter, has been freed on bail.

Amadi Nyathi (39) appeared before provincial magistrate Mr Tinashe Tashaya facing a murder charge.

He allegedly assaulted his late mother (name withheld) with a metal crutch all over the body after accusing her of practising witchcraft. Nyathi`s mother died after six days at Mpilo Central Hospital.

A court heard that Nyathi`s mother assaulted her son first.

She allegedly hit him with the same metal crutch after he forced her to open her wardrobe which was full of traditional herbs (muti).

The court heard that Nyathi tried to flee and his mother threw a brick at him.

He allegedly fell down and she followed to continue the attack.

Nyathi allegedly hit his mother after she dropped the crutch and grabbed his private parts threatening to bite them off.

Mr Tashaya did not ask Nyathi to plead and remanded him out of custody to 20 March 2017 on free bail.

Prosecuting, Mr Nkathazo Dlodlo said on January 13 this year at 10PM, Nyathi had an argument with his mother accusing her of witchcraft.

He allegedly assaulted her and she died in hospital six days later from injuries sustained during the beating.

Nyathi was arrested a day after his mother died.

“Accused assaulted the now deceased all over the body with a crutch. A misunderstanding arose after accused found the now deceased with items he believed were used for witchcraft. Complainant was taken to Mpilo Central Hospital where she died six days later,” said Mr Dlodlo.

“There are witnesses who saw accused assaulting the now deceased. He gave indications to the police that led to the recovery of the crutch he used in the assault.” – State Media

XENOPHOBIA: Zuma Fix

President Jacob Zuma

President Jacob Zuma is under pressure to fix the current menace of xenophobia.

The violence is believed to be the work of named controversial opposition figures in that nation seeking to dislodge Zuma in the event of a national security failure. The Zimbabwean Community in South Africa chairman, Mr Ngqabutho Mabhena, told reporters there was a third force behind the attacks and accused some opposition parties of trying to destabilise the neighbouring country under the ANC-led government.

PDZ party leader Barbara Nyagomo blasted Zuma saying, “As an organisation’s condemn forthrightly the emerging xenophobic upheavals in South Africa and view this a violation of people rights enshrined in the South African Constitution and other instruments that South Africa has ratified. The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa states in it’s preamble that ‘ South Africa belongs to all those who live in it,” Violence targeted at foreign nationals is also a violation of the right to, dignity and equality enshrined in the Constitution. We call upon  the government of South Africa and it’s organs to take stringent measures to quell the situation and ensure that normalcy is restored immediately. Illegal foreigners must be dealt with through the statutory defined processes by the right state organs. The government can not allow such criminal acts to unfold unabated. The rule of law must be restored immediately.”

Jacob Zuma has been trapped at the teeth by right wing extremists on the subject of immigration. Last week Zuma, struggling to fix the problem, was cornered during a press interview ending up contradicting himself.

He said, “well, firstly that is a debatable point whether South Africans are xenophobic.  I don’t think we have those numbers of foreigners. And I don’t think you would sit for years and years without any burst out, if South Africans were xenophobic, in the majority of cases only when there are such incidents where people take the law into their own hands. And generally people who take the law into their hands because they don’t have places to stay etcetera, and also the kind of employment they have, if for an example, you look at how it has been done in other areas where they open a lot of businesses, it becomes so obvious that the numbers are too big; and with time, people begin to feel what is this;

you will recall an incident in Soweto they were having shops, nobody ever thought the foreigners have got shops here until a young man was trying to steal and a foreigner shot him and that became a problem, so you can see what is it that makes the kind of situation get out of hand; I feel the numbers of foreigners in South Africa are far more than the numbers Europe is fighting…”

More Drama As Man Sires 9 kids With 3 Women In 3 Years

A Bulawayo magistrate has ordered an unemployed man who allegedly boasts of being a “super dad” after siring nine children with three women in three years, to pay $120 per month for the upkeep of one of his children.

Mr Tinashe Tashaya heard that Kudakwashe Maregedze (35) of Harare`s Glen Norah suburb has four children with Ms Rachel Lunga, four children with Ms Jesca Rudzayi and a child with Ms Sophia Jiri.

Ms Jiri (21) of Entumbane suburb dragged Maregedze to court seeking $206 for the upkeep of their six-year-old child.

She said Maregedze has never contributed to the upkeep of the child.

Mr Tashaya ordered him to pay $120 per month for the upkeep of his child starting from this month end.

“You have to deposit $120 into the applicant`s bank account. Maybe if you pay this amount you will stop impregnating women. I wish these other women can also drag you to court claiming maintenance because you are not behaving like a responsible man,” he said.

“You have to look for a job and maintain your child. Failure to do so you are going to be arrested and we will meet in criminal court”.

Ms Jiri said Maregedze was irresponsible.

“Your Worship, l’ve been struggling to maintain this child for the past six years. The child needs food, clothes and money for medication. Kudakwashe has never assisted me. He always hides when l go to Harare to look for him,” she said.

In response, Maregedze told the court that he could afford $10 per month as he is not working.

“Your Worship I have four children with Ms Rachel Lunga and four children with Ms Jesca Rudzayi and the other one with the applicant. All of these children need my support and I’m not working,” he said as he handed over nine birth certificates to the magistrate. – State Media

Shock As South-African Man Axes Wife And Son To Death

A South African based man axed his ex-wife (23) and the couple’s one year old son to death after the woman ditched him.

It is suspected the double murder suspect — Mkululi Moyo (30) — of Utandi Village under Chief Bvute in Mberengwa could have fled to South Africa after killing Ms Netsai Maruvise and baby Mthabisi on Thursday last week.

Police have since launched a manhunt for him. Acting Midlands Provincial police spokesperson Assistant Inspector Ethel Mukwende yesterday said the incident occurred at Nyama General Dealer Shop, Neta Business Centre in Mberengwa.

She said Ms Maruvise was customarily married to Moyo. Asst Insp Mukwende said Ms Maruvise and Moyo separated sometime last year following an undisclosed misunderstanding.

She said Ms Maruvise moved from Utandi Village and settled with her sister and aunt who are shop keepers at Nyama General Dealer Shop.

“I can confirm that we are investigating a case of murder which occurred between February 23 and 24 at Nyama General Dealer Shop at Neta Business Centre, Mberengwa. It is alleged that Ms Netsai Maruvise and Mthabisi Moyo, an infant aged one were both murdered by Mkululi Moyo. Moyo is ex-husband of Maruvise and father to the infant,” she said.

She said on February 23, Moyo arrived at the shop to talk to Ms Maruvise since he wanted her back at their matrimonial homestead. Asst Insp Mukwende said around 8PM, on February 23, Moyo and Ms Maruvise failed to reach a consensus.

“Moyo left the shops but threatened to consult a witch doctor to kill Mthabisi in order to spite his ex-wife. On the same night, Ms Maruvise and Mthabisi retired to bed in one room while her sister and aunt slept in another room at Nyama General Dealer Shop,” she said.

Asst Insp said the following morning at around 6AM, Ms Maruvise’s sister went to open the shops and discovered her sister’s (Moyo’s ex-wife) body and her son’s with cracked skulls lying in pools of blood.

She said a report was made to the police who have launched a manhunt for the double murder suspect.

“The mother and child suffered skull fractures and were found in pools of blood. The suspect fled during the night. We are appealing to anyone with information that might lead to the arrest of Moyo to visit their nearest police station. We also appeal to members of the public to desist from using violence to solve disputes,” said Asst Insp Mukwende.
The bodies of the mother and child are at Zvishavane District Hospital awaiting postmortems, she said. – State Media

Man’s Head Crushed By Potholes Dies


A Bulawayo man died instantly when a vehicle he was driving landed on his head and crushed it after he swerved to avoid a pothole.

Blessing Mudekwe (26) from Mzilikazi suburb was thrown out of the Iveco vehicle as it rolled along Masiyephambili Drive near Lobengula suburb and landed on his head.

The freak accident occurred around 4PM on Sunday.

Mudekwe’s brain was left splattered on the roadside and his family cleaned it up yesterday.

A family source said Mudekwe had three friends on board the vehicle.

“One of his friends is admitted to Mpilo Central Hospital while the other two were discharged with minor bruises,” said the source.

Following the accident, word spread on social media that Mudekwe had been decapitated.

“I didn’t see his head. I thought it was chopped off,” said one of his friends.

The state media yesterday caught up with Mudekwe’s family who expressed shock at the accident.

They however, dismissed the decapitation story saying his head was crushed to the extent that it could be assumed that it had been separated from the body.

“I think it was shock that led his friends to think that his head had been chopped off. It wasn’t removed but was flattened as the car landed on his face. He became unrecognisable but we have identified him. He had a deep cut on his arm but the rest of the body is still intact,” said Mrs Sitshengisiwe Dube, the family’s spokesperson.
She blamed the accident on potholes that litter the city’s roads.

“He swerved while trying to avoid a pothole only to land on other potholes. This resulted in him failing to control the car. He hit a street light pole and was thrown out of the vehicle on impact.

“Unfortunately, the vehicle landed on his head crushing it. We have identified him and today we went to the accident scene to sweep and gather bits of his brain that were scattered at the accident site,” said Mrs Dube.
She said this was not the first time Mudekwe was involved in an accident due to potholes.
She said recently Mudekwe and a friend were nearly hit by a car whose driver had lost control due to potholes.

“We can’t continue to lose lives because of potholes. Right now a young life has been lost due to the potholes. The council and Government should act on this,” she said.

Bulawayo police spokesperson Inspector Precious Simango confirmed the accident saying Mudekwe’s body was taken to United Bulawayo Hospitals (UBH) for post mortem.

“We also urge motorists to be cautious on the roads. With the rains we’re experiencing the roads have become slippery and the depth of some potholes may not be easy to see as they might be filled with water,” said Insp Simango.

Bulawayo Town Clerk Mr Christopher Dube said the council will not shoulder the blame for the accident saying drivers should drive cautiously as it was common knowledge that roads were potholed.

Mr Dube said for council to improve on service delivery, residents should pay their bills.

Dep Mayor Fired

Gift Banda

Bulawayo deputy mayor, Councillor Gift Banda and ward 21 Councillor Reuben Matengu have been fired from their council positions following recommendations made by an independent tribunal.

Clrs Banda and Matengu, who appeared before the independent tribunal for gross misconduct and mismanagement following their suspension in September 2016, were reportedly served with the verdict from the tribunal last Friday but allege they have not been contacted by the Ministry of Local Government, Public Works and National Housing.

In an interview yesterday, Permanent Secretary in the Local Government Ministry, Engineer George Mlilo confirmed that the two had ceased being councillors.

“Yes the two have been fired. The tribunal has forwarded their recommendations to us on the two affected individuals. While we are yet to get to the finer details of the recommendations, the underlying issue is that they have been relieved of their duties with immediate effect,” said Eng Mlilo.

Government sources revealed that Clr Banda was found guilty of unprocedurally getting a lease for the construction of a social club at Hume Park but was exonerated in the purchase of a piece of land at Ascot race course for the construction of town houses.

However, the sources revealed that the Hume Park stand does not exist after the local authority made it clear that there was no available land in the suburb.

Clr Banda said:

“I have no comment. I am still talking to my lawyers. After that, I can give you a comment.”

Clr Matengu on the other hand confirmed receiving the verdict from the tribunal but said he was not satisfied and was preparing an appeal.

He was found guilty of selling a residential stand in Southwold suburb, which he had bought under a special facility which gave him a 40 percent discount on the purchase price but was not supposed to resell it according to the agreement of sale.

“I only got communication from the tribunal not the ministry but there are a lot of things which were ignored in coming up with this verdict. It was as if the tribunal were taking what they wanted and leaving out the key aspects.

“What boggles the mind is that when I did what I did I actually consulted the council management. I never at any point tried to hide anything, actually what I did was approved by management, so I guess I am being made to suffer for listening to council management,” said Clr Matengu.

Bulawayo Progressive Residents Association (BPRA) coordinator, Mr Rodrick Fayayo commended the verdicts, noting that residents did not condone corruption at any level.

“Corruption at any level should be dealt with, regardless of whether you are in council or central government. We further believe that corruption should never be politicised hence we are satisfied with the outcome of this tribunal,” said Mr Fayayo.

BPRA raised the red flag over the rate at which councillors were grabbing land in the city leading to the Government sending an investigation team to get to the bottom of the matter.

Last week, the Minister of Local Government, Public Works and National Housing Saviour Kasukuwere fired Gweru Mayor Clr Hamutendi Kombayi and Clr Kenneth Sithole following a recommendation by another independent tribunal.

The two were part of 15 councillors that were suspended on August 15 in 2015, facing allegations of gross mismanagement of council resources.

The other 13 councillors have returned to work. – state media

PSL Clubs Register for Squads Today


State Media – The Premier Soccer League registration deadline closes today, with all 18 teams expected to forward their 2017 squads.

Kudzai Bare, the league’s communications officer, said the registration deadline is, however, for administrative purposes so that teams can get players’ licences in time.

She said the clubs will be allowed to alter their squads after today’s deadline until the transfer-window closes at the end of March.

“Teams should submit their squads to our offices tomorrow so that we start processing their licences. Please note that this is a players’ registration that was agreed on long back so that should there be developments that require teams to play even next week, teams are able to field registered players,” said Bare.

“Another reason for this deadline is to allow verification of players’ data so that if there are queries they are addressed before the start of the league. And remember, we have more teams this year meaning that the workload is more than it was last year,” she said.

She allayed fears that their registration deadline would interfere with the new Fifa system of player registration that Zifa has adopted with immediate effect.

The new Fifa system known as “Connect” seeks to eliminate the hassle of teams travelling to Harare for registration with all their documents.

The new system will see Zifa’s provincial and regional officers and some clubs’ administrators going for a training workshop in Harare on a date to be announced.

“We are aware that there is a new registration system that will be used, but still, data has to be fed and those that will use the system need time to familiarise themselves. For those reasons, we need to have all the paperwork in time to facilitate smooth registration,” said Bare.

League champions Caps United, who are participating in the Caf Champions League, as well as the country’s representatives in the Caf Confederations Cup Ngezi Platinum Stars are expected to be among the early birds in submitting their lists as they have somehow already finalised their squads.

Caps United and Ngezi Platinum Stars had an early start to their season as they prepared for Caf club competitions.

Another side expected to send their registration papers early is FC Platinum, which had a two-week long pre-season camp in South Africa where they played a training match against Caf Champions League hold Mamelodi Sundowns.

The platinum miners are close to finalising their squad, having retained the bulk of their 2016 squad, with new additions being the quartet of Bret Amidu, Gift Mbweti, Talent Chawapiwa and Agrippa Murimba.

FC Platinum are said to be looking for a central defender and a striker to complete their 2017 squad.

They have shown interest in national team defender Lawrence Mhlanga, who signed a contract with them a few weeks back, after allegedly misrepresenting facts claiming to be a free agent when he has a running contract with Chicken Inn.

Mhlanga is reportedly disputing that he is contracted to Chicken Inn.

Bulawayo giants Highlanders are unlikely to have any glitches with meeting the deadline as they have returned the core of their 2016 squad.

Bosso only released skipper Felix Chindungwe, Njabulo Nyoni and Julius Daudi and have since roped in striker Rodrick Mutuma.

Highlanders’ coach Erol Akbay told Chronicle Sport that he wants to add another striker to complete his 2017 squad.

Former champions Chicken Inn have added ex-Mutare City striker Kudakwashe Gurure and defensive midfielder Innocent Muchaneka from Hwange to their squad.

Ex-Highlanders and national team midfielder Peter Rio Moyo headlines a list of new players roped in by How Mine. The gold miners have been quietly doing their transfer dealings, with coach Kelvin Kaindu saying their focus is on giving youngsters an opportunity to shine as they build a team for the future.

Emirates Eating Our Cake – AirZim

Air Zimbabwe is opposed to the granting of licences to foreign airlines such as Emirates to carry passengers between Harare and Lusaka, saying such a move disadvantages the national airline. Air Zimbabwe chief executive officer Captain Ripton Muzenda last week told the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Transport and Infrastructural Development that the Harare-Lusaka route was one of the most viable routes that the national airline must be enjoying. He said under the agreement with Emirates, the airline was supposed to carry passengers from Zimbabwe to Dubai, instead of carrying passengers between Harare and Lusaka.

“Our opinion as Air Zimbabwe is that this works against our favour that Emirates is operating between Harare and Lusaka,” said Capt Muzenda.

“It is not a fifth freedom because by definition of a fifth freedom, Emirates has a right to come to Zimbabwe and take passengers to anywhere in the world provided they take them first to Dubai.

“At present they are allowed to take passengers from Harare to Lusaka and terminating. So, this extends to seventh freedom, which we are opposed to.” Capt Muzenda said the fact that Emirates was allowed to ply the Harare-Lusaka route disadvantaged the national airline, as it was unable to compete with it.

He said given that Emirates had been allowed to ply that route, there were high chances that they could end up carrying passengers between Harare and Victoria Falls or Johannesburg.

“As a national airline, we are opposed to the granting of this seventh freedom that has been couched as a fifth freedom, said Capt Muzenda.
“If they fly to Harare, they must fly back to Dubai. They are allowed to fly from Dubai to Harare to Lusaka, but they should not be carrying passengers in between.

“This brings unfair competition. For your information, the Lusaka route is very lucrative.

“The Harare-Jo’burg is the most lucrative. Harare-Lusaka is equally competitive or very close to Jo’burg and Bulawayo. So, we are opposed to the granting of foreign carriers coming to ply those routes. We cannot oppose South African Airways flying between Jo’burg and Bulawayo because it’s by right, it is reciprocal.

“We also get to do the same. But we should not be giving the foreign carriers like Emirates seventh freedom to come into Victoria Falls and Cape Town. We oppose the granting of those.”

Capt Muzenda said one of their strategic objectives for this year was to buy an aircraft that they would own. He said all the aircraft they were operating were owned by Government. Capt Muzenda said they needed to ensure that they maintained 95 percent aircraft departure reliability, though they faced challenges from their old aircraft.

He said the other challenge they faced was lack of vehicles to carry their cabin crews.

Capt Muzenda said they were hiring two vans, adding that they intended to buy some vehicles for transporting cabin crews. – State Media

South-Africa Xenophobia Attacks, African Embassies Rescue Nationals

The Zimbabwean embassy in South Africa says it is keeping lines of communication open to assist Zimbabweans affected by the xenophobia attacks in South Africa.

This comes as the African governments engage South African authorities to curb xenophobia attacks.

African governments have engaged South African authorities to manage xenophobia attacks by South Africans on foreigners.

In a telephone interview with ZBC News, Zimbabwe’s ambassador to South Africa Mr Isaac Moyo said he together with other ambassadors from other African countries met with the Home Affairs Ministry on Friday.

He said the purpose of the meeting was to come up with an immediate solution to stabilise the situation.

Ambassador Moyo advised Zimbabweans living in South Africa to keep following the developments in South Africa and to stay home until the situation culms down.

Meanwhile, Zimbabweans in South Africa have been urged to contact the embassy in Pretoria and the consulates in Johannesburg and Cape Town for assistance.

A number of videos have been circulating on social media showing foreigners being physically attacked by South Africans who are alleging that foreigners are taking their jobs.

 

Floods Sweep Away Masvingo-Bulawayo Highway Bridge

Staff Reporter |  A bridge over Nkankezi River in Filabusi Insiza District was last night swept away by floods completely cutting the road from Masvingo to Bulawayo via Mbalabala.

The destruction of the bridge means that travellers wishing to travel from Masvingo to Bulawayo will have to go the longer distance via Mvuma and Gweru.

No comment has yet been received from the Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure Development on the catastrophe.

Mugabe Workers Turn Against Him

Staff Reporter | Government workers  known for resisting industrial action claiming that they are duty bound to be loyal to President Robert Mugabe’s government will on Monday turn against the aged president and demonstrate against his government’s failed administration of the civil services.

Information coming through to ZimEye.com from sources within the Apecs Council meeting sitting in Harare today suggests that the civil servants have declined a government offer to pay the workers their promised 2016 bonuses in the form of urban and peri urban land and demanding instead to be paid in cash.

Sources within the government indicate that the workers from across the country will on Monday gather at the popular defiance centre at the Harare Gardens demanding to be addressed by the President as talks with the Public Service Ministry collapse.

The government workers are understood to be vowing that they will not return to work until they have met with the President and have their issues resolved. The sources indicate that information will be circulated to all sectors of government workers including teachers and nurses to shut down government services until their grievances have been resolved by government.

State doctors are already on a mass industrial action which seen them down their tools for the last yen days which has crippled the hospitals countrywide.

Mnangagwa Victory Put On Hold

Zanu PF’s provincial election results for Masvingo, in which previously sacked regional chairperson and alleged Team Lacoste kingpin Ezra Chadzamira trounced Generation 40-linked (G40) bigwig Mutero Masanganise has presented the warring ruling party with a massive headache — what to do next.

As matters stand, President Robert Mugabe and his senior party lieutenants are dithering about releasing the results of the poll formally — seemingly more concerned about diffusing rising political temperatures within the party in the volatile province, although insiders told journalists yesterday that this was inadvertently also inflaming emotions further in the process.

All this comes as Zanu PF’s two major factions have escalated their fights ever since Mugabe gave his traditional birthday interview to the ZBC last week, in which he rubbished all his minions’ leadership credentials and their chances of succeeding him.

It was reported at the weekend that the G40 — which is rabidly opposed to Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s mooted presidential ambitions, and which is said to be backing Masanganise — is pushing to have the results of the Masvingo poll set aside, citing alleged rigging and other irregularities.

To complicate matters, there were also unconfirmed reports that Masanganise, a war veteran and retired army colonel, may be related to Mugabe.

At the same time, the insiders who spoke to the Daily News yesterday suggested that Zanu PF’s ever-fluid factional dynamics could be shifting again — with Mnangagwa’s allies, Team Lacoste, cranking up their own assault on the G40 who have been in buoyant mood over the past few weeks.

“It (Masvingo result) speaks to an internal rebellion in Zanu PF and the movement’s continuing implosion,” political analyst Maxwell Saungweme chipped in.

“The election result is an early warning sign to those in Zanu PF that once Mugabe is gone the power matrix will change. It also calls for the G40s to rethink their strategy after Mugabe, as Mugabe’s brand will be buried with the man,” Saungweme added.

On his part, University of Zimbabwe professor of politics Eldred Masunungure said it was unrealistic for the G40 to hope to hold sway in Masvingo.

“It’s common knowledge that Masvingo is a stronghold of Team Lacoste. For the G40, it was an ambition which was not realistic. They should have never harboured ambitions to take control of the province.

“But I don’t think the people of Masvingo are defying Mugabe. They are only saying that they are not swayed by the relationship between the president and this other candidate (Masanganise),” Masunungure told the Daily News.

In the provincial election results that became public on Thursday, Chadzamira crushed Masanganise — polling 12 393 votes against his opponent’s 4 888, amid allegations of rigging and failure by people in Mwenezi and some parts of Chiredzi to vote.

But Chadzamira has an uneasy relationship with party bosses after he was suspended last year on charges of indiscipline and inciting insolence, as well as engaging in violence.

He was subsequently replaced in an acting capacity by Amasi Nenjana, who is said to have reluctantly pulled out of last week’s race to pave the way for Masanganise.

Zanu PF has since said that its politburo will now have to determine the outcome of the provincial election at its next sitting, although Masanganise wants to have the results nullified.

In a statement, Masanganise accused politburo member and presiding officer, Joram Gumbo, of allegedly showing bias in favour of Chadzamira.

“The presiding officer displayed from the onset his bias towards a certain candidate and has continued to canvas public opinion by going public about a process which is yet to be concluded.

“We all wonder where the presiding officer got his 63 percent when the whole of Mwenezi District did not vote, Chiredzi District two thirds did not vote, in Gutu District a fragmentation of a few districts participated with Gutu North Constituency not having a single vote.

“In Masvingo District only Masvingo urban constituency voted with an average of two districts each having voted in the other four constituencies.

“Chivi South constituency was affected by heavy rains, while there was a circus in Zaka East constituency where the Member of Parliament was conducting elections,” Masanganise said.

Meanwhile, Mugabe — wittingly or unwittingly — appeared to confirm at the weekend why there is so much interest in the election of the party’s provincial chairpersons.

Speaking at his belated birthday celebrations in Matobo on Saturday, a tired-looking Mugabe accused his lieutenants of using their factions’ provincial chairpersons to push their succession agenda.

“Let me refer now to the unending problem of division within the party. We want a party which is tight … The party, as I said, is based on a party constitution and the party constitution provides how people can get elected from one position to another.

“Izvi zvekuti vanhu vanoti vanoda kudyarana kuti vaite create ma-chairpersons or groups dzinova-supporter ivo havambofa vakabudirira muZanu PF (those who connive to install their own chairpersons or groups won’t succeed in hijacking Zanu PF),” the nonagenarian warned.

Mugabe spoke as Zanu PF’s ugly tribal, factional and succession wars have got worse over the past few weeks, with the ruling party split between Team Lacoste and the G40 camp.

The nonagenarian also repeated on Saturday that he would neither retire nor name a successor, unless the deeply-divided ruling party staged an extraordinary congress to choose his successor if he decided to retire.

“If Zanu PF says I should go I will … For your own information, I never canvassed for any position, I rose up to my position … let the people judge for themselves … We don’t want imposition (of leaders) at all.

“People have said that I should choose a successor but that is what is called imposition. I don’t want and will never impose. This is the job of congress to choose those who will then come up and the party will elect.

“Whatever position you seek must be a position you get upon a proper election by the people … People who are busy forming their own groupings saying VaMugabe must go I ask myself where should I go,” Mugabe said.

But such statements have not gone down well with Mnangagwa’s allies, who include sacked Mashonaland Central youth leader, Godfrey Tsenengamu.

Last week, they warned the increasingly frail nonagenarian that he faced a big fight if he continued to thwart the Midlands godfather’s mooted presidential aspirations.

Tsenengamu also said that they would now openly campaign for Mnangagwa as Mugabe’s successor, raising the stakes high in the succession saga.

He was subsequently nabbed by detectives, a day after he held his press conference in the capital where he let rip at Mugabe and his powerful wife Grace.

Tsenengamu has since appeared at the Harare Magistrates’ Courts where he was denied bail.

He is facing three charges: violating provisions of the draconian Public Order and Security Act (Posa) for holding his press conference without clearance, undermining the authority of the president and subverting a constitutionally-elected government. – Daily News

OLINDA FAMILY BLOWS OUT: Stunner Has Nothing to Do With Her Turbulence, She Was Always Like That, Years Before!

 

She “is like weather,” and has a “double personality,” and she “was never abused[in her earlier life]”

Olinda Chapel’s close circuit family has spoken out on their kin’s unstable disposition stating that she was always like that years before Stunner (Desmond Chideme) came onto the scene.

The family in an official request approached ZimEye stating that contrary to what many have claimed that her condition of turbulence is due to Stunner’s cheating, Olinda, was in fact never abused in her domestic life prior to her marriage to the rapper.

She “is like weather,” and has a “double personality,” and she “was never abused[in her earlier life],” they said.

 

On the day Olinda was to go into a snap interview that sought to analyse “abuse of women through cheating by spouses” on ZimEye last Monday morning, her brother (Tongesai) and sister, Rudo rushed to telephone the ZimEye network demanding that that last interview be cancelled. The session had been scheduled and had been specifically customised to highlight “the abuse of women” for which on Saturday 18th February, one victim had telephoned while lamenting that 3 years after her husband cheated on her, she is still crying years later.

“But our sister is like weather,” Mr Mudekunye charged saying.

He continued, “we understand that there are women’s abuse and the like, but when a person starts bringing out things like bank statements and so on; even in your own home when your wife starts taking out things to the public (sic); Me I was working for my sister (Olinda) in Oxford while I was staying in Leicester, and at one time her car I was using broke down, and she got onto my case in a disturbing way, attacking me for a car worth £300, but this time her husband has destroyed a car worth £40,000, you know(sic).

“I am just [wanting you to see] she is a nice person, but being a nice person she will be wanting to be rewarded for being nice, you know. People are asking ‘does she not have relatives?,’ but she does have relatives but when the kins are now fed up, there is a little bit that they can do, you know, there is a little bit they can do. Imagine your own sister,” he asked.

Was she ever abused at some point in her lifetime?, Mudekunye was then asked, to which he replied saying, “she was never abused, she was never abused. But there is that thing they call “Double Personality”. She is that type person who requires an elderly person reveal to you that this person has certain strengths in business, but you know business in the care agency can fold away tomorrow and then what?”