CIO’s Driver Drops Down In The Dock

A Chivhu taxi driver who was a witness in a case of theft where a member of the Central Intelligence Office was the complainant collapsed while standing in the witness box and was whisked to Chivhu General Hospital for treatment.

Tichaona Bareta who is also employed by the complainant collapsed while waiting to testify before Chivhu Resident Magistrate, Story Rushambwa.

Dellen Hove (37) who is employed by the Ministry of State Security Chivhu was the complainant in the case.

Bareta started sweating when the State prosecutor led evidence in court. He produced a sharp sound like he was having difficulties in breathing. This happened before cross-examination.

He fell from the witness’s stand where he was standing and landed on the bench and was placed on the floor and then taken to hospital.

It was the State case that sometime in April 2016, the accused, Thomas Paradza (44) of Chivhu received and took into his possession a motor vehicle Honda Fitz registration number ADU 0713 from Bareta who was employed by the complainant.

It was agreed that the accused would hold it in trust for the sole purpose of repairing the gear box and return it to Bareta.

Thereafter, the accused, in breach of agreed terms neither repaired the motor vehicle nor returned it to Bareta but instead stripped 4 coil packs, gear box censors, valve board and gear box seal from the engine.

The complainant discovered the offense when he came to collect the vehicle and the accused person was questioned on the whereabouts of the parts but could not give a satisfactory answer.

A report was made to the Police leading to the arrest of the accused person. Value of the missing parts is $390 and nothing was recovered.
Magistrate Rushambwa found the accused not guilty and acquitted Paradza. He said that there was no evidence produced to show that Paradza stole the parts. – Masvingo Mirror

SOUL JAH LOVE: “I Was Not Amputated”

Dancehall lion, Soul Jah Love has come out speaking on rumours claiming the man was amputated.

The singer made revelations on his condition to revelers at a Harare gig on Sunday.

Rumours had claimed that the dancehall basher was recently amputated due to diabetes.

But the man has refuted the reports saying, “Ndiri kutongonzwawo kuti ndakagurwa gumbo but hameno pamwe rakagurwa zvandisingazive. Repa whatsApp ndiro rakagurwa kana rako iwewe (I am just hearing the rumours but maybe they amputated my WhatsApp leg or maybe yours,” he told the state media.

During the smasher on Sunday, the musician kept fans on their feet and was noted for his dancy performance sharing the stage with Alex Macheso.

Jah Love has had a troublesome diabetic foot ulcer for which condition he was hospitalised in the United Kingdom at Northampton General Hospital. This was several days after necromancer, Walter Magaya had claimed he had healed him in December 2016 and the preacher staged an act using a fake wheelchair experience.

Idi Amini Spirit : Mugabe’s Official Calls For Expulsion Of All Indians

Zimbabweans were yesterday shocked by new threats from Zanu PF Harare provincial political commissar Shadreck Mashayamombe to expel all Indian nationals from Zimbabwe.

The threats were accompanied by the kind of worrying rhetoric which threatens to place the ruling party in the same league as Ugandan dictator Idi Amin who hounded out the Asian population in the 70s through similar racial and economic unrest.

The Zanu PF Harare South MP said on Facebook:  “Something must be done with this Indian community in Zimbabwe.

“Firstly, they don’t bank their money, secondly, they don’t develop their estates, and thirdly they don’t want to marry our sisters, fourthly, before independence they used to be given special treatment as compared to blacks.”

The Indian embassy was not immediately available for comment over the weekend, but the small community has by and large maintained cordial relations with locals.

By setting its sights on expelling the Indians, Zanu PF appears to be following the well-trodden — but largely discredited — path of Africanisers such as Amin and Mobuto Sese Seko of Zaire.

Amin’s deportation of about 50 000 UK passport-holding South Asians in 1972 failed to bring promised prosperity, and saw the collapse of the commercial sector.
Meanwhile, the economic outcome of Mobutism was the wholesale plunder of Congo’s resources by the ruling elite.

This comes as President Robert Mugabe has increasingly leaned on India and China after being shunned by Western trade and financial partners.
They have been put off by concern over human rights and alleged fraud in elections won by the president and his Zanu PF party.

Speaking at the 11th Zimbabwe International Research Symposium on Friday, Mugabe said more than 23 percent of Zimbabweans were now earning a living through the SME sector and must follow India’s example.

“With success stories having already been recorded around the globe, in China and India for example, there is no need to reinvent the wheel on SMEs development.

“This is especially so given the sound relationship between Zimbabwe and India, especially in the SMEs sector, ICTs, energy, education and the pharmaceutical sectors,” Mugabe said. Daily News

Exposed Lily-Livered Mnangagwa Goes On Knees To Praise President Mugabe

VICE President Emmerson Mnangagwa who has been told by President Mugabe that he is not the man to replace him says the President made him what he is today.

“I would not be where I am if I had not gone through the mentorship of his Excellency for the past 50 years. I am what I am because of him. I have no other way of repaying him except to be loyal and to deliver whatever assignment or deployment I have been assigned to. I must do my best, that is the only way I can satisfy the opportunities he has given me in my life, in the struggle and in the party,” said VP Mnangagwa.

“He is that statesman who says this is what we want to achieve, you go to sleep. You come tomorrow, and he says, this is what we want to achieve.

“Once you agree on a course of action for life or death, that’s the course he will take. He will not be diverted by other things. Principle is principle. This is the President. We have very few who appreciate that, but it’s a blessing.”

Zanu-PF secretary for Administration Cde Ignatius Chombo weighed in and wished President Mugabe good health and prosperity.

“It is the President’s birthday today and as we celebrate with him, we take time to look at his leadership since Independence,” said Dr Chombo.

“He led the liberation struggle and was separated from his family. His son Nhamodzenyika died while he was away, and there was no day that he gave up or backslid.

“His late son’s name, Nhamodzenyika, shows how he was dedicated to the nation. During Independence, he surprised the nation by saying that although we fought, we are one person and let’s forgive each other.”

Dr Chombo said reconciliation was an important phase and President Mugabe healed the nation. “He showed that he was a man of the people and his objective was to move forward,” said Dr Chombo. To find someone with such an understanding is a miracle. He has the ability to see beyond. It’s a special gift not found in many.

“He is a good listener and it is what makes him understand the wishes of the people. He is not crude to his enemies. He is always trying to learn from others for the benefit of the nation and his goals are not in short-cuts to please people. He fought for education and he said education is an equaliser and creates equal opportunities. The land reform programme and indigenisation are the gifts he gave us.”
President Mugabe is a man who is difficult to describe, he is very gifted and intellectually sophisticated, said Dr Chombo.

“He has a sharp memory and remembers things that happened many years ago like they happened yesterday. He is an icon to everyone and the entire region. He never sold out anything that is meant for Zimbabweans. He gave us land, minerals and education and asked us to share among ourselves. – State Media

Kurasha Laid To Rest

Zimbabwe Open University (ZOU) vice chancellor Professor Primrose Kurasha, who died last Friday, was buried at Glen Forest Memorial Park in Harare yesterday.

The State-assisted funeral was attended by hundreds of people including Cabinet ministers and senior Government officials.

Speakers paid glowing tributes to Prof Kurasha, who was the first woman to become vice chancellor of a university in Zimbabwe.

Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Development Minister Professor Jonathan Moyo said the late Prof Kurasha led a university that was open to everyone.

“We have 15 universities in the country and out of these, only four have the name Zimbabwe in them, and ZOU was among them. ZOU is unique in this category of four because it is the one which is open to everyone,” he said.

“Her death has left a void that shall be difficult to fill and her legacy will leave forever.”

Professor Jameson Kurasha described his late wife as a person who wanted everyone to succeed.

“I want to point out a few things about Primrose as an educator. Primrose was not a gatekeeper. In our culture, we have some people who believe that when they succeed, no one else should succeed. She was not like that. She believed that we could all make it in life,” he said.

He added that his late wife had persevered in setting up ZOU despite efforts by some to derail her dream.

“When she set up ZOU, there were efforts from some quarters to shatter her dream. She was investigated five times and five times she was found to be as a clean as whistle,” he added.

Mr Webster Waungana, brother to the late Prof Kurasha, said his sister was ambitious and did not accept failure.

“We grew up hard working and she was an ordinary girl just like any other,. But she had ambitions and she taught us that with the right will, one can achieve anything in life. I have lost a sister and a friend,” Mr Waungana said.

Masvingo Provincial Affairs Minister Shuvai Mahofa, who was an aunt to the late Prof Kurasha, said her work in the education sector was self-evident.

“Her work at ZOU is there for all to see. ZOU has surpassed other universities in Zimbabwe.

“Even those who dreamt of attaining a degree have managed to do that through ZOU. What pains me the most is that when I was taken ill last year, she assisted me a lot, but now she is the one who has gone ahead of me,” Minister Mahofa said.

Other ministers who attended the burial include Industry and Commerce Minister Dr Mike Bimha; Harare Metropolitan Province Minister Miriam Chikukwa; Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare Minister Prisca Mupfumira, together with the ZNA Commander Lieutenant General Philip Valerio Sibanda and president of the Chief’s Council Chief Fortune Charumbira. – State Media

Mugabe At 93 Hits Back – “I’m Not Dying”

Controversial Pastor Patrick Mugadza has prophesied that President Robert Mugabe will die on October 17, with the latter choosing his 93rd birthday celebration to declare that he is not dying any time soon. Mugabe also contradicts his young wife Grace who told a stunned audience that he might not make it to the 2018 election alive and that Zimbabweans in their millions would vote for his corpse. Below is the state media interview:

President Mugabe (RGM) turns 93 years old today. The following is Part One of the interview the President had with Tazzen Mandizvidza (TM) of the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation ZBC.

TM: Thank you very much Mr President for affording us this time to talk to you. We know you have a busy schedule. Let me start by saying congratulations, makorokoto on turning 93.

RGM: Thank you.

TM: Your Excellency, during the Harare Agricultural Show some years back, a palmist once read your palm and predicted that you will live up to 100 years, makore zana. But almost every year we come across the so-called prophets proclaiming that President Mugabe is going to die on this date and that date but you are here, you are alive. What would you want to say to these so-called prophets as you celebrate 93 years?

RGM: So-called prophets. Why don’t you say prophets of doom? Uhhm? They are prophets of doom who prophesy what really are their wishes, so they turn their wishes into prophecies or dreams perhaps, but hardly any dreams. I would want to think. It’s just wishes, that this man must go. This man must go and the man is not going. So year in year out, it’s the same wish. And the same prophesy.

Why do you care about them? I don’t care about them anymore. We have had even some pastors praying for my death. And even a bishop in my church, wekuMatabeleland uya watakazobata anemudzimai akazviregera. So we get such people in society. They won’t see some of them. In fact, the numbers may tend to increase sometimes. Ndakanzwawo chimwe chichiti President arikufa muna October, asi kana asingade kufa ngaataure, nhai? (laughs) So there it is. I don’t pay much attention to them at all.

TM: Meanwhile, Your Excellency, there have been calls for you to step down on account of your age and how do you answer such calls including from non-Zimbabweans like Julius Malema?

RGM: Do you listen anything from Malema? Who is Malema? The call to step down must come from my party; my party Congress, my party Central Committee. I will step down. But then what do you see, get? It’s the opposite. They want me to stand for elections, they want me to stand for elections everywhere in the party. And it’s their voice I heed and the voice of no one else.

Of course, if I feel like I can’t do it anymore, I will say so to my party so that they relieve me. But for now I think I can’t say so and even if I might feel I wanted to rest but with, you know, that volume of wishes for the President to stand, the number of people who will be disappointed is galore and I don’t want to disappoint. More so, that the majority of the people feel that there is no replacement actually nor successor who to them is as acceptable as I am.

But the people, you know, would want to judge everyone else on the basis of President Mugabe as the criterion, but I have been at it for a longer period than anyone else. Leaders will have to be, you know, as it were given time to develop and to have that ability to meet with the people and to be judged by the people.

Silently in the majority of the cases, the people must see and be convinced that yes so and so can be a good successor. Others think because they have been this long in the party or they are this in the party they are capable of succeeding the President. It’s not that easy.

TM: But Your Excellency, are you now changing your mind? You are on record as saying you will not groom a successor, but now you sound like you are saying maybe somebody needs to be given time. Are you now thinking of grooming a successor?

RGM: No, no, no. that doesn’t suggest grooming a successor. A successor is groomed by the people actually. You see. Those around you can get the confidence of the people as they operate around you and gain the confidence of the people. When the people see their leaders, they can trust their leaders beyond corruption, their leader’s knowledgeable, sure, that’s grooming I mean.

TM: Thank you Mr President. Now allow me to move on to the First Lady. When Dr Grace Mugabe was requested to lead the Women’s League, I remember you pointed out that you advised her on what to expect in the political arena. But now, today with so many stories about her, the family and yourself, how do you console her against all that? And don’t you regret maybe you could have advised her not to get into this?

RGM: Against all the what?

TM: The stories that are coming out about her, about you, the criticism and all that.

RGM: The criticism. Well the criticisms, I get are criticisms from the opposition. From the party, well there have been a few criticisms from vananaMutsvangwa and so on and so forth who, you know, I then saw something quite different in her. They thought she was an ambitious woman who would want to work herself into a position of power. But I had my first wife Sally, she organised the women.

We did not have the Women’s League here, the Ghana’s style, the (Kwame) Nkrumah style of the Women’s League which gained acceptance in our region was introduced by my wife and others in Zimbabwe, my late wife I mean. But in fact people were saying aaah the leaders must not disallow their wives from participating in politics, we want their wives to lead us, but what you get nowadays from some quotas is that the leader’s wife should not participate in politics. Why not? Why not? I don’t know what criticism you are referring to? She is very acceptable, very much accepted by the people. I thought you saw her on television today (Friday).

TM: Yes, I did Your Execellency.

RGM: It’s fireworks isn’t it? (laughs)

TM: Yes, it indeed (laughter all round)

TM: Sometimes the media tends to write so many stories and when she is facing all that, how do you comfort her as a seasoned politician?

RGM: I donot know what do you mean? She is well seasoned now, she is a very strong character.

TZ: Let’s move on from the family to look at economic issues. My first question is on the land reform. I remember you once said on his deathbed the late Father Zimbabwe Cde Joshua Nkomo told you to ensure the land is given to the people.

RGM: Two things, land to the people, unity.

TM: Yes, two things but let me focus on the land first. If you were to talk to him what would you say about the land reform?

RGM: Yes, I would say we have continued to give land to the people and most of the land, which used to be in the hands of the settlers is now in the hands of our own people and what there is now for us is to ensure there won’t be any retrogression. That those we have given the land will keep it, use it, cultivate it properly and ensure that its made productive.

So I would say what you wanted me to do I think I have done and done well. And I think our objective earlier on which constituted our first grievance as we fought the struggle, that the people, land that is possessed by settlers must be repossessed by we the indigenous and not just that, but that it should also be defended, protected and never be allowed once again to fall into the hands of the settlers. I think we have done that well.

TM: The issue of unity we will talk about it later on. Still on the economy, Zimbabwe’s economy is still on a recovery path, but Your Excellency, what else would you want to see done in order to speed up the process and also to ensure that those jobs that were promised by Zanu-PF towards the last election are made available?

RGM: Well the process, you know, it’s a gradual one as we improve the economy sector by sector and bring about employment alongside that improvement. Naturally, we shall also be transforming the overall economic sectors in accordance with our Zim-Asset and transforming means, adding value to the raw materials that might come out of agriculture, mining et cetera.

So we ensure that upon the exportation of goods from these sectors, we shall receive, perhaps, double or even more than double what we might have got if we did not transform them all and add value to the particular goods. That whole process its an economic process. As you transform the economy, you are actually ensuring greater employment sector by sector. It’s the creation of industry, by the way and industry is created in mining, in agriculture and in commerce by that transformative process, which ensures that we can now talk of our country having transformed and a greater part of our people having been employed.

By the way employment, getting a job is not the only thing that we need to look forward to, we would want to see our people turned into entrepreneurs such thats what I was talking about this morning kuma researchers. Is it just the production of tobacco, or production of tobacco and turning tobacco into cigarettes but in the process, if our producers were dependent on foreigners for the production, are we now the main producers.

Have we really become the producers of our own goods? Have we become the masters of our own economy, or are we still, you know, thinking of whites as the best entrepreneurs and Africans as the labourers for these entrepreneurs ? I have my worry in that regard, great worry indeed. Because even where we have said to our people get together form companies, partnerships, collectives as African, Zimbabwean entrepreneurs , you know they would want to see investments made by whites, where they are able themselves to get together and invest in the particular area. They want to see a European invest and then they go and work for that European as director, as managers, the CEOs, yes.

Of course the whites would be happy to see us to continue to work for them. If yesterday they did not, as they held the economy, did not want Africans to be at the management level, today in order to secure their positions no and ofcourse also because they recognised Africans are well educated and well skilled, they would be very happy to stay in the country, run various enterprises with Africans, African young people from universities at the top as accountants, managers CEOS etc be there in the background, after all they are not that many.

They are in the background and they play their game. They have a company here, they like Zimbabwe a lot and they want to stay here and they have something also in South Africa so they are not foolish at all. One leg here and one leg in South Africa but those who were here, I think it’s better here than in South Africa. We are seeing in the agricultural sector quite a number of these surreptious operations where they come and say “you don’t have to worry if you have a farm, we can cultivate for you. Stay where you are, live in town, we will do the work for you”.

At the end of the day of course they cultivate, they have the machines and you are in town and you say, “ah yes, I am using him he is a worker in my farm”. He is a worker on your farm yes, and he will say yes I am just a worker, a manager here. Year in, year out and what happens after five years, he is in the same position. Stupid, stupid we, as indeed we are doing that. Ndozvatirikuita hameno kuti chiiko? Kutadza here basa, kana?

Those who are doing it I know there are some who are really genuine about farming and they are doing farming. Even though they are in town they have some jobs to do at the weekend, Fridays like today they go and ensure that their managers are doing the right thing at the farms and stay on for some time and correct a number of things at the farms and have their own children in some cases. But there are others who really have gone to sleep and the whites have taken over once again, its sad isn’t it? Yataiti tinoda nyika, maida kuti muzope varungu zvakare? Aah!

TM: Your Excellency, you mentioned the concept of weekend farmers vari kumabasa kumatown during the week then voenda kufarm paweekend, are you therefore suggesting a model where if one is farming they should be farming, kana watsvaka basa watsvaka basa kutown? Somebody has argued that Zimbabweans are doing two jobs, one as a farmer and then a banker somewhere else, so should we be moving towards that where we are seriously on the land?

RGM. I think for now that double dealing is necessary because it is those in the banks, those in management areas, those working in town, those employed in the civil service, where we have given them farms, they are the ones with the capacity, financial capacity, with money, you know, really to do something on the farms. Then there are others without that capacity and I would like to believe that those who have financial capacity by and large have been ensured that the farms belong to them and they will become like managers.

Some have their own children who have been to university and done agriculture and it’s not that bad everywhere. But it is bad in some cases. Kozoti vasingagone zvavo including some of our chiefs. Eeh kozoti mamwe maheadman vanofunga kuti if they have an area of control vanokwanisa kusettler wo vanhu, aah nzvimbo iyi ndakaipihwa ndeyangu. So persons coming from elsewhere can be resettled, provided they pay something. That has been happening.

Fanika nyaya yemachiefs, yeah, I know machiefs vanorimirwa nevarungu and who say aah oh today ah oh murungu akanaka uyu, akanaka anotirimira. So especially vamwe vakasaririra varungu vatanga tisati tabvisa, vari juxtaposed to the farms dzema chiefs, nemaheadman and ivavo who are neighbours, you know, the trickery of doing something for their neighbours who are chiefs and headmen yah and then the chiefs say ah, regai kubisa uyu wakanaka.

Nharo chaidzo idzo. Musatibisire uyu and we have had missions, paid to us to ask kuti ah the ministry would want this European who is next to us and who has been doing quite a lot for us yah yah yah, he is also a member of the party. Anoita zvakati, zvakati, zvakati aah tinomuda.

TM: Your Excellency, from that let me take you to the issue of investments. You have signed a lot of investment agreements including mega investment deals with China and recently you met the Chinese President while you were on your annual vacation. From that meeting, Your Excellency we just want to know, what did you focus on?

RGM: We just focused on programmes that we have with them and the programmes which they themselves have offered us so that they can be accelerated and where I think one or two areas like defence. They felt I should raise the issue ye claim yavo yeplatinum yavakapa ku a Chinese company kuti iitwe exploit so the money therefrom can be used to secure and pay the debt which they have rema arms avakatenga kuChina.

I think that was the only fresh one. The rest were just, you know, pushing, pushing. Trying to push so that there is speed in executing and ensuring that the programmes are done. But some are underway actually. They are underway but others have stalled because Finance has not been able to pay mainterest on the funding. They have delayed paying but they been paying but slowly anyway.

The programmes with the Chinese are very good programmes. It was really to ensure that we are strongly together nanaXi Jinping on the programmes they promised us and that the others that come from the $60 billion and we have those which are bilateral, the others in these multilateral grouping and we have so many African beneficiaries mu $60 billion. Isu I think we have gone for about three or four programmes to be funded from mari ye $60 billion. So hushamwarika, kana taendako hamungarege kutaura zvamurikuita.

TM: Asi muchitarisa shamwari dzedu muchiita compare nedzimwe nyika dzirimuAfrica varikutipawo here zvakawanda. In comparison with others in terms of investments?

RGM: I think so. I don’t know what they are giving other countries but it depends on our capacity not only to absorb the funding but to ensure also that we repay what we should repay by way of the refunds. Mamwe mafunds are not gratuitous, they are not grants. They are debts, loans that are being extended to us and we should be able to repay or start repaying them. When then we fail to do so then our friends say ah, but whats happening? And this has been the situation in some cases regarding the Chinese loans.

TM: Let me bring you back home. There were calls made for the establishment of a Women’s Bank I think as far back as 2013, what has been stalling or delaying the launch of such a bank. I know you are championing the empowerment of women

RGM: I push, I just push from the back but I think it’s oncoming. You don’t just establish a bank by word of mouth. It must have funds. It must have depositors. And not just initial little amounts. It must attract on regular basis deposits. I think we have been going through bad times. No liquidity flowing cash was vanishing and I don’t think it has returned yet but we hope it will return.

So unless we can say there is now the possibility of having the bank resourced financially and then you will be paying lip service to it. And I think this is what we have tended to be doing. it’s still the talk on the lips of the women. Mai SME, Nyoni, I call her Mai SME, yah she has been very very very interested in having a bank, a women’s bank and we back her in that, but ka interest yake, yemadzimai ndokunge vaine mafunds to be deposited.

But if they say we have a bank and at the same time from their earnings and there is the informal sector and they carry what they carry those earnings into their pillows and briefcases back home and hold the funds back home and become reluctant to release them, then the bank will not have any resource and will continue to talk of illiquid banks, illiquidity in the system. Thats what has happened. Dzimba idzi dzizere nemari. Tikati kumapurisa nemasoja go yee house by house and dig for the funds that are being hidden there.

Don’t take them as yours but dig them up and tell us who and who have them. You will be guilty, I will be guilty, I don’t know who will not be guilty here nekuti tinotya . . . (laughs) . . . dzimwe (laughs) ukaona tumari twako wotya (claps) kuti aah ndikanoisa uko kuti ndizonoitora mangwana hapana. So you tend to keep it. it’s not your fault, its not his fault. It’s the fault of a system that has not yielded enough cash. Mind you the dollar is not our currency we are actually using it.

MaAmericans vari kuti aah we will not impose sanctions on that one we want them to use our dollar and make it more popular but then they will say aah that is as far as we can go but we can’t issue them fresh piles of dollars when they need them. Ndopouya masanctions ipapo and that’s how we have been restricted, that’s the cause of most of the liquidity that we have, illiquidity that we have because we have not been able to replenish the dollars.

If you look at some of the dollars that have gone round tsvina (laughs) ine mari yacho, goodness me! Kana ari madollars, one dollar I think they are the dirtiest of all, the smaller ones, one dollar, two dollar.

TM: Your Excellency, talking of the dollars, we have the Confederation of Zimbabwe Industries they are calling for the adoption of the rand as the official currency and I know right now we also have the bond notes they are also in circulation but does it appear like Zimbabweans are not confident of having their own currency, what is the solution to having our own currency in Zimbabwe?

RGM: (Laughs) . . . My you don’t seem to know the history we had with our own currency, that galloping inflation and we thought of giving it up and adopting the dollar. That’s how it all happened, the rand, we are a multi-currency country.

Well, I don’t know why the Ministry of Finance together with the Reserve Bank have not wanted to use other currencies. I have asked actually again and again kuti why not have euros, why not have yen, why not have rand alongside with the dollar? Ah tichazviita, tichazviita. At least if we had the euro, I don’t think we have sanctions on the euro but the euro is slightly more expensive than the dollar but the difference is minimum.

TM: That’s okay Your Excellency, last year you lamented over how diamond mining has not benefited the nation, you even spoke about how Zimbabwe had been prejudiced of up to $15 billion but now we have the Zimbabwe Consolidated Diamond Company in place but why is it that the benefits are not yet apparent?

RGM: Oh! Oh! Oh! These various companies which operated alongside the ZMDC operated for quite a long period. We don’t know how the earnings, you know, from their operations were accounted for and they just regarded them as their own earnings and nothing seems to have come to the ZMDC, which was partner. In turn nothing seems to have come to Government as revenue.

Then we decided, after studying how the diamond sector was controlled in two countries, perhaps three, Botswana, Namibia and Angola, and there just one company. It may have two operations or so, the system in Botswana, system in Namibia those two, I looked at they were satisfied that there was need for consolidation, they don’t allow anyone else, no small company, hakuna makorokoza so the diamond industry is in the hands of the state and maybe the State and the private company together in this case and I was told by Khama how they are very strict about the earnings dzemadiamonds because that the resource they depend upon in the main for their survival.

So anyway we offered the other companies, the Chinese one, the Lebanese one and neyanaMhlanga all the three, the choice do you want to join Government in a consolidated company or do you want to stay out and go? Make your choice, the Chinese said they wanted to go, the Lebanese said they wanted to go, the South Africans said they wanted to go, Mbada ndeyema South Africans yana Mhlanga they wanted to go. Aaah, we said think again. They didn’t want consolidation hmmmm, so we said why would you resent consolidation it’s a get together, working together and then you share a product.

Because they used to pocket everything they got ivo anaMbada ivava. Alright your question is why has there been no change, well ah it’s because it’s much more recent, getting you know this new company together, the consolidated company together has taken time yet it had to have the machinery and in a number of cases also it has been taken to court and it tended to delay the process of its operations. It affected the speed with which it could begin its operations.

TZ: Thank you very much Your Excellency for being with us on this special programme. That brings us to the end of part one of the programme President Robert Mugabe at 93. Viewers note that we shall be bringing you Part Two where we will continue with this discussion. – State Media 

‘Killer Jindu Used Cash To Lure Victim’ – LATEST

THE family of a man who was allegedly killed by Rodney Tongai Jindu in an apparent calculated ritual murder in Bulawayo recently has said their relative was lured by his alleged killer with promises of capital to resuscitate his business.

Mboneli Joko Ncube (30) was last seen on January 12 and his family reported him missing on January 15, only for his remains to be exhumed on February 10 at a vacant residential stand in Burnside suburb.

Ncube’s remains were found six days after the body of Jindu’s friend from Queens Park suburb, Cypran Kudzurunga (28), was exhumed from the same stand.

It has been suggested that Kudzurunga apparently stumbled on evidence incriminating Jindu in Ncube’s murder, prompting him to silence him by fatally shooting him on January 31.

DNA test results are still pending to certify if indeed the remains belong to Ncube.

A spokesperson for the Ncube family, Mr Clifford Mhlophe, yesterday said Jindu and the deceased were not friends, but had somewhat become business acquaintances as the murder suspect had offered to assist his would-be victim financially to resuscitate his travel and tourism company.

Mr Mhlophe — who is Ncube’s maternal uncle — said although Jindu had lived a stone’s throw from Ncube’s house in Glengarry suburb, the two only got to interact through a mutual friend.

“Two days before my nephew went missing, we talked one-on-one as he related how he aspired to resume his tourism business which he had run for a short while last year. He told me he needed capital injection to manage the tour business for schools and through the link of a common friend between them, Jindu had offered to help.

“Last year he attempted to run the business where he would offer transport to schools on tours, whether to resort areas, historical places and others.

However, because of financial constraints, the business was short lived. Two days before he disappeared, he mentioned that Jindu had offered to help him and that’s the only connection we know of between the two,” he said.

Mr Mhlophe said Ncube had his own set of friends while Jindu had his own and the two had become more of business acquaintances.

“Jindu isn’t someone I knew much except that he was a neighbour of many years and my sister lived four houses away from him in Glengarry suburb,” he said.

Mr Mhlophe said they were shocked and confused by the fact that no member of Jindu’s family had approached them in the wake of the alleged murder.

“According to our culture, ubuntu bethu buthi if there’s any rumour or ill word on your child, you talk about it as a parent or as parents. I must say, we expected to see the Jindus because we cannot be found going to them. The least they could do was to pay us a courtesy call, maybe in the escort of a church pastor, police or even a community leader,” he said.

Mr Mhlophe said his family was still trying to come to terms with the horrific murder of Ncube.

“Although the police and the media have fully reported on the confessions by Jindu of murdering my nephew Mboneli for whatever reasons, police advised us to wait for DNA results which will fully certify if indeed those are his remains.

“It’s unbelievable that Mboneli was killed in such a gruesome manner. Unfortunately, the test results are taking quite some time                                        to come out and we cannot wait longer                                                                     as we want to bury the remains of our loved one. We want to put him to rest and we have left everything in the hands of the Lord,” he said.

Jindu told the police that a South African inyanga and unknown Omalayitsha (cross border transporters) allegedly demanded body parts of people with a Ncube surname but were yet to pay him at the time of his arrest.

According to a statement Jindu made to the police, he shot Kudzurunga twice — in the head and chest in a bushy area between Glengarry and Queens Park before carrying the body home in a wheelbarrow.

Police sources say Jindu also allegedly confessed to murdering his neighbour Ncube — a devout Jehovah’s Witness member— on January 12 and selling some of his body parts to the inyanga and omalayitsha after promises of $20 000 in cash and a Toyota Quantum were made.

Jindu allegedly cut the dismembered body of Ncube and set the pieces on fire before burying them in four shallow graves.

The mutilated remains of what Jindu claimed were Ncube’s body were exhumed on February 10 by the police after Jindu made indications. – State Media

BREAKING NEWS: UK-Missing Zimbabwean Girl Finally Found

Victory for ZimEye readers, and the family – a missing Zimbabwean 13-year-old girl, Vonai Ziyambi has been found.

The development came after a massive police appeal published by ZimEye.com which began last Friday the 17th Feb.

Vonai, was reported missing from Redbridge on Friday.

The local police department has however a day later announced in a tweet saying she has since been found following the ZimEye campaign.
She is now safely at home with her family, the cops said.
The Metropolitan Police said it “would like to thank everyone who shared their appeal and helped find her”.

Grace Mugabe Zimbabwe’s Next President ? | FULL REPORT

During a state banquet in Pretoria, South Africa, in April 2015, I had a brief encounter with Grace Mugabe, the first lady of Zimbabwe. I was asking her husband, Robert Mugabe, about the question of her succeeding him as president. “She doesn’t have those ambitions,” began Mugabe, the spectacles perched on his nose reminiscent of an elderly librarian, a narrow moustache clinging to his upper lip like a caterpillar. Suddenly he interrupted himself with mock alarm: “Careful, there she comes!” The frail 91-year-old, who increasingly resembles a hanger for his well-tailored suits, remained seated. I rose and turned to behold his 49-year-old wife, with her cropped hair and long black dress, lace hanging daintily at the wrist. Grace, who had been the subject of persistent gossip about a serious illness, was returning from an interlude on the dancefloor that delighted dinner guests.

“Hello, David Smith of the Guardian. We were just talking about you.”

“I just wanted to ask you if it’s true you might like to be president one day,” I asked.

Her hard features, which can resemble a mask with striking dark eyes and sculpted cheekbones, dissolved into a laugh. She did not deny it. “I don’t know, I don’t know.”

Just then a band struck up and I beat a retreat, past the glares of South African protocol mandarins, one of whom ordered me to leave, snarling: “I hope we never see you again.”

Few women in Africa provoke such fascination, or such loathing, as Grace Mugabe. Loyalists describe her as “Amai” (Mother), “The Lady of the Revelation” or, predictably, “Amazing Grace”, while detractors prefer “DisGrace”, “Gucci Grace” or “First Shopper”. There are reports that the couple have substantial foreign properties and multiple offshore bank accounts, Grace’s overseas shopping expeditions are legendary: she was widely reported to have spent £75,000 on luxury goods in one day in Paris in 2003, and to have taken 15 trolley-loads of purchases into the first-class lounge of Singapore airport. She has been forced to deny rumours that she has been unfaithful to the president and defends herself against accusations that she is pampered and lazy.

The four-decade age difference between her and her husband has invited urgent questions about what will happen to her after his death. She stands to lose the presidential credit card and possibly the luxurious mansion in the Zimbabwean capital, Harare. She has grown up in a country where proximity to power is no guarantee of survival, and knows how quickly loyalties can turn. Mugabe’s long years of cunning divide and conquer have left the ruling Zanu-PFparty and the country without an obvious successor, creating an atmosphere among the ruling elite that seethes with mutual suspicion and treachery, and bitter factional divisions.

Grace had always appeared acquiescent, an adornment, mother of the president’s children. No one, until now, considered that she might have political ambitions. But late last year, the world met a new Grace Mugabe. Suddenly, without warning, she transformed from smiling president’s wife to political player in her own right. In early December, she was elevated to a senior role in Zanu-PF and confirmed as the new head of its women’s league. She then embarked on a national promotional trip, nicknamed the “Graceland tour”, flying across the country to attend a series of rallies, where she delivered tirades against her husband’s perceived enemies. At one of the rallies, Grace made her agenda clear. She declared: “They say I want to be president. Why not? Am I not a Zimbabwean?”

The political establishment was rocked back on its heels. Ibbo Mandaza, a former civil servant who has known the president and his wife for years, said: “Grace was always sedate, sitting in the background looking beautiful. Then suddenly this woman is someone else you can’t recognise. She was uncouth, unbecoming.”

Part of the rebranding was her award of a PhD in sociology from the University of Zimbabwe in just three months – all the more remarkable because she reportedly once dropped out of a correspondence course at the University of London after failing most of the exams with marks as low as 7%. One academic said: “It’s an embarrassment to the university. Everybody here jokes about it. It made the university a laughing stock.”

She appeared to be carving out a political identity that would protect her against the loss of her husband. Having risen from selling chickens in her home village to working as a receptionist at State House and then becoming first lady, the prospect of losing everything was unthinkable. One political insider, who did not wish to be named, said: “The Mugabes are feeling cornered by time and circumstances. She comes across as this ambitious climber creating an image and it’s getting worse as she’s getting older. She’s experienced this massive wealth and doesn’t want to lose that.”

When Muammar Gaddafi was dragged from a drainpipe, beaten and sodomised with a bayonet in 2011, there was cause for sleepless nights in the bed chambers of many of Africa’s ossified dictators. If Libya’s self-anointed “King of Kings” could suffer such a lynching after four decades in power, what winds of change might blow the continent’s other strongmen off their pedestals and into the hands of a vengeful mob? No one, it seems, was more rattled by Gaddafi’s demise than Robert Mugabe, the oldest leader in the world. At the UN in 2012 he railed against the US and Nato for backing Libyan rebels: “The mission was strictly to protect civilians, but it turned out that there was a hunt, a brutal hunt, of Gaddafi and his family. In a very dishonest manner we saw … Chapter 7 [of the UN charter] being used now as a weapon to rout a whole family.”

At a rally a year later, Mugabe cited the fall of Gaddafi and Saddam Hussein and again swiped at the west: “All of them were killed and these nations are left in chaos as people fight among each other. Beware that is what they are seeking when you hear them speak of removing Mugabe because they say he is the impediment to our goals.”

Mugabe’s reference to Gaddafi’s family was no accident. The first lady, who turns 50 this month, has made enemies among the political elite and the general population; she and the couple’s three children may be vulnerable. Her son by a previous husband was last month convicted of manslaughter and fined the equivalent of £520 for running over and killing a man, which sparked protests at his lenient treatment. Grace’s abrupt emergence on the political stage last year can be seen as a frantic act of self-preservation. At one rally she inveighed against the then vice-president Joice Mujuru: “She has been telling people that once Mugabe dies, she will draw me close to her, and my secretaries told me that she will drag me in the streets, with people laughing while my flesh sticks on the tarmac.”

Robert Mugabe was already a political prisoner in Rhodesia when Grace Marufu was born in Benoni, South Africa. Like many Zimbabweans, Grace’s parents had crossed the border to look for employment. Her father, Johnston Marufu, worked in Johannesburg for several years. Grace, the youngest of five children, was five years old when the family left South Africa in 1970. In that time, she formed some impressions of the country’s apartheid regime, but her formative years were spent in rural Zimbabwe.

As a young girl, Grace lived in Sadza, a village in Mashonaland East province, 150km south of the capital, Harare. Even now the signs of its butcher, grocer and “bottle store” display the bold, unironic fonts of a bygone age. Maize grows in the garden of the modest white farmhouse Grace once shared with her aunt. Just in front of its barbed wire fence stands the primary school she attended. The building nestles amid ravishing green hills, but the dusty grounds where Grace once played now look tired, with washing hung out to dry and a concrete courtyard where flies buzz and chickens strut. The rudimentary classrooms have battered doors and dirty windows, yet their walls are hung with colourful cartoon illustrations of animals. The school has 739 pupils, aged from four to 15, and just 21 teachers.

Tapiwa Chengeta, 42, the deputy headteacher, complained that the school is starved of resources. “We have a room that could be a computer lab but no computers. We are still waiting for tar for the road.” Grace last visited, by helicopter, in June 2008 but has not provided any help. “It’s very difficult to put pressure on such a person,” Chengeta said.

Grace continued her education at St Francis of Assisi, a Catholic boarding secondary school in Madondo, close to her home. That institution bore the stamp of British colonialism, offering O- and A-levels. Its former headteacher, Stephen Chiurayi, 66, said Grace gained entry on merit, aged 14, but was there for less than a year because the school was burned down in 1979 during the bush war, in which Robert Mugabe led a guerrilla struggle against Rhodesia’s white minority rulers. This may have been a traumatising moment for the teenage Grace, but it did not appear to politicise her. The upheaval forced her to complete her schooling at Kriste Mambo High School in Rusape, Manicaland province. She then took a secretarial course at the Christian College of Southern Africa. Grace was still a teenager when she married Stanley Goreraza, an air force pilot, and 20 when she was recruited as a typist at State House, the seat of power in Harare. By then, her father had died, creating a vacuum in her life that would soon be filled in a most unexpected way.

Zimbabwe was the last African country to escape the yoke of British colonialism. Robert Mugabe was an intellectual who fought for black voting rights, and preached forgiveness long before Nelson Mandela emerged from prison. He was one of the most visionary figures in post-colonial politics and remains a giant in Africa, receiving ovations almost everywhere he goes on the continent. To many he is the embodiment of black pride, of achieving true psychological independence, of sticking two fingers up to the arrogant west.

Mugabe rose to power with quiet ruthlessness. At the racially inclusive Fort Hare University in South Africa he experienced a political awakening after encountering the African National Congress (ANC) youth league. He became a teacher in Ghana and, inspired by Kwame Nkrumah, who had led that country to independence, returned home in 1960 to what was then Rhodesia, where white settlers dominated politics and farmed the most fertile land. Mugabe was arrested for “subversive speech” and served a 10-year jail term, after which he fled to neighbouring Mozambique to lead guerrilla forces in a protracted war against Rhodesian prime minister Ian Smith’s government. One veteran of the war of independence, which took place between 1964 and 1979, is Didymus Mutasa, who spent eight months with Mugabe behind bars. “He was an outstanding person among us,” he recalled. “When he went out to fight it glorified him more. He was the brains.”

For their part in bringing an end to the war and the start of independence, Mugabe and Lord Carrington, the British foreign secretary, were nominated jointly for the Nobel peace prize. As the new prime minister of Zimbabwe, in 1980, Mugabe announced a policy of reconciliation and invited whites to help rebuild the country. In these early years Zimbabwe prospered, with booming agriculture, new hospitals and schools – the latter of which resulted in the highest literacy rate in Africa. With his eloquence, intellect and charm, Mugabe was such a darling of the west a blind eye was turned to his brutal crushing of an armed rebellion in the province of Matabeleland in the 1980s.

By the time the 20-year-old Grace came to work at State House in 1985, an aura of mastery surrounded Mugabe. “At the time I looked at him as a father figure,” she told interviewer Dali Tambo on the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) in 2013. “He just started talking to me, asking me about my life – were you married before, things like that. But I was just saying, ‘He’s my boss, he must ask.’ I didn’t know it was leading somewhere. I was quite a shy person, very shy.”

“She was very beautiful, pretty braids, sitting at the switchboard at State House,” said Ibbo Mandaza, who is now head of the Southern African Political and Economic Series Trust thinktank in Harare. “All the girls were attractive but Grace especially. I said, ‘Let’s go for lunch’, but someone said, ‘You’ll get in trouble.’” Then one day Mandaza noticed that Grace was pregnant. “And it clicked.”

Mugabe’s pursuit of the young secretary was kept quiet, for the perfectly simple reason that he was already married. He had met Sally Hayfron, a fellow teacher, in her native Ghana. They married in 1961 and had one child, Michael Nhamodzenyika, who died aged three from cerebral malaria. By then Mugabe was in jail in Rhodesia, and he was denied permission to attend his son’s funeral. Sally held a political role in the Zanu women’s league that she continued after independence, and set up a children’s health charity. She was greatly respected and loved; revered as the mother of the nation. According to the journalist Angus Shaw, Grace suffers by comparison: “Sally always had an ideological base. She appeared to be very committed to freedom and believed in a socialist ethic of equality. Grace has never shown that; she has shown greed. Sally was a modest person and didn’t yell like a Billingsgate fishwife.”

In her 50s, Sally became gravely ill with kidney disease, and was hospitalised for long periods, while her husband was conducting his affair with Grace. There was a painful, farcical episode when Grace gave birth to Mugabe’s daughter, Bona, and Mugabe had to shuttle between the maternity ward and his dying wife’s intensive care unit.

In the 2013 SABC interview, Tambo put it to Grace that Mugabe was still married to Sally when they got together. Grace admitted: “I felt a bit uncomfortable … He told me that they had discussed it and she was sort of agreeable … Of course she knew I was there, she knew the children were there, that’s what he told me. So I’m sure they had come to some agreement of some sort.”

According to Sally’s friend Margaret Dongo, Sally only discovered her husband’s adultery when word leaked that Grace was pregnant, in 1989. “She came to my house and said, ‘How could this happen?’ It hurt her. Inside her heart she cared, but being first lady she couldn’t stand on a rooftop and say this is what happened to me. She didn’t want to embarrass him. This would have been one of the most damaging things to his career … I would never forgive him because, to me, it was an indirect torture. It shows that element of cruelty in him.” Dongo’s verdict on Grace is scathing: “If Sally saw Grace today she would say, ‘God, let me go back quickly and rest in peace.’”

The affair was hushed up for as long as possible,but one night in the early 1990s Grace’s mother was admitted to a hospital in Harare while experiencing a psychotic episode. The head of state soon arrived on the scene. One witness recalls: “The entire presidential cavalcade came, which made people scared. Robert Mugabe and Grace arrived together. The affair was rumoured, but it was an extraordinarily well kept secret.”

Indeed, the news did not reach the wider public until three years after Sally’s death. The March/April 1995 issue of Horizon, then Zimbabwe’s top-selling lifestyle magazine, broke the story that Mugabe had paid lobola – bride price – to Grace’s family at the end of 1992, 11 months after Sally’s death. Andy Moyse, then publisher and editor of Horizon, said: “The issue sold out in about a day: we were printing 60,000 to 70,000 copies. It became the talk of the country and there was quite a lot of resentment towards Grace. It’s suggested that Sally had given her blessing but she had no choice: he was bonking Grace anyway.”

Grace is thought to have divorced Stanley Goreraza in the mid-1990s, after which he was assigned to China as defence attache. Another obstacle to the president’s happiness was swiftly taken care of. Mugabe was raised Roman Catholic – he is never without his rosary – and his church would not normally countenance a divorced mother remarrying. But the so-called “St Paul prerogative” was invoked. Grace had not been baptised prior to her wedding to Goreraza, so the elaborate argument went, and was therefore not a Christian at the time, so that marriage should not be recognised. She was duly baptised in 1996 ahead of a lavish wedding in Kutama, the Jesuit mission where Mugabe went to school. Mozambique’s president Joaquim Chissano, the best man, escorted the groom up the aisle.

Some 6,000 invited guests, including South African president Nelson Mandela, joined the celebration, and an estimated 40,000 citizens gathered to show their support. Pope John Paul II wished the couple “an abundance of divine joy”. The lavish banquet attracted some criticism at a time when drought had reportedly driven more than 100,000 Zimbabweans to the brink of starvation. The event cost an estimated $6.5m, with about $2m coming from state coffers.

The Mugabes take care to nurture the image of a happy couple: in the SABC interview, they took each other’s hands and expressed their love for one another. There was mirth around the family table as Grace rose to give the president a chaste kiss. Another glimpse of Mugabe family life appeared online last year with photos of their Christmas holiday in Singapore: Grace looking at an iPad with a glass of red wine; the teetotal Mugabe appearing somewhat disengaged as their children celebrated.

The Mugabe family on holiday.
The Mugabe family on holiday in Singapore. Photograph: The Guardian

Still, there has been much conjecture about the first lady’s private life. One unconfirmed rumour has linked her to a businessman named Peter Pamire, who died in a car crash in 1997. There have also been suggestions of a relationship with the governor of the reserve bank, which she has publicly denied.

A 2007 diplomatic cable from the US embassy in Harare, published by WikiLeaks, stated: “Within the last year, it was rumoured (unconfirmed) she had fled to east Asia and that her husband travelled there to convince her to return to Zimbabwe … Grace has few friends, even within the Mugabe family … Grace’s primary personal interest appears to be shopping; she reportedly spends large amounts of forex on her infrequent trips to Asia. In Zimbabwe, she makes contributions to women’s cooperatives.” The cable concluded: “We believe Grace has little or no political influence over her husband. She is concerned about her children and would seek to influence the president to act in ways that would benefit or protect them.”

At this time Grace appeared content in a role typical of first ladies in Africa: the demure companion at her husband’s side. There was little hint of ambition. One acquaintance, who did not wish to be named, said bluntly: “When she’s out of her depth, she’s aware of her intellectual inferiority. If someone would talk about a subject at a committee meeting and reach a decision, five minutes later she would bring it up again … She had strong opinions and didn’t hear what people were saying. I had a strong feeling that she was almost trying to make herself a royal figure, slightly distanced from the hoi polloi. She’s been quite good at reinventing herself.”

Grace has certainly made efforts to correct her public image. “I’m not really what they say I am,” she declared in a TV interview two years ago. “And I’m actually surprised to hear some of the things they say: that she’s a very lazy person, she’s always eating. I work so hard I have no time to pamper myself.”

Trudy Stevenson, the Zimbabwean ambassador to Senegal, said: “You know all the rumours but I have to tell you she has certainly improved herself enormously and can hold her own with the best of them. She has very strong opinions on all sorts of things and she’s very happy to debate those opinions.

Grace, meanwhile, has cultivated an image as a philanthropist, perhaps conscious of the previous first lady’s achievements in this area. She has opened an orphanage in Mazowe, outside Harare, where an imposing security gate and bell tower are visible to passing motorists amid the rolling countryside. Andy Moyse said: “Grace has done this orphanage to outdo Sally. It’s a political thing: people will compare her and Sally and she needs to have some credibility.”

“People are terrified of her: when she’s coming to a place, that place gets transformed,” said an acquaintance. “There’s no shortage of money when she’s coming to town. She does have a good sense of humour but if you say the wrong thing she might have your head chopped off, so be circumspect.”

There are people in Zimbabwe who have never forgiven Mugabe for betraying his first wife. Some also believe that without Sally’s guiding force, he became politically and morally lost. According to Angus Shaw: “Sally was regarded as a decent woman. The consensus view is she could have kept Mugabe more on the rails.”

In the early days of the 21st century, the ground began shifting under the Mugabes’ feet. Mobs of self-styled war veterans seized farms with the government’s blessing in what was billed as an attempt to correct the colonialist legacy that left immense tracts of land in the hands of a shameless white minority. Many saw it as a crude attempt to isolate the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) which enjoyed support among white farmers and black farm workers.

In a wave of vicious attacks, both landowners and their long-time managers and farm hands were killed, beaten or chased away and the properties taken over by Zanu-PF cronies or citizens, many of whom lacked the skills or capital to farm. The world was transfixed by images of farm buildings ablaze and acts of truly horrific violence. In the eyes of many, the party that had brought liberation and hope to Zimbabwe was now irredeemably corrupt and motivated by self-enrichment and power at all costs. That transformation reflected more on Mugabe than anyone else. Food production imploded and one of Africa’s strongest economies shrank to half the size it had been in 1980. Later, record hyperinflation would render supermarket shelves bare and the national currency worthless. In a region of fertile land with probably the most pleasant climate on earth, 10% of the population have fled to neighbouring countries in penury, hunger and fear.

From 1999 Mugabe faced an unprecedented challenge. He clung to power through a series of hotly disputed elections, culminating in 2008 when he lost the first round to MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai. It was the first potential “Gaddafi moment” when the Mugabes could have found themselves suddenly stripped of their invincibility. Instead, Zanu-PF triggered an explosion of political violence in which more than 200 people were killed and many more tortured. Mugabe displayed political genius by inviting the MDC into a power-sharing agreement in September 2008 by which he remained president and Tsvangirai was appointed prime minister. It is now widely held that he outmanoeuvred Tsvangirai brilliantly, conceding few real powers and distracting the MDC from the next election, which it lost heavily. In 2009, Tsvangirai’s wife Susan was killed in a car crash. The prime minister accepted that it was an accident, but the tragedy was another reminder to Grace of the fragility of existence.

After allegations of violence and vote-rigging, Mugabe, once the shining star of Africa, became an international pariah – assets belonging to Mugabe and Grace have been frozen and both have been subject to an EU travel ban – yet they emerged from the chaos unscathed, smiling, and rich. Opponents had been beaten or seduced while the west had been faced down. The first couple are now said to be the biggest landowners in the country after acquiring farms spanning thousands of acres, one of which Grace used to set up a dairy. A 2008 diplomatic cable from then US ambassador James McGee reported that Grace was said to be among “a small group of high-ranking Zimbabwean officials who have been extracting tremendous diamond profits” from the country’s mines.

Since she stepped into the limelight, Grace’s popularity has taken a battering. MP Eddie Cross, 75, the MDC’s secretary for local government, said: “She’s arrogant and greedy, a very nasty woman. I don’t think she has any redeeming features; the contrast with Sally could not be greater. She’s been an unmitigated disaster as first lady and I really fear for her safety once her husband is no longer in his current position.”

* * *

At one of her firebrand political rallies late last year, dressed in colourful regalia including an elaborate headwrap featuring her husband’s image, Grace jabbed an angry finger and accused Joice Mujuru of plotting to assassinate Robert Mugabe. Mujuru had been his deputy for many years and was the favourite to take over when he dies. Nevertheless, Grace brought Mujuru down, accusing her of witchcraft, murder plots and indecent behaviour. She proclaimed that if Mujuru were killed, “dogs and fleas would not disturb her carcass”. Mujuru was ousted from her position as vice-president in December last year, and this March, expelled from the party.

A former guerrilla fighter with the nom-de-guerre Teurai Ropa (spill blood), Mujuru refused to trade insults with Grace. She responded: “We are not of the same background so our understanding is totally different. You can’t blame someone when you have no understanding who she is. I leave it to herself and the people of Zimbabwe to judge her. She was a first lady housewife. I was vice-president with a fully fledged financial office. I wouldn’t spend much time with housewives. I only saw her interested in politics last year. I had not seen her as politically minded herself: she was first lady. For the first few years she told us she wasn’t interested.”

Joice Mujuru with Robert Mugabe in October 2014 shortly after the first lady Grace Mugabe called for Mujuru's resignation as vice-president.
Joice Mujuru with Robert Mugabe in October 2014 shortly after Mugabe’s wife called for Mujuru’s resignation as vice-president. Photograph: Jekesai Njikizana/AFP/Getty Images

Mujuru, whose husband Solomon, a former army chief, died in an unexplained farmhouse fire in 2011, vehemently denies plotting to kill the president and said she appealed to Mugabe in person three times last year. “I’m so shocked a man of his calibre believes such lies. You work with someone such a long time and you don’t know him.” Among the old guard cast into the wilderness with Mujuru was Mugabe’s former friend from the independence struggle, Didymus Mutasa. He has known Mugabe since 1972 and regards Grace as a wrecking ball: “The words she uttered against Mrs Mujuru are not words any leader with respect would say about another woman … Joice Mujuru will be our next president come any election. Those who now call themselves Zanu-PF have no following and no one wants to see them today.”

Mujuru’s long-time rival Emmerson Mnangagwa, known as “the crocodile” – became vice-president late last year, but officials have played down the idea that he is the heir apparent. Does that leave the way open for Grace? Mutasa, who is now 79, said: “That has been said to a great extent, particularly in Zanu-PF. There was a rumour that the president made a request to the current Zanu-PF hierarchy to assist the first lady to take over from him. I don’t know the response but I don’t think any of the current leaders would accept it. It’s totally un-African.”

Rugare Gumbo, 75, who was formerly Zanu-PF’s spokesperson, a politician who has known Mugabe for half a century, said: “Under an erratic woman, Mugabe’s legacy has been destroyed. The party has been destroyed. The liberation legacy has been destroyed. She’s young, she’s beautiful and the old man is charmed by that. He can’t say anything.”

Some have compared Grace to Jiang Qing, the third wife of Mao Zedong. An essay by political analyst William Muchayi, published last year, points out that both were secretaries who began affairs with older, married men. Both struggled to gain public acceptance, sought to exploit their husbands’ reputations and turned crises in their political parties into personal opportunities. Muchayi pointed out that Jiang attempted to seize power after her husband’s death, only to be arrested a month later and sentenced to death – her punishment was later reduced to a life sentence but she eventually committed suicide in prison.

Even at 91, Robert Mugabe does not appear in imminent mortal danger. He walks without the aid of a stick and still possesses an easy charisma evocative of the first generation of post-independence African leaders. But he cannot go on forever. Zimbabwe stands at the edge of the precipice and Grace Mugabe is determined not to fall. To avoid a diabolical end at the hands of a mob, she is capable of anything. – The Guardian

 

Jonathan Moyo Summons Army To Rescue Tsholotsho

Shyleen Mtandwa | Higher Education Minister and MP for Tsholotsho, Jonathan Moyo , has risen to the challenge of saving his drowning and totally devastated constituency, savaged by floods as he summoned the Zimbabwe National Army to a serious rescue mission.

Professor Moyo told ZimEye.com that he had summoned two specialist teams from the military regiment in a serious humanitarian assistance operation not experienced in Zimbabwe to date.

Live footage shows army helicopters in Tsholotsho rescuing desperate villagers. The historical irony in this trajectory is that the very same helicopters that have descended on Tsholotsho today, to save lives, 34 years ago were in the same territory with an opposite agenda of killing every living being.

Said local Mp Moyo, local rescue units are currently attending to the matter. “The Mat North & Tsholotsho Civic Protection Units in coordination with the National CPU are currently seized with the emergency situation in Ward 6 in Tsholotsho to provide the needful to affected households.”

The state media reports that up to 80 families in Sipepa area in Tsholotsho were marooned since Saturday and by last night the Airforce of Zimbabwe was airlifting affected villagers to safety.

The Civil Protection Unit Deputy Director Ms Sibusisiwe Ndlovu said between 60 and 80 families had been trapped in the area by floods.

“We’ve been told that there are 60 families, while others are saying they are 80. We can’t really say how many were affected. But all are coming from Sipepa area. We can’t determine the exact number of people who were injured,” said Ms Ndlovu.

She said the Air Force was engaged as it has resources suiting the situation.

Sipepa is prone to flooding and yesterday disturbing pictures were posted on social media showing mud houses and a school surrounded by water.

Ms Ndlovu said six homes were badly damaged in Dinyane ward 15 on Friday.

Last night, the local CPU led by Tsholotsho District Ms Gladys Zhou said the rescue mission was still on course.

She said people were being airlifted to Sipepa Secondary School and Sipepa Health Centre.

“The helicopter has so far done eight trips and it’s still continuing. We hope by the end of the night to have moved everyone to safety,” she said.

Ms Zhou said they are yet to calculate the number of affected individuals. She appealed for clothing and food for the affected villagers.

Chief Mathuphula described the situation as dire, but said he was happy with the swift CPU response.

He said flooding started after Gwayi River started spilling on Saturday morning, marooning people in nearby communities.

“Yesterday (Saturday) the provincial CPU failed to access the affected areas resulting in it seeking the services of the army. But I’m happy with the swiftness with which they responded to our plight. Our situation is very dire, people need help,” said Chief Mathuphula.

In an interim situation report, the CPU said homesteads, roads, bridges as well as small to medium dams were destroyed in the Midlands and Matabeleland provinces.

The CPU said in Matabeleleland South’s Umzingwane District, several homesteads in Esihlengeni area succumbed to excessive moisture and heavy rains last Friday while in Kezi District three homesteads were encircled by Tuli River on the same day and 21 people were trapped. The report said the local headman mobilised the community and successfully rescued the families.

“Insiza District — the southern parts of the district experienced unprecedented flooding on Friday 17th February rendering it inaccessible as rivers were all full and bridges were overflowing and damaged. The road network was badly damaged in some places. Several small dams failed. Wanezi River burst its banks up to a kilometre in places as a result some families in Mazeya self-evacuated and spent the night at the local school. The water pump at Filabusi Town was submerged,” said the CPU in its report.

In Gwanda District the road network and bridges were badly damaged in some areas.

“Bulilima District — several homesteads in Makhulela Ward 9, Bambadzi Ward 10 and Huwana Ward 8 are badly damaged with water moving freely within homesteads on the night of 18th February 2017. The District Civil Protection Committee is in the field assisting the affected.”

It said in Bulawayo, a number of homes were flooded and the local fire brigade responded. The CPU said some of the affected suburbs include Mahatshula which was affected by the flooded Umguza River.  Kingsdale, Emganwini, Nketa 8 and Cowdray Park were not spared.

 

“Stop Eating Maize, It’s Stock Feed” – Mai Mugabe

President Robert Mugabe’s wife, Grace, has said Zimbabweans must stop eating maize — the country’s staple food — claiming the grain is stock feed unfit for human consumption.

Officially opening a girls’ dormitory named after her at Hande High School in Buhera, just a few kilometres from where she had curiously donated maize at her rally on Friday, Grace said she was no longer eating sadza — a cooked maize-meal that is not only common in Zimbabwe, but across southern Africa.

“Maize was not meant for human consumption at all, but as stock feed. Isn’t it so (Agriculture) minister (Joseph) Made?” she said.

“It’s better to eat millet sadza,” she suggested.

“I have long stopped eating it after I gained the knowledge. Knowledge is power. The food to eat is brown sadza, that is what our forefathers would eat,” Grace said.

Oddly, she later donated 300 tonnes of maize and 120 tonnes of rice among other basic goods.

This comes as the Manicaland District has produced a very poor crop, in spite of the good rains the usually arid area received this season.

“The soil is not fertile and it’s not meant for maize. People here should try to venture into small grains which grow well in this part of the country,” the First Lady said.

Earlier on, State minister for Manicaland, Mandi Chimene, had said locals needed to be encouraged to dump maize production due to perpetual crop failure.

“Maize is not your crop here and you need to consider migrating to small grain production. We have seen some fields with very poor crop. I hope amai (Grace Mugabe), they will listen to you if you tell them yourself,” she said.

Successful maize farming in the district has always been a long shot and has always been a perpetual exercise in futility.

At least 50 percent of the district is in natural farming region five, 35 percent in region four and 15 percent is in region three. – Daily News

Mahofa Under Fire For Protecting White Farmers

Shuvai Mahofa

Terrence Mawawa, Masvingo | Litigious Masvingo State Minister Shuvai Ben Mahofa, has once again crossed paths with her political bosses after blocking the invasion of a farm owned by white farmers. Mahofa irked her bosses including President Robert Mugabe when she stopped one Gilbert Nyasha from invading a crocodile farm owned by Jeffrey Howard Sommer and Henry Allan Sommer. Last year Mahofa clashed with Mugabe over the invasion of Tongaat Land. Party stalwarts accuse Mahofa of being paid cash to block the compulsory occupation of the farm.
Mahofa claimed the Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife department was in a better position to comment on the matter.
“I am aware of the matter and I wonder why the guy (Nyasha) failed to move onto the farm after being given an offer letter in 2012? How can people claim that I am being paid by these white people? That is not true because I only knew them last week. They came to my office to explain their case and I had to listen to their side of the story,”said Mahofa.
Nyasha ,said to be a Zanu PF activist, accused Mahofa of hypocrisy. “Mahofa claims she is concerned about the welfare of 60 employees at the farm yet she supports the invasion of Tongaat Hullet Land where 2000 workers have lost their jobs. This means Mahofa is a hypocrite. Mahofa is protecting the interests of the white farmers because they are paying her,”said Nyasha.

Teachers’ Bonus Update… LATEST

* This is part of Amalgamated Rural Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (ARTUZ) bonus strike update.

In Matebeleland North province, 30% of the Union’s 700 strong membership heeded the strike. In some schools , teachers are at the shops drinking beverages whilst students are loitering in school grounds. However, the public service commission inspectors are moving around the province intimidating teachers and threatening to fire them if they join the strike.

In Masvingo ,25% of our 653 strong membership joined the strike with others saying they were waiting the outcome of the meeting which was scheduled for today,20 February 2017 before joining the industrial action.

In Manicaland some 253 members out of 588 have confirmed to be on strike with most of them going to work stations but not doing any of their duties.

In Mash West, east and central over 800 out of 2110 members confirmed to be on strike .

In all these provinces, public service inspectors are moving around threatening teachers with dismissal if they go on strike. It is sad that other Unions have gone out of their way to work in cahoots with these inspectors to intimidate teachers.

ARTUZ remains unfazed by all these tactics and its targeting to escalate the job action until it has become a full strike by the end of the week. The Union has since developed a circular which will be sent through to Provincial education directors,district education directors ,headmasters and to the teachers.

More updates to follow………..

Aluta Continua!!!!

Tsvangirai Aide Arrested

Staff Reporter|Police in Harare have arrested MDC-T youth leader Happymore Chidziva.

According to an alert by the party, Chidziva is being held at Harare Central Police station after being arrested for inciting public violence.
“MDC National Youth Assembly Chairperson Happymore Chidziva, aka, Bvondo arrested is at Harare Central Police Law and Order Section and is accused of inciting violence at #Myzimbabwe Launch sometime last year,”read part of the alert.

More to follow….

Dabengwa Accorded National Hero Status | ZAPU

Edmore Ncube | The ZIPRA Veterans Trust have accorded ZAPU leader, Dumiso Dabengwa with a national hero status, while he is still living and awarded him with a medal and certificate in that honour.

The veterans gave Dabengwa the award last week for what they described as championing the party’s ideology as well as preserving the late founding father, Joshua Nkomo’s legacy of nationalism.

The ZIPRA Veterans Trust Chairperson, Ben Ncube said the association had decided to honour the former intelligence supremo for pursuing Nkomo’s vision of nationalism and wanting to liberate Zimbabweans from the yoke of oppression.

“As former ZIPRA cadres we have decided to honour our leader for maintaining ZAPU policies. Dabengwa has continued to carry the message and preserve the legacy of umdala uNkomo,” he said.

Ncube also paid tribute to Dr Dabengwa for spearheading ZAPU’s withdrawal from Zanu PF in 2008, saying that was a “brave” and necessary move.

“Ubaba Dabengwa removed us from the mud in Zanu PF. We want to thank him for pulling us from that mud otherwise we would have sunk,” he noted.

Dr Dabengwa expressed gratitude to the ZIPRA cadres for honouring him but said the journey to liberate the country was not easy.

The ZAPU leader narrated experiences, he and his colleagues went through, but lamented that some of his comrades who he served with during the liberation struggle were now late leaving him lonely.

“I am humbled to receive such recognition. We went through a lot in our efforts to liberate this country during the liberation struggle. I urge all the remaining ZIPRA cadres to make the last sacrifice for our children. I also encourage all ZIPRA cadres to put your heads together and come up with solutions to the challenges we are facing now in our country,” said the former Home Affairs Minister.

Dr Dabengwa also promised to preserve and maintain the party’s principle sand urged elderly members of the party to groom the younger generation so they too can follow in their footsteps.

Free All Activists,Demands Pressure Groups

Zimbabweans from all walks in UK and Ireland will converge at The Zimbabwe Embassy in London on the 21st February 2017. This is to register their disgust on the melting down of every social, political, and economic aspect of the country while the Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic Front (ZANU PF) are busy looting and splashing tax payers money on the 93 year old nonagenarian Robert Mugabe’s birthday bash.

MZYWCAN invites the public to attend this
event.”You are all cordial invited to the function so as to show Zanu PF that we want our human rights and freedom back. The group comprises of MaZimbabweans Yes We Can (MZYWCAN) who have already sort and have been given a Met. Police Events Department clearance to hold the demo, Movement For Democratic Change (MDC-T), Zimbabwe Human Rights Organisation (ZHRO), MAVAMBO, Restoration Of Human Rights (ROHR) Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe Citizens’ Initiative(ZCI), Zimbabwe African People’s Union (ZAPU) and others. People will be coming from as far as Manchester, Leeds, Bournemouth, Swindon, London and many others.”said David Kadzutu.

This gathering will be blessed by the presence of a prominent actor and activist, Silvanos Mudzvova who has been at the helm of handy cuffing himself and protesting about the appalling conditions in Zimbabwean prisons and the general human rights abuse. He was once abducted by security agencies in Zimbabwe but remains resolute in fighting against oppressive forces.

More details on the flyer below….

ZRP Cop Commits Suicide

Terrence Mawawa, Chivhu| A Zimbabwe Republic Police officer hanged himself following a heated domestic dispute with his wife.

In an incident that has set tongues wagging in the small transit town of Chivhu, Constable Mugejo Ndlovu hanged himself on the peripheries of the town last week, ZimEye is reliably told.

Deputy Officer Commanding Chivhu District and Superintendent Crime, Lameck Mtetwa confirmed the incident and said he was yet to get comprehensive details on the matter.

“I can confirm that there was such an incident but I am yet to get comprehensive details,” said Mtetwa. According to sources here, Ndlovu had a domestic dispute with his wife at their Northwood home. The wife had threatened to sell their vehicle and residential stand.

Ndlovu left the house around 1 am and never returned.

His wife went to the police station hoping to find him but she was told they had not seen him.

A passerby discovered Ndlovu ‘s body and alerted the police.

Sources said the wife disclosed there was heightened tension between the couple. “There was a misunderstanding and Ndlovu’s wife told us there was tension between the two. She also told us what transpired,” said a neighbour who declined to be named.

Numerous cases of suicide emanate from domestic disputes and social unrest, health experts counselors have said.

Olinda “Murder Plot” Shocker

Stunner’s ex wife, Olinda Chapel has been exposed in a shocking live video she shot of herself plotting to deal with Desmond Chideme as she was also audibly heard talking to a man audibly conniving to a plot to actually hurt Stunner.

The video was shot on Friday night and a man she claims is her brother, is heard saying as per instruction “I am now killing him.”

She is heard repeating the phrases, “do whatever you desire son of my mother” as the man says he is now killing Stunner. Another man’s voice believed to be Stunner’s is then heard crying out in deep pain following Olinda’s brother’s promise that he is now killing Stunner. (The shocking full video footage will be re-streamed on ZimEye.com throughout the day today and a LIVE DISCUSSION Olinda herself invited, opened at 11am, 4pm (UK time) today.)

During that time, Stunner is then bizarrely attacked by unknown assailants in Harare, Zimbabwe. In the melee, Stunner luckily survives, and manages to come out, albeit severely injured, just as Olinda boasts saying her ex is so poor that he does not even have money to pay for his medical bills.

Within hours, the following day, Olinda then suddenly and dramatically tells ZimEye.com in an exclusive interview that Stunner has been involved in an accident. She then quickly rushes to claim that Stunner might be playing a stunt. But between the two, Stunner and Olinda, who was the real stunt-woman/man?  ZimEye.com explores the shocking facts today as they are revealed in undeniable, impeccable video-graphic detail. On Saturday, Olinda announced following a police crack down, she has been kicked out of the Facebook website and people wishing to connect with her can only find her on ZimEye. Follow the investigation as it continues today on ZimEye.com and the LIVE-DISCUSSION at 3pm (UK time).

Slave Trader Denied Bail

A 25-YEAR-OLD South African man who is accused of trafficking four Zimbabwean illegal immigrants to the neighbouring country was yesterday denied bail by a Polokwane magistrate and is set to stand trial on April 12.
Raymond Sithole of Chebeng village in Seshego area, was arrested on January 3 by a team from South Africa’s Directorate for Priority Crime Investigations (The Hawks) following a tip off.

Sithole is accused of holding the four Zimbabwean men hostage at his home.

Hawks spokesperson for Limpopo province, Captain Matimba Maluleke said the accused illegally took the victims aged between 15 and 20 years into the neighbouring country after promising them good jobs.

Capt Maluleke said the four were being held hostage at Sithole’s house.

He said sometimes, the man would send his victims to steal and do other jobs without payment.

“He is facing charges of human trafficking. The four men were  allegedly kept under key and lock after being smuggled into South Africa with false promises of good jobs and better lives.

“In some cases the suspect would severely assault them if they failed to comply with his orders,” he said.
Capt Maluleke said the man was arrested by a Hawks reaction team after getting wind of the allegedly exploitation of the Zimbabweans.

The incident came shortly after police from both countries intensified border patrols in light of the increase in the illegal trafficking of children between the two countries.

In December alone, 120 children were intercepted along the border while being taken into South Africa, prompting security agents to re-double their efforts in fighting the crime. – State Media

Gold Panner In Horror Murder

A 35-year-old Gwanda gold panner allegedly fatally struck his colleague with a spade on the head following a misunderstanding that started while they were on their way from a beer drink in Colleen Bawn.

The suspect, Josphat Nkosi of Matobo allegedly struck Aleck Mwinde once on Thursday morning and he died on the spot.

After allegedly committing the crime, he allegedly fled from the scene leaving Mwinde’s body in a pool of blood with the spade on his side.

Matabeleland South police spokesperson, Inspector Philisani Ndebele yesterday confirmed the incident.
He said Nkosi was on the run.

“The pair was coming from a beer drink at Colleen Bawn Bar with one of their unnamed colleague. They left the bar at around 10:30PM on Wednesday going back to Rubicon Mine where they work.

“Along the way Nkosi and the now deceased Mwinde picked up an argument over an undisclosed matter. The misunderstanding went on up to the time they arrived at the mine. However, their colleague went to sleep while the pair proceeded to their tent still arguing,” said Insp Ndebele.

He said while at the tent the misunderstanding degenerated into a scuffle and Nkosi allegedly picked up a spade and hit Mwinde on the head and he died on the spot.

“After striking him he went to their colleague at around 2AM and advised him that he had seriously injured Mwinde and he disappeared from the mine.

“Their colleague didn’t take action that time but waited until 7AM when he went to the tent and discovered the body of Mwinde lying in a pool of blood and a spade on his side. A report was made to the police,” he said.
Insp Ndebele appealed to members of the public to solve disputes amicably to avoid unnecessary loss of life.
“Members of the public shouldn’t take the law into their own hands as it leads to unnecessary loss of lives. They should seek counselling from elders or come to the police,” said Insp Ndebele.- State Media

Horror As 25 Civilians Are Killed In Ethnic Attacks | DRC


Goma — Militiamen from the Democratic Republic of Congo’s Nande ethnic group have killed 25 civilians in the country’s violence-torn east, almost all of them hacked to death with machetes, local officials and activists said on Saturday.

“In total 25 people were killed, decapitated by machete by the Mai-Mai Mazembe in and around the village of Kyaghala,” Francis Bakundakabo, the local representative of the governor of North Kivu province, said.
“All of these people were Hutu civilians,” he said, adding that the killings took place between 4:00am and 8:00am on Saturday morning.

Hope Kubuya, a local civil society activist whose group went to verify the attack, said 24 of the victims had been killed with machetes and one woman shot dead.

“This raid by the Mai-Mai Mazembe in the Hutu village will enflame the inter-ethnic conflict in the region,” he added.

The Mai-Mai are a “self-defence” militia who count members of DR Congo’s Nande, Hunde and Kobo communities among their ranks, in opposition to rivals from the Nyaturu group representing ethnic Hutus.

The area around Kyaghala is majority-Hutu.

The last major attack to strike the volatile region came in December when at least 35 civilians were killed in clashes between fighters from the two groups.

DRC’s Nande, Hunde and Kobo people largely regard Hutus as foreigners, while the migration north of Hutu farmers – forced to abandon their southern territory due to rising land prices and under pressure from powerful landowners – has added to the strain.

Tensions between the Nande and Hutu communities have been growing worse for more than a year, with a series of village attacks by militia groups on both sides in the centre of North Kivu. The province, like much of eastern DRC, has been riven by conflict for more than two decades.

Since December, the DRC’s political crisis has also worsened, with President Joseph Kabila refusing to step down despite his mandate coming to an end.

The international community has urged government and opposition parties in the country to restart deadlocked talks to set up a transition regime ahead of elections due later this year.

Though the vast central African nation is rich in mineral wealth and water, it has long been one of the continent’s poorest nations and rising unrest has only deepened the economic malaise.
— AFP

UK: Zimbabwean 13 Yr Old Girl Goes Missing | BREAKING NEWS

British Police are appealing for the public’s help to trace a missing Zimbabwean girl from Redbridge.

Vonai Ziyambi, 13 was last seen at approximately 02:00hrs on Friday, 17 February.

She is described as a black girl, approximately 5ft tall, of slim build with short dark afro hair.

Vonai was last seen wearing a dark blue ‘Puffa’ style jacket.

Given her age officers are concerned for her welfare and whilst her current whereabouts are unknown, it is believed she may have travelled to shopping centres at Stratford Westfield or Bluewater in Kent.

Anyone who has seen Vonai or has any information as to her whereabouts is asked to contact police on 101 or via Twitter @MetCC.

Army Helicopters Sent to Tsholotsho as Floods Hit Homes | BREAKING NEWS

LIVE-BLAST:   VIDEO LOADING (refresh page) 

 

 

Simba Chikanza| Army helicopters have been dispatched into Tsholotsho after the region became flooded since yesterday afternoon.

Scores of residents were left stranded after they were Tsholotsho was flooded and we hereby release disturbing images showing their plight.

Yesterday parents of more than 600 students at St James High school in Nyamandlovu were stranded after Khami river was flooded. STORY CONTINUES BELOW PICTURES…

They were on way to AGM and school visit.

Locals told ZimEye army choppers hovered over the area assisting people.

The local MP, Professor Jonathan Moyo confirmed to ZimEye local rescue units are currently attending to the matter.  “The Mat North & Tsholotsho Civic Protection Units in coordination with the National CPU are currently seized with the emergency situation in Ward 6 in Tsholotsho to provide the needful to affected households,” he said in response to inquiries. Refresh this page on ZimEye.com for more updates on the crisis.

 

Mugabe Chief Rams Vehicle Into Shop

Demand for same as judges…Zimbabwe’s chiefs at a meting …file

By Shiellah Sibanda| A heavily intoxicated chief Mathema of Gwanda last night rammed his BWM 318 vehicle into a shop after a long drinking session at a Bulawayo strip club.

The drunken chief who was in the company of two former Highlanders players, Thabani Masawi and Siza Khoza, rammed his vehicle into a newly renovated shop opposite opposite Cecil Hotel night club famous for it’s stripping women shows.

The chief is believed to have attempted to reverse the vehicle out of the parking bay and instead put the vehicle on forward gear and smashed it into the shop breaking security bars, and a huge window at the shop entrance.

Eyewitnesses told ZimEye the trio immediately pushed the damaged vehicle away from the scene to avoid public eyes as they are popular figures in the city.

Police at Bulawayo central police confirmed receiving a report on the incident but would not shed more details.⁠⁠⁠⁠

MUJURU EXPLODES: Didymus Mutasa Stole $10K

Mujuru in Matebeleland South yesterday

We are auditing thieving Mutasa and Gumbo – Mujuru

The counter accusations and mud splashing of each other at the splitting Zimbabwe People First party keeps intensifying with party President Joyce Mujuru declaring that the party will be investigating the Rugare Gumbo and Didymus Mutasa faction for swindling party funds.

Speaking at the party’s Matabeleland South provincial council in Gwanda yesterday, Mujuru rubbished earlier sentiments by the ousted founding elders Mutasa and Gumbo that they fell out of favour with the party after Mujuru failed to account for party funds raised through the sell of party membership cards and donations from the United Kingdom.

Mujuru said that then truth of the funds issue will be revealed after the party completes an audit on the funds which were being handled by party members Sylvester Nguni, Mutero Mutezo and Coughan Matanhire who left the party with the two elders.

Mujuru told the party provincial leaders that Mutasa actually received $10 000 from the United Kingdom members which he did not disclose to the party. In contrast, Mutasa last week accused Mujuru of receiving a similar $10 000 which he claims she did not declare to the elders.

Collaborating Mujuru’s sentiments, party national mobilising secretary, Dzikamai Mavhaire claimed to the members that the party was recalling all membership receipt books for an audit of the finances as Nguni had left the party and refused to leave the party records.

ZimEye.com established that the provinces were sending electronic money to Nguni. Over $20 000 was collected from members in a period of four months and Mujuru claims that none of that money was declared to the party by Nguni who was heading the party finance committee.

Tsvangirai Youths Arrested

By Staff Reporter| Police in Harare’s Mount Pleasant low density suburb, have arrested scores of MDC-T youths who were conducting voter education.

The youths who included the party’s Harare Province Youth Assembly treasurer, Manyungwa Macheso, were on Saturday conducting a door to door voter mobilisation campaign when they were arrested.

They were however released without any charges after the police failed to establish any offence against them.

“The Police and ZANUPF local MP Pasadi were offended by how the Youth Assembly conducted the door to door campaign,” said the MDC-T youth assembly in a statement Sunday .

“We therefore urge our members to continue observing groups of less than 15 People when conducting the door to door campaign( D2D),” they added in a statement.

Mujuru Exposes Mugabe, ZANU PF

Zimbabwe People First (ZimPF) president Joice Mujuru claims Zanu PF has deployed 500 spies to infiltrate her party’s structures ahead of its inaugural elective convention.

Mujuru accused the ruling party of trying to capitalise on the democratic process of choosing substantive leadership at the party’s inaugural elective convention to infiltrate her party.

Addressing her party’s Manicaland provincial executive committee in Mutare on Thursday, Mujuru said “just two weeks ago, Zanu PF hatched a plan to have 500 of its members infiltrate ZimPF structures in every province.”

“We have to be very careful when we elect members to fill in various positions at the national convention.

“We should select people whose history we know, members who we started the party with and members with a track record in the party.”

Mujuru two weeks ago fired her former allies Rugare Gumbo and Didymus Mutasa on allegations they were plotting to topple her and spied on the party for Zanu PF.

Gumbo and Mutasa have since appointed themselves caretaker ZimPF presidents at a meeting attended by war veterans with links to Zanu PF.

The former VP also promised that her ZimPF government would look at issues of national healing, starting with the Gukurahundi genocide.

“There are people without birth certificates, people who can’t go to school because they don’t have documentation because their parents were killed,” she said.

“The problems are not unique to Gukurahundi.

“Even here in Manicaland, people have been disappearing and Zanu PF uses Border Gezi trained youths to carry out these dastardly acts.”

Over 20 000 civilians were murdered in Matabeleland and Midlands regions in the early 1980s when the North Korean-trained 5th Brigade was unleashed to deal with a few dissidents elements.

Mugabe is yet to apologise for the atrocities, preferring to call the period “ a moment of madness.”

Mujuru said Mugabe could easily say “it was a moment of madness and finds comfortable sleep thereafter because he has no relative that he lost in the massacres.”

The ZimPF leader said she was committed to an opposition coalition that would seek to wrest power from Mugabe in the 2018 elections, adding that nothing would stop the impending pre-election alliance of opposition parties.

Meanwhile, Mujuru told her supporters in Bindura that she survived four coup plots allegedly orchestrated by party elders, Gumbo and Mutasa before she eventually decided to fire them a fortnight ago.

Mujuru fired Gumbo, Mutasa, former Masvingo provincial minister Kudakwashe Bhasikiti, Margret Dongo, and three other members on allegations of plotting a coup against her.

Other party bigwigs who include Sylvester Nguni, Ray Kaukonde, Agrippa Mutambara and Cougan Matanhire resigned in solidarity with the fired elders.

Addressing ZimPF officials in Bindura last week, as part of a nationwide tour aimed at auditing party structures, Mujuru said her life had become hell because of Gumbo and Mutasa.

She alleged the party elders had been sabotaging her to an extent that ZimPF failed to hold an elective convention to select substantive leadership last year.

The former VP said this meant ZimPF could not conclusively negotiate a proposed coalition with other opposition parties, especially Morgan Tsvangirai’s MDC-T.

“Mutambara, when he was still with us, told me that he had been asked for support by Gumbo in his bid to take over from me as party president,” Mujuru told the Mashonaland Central provincial executive.

“They made attempts to oust me. This was the fourth time after the Bikita by-election,” she said.

“They made the decision to go into the polls after being persuaded by [Claudius] Makova.

“When we lost, it became Mujuru’s problem. They had drawn a list of 15 members to be fired. This is when I decided they should go for the growth of the party.”

She alleged Mutambara only turned against her after she blocked the elders’ decision to have national organising secretary Dzikamai Mavhaire reassigned.

Mujuru alleged Gumbo and Mutasa had promised him Mavhaire’s post.

“We had a meeting in which they suggested that Mavhaire be reassigned,” she said.

“But I told them that the issue should be handled by the interim national executive council.

“What I didn’t know was that they had already appointed Mutambara to replace Mavhaire.

“So when I told them that the matter should be referred to the national executive council, this did not go down well with them,” she said.

The former VP said her problems with the elders started a long time back when the youth rejected Bhasikiti as their chairperson.

“But Bhasikiti thought I was the one who influenced the youth to reject him. He started holding clandestine meetings to sabotage me,” she said.

“Our meetings have always been characterised by silly arguments, with the elders trying to derail everything.

“Each time we had a meeting the following day, I would not sleep dreading the petty arguments by these men in the meeting. I went through hell at the hands of these men.”

Mujuru said the other source of conflict was their stance not to accommodate members from other political parties except those from Zanu PF.

“And I asked them, how many people from Zanu PF can help us win the elections? We need everyone,” she said.

Gumbo denied allegations that he plotted against Mujuru in an exclusive interview with The Standard. – TheStandard

Wicknell’s Money Disappears

I am really poor and I am still waiting for a bank loan application, Wicknell Chivayo has revealed.

Years after flaunting that he earns over $200,000 per month, controversial ZANU PF young “tycoon,” and humiliated ZIFA sponsor, Wicknell Chivayo has revealed he has no money at all and is currently waiting for a bank loan.

Chivayo last year told ZimEye.com in an exclusive interview that after dashing the hopes of the Zim national team, flying them in a jet made of straw, he really is penniless and cannot at all lift the $200million power tender awarded him in October 2015. After pleading with Zimbabweans saying he needs more time to prepare, he revealed he is waiting for a bank loan also showing that at present he has not even applied for that money. He went on to suggest that the taxpayer through the government’s Zimbabwe Power Company, must pay him for the same project he last year claimed he can carry out to electrify all of Gwanda and Mat South.

In the latest development, the man has told the state media his Gwanda Solar Project sill requires bank financing.

Q: Has work started on the project?

A: Contractually, we are at the stage known as pre-commencement works. This is the stage where incidental activities that are fore-runners to the actual work on the project are carried out.
These include inter alia:-
Feasibility studies and economic models to establish the economic viability of the project and the presence of all conditions that are necessary to make the project a success,
Topographical studies to assess the contours and general lay of the land,
Geological surveys to assess underground conditions including ground stability, soil structure, transmission wayleaves and possible disturbance from mineral extraction activity. This involves specialised drilling of the ground and analysing the results of cores of rock extracted during this process,

Environmental impact assessment where the potential impact of the project on the environment is assessed, measured and mitigated in conjunction with the community,
Harnessing water resources and creating access gravel roads into the 200 ha site,
Clearing the ground in preparation for the laying of solar panels and fencing,
But in a strictly legal sense the project will officially commence after financial closure, a process that is now at an advanced stage.

Q: How are you progressing on the project?
A: From the overall assessment above, we are approximately 70 percent of the way to completion of pre-commencement works which themselves are only 3 percent of the total project cost so that works out to about 2 percent of the project. Further progress to complete pre-commencement works is incumbent on permission from EMA to carry out the rest of ground clearance which is the major remaining part of pre-commencement works plus the current inclement weather conditions which has hampered ground progress.

Q: Have there been any constraints with the projects, in terms of funding or otherwise?
A: Project progress is in two broad forms:
1. Site preparation as described above. This now awaits analysis of geological survey results from the drilling of the site, plus EMA approval of the environmental impact assessment which defines the parameters of disturbance and destruction of vegetation, flora and fauna. Engagement with EMA also canvasses community support and minimises social disruption. Currently, this process is at a very advanced stage.

2. Fundraise. The scope of this project demanded the integration of a credible project finance plan for the project. Pre-commencement works were only authorised after satisfaction that the financing of the full project was viable and credible.

This is a parallel process that is a function of Zimbabwe’s international credit rating which is the subject of ongoing engagements with multi-lateral agencies by the Ministry of Finance, eg Sinosure, etc.
But we are pleased to place it on record that the project fundraise (sic) has received the necessary support from Government, the employer ZPC and international multi-lateral funding partners and subject to parallel processes from Government should be finalised soon.

Q: When do you expect the project to be completed?
A: The project will be completed 18 months after financial closure.
Q: Any other comments that you think might be useful to our readers.
A: Contractually, all comments on this project are required to emanate from the office of the managing director of ZPC, which owns the project.
But in view of your status as Zimbabwe’s leading journal, we have furnished you with generic

“Mugabe National Holiday” Coming!

national holiday…Robert Mugabe

Government is working on modalities to make February 21 a national holiday in honour of Zimbabwe’s Founding Father. President Mugabe, Zimbabwe’s first black Prime Minister at Independence in 1980 and inaugural executive Head of State and Government in 1987, was born on February 21, 1924.

His birthday has for decades been a landmark date on the national calendar via the efforts of the 21st February Movement, which creates awareness about President Mugabe’s contribution to development with particular focus on youth involvement in socio-economic transformation.

At a meeting to assess preparations for this Saturday’s 21st February Movement celebrations in Matobo, Zanu-PF Secretary for Administration and Home Affairs Minister Dr Ignatius Chombo said the ruling party’s Youth League had recommended that the day be declared a national holiday, and Government consulatations on the matter were at an advanced stage.

Dr Chombo and youth league leader Kudzi Chipanga expressed satisfaction with preparations for the event.

DOKORA TO PARENTS: I’ll Use Your $1,2Billion To Finance My Militancy Curriculum

war on parents…Lazarus Dokora

Primary and Secondary Education Minister Dr Lazarus Dokora has shot into protesting parents and pupils coldly saying that he will use the $1,2 billion school development funds annually paid by parents to rather fund his new curriculum.

He said he will use the cash to implement Phase 2 of his updated curriculum.

Dokora has already been blasted in the state media as his curriculum reforms were labelled “too ambitious,” and on Friday the minister was humiliated by disgruntled pupils from Alan Wilson School in Harare.

But Dokora has insisted saying his method will empower the nation’s pupils. “This generation that we are now teaching will become an empowered one. Parents pay money for their children to have good education,” Dokora told the state media.

He continued, “all the programmes we are introducing are good for our country, our people,” he said.

“So do I have to wait until all the teachers have become literate in ICT? When you say there are too many changes, we are enabling, creating an enabling environment.

“They (parents) contribute US$1,2 billion every year. That is the money that goes directly into the hands of SDCs (School Development Committees). Teachers are paid the tune of US$900 million, that brings the money in the education sector to US$2,1 billion. I then top up with what I get from education partners. With these kinds of figures we can do anything so nothing should stop us from implementing our programmes.”

Baba Appeals For Corporate Support

BULAWAYO Amateur Boxing Association (Baba) is making frantic efforts to send a team that will compete at a national competition to be held at Nyanyadzi, Manicaland Province next week.

The national competition set for February 25 will be used to select boxers who will represent the country at a regional tournament to be held this April in Angola.

Cynthia Zenda, Baba secretary-general is hopeful that they will be able to get corporate support to send pugilists to Manicaland.

“The national finals are an opportunity for local boxers to get selected into the national teams. As Baba we’re working hard to get transport and we are also appealing to the corporate world as well as well-wishers to assist us with travelling expenses. There are a number of talented boxers from Bulawayo who we are confident have what it takes to be part of the national teams,” said Zenda.

She encouraged clubs to also look for funds to send their boxers in the event that Baba fails to get transport sponsorship.

Clubs affiliated to Baba are HQ One Brigade, Nketa, Nkulumane, Tshaka, Bulawayo West, Percy, Sikhulile, Inyanda and Lobengula.

Meanwhile, Zenda said Baba will have a planning meeting today where they will brief clubs about the tournaments that the association will hold this year. – State Media

Kombi Driver Jailed For 7 Months

A Chitungwiza kombi driver who caused an accident at a roadblock along New Chitungwiza Road has been sentenced to an effective seven months in prison, and prohibited from driving for the next five years.

Alvin Muringani (31), appeared before Mbare magistrate Mr Stanford Mambanje charged with negligent driving under the Road Traffic Act.

Prosecutor Ms Hilda Huni alleged that on January 8 this year, Muringani was driving a Nissan Caravan along New Chitungwiza Road heading towards a roadblock.

Muringani, who was not pulled over by the police, allegedly accelerated his vehicle passing the road block and rammed the back of another Nissan Caravan forcing it to hit another vehicle.

Several people suffered severe injuries and were ferried to Harare Hospital.

Ms Huni told the court that Muringani acted unlawfully by driving at an excessive speed under those circumstances, disregarding other road users which resulted in passengers getting injured.

In the same court, a Harare man Norman Takadii (21) was slapped with a 15-day jail term after being found guilty of stealing a chicken.

He appeared before Mbare magistrate Mr Stanford Mambanje charged with stock theft.

Allegations are that on February 12 this year, Feddy Taiwa was informed by Takadii’s stepmother that there were feathers in his room, which she suspected were from a stolen chicken.

Taiwa then checked his fowl run and discovered that one chicken was missing and went to Takadii’s room where he discovered feathers similar to that of the missing chicken. – State Media

MUJURU SAGA: “Foolishness Thinks It Can Cure Itself”

Patrick Guramatunhu | “COMRADES, what did I say last year about some foolish strong-headed woman’s dream of forming and running viable political parties? I laughed when I heard that this is what was happening, and I warned that in no time, the outfit would be falling into smithereens … it has not even taken a year for this prophesy to come to pass. Being a veteran politician that I am, I did not need anyone to tell me that this whole project was a joke,” wrote satirical columnist CZ.

“Well, I agree with those that say foolishness thinks it can cure itself!

Well that is just too smug CZ, you need to be taken down a peg or two. There are four reasons you, of all people, do not dare be so smug about ZimPF imploding:

  1. The “foolish strong-headed woman” you are talking about is Joice Mujuru whom you have kept in your cabinet for 34 years and even had her as VP for 10 years. Whilst many would agree that Joice Mujuru is a corrupt and incompetent simpleton who was promoted way above her level of competence as deputy minister to say nothing of Minister and VP. History will remember the fool who promoted this simpleton to such lofty and dizzying heights – you, CZ!

If the truth be told, and it must be told even if mountains are levelled, CZ, for selfish reason surrounded yourself with useless individuals like Joice Mujuru, Simon Muzenda and all the other “vakadzi vaMugabe” (Mugabe’s useless subservient concubines), as Margaret Dongo call them. Julius Malema called your Zanu PF cronies “cowards” and they are. It served your selfish purpose of justifying you long stay in power, since none of the brainless concubines posed any threat to your hold on power, but the nation has paid dearly for having a corrupt and murderous tyrannical regime for 37 years.

The Lord God has punished you, CZ; you talk of Joice Mujuru as a “foolish strong-headed woman” and in marrying Grace, you got someone even worse!

  1. Now that we have established that you, CZ are just another fool then why has your party, Zanu PF lasted decades whilst Mujuru’s ZimPF imploded after a year? The answer is simple you inherited a rich and prosperous economy from Ian Smith in 1980 and you used the nation’s wealth to bribe your cronies who wasted the wealth. After decades of gross mismanagement, rampant corruption and lawlessness Zimbabwe’s once promising economy is now in total ruins, unemployment has soared to 90% and millions now live in abject poverty.

It is rich for you CZ to be laughing about ZimPF “falling into smithereens” when Mujuru and the many other former Zanu PF bigwigs are the by-product of Zanu PF itself falling into smithereens! The factional wars in Zanu PF did not stop with the departure of Mujuru & Co. as two new factions emerged immediately. One of the factions is headed by a very foolish woman whose love for power and wealth has turned her into a monster!

Zanu PF is imploding fuelled by the country’s economic meltdown. You held the party together only by dishing out the nation’s wealth but now that the wealth is gone Zanu PF is falling apart. The centre cannot hold, it is rotten to the core; having, as it does, a fool at the core.

  1. If ZimPF “was a joke” then so is Zanu PF itself and you too, CZ, you are a joke!

Zanu PF may see the myriad of weaknesses in the opposition camp as a positive, sure the regime can rig the next elections and bulldoze its way back into power next year, just as the regime has done in the past. The party rig the elections in 2013 but has since failed to follow that up by rigging economic recovery. Rigging the 2018 election will be the ease bit rigging the economic recovery will still be the real challenge. And the nation’s patience on the economy is running out as last year’s street protests showed.

With 90% out of work “70% classified as poor and a further 20% as living in abject poverty”, according to a recent UN report; this situation is socially and politically unsustainable.

Zanu PF is imploding and Zimbabwe will have the regime change it has been denied for the last 37 years, of that we can be certain.

When you thought out those words, “I agree with those that say foolishness thinks it can cure itself!” you should have been looking in the mirror for you would have seen the biggest fool of all CZ – you!

 

Mugabe ‘Death Prophet’ To Spend More Time In Jail

INCARCERATED Kariba-based Remnant Church Pastor Patrick Philip Mugadza, who is alleged to have committed a criminal offence by saying that President Robert Mugabe would die on October 17 this year, was yesterday further remanded in custody to next Monday.

The pastor did not physically appear in court after presiding magistrate Vongai Muchuchuti-Guwuriro, who was recently transferred to Bindura, failed to bring the suspect’s court file from the Mashonaland Central town.

Mugadza was represented by lawyers from the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights Jeremiah Bhamu and Gift Mtisi.

Allegations against Mugadza emanated from a “prophecy” which he revealed during an interview with a local online publication where he caused the publication of a story which said God had told him Mugabe would die on October 17 this year.

Meanwhile, the trial of Patson Dzamara and his four alleged accomplices, who are being charged with disorderly conduct, also failed to kick off as presiding magistrate Gamuchirai Siwardi did not report for duty. – Newsday

Grace Mugabe Thrills Manicaland

MANICALAND is honoured to be the first province to host the First Lady,  Amai Grace Mugabe, says Manicaland Minister of State for Manicaland Provincial Affairs,  Mandi Chimene.

Amai Mugabe will be visiting Buhera North today (Friday) where thousands of people are expected to welcome her during her debut provincial tour of the year.

In an interview yesterday (Thursday) ahead of the First Lady’s visit, Chimene, said as province they felt honoured to be accorded the chance to be the first province to host the First Lady in 2017.

“The year is just beginning and it is an honour for us in Manicaland to be accorded the chance to host the mother of the nation. As the mother of the nation, she will be meeting her children to give them direction for 2017. Like in any family set-up, parents set the tone for the year and that is what our dear mother will be doing in Buhera.

“As Manicaland, we are more than ready to welcome our First Lady. All logistics are in place and come tomorrow (Friday), all roads will be leading to Buhera. God blessed us with rains this year and everyone travelling to Buhera will see a green Buhera unlike in the past where wilting crops were a common sight especially this time of the year,” she said.

On logistics, Chimene, said: “It is systems all go to receive Dr Amai Mugabe. Manicaland is the most organised province and we will prove that tomorrow. Communication was sent to all Members of the National Assembly to mobilise enough transport and resources to ferry people to Buhera North. The response from our traditional sponsors among them businesspeople has been overwhelming.

“We are also excited that schools are volunteering their buses to help to transport people to Buhera and we want to thank them for that gesture. We are the pacesetters and those who will come after us in hosting national events of this nature will have a torrid time to surpass our standards,” said Chimene.

In an earlier interview, Zanu-PF national secretary for administration in the Women’s League, Letina Undenge, said Dr Amai Mugabe, was an inspiration to many women.

“We are very excited to be hosting Dr Amai Mugabe in Manicaland. She is an inspiration to many women. We have benefitted a lot from her unquestionable leadership qualities as the Women’s League. During her short stint at the helm of the Women’s League, she has initiated a lot of projects that has transformed the lives of many women.

“As women in Manicaland, we are assured of learning many things from her inspired address come Friday. She is a straight talker and I am rest assured that she will leave us a more united lot in Manicaland. To us, Dr Amai Mugabe’s visit will be a double celebration as it comes five days before President’s 93rd birthday. Dr Amai Mugabe should be hailed for looking after our President who is still as fit as a fiddle despite his age. We want to take this opportunity to say thank you Amai for looking after our father,” said Undenge. – State Media

17 Drown in Horror Floods

SEVENTEEN people have so far drowned in Manicaland Province since the onset of the rainy season in November.

Police said most of the people were swept away while attempting to cross flooded rivers.

Most incidents happened in Chief Saunyama’s area of Nyanga between December 1 and February 6.

Manicaland provincial police spokesperson, Inspector Tavhiringwa Kakohwa, said all the bodies were retrieved.

“We urge people to desist from crossing flooded rivers. We also urge parents and guardians to ensure that their children do not stay or play near water bodies.

“They should accompany their children to school. Water reservoirs should always be secured. It is important to take precautionary measures to avoid unnecessary loss of lives,” said Insp Kakohwa.

Two siblings, Life and Energy Murembwe, aged seven and eight respectively, drowned on December 5 in Fungirai Village in Chief Marange’s area. The two, who were herding cattle along Manguwe Stream, drowned while swimming in a three-metre deep pool. The bodies were seen floating in the dam the following day.

In another incident, a six-year old boy, Paul Kurehwatira drowned in Mukuni River after he slipped while herding cattle with his brothers, Desire and William.

Prominent Nyangunzi lost her 11-month-old daughter, Bridget after she fell in a 20-litre bucketful of water and died instantly.

An illegal gold panner, Happimore Mazonde (28), drowned after he jumped into a flooded river while following an empty two-litre container which had been blown into the river by whirlwind on December 2.

In Buhera, a three-year-old boy, Ngaavongwe Malcom Musapukira drowned in Nyarushanga River in Chief Nyashanu’s area on December 18 after he was left unattended by his sisters, Praise and Sifelani aged nine and 11 respectively.

A one-year-old toddler, Kimberley Jobo, drowned in a two-metre deep well after her mother, Tariro left her unattended. The incident happened in Sekai Village under Chief Makoni in Rusape.

Amon Chiduku (64) of Fiki Village and Agabu Machote (30) also drowned after attempting to cross flooded rivers.

Last week, a four-year-old infant drowned after she slipped into Nyajezi River while attempting to follow her mother.

Alice Ngwaru (39) was on her way home from Village Eight in Chief Saunyama’s area in the company of her daughters, Patience and Nyasha and upon reaching a flooded Nyajezi River, Alice carried Patience and crossed the river leaving Nyasha behind. Alice left Patience on the other side of the river as she crossed back to take Nyasha. Patience followed her, but slipped into the river and drowned.

A five-year-old girl from Sahumani Village under Chief Mutasa was swept away on January 13, at around 12 noon after she attempted to cross a flooded river while heading to school. Her body was found floating in the river the following day.

On January 14, in Murodzi Village in Nyanga, a 66-year-old woman who had left home to Murodzi Farm to sell fruits and vegetables was swept away after she attempted to cross a flooded river. Villagers conducted a search after she had gone missing and found her body trapped in between stones in the river.

Odzi Primary School pupil, Shalom Mutopora (five) drowned on January 17 after she attempted to retrieve her shoe which she had dropped in Mutopora River. Efforts by villagers to rescue her were in vain.

The body of an unknown man believed to be in his early 20s was recently found floating in Dinhidza river in Zamuchiya village in Chipinge District. The body was discovered by a group of school children who were coming from Mariya Secondary School. The children alerted other villagers who went on to make a police report. They attended the scene and retrieved the body from the river. The body which was in a state of decomposition was conveyed to St Peter’s Mission Hospital mortuary for post-mortem.

34-year-old Cynthia Nehwangura’s body was recently found floating along Mutorahuku River in Manyika Village under Chief Mutambara.

Police said Cynthia was a suspected mental patient. She had gone missing on January 17 at around 6pm. A villager, Morgan Manyika found Cynthia’s body on February 7 while he was looking for his cattle.

The body was at an advanced stage of decomposition. The body was conveyed to Mutambara Mission Hospital for post-mortem. Investigations are in progress. – State Media

 

Drama As Top Lawyer Bashes Ex-Lover In Public

THERE was an unprecedented drama at the Rusape Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday afternoon when lawyer, Tendai Bvuma and estranged ex- live-in girlfriend, Hazel Mahati were involved in a public fight.

The brawl took place in the corridors leading to the public prosecutors and interpreters offices soon after lunch. The fighting temporarily brought court business to a halt as officials rushed to offer Mahati first aid assistance.

The real cause of the fight was not clear at the time of going to Press as both parties gave conflicting statements.

Fellow lawyer, Mr Taurai Khupe and Public Prosecutor, Mr Tafara Chawatama, had a torrid time restraining the former lovers from fighting.

Mr Chawatama held Mahati, while Mr Khupe battled to control an enraged Bvuma. Bvuma’s jacket and trousers were torn in the scuflle.

Mr Khupe managed to drag Bvuma and shoved him into District Prosecutor, Mr Tirivanhu Mutyasira’s office, but Mr Chawatama was overpowered by Mahati who followed Bvuma in Mr Mutyasira’s office. Another scuffle ensued.

As the two fought, Bvuma punched Mahati on the cheek and she plunged headlong to the ground. She lost consciousness in the process, prompting Mr Khupe to shout: “Tendai unouraya munhu kani” and Bvuma responded saying: “Anofira mumaoko angu uyu, basa rekundiendera kun’anga nemaporofita.”

Mahati was later carried by fellow workmates from Mr Mutyasira’s office into senior interpreter, Mr Binali’s office.

When Bvuma saw this correspondent, he shouted pointing at Mahati: “Correspondent wanga uripiko? Tora news. Anga akuenderera mberi. Ndamudzemura akafenda. (Hey you Correspondent where were you. Record this drama, I thumped her and she fainted.)

For professional reasons, Messrs Khupe, Chawatama and Mutyasira refused to comment.

Asked to comment on what led him to fight his former girlfriend whom he has a two-year-old son with in public, Bvuma alleged that Mahati was visiting n’angas and prophets for him to have misfortunes in life.

He also said he was not worried about the consequences he was likely to face from the no nonsense Law Society of Zimbabwe since their issue was a domestic one and Mahati had provoked him.

“Hazel is consulting prophets to cast a spell on me. She wants me arrested so that I lose my job. She was at a prophet in Headlands last week and I confronted her.

“When I arrived at the court she told me that she wanted to create a scene and humiliate me. She threatened to follow me in court. She wants me out of Rusape. She grabbed my jacket and neck. When I sought refuge in Mr Mutyasira’s office she followed. Khupe and Chawatama tried to stop the scuffle.

“While I was in Mr Mutyasira’s office, she grabbed me by the neck. I retaliated and punched her. She fainted. She is very weak, she almost died. I was never in love with her because she used juju to lure me into the relationship. I do not know what she really wants from me. She is refusing to surrender my clothes that I left at her home. I am paying a lot of debts which she accrued.

“What did you want me to do when she provoked like that. The Law Society of Zimbabwe does not deal with domestic issues and this is a domestic issue. Yes, it happened at court, but it is domestic,” said Bvuma.

Mahati who was recuperating at home claimed that she suffered a broken skull as a result of the scuffle.

She further claimed that Bvuma provoked her when he told her to stop calling his new wife, Fortunate Nyakwenga.

“He is being fed with lies by Fortunate Nyakwenga. Bvuma spends the whole day at court and she thinks I will be with him. After lunch, Bvuma came to me fuming. At first I thought he was at work, but he charged at me as I was about to enter the courtroom.

“It is Bvuma who confronted me saying I wanted to kill him. He is getting that information from Fortunate. He is not even paying maintenance for his child. He was ordered to pay $150 a month, but he has arrears amounting to $2 000. The criminal case emanating from the maintenance default is being heard at Mutasa Magistrates’ Court, but he absconded three times. The police are not arresting him.

“I am at hospital now. I sustained skull injuries. The car he is driving is mine, but he is refusing to surrender it. He is not a licenced driver. For the past one and half years I avoided talking to him. I am yet to return to work, I am at hospital right now,” said Mahati.

Efforts to get a comment from Nyakwenga were fruitless at the time of going to Press. – State Media

Stunner In Car Accident? | BREAKING NEWS

Stunner, Desmond Chideme has been reportedly involved in a suspected car accident.

ZimEye is being told by his ex-wife, Olinda that she has received calls and pictures showing that Stunner was involved in another car crash. The video report begins in the next 5 minutes. REFRESH THIS PAGE to watch the LIVE-REPORT :

 

ZRP Cop Severely Bashed At Roadblock | BREAKING NEWS

Terrence Mawawa, Mwenezi | A ZRP cop has been severely assaulted by a Rutenga businessman at a roadblock.

 

Constable Advance Kaneta(30) of ZRP Rutenga Traffic Section was assaulted by Presence Taruvinga at a roadblock at the 167 km peg along the Masvingo-Beitbridge Highway following differences over the payment of a spot fine.

 

Kaneta demanded $20 from Taruvinga’s driver identified as Mutaro. The cop indicated the vehicle did not have a third number plate.

 

Mutaro said he did not have the money but Kaneta insisted on the payment of the spot fine. Kaneta then impounded the vehicle and said it would be released upon payment of $20.

 

Mutaro reacting, called Taruvinga who drove to the scene. Upon arrival he pleaded with the cop to give him time to look for the money but Kaneta refused to release the car.

 

Taruvinga then charged towards Kaneta and assaulted him with open hands and clenched fists while other officers watched.

 

Taruvinga drove off after assaulting the cop but was later arrested.

 

Acting Masvingo Provincial Police Spokesperson, Assistant Insepector Kudakwashe Dhewa confirmed the incident to ZimEye saying the suspect would appear in court on Monday, February 20.

 

Last month ZRP cops were bashed in Zvishavane after impounding a vehicle ferrying a sick child to hospital. Angry Zvishavane residents accused the cops of being insensitive to the situation.

Trump Snubs ‘Political Risk’ Mugabe

US President Donald Trump’s phone call to South Africa President Jacob Zuma highlights neighbouring Zimbabwe’s high political risk and that Washington does not consider President Robert Mugabe a serious factor in Afro-American political and socio-economic relations, opposition and analysts said yesterday.

This comes after Trump spoke with Zuma on Monday this week to discuss ways to expand cooperation and trade between the US and SA.

According to a statement from Zuma’s office, “The two presidents reaffirmed their commitment to strengthening the already strong bilateral relations between the two countries. There are 600 US companies in South Africa and strong trade relations between the two countries.”

In a quintessential rebuff of the 92-year-old Mugabe as tensions escalate over Washington’s February 6, 2017 concerns over “the continuing deterioration of the human rights situation in Zimbabwe”, the White House apparently snubbed Mugabe, with the businessman and television persona turned president maintaining a tougher US line against Zimbabwe.

Presidential spokesperson George Charamba has reacted with indignation to US’ damning criticism of Zimbabwe’s human rights record, telling State Department officials they can “go and hang on a banana tree.”

Charamba told the State media Zimbabwe was waiting for an overture from the Trump administration to see how relations will be between the two countries during the Republican leader’s presidency.

“We are waiting for a cue from a new government,” Charamba said.

But Morgan Tsvangirai’s opposition MDC said the snub highlights the deepening of an already toxic bilateral relationship that matters increasingly less to Washington.

“Put bluntly . . . Mugabe has been nothing but a curse to Zimbabwe’s international relations,” MDC spokesperson Obert Gutu said.

“No one, including even the Chinese, no longer trusts Mugabe. He is not a man of his word. He indicates left and then he suddenly turns right.

“Trump doesn’t consider Mugabe as a serious factor in Afro-American political and socio-economic relations.

“Trump knows that Mugabe is yesterday’s man; he also knows that Mugabe is in the political departure lounge, he is on his way out of power.”

Trump and Zuma, according to a White House summary of their call, reaffirmed an “expressed interest in identifying new, mutually beneficial opportunities for trade” and to “deepen the bilateral relations.”

Analyst Takura Zhangazha said people must not read too far into Trump’s snub as it does not change the structural dynamics in a bilateral relationship that is slowly worsening, and slowly fading in importance.

“Trump chose Zuma because the latter leads the largest economy in the region and is a key trading partner with the US and also in recognition of the fact that South Africa is a regional powerhouse, at least economically.

 “This is also the same reason why Trump also called Nigeria’s (President Muhammadu) Buhari.”Trump also spoke with Buhari to discuss the strong cooperation between the US and Nigeria, including on shared security, economic, and governance priorities.

Analyst Maxwell Saungweme said SA has a larger GDP, larger population than Zimbabwe, and better trade with the US.

The country exported $176 million in agricultural products to the US last year under the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) — a US trade agreement designed to help African exporters.

“Zimbabwe is a very small country, with a tiny GDP, dilapidated infrastructure, and facing economic downturn. Zimbabwe also has high political risk on investments.

“So all these factors, including poor governance make us not a favourite choice for stronger bilateral relations with super powers seeking to expand trading relationships.”

Dewa Mavinga, a senior Africa researcher at New York-based Human Rights Watch, said: “President Mugabe’s government needs to know that investors can completely ignore Zimbabwe if there are no urgent steps to restore the rule of law and establish conditions conducive for business that secures the best interest of Zimbabwe and its people.”

Senior consultant at the International Crisis Group Piers Pigou said Trump cannot engage Mugabe because of targeted sanctions aimed to maintain pressure on Zimbabwe by sustaining the costs of its blatant electoral fraud and rights abuses.

“The US cannot legally move on certain areas of engagement with the Zimbabwean government until there have been significant moves on governance, rule of law, human rights issues. This is clear from Zdera (Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act of 2001).

“This (US) law appears to inhibit the kind of shift from the politics of the stick to the politics of the carrot that we have seen employed by the UK and EU, which has had mixed results and generated significant frustration, in turn leading to a growing concern about the Zimbabwean government and ruling party’s commitment to reforms it claims it will implement.

“I suspect the US has watched this and decided at this juncture there is not much to work with in terms of those issues.”

Nevertheless, the US remains a vital contributor to humanitarian support and key service delivery areas to Zimbabwe, in particular the health sector.

“Trump can override Zdera but there has to be clear cause to do so.  In their calculations this is not so,” Pigou added.

Dinizulu Macaphulana, former researcher at Institute for Security and Development Policy, said the US is focusing on SA, Nigeria, Botswana and other countries in their scramble for the control of Africa.

“Zimbabwe will be inconsequential except as a problem to be solved. Zimbabwe’s international relations died a long time ago,” Macaphulana said.

Trump, who so far has been mostly focused on his “America First” agenda, has not spoken at much length about his policies concerning Africa. But his controversial travel ban, one of his first major executive orders, has targeted three African countries: Sudan, Libya and Somalia. – Daily News

 

Why Kim Jong Un’s Brother Was Murdered

THE last time Kim Jong Nam made the headlines he was also at an airport, travelling under a false name. In 2001 “Fat Bear”—the Chinese alias used by the son of North Korea’s leader at the time, Kim Jong Il—was arrested after arriving in Tokyo on a forged Dominican Republic passport, on his way to Disneyland. This time it was “Kim Chol” who was waiting for a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Macau on February 13th when two women assumed to be North Korean agents attacked him. He is said to have died on his way to hospital.

As The Economist went to press, the results of an autopsy had not yet been released. Rumours suggest that Mr Kim was poisoned, with a needle, spray or toxic cloth to the face. Malaysian police said they thought six people had been involved in the attack; they have detained two women and one man, travelling on Vietnamese and Indonesian passports.

The 45-year-old Mr Kim had once been Kim Jong Il’s favourite son: witnesses described a 10,000-square-foot playroom filled with toys. Before each birthday, North Korean diplomats would be sent on a month-long hunt for exotic presents. A cousin of his who defected in 1982 said that Kim Jong Il would take his son to the grand halls of state and say, “Jong Nam, this is where you’ll be able to talk big one day.”

But in the end it was Kim Jong Il’s third son, Kim Jong Un, born to his second wife and educated, like his half-brother, in Switzerland, who succeeded their father in 2011. Kim Jong Nam was not visible at his father’s funeral. He was known in recent years to have been living in exile in Macau, a semi-autonomous enclave within China.

Since the 30-something Kim Jong Un came to power, he has consolidated power by executing about 140 senior officials, most notably his uncle and security chief, Jang Song Thaek. Yet exile had typically been the fate of members of the Kim family who had fallen out of favour. Kim Jong Il’s half-brother, Kim Pyong Il, was sent abroad on never-ending diplomatic service, for instance. (Jang was not a blood relative of Jong Un, unlike Jong Nam.) Some say Jong Nam was sidelined by Jong Un’s mother and her family long before his Disneyland disgrace. As a political irrelevance, he had seemed likely to survive Jong Un’s purges.

The Macanese candidate

Wild rumours had circulated in the South Korean press that Jong Nam had conspired against his brother with Jang. Jong Nam had been close to Jang, who was his escort during his school days in Switzerland. But Michael Madden, who runs “North Korea Leadership Watch”, a blog, says tales of fraternal hostility have been overdone. Some sources say Jong Nam did in fact attend a private family funeral for his father in Pyongyang, the North Korean capital. Yoji Gomi, a Japanese journalist with whom Jong Nam exchanged 100-odd e-mails from 2004, quoted him in a book in 2012 as having said that he wanted to “co-operate” with his half-brother.

It is possible that Jong Nam was involved in financial dealings that Jong Un wanted to wind up. Some suspect he was laundering money through Macau’s casinos. Mr Madden says he had ties with Office 39, a department that seeks foreign income for the Kim regime through illicit means. More likely, however, is that Jong Nam simply irritated his half-brother by criticising him. Mr Gomi quoted him as saying Jong Un would “not last” as leader. Around the same time his son called the North Korean regime a “dictatorship” on a Finnish talk show. Given that North Korean officials have been executed for slumping in their chairs at meetings, such comments would surely qualify as capital offences.

Jong Nam was thought to have been under the protection of the Chinese security services. China’s government, which had had good relations with Jang, is bound to be irked by the murder of yet another protégé. Kim Kwang Jin, a defector who once worked in North Korea’s “royal court” economy, says that even if rumours that China had hoped to install Jong Nam if Jong Un fell from power are far-fetched, China would nonetheless have seen Jong Nam as useful leverage.

North Korea frequently irks China, however, without changing its apparent conclusion that a violent nuclear dictatorship makes a better neighbour than a unified Korea packed with American troops. The timing, hard on the heels of a North Korean missile test (see article), is probably coincidental. North Korea had been trying to kill Jong Nam for some time, according to South Korea’s spooks: a North Korean spy jailed by South Korea in 2012 allegedly confessed to planning a hit-and-run on him in China. And given how little clout he seems to have had in North Korea, there is no hint that his murder is a sign of turmoil within the regime.

This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Half-brotherly love”

Drama: Tsvangirai Declares Self Coalition Leader

Terrence Mawawa, Masvingo | MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai has said he is the only opposition leader capable of leading a united front against President Robert Mugabe and Zanu PF.

Although Tsvangirai said consultations on the matter were in progress, he also emphasized that there is no other opposition leader capable of leading the much anticipated grand coalition.

Tsvangirai made the remarks at the party provincial offices in Masvingo Province last weekend. Political analysts say although Tsvangirai has played a pivotal role in the struggle against the Mugabe regime, he has to be prepared to embrace other political figures. “We cannot offer the top post to anyone else. Others have to wait in line. When you arrive at a place you have to familiarise with proceedings.You have to let those you found in the area lead the process while you learn,”said Tsvangirai.

The MDC leader said he was persecuted by the Mugabe regime for 17 years and he was the right candidate to lead the anticipated united front. “The people have suffered for a long time and we know what has been taking place.Therefore, we want the highest office because that is where decisions are made,”said Tsvangirai.

In Zaka District party supporters told Tsvangirai they were sceptical of Mujuru’s sincerity. The former premier however said his party would work with all progressive opposition parties.

Mawarire To Challenge Mugabe 2018 | LATEST

A Zimbabwean pastor who led a popular protest movement last year against strongman President Robert Mugabe said Friday that he might stand in the 2018 general election.
Evan Mawarire was publicly threatened by Mugabe, 92, after starting the “This Flag” internet campaign that triggered the largest surge of anti-government street protests in many years.

Mugabe has vowed to run again and has already been chosen as the candidate for the ruling ZANU-PF party, which has been involved in brutal violence and vote-rigging in past elections.

Mawarire, who is on bail, faces charges of subverting the government and inciting public violence after he was arrested earlier this month at Harare airport.

“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 on Friday.

“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.”

Mawarire fled the country in July in fear for his life, and was arrested on his return.

The evangelical pastor, 39, emerged as an opposition figurehead after posting a Facebook video in which he wore Zimbabwe’s flag on his shoulders as he condemned the country’s worsening economic crisis.

Following Mugabe’s intervention, security forces crushed the series of protests and work strikes organised by the “This Flag” movement and other groups.

In the last election in 2013, Mugabe easily defeated the opposition Movement for Democratic Change in a vote widely seen as not credible.

The court case against Mawarire was postponed until March 16. – Guardian

Mujuru: Mutasa And Gumbo Wanted To Make Me Their Queen Bee | THE RESPONSE

Do not cast your peals before swine for they will tramp on it. Mathew 7 v 6.

Jesus forewarned us not to waste good deeds on people who will not appreciate or understand them.. An ignoramus swine will never appreciate the beauty of peals. The recent ranting utterances by Dr J Mujuru on Mutasa and Gumbo suggesting to promote her to be a queen bee befits the above verse very well.

It serves these old Madalaz very well for how could they use such a “complicated” statement on a simplistic woman like Dr Mujuru? My president would rather be called Mother of the nation than a queen bee.

Let’s respect our widows. Mujuru is mother of the nation and not a queen bee!

Maybe Mujuru genuinely doesn’t understand or know the roles of a queen bee. Since she confidently directed us to google, please Madam Mujuru indulge yourself with the roles of a queen bee, for how could Mutasa and Gumbo insult your dignity like that?

A queen bee is the heart and soul of the honey bee colony. She is the reason for nearly everything the rest of the colony does. The queen is the only bee without which the rest of the colony cannot survive. A good quality queen means a strong and productive hive.

Only one queen bee lives in a given hive. She is the largest and most glorious bee in the colony, with a long and graceful body. She is the only female with fully developed ovaries. The queen’s two primary purposes are to produce chemical scents that help regulate the unity of the colony and to lay lots of eggs.

The other bees pay close attention to the queen, tending to her every need. Like a regal celebrity, she’s always surrounded by a flock of attendants as she moves about the hive. Yet, she isn’t spoiled.

These royal attendants are vital, because the queen is totally incapable of tending to her own basic needs. She can neither feed nor groom herself. She can’t even leave the hive to relieve herself. And so her doting attendants (the queen’s court) take care of her basic needs while she tirelessly goes from cell to cell doing what she does best . . . laying eggs.

Madam Mujuru get this right: Mutasa and Gumbo did not insinuate that you are an insect or that they are begging for a threesome with you. They were simply suggesting that you are the heart and soul of the party without which the party may not grow since you were its leader. They did not in anyway suggest you were a whore or that they intend to turn you into one.

Not everything is about your sexuality Madam. Some statements are simply just that: STATEMENTS.

These old Madalaz were suggesting that you need all the undivided support and protection since no one is perfect.

Your simple role would have been to plant and grow the party (laying of eggs) till we overcome zanupf. It’s a pity if you didn’t understand such a simple statement.

Such yawning misfiring leaves one wondering if you, Madam, actually personally researched and understood your own PHD dissertation.

Madam if you can be confused by such plain statements it boggles the mind then as to your intellectual capabilities to lead a party, negotiate a coalition, let alone lead Zimbabwe or negotiate peace or energy deals with Iran.

Iam mostly disappointed at your PHD mentor and supervisor madam.

I hope one day we will not revisit this letter and wish we had not made you the president of the country for it will be too late! – Anonymous

Mnangagwa Humiliation As Bill Is Rejected

THE Constitution Amendment (number 1) Bill sponsored by Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa was yesterday rejected by Harare residents at a public hearing with most people seeing a hidden political motive behind the proposed changes.

MPs, with the Ziyambi Ziyambi led Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Justice, which is conducting the public hearings on the Bill, were told blankly that the judicial arm of government was critical and should maintain independence.

The crowd, which failed to fit in the venue of the hearing at Parliament Building, did not mince its words, vowing people would never allow the three-year-old Constitution to be tampered with for political advantage, and would not tolerate it being “patched”.

The amendments will affect section 180 of the Constitution to ensure the Chief Justice (CJ), Deputy Chief Justice (DCJ) and the Judge President of the High Court are appointed by the President after consultation with the Judicial Service Commission.

ZimRights boss, Okay Machisa said the Constitution was in its infancy with several laws needing to be realigned. He said the rights of people were already being curtailed by allowing the head of State and the Executive arm of the government to interfere with appointment of the judiciary.

“I am not in support of this amendment, and Parliament must instead push for the outstanding realignment of laws to suit the Constitution,” Machisa said.

Speakers condemned the amendments saying they did not want President Robert Mugabe to decide who to appoint as CJ as that appointee would make biased rulings in his favour whenever he was found on the wrong side of the law.

David Hofisi said the current Constitution provided for interviews for CJ, DCJ and Judge President of the High Court to ensure judicial independence, accountability and diversity, as well as to create a buffer between the Executive and judiciary.

“If the appointment process is entirely on the President, it becomes subject to political whims. Parliament must consider the principles of the independence of the judiciary and safeguard against improper political motives. This Bill is against democracy and must not be passed,” he said.

Reverend Machaire said: “The Constitution is like the Holy Bible, which must not be amended. We do not want the President to appoint the CJ because why do you always come up with laws to protect your political interests and enrich yourselves? You want to patch the Constitution yet you are failing to patch the roads? Do not forget we voted for you and we will remove you if you do not take our views.”

John Chirenda was surprised that before the Constitution crafted in 2013 had even been fully implemented, the Executive was already talking of amendments.

“I do not think the Labour Court should be subordinate to the High Court because it creates unnecessary bureaucracy. The appointment of CJ, DCJ and Judge President of the High Court must be left to the Judicial Service Commission. If we follow that route it will give public confidence in the Judiciary,” Chirenda said.

Takawira Mashingaidze said: “Why do you want to patch the Constitution before we have even enjoyed the rights in it? By the end of the year, how many patches will it have?”

Brighton Mahuni said political appointments to the Judiciary threaten its independence.

Retired lawyer, Alex Masterson blasted the short notice given to members of the public to attend the public hearings.

Masterson said it would be a big mistake to give more power to the Head of State to appoint judges, adding the correct thing to do was to observe separation of powers and decentralise government.

“Interviews for judges are good because people will know how much time he spends on his farm and at the court.

This amendment should be set aside,” he said.

Different women, who contributed, said the Constitution must not be adulterated and should be left in its current state.

“Who is hurt by that the CJ, DCJ and Judge President must be interviewed? Is it an individual seeking to get political advantage? Zimbabweans say no to amendments,” a member of the public said. – Newsday

Dineo Floods Savage Matabeleland South

Staff Reporter | Heavy rains from Cyclone Dineo which pounded much of Matabeleland South yesterday have left several places marooned and dams destroyed.

Reports being received by ZimEye.com from correspondents in Matabeleland South are that much of the province is now not accessible as all major rivers throughout the province are flooded.

The provincial capital town Gwanda was first to be isolated as all roads leading into the town except the Beitbridge Bulawayo highway went into floods and people can not get into the town from neighboring Gwanda North, Gwanda South and Insiza districts. By late last night even the Beitbridge highway was at the risk of closing up as waters in Umzingwane River were rising to just a few centres below the bridge.

In Filabusi districts reports are that a dam at Wanezi gave in last night and several people in the area have been evacuated and some homesteads within the area have been swept away by the floods.

The Limpopo, Shashi and Tuli Rivers in Gwanda South are reported to be reaching levels that villagers have never seen before. The villagers claim that the water levels are already higher than those seen in the notorious Cyclone Eline of the year 2000.

In Mangwe and Bulilima Districts there are reports that several dams in the area have either collapsed or on the verge of collapsing with the Civil Protection Unit busy evacuating villagers in low lying areas in fear of the risks involved if the dams give in. Thekwane River in Bulilima burst its banks by sunset yesterday as the rains continued to pounce the area.

No deaths or drownings have been reported yet as the police and the CPU remain on high alert and controlling people from trying to get to the flooded rivers and dams.

The rains are expected to continue until Monday. ZimEye.com correspondents in the areas are keeping watch of the situation and updates will be made available as events happen.

Mugabe To Malema – No Suitable Successor For Me

President  Mugabe says there is no suitable successor at present, hence he will continue to be in power.

“There is no successor at the moment who people have faith in,” he told the ZBC in an interview today to mark his birthday.

The 92-year-old leader who plans to die in office claimed that people still wanted him to lead them. “If I feel I’m no longer able I will tell my party but with the volume of wishes I will carry on.,” he said adding  :”Its not easy to leave today, people have entrusted me to lead.”

Mugabe said he did not care what prophets say.  “I dont care about prophets of doom who wish me dead. We have pastors and bishops in my church joining the bandwagon.”

He scoffed at EFF leader, Julius Malema who told him it was time to go. “Who is Julius Malema to call for me to step down. Elections are held every five years and people elect me. – Agencies

Former Minister Exposes Traffic Cop Hell

FORMER Industry and Trade minister Nkosana Moyo has said traffic police officers recently tormented him over failure to produce one breakdown red triangle and a swollen tyre after he hit a pothole during his recent visit to Harare.

On his Facebook wall, the former minister said Zimbabwean police officers’ desperation to beat targets of “illegal” collection of money from motorists had escalated to disproportionate levels.

“What has Zimbabwe come to really? I recently drove through Harare and, as is now the norm, I went through an unbelievable number of police roadblocks,” he posted.

“These roadblocks are for no other purpose, but to extract as much money from the already suffering Zimbabwean citizenry as possible. All for the benefit of the political beast that must continue to feed itself at the people’s expense.

“At one of the roadblocks, a young police officer, who no doubt was struggling to meet his daily target of money to extort, walked around my car.

“He then asked for my driving licence, which I duly produced. He then proceeded to list my transgressions for the day. The list was as follows: I did not have a second breakdown triangle, which is a requirement in Zimbabwe, because I had that morning hit a pothole; one of my tyres had a swelling. For these transgressions he wanted me to pay $40 that is $20 for each transgression.

“I explained, as calmly as I could, that I was not responsible for repairing roads so that motorists would not hit potholes and also that my vehicle was very roadworthy.”

Moyo said he further pointed out that Zimbabwe, which does not manufacture vehicles, was the only country he knew which required a second breakdown triangle.

“I told him that I would not pay for the tyre swelling and I would rather go to court. Nevertheless, I conceded that he, the poor police officer, was not a legislator and so this extortion madness was not to be blamed on him,” the former minister said.

“I asked him to please give me a ticket for the second triangle transgression given that I could not withdraw cash from my bank although they were sitting on a significant sum of my money. At this point, he said that the police do not issue tickets. They were required to collect spot fines. I explained that I could not pay a spot fine since I could not get any of my hard-earned cash from the bank. The young police officer then came up with an amazing solution to the predicament.”

Moyo said the police officer said he would come with him to the nearest supermarket so that they would look for someone with cash and instead of that individual paying for their groceries in cash, they would give him (Moyo) the money and he would use his card to pay the shop for the goods.

“I would, in this way, be able to pay my fine,” he said.

Moyo lamented that the level of desperation of the State to raise money was embarrassing for the nation, which has been run down by the Zanu PF regime.

Contacted for comment, police spokesperson, Senior Assistant Commissioner Charity Charamba said: “Do I need to comment or respond on that? How do I know that he had such a complaint?” – Newsday

Dad Attacks Daughter At Her Privates To Get Rich

A 38–year-old Mberengwa man has been slapped with a three-year imprisonment sentence for applying herbs on his 19-year-old daughter’s breasts and private parts in a ritual to get rich.

The man’s daughter, who was abused when she was 17 years old in 2015, started having problems when she got married as she would see a vision of her father sleeping with her whenever she became intimate with her husband.

The man, from Hlatini Village in Mberengwa whose identity has been withdrawn to protect the identity of his victim, appeared before Mberengwa resident magistrate Mrs Evia Matura facing one count of indecent assault.

He pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 36 months imprisonment. In passing the sentence, Mrs Matura said the man had violated his daughter in a manner that would haunt her for the rest of her life.

“You exchanged your cultural values for the love of money. This manifests moral decadence at its heights. You have caused your daughter to suffer hallucinations and it has affected her marital life.
“She sees your cruelty in every man and you didn’t show any remorse or contrition. You are sentenced to three years in prison,” she said.

Prosecuting, Ms Wadzanayi Shayanewako told the court that on November 29 in 2015, the accused ordered his daughter to come to the garden where he was.

“The accused called the complainant into the garden which is situated at their homestead and persuaded the complainant to obey to whatever he wanted her to do saying that she was his beloved daughter. The accused’s wife was not at the homestead and was to sleep out on the same day,” said Ms Shayanewako.

The court heard that on the same date at around 10PM the man, while half naked, went into his daughter’s bedroom hut and lured her to his bedroom hut.
Ms Shayanewako said he then made her daughter sit on his bed before pulling her blouse exposing her breasts.

He also pulled up her skirt. “The accused took some herbs and applied them all over the complainants’ body including her breasts and private parts with his hands. He ordered the complainant to lie on the bed but she refused,” said Ms Shayanewako.

She said the matter came to light in November last year when the complainant revealed the incident to her husband after having some hallucinations. – state media

Grade 6 Pupil Beats Classmate To Death

AN 11-year-old pupil from Shurugwi has been charged with murder for allegedly fatally punching his classmate who was five years older.

The Grade Six pupil who was in a special class at Wida Primary School in Tongogara area, Shurugwi, allegedly felled his 16-year-old classmate with a fist leading to his death.
He has since been charged with murder but was released into the custody of his parents pending his appearance in court.

Acting Midlands provincial police spokesperson Assistant Inspector Ethel Mukwende confirmed the incident which occurred on Monday. Asst Insp Mukwende said the two boys were attending the same special class at the primary school. She said reasons why they had engaged in the fistfight were still not clear.
“Police are investigating a case of murder which took place on February 13 at around 12.25PM at Wida Primary School in Tongogara, Shurugwi, where an 11-year-old boy who cannot be named for ethical reasons but from Chidende Village, Chief Nhema, fought with a 16–year-old classmate also from the same village,” she said.

“It is said the boys exchanged blows and during the fight, the 11-year-old overpowered the 16-year-old who then fell to the ground and became unconscious.”

Asst Insp Mukwende said a teacher tried to render first aid to the boy to no avail. He was taken to Zvamabande Clinic where he was pronounced dead on arrival.
“The body of the 16-year-old boy was taken to Shurugwi District Hospital for post-mortem,” she said.

Asst Insp Mukwende said investigations are in progress.

“We would like to appeal to members of the public to desist from using violence as a way of solving disputes because such acts are now cascading to the children who now view violence as a necessity in solving disputes. The boy is in the custody of his parents,” she said. – state media

Grace Mugabe’s Ally Blasts Lazy MPs

Minister of State for Manicaland Provincial Affairs Mandi Chimene has called on the electorate to elect Members of National Assembly who deliver on promises as some of them are now a liability to Zanu-PF.

Giving her welcome remarks during the First Lady, Dr Amai Grace Mugabe’s rally in Buhera yesterday, Chimene said it was sad that some Members of National Assembly had deserted their constituencies in Manicaland.

“We are all volunteers in Zanu-PF. We are not in the party for monetary gain. When we go out to the electorate we should have programmes that change people’s lives. Some MPs here are not working for the people and they are letting the party down. Amai, you are the mother of the nation, but some of your children who were voted into office are not user-friendly and they are doing a disservice to the parry. It should be made clear that those who do not want to work for the people should step aside. We do not want liabilities in Zanu-PF,” said Chimene.

“I want to urge the electorate to elect people who are easily approachable and not those who abandon their constituencies and give flimsy excuses of being busy. We should also not be ambitious in the party. You should not use your ambitions to create chaos in the party,” said  Chimene.

She said despite its richness, Manicaland had nothing to show for it.

“The province is endowed with gold, diamonds, vermiculate, phosphate, tantalite and copper. Illegal panning is rampant especially in Chimanimani at Tarka Estate where timber is being destroyed. Our mineral resources should not benefit a few individuals, but Zimbabwe as a whole. Corruption is rampant and panners are wreaking havoc. The country is losing a lot through these illegal activities.

“There is no diamond cutting and polishing in the province, yet most of the diamonds are being mined in Chiadzwa and Chimanimani. The merging of diamond companies is highly appreciated, however, the process should move with speed to ensure that our communities benefit from the diamonds. Furthermore, efforts should be made to acquire equipment relevant for deep mining of diamonds,” she said.

Speaking at the same occasion, Zanu-PF provincial chairman, Dr Samuel Undenge, thanked Dr Amai Mugabe for choosing Manicaland as her first port of call for 2017.

“We are honoured to be the first province to host Dr Amai Mugabe this year. The last time she was here, she empowered the Chimanimani community by donating tractors which have helped in changing lives there. She has continued with her generous donations as she recently donated chicks for income generating projects for women in Manicaland. We want to thank our mother for being an exemplary mother,” said Dr Undenge.

He said Zanu-PF was growing in Manicaland, and come 2018 it would sweep all the seats in the province.

“Zanu-PF is strong in Manicaland. The restructuring exercise went on very well and we now have more districts. We are witnessing defections from parties like Zimbabwe People First and all the MDCs. People are coming back to Zanu-PF in their numbers.

“I also want to reiterate that our candidate for 2018 is President Mugabe,” said Dr Undenge.

In her vote of thanks, Zanu-PF national secretary for transport and welfare  Oppah Muchinguri-Kashiri said there was unity of purpose in Manicaland.

“We want to thank the First Lady, Dr Amai Mugabe for coming to Manicaland where she continued with her gospel of unity.

“Manicaland is a problem province as most of the opposition leaders are from Manicaland, the likes of the late Bishop Abel Muzorewa, Reverend Ndabaningi Sithole, Edgar Tekere, Simba Makoni, Morgan Tsvangirai, Margret Dongo and now Didymus Mutasa.

“We will continue working hard to consolidate our position as the people’s party in Manicaland. We should put aside all our personal differences for the good of the party,” she said. – State Media

HORROR FIGURES: Zimbabwean Men In The UK Top In killing Their Partners

By Dr Masimba Mavaza | Zimbabweans in the UK have taken the first and the golden cup in killing their spouses. In the last four years in the UK alone thirty Zimbabwean women were murdered ruthlessly by their husbands or boyfriends. About 40 percent of all female murder victims (and just six percent of male murder victims) die at the hands of a former or present spouse or lover.

The home becomes a dangerous place for women. Whereas almost all cases of murder committed by males against their female partners occurred after the female ended the relationship or announced her intention to do so, most of the murders committed by females against their male partners were actions to severe male domestic violence.

In 2011 a Zimbabwean woman in Luton cooked her husband in cooking oil burning all his genitals leaving him for dead. The woman was reacting to sexual and personal abuse, in Corby a town few miles from Leicester a woman who was in a wheel chair drove thirty miles to burn her boyfriend who has jilted her. Unfortunately she killed three innocent children and their mother who had nothing to do with the affair.

The handling of domestic issues abroad is so bad that it ends in murder. According to the Metropolitan police Zimbabwean men involved in murdering their wives have risen and the causes are more of passion than wealth. When love kills Zimbabwean man tops the list. A woman was stabbed in a car park by her husband and the other was stabbed several times in the comfort of her house by her ex-boyfriend. The scenario in most bedrooms abroad resembles a war zone. The white sheets and colourful beds are being turned to blood and the lucky ones come out bruised and some permanently maimed.Nearly all male murderers claim that (a) they committed the murder out of love, and (b) it was a result of loving too much. Wife murder does not express profound love; rather, it is an abusive type of the problematic fusion model of love.

There is a great difference between love and jealous most men even those who have not killed yet are so jealous and interpret any movement by the wife to be infidelity. The men have become so insecure and feel so unsafe to the extent that they declare that if they cannot have her no one should. The embarrassing and painful situation is that even adult couples have joined in the race to murder spouses. What has gone wrong with our diaspora society? There is no family which does not know a family which was a victim of diasporic domestic violence. There are reasons always given for such cowardly behaviour by our people in the Land of the queen.

The various explanations offered for the murder of wives share two common assumptions: (a) the murder stems from masculine possessiveness; it is the embodiment of the murderer’s personality and sexual jealousy and anger are two emotions that trigger it; (B) the murder is the climax of a history of violence that preceded it. Killing for love is never justified, killing for anything is the cruellest human action ever described. Spouse-murder is undoubtedly the most extreme manifestation of male violence, it is not due to a single male quality, such as masculine possessiveness, and is not a “natural” or “inevitable” continuation of domestic violence.

It is a phenomenon that is separate to other forms of male violence. Moreover, it is believed that in an important sense, these murders are committed out of love, so that an understanding of which components of love play a role in these murders would increase our understanding of this phenomenon. Because of the shock of the changes in finance , culture and behaviour a sense of insecurity is ushered in the mind of a man and the stupidity blinds his thinking and ends up killing his wife.The wife murderers are not only those who are druggies or those who depended on the wives, some of them are pastor’s and some professionals, their actions leaves one wondering what spirit has visited us. What is wrong with us.The murder is not an unintended result of violence that went too far—as most of these murders are well-planned. Furthermore, wife murder cannot be understood in terms of loss of control or local insanity. It is rather a deliberate act which is the resultof emotional ripeness that created mental readiness for committing the murder as anact of profound despair that is ready to destroy the other even if this means destroying oneself.Victims always know the result.

“There was writing on the wall”
It is sad to note that in most cases the victim have been subjected to a prolonged violent treatment. Some have so much into our culture that I cannot embarrass my husband, so they soldier on. Most of those who are killed have been in the abusive relationship for some time. They want to be Zimbabwean woman and try and hope that the man will change. Many women put up a fake picture of what is happening to them in order to have a face. at the end we will all say “There was handwriting on the wall … but I think that even if the writing on the wall wasn’t so prominent for the people around, for the family, for friends, the onefor whom it was definitely prominent was the victim….

The victim ignored and believed that maybe it wasn’t what she thought.” Although masculine possessiveness as well as jealousy and anger all play a role in the full range of factors that produce a readiness to take the life of a partner, it is more accurate to consider the motive for murder in terms of conditions that are favourable for the development of murderous violence, rather than in terms of one central personality variable. The murders are mostly caused by the man’s perception that the woman is his whole world so that he feels that any separation from her entails a loss of his own identity, he feels that there is no other reason for being alive without this woman.

The man’s traditional perception of masculinity, which dictates that the male has full power, honour, and control, runs counter to his dependency upon his wife, making that reliance appear evidence of his weakness and humiliation, and an affront to masculine honour. Some of these men are lazy and are so used to be fed by these women. When they are thrown out or feel that they will be thrown out, they see the end of their world and they make a fatal decision to kill to avoid humiliation.

These men are uncompromising and have a rigid behaviour which can only be controlled if there was pressure or assistance from the extended family. The man’s prevailing beliefs about love appear to justify the sacrifice of his wife on the one hand and of persistence on the other. In this case, the ideology behind love provides the legitimacy for terrible crimes. When all the above conditions pertain, the risk of wife murder significantly increases. The specific event that ignites the explosive barrel often revolves around the woman threatening to or actually separating from her partner. Knowing these conditions of risk will enable us to read the writing on the wall, thereby preventing many wife murders.

The reasons given by these murderous spouses are often that “I couldn’t live, I couldn’t function without her. … I believed that I couldn’t function if I wasn’t with her.”In light of the centrality of love in our lives, it is no wonder that cultures all over the world have depicted an ideal form of romantic love towards which all of us are supposedly striving. Zimbabwean men have indeed considered romantic love to be crucial for personal fulfilment and a happy life.

However, romantic love is also a major factor in people’s misery, as it involves many disappointments and unfulfilled hopes. but love also hurts a lot, can be dangerous, and may lead us to foolish deeds. The biggest problem we have with Zimbabwean is that most do not want to work and view their wives as tools of work. They spent most of their time flirting and themselves harloting around. They then believe that their wives are doing what they are doing. in their idle minds they then plan to kill to show their ultimate power. Most of them commit suicide but many have unfortunately been rescued and they have survived.Needless to say, explaining the men’s horrific behaviour as stemming from love is in no way a justification for their actions.

Understanding the men’s state of mind could prevent future murders; hence, we should examine the real state of mind that leads these men to kill their partners, without worrying about whether our findings are politically correct. The fact that Zimbabweans in Diaspora have no cultural guidance has contributed to these murders. Zimbabwean home grown churches have contributed to the killing of these victims.The church spends time fund raising buying the pastor clothes, cars suits.

A woman was killed in 2015 in London because she bought a high quality suit for the pastor and had never bought o sock for the husband.Zimbabwean women in UK have a great madness for hero-worshiping their pastor’s to the extent of evoking anger from the husband. Statistics shows that half of the murdered women the problems started from the churches. Pastors have abandoned their roles of promoting family life, they have embarked on the get rich fast.

With the loophole and windfall in payment of nurses women became richer than theirhusband in diaspora, so they start controlling the household thinking. Pastors in their need for money always side with those who are highly paid so that their cars are fuelled and their kitchens are upgraded.There is no spiritual guidance, the closeness of the pastors to the ladies with money has made the men jealous and caused these killings.Whichever way we look at it life abroad has made husband and wife strangers, the wife works 24/7 and the husband thinks she is oiling someone.

Sometimes the husband is so tired the wife is not sexually satisfied; she then goes out to fill up the sexual gap. When this is done the cheated husband feels humiliated and lowered and turns to kill the wife.In the name of love, people are ready to use other people; in the name of love, people are ready to be used. In the name of love, women want to leave their male partner, and in the name of love, these men murder them. The woman is the man’s whole world and the condition of his existence.

If the man’s ability to maintain his view of himself as a human being depends on the woman being part of his life, how can he let her go? Thus, love turns the woman into a hostage—a hostage to the man’s life—and this puts her own life at risk. The words of many loves songs may beno more than superficial clichés about love, but when these clichés are adopted wholeheartedly with no attention to reality, love becomes a loaded gun.If only women can open up, if you are caught cheating tell someone, a cheated man is unpredictable. The problem with Zimbabwean women in England is they quickly want to behave English. Have friends who are men and go out at will, if your husband is suspecting and you reply in a manner foreign to his culture you have put your leg in a bottle.

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Man Arrested For Infecting Girlfriend With HIV

A 22-YEAR-OLD woman reported her 41-year-old boyfriend after he allegedly deliberately infected her with HIV.

A Bulawayo magistrate heard yesterday that the couple has been living in Nkulumane suburb for the past two years and have a baby who is 16 months old.

State allegations are that the woman stumbled upon her boyfriend’s medical cards on February 8 showing that he was HIV positive.

The man, whose name has been withheld for ethical reasons, pleaded not guilty to a charge of deliberately infecting another person with HIV.

Bulawayo Regional Magistrate Mr Chrispen Mberewere remanded him out of custody to March 14 for trial.

State representative Mr Simbarashe Manyiwa alleged that the woman asked her boyfriend about the medical cards she had found in his pocket but he laughed off the matter.

“Complainant found cards dated and stamped by OI (Opportunistic Infections clinic) and she asked the accused what they were for. Accused laughed and said he had gotten them from his grandmother. Complainant was not satisfied so she did her own investigations,” said Mr Manyiwa.

He said the woman approached her cousin with the cards but he also displayed ignorance on the matter.

“Complainant’s cousin referred her  to his friend who is a nurse at a local hospital.

“The friend is the one who explained that the cards are used when obtaining HIV treatment,” said Mr Manyiwa.

He said the woman went for testing and found that she was HIV positive.

“She went and confronted her boyfriend again about the issue and her new HIV status and he admitted that he was on treatment. Complainant made a police report leading to the arrest of the accused,” said Mr Manyiwa. – State Media

Cyclone Dineo Hits Bulawayo

FLASH floods hit some suburbs in Bulawayo while a number of homes in Matabeleland South succumbed to heavy rains that fell yesterday.

Weather experts warned of more rains accompanied by strong winds leading to flooding in some parts of the country. As the country experiences a tropical storm induced by a downgraded Cyclone Dineo, the Meteorological Service Department (MSD) and the Civil Protection Unit (CPU) issued flood warnings for some areas including Bulawayo, Matabeleland North and Matabeleland South and parts of the Midlands province.

In Bulawayo, the Acting Chief Fire Officer Linos Phiri yesterday said some homes in some suburbs including Nkulumane and Emganwini were flooded.

A Chronicle newscrew visited Cowdray suburb where some roads were impassable. Enterprising men started to charge 50 cents to help individuals cross flooded roads.

The area’s councillor Collet Ndlovu said about 50 residents had reported that their houses were flooded by yesterday afternoon.

“I just addressed about 50 residents who said their pre-cast walls had also been damaged by the rain. Some had their household property destroyed due to poor drainage systems around the suburb,” said Clr Ndlovu.

At 8AM yesterday, five vehicles were involved in a pile-up along Plumtree road in Belmont after the car which was in front stopped when visibility was poor due to heavy rains. Two people were reportedly injured.

CPU national deputy director Ms Sibusisiwe Ndlovu said Insiza, uMzingwane and Matobo districts in Matabeleland South and Matabeleland North districts of Nkayi, and Tsholotsho and Gokwe in the Midlands were at high risk of flooding. She said some community dams were bursting.

“Communities in Insiza district must maintain vigilance as all river systems are full and walls of small dams have failed as the district received in excess of 82mm of rain over 24 hours as it continues to rain. Motorists should be on the lookout as most of the bridges are overflowing and the roads are badly damaged. uMzingwane District received an excess of 60mm of rainfall in 24 hours, families need to be on the lookout as most homes are succumbing to excess moisture,” said Ms Ndlovu.

She said villagers who might lose their homes to floods should report to councillors and the police.

 “In case your home is damaged or destroyed in rural areas report to your local councillor or police and seek shelter elsewhere. Assistance with tarpaulin (temporary shelter) for those left homeless will be made available at the shortest possible time depending on accessibility,” said Ms Ndlovu.

She said flash floods are expected in Bulawayo and urged residents to approach the city’s emergency department when they are in danger.

“Bulawayo received rains in excess of 59mm in 24 hours and it continues to rain, causing widespread flash floods threatening homes. Residents are advised to call the Fire Brigade on 09-71717-9,” she said.

In Gwanda District in Matabeleland South, pupils were sent home as early as 10AM due to fears of floods following heavy rains that started on Thursday night.

Gwanda District Civil Protection Unit (GDSPU) head who is also the acting District Administrator, Mr Judge Dube, and the Provincial Civil Protection Unit had recommended that children should go home early.

Mtshabezi River was flooded, cutting off people from travelling to either side. In Silonga area there were strong winds, forcing the cancellation of cattle sales.

“We recommended that schools dismiss children early as we assess the situation. If it continues like this until next week we have recommended that they don’t come to school until it passes. We are also warning members of the public to move away from low-lying areas,” said Mr Dube.

He said there were no reports of any damage or distress made so far, but urged those who need help to call the hotline (0284) 20139.

Matabeleland South CPU chairperson Mrs Sithandiwe Ncube said the committee had activated all its arms and was ready to deal with any eventualities.

She said dams in Esigodini, Insiza, and Matobo had started spilling and Wanezi Dam had already started to give in.

Mrs Ncube said they had sent engineers to assess some of the bridges in Nkakezi area and other secondary roads.

“We are on high alert and are ready to evacuate all those people living within low-lying areas within the province. We are monitoring the situation around the clock, so that we are no found wanting and we will continue mobilising resources,” she said.

“We have teams at district level which are busy educating people about the impending disaster and how to handle various eventualities.”

Mrs Ncube said people living in the low-lying areas of Beitbridge were at high risk of floods, as most rivers passed through the district on their way to the Limpopo River.

In Midlands province, the Minister of State for Provincial Affairs, Cde Jason Machaya said the province was on high alert.

“The situation is still under control,” he said.

Cde Machaya urged people in the province to avoid unnecessary movements and crossing flooded rivers. – State Media

 

Drama As Child (11) ‘Murders’ Classmate

AN 11-year-old pupil from Shurugwi has been charged with murder for allegedly fatally punching his classmate who was five years older.

The Grade Six pupil who was in a special class at Wida Primary School in Tongogara area, Shurugwi, allegedly felled his 16-year-old classmate with a fist leading to his death.

He has since been charged with murder but was released into the custody of his parents pending his appearance in court.

Acting Midlands provincial police spokesperson Assistant Inspector Ethel Mukwende confirmed the incident which occurred on Monday.

Asst Insp Mukwende said the two boys were attending the same special class at the primary school.

She said reasons why they had engaged in the fistfight were still not clear.

“Police are investigating a case of murder which took place on February 13 at around 12.25PM at Wida Primary School in Tongogara, Shurugwi, where an 11-year-old boy who cannot be named for ethical reasons but from Chidende Village, Chief Nhema, fought with a 16–year-old                   classmate also from the same village,” she said.

“It is said the boys exchanged blows and during the fight, the 11-year-old overpowered the 16-year-old who then fell to the ground and became unconscious.”

Asst Insp Mukwende said a teacher tried to render first aid to the boy to no avail. He was taken to Zvamabande Clinic where he was pronounced dead on arrival.

“The body of the 16-year-old boy was taken to Shurugwi District Hospital for post-mortem,” she said.

Asst Insp Mukwende said investigations are in progress.

“We would like to appeal to members of the public to desist from using violence as a way of solving disputes because such acts are now cascading to the children who now view violence as a necessity in solving disputes. The boy is in the custody of his parents,” she said. – State Media

Primrose Kurasha Dies

Zimbabwe Open University (ZOU) Vice Chancellor Professor Primrose Kurasha has died.

Prof Kurasha died this evening at a local private hospital where she had been admitted.

Details of the circumstances surrounding her death were still sketchy as family members were still in shock.

A senior medical doctor who spoke on condition of anonymity confirmed the death of Prof Kurasha.

“Yes, she died around 8pm. Everyone is still in shock. Close family members have been notified, but they have not yet appointed a family spokesperson. Her death is quite sad because we did not expect it,” said the medical practitioner.

Prof Kurasha wrote her own history when she became the first woman Vice Chancellor in Zimbabwe, after being appointed to head ZOU in 2003. – State Media

‘Queen B’ Mujuru Will Not Survive The Storm | OPINION

Ndaba Nhuku | The simple answer is “No, Mujuru will not survive the political upheaval she faces!”

This is my reaction to analyst’s perception about a Mujuru revival in her party’s upheaval.

I honestly think some of the folks we call analysts are just waffling nonsense. Mujuru did not form the party but was invited to be it’s leader because she was a widowed former Vice President basking in our sympathy.

Empathy and sympathy do not translate to long term political support. All Mujuru had to do was capitalise on that and show strong leadership. She failed. The party remained an emotional movement for folks seeking revenge for being sacked from Zanu. People flocked to support it because Zimbabweans are desperate to see the back of President Robert Mugabe, and anyone saying “Pasi naMugabe” is hailed a hero!

But once the charade goes on without any results of removing Mugabe, people move on to the next noisy pretender. Mujuru failed to realise that and dragged on with a limping movement bereft of any action or direction. Like other contenders, she failed to seize the mood of the nation and lead the masses against a disoriented and divided Zanu PF.

As the sympathy waned, before the messy situation she finds herself in now, we even saw protests stunts (Mawarire, Tajamukas, Lindas)overshadow her. If you are a political observer or analyst you have to ask yourself why such one man protests would overshadow a recently formed popular party. None of our analysts asked the question.

People were now moving away from Mujuru whose movement seemed tired and going nowhere like all other opposition parties. And by taking too long seemingly going nowhere, she gave people the opportunity to start asking real questions about her own performance in Zanu PF, her own corruption, her decades long relationship with Mugabe and whether she was a suitable cadre ready to challenge her former decades long master and mentor.

People started asking questions about her own cadres around her. And people had the opportunity to see her mediocre interviews around issues like Gukurahundi, governance, her past as ineffective vice-president and her lying about not knowing what was going on in Zanu PF when she was leader, minister and VP in the party and government for almost FOUR decades.

Mujuru had loyal figures in people she was fired with because they had all come a long way together and have lot in common. If they are old and tired, is she also not? Come on folks, she is their age mate!

Like a yesteryear Tsvangirai, Mujuru dismally failed to deal with political dynamics in her organisation because she is simply not an effective leader. She doesn’t have loyal folks anymore in the party. She is left with a lot of new faces with diverse interests but mainly focused on political positions and their own personal egos.

Whereas her old timers were united and focused on vengeance and were all hanging unto Zanu PF  ideology, she is now left with folks not loyal but driven by their personal interests. Few are standing for the interest of the country. And any analyst who doesn’t feature all this in the expectations of a Mujuru survival, is not being genuine to her, and our political drama.

The truth is that Mujuru now needs the coalition to succeed more than anyone else, not for the sake of the nation, but for her own name and political revival. Her survival depends on the coalition. And now Zanu PF will strongly engineer the failure of the coalition to ensure that Mujuru has no chance whatsoever to survive this upheaval.

To worsen matters, she now has more than three groups of former colleagues strongly opposed to her; Mnangagwa, Grace/ G40 faction and the Mutasa groupings. Despite allegedly being rich, Mujuru is known to be financially stingy, and has now lost liberal funders like Ray Kaukonde who wanted to hit back at Zanu. She is left politically exposed and at the mercy of these Zanu PF factions. These are people who know her very well, and all her weaknesses. Who knows Mujuru more than her recently sacked right hand man Mutasa? The very wat she fired her formed Zanu colleagues showed her glaring weakness! Mujuru is now only praying for the coalition negotiations to succeed and get herself a role as an actor in our political drama.

STUNNER SEX TRIANGLE: Horror As Olinda Cracks Stunner’s Lover’s Phone, Abortions And More Lovers Revealed

Ray Nkosi | Olinda Chapel previously known as Mai Chideme got hold of Stunner’s (Desmond Chideme) lover’s phone. The drama has now reached another level.

She put a sim card in the phone, only to get the back up of messages Stunner had with his lover. According to Olinda on a LIVE stream as she read messages live on Facebook the girlfriend had an abortion last week. She also read messages of the lover with other men who she was having sex with, including records of the girl going to Stunner’s house for sex, with rent paid for by Olinda.

Olinda who is really hurt and has reached the final straw gives orders to her brother to do what he wants with Stunner. “You know guys I do not even an evil born in me, today Desmond Chideme you are going to ask for forgiveness I am going to show you the power of money.” More to follow…

 

 

Hospital Crisis As Senior Doctors Join In Strike Action

Staff Reporter | The hospital crisis is set to escalate after senior doctors have given notice to join junior doctors in a strike action that has entered its 3rd day.

The doctors cite in the letter above that it is not safe for them to continue with their duties in the absence of junior doctors and will only resume after they are back.

The doctors’ strike enters its third day today, with the medical practitioners accusing the government of failing to concretise its promise of creating more posts and improving their welfare.

Striking doctors vowed to continue with their industrial action until they are furnished with real dates, timelines and the locations of the posts that Health minister David Parirenyatwa announced had been created.

Parirenyatwa, on Tuesday, said the government had opened up 250 posts for doctors and 2 000 posts for nurses, but did not give further details on how soon this would be implemented.

“In the next two weeks, 120 trained doctors will be rendered jobless as a result of an ill-timed freeze on health sector posts,” the Zimbabwe Hospital Doctors’ Association (ZHDA) said.

“The ministry issued a notice that posts would be created to accommodate the cadres completing internship in the next two weeks. The notice, however, falls short of absolute clarity on when the posts will be availed and an update can only be given by October 14, 2017.

“This arrangement will render our cadres jobless and detached from the payroll for eight months. Revision of this position will definitely unlock avenues of collaborative engagement,” Edgar Munatsi, the ZHDA president, said.

In a statement to its members, ZHDA said the industrial action was deeply anchored on the “unpalatable inability” of the Health ministry to resolve the long-standing issues.

These included that doctors were currently earning around $1,20 per hour as on-call allowances despite an October 2014 agreement between the doctors’ association and the Health minister.

“ZHDA unequivocally reiterates that the agreed minimum of $720 per month be immediately implemented and also the duty-free vehicle policy for health workers,” the association said.

ZHDA said it had been actively engaged in consultations, negotiations and meetings with a view to resolving the current impasse.

“The proposed dates for resolving on-call allowances and duty-free facility are not an accurate reflection of both the urgency, which this matter deserves and the time for which they have been outstanding,” Munatsi said.

ZHDA was yesterday consulting its members on quick ways to resolve the impasse in a manner that causes the least harm to patients and country.

Efforts to get a comment from Parirenyatwa Hospital’s CEO, Thomas Zigora, as well as from Harare Central Hospital were fruitless.

Meanwhile, ZHDA said there was an overwhelming response from government doctors across the country on the call to go on strike.

“Central hospitals such as Mpilo, Parirenyatwa and Harare hospital today literally closed their out-patients’ department and cancelled emergencies. ZHDA deployed a few doctors in casualty and emergency departments to cover for emergency cases,” the association said in a statement. – Newsday/Phylllis Mbanje

Mugabe Outfoxes Opponents Again

Zanu PF bigwigs say President Robert Mugabe was at his “foxy” best during Wednesday’s heated politburo meeting in Harare — running rings around the ruling party’s two warring factions and apparently leaving both camps “thoroughly confused”.

Well-placed sources who spoke to the Daily News yesterday said the wily nonagenarian cunningly contrived to lose his temper, before demanding that his lieutenants work together to save the former liberation movement from suffering another humiliating defeat in the much-anticipated 2018 national elections, as had happened in 2008.

Mugabe, who turns 93 on Tuesday, was apparently also careful not to look like he was siding with either of Zanu PF’s two feuding camps during the meeting — supporting and shellacking both camps in equal measure.

“Gushungo (Mugabe) was in his element, and made it clear that he is still the unchallenged and unchallengeable leader of the pack.
“It was also very clear that any of the factions with designs on power in the country will need his support if they are to get anywhere.

“He gave and took away from the two camps with equal measure, leaving them both thoroughly confused about what his next move will be,” a Zanu PF senior official who has always claimed to be “non-aligned” said.

Wednesday’s meeting was held against the backdrop of the high level of indiscipline within the ruling party, as well the deep-rooted tribal, factional and succession wars which are ravaging the former liberation movement — and which escalated when Mugabe was away in the Far East on his annual holiday.

Another source also said yesterday that the “deliberately angry” Mugabe had refused to “buy into” the party factions’ allegations and counter-allegations against each other — choosing to focus instead on healing all internal rifts as Zanu PF prepares for next year’s make-or-break elections.

The ruling party is split in the middle, with a faction of young Turks going by the moniker Generation 40 (G40) rabidly opposed to Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa succeeding Mugabe, and squaring up against the VP’s allies, Team Lacoste.

“He lashed at the escalating factionalism that is devouring the party. He openly warned members of the politburo to unite the party as we are likely to face a united opposition in 2018,” the second source told the Daily News yesterday.

Zanu PF secretary for administration Ignatius Chombo told a news conference after the meeting that Mugabe had tasked them with making sure that the party was united ahead of the 2018 elections.

“Commenting on the 2018 harmonised elections, the president advised members to attune their minds, attitudes and emotions to focus on unity, so as to win the 2018 harmonised elections.

“The president informed members that the late Vice President Simon Vengesai Muzenda left a legacy of success and victory in all elections. Thus it’s our duty to maintain that success story to honour his legacy,” Chombo said.

In the run-up to Wednesday’s politburo meeting, the G40 and Team Lacoste had traded deadly blows on all fronts.

The G40 escalated its fight with Team Lacoste after Mnangagwa hosted and sacked Zanu PF officials at his rural home during the festive season, saying this was in fact a meeting organised to plot the ouster of Mugabe from power.

And since the images of Mnangagwa holding the much-obsessed about coffee mug (written I Am The Boss) emerged in the public domain, the G40 had interpreted this as the VP’s open statement that he had unbridled presidential ambitions.

G40-linked party officials subsequently met at the Zanu PF headquarters in Harare where they issued a statement in which they called for a probe into Mnangagwa for hobnobbing with the likes of war veterans’ leader Christopher Mutsvangwa and maverick businessman-cum politician Energy Mutodi.

Sources linked to Team Lacoste claim Mugabe had refused on Wednesday to entertain the “Cupgate” issue, apparently going on to talk about how allegedly loyal Mnangagwa was to him.

“He simply took the wind out of the sails of both factions by deftly dealing with their issues while reminding them he was still the boss.

“The president neutralised the coffee mug debate on one hand, but on the other, attacked Team Lacoste’s actions in Masvingo where he ordered fresh elections to choose a substantive executive,” the supposedly “non-aligned” party bigwig said.

Before the politburo ordered fresh elections in Masvingo, the regional structure found itself deep in the throes of factional anarchy, following its leadership’s unilateral decision to bring back the suspended former provincial leader, Ezra Chadzamira, to replace Amasi Nenjana who had been the acting chairperson.

Chadzamira is said to be a key member of Team Lacoste which accused Nenjana of allegedly working with the G40 to destabilise the province.

During the party’s annual people’s conference in Masvingo last year, Mugabe also slyly blew a gasket at the gathering, savaging his brawling lieutenants, while cunningly moving to finger some of his top aides in alleged plots to hound him out of power — as the ruling party’s tribal, factional and succession wars continue to burn hot.

He made a thinly-disguised dig at Team Lacoste then, saying the party’s leadership was not won through plotting the arrest of opponents, but through elections.

This was after the G40 had over the previous months alleged that the Mnangagwa camp was abusing key State institutions, including lapdog State media, to irregularly grab power in the former liberation movement.

But, in typical Mugabe style, the nonagenarian also moved to attack the G40 at the meeting for their alleged indiscipline, and for abusing social media to attack fellow party officials.
“To the party leadership, we do not run matters of the party through Twitter or Facebook,” he said, as he sought to balance his criticism and in the process consolidate his own position.
Political analysts who spoke to the Daily News at the time said it would have been “atypical” if Mugabe had chosen one faction over the other.

“The current situation where there are factions fighting each other below him means that there isn’t a faction fighting him directly, so the fighting serves him well,” said former civic leader McDonald Lewanika.

Mugabe — the only leader Zimbabweans have known since the country gained its independence from Britain in April 1980 — is facing the biggest challenge to his long rule.
The increasingly fail nonagenarian and Zanu PF are battling growing unrest among the country’s restive populace, which blames his government for presiding over the country’s dying economy and the deepening rot in the former regional breadbasket. – Newsday

Smugglers Nabbed At Beitbridge Border Post | LATEST

The Ferret team intercepted three South African-registered vehicles believed to be part of a smuggling syndicate transporting prohibited goods to Bulawayo through Beitbridge Border Post early this week.Two Toyota Quantums towing trailers were intercepted on Tuesday midnight, while carrying 1 360 boxes of cooking oil, 119 boxes of wine, 11 boxes of candy sweets and 39 boxes of éclair pops chocolate.

A third car, a Toyota Hilux, which was being driven by Donovan Mpofu of Luveve in Bulawayo, was busted yesterday carrying 89 boxes of cooking oil.

The three vehicles and the goods were seized by the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra). The value of the goods is yet to be ascertained and three suspects were arrested in connection with the incident.

The Ferret team is made up of officials from Zimra, police, immigration and other security agencies. Matabeleland south police spokesperson Inspector Philisani Ndebele said he was yet to get details on the matter.

However, sources close to investigations said the vehicles were intercepted during routine border patrols.

“Searches were conducted leading to the discovery of an assortment of goods worth thousands of dollars in import duty,” said a border official who did not want to be named.

“The goods and the vehicles have been seized by Zimra,” he said. “Efforts are being made to send the three suspects to court,” he said.

The official said they had intensified patrols in light of an upsurge in smuggling of prohibited goods into the county through the border and other illegal crossing points along the Limpopo River.

A fortnight ago, the same team intercepted two South African trucks en-route to Harare carrying a consignment of detergents worth $30 000 in import duty.

The suspected owners of the contraband under-declared the goods and paid a paltry $2,910 for both trucks instead of $29 924,50.

The smuggling of goods through the country’s borders heightened from July last year after Government removed various commodities including food items, building materials, furniture, toiletries and cooking oil, from the open general import licence.

The goods now require a permit prior to importation and travellers are allowed to bring in limited volumes once per calendar month. – State Media

WATCH: Grace Insults Tsvangirai’s Wife

First Lady Grace Mugabe this afternoon used the opportunity in Morgan Tsvangirai’s home village Buhera to lay into his wife Liz, for her skin bleaching. Grace said bleaching was not a sign of beauty. VIDEO:

Tsvangirai, Ncube Kiss And Make-Up

MDC-T leader Morgan Tsvangirai and his fierce splinter rival MDC boss Welshman Ncube have all but clinched a coalition agreement which will see the two parties supporting each other’s candidates in selected constituencies in next year’s general elections, ending 12 years of political estrangement.

The Zimbabwe Independent is reliably informed that Ncube, who at one time vowed never to work with Tsvangirai because of his “dictatorial tendencies and propensity to breach the party constitution”, have found each other after months of negotiations.

Inside sources in both parties revealed the two were close to signing a coalition agreement which will see Ncube being given a senior post in a Tsvangirai-led government.

“Tsvangirai and Ncube are close to signing an agreement. However, there are still some areas that need to be ironed out. The two political parties have agreed in principle that they will select the constituencies where each party will field a candidate on a sort of proportional representation. The parties will then support each other, that is, there won’t be any competition between the two parties,” said the source. “This is just a first step in forming a coalition or even uniting the MDC as well as other opposition parties ahead of elections. Ncube will benefit from the arrangement as his candidates will ride on Tsvangirai’s popularity, while Tsvangirai will benefit from Ncube’s credibility and strategic thinking.”

Contacted for a comment on Wednesday Ncube said while his party has been in talks with Tsvangirai’s MDC since last year, no agreement had been reached.

“Nothing has been agreed on anything yet. However, in principle that is not how a coalition works. Candidates belong to the coalition and not to its constituent elements,” Ncube said.

Tsvangirai’s spokesperson Luke Tamborinyoka said a deal is yet to be sealed with Ncube.

“Nothing has been sealed with anyone. Coalitions are the exclusive zone of the president (Tsvangirai), but there has been no agreement with anyone. If there is such an agreement, then the president has an obligation to brief the executive organs of the party. That he is yet to do so means it’s still speculation at this stage. You also need to know that the alliance goes beyond political parties to include other stakeholders as well,” Tamborinyoka said. “It’s all still speculation. If there is an agreement with anyone, the executive organs of the party would have known ahead of the media.”

The Tsvangirai-Ncube talks have irked MDC-T deputy president Thokozani Khupe who recently said there was no need for her party to entertain the idea of a coalition in Matabeleland regions where the party is strong and popular. Khupe said a coalition is only needed in Mashonaland provinces where the MDC-T has not been performing well.

“As a political party, you want a coalition because you will have realised a gap in your party and, as the MDC-T, where is our gap? It is clear that our gap is in Mashonaland East, West and Central where we have consistently not done well,” Khupe said.

But MDC-T insiders say after learning from the defeats in 2008 and 2013, Tsvangirai and other senior officials believe a coalition is the best way to defeat President Robert Mugabe and Zanu PF.

The sources said Tsvangirai also intends to reach out to other opposition leaders, include former vice-president Joice Mujuru, Simba Makoni and Dumiso Dabengwa. – The Independent

 

Grace Mugabe Invaded Properties Mortgaged To Local Bank

UPMARKET houses which First Lady Grace Mugabe is accused of invading over a botched US$1,35 million diamond ring deal are mortgaged to a local financial institution BancABC from Lebanese businessman Jamal Ahmed, the Zimbabwe Independent can reveal.

This development comes as it emerged this week that Interpol has expressed ignorance over Grace’s claims that it is assisting in the extradition of Ahmed from Belgium to Zimbabwe to face prosecution over the diamond ring dispute.

Ahmed’s lawyers say Grace is in contempt of court by allegedly ignoring an order compelling her and her son Russell Goreraza to surrender the four properties they are accused of invading in December last year.

The properties which Grace is said to have invaded, the Independent established this week, were in fact attached by BancABC, which won a civil matter against Ahmed in an unrelated dispute involving a US$10 million loan which was advanced to the businessman in a botched diamond sale deal.

However, as the property saga continues the Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) which, according to Ahmed’s lawyers, is trying to shield Grace, has also enjoined itself in the matter alleging that the seized properties were not invaded by Grace, but were taken over by the law enforcement agents as exhibits in a criminal matter involving Ahmed.

On January 4 this year, Ahmed’s lawyers, Mtetwa and Nyambirai Legal Practitioners, obtained a writ of ejectment against Grace, her son and Kennedy Fero, who is Grace’s aide but is also attached to the ZRP, ordering them to vacate the properties in dispute.

The writ of ejectment reads in part: “Whereas the applicants in this matter, (Jamal, Thatchfree Investments, Super Earth and Itchester Investments) c/o Mtetwa and Nyambirai Legal Practitioners of No. 2 Meredith Drive, Eastlea, Harare obtained judgment in the High Court of Zimbabwe on the 21st of December, 2016, against Russell Goreraza, Grace Mugabe and Kennedy Fero, unlawfully occupying, No 409 Harare Drive, Pomona, No 18 Cambridge Road, Avondale, Harare, and No. 75 King George Road, Avondale, Harare, ordering Russell Goreraza, Grace Mugabe and Kennedy Fero and all persons claiming occupation through them to be ejected …”

“Now therefore you are required and directed to eject the said Russel Goreraza, Grace Mugabe and Kennedy Fero and all persons claiming occupation through them, whilst restoring peaceful and undisturbed possession of the said premises, to applicants, to the end that the said applicants may peaceably enter and possess the same.”

After obtaining the ejectment order, the lawyers then approached the sheriff with a view to enforcing the court order, but on January 13 2017, the police intervened and claimed they were the ones in occupation of the properties.

But court documents gleaned by this paper reveal that the seized properties in question were subject of a court dispute between Ahmed and BancABC, of which the latter obtained a writ of execution and was the rightful owner.

According to the court papers, sometime in April 2014, BancABC successfully obtained an order against Jamal and nine other defendants which order allowed the bank to retain the properties with a view to recovering US$4 634 547,72.

The court order obtained by BancABC expressly mentions one of the properties as number 18 Cambridge Road, Avondale, Harare, while other properties are identified by their title deeds and measurements.

“You are further required and directed to attach and take into execution: (1) certain piece of land situate in the District of Salisbury called Subdivision C of M.T.C. lot measuring 8 165 square metres and held under Deed of Transfer 205/10, transferred to the seventh defendant, Exodus Fuel (Pvt) Ltd on the 15 February 2010,” reads a writ by former High Court judge Justice Chinembiri Bhunu.

“… (2) certain piece of land situate in the District of Salisbury called stand 7473 Salisbury Township of stand 7460 Salisbury Township measuring 2 221 square metres and held under Deed of Transfer 8274/10 transferred to eighth defendant, Backlodge Investments (Pvt) Ltd on October 2005; and
“… (3) certain piece of land situate in the District of Salisbury being an undivided 8,33% share being share No, 12 called Remainder of Subdivision G of Subdivision A of lot 15 Block C of Avondale measuring 5 657 square metres and held under Deed of Transfer 0620/09 transferred to the 9th defendant Itchester Investments (Pvt) Ltd on the 2 February 2009. Which were by order of this court bearing date 2nd of April 2014 specially declared executable to satisfy the aforementioned sum of US$4 634 547,72 together with interest thereon at the rate of 38% per annum from the 25th day of October 2013 to date of payment …”

Although the bank obtained the court orders against Ahmed and being the rightful owner of the properties, the financial institution has remained mum on the matter, possibly for fear of reprisals as the property saga is now being controlled by Grace.

This also comes as Interpol has refused to be involved in the battle between Grace and Ahmed.

In her opposing papers, Grace alleged that Ahmed had a warrant of arrest which was issued by Interpol on various criminal activities. Grace did not, however, attach the warrant of arrest to her papers.

Ahmed’s legal team, led by Beatrice Mtetwa, then wrote to Interpol demanding a copy of the warrant of arrest.

In the documents seen by this paper, Mtetwa wrote: “In proceedings currently pending before the High Court, Superintendent Nyambo Viera of the Law and Order Section in Harare stated in his affidavit that there is a warrant of arrest issued against our client and that Interpol has been requested to assist in the extradition of our client back to Zimbabwe.”

“We subsequently requested the police to provide us with a copy of the warrant of arrest and the documentary evidence confirming that Interpol was seized with the matter.

“Regrettably, none of these documents have been provided to us as the response received merely states that the matter is sub-judice,” wrote Mtetwa.

“We would be grateful if you could forward to us copies of the warrant of arrest and all correspondence from the police to yourselves requesting for our client’s extradition.”

However, a Chief Superintendent Munjeri, officer commanding Interpol Harare, referred Mtetwa back to police headquarters.

“Pertaining to your request, please liaise with Police General Headquarters for assistance,” Munjeri wrote. – The Independent

 

War Vets Demand Mujuru Meeting

THE Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans’ Association (ZNLWVA) is planning to meet Zimbabwe People First (ZimPF) leader, Joice Mujuru, as part of efforts to unite former freedom fighters.

ZNLWVA spokesperson, Douglas Mahiya, along with secretary-general, Victor Matemadanda, on Wednesday surprisingly appeared at a meeting of the ZimPF faction led by Rugare Gumbo and Didymus Mutasa.

But Mahiya said they had also lined up a meeting with Mujuru, who is tussling with Gumbo and Mutasa for the control of ZimPF.

“She is a war veteran and, as we did with others, we are going to meet as part of efforts to bring together all those who fought in the war,” he said.

“We are seeking ways of finding how the revolution has been derailed and it has been an ongoing process. War veterans have been clear; we want to be referees in the political game and not players.”

Mahiya said the meeting with Mutasa and Gumbo was pre-planned.

“We have said it before that we have no appetite of joining a political formation. It must be made clear that we have not endorsed any of the warring groups within ZimPF, but will take our position as war veterans to urge them to stop washing dirty linen in public,” he said.

“Whatever their differences, it does not help the cause of suffering Zimbabweans, let alone the political cause of these comrades, to hurl insults at each other.”

Mujuru made the shock announcement that she had expelled Mutasa, Gumbo and other senior leaders of her opposition party last week on allegations they were working against a proposed coalition of democratic forces ahead of general elections next year. But the group also turned around and announced that Mujuru had been deposed as party leader. – Newsday

Mugabe Dead in 2018 and We Will Vote for A Corpse, Says Own Wife, Grace

LIVE-BLAST: Shyleen Mtandwa | First Lady Grace Mugabe has unwittingly uttered unprintable words on her husband, Robert’s life. Grace in what appeared like a spiritual trance, said her husband will be dead in 2018 and people will put their “X” on a corpse’s name.

It is unAfrican to speculate and call someone still alive “A Corpse.” But Grace said people will confidently ink-down an X on her husband’s name who she called a Corpse.

Grace challenged the notion of Mugabe’s age as a hindrance, in apparent reference to the faction led by Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa which argues that Mugabe is old and must now let others take over. Grace said she found it disturbing that those who have been in leadership with her husband since 1980 want to use his age to oust him and yet they remain in leadership.

If Mugabe dies, Grace said, “we can field his corpse to participate in elections.”

This is not the first time Grace has suggested that Mugabe would rule from the grave in what many see as her attempt to succeed Mugabe since she has also implied that she is the virtual president of Zimbabwe.

Grace Mugabe: Joice Mujuru Had Sex With Gumbo, Mutasa

LIVEBLAST: First Lady Grace Mugabe has opened fire on former Vice President Joice Mujuru claiming that Mujuru had sex with Didymus Mutasa and also Rugare Gumbo.

 

She likened Mujuru to the Queen of a bee hive, “Queen Bee.”

“vaMutasa mungakungurusana naro ziQueen B mukarikwanisa?

muchaona (Joice) abvisa hembe pavanhu,” she said, also adding that Mujuru must simply seek for forgiveness from her.

Grace Mugabe is speaking in Morgan Tsvangirai’s home area, Buhera. This LIVE-REPORT continues – refresh to read further.  

14:00

If Mugabe dies, Grace says, we can field his corpse (sic) to participate in elections.

This is not the first time Grace has suggested that Mugabe would rule from the grave in what many see as her attempt to succeed Mugabe since she has also implied that she is the virtual president of Zimbabwe.

Grace accuses non-governmental organisations of ‘taking advantage of drought’ to sway people to support opposition parties.

Last year, in response to a government appeal for assistance in February last year, the United Nations, humanitarian partners and NGOs developed a Humanitarian Response Plan through a collaborative and joined-up efforts.

To ensure a holistic and multi-sectoral response, the Humanitarian Response Plan coverred Food Security and Agriculture; Health and Nutrition; Water, Sanitation and Hygiene; Education; and, Protection.

Of the $360 million requested for the period of April 2016 – March 2017, nearly $190 million was committed, enabling the UN and humanitarian partners to reach 1.5 million people with relief assistance. Given the rise of affected population to 4.1 million.

13:45

Grace Mugabe attempts to explain the SWOT analysis to the largely rural audience. “Our main strength is in Mugabe…Everyone, including a child, knows there is someone called Robert Mugabe.”

She continues heaping praise on Mugabe, who turns 93 next week and intends to run for re-election in 2018, at 94.

If elected, Mugabe will be the oldest president to be elected, and will extend his reputation as one of the longest serving African leaders.

13:30.

In apparent reference to embattled ZimPF leader, Joice Mujuru, Grace has insinuated that the Queen bee is always followed by other bees for mating, at a rally where there are hundreds of schoolchildren in attendance.

In a long attack on Mujuru’s party, Grace has said Mujuru must ask for forgiveness from Mugabe and return to Zanu PF.

13:15.

Grace Mugabe has commenced her speech – in her usual tone- hitting back at allegations that there are cracks within the Zanu PF Women’s League, which she heads.

The First Lady has attacked women who bleach to lighten their skins…”Why do you want to look like Mr and Mrs Smith..hudofo..sehwaQueen Bee (in apparent reference to Joice Mujuru)

BY 12pm:

Grace has arrived at the rally venue and party officials are making introductory remarks and sloganeering ahead of the First Lady’s address.  (Additional reporting Newsday).

 

Grace Mugabe Invades Tsvangirai’s Home

Ray Nkosi | First Lady Grace Mugabe this morning embarked on her infamous rallies, inaugurating her come-back in opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai’s home village Buhera.

In her speech, Mugabe went into liberation struggle rhetoric in her speech as she acknowledges the role played by freedom fighters during the war. She thanks villagers in Tsvangirai’s home for voting her husband into power overwhelmingly.

“We must go to the people. We do not want to go to the people only when there are elections. Even when it rains I will be there stepping on Buhera,” said Mugabe.

Fear and trepidation has gripped warring Zanu PF factions following First Lady Grace Mugabe’s decision to resume her controversial nationwide “death rallies” amid concerns she could worsen an already fragile situation.

Today marks 16 months, 10 days since First Lady Grace Mugabe first launched her death rallies in 2015. The meetings saw several people killed in horrific stampedes as Mrs Mugabe dished out goods stolen by ZIMRA from poor citizens at the Beitbridge border post.

 Scores of people were injured at Shindi High School as they scambled for First Lady Grace Mugabe’s donations.
Mrs Mugabe’s pickings, distributed in the name of philanthropy, left several people dead during her ‘death’ rallies. (SEE FULL SATELLITE MAP). Critics argue the First Lady has been raiding the Zimra (border confiscated goods) warehouses to dish out to people. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW…

Mawarire Walks As State Fumbles On Case

Ray Nkosi | Pastor Evan Mawarire’s case been postponed to March 16 because the state was not ready, when he appeared in court this morning.

Speaking after the court session Mawarire said, “Our resolve remains steady in uniting the citizens of Zimbabwe as we prepare for the coming season of change.”

Pastor Mawarire is facing charges of insulting the national flag to brand criminal activities and wearing the flag while subverting the government.

Anne Kansiime Heathrow Airport Arrest | LATEST

Staff Reporter |Ugandan entertainer, comedian and actress, Anne Kansiime, has come out to refute reports that she was Wednesday arrested at Heathrow Airport after being found in possession of 2kgs of cocaine.

Speaking to Ugandan publications Kansiime said, “Am safe. Am not in prison, I am actually at National theatre preparing for my tonight’s show. There is no problem. Haters are the ones trying to come up with such stories. I will come up with an official communication on my page as soon as I can.”

Police spokesperson Andrew Felix Kawesi also said that Kansiime is in Uganda not in UK as claimed and so the claims are not true.

A UK publication had earlier claimed that Kansiime was arrested at London Heathrow Airport for trying to smuggle 2 kilograms of cocaine hidden in two bags of coffee inside two suitcases; authorities said on Wednesday.
Customs and Border Protection police officers searched her suitcases upon suspicion and found a plastic coffee bag containing white powder, according to officials.
She was taken to a private search room, where the officers found a second bag full of powder. Both tested positive for cocaine.The estimated value of the cocaine is more than £80,000, officials said.
Anne Kansiime was arrested and handed off to Port Authority police. She will be prosecuted by the London District Attorney on drug smuggling charges.
“This seizure is another example of UK Border Agency being ever vigilant in protecting the United Kingdom from the distribution of illicit drugs,” said Robert E. Perez, Director of UK Border Agency London Field Operations.

FIFA President Visits Zimbabwe To Celebrate Chiyangwa’s Birthday

New boss…Gianni Infantino

FIFA’s new president, Gianni Infantino has indicated he will be flying to Zimbabwe to celebrate Cosafa and ZIFA president Philip Chiyangwa’s birthday.

The party to be held in Harare, will also celebrate Chiyangwa’s election as president of Cosafa.

Infantino in a letter said:

“I would like to thank you for your letter dated 8 January 2017 and for your kind invitation to visit your country this month. I am very pleased to confirm my visit.

“This will take place in connection with my trip to South Africa for the FIFA Executive Summits in Johannesburg, which will take place from 21-23 February 2017.

“I will be arriving in Harare on Thursday 23 February 2017 at around 18:00 and leaving on Friday at 18:00. I have no doubt that this visit will help us to lay foundation for further fruitful cooperation and share our personal vision for the continued development of our sports in your country.”

Mujuru’s ZimPF Implosion: Gift For Tsvangirai?

The expulsion of Joice Mujuru from both government and ruling party, in December 2014, was a typically brilliant political gambit from Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe. With one stroke, he removed a major threat to his power from within Zanu-PF, and lumbered his opponents outside the party with a dangerous, destabilising new player.

And Mujuru did not disappoint. Along with a handful of other Zanu-PF exiles, most prominently Didymus Mutasa and Rugare Gumbo, Mujuru established Zimbabwe People First (ZimPF) just under a year ago, and demanded her seat at the opposition table.

It’s a crowded table. Although Morgan Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change (MDC-T) is the undisputed heavyweight, there are more than a dozen smaller parties all vying for airtime. These were mostly known quantities, however, unlike Mujuru’s ZimPF. How much support did she really have? Could she tap into traditionally Zanu-PF constituencies? Could such a longtime Zanu-PF stalwart, and formerly close Mugabe ally, really be trusted?

With the 2018 elections on the horizon, one thing Zimbabwe’s opposition parties can agree on is that it is vital to present a united front. A strong opposition coalition will beat Mugabe. A weak, fractured opposition will be easy pickings for Zanu-PF’s formidable electoral machine. But the presence of ZimPF made the negotiations around that coalition exponentially more complicated – especially because Mujuru was angling to be leader.

As one of Tsvangirai’s senior advisors told the Daily Maverick, speaking anonymously: “We know we need to work with Mujuru. But it feels like we are dealing with the devil.”

Perhaps that’s why the MDC-T has been so slow to agree to any deal. Although coalition negotiations are at an advanced stage, Tsvangirai has been reluctant to put pen to paper – and now his patience has been handsomely rewarded.

In the space of three tumultuous weeks, ZimPF’s credibility has unravelled. The first major stumbling block was in the Bikita West by-election, in which ZimPF’s candidate was handsomely defeated by the Zanu-PF candidate. The defeat revealed not only the fragility of ZimPF’s supposed constituency, but also highlighted internal divisions within the new party.

“It is unclear why ZimPF… put up a candidate in the Bikita West election at all,” observed International Crisis Group’s Piers Pigou. “There were internal ZimPF tensions over whether or not to participate, and the provincial party leaders who pushed against it have now resigned. In the end, the failure of ZimPF’s candidate in Bikita West has now damaged ZimPF leader Mujuru’s prospects of leading an opposition coalition in the 2018 elections.”

Things were about to get even worse. Last week, a coterie of senior party officials including Mutasa and Gumbo were abruptly expelled from the party, bringing those internal tensions into stark relief. Insults flew between the various factions. Mutasa’s crowd then claimed that actually they had expelled Mujuru from the party.

“The problem is that they were an untested entity when they were together, and they remain untested as separate entities. I presume having fired each other there’s going to be some kind of legal fight over the assets, the name, etc. That will occupy them for months. For me it’s a further manifestation of opposition fragmentation, and unfortunately a reflection of the sad politics of personality that continues to characterise politics in Zimbabwe,” Pigou told the Daily Maverick, in a separate comment.

Alex Magaisa, political analyst and former adviser to Tsvangirai, said that ZimPF’s apparent implosion did not come as a surprise. “This was a group of disgruntled people who left Zanu-PF not because they wanted to, but because they were caught up in challenges within Zanu-PF. The unity between them was more because of their predicament than the values they shared. There was bound to be trouble at some point.”

Magaisa argues that the big winner is Tsvangirai himself, because Mujuru’s case to be leader of the opposition coalition has been substantially weakened. In fact, the MDC-T may no longer feel the need to include any elements of ZimPF. They no longer have to work with any devils.

“It’s a blessing in disguise that there has been this rupture. Otherwise the coalition would have included characters who had an insincere interest in building a solid coalition against Zanu-PF. It also means we don’t have too many problems now about who should lead the coalition. In the past it appeared that Mujuru was a contender for leadership, but it’s becoming clear after the shenanigans in her party, as well as a very heavy defeat in the recent by-election, that there remains only one person with solid support. If there’s going to be a coalition, then it’s going to be built around the MDC led by Morgan Tsvangirai,” said Magaisa. – Daily Maverick

Nokia 3310 Making a Historic Comeback

Arguably the world’s most reliable cellphone to date, the Nokia 3310 will be relaunched at the end of this month by popular demand.

The brick phone which was first introduced by Nokia in the year 2000 was last manufactured in 2005 though used 3310s were still being refurbished and sold through Amazon in most parts of the world.

The Nokia 3310 had a reputation for being hard. People told many stories of putting it to test for instance throwing it down a flight of stairs, spill a pint over it, or drop it into a pool of mud, and it would emerge unscathed.

“It was like the Wolverine of phones, and for that reason, it remains a firm fan favorite,” said an official at Nokia.

Nokia plans to re-launch the device at the upcoming MWC conference in Barcelona.

At its launch the handset will reportedly cost about $85, and will be marketed as a way of getting long battery life in an almost-indestructible form factor.

Although Nokia hasn’t manufactured the phone in years, there’s still a fondness for the device, and in Zimbabwe the demand has remained very high. Second hand cellphone dealers are currently selling it at about $35 whenever available. Some have been managing to bring in the device from Dubai and selling for between $60 and $75.

Given that most smartphones have a propensity to run out of power before the day is finished, the 3310 should still draw a huge market for in the country.

HORROR SUICIDE: Man Drinks Sulphuric Acid, Sets Family Home Ablaze | LATEST DETAILS

A 42-year-old Harare man committed suicide by taking a concoction of sulphuric acid and pesticides after ramming his car into the family house before dousing it with petrol and setting it ablaze.

Patrick Bangani of Southlea Park rammed the car into the lounge through an open French door and locked himself and his daughter in the house.

The 11-year-old daughter, who witnessed her father taking the poisonous concoction, escaped through the window of one of the bedrooms, while her other sibling was out playing in the neighbourhood.

Bangani’s wife Ms Porina Kadzuwa, whom he allegedly gave a thorough beating the previous night, had in the morning left the home to pick up a protection order against him that had been granted, according to neighbours. She heard the news of her husband’s suicide when she went to the police to get an officer to serve Bangani with the protection order.

Chief police spokesperson Senior Assistant Commissioner Charity Charamba said she had not yet received the report.

Harare provincial police spokesperson Assistant Inspector Simon Chazovachiyi said he was not on duty and could not confirm the death. A neighbour, Ms Shylet Mabodo said Bangani and his wife had a tumultuous marriage and were always trading blows in front of their four minor children. – State Media

War Vets Back Mutasa And Gumbo

EMBATTLED Zimbabwe People First (ZimPF) leader, Joice Mujuru, yesterday suffered yet another setback in her fight to control the opposition party after war veterans rallied behind “expelled” founding members, Rugare Gumbo and Didymus Mutasa (pictured), and appeared to endorse them as the bona fide leaders.

Top executives of the Christopher Mutsvangwa-led Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans’ Association, Victor Matemadanda (secretary-general) and Douglas Mahiya (spokesperson), were part of a ZimPF steering committee meeting called by Gumbo and Mutasa in Harare to announce a new party leadership following their break-up with Mujuru last week.

Addressing journalists at the ZimPF headquarters yesterday, Gumbo said he would, for now, co-lead the party with Mutasa until a substantive president has been selected at an elective convention to be held “in due course”.

 “Party elders, founding members and the steering committee will in due course meet to choose an interim president, who will lead the party pending an elective convention,” he said.“Meanwhile, the steering committee, together with Mutasa and Gumbo, are the caretaker leaders of ZimPF.

“We are going to consult extensively from the members of the steering committee and the founders of the party to find what their opinion is regarding leadership.

“So, we cannot give a definite date, but we are saying, any time after the end of February, we should be able to have an answer.”

Matemadanda said they were attending the meeting in solidarity with their fellow liberation war comrades.

“We didn’t come here as members of People First, but we came here as comrades, who received information that other comrades are meeting here,” he said.

“Our membership and mobilisation will support a candidate, who has respect for our founding principles. We are not here to seek for membership or anything, except that, as comrades, there will be a time when we are going to meet as the veterans of the struggle.

“We will count each other, those who are with us and those that are not with us. We will ask what is meant by getting lost, because we were taught that the majority is the superior to the minority. When the minority remains with the other side (Zanu PF) and the majority is outside, what do you call that?”

Mahiya accused President Robert Mugabe of manipulating war veterans by using them for campaign purposes and dumping them afterwards.

“There is no one who can say I was not used at Shake-Shake (Zanu PF headquarters). We were all used at different levels and doing different things, but we couldn’t realise it,” he said.

“I have never seen an army general, who will go to war and later fire his troops soon after winning the war to accommodate nonentities like (Zanu PF commissar, Saviour) Kasukuwere. This is manipulative.”

Mutsvangwa, Matemadanda, Mahiya and others were fired from Zanu PF last year on allegations of indiscipline after they openly called for Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa to take over from Mugabe.

Norton’s independent legislator, Temba Mliswa, also attended the meeting in solidarity with the ZimPF elders.

Mujuru last week announced the expulsion of seven ZimPF founders, accusing them of being Zanu PF agents, but they have remained defiant, saying they could not be fired from a party they founded.

Mliswa described Mujuru as unelectable, while urging people to stop idolising political leaders.

“Mujuru was handpicked to be Vice-President. This is why I always ask you why you believe somebody who was handpicked can win elections,” he said.

“That is the danger of Zanu PF today. Mnangagwa was handpicked and (Vice-President Phelekezela) Mphoko was handpicked, so was Mujuru. So you cannot go and get votes out there without winning internal elections. It’s suicidal to have such a person as a substantive president.”

Margaret Dongo, who was also fired alongside Gumbo and Mutasa, took a swipe at Mujuru’s “dictatorial tendencies”, saying ZimPF structures were behind their group.

Gumbo also raised a litany of allegations against Mujuru, including running the party like a personal business, going on foreign trips without briefing her executive, failure to account for party finances, blatant disregard of the constitution, and backbiting, among others.

He also said it was a lie that they were against a coalition with other opposition political parties.

“There has been a deliberate distortion of the position of elders regarding the coalition of opposition forces,” Gumbo said.

“We want to unambiguously state our position regarding the question of coalition.

“We agree with the coalition of all opposition parties. We are for the unity of our people. Faced with a regime that knows no bounds in its quest to remain in power forever, we cannot and should not accept the luxury of being divided.”

He said Mujuru always shunned advice from the party elders, alleging she started plotting to expel them last year, but was blocked by some members of the national executive council.

“Mujuru always wanted the elders removed because they have the courage to speak out whenever she vacillates or goes astray,” Gumbo said. – Newsday

“Cyclone Dineo Blocked By Zimra and ZRP, Yipeee!”

“Cyclone Dineo has been blocked by Zimra officials at the border post, they are demanding a cut first before it is allowed into Zimbabwe,” this joke circulated around social circles yesterday.

The Zimbabwe revenue authority together with the police have been noted for the way in which they constantly rip people off demanding either outrageous fees, fines, or kickbacks. A recent audit at the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (Zimra) has exposed massive corruption, fraud, poor corporate governance and tax evasion scandals with shocking revelations that the government was prejudiced of more than US$20 million. According to the audit report compiled by a local audit firm and released on September 26, the authority’s commissioner-general Gershem Pasi worked for two years, from 2011 to 2013, after his contract had lapsed, illegally drawing hundreds of thousands of dollars in salaries and allowances. The report also shows that Zimra executives failed to investigate a whistle-blower’s report on the externalisation and over-invoicing of US$300 million by a local telecoms firm (name supplied) through its foreign sister company.

Meanwhile another joke circulated which said, the cyclone has been blocked by potholes in Zimbabwe’s roads, another development emerging from the Mugabe family run Zinara board, the latter which is not needed as all the work can be performed by one person, the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Transport.

Fear And Terror As Grace Mugabe Resumes Death Rallies

Grace-DEATH-RALLIES

Fear and trepidation has gripped warring Zanu PF factions following First Lady Grace Mugabe’s decision to resume her controversial nationwide “death rallies” amid concerns she could worsen an already fragile situation.

Today marks 16 months, 10 days since First Lady Grace Mugabe first launched her death rallies in 2015. The meetings saw several people killed in horrific stampedes as Mrs Mugabe dished out goods stolen by ZIMRA from poor citizens at the Beitbridge border post.

Scores of people were injured at Shindi High School as they scambled for First Lady Grace Mugabe’s donations.

Mrs Mugabe’s pickings, distributed in the name of philanthropy, left several people dead during her ‘death’ rallies. (SEE FULL SATELLITE MAP). Critics argue the First Lady has been raiding the Zimra (border confiscated goods) warehouses to dish out to people. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW…

In 2014, a similar series of gatherings led to the expulsion of then Vice-President Joice Mujuru together with other senior leaders on allegations of plotting to topple President Robert Mugabe.
Mugabe has haplessly watched as a vicious internal power struggles for his throne involving his wife and Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa unfold. Grace is the current leader of the powerful Zanu PF women’s league and, reportedly, has the endorsement of a group known as G40, while Mnangagwa boasts of support from war veterans and sections of the country’s military.
After reportedly being forced to abandon the rallies last year in the aftermath of her attacks on the security establishment including startling claims that sections of the army wanted Mugabe’s second son dead, Grace today resumes her rallies in Manicaland’s Buhera district.
Zanu PF political commissar Saviour Kasukuwere confirmed the rally was on.
“Yes, she will be in Manicaland and we will be announcing the other venues in due time,” Kasukuwere, reportedly a leading figure in the G40 faction, said.
In last year’s bout of rallies, Grace seemed to be ratcheting up pressure against Mnangagwa before they were abruptly cut off. Women’s league treasurer and Grace’s self-anointed spokesperson, Sarah Mahoka, had promised details of the impending gatherings, but was later unreachable.
“Yes, but that is a big issue, I will explain later,” Mahoka said.
Insiders said there was growing uneasiness over Grace’s latest intentions.
“People are on tenterhooks because nobody knows if she will really tone down on her rhetoric or which side will bear the brunt of her sharp tongue. You will understand because she is naturally abrasive.
“Those in Mnangagwa’s camp are scared that she will go after him, the neutrals fear these rallies will further destabilise the party ahead of elections next year, which is the last thing Zanu PF wants. On the other hand, Grace’s relations with senior leaders in the G40 faction, including Mahoka and Kasukuwere, are at best tense,” NewsDay heard. “The rallies could be a double-edged sword for the party and it’s touch and go.”
Political analyst, Alexander Rusero said Grace was inspired by a burning wish to “kill two birds with one stone”.
“The First Lady is Mugabe’s public face at the moment and given the fact that he has been chosen to represent the party as the presidential candidate next year, the campaign for that begins now. The women’s league is also a vital component in the Zanu PF machinery and indeed the intriguing succession issue. Grace might have personal ambitions.
The league represents a great foundation to launch any bid at the top job,” Rusero said. “So the rallies could be aimed at both propping up Mugabe and laying proper groundwork for her for an assault at the presidency if push comes to shove.”

Cyclone Dineo Hits Southern Zimbabwe

Cyclone Dineo has already started pounding some parts of Zimbabwe with sustained heavy winds and torrential rains after devastating several regions in Mozambique.

According to the Meteriological Services’ Tich Zinyemba, some of the areas already being pounded by the cyclone include Mutare, Chiredzi and Beitbridge.

Heavy rains are expected to continue until Monday in several areas, which are already water-logged due to previous heavy rains.

Zinyemba said people in the affected regions should stay in safe places and avoid venturing outside their hamlets or low-lying areas.

In 2000, Cyclone Eline devastated some regions leaving almost 136 people dead and 59,184 houses damaged.

The cyclone also killed 20,000 livestock and damaged 230 dams, 538 schools, 54 clinics and 14,999 toilets. – VOA

Mugabe Grills Kasukuwere

TEMPERS reportedly flared at a Zanu PF politburo meeting on Wednesday when President Robert Mugabe clashed with party commissar, Saviour Kasukuwere, after the latter ripped into two Masvingo bigwigs, Josaya Hungwe and Shuvai Mahofa, accusing them of fuelling chaos in the province.

Politburo sources yesterday told journalists that Kasukuwere specifically accused Hungwe and Mahofa of orchestrating the leadership crisis that has seen acting provincial chairperson, Amasa Nenjana, being forced out to pave way for Ezra Chadzamira.

Irked by the blunt accusations targeted at his lieutenants, Mugabe reportedly sprang to Hungwe and Mahofa’s defence, chastising Kasukuwere and apportioning blame on the entire party leadership.

“After Kasukuwere had told Hungwe that he was the main problem in the province and that he was destroying the party, the President reprimanded him, saying the party, as a whole, should take responsibility for the mess,” a politburo source, who declined to be named, said.

“But the commissar did not stop lashing out at Hungwe, resulting in the President asking him if he was now arguing with him.”

The source said Kasukuwere toned down his words on realising that Mugabe was getting angry and was “fiercely and persistently defending Hungwe, apportioning blame to the entire provincial leadership and the party in general”.

After a tense debate, which, according to sources, lasted for over 45 minutes, the politburo resolved to hold fresh elections in the province.

“Kasukuwere, with the support of [Jonathan] Moyo, [Kudzanayi] Chipanga and others, said it would be wrong for Chadzamira to be the chairperson, since the politburo meeting of December 11, 2016 had made a resolution relieving him of his duties,” a senior politburo member said.

After a decision to hold fresh provincial elections was endorsed, politburo members reportedly faced a fresh hurdle over selection of a top party official to lead the process, with some proposing Moyo, but Mugabe objected.

“It was agreed that Joram Gumbo should be tasked with overseeing the affairs of the province until such a time when elections are held,” the source continued.

“The commissariat department was tasked to provide support to Gumbo and select a team from central committee members to oversee the election process.”

Contacted for comment yesterday, Kasukuwere confirmed Gumbo’s appointment as caretaker leader for Masvingo province.

“The politburo has dissolved the entire structure of Masvingo province and we are asking Joram Gumbo, in the interim, to lead the province and this also culminates in elections, which must be held very soon,” Kasukuwere said.

“We hope that this will bring order in the province. We will also ensure that elections, which will be conducted in Masvingo, are free and fair and allow people to choose their representatives without being pushed around, threatened or intimidated.

“We are happy that this decision will finally settle the challenge that was setting our party apart in Masvingo. We lost a third of our key positions in the province from 2014 to date, hence, we took that decision that we can restore order.”

Gumbo recently played a similar role in his Midlands province following factional problems that rocked the province after the sacking of Kizito Chivamba.

Kasukuwere said there was nothing amiss in appointing someone from a different province to act in a caretaker capacity in another region.

He said the party once appointed Edna Madzongwe from Mashonaland West province to lead Mashonaland East after the former provincial chairperson, Ray Kaukonde, was sacked.

“We want to get someone from outside the province who will not be viewed as having an interest in the outcome to do that work,” Kasukuwere said.

“Because these are new elections, Chadzamira is eligible to stand. Anyone can stand as well as those who have completed their sentences, who had been suspended by the party before are also eligible.

“In other words, we have lifted the ban on the ban on aspiring candidates in Masvingo. They are all eligible to stand.” – Newsday

UK: Zimbabwean Carer Ties Vulnerable Patient To BedFrame

Yorkpress-  A Carer has been convicted of restraining an elderly dementia patient in his hospital bed by tying bedsheets to the frame.

Olga Dzikiti was asked to give one-to-one care to 88-year-old Harold Dunnington during a shift at York Hospital on January 13 this year.

The 39-year-old care worker assistant, from Rotherham, was looking after Mr Dunnington as he left the Acute Admissions Unit and was transferred to Ward 23.

York Magistrates Court heard the pensioner was distressed when he arrived on the ward and kept trying to remove his oxygen mask. The patient was making attempts to pull his T-shirt and bed sheets towards his neck, which the defendant assumed were efforts to strangle himself.

To prevent him for doing any further harm, she tied the bedsheets to the bed frame, restraining Mr Dunnington across his chest so he could not move his arms.

He was left like this for nearly an hour while Dzikiti sat at the end of his bed and used a tablet device.

His treatment was uncovered when a nurse, who was also working on the ward, came into the six bed room to relieve Dzikiti.

The nurse immediately untied the patient and alerted her boss, who spoke to Dzikiti about what she had done. She admitted Mr Dunnington had been restrained and said she had done it for his own good.

Philip Morris, prosecuting, said: “Irrespective of his mental capacity he was not in a position to move freely.”

Zimbabwean-born Dzikiti, a single mother, may never work in the profession again after being found guilty of wilful neglect. She told the court she had worked in the same role for 15 years and did not set out to harm Mr Dunnington. Magistrates found her guilty and fined her £100, ordered her to pay £620 prosecution costs and a £20 victim surcharge. – Yorkpress

Bogus Constitution In Tsvangirai VP Challenge

MDC-T leader, Morgan Tsvangirai yesterday claimed the High Court challenge filed by two party activists against the appointment of vice-presidents Nelson Chamisa and Elias Mudzuri was defective, as the applicants had used a “bogus constitution” to pursue the matter.

Tsvangirai was responding to a High Court application filed by MDC-T members, Patson Murimoga and George Rice, in July last year, seeking nullification of Chamisa and Mudzuri’s appointments as party vice-presidents.

In their application, the litigants cited Tsvangirai, Chamisa, Mudzuri and MDC-T national chairperson, Lovemore Moyo as respondents.

Tsvangirai’s lawyer, Thabani Mpofu, pleaded with Justice Lavendar Makoni, who is presiding over the matter, to dismiss the application on the grounds that the activists had cited a wrong copy of the party constitution and that they had rushed to take the matter to the court before exhausting internal processes.

He added that the activists also erroneously made reference to the party’s sixth congress, which had not yet taken place.

Mpofu claimed Murimoga and Rice updated their subscriptions to the party two days after filing the application, in a bid to authenticate their application and as such they did not have the locus standi to pursue the matter.

But, the duo’s lawyer, Zivanai Macharaga, said his clients had a constitutional right to approach the court and challenge Tsvangirai’s decisions.

“By virtue of being members, they have the right to file this application. There is nowhere where it is shown that their membership has been withdrawn,” Macharaga said, adding his clients could not have approached the party’s national council because, in their view, it was the offender and could not have resolved the dispute impartially.
Justice Makoni reserved judgment on the preliminary points raised by Mpofu. Newsday

Parents Chase Away Corrupt School Head

Terrence Mawawa, Chiredzi | There was drama at Chibwedziva Secondary School in Chiredzi when local parents forcibly evicted the head from his house, locked it and chased him away.

The incident happened last week when irate parents accused Simbarashe Jackson Zenda, the school head of corruption and rampant embezzlement of funds. The parents accuse Zenda of squandering $6,000 school cash.

The parents claimed the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education officials were reluctant to act on the matter.

Chiredzi Schools’ Inspector, Petronella Nyangwe confirmed the incident and said the parents did not have the authority to chase away the school head.

Nyangwe said she referred the matter to the Provincial Education Director for guidance.

She added the parents were not supposed to interrupt the ministry’s investigations.

“I can confirm that parents chased away the head of Chibwedziva Secondary School.They forcibly evicted him from his house and locked it,” said Nyangwe.

She said the parents acted in unlawful manner.

“We called the School Development Committee members to our offices and told them the action taken by the parents was unlawful.Parents should not take the law into their hands,” said Nyangwe.

The SDC treasurer, Pastor Chisase, said the head was chased following a resolution made at the school’s Annual General Meeting two weeks ago.

Zenda could not be reached for a comment.

Shock As Brother Kills Brother For Money

A 22-YEAR-OLD Chivi man allegedly killed his younger brother in cold blood in a ritual to get rich and find a beautiful woman to marry.

Ezekiel Mabhiza dragged Israel Mabhiza (12) of Maduveko Village under Headman Madamombe to a stream, about one kilometre from their homestead in the dead of the night on Sunday, where he bashed his skull with a mattock.

Ezekiel, sources close to investigations said, developed cold feet and failed to cut out parts from his brother’s body. He allegedly wrapped the body in a comforter, dug a shallow grave where he buried the body but quickly exhumed it.

Ezekiel allegedly carried the body for seven kilometres to Mhandamabwe Business Centre where he dumped it in a public toilet. Pre-school pupils, accompanied by their teacher, ran out screaming on Monday at around 8AM when they saw the bloodied body.

Acting Masvingo police spokesperson Assistant Inspector Kudakwashe Dehwa confirmed the incident and said Ezekiel was arrested on Monday after he had escaped to a hideout in another area within the same district.

“We received a report of suspected murder where a man from Chivi’s Headman Madamombe area killed his younger brother purporting that he had been instructed to do so by his ancestors in order to get rich and find a woman to marry. The suspect was arrested after he had escaped to another village and is assisting with investigations,” said Asst Insp Dehwa.

He said Brilliant Child Pre-school teacher Ms Siyamukhele Mhere (25) of Mhandamabwe Business Centre accompanied her pupils to the toilet. She stumbled on Israel’s body wrapped in a comforter.

“A report was made to the police at Mhandamabwe Base who attended the scene and took the body to Chivi District Hospital mortuary for post-mortem.

“The body had two deep cuts on the head and on the back of the head and a blood-stained mattock was recovered at the suspect’s homestead. He was arrested at about 12PM on Monday in Hapazari Village under Headman Madyangove where he had fled to,” he said.
Police said Mabhiza said his ancestors came to him in a vision and instructed him to kill his brother to get rich.

He allegedly said the ancestors told him how to kill his sibling and the rituals he had to perform with the body to get instant riches and a beautiful wife.

The ruthless killing occurred at a time when the country has been gripped by an unfolding
story of a suspected serial killer in Bulawayo who allegedly killed two of his friends and buried them in shallow graves.

Rodney Tongai Jindu (25), who is on remand for the murders of his friends Mboneli Joko Ncube (30) and Cyprian Kudzurunga (28), was allegedly hired by a South African inyanga to kill someone with a Ncube surname for body parts to be used in rituals. – State Media

Mnangagwa Out As Gumbo Takes Over, Fresh Election Ordered

A faction aligned to Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa has lost the Masvingo battle, after a politburo decision to appoint Jorum Gumbo as interim chairperson.

The state media reports that Zanu-PF appointed Gumbo yesterday as the interim chairperson for Masvingo, as three candidates have so far expressed their interest to contest for the provincial chairmanship in fresh elections that were ordered by the Politburo on Wednesday.

Gumbo is expected to lead the province’s restructuring exercise and the process of holding the elections for the full provincial committee. The Politburo dissolved the Masvingo provincial executive and called for fresh elections after a third of its members left their positions for various reasons.

There was confusion in the province when Ezra Chadzamira was co-opted recently as the substantive chairman, taking over from Amasa Nhenjana, who was acting.

Renowned philanthropist and Chivi Rural District Council chairman Councillor Killer Zivhu said he was ready to contest for the top provincial party position, as was Chadzamira and  Nhenjana.

Dr Zivhu, who is the provincial secretary for Finance in the dissolved executive, said time was now ripe for him to lead the province and had an elaborate programme that will enable the party to develop Masvingo.

“I am more than prepared to lead Zanu-PF in Masvingo and to all ruling party youths, women and other members, this is the time to choose a leader who can deliver tangible results to the people of our great province,’’ he said.

“I am a development-oriented and neutral person who is best disposed to lead this province as Zanu-PF chairman and I welcome the decision by the Zanu-PF Politburo led by our great leader and First Secretary President Mugabe.”

Dr Zivhu, who is well known for his pro-development activities in the province, said he would be able to unite people in the party and push for developmental projects that will benefit the majority.

“With the completion of Tokwe-Mukosi Dam and the rehabilitation of the Harare-Beitbridge Road, all is set for the uplifiting of the province and we need a person with a clear developmental vision. It is time for Zanu-PF members to elect a person with a clear agenda for poverty alleviation and programmes that will uplift them and create a green belt in Masvingo using the dam and Command Agriculture.

“I am offering myself to serve the people of this province and ensure that there is a turn around in the economy of the province that will ultimately benefit Zanu-PF and enhance its support base.”

Dr Zivhu was instrumental in spearheading the Chivi Village Zim-Asset, among other developmental projects, which resulted in some tangible benefits in the upliftment of communities.

If replicated throughout the province, such a programme will result in change of fortunes, through the harnessing of all water bodies in the province, especially for irrigation purposes, he said.

Chadzamira said he was excited by the decision to call for fresh elections in Masvingo.

“I want to thank our party President and First Secretary Cde Mugabe for making sure that the Politburo came up with a decision that called for fresh elections in Zanu-PF in Masvingo,” he said. “I personally think that it was a good decision which will further strengthen our party as we go for elections next year.

“I will always be available to lead Zanu-PF in Masvingo if people ask me to. I will contest the provincial chairmanship elections in Masvingo if that is the will of the people.’’

Nhenjana expressed his readiness to contest.

“The decision by the Politburo was the best solution for Masvingo because leaders who have the mandate of the people on the ground will emerge after fresh elections are held. I have not committed any offence against the party so nothing will stop me from contesting the party chairmanship post,” he said.

Party leaders from the province who spoke to The Herald yesterday said fresh elections to choose new provincial executive office bearers would bring on board leaders with the full confidence of the people.

Zanu-PF Politburo member and Masvingo Provincial Affairs Minister Senator Shuvai Mahofa said the move to hold fresh elections was a harbinger of good times for the ruling party in the province.

“We cannot continue to have a small executive of imposed people in our party and I think holding fresh elections will further strengthen our party as they will have the full confidence of the people,’’ said Mahofa.

Zanu-PF secretary for Administration Ignatius Chombo said no one would be barred from contesting the fresh elections in Masvingo.

Senior Zanu-PF Politburo member in Masvingo Josaya Hungwe said the province wanted fresh elections to be held as soon as possible.

“Everyone will be free to participate in the elections and all the posts in the executive will be up for grabs,” he said. “Politburo member Joram Gumbo will preside over the polls and we will have a preparatory meeting for the polls soon.

“We are quite heartened with the decision for fresh elections and President Mugabe was quite emphatic in the Politburo that leaders should come from the people instead of being appointed.’’

Zanu-PF national political commissar Saviour Kasukuwere said Gumbo was expected to descend on Masvingo on Sunday.

“We appointed Gumbo as our interim leader leading to (provincial) elections,” he said. “Additional appointment would be made to help him. He will have other members of the party who will help him.”

Kasukuwere said Gumbo had worked for the party in Masvingo before, hence his appointment.

MUGABE GONE: Biti Inks Down CODE

The People’s Democratic Party (PDP) led by former Movement for Democratic Change secretary general, Tendai Biti, has joined a group of opposition parties known as the Coalition of Democrats (CODE), comprising several parties vying to unseat President Robert Mugabe.

Speaking at the signing ceremony in Harare on Thursday, Biti said they are joining the coalition after realizing that this is the only way to remove the ruling Zanu PF party from power.

“It is with great humility that as PDP, we have taken this position of joining CODE, a process which we were part of when the first CODE meeting was held in Harare on 14 May 2014. Today, we complete a journey started nearly three years ago. CODE is bound by upright qualities of that no one is more equal than the other.”

He said the coalition wants to ensure that Zimbabweans will establish a free and democratic society based on some provisions of the country’s constitution.

“That is the vision of CODE. We are not asking for much. We are asking what is in the Constitution – the freedom to love. A Zimbabwe that treats us like first class citizens and not fourth class citizens, that is why we are forming this coalition.

“We are confident that CODE is the only coalition in Zimbabwe and that believes in personal accountability and this is our natural home. This is a coalition, we are not in competition with other political parties but it is a coalition that is not going to beg anyone and we are going to work very hard. CODE is the only political alliance and it will survive. We have respect for different views and we cannot question the lack of wisdom.”

He said Zimbabwe is less than 18 months to an election, which would be held without significant electoral reforms.

“As we sit here right now, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) has been kicked out (of the voter registration process). Zanu PF is known for predatory, toxic politics. It is state capture. Zanu PF is confirming that it has captured ZEC.

“It is therefore not accidental that we are signing CODE in a church. We find it humble that we are signing this in church and the walls of Jericho are going to fall sooner. Chief among our demands will be a new voters’ roll …”

Biti said CODE will give Zanu PF a run for their money and there is need for it to establish a transformative state. – VOA

MP Humiliated After Sex With Teen: Rape Charge Flops

https://youtu.be/IcS2Wy1HEt8?t=50

A 19-year-old man who was facing allegations of raping a Zanu-PF Matabeleland South Central Committee member on her way from a beer drink at midnight, has been acquitted.
Dylan Ndlovu of Maphisa pleaded not guilty to rape when he appeared before Gwanda regional magistrate Mr Mark Dzira and the matter went for full trial.

In his defence, Ndlovu said he did not commit the offence. “I was already asleep by the time the offence was allegedly committed. Also the clothes they say I was wearing on that day are not the ones I was wearing. They are wrongfully accusing me,” said Ndlovu.

At the close of the State case Mr Dzira acquitted and discharged Ndlovu. “Evidence before the court show that the witnesses failed to identify the accused as the person who committed the offence. The evidence which they also gave was full of inconsistencies. The accused is here acquitted and discharged,” ruled Mr Dzira.

 Allegations against him were that on 11 November last year, the female politician in the company of three of her friends and an aide were coming from a night spot around 12AM.

When they arrived at a football pitch they started singing traditional songs leading to two of her colleagues getting into a trance.

She instructed her aide to rush home and call her husband so that he could help her.
When the aide left, it was alleged, Ndlovu arrived armed with a knife and grabbed her by the neck. He is alleged to have raped her once before he was caught red-handed by the returning team and he fled into darkness with his pants down.

A report was made to the police and investigations led to his arrest. A lawyer from Mathonsi Law Chambers Legal Practitioners represented Ndlovu while Mr Mncedisi Dube represented the State. – State Media

 

More ZRP Cops Arrested For Theft

SIX more police officers, including four bosses in charge of the training at Ntabazinduna Training Depot, appeared in court yesterday charged with theft of more than $200 000 in projects funds.

Chief Superintendent Rosum Shonhiwa (42) who is responsible for training, Inspector Sibonginkosi Dube (38), the officer-in-charge of the mess, Assistant Inspector Oswald Mushonga (33), finance clerk and Constables Kelvin Moyo and Tafadzwa Sibanda appeared before Bulawayo magistrate Mr Tinashe Tashaya facing theft charges involving $206 048.47.

Superintendent Farai Chikonamombe (43) appeared separately before the same magistrate facing a charge of criminal abuse of duty as public officer.

The magistrate remanded all of them out of custody to March 1 on $50 bail each. He ordered them not to interfere with State witnesses and to reside at their given addresses until the matter is finalised as part of the bail conditions.

The State, represented by Ms Liane Nkomo, did not oppose bail.

Advocate Sampson Samuel Mlaudzi is representing Chikonamombe. Mr Bryon Sengweni is Shonhiwa’s lawyer while Mr Kucaca Ivumile Phulu is representing Moyo.

Dube and Sibanda are represented by Mr Jabulani Mhlanga while Mushonga is not represented.

The court heard that between September 21 and December 31, 2016, Shonhiwa, Mushonga and Fidelis Chivavava connived and signed internal funds transfer slips authorising Standard Chartered Bank to transfer $14 785 from Ntabazinduna Training Depot’s Mess account into Dube, Moyo and Sibanda’s accounts.

Chivavava, who is already on remand for the same charge, was the acting finance clerk at ZRP Ntabazinduna Training Depot responsible for withdrawing, holding in trust the withdrawn funds, conducting payments for suppliers and reconciling the money.

The court heard that between 2015 and 2016, Chikonamombe connived with Chivavava and signed an order to pay suppliers using already paid invoices for acquittals and in the process prejudicing their employer of $144 014,29.

During the same year, Chikonamombe and Chivavava signed another order and purportedly indicated in the financial books that they paid Oscaria Bakery and Fortwell Wholesalers and prejudiced ZRP of $147 214,29

Between January 18 and 19 this year an internal audit was carried out at ZRP Ntabazinduna Training Depot and it was discovered that a total of $206 048,47 was missing from the coffers. When the accused persons were engaged over the issue they failed to account for the money.

A report was made to police at Mbembesi on 10 February leading to their arrest.

Investigators found a bank statement indicating all the bank transfers made by the accused persons including copies of the beneficiaries’ signed bank slips. – State Media

Second Suicide At UBH Hospitals

A FEMALE patient who was admitted at the United Bulawayo Hospitals (UBH) died after she allegedly threw herself out through a window of the facility’s third floor on Monday.

Nolini Sibanda (37) becomes the second woman to throw herself to death at the hospital in the last three years.

In 2014, a 20-year-old new mother allegedly killed herself days after giving birth by leaping out of a second floor window at the hospital’s maternity ward.

UBH clinical director Dr Narcisius Dzvanga yesterday confirmed the latest suicide.

He said the hospital has handed the case to police for investigation.

“I can only confirm that it happened but I won’t comment further as the matter is under the investigation by law enforcement agents. Her relatives have not even come to my office to discuss it,” said Dr Dzvanga.

He said the hospital was puzzled about how Sibanda committed suicide.

“We don’t know how she managed to do it. We have burglar bars which are still intact. The police are looking into the matter,” he said.

Sources at the hospital said Sibanda had visible uneasiness before disappearing, and apparently throwing herself to the ground.

“She was walking up and down in the ground floor of the building near the benches making noise for other patients.

“She disappeared and one of the hospital superintendents ordered a student nurse to look for her. The nurse found her lying in a pool of blood,” said the source.

“She was not dead but died later from the injuries sustained.”

The source said it became clear that Sibanda had leapt from the third floor as window panes were broken in that area.

The Chronicle could not confirm what she had been admitted at the hospital for, but sources said she was hospitalised with severe head injuries.

Bulawayo police spokesperson Inspector Precious Simango confirmed the sudden death.

She however referred questions to the hospital. – State Media

Gumbo And Mujuru Affair : Leave Vendors Out | OPINION

Rufaro Mufundirwa | One day my wife had a quarrel with our first born. While she was throwing insults on him, she uttered a statement that I took as an indirect attack on me. Women do that, at times to an extent of attacking you under the guise of attacking a dog.

Sadly, this unfair practice was repeated this week by Rugare Gumbo who, in their exchange of insults with his former boss, Joice Mujuru, ended up attacking innocent vendors. Gumbo and anyone of like-minded would do well if they stop dragging everybody in their messy divorce. As a politician, Gumbo fails to realise that vendors make up a critical component in the political matrix of this country. Their vote is very important and can decide his political destiny, albeit their low social standing. He is, therefore, totally wrong for believing that “meeting with vendors cannot change the situation.” Politics is a game of numbers and vendors are a critical mass.

“We don’t believe in going around the provinces meeting vendors and so on, as if that is what can change the Zimbabwean situation,” Gumbo said. That statement is pregnant with meanings. If the break-away ZimPF wants to be a serious political ensemble, it must remove the old man from the spokesperson’s desk. He is just careless and a total liability. Gumbo’s statement gives us the impression that vendors and by implications other ordinary members of the society have no place in his party. We thought we would hear Didymus Mutasa distancing himself or his party from Gumbo’s utterances. It seems they are ok with that dangerous statement.

Gumbo thinks that vendors are not worthy listening to. He must take time to mingle with them and he will be shocked to realise that there are decent thinkers in the streets. Those vendors are not in the streets by choice but the sanction-induced economic hardships forced them into vending. They have great ideas that can bring grist to the mill of a listening politician. Indeed some of them are quite educated, if not more educated than Gumbo himself.

The shona elders would say seka urema wafa. It will not surprise anyone that one day Gumbo will see himself vending in the streets with the class of citizens he is belittling today. He must get advice from his erstwhile ally, Dzikamai Mavhaire.  When Mavhaire was booted out of Zanu PF for calling President Mugabe to step down, hard times caught up with him. He ended up brushing shoulders with vendors, selling tiny sour oranges in a ramshackle vehicle. It does not take time for one to fall from glory to shame. Gumbo is still enjoying the little savings from his Zanu PF job and the donor funds we hear they have been abusing in ZimPF. Very soon he will be dry. As one Professor would say handei tione!

Gumbo thinks his imagined sophistication and education will turn into votes. Old habits die hard. We have read history. At one time, Gumbo ran away from the struggle to further his education. He told those he left in the trenches that they should continue fighting while he furthered his education so that he would rule them upon his return. Indeed when he came back, history has it that he would always remind everybody including the decorated ZANLA commander Josiah Tongogara that they were not as educated as he was. That bigoted attitude led to his arrest after he attempted a coup.

This is where these western sponsored parties differ from Zanu PF. Whenever the revolutionary party holds its rallies, vendors voluntarily leave their stalls to attend the rally. Of course the likes of Gumbo and other opposition elements rush to say they are being force marched to the rallies. No, they know that the party has their interests at heart. We have heard the first lady Dr Grace Mugabe who is Zanu PF secretary for women’s league saying vendors must be protected from municipal police who are in the habit of confiscating their wares. That’s being sensitive and a true reflection of the party that she comes from.

It appears that the opposition politicians generally do not have attachment to those in the lower social stratum. The MDC-T leader, Mr Morgan Tsvangirai is on record insulting the same social group. He derogatively told poor peasant farmers whom government had resettled that they just sprout like mushrooms. He called villagers mushrooms and the other day he called them blind puppies. Tsvangirai chided the villagers that he had assembled at a rally that they do not have undergarments.  Unsophisticated as these politicians might think, the ordinary people matter much in the ballot.

 

 

Despair As President Extends Sick Leave In UK Hospital

Johannesburg — Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari’s nearly month-long medical leave in London is a sharp reminder to taxpayers that while they finance their leaders’ health care abroad, they often are stuck with decrepit, ill-staffed government health facilities at home.

For decades, Nigerians have paid for their leaders and former rulers to get medical treatment overseas. That courtesy also extends to senior government employees.

This is despite taxpayers’ funding of the State House Medical Center, said to be Nigeria’s best-equipped facility, which serves the president and vice president, their families and staff. The center’s budget this year of 3.8 billion naira to care for fewer than 1 000 people represents 1 percent of the entire public health budget for the country’s 170 million people.

“For years, billions have been budgeted for the State House Medical Center while it has always been evident that every president mostly accessed medical facilities outside the country, going back to the 1980s,” said Oluseun Onigbinde, co-founder of BudgIT, an organization that tries to bring clarity to the West African nation’s opaque budget.

The mysterious nature of Buhari’s absence is adding to the unhappiness at home, as one of Africa’s largest economies and oil producers lurches through a recession.

His government has not said what exactly his health issues might be or when he will return. The president’s trip, originally scheduled from January 20 to February 6, was described as a vacation during which he would undergo routine medical tests. It has been extended for further tests.

Officials insist that Buhari is “hale and hearty,” and he was well enough this week to speak by telephone with US President Donald Trump.

Human rights lawyer

“The practice of allowing poor citizens to die of preventable diseases while top public officers and rich private citizens are allowed to travel abroad for medical treatment can no longer be justified,” he said in a lecture this week, noting that Nigerians have a life expectancy of 52 years, though the World Health Organization puts it at 49.

It is not clear how much the country’s taxpayers pay for leaders’ treatments abroad.

Former first lady Patience Jonathan has claimed that half of $31.5 million frozen in a corruption investigation was a government payout for medical bills she incurred in London in 2013. Ever-witty Nigerians took to social media to ask if she was buying eternal life.

Victims receive treatment at a hospital, after an explosion in Maiduguri, Nigeria. President Muhammadu Buhari’s nearly month-long medical leave in London is reminding his country’s taxpayers that while they finance their leaders’ health care abroad, they often are stuck with decrepit, ill-staffed government health facilities at home. File photo: Jossy Ola/AP

The Ministry of Health estimated that Nigeria paid about $1 billion for government officials traveling abroad for medical care in 2014, with ordinary Nigerians spending about $6.3 billion in 2015 for what is called medical tourism.

Senior Nigerian officials get “high yearly allowances” for health care abroad which “provides them opportunity to demand amounts to take care of their non-health care needs like shopping abroad,” economist Vitalis Chi. Nwaneri wrote in his 2013 book “Governing the Ungovernable.”

Former military dictator Gen. Ibrahim Babangida returned home this month from a six-week “medical vacation” in Switzerland. Last year, he was treated for weeks in Germany.

Taxpayers also footed the bill when former President Umaru Yar’Adua received months of medical treatment in Saudi Arabia in 2008-2009, before he returned home to die in office.

In April, Buhari announced that his government would no longer pay for officials to travel abroad for medical services available at home. But two months later, the president was in London for treatment of an ear infection.

“The best-funded clinic in Nigeria does not suffice to treat the president’s ear infection. Nor does the president have enough confidence in the same clinic to do his ‘routine checkups’ there,” novelist Okey Ndibe wrote at

“Imagine, then, the fate of Nigerians who have no choice but must seek treatment at the ill-equipped, wretchedly funded hospitals in our country?” he asked.

Nigeria has just five hospital beds for every 100,000 people, as opposed to a global average of 35 beds and 24 beds per 100,000 in South Africa, which has the continent’s most advanced medical care, according to a PricewaterhouseCoopers study in 2015.

Nigerians who can afford it shun even private health care at home.

Because the country has one of the world’s worst infant and maternal mortality rates, women fly to the United States and Britain to have babies safely delivered. The risk of a woman dying because of pregnancy or childbirth in Nigeria is one in 15, compared to one in 5,000 in developed nations, according to Dr. Chris Akani, professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Nigeria’s College of Health Sciences at the University of Port Harcourt.

Buhari’s medical costs do not come with a heftily priced five-star hotel bill, as did those of predecessors. The 74-year-old anti-corruption crusader known for his simple lifestyle is staying at the residence of the Nigerian High Commission in London, a spokesman said. – AP

I Didn’t Apply For USA Asylum – Mawarire

https://youtu.be/ZPKUkJjYIW4?t=779

Staff Reporter | #ThisFlag Pastor Evan Mawarire came out to clear the air over his stay in the United States of America, declaring that he never claimed asylum, during the short stay.

Mawarire was responding to a number of questions concerning, his life, plans and hope for Zimbabwe’s future in an interview with advocate Fadzayi Mahere.

“Why come back home?” Mahere asked #ThisFlag Pastor.

Mawarire explains that the decision to come back to Zimbabwe was made on the day that he left.

“If I had sought asylum I would not have come back, I was reading all the reports in fact some people swore that I had already been given a green card, there were all sorts of stories, that he has sought asylum he is never gonna come back. I had been given citizenship or if asylum is what I wanted, I would not have come back,” explained Mawarire.

On why he left Mawarire says, “my family began to come under attack and under abuse,,,It was not just verbal abuse that was being thrown around by whoever it was on social media, but physical abuse, we had groups of men showing up at our house, the night that I was in prison, groups of men came and demanded my wife to come out so they could talk to her, about 12 people that wanted to talk to her, the same thing happened again after I had been released.” Mawarire recounts the ordeal of the danger his family was in.

“I am not prepared and am still not prepared today, that my wife is attacked at that level,” said Mawarire whose wife was pregnant at the time, left in the house with their two little children.

“It was important to keep them safe,” said Mawarire.