Tajamuka Bunks Own Demo

Vendors and #Tajamuka activists yesterday failed to show up for a demonstration they had called in the Harare central business district (CBD).

The protest was in reaction to a blitz launched by Harare City Council(HCC) and the Zimbabwe Republic Police to evict vendors from the CBD, as part of desperate measures to contain a typhoid outbreak that has so far claimed two lives.

While #Tajamuka activists and the vendors did not turn up, there was heavy police presence and water cannons at the protests venue – the open space at the corner of Julius Nyerere and Jason Moyo.

A truck-load of riot police was also nearby while several other police officers milled around the place.

In its demo alert, #Tajamuka also invited disgruntled members of the public. “Even if you are not a vendor but you are outraged by the economic injustice being meted out against vendors, you are welcome.

“We will meet with all vendors and all patriotic Zimbabweans to confront the city of Harare and the ministry of Local Government,” it said.

“No vendor will be expelled from their livelihood. Munhu wese achabva achienda industry awana basa. (Vendors will only move after getting jobs in the industry,” #Tajamuka said.
Efforts to contact Tajamuka leader Promise Mkwananzi were fruitless as his mobile phone was switched off.

However, the pressure group later issued a statement stating that heavy rains had disrupted logistics, making the demonstration unsuccessful.

“We pledge to continue to pursue the right to peaceful protest as encapsulated in Section 59 of our country’s Constitution. In that regard, our demonstration has been postponed to a later date,” #Tajamuka said.

Vendors Initiative for Social and Economic Transformation (Viset) leaders were also not available for comment as their mobiles were also unavailable.

Recently, Zimbabwe Peace Project(ZPP) accused police and HCC of disregarding a court order by High Court judge David Mangota to stop the removal of vendors from the CBD.
ZPP said the two institutions continued to violate laws by forging ahead with the raids on informal traders despite a court injunction.

“According to the lawyers representing Viset, the court order was delivered to HCC officials and the police commissioner-general Augustine Chihuri.

“Despite this, police and council municipal police are still raiding vendors in the city centre in contempt of the court order,” ZPP said in a statement. Daily News

#ThisJacket – Mudenda Has No Right To Tell MPs What To Wear

HARARE – Mutasa Central MDC MP, Trevor Saruwaka, yesterday said House of
Assembly speaker, Jacob Mudenda, has no right to determine the colour of
clothes he wears in Parliament.

In October last year, Saruwaka was ejected from Parliament for wearing a
jacket adorned with Zimbabwe’s national flag colours.

In protest, he approached the High Court over the move, which created
commotion in Parliament resulting in police intervention.

Saruwaka argued in court yesterday that his ejection from Parliament for
wearing the jacket was unlawful and an infringement of his right to
freedom of conscience and religion.

He further said there was no provision in the Standing Rules and Orders of
the Parliament that bars him from wearing such colours.

In the application, Saruwaka – who is represented by attorneys from
Kadzere, Hungwe & Mandevere Legal Practitioners – cited Mudenda and the
chief security officer of Parliament as respondents.

Saruwaka said he is an avowed follower of the Rastafari religion, adding
that the colours on his jacket are synonymous with his religion.

“…it is respectfully submitted that, applicant (Saruwaka) being of the
Rastafari religion, has a right to freedom of conscience and religion in
terms of Section 60 of the Constitution, which right includes the right to
propagate his religious beliefs whether in private or in public within the
confines of the law.

“By arbitrarily denying applicant access to Parliament, respondents have
elevated themselves above the Constitution without lawful cause. There is
no legal basis upon which applicant can be barred from entering
Parliament,” the court heard.

He said he is entitled to protection by the law.

“It is further submitted that, respondents do not have the power to
determine the colour of the jacket applicant wears. The respondents are
therefore acting outside the scope of their powers by ejecting applicant
from National Assembly sessions on account of wearing the jacket in
question,” he said.

He added that according to the provisions of Standing Order 76 (7), only
jeans, T-shirts and sleeveless outfits, are prohibited from the House.

“Nowhere is it mentioned that jackets such as the one worn by the
applicant are prohibited,” he said, adding that his jacket does not in any
way offend the national flag.

Saruwaka’s Parliament “drama” took place after Mudenda ruled in June last
year that the national flag would not be allowed in the House, following a
plethora of protestors donning the flag during demonstrations against
President Robert Mugabe’s 36-year rule.

Several MDC parliamentarians, including Saruwaka, had entered the House
with national flags draped around their necks.

The national flag became a protest symbol after it was popularised by
self-exiled cleric – Evan Mawarire of #ThisFlag movement.

The movement demanded Mugabe’s immediate resignation, citing his
administration’s failure to deal with corruption, nepotism and a serious
economic meltdown. – Daily News

Potholes A Reflection Of Zims Total Collapse

Former Finance minister Tendai Biti is famed for using dramatic language to drive home a point whenever he speaks about Zimbabwe’s decay and Zanu PF’s role in the tragedy, but this time government might agree with his assessment of the state of the country’s roads.

After weeks of heavy rainfall, the country’s poorly maintained road network deteriorated to shocking levels and jolted President Robert Mugabe’s government into action.

Last week the government declared Harare’s potholed roads a national disaster in a desperate move to raise funds for their rehabilitation and Biti — now the leader of the opposition People’s Democratic Party (PDP) — said it was too little too late.

He said it was not only Harare’s roads that needed attention but the whole country’s infrastructure was “now a disaster.”

“This government can’t pay salaries for its workers and expecting them to secure money to fix the country’s national road network was expecting too much from them,” he told The Standard.

“Declaring the roads a state of national disaster is just theoretical, the roads are a disaster and the country now qualifies to be a pothole capital of the world.

“Just like the [Democratic Republic of Congo] DRC, which has the worst road network, Zimbabwe is a failed state.”

Biti said during his tenure as Finance minister, it was established that Zimbabwe needed $14 billion to rehabilitate the road network, which was three times the country’s budget.

Of that amount, about $5 billion would be used to rehabilitate major trunk roads.

The PDP leader said naturally, a declaration of state of disaster would attract donors and international financers to fund the rehabilitation of roads, but Zimbabwe had become unattractive for capital.

“This is the huge prize the country is paying for running a corrupt government,” he said.

“The Lima process [that involved Zimbabwe’s reengagement with major donors] has failed and money cannot be accessed from international monetary institutions, including the African Development Bank.

“Only a new government with credibility can get foreign funds.

“This government has failed to build the Tokwe-Mukosi Dam in 37 years, what can they achieve today?”

For decades, the government has neglected maintenance of the road network inherited from the colonial government.

The majority of the roads have outlived their life-span and there has been little investment on infrastructure.

The Beitbridge-Harare road, which links Zimbabwe and Zambia to the county’s biggest trading partner, South Africa, has deteriorated over the years, causing many otherwise avoidable accidents that have resulted in thousands of deaths.

Most motorists have lost tyres to potholes while the patching of roads have been done poorly, denying the heavily taxed motorists comfortable rides.

The rail network has not been spared either and the National Railways of Zimbabwe’s operations are almost at a standstill.

This has piled pressure on the road network as haulage trucks are filling the void left by the disappearance of goods trains.

In 2014, when Obert Mpofu was appointed Transport minister, he doubled toll fees and increased the number of toll plazas, claiming he was doing so to increase revenue for road rehabilitation.

At the time, Mpofu said the Zimbabwe National Roads Administration (Zinara) was collecting $40 million annually in toll fees, which he said was only enough to tar 30km.

He said relying on Zinara’s collections would take the country 100 years to repair its 80 000 km road network.

But despite the promise, the roads deteriorated under Mpofu’s watch while reports of corruption continued to rock Zinara, with some bosses at the road authority becoming targets of Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission raids.

Conflicting statements have been issued by ministers on how much Zinara has been getting through toll fees, with Transport minister Jorum Gumbo last week revealing that the road fund was collecting $200 million annually.

In the rural areas, the gravel roads are a sorry sight. Perennial neglect has seen some of the roads disappearing as the District Development Fund has failed to cope with maintenance requirements due to poor funding from government.

Bridges have collapsed while grass has closed in on the roads, most of which have been reduced to mere foot paths. Some roads constructed by the colonial regime have been reduced to strip roads.

However, the biggest disaster has been in cities, including the capital Harare whose 5 000km road network is now infested with potholes.

The Combined Harare Residents Association (CHRA) said while it believed that the deterioration of the road network was due to council’s failure to maintain them, Zinara must return the management of licence fees to the local authority.

“We would, however, like to point out that the road problem in Harare has deteriorated over the last five years largely due to non-maintenance by the Harare City Council,” CHRA said on its Facebook page.

“We firmly believe that in order to find a lasting solution to the roads problem in Harare, you need to push for and support our call to return the management of vehicle license fees to the city council from the Zimbabwe National Roads Administration.”

Biti said the Zanu PF government had no capacity to raise funds to rehabilitate the roads because of its tainted record.

But Local Government minister Saviour Kasukuwere — who toured Harare’s roads before the declaration of the state of disaster — believes the move was the panacea for the mounting problems.

“We have agreed on a programme with the minister of Transport [to rehabilitate the roads],” he said.

“We will get the necessary and important support from government.”

Kasukuwere admitted that the government had no money to fix the roads but insisted that a way out would be found.

“It’s tough but we have to repair the road network. We will find the resources,” he said.

“Roads are key to communication and economic activity.

“It’s not going to be easy but with the initial support, the Ministry of Transport has set aside we will start [working the road]”.

During the tenure of the inclusive government, government secured a loan from the Development Bank of South African to rehabilitate the Mutare-Harare- Plumtree highway, raising hopes that the country would upgrade its national highways to international standards but it became the only major infrastructure project undertaken during the period.

Last month, the government signed an agreement with a Chinese company to rehabilitate the Beitbridge-Harare highway at a cost of $2 billion, but Biti said at most, the project must cost $700 million — $1 million per km, not $3 million.

“This is a result of corruption, figures are inflated,” he charged.

Zimbabwe’s neighbours Zambia, Botswana and South Africa have invested heavily in their road infrastructure and the country is now on the verge of losing its status as a transport hub in the region. – The Standard

Why a Coalition May Elude Zim Opposition | OPINION

JOHANNESBURG — In the absence of a united opposition, President Robert Mugabe — who will be 94 years old when the 2018 polls take place in Zimbabwe — is tipped to retain control of the country for another five-year term.

Mugabe has been in power since independence in April 1980 and his probable win would be aided in part by the tight control he still wields over the state apparatus and the refusal by his ruling Zanu PF to implement election reforms — as stipulated by a new constitution — which, if followed, would level the political playing field.

Zanu PF is deeply divided over the issue of Mugabe’s successor, but this has not stopped it from naming him as the sole candidate for the polls at its party conference in December.
The deep divisions among the opposition’s ranks over whether to enter into a coalition arrangement may alter what happens next.

“I don’t see a coalition taking place, as the main contenders for the presidency both see themselves as viable candidates,” says Ibbo Mandaza, director and founder of the Sapes Trust, a Harare-based think tank. “I don’t see Morgan Tsvangirai and Joice Mujuru coming together.”

Tsvangirai leads the largest opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC-T). The next polls will be his fourth attempt since 2002 to wrest power from Mugabe.
His previous election defeats at the hands of Mugabe and in particular his 2013 election loss led to calls for him to pass the baton to someone else. But Tsvangirai has resisted such calls.
“You can’t change the [leader] right in the middle of a struggle,” he often tells critics.
MDC-T insiders say that though the party projects an image of approval for a coalition arrangement, the issue has split the party right down the middle.

Those opposed are sceptical of joining hands with Mujuru, who served under Mugabe for 10 years as his deputy and was a cabinet minister since 1980. Some see her as a person who would taint the MDC-T. Mujuru now heads the Zimbabwe People First party.
Deliberations by the MDC-T’s top brass last year set out stringent conditions for a possible coalition. Ex-party members who have broken away from Tsvangirai are likely to be left out in the cold.

This especially includes Tendai Biti, the former MDC-T secretary-general and one-time Tsvangirai right-hand man, who left the MDC-T in 2014. Biti now leads the People’s Democratic Party.

The MDC-T has insisted that the coalition candidate must be someone who is able to win an election against Mugabe.
The issue will also be put to the MDC-T’s grassroots supporters. Tsvangirai is set to canvass the opinion of his supporters this week.
The MDC-T says Tsvangirai will embark on a “highly interactive tour” of the country’s 10 provinces.

He will meet “ordinary people, party structures, as well as opinion leaders in the country’s provinces to hear them out on the crisis facing the country, as well as other national issues — alliance building being key among them,” it says.

Meanwhile, political observers say that with Zimbabwe quickly slipping into election mode, social movements, which gained traction last year, could play second fiddle to political parties themselves. Social movements such as #ThisFlag and #Tajamuka riled authorities last year as they called for mass protests and for Mugabe to step down.
Political commentator Vivid Gwede says social activist leaders will remain relevant in the short term and are a vital cog in highlighting the issues of ordinary people, while the political players haggle over positions.

“I see them [social activists] as being either roped into or sidelined by the coming electoral tide. They have to fight to keep their heads above water,” Gwede says. — Financial Mail

Mujuru Loses Ally, Mnangagwa Dirty Hands Fingered

Namhla Ntandwa |Former Vice-President and Zim People First leader, Joice Mujuru, has lost an ally and party founding member, Colonel (Retired) Claudius Makova, amidst speculation that Emmerson Mnangagwa, is out to finish her.

There is no love lost between Mujuru and Mnangagwa as their political battles date back to over a decade ago when President Mugabe favoured her to deputise him, ahead of Mnangagwa who apparently had majority provinces on his side.

Analysis

For Mnangagwa dealing with Mujuru is unfinished business as he loads every gun at his disposal to shoot at her, furthermore, not making an attempt to conceal his devious political schemes.

Left on her own, Mujuru now has to fight Mnangagwa with bare knuckles, her husband Solomon now late and no longer President Mugabe’s favourite female politician whose largess she enjoyed to no end as a Zanu PF politician.

Mujuru last week made sensational claims that she knew the scheming ruling Zanu PF party was out to destabilise her new outfit which poses the greatest threat to Mugabe, claiming that one of her officials still to be named had been lured with a $90 000 bribe.

“We hear that among our war veterans in the party, someone was given $90 000 so that they keep quiet. Such is the level of Zanu PF infiltration, which has targeted us more than the MDC-T,” said Mujuru as she threw the final dice in campaigning for her Bikita-West candidate.

“They are no longer worried about the MDC-T, but the focus is now on us,” she said referring to Morgan Tsvangirai, who has survived jail and assassination attempts from the ruling Zanu PF party agents.

Several weeks ago Mujuru fired another top ally former Information deputy minister, Bright Matonga, on spying allegations. “Matonga was expelled a few weeks ago after being accused of being a spy for the military and especially for a faction of Zanu PF associated with Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa,” a ZimPF source told journalists.

And now soon after this Mujuru’s revelation of infiltration, close ally Colonel (Retired) Claudius Makova resigned from Zim People First citing the dismal loss in the Bikita-West election to Zanu PF.

Disturbing however, is that before the ink has dried on Makova’s resignation letter, he has made state media headlines, singing praises of President Mugabe, in the Emmerson Mnangagwa controlled state media.

The state media reports that the former provincial co-ordinator  has indicated his desire to return to Zanu-PF while lavishing President Mugabe with praises, saying the revolutionary party remains strong under his leadership.

“Nobody wanted to leave Zanu-PF, but we were expelled. There is no way I can go back and bow to these small boys. I will only bow to senior people such as President Mugabe and Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa. I have great respect for President Mugabe, ” Makova is quoted saying.

Speaking to journalists in Harare last week, Rtd Col Makova also opened up on goings-on in ZimPF, including the leadership’s frustration at failing to garner grassroots support for a proposed opposition coalition.

Rtd Col Makova quit his post following ZimPF’s thumping defeat at Zanu-PF’s hands in the January 20 Bikita West National Assembly by-election – the first poll the opposition outfit has participated in since its launch in early 2016.

The Mnangagwa media further claims that the defeat sent senior party officials scampering for cover from the humiliation, with some said to be baying for the blood of their leader, Mujuru.

“I realised that if my party has lost in my own backyard, I cannot expect to win again in my area. It’s time to give others a chance, but I will remain an ordinary member.”
Rtd Col Makova said he was still bitter about his expulsion from Zanu-PF after being linked to Dr Mujuru’s ill-fated attempt to unconstitutionally unseat President Mugabe in both Government and the ruling party.

He said he would, however, “consider the option of returning”.
“It was not a choice to form People First, but there was no other alternative. I am hurt and I do not see myself going back. But if Zanu-PF apologises for what it did, then maybe I will start considering that option.

Mliswa Builds Mortuary For Norton Residents

By Shyleen Mtandwa |  Barely three months after his election into office, Norton independent legislator, Temba Mliswa is mobilising resources needed for the construction of a mortuary at Norton hospital.

“Norton hospital is not in good shape, at the hospital there’s no functioning mortuary and one is needed,”said Mliswa.

“We are looking at around $18 000 to $22 000 as quoted by the department public works for the whole project to be completed.”

“We have 16 wards in Norton and we have said that each ward should raise $1000 because we believe in community ownership of every project in Norton,”he said

The firebrand politician said he was working with development partners to develop Norton.

Mnangagwa Sabotages Mugabe’s Birthday Bash

By Ray Nkosi  Organisers of President Robert Mugabe’s 93rd birthday to be held in the Gukurahundi wounded Matobo district, next month, are in severe factional fights threatening the success of the event, with reports of internal sabotaging.

A faction aligned to Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa is reported to be causing confusion in the preparations of the already controversy ridden birthday celebrations.

ZimEye can reveal that party sources close to the organising committee say that the organisers are failing to agree with each other on a number of issues evidently influenced by factional wars in the party.

According to the sources there is a team of identified members who are reportedly deliberately sabotaging the preparations of the event in what they described as; “directives being issued to the team by some senior officials in Harare.”

The sources claim that the team deliberately delays or ignores sourcing for vital materials and equipment needed in the preparations for the birthday bash expected to gobble up almost a million dollars. Due to the team’s sabotage activities the preparations are reportedly running way behind schedule guaranteeing a possible flop of the event.

As the divisions became very evident and dirty with near fist fights among the committee members, Minister for Provincial Affairs, for Matabeleland South Abednico Ncube, had to last week convene an urgent meeting of the organising committee to try and solve the factional divisions in the committee.

Addressing the committee, Ncube called on the organisers to be united and focus on making the event a success “for the sake of President Mugabe.”

“We may have our separate differences within the party but we all remain loving our President and we therefore must remain united for his sake as we prepare for his birthday celebrations,” said Ncube.

Leader of the Matabeleland based cultural group Ibhetshu Likazulu, Mr Mbuso Fuzwayo last week told the media that the hosting of the event a few kilometers from ZANU PF and Mugabe orchestrated Gukurahundi genocide mass graves will not be a success as it is not having the blessing of the spirits of the people who are buried in shallow graves around the area.

A local headman who would not be named, yesterday told ZimEye.com that they are not surprised by the fights within the organisers as the spirits in the area are fighting for the people against ZANU PF’s forced hosting of the event in the area.

“The gods are at play in this whole confusion. We can also see it as bystanders as these people fight and quarrel right in front of us even failing to agree on simple things like the direction which the tents must face,” he said.

“In our culture we believe that those who the gods want to destroy they first make them confused and mad and that is exactly what is happening to these ZANU PF people here,” he added.

The no nonsense Party National Commissar Saviour Kasukuwere is reportedly going to be meeting with the committees this week and heads are expected to roll in his assignment to bring sanity into the event preparations.

Trump In Trouble

A federal judge in New York has issued an emergency stay temporarily halting the removal of individuals detained after President Trump issued an order to ban immigrants from seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the U.S.

The move appears to mark the first successful legal challenge to the Trump administration and affects those who have arrived in the U.S. with previously approved refugee applications or were in transit with valid visas.

U.S. District Court Judge Ann Donnelly ruled in favor of a habeas corpus petition filed by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) on behalf of two Iraqi men who were detained at John F. Kennedy International Airport on Friday after Trump signed his order.

Donnelly, who was nominated by former President Barack Obama and confirmed to her judgeship in 2015, ruled in the Eastern District of New York that “there is imminent danger that, absent the stay of removal, there will be substantial and irreparable injury to refugees, visa-holders, and other individuals from nations subject” to Trump’s order.

“This ruling preserves the status quo and ensures that people who have been granted permission to be in this country are not illegally removed off U.S. soil,” said Lee Gelernt, deputy director of the ACLU’s Immigrants’ Rights Project.

The ruling deals with a portion of Trump’s order handed down Friday, which bars Syrian refugees indefinitely and halts the resettlement of all refugees for four months as the administration reviews the vetting process.

The order also denies entry for 90 days for individuals from seven predominantly Muslims countries: Iraq, Iran, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Libya and Yemen.

“Clearly the judge understood the possibility for irreparable harm to hundreds of immigrants and lawful visitors to this country,” ACLU Executive Director Anthony D. Romero said in a statement.

“Our courts today worked as they should as bulwarks against government abuse or unconstitutional policies and orders. On week one, Donald Trump suffered his first loss in court.”

The order Saturday evening capped off a chaotic first day following Trump’s directive, as the administration moved to implement his order, with reports emerging of individuals being detained at a number of airports across the country.

The Department of Homeland Security said Trump’s order would apply to green card holders from the seven impacted countries.

“President Trump and his administration are right to be concerned about national security, but it’s unacceptable when even legal permanent residents are being detained or turned away at airports and ports of entry,” Republican Sen. Jeff Flake (Ariz.) said in a statement.

A senior administration official said green card holders from the countries who are currently outside the U.S. will need a case-by-case waiver to return to the U.S. and green card holders in the U.S. would need to meet with a consular officer before leaving the country.

An administration official also said that Trump advisers had been in contact with the State Department and Department of Homeland Security for weeks prior to the issuing of his Friday order, arguing it affected a “relatively small” number of people.

“It’s important to keep in mind that no person living or residing overseas has a right to entry to the U.S.,” the official said.

But backlash on Saturday to the order was swift from civil-rights groups, businesses and various Democratic officials, which condemned it as a departure from the U.S. tradition of accepting refugees and comparing it to Trump’s campaign proposal to temporarily ban Muslim migrants.

Rep. Nydia Velázquez (D-N.Y.) slammed Trump’s executive order outside JFK where she and fellow Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) worked to secure release of the two Iraqi men, calling it “arbitrary” and “unjust.”

Democrats also pressed the Trump administration for further explanation on the order, with Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) called on the Department of Homeland Security to immediate “rescind” it.

“It’s not a Muslim ban, but we are totally prepared,” Trump told media gathered in the Oval Office on Saturday afternoon as he signed three new executive orders on lobbying, a plan to defeat the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and a reorganization of the National Security Council.
“It’s working out very nicely. You see it in the airports, you see it all over. It’s working out very nicely and we are going to have a very, very strict ban and we are going to have extreme vetting, which we should have had in this country for many years,” Trump said. – The Hill

MUGABE OUT: Tsvangirai, Mujuru Pact Close

It is almost a year since former vice-president Joice Mujuru announced her entry into opposition politics after her expulsion from Zanu PF in 2015.

Her Zimbabwe People First (ZimPF) on January 21 fielded a parliamentary candidate for the first time in the Bikita West by-election and its performance left some doubting Mujuru’s capacity to take on President Robert Mugabe in next year’s elections.

However, Mujuru (JM) yesterday told our chief reporter Everson Mushava (EM) that the polls had proven that ZimPF was a force to reckon with and she is confident that she will be a big factor come 2018.

Below are excerpts of the interview.

EM: What motivated you to go against the National Electoral Reform Agenda (Nera) position not to take part in elections until there were reforms? Why did you field a candidate in the recent Bikita West by-election?

JM: Thank you very much for making time to come and have a discussion with me after the Bikita elections. First of all, let me tell you that People First respects the ideas and the will of the people.

The decision to go to Bikita West was not an individual call, it came from the people.

Yes, as Nera, we are talking about levelling the playing field, areas that need reforming and so on. It has not been our position that we don’t participate in any election.

Going to Bikita is not something that we regret, but it is something that we agreed upon as a party.

EM: After ZimPF’s “poor showing”, there are sentiments that you were left weakened.What is your comment on that?

JM: I don’t know who marks or who gives the levels at which parties should be commended as having done an excellent job at a given period of time and so on, but let me tell you that as PF, we are saluting ourselves because we are a party that has been in this business for less than a year and have done a lot under very difficult circumstances.

We went in knowing for sure we were going to encounter such problems like we have been hearing from other opposition parties we work with in Nera.

We now appreciate practically what others have been saying when they said the playing field is not level.

I can now tell you the ground is not level because we have tested it.

Right now I am a well-informed leader of PF that it is not fabrication that the playing field is not level. We have tested the pudding.

EM: Is there any truth in the allegations that Zanu PF was engaged in vote-buying and intimidation of voters ahead of the by-election?

JM: Like I said before, we experienced it. For example, when someone who is able to use an advanced iPhone would come on voting day and say “I can’t read and write, so help me”.

We could see desks set 100m from the polling stations (manned by officials), threatening people that they were seeing who they were voting for. It was a way of frightening voters.

How on earth can we do something like this to the voters? Because of the nature of Zanu PF, people believed it and they have been telling us.

The kraal heads were told to march their people to the voting centres and this is exactly what we have been hearing and for us we can say, “yes we have now witnessed that”.

EM: Don’t you think your participation in the polls may affect your relationship with other Nera members who are pushing for electoral reforms?

JM: I think about two, three days ago [Dr] Morgan Tsvangirai was in the papers informing the nation and the world that he is comfortable working with PF.

I am sure he saw that we mean serious business. PF and the MDC-T are very serious about working for the freedom that the people of Zimbabwe are looking forward to.

We are not just talking about this freedom with Dr Tsvangirai’s party or Dr Tsvangirai himself, but many other opposition parties.

We are doing it bilaterally, multilaterally and so on. So I don’t think there will be anybody questioning our worthiness at going into a coalition.

EM: There are some in ZimPF who are accusing you of failing to stamp your authority and stop Retired Colonel Makova from imposing Kudakwashe Gopo, your losing candidate in the Bikita West by-election. They say he dragged the whole party into the polls unprepared. What is your comment on that?

JM: I don’t understand when people are talking about authority of an individual. When you try to question such decisions, they will say we don’t want one centre of power.

The decision to take Gopo as our candidate for Bikita West was not supposed to be an individual or the president’s decision.

It was a party decision. It was not a Makova decision.

Yes, Makova was the provincial coordinator and mind you, when you are the coordinator you are just a postman, you have no decision of your own, you take the people’s will and Makova was approached by the Bikita West people and he only passed it on to the party.

We discussed about the issue and agreed we were going to go into Bikita West.

JM: MDC-T claimed it distanced itself from supporting you because you fielded a candidate accused of human rights violations during his time in Zanu PF. Did you learn any lessons from this?

JM: As democratic forces, we wouldn’t want to be seen as moving sideways. We want to be pulling together, we don’t want to be creating difficulties amongst ourselves when we know for sure that we have one enemy and then we are seen creating enemies amongst ourselves, but with this situation of Bikita West, that one I didn’t hear about it. If it happened it’s unfortunate.

EM: Do you think the problems encountered during the by-election can be resolved before the 2018 plebiscite?

JM: Like I have said already, it is now the first-hand information that we can share with others who had this experience before us.

But right now as PF with this involvement, we can tell you that these things happen and we think in future we will find ways of how to really try and make things work the other way.

We now know Zanu PF has its own tactics of doing things and we have to strategise against them.

EM: Are you still committed to a coalition with other opposition parties ahead of 2018 and are you happy with the progress made so far?

JM: Like what I have said already, from what you have heard from Dr Tsvangirai that he is ready to work with PF and that even from our side, we are also ready to work with other democratic forces that are ready to work with us.

Right now it is MDC-T we are talking to on bilateral basis, but we also have many more that we are talking to.

So for 2018, we are sure the democratic forces will be ready to work together because the enemy we are facing is one.

We are not enemies amongst ourselves as opposition parties.

But we know what the Zimbabwean people are aiming to have at the moment, so our focus is to bridge the gaps that separate us so that come 2018, which is very close, we will pull together.

EM: Some observers say you and MDC-T are arrogant because you only want a coalition among yourselves. Is that how you see the talks from your side?

JM: There were many issues put to thought because of us not going to Cape Town [for talks with other opposition parties last year] but that we are probably trying to get rid of other parties before 2018; that is not true.

As we have been working with other parties, and may be you noticed that many parties attended out provincial rallies. You can’t say we are discriminating against other political parties.

EM: Do you think your loss in Bikita will compromise your bargaining power in the negotiations?

JM: I don’t think there will be a compromise at all in any talks that are yet to come. In fact, it should give them confidence that PF is a force to reckon with because of what we have done is such a short space of time.

If you compare us with other parties, we have managed to participate in an election, in less than a year we have managed to register our party, in less than a year we have managed to have 10 launches in each province.

So how many parties do we have in Zimbabwe that have managed to do that in a short space of time?
As I am telling you right now, we have managed to come up with a constitution, having consulted countrywide.

The rural people are joining us because they are saying this is the time that we should just show the world that no, what we fought for never came and this is the time that it should come to the people.

EM: Does the lack of substantive office bearers have any bearing on the alleged infighting in your party?

JM: You know it’s a party that is less than a year old and I know of parties that are many years older than us that have not held their conventions, but with us a convention is inevitable and we have said it just has to be there.

For your own information, it is going to happen because our constitution is ready now and we wouldn’t have gone to that convention without a document that we are satisfied with.

EM: When will ZimPF be finally launched considering that it is almost a year since you first announced your intention to form a political party and that 2018 elections are drawing close?

JM: I don’t know why people love to talk about fights. Fights are where you see people having blood gushing all over, taking each other to courts and people paying fines and so forth.

I think when people have different opinions, people want to turn them to fights, different opinions are allowed even among brothers and sisters, even between a husband a wife fights are allowed.

Those are democratic processes and if you don’t have such things happening, how would you then try to crystalise your process?

How are you going to come up one day and be proud of the good job that you have done in future?

What we are doing is not only for the present. People are working on the process of having this country run properly under a good party and that party should be based on a well-set foundation and if you don’t set the foundation properly, it will not go any far.

So what we are doing takes time and when we are doing it, like what we have told you, consulting people takes time.

EM: Don’t you think time is running out for 2018?

JM: For PF, this is where democracy plays out; we have to go to and fro consulting people. It is good to see the common fabric that is running within the minds of the people. We have to take our time to know the people we are dealing with.

What if some of them wake up one day and become informants? It’s the game of politics. You need time to learn about each other, understanding issues.

EM: You recently told SABC that you are ready to forgive Mugabe if you win the forthcoming elections. Can you tell us more about your position?

JM: We are a Christian country, and I believe forgiveness is what we are taught and some of us we have grown to understand and if you are a leader who does not believe in forgiveness and you want to apply the rule of an eye for an eye and retributive tendencies are applied and all those ills that you can think of that cause the nation to be at each other’s throat, can we call that a nation?

I am sure that the nation of Zimbabwe is tired; they want peace, like what we have agreed in our Constitution.

We have a department for the peace and reconciliation because we believe in peace, like what happened, many other things happened in this country, a lot of people have pronounced a lot about Gukurahundi, they gloss over it.

As Zimbabweans, we have a culture and those are the things we say as PF we need to make sure that they are more pronounced, developed, not just for us, but for future generations.

We have our own ways of solving disputes as Zimbabwe. There are peaceful ways of addressing mistakes.

EM: Having been in the ruling party for 43 years, do you miss being in government?

JM: If I ask, is there a government to miss today? I don’t think so. And let me tell you, with what is happening, that there is this group that is sharpening its tools to fight another group, and in PF we say we want peace, you ask yourself, would I be willing to be in such a situation.

What role would I be playing right now? Some of us are not of the fighting spirit.

Rather than sitting on the terraces and watch Zanu PF decimate the little that is left of this country, it’s better we join hands with democratic forces in Zimbabwe and give peace and freedom to the people of Zimbabwe. – The Standard

BREAKING NEWS: Dokora Orders All Schools to Empty Their Bank Accounts for ZANU PF

Staff Reporter| Despite assurances that he was going to wait for stakeholder consultations, Education Minister Lazarus Dokora has ordered all schools to empty their bank accounts (school levy) and dish everything into his ZANU PF run bank account whose signatories are unknown.

The development is set to see education standards deteriorate. ZimEye analysts today reveal that if government stops interfering, most schools aroud the country will successfully create quality education for every school pupil, READ THE UPCOMING ARTICLE: Zimbabwe Free Primary & Secondary Education for Everyone Plan.

In a government circular seen by ZimEye.com ordering all school headmasters dated Wednesday 25th January, Dokora’s office said in a statement, “All funds in the School Development Committee account should be transferred into the School Services Account by the 1st February 2017.”

The latter bank account’s signatories are not known.

Dokora introduced the School Services Account in March last year when he first made his intentions known shortly before being resisted.

One of the letters was signed by District School s Inspector, A Mugumbate (Harare Metropolitican Province.)

The development will see Dokora’s ministry for the first time control all school development funds.

It will most likely compromise the quality of education in the country, a petition read last year.

“We need answers and proof that government through consultative processes has considered all facets and legal frameworks namely, the Public Finance Management Act (Chapter 22: 19), Audit and Exchequer Act (Chapter 22:03) before giving this directive.

“Why didn’t the ministry plan for this and conferenced with committees beforehand? The question is, who are (the) signatories to the SSF?,” it stated. MORE TO FOLLOW, ALSO READ THE UPCOMING ARTICLE: Zimbabwe Free Primary & Secondary Education for Everyone Plan.

“Mugabe Is Jesus!” Man In Trouble as the Mysterious Fire That Suddenly Gutted His House Is Probed | LATEST

The fire that gutted the ZANU PF youth leader who claimed that President Robert Mugabe is Jesus’s house, has gone under investigation.

Kudzai Chipanga this month said that President Robert Mugabe is Zimbabwe’s Jesus Christ, a development that suddenly saw his farm property going under the mysterious fire. There had been claims that the mishap was in fact an attack by political enemies.

But close sources have told ZimEye there was no connection whatsoever with outsiders. Reports say a mysteriously overheated electrical wiring caused the fire that resulted in more than $15,000 in damage. No one was inside the residence at the time of the incident, Chipanga says.

Others blame the man’s wife for it all. “The home caught fire due to negligence on the part of his wife, that had nothing to do with politics, purely accident,” one Youth League source said.

Chipanga’s farm property was torched down to ashes shortly after he uttered the blasphemous statements equating the 92 year old ailing leader to Jesus Christ of the Holy Bible.

Property worth over USD15,000 were set ablaze at his Headlands plot on Wednesday.

 

 

Background.

Chipanga 12-roomed farmhouse in Headlands was suddenly made worthless in what some now claim was a politically instigated attack.

Chipanga earlier on confirmed the development saying “Yes, I lost a 12-roomed house. The house was razed down by fire and we suspect an electrical fault to have caused the fire. We made a police report and they said they were investigating the matter. Luckily, there was no one in the house. I lost household goods worth almost $15 000.’

However his party-mates say the values are above $18,000.

ZimEye reveals that many ZANU PF farm properties have gone up in smoke in recent years in unexplained circumstances. Former Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono’s property has suffered the same fate. The man’s farm properties have been attacked (4) four times since 2011. In August 2011, his warehouse at his poultry plot in Borrowdale was destroyed by fire, rendering goods valued at over US$100 000 worthless.  In July 2013, property worth about US$30,000 was destroyed when fire gutted facilities at Gono’s chicken farm.

But Zanu PF Manicaland provincial youth chairperson, Mubuso Chinguno, has implicated a rival faction opposed to Chipanga’s camp for the alleged arson.

“When he was given that farm, some politburo members and a minister from Makoni were against the idea. There was a time when even some senior officials incited villagers to demonstrate against Chipanga over the farm. We are not going to be intimidated, as we carry out our own independent investigations into the incident,” he said.

Prophets TB Joshua, Uebert Angel, Magaya Go MIA | AFCON 2017

The Africa Cup of Nations is upon us now and one thing that has been conspicuous by its absence is the flurry of prophecies and predictions by the so called Men of God of the likely outcome in this tournament. I “googled” and searched the web to make sure I did not miss a single “prophecy” from our fine prophets of Africa. But alas there is none indeed, not on You Tube, not on Tweeter, not on Facebook and not on Whatsapp; nowhere on social media will you find a prophecy on the possible outcome of the AFCON tournament.

In Nigeria, this is the stuff of the T B Joshuas of this world, they thrive on throwing a few hints into the air for the congregates to have it stuck in their heads that something like that was once mentioned, in preparation of doctoring the videos at a later stage to fit the outcome, but this time around nothing from the man. I mean, this is a man who has thrown a prophecy on practically everything happening in the world, from the next earthquake, flood, death of a president, artist, which dead artist is in hell to the next terror attack and the next president (oops, don’t go there) but this time, the silence is deafening, honestly. I guess Joshua has too much on his plate at the moment to try and conjure a miracle fake prophecy on the AFCON, what with the 116 deaths court case refusing to go away and a prophecy from one Nigerian prophet about T B Joshua’s own impending death? http://dailypost.ng/2016/12/26/t-b-joshuas-death-near-prophet-faleyimu-reveals-alarming-2017-predictions/, honestly football would be last thing to be concerned about.

Closer to home, our own Bulawayo based Blessing Chiza, our own soccer prophet, decided to stay clear from telling the nation how the Warriors were going to fare in the tournament after he misfired when he promised the Warriors that they would beat Libya by something like 3-1. Needless to say the Warriors went on to be thumped by the Libyans and our dear prophet started looking around for excuses. Ever since we have not heard any football result prediction coming from the direction of koBulawayo, and this is understandable. He wouldn’t want to get his prophesying cap burnt twice.

In the vicinity of Zindoga the warriors were not summoned this time for some anointing neither did any cash windfall come their way. The prophet with a PHD in practically everything, except of course prophesying, our versatile Walter Magaya didn’t want to take chances with the unpredictable Warriors like what he once did. He once took a shot at this football prediction game and told all who cared to listen that after blessing the Young Warriors, he wouldn’t reveal the final score but that there would be a penalty in the match the Young Warriors were about to play against Cameroon. In that match, a penalty is the only thing the football fans did not see. From that time Magaya exited the perilous field of football prophecy and has dared not be seen next to the national team again.

Enter the Tweeter Prophet, the dodgy Papa whose tweets we only get to see well after all the football kits and balls have been cleaned and packed away and the turf has been repaired. Enter Uebert Angel (Mudzanire) you can’t put it past this guy that he will release several backdated Tweets all telling us the correct results of all the major games and who is going to get to the finals and who the final winner will be. All we have to do is wait for the tournament to end and book a date with the press of the 6th of February 2017 and you will be able to see all of Papa’s correct predictions, “Just like you said it Papa the results came out exactly like that”, will read some of the congratulatory tweets from his blue-eyed partners in crime trying hard to make it all look authentic.

We will leave 777, (not 007) Emmanuel Makandiwa out of this, I have never heard him stake his tattered credibility on football results, the mushrooming gold, cracking Kariba wall and fat loss have done enough damage to him already. Maybe he has already told the prophecy to his privileged partners only, like he always does, remember the Hillary Clinton prophecy?

But to be honest none of the showy so called prophets, the whole breath and width of the African continent dared stack their credibility with attempting to predict the outcome of a single match let alone the results of the final match of the African Cup of Nations 2017. It’s not a risk worth taking, what are the chances of taking a wild guess out of 16 teams and come out with the correct final winner? Even the Polls are not helping these guys much, they are deafeningly silent on who could be the possible winner, what with all the big names absent from or doing badly at the tournament.

None of the men of god wants to go the TB Joshua Clinton way and later try to offer some lame excuses as to why the result did not come out the way they had said it. T B Joshua taught them all never to put your trust in the opinion Polls because surely you will lose church customers (because they bring the prophets lots of money). The simple reason they make and publish these guesses disguised as prophecies is to attract the miracle seekers and the gullible who bring along their hard earned money and leave it in the hands of these charlatans disguised as men of God.

Safe to say we won’t be seeing any of these fake prophets touch the AFCON 2017 with a budge pole, they are staying away from this one indeed; memories of the USA Elections are still fresh in the memories of all their customers and the world at large.

I don’t believe that God, in all his Might, can be so fascinated by worldly things such as football, when there are so many sinners that the All Mighty would wish they could hear his message. It goes to show that the football result prophecies or predictions are not from God, these men of fine suits are just mere sorcerers out to get your money by means of impressing you with thing that are not of God.

BONZO reSVOSVE
[email protected]

Kereke In Jukwa U-Turn

Fester Dube| Former Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono’s former aide, Munyaradzi Kereke has been recorded performing a u-turn on his previous pronouncements and statements against Gono.

The humiliated former Zanu-PF National Assembly representative for Bikita, has been recorded “unreservedly” apologising to Gono for tarnishing his image by making corruption allegations.

In the run up to the 2013 elections, Kereke made declarations which were published through the Mai Jukwa Facebook campaign. They included strong allegations that Gono stole the central bank’s gold coins.

But Kereke, who is serving a 10-year sentence for child rape, told the state media he has since withdrawn all court cases against Dr Gono who has given “credible and plausible explanations on a lot of the grey areas” that had caused problems between the two.

Kereke went on to apologise to President Robert Mugabe for tarnishing the country’s image, saying he and his former boss had not listened to President Mugabe’s advice on conflict resolution.

Kereke reportedly said, “From my heart, I would want to say to Dr Gono it’s good to rediscover each other, mukoma. It’s good to rediscover each other, mukoma. Rediscovering in the sense that we had gone so far, lost in our own appetite to fight and fight and fight and fight.”

The statements published in the Sunday Mail continued stating on Kereke’s words,

“More like fighting, but both of you are on a cliff. You can almost imagine what would happen. You are on a cliff and you are busy brawling. You may roll over and the results would be casualties beyond yourselves. It affects family, it affects the image of the country. It affects a lot of other things.”

“So I withdrew all my cases from the courts and elected that path where parties should really talk over as a way to get an end to this. And also factually, Dr Gono was able to give credible, plausible explanations on a lot of the grey areas that had caused us problems,” said Kereke who was in high spirits with a huge Bible by his side. Pressed to explain what really went wrong since the two had an “excellent” working relationship at the RBZ, Kereke said: “I think Dr Gono would be the best person to respond to that. You know, when two parts of the same body are attached and you separate them abruptly, there is trauma. There is bleeding. The part that has been amputated will remain with questions, but I want to say all of that is in the past now. All of that is in the past.”

Kereke explained how the dispute started, saying at one point when he returned to work from his annual leave, he was shocked when he was denied access into the Central Bank.

“Just so you know, I went on leave; it was in December. In January, when I drove to work, the doors were closed. No discussion, nothing. So, a lot of the issues about what went wrong, I would not be the best person to answer.

“But I want to insist again, this is now in retrospect. Whatever it was, I want to believe it’s finished now. We are now on the same page. We are now people who have found common ground.

“We have been communicating through lawyers, wanting to clarify areas where we had differences. I want to say that process went on very smoothly and cordially because either side wanted real closure, to get to the bottom of things. So, yes, we communicated through our legal counsels.”

Kereke added: “But the moment communication was opened, he was able to say ‘Ahhh, munin’ina, you know what, these funds whereas from the information you had, the file which you had, this went to Air Zimbabwe, this went to Zec’ and so on.

“We reconciled and I said, ‘Ahh, mukoma, this is correct.’

“So, there is no issue. We were able to tick line by line all these things and cleared all the grey areas. I came to the conclusion that there was perhaps on the part of my brother. . .he ought to have communicated better so that there was proper synchronisation of information.”

Asked whether he regrets what he did to Dr Gono, Kereke was emphatic in his response.

“Very much so. In fact, in my statement, I said things could have been managed differently and better perhaps,” he said.

Kereke went on to explain that he was making the apology out of his own volition.

“Certainly and for the record, no one talked me into this. It is a matter of wanting to clear my own conscience. It is a voluntary process. It is a process, I want to believe also Dr Gono has to move on with his life, so do I. We needed to clear the air. Certainly, no one talked me into this. . .

“We had driven each other to the cliff where everything was embarrassing now. We were losing face even to our wives and to our children. So, sense had to come in. We realised this is not good.

“And for the country, Dr Gono was governor of the Central Bank, appointed by the country’s leadership. On my part, I think I needed to have acted differently regardless of whatever he would have done. Whatever he would have done, I should have acted differently. I think in a way, I wasn’t sensitive. Without any shame, I tender my apologies to the country and to Dr Gono.

He went further to exonerate Dr Gono from all the corruption allegations he levelled against him.

Asked whether Dr Gono was corrupt, Kereke responded: “He is not. This has come about, you know, when you block dialogue, no pressure moves anything unless it’s contained. If you boil water, close it in a can, it blows up the thing. There is no movement.

“I think we didn’t share information as much as we have now done. We didn’t explain things because there was that sudden amputation. So, the question was: These things that I have, could they be the ones; the reasons I have been shunted out? Or what is it? But through dialogue, you then see that you join the two pieces together and they make a logical story which is quite plausible. . .

“Dr Gono and I, we were beyond workmates. We were like brothers. I think that’s perhaps the reason why the dispute had to go to such extremes. When you go to brothers who are very close, more like your own arm, you wake up one night, zaaappp, it’s taken off. There would be trauma. Any small glitch tends to snobble into a bigger dispute.

“Having said all this, I tendered my apologies to Dr Gono and his family to say, ‘Ahhh, mukoma, let’s be sensible. Regardless of whatever you had done, muri mukoma, muri mukuru kwandiri. You are my brother. I am sorry for the way I acted.’ He accepted the apology. Likewise, he said, ‘Munin’ina, whatever went wrong at any stage in our relationship, know that I have forgiven you and we want to live normally.’

“That’s at our level. But to the country, with a very clear conscience, I want to profusely apologise to the country’s leadership and the nation at large. To say really this brawl with Dr Gono risked tarnishing the image of the country. It was not good at all. We could have acted better and in a different way.

“I have an example. His Excellency always says, ‘Mukanetsana, even at party level, regardless kuti umwe atora dhongi remunhu or mbudzi, try to resolve the issue quietly muri kumacorner.’ I think, in a way, Dr Gono and I hatina kuteerera that advice. Fortunately, we have come to realise that it was the right advice.”

Kereke said he was aware that the dispute had affected Dr Gono’s businesses and his standing in the eyes of his partners.

“I have clearly stated in my statement that, ‘Don’t look at the brother-to-brother dispute that had come up as a reflection of his integrity, as a reflection of his inability to deliver. Please, see that this was a dispute.’

“People were throwing sling-shots. If you google the speeches he would give, sometimes the jabs he would give, offensive language that also came from me to him. It affects relationships.

“So, to the business community, honestly and with all sincerity, take it from the fact that the two parties have now reconciled. They did all they did in the midst of a conflict which was mishandled by both parties. We are pleased that it is over.”

Turning to the two families, Kereke said: “. . . to our families, we are so sorry. We acted irresponsibly as parents, fighting in public, in front of your eyes, in front of your ears. Know that this dispute is over and let’s live together again as family.”

Kereke explained that he had chosen to speak  state media because of its credibility and remarkably high circulation figures.

“I think it’s about credibility. The tragedy with our media these days is that they can turn something which is virtuous into something awfully terrible, depending on which side of the political equation that journalist is.

“I know certainly that The Sunday Mail has credibility, believability among the public. It’s also about circulation because we want people to know that the yesteryear conflict is no more. We have reconciled. We are one family.

“If Dr Gono were to bring me on a public holiday, we have the forthcoming Easter Holiday, cooked beef in a lunchbox, I would eat it without doubting or suspecting that there could be something in it. He can bring me a cup of coffee. He knows my sugar levels in tea. I take it without asking. So, it is at that level that we have come to reconcile.”

Asked what lessons he had learnt from the way he had handled the dispute with Dr Gono, Kereke said: “First, my advice to bosses is: If a junior has done something which you feel is not in congruence with what you would want, communicate effectively.

“You don’t lock the door and assume you have communicated. So, our separation with Dr Gono created the false impression that we had a lot of bad issues against each other. I couldn’t understand why all of a sudden I was shut out. So, it’s communication.

“Secondly, resolve your disputes as much as possible through dialogue. It is the right way. The results are much, much more effective. Look, we could have dragged each other to the courts, but the moment we took the dialogue way, information started to flow, exchanging files which clarified a lot of issues.”

He went on: “And we were saying, ‘What was the problem.’ All these years fighting when all these grey areas could have been cleared in a matter of a few weeks through proper dialogue. So, my advice would be don’t choose the aggressive path of fighting. If anything, embrace each other in the context of your difficulties; put communication and sensibility ahead of everything else.

“But in our own culture and even Biblically, I can’t remember which verse it is, which says, ‘Do not speak angrily to someone older than you’. I think I went off the rails. He could have come, poured hot water on my face. He could have come and insulted me in any way. . .I ought not have reacted the way I did.

“It was wrong and very, very bad. And I am sorry for that. . . Let me state it again boldly, handina kufoswa. It’s the conscience to want to do the right thing.”

Prophet Java Loses All


PASSION Java Ministries’ leader Prophet Passion Java’s fortune is crumbling like a deck of cards, as one of his last pieces of property is set to go under the hammer to recover an undisclosed sum owed to ViewSat Limited, a United Kingdom-based telecommunications firm.

The charismatic preacher, known for his extravagant lifestyle, is reportedly struggling to make-ends-meet after he was reportedly chucked out of his Borrowdale Brooke lodgings for failing to pay rentals.

He could not be reached for comment as mobile phone was not reachable with officials at his church saying he was “away in Ethiopia”.

Church members close to the 29 year-old man of the cloth said he had gone to Ethiopia to stay with his in-laws.

Due to mounting debts, a stand measuring 1 350m2 in Kadoma was recently attached by the Deputy Sheriff of the High Court and will be publicly auctioned by Bard Real Estate.

The property is set to be auctioned on February 3, 2017 at Raylton Sports Club in Harare to settle Prophet Passion’s obligations with ViewSat Limited.

In a notice last week, Bard Real Estate said: “In the matter between ViewSat Ltd vs Passion Java Ministries and 2 others: SS194/15: a certain piece of land situate (sic) in the district of Gatooma called stand 2983 Kadoma Township of stand 3341 Kadoma township measuring 1 350m2. Also known as stand 2983 Blue Ranges Kadoma. Improvements: unserviced residential stands Chinhoyi.”

ViewSat is one of the fastest-growing operators within the global broadcast and transmission services industry for television and radio channels.

Launched in 2006 to provide digital satellite services to private broadcasters in Africa, ViewSat is now active across the global marketplace with operations extending to Asia, Europe and North America.

The state media  Religion could not ascertain by the time of going to print if the property to be auctioned was in respect of US$37 500 owed to ViewSat for international telecommunication services provided to his church.

In April 2015, ViewSat was issued with a writ of execution directing attachment of movable property from Passion Java Ministries, Prophet Passion and his then wife, Yasmin Java.

The writ of execution was issued under case 11007/14.

Read part of the writ: “To the Sheriff for Zimbabwe or his lawful Deputy, you are required and directed to attach and take into execution the movable goods of Passion Java Ministries (formerly Kingdom Embassy), Passion Java and Yasmin Java of 109 Robert Mugabe Road, Harare and of the same cause to be realised the sum of US$37 500 plus interest thereon at two percent per month compounded on a monthly basis from 1st May 2014 to the date of payment plus costs of suit in the above mentioned suit and for you so doing this shall be your warrant.”

The writ followed a default judgment by Justice Mathonsi on March 3, 2015 at the High Court ordering the recovery of the US$37 500 and costs of the suit.

Some of the property attached at that point included a Leyland truck, public address system and chairs.

Prophet Passion dumped his former wife Yasmin in 2015 after a four-year marriage. The couple had been blessed with a son. He has since replaced Yasmin with Ethiopian beauty, Lily Tsegaye, who is said to be five months pregnant.

Prophet Passion is not new to controversy.

He once claimed to have performed a “miracle abortion” after allegedly praying for a woman who was four months pregnant. The woman claimed her lover had denied responsibility for the pregnancy and she was stranded.- State Media

Chihuri Fleeces Motorists

Dear Commissioner-General (Dr) Augustine Chihuri,
It is not often that your good office is addressed this way, but that we have resorted to this route might be an indication of the gravity of the matter at hand.

It is no longer a laughing matter. It is one of national importance.

The presence of the police on our roads, highways, motorways etc has reached proportions that it would be a miscarriage of justice if we keep quite about it.

Should we do so, our children will find us guilty, not by commission but by omission.

The police force has worked over the years to build its reputation.

But it is a sure bet that in the past year given their presence and penchant for fining people left, right and centre this behaviour might have eroded public confidence in the force.

Let’s be practical, Commissioner-General, lest you might think we are using emotions here.

How does one explain four roadblocks between Harare Drive, which marks the boundary of Harare, and Mazowe, a distance of less than 40km? An average of a roadblock every 10km!

The first of these roadblocks is right by Marlborough Police Station, which is understandable: a security check point for what is going or leaving the capital city.

Then either side of the Eskbank tollgate, either just after the National Defence College or just at Eskbank Farm, is the second of the roadblocks.

This is usually the mobile highway patrol team. If you miss them there, you are bound to meet them by the Christon Bank turn-off.

The third of the roadblocks is by Henderson Research Station, which has morphed into a 24-hour operation. Then comes the fourth at Mazowe Citrus Estate.

If you are proceeding the Bindura way, there are bound to be some more, as well as on the Mvurwi Highway.

This high presence of police officers on the highway is not confined to this route, but I have cited it because it is a road I use regularly.

Between Harare and Bulawayo, the country’s two major urban settlements which by their standing have high vehicular and human traffic, the number of roadblocks is too numerous to count.

Entering and exiting an urban settlement, one is bound to meet a set of traffic police officers, and most of the time, asking for the same things or after the same offences that would have been asked at the previous blocks.

The same presence of police officers replicates itself between Bulawayo and Victoria Falls, the country’s major tourist destination.

Turn the other side of Harare driving to Mutare the same can be said of the presence of police officers.

For a country as peaceful as Zimbabwe, for a citizenry that is struggling to eke out a decent livelihood, which is made all the more difficult by cash shortages, and for a motorist who has to contend with a potholed roads, this makes travelling a nightmare. Your chief spin doctor, Senior Assistant Commissioner Charity Charamba, will be quick to respond that potholes have nothing to do with the police force and that the force is simply meeting its constitutional mandate. But introspection asks of all of us: what we are doing for Zimbabwe’s image?

To fine a motorist, who is a tourist to the country, for his rented vehicle for not having “honey-comb” reflectors is surely not the best way to market Zimbabwe.

Neither does it augur well for our economy that an informal trader who is moving to and from agricultural markets can be fined for his vehicle not having the gross vehicle mass or net vehicle mass displayed.

Fine, we know all these misdemeanours are contained in legislative material, and it is up to us, the electorate, to ask our MPs to review them.

But what does common sense entail?

What would be wrong with a police officer, on noticing that a vehicle’s number plate lights are not functioning, advising, warning and cautioning the motorist that at your next destination, please attend to this anomaly?

Why the inclination to fine there and then?

Commissioner-General, it is not just the presence of the police officers on the highway that is disconcerting: it is their behaviour; their lack of respect; their assumption that every motorist is guilty; that every motor vehicle has a defect; that everyone must pay a spot fine.

Even as the officers stop you, the body language and demeanour tell you that you are in trouble before any question has been asked or answered.

And is it by mere coincidence that police officers seem to have exchanged their baton sticks for spikes? That memo must have missed our attention.

Compare the attitude of our police officers with those of neighbouring countries. In South Africa and Botswana, for instance, the officers are ever-smiling, courteous and if they are to fine you, for sure you would have committed road traffic offence worthy of such a punishment.

And in the said countries, wherever they mount a roadblock, some distance before, you are warned that you are approaching such a stoppage, which gives you time to prepare, mentally or otherwise.

There are signs, and if it is night time, the signs are reflective, giving the motorist enough warning of an impending police stop.

Contrast this with Zimbabwe scenario, the aforementioned Henderson Research Station roadblock, in spite of it being mounted well into the night, is hardly visible after dark.

It takes a motorist who is a frequent traveller on the road to know that there is always a roadblock.

Whoever told the police that their drums, the ones they use to block the road, should be painted black and white? Whilst this might work during the day, at night it just doesn’t add up! Reflectors are needed.

Same with the Norton roadblock, just by the service station.

There are other considerations. We are in election season. What is the behaviour of the police force doing to the electorate? Are we not creating discontent against the ruling establishment?

There is no nation that can do without policing. The police are an integral part of any state. But it looks like we have taken policing to a different level in Zimbabwe.

We would understand the tactics as employed by speed trap police officers, it is a trap, so it supposed to catch a motorist who is driving above the speed limit.

But when every traffic officer decides to play hide-and-seek with motorists, choosing street corners, bushy areas and highway bends to mount roadblocks, that indicates a desire to merely fine motorists rather than to promote order.

Then the seriousness, or lack thereof, of the offences, makes many believe that it is all a fund-raising gimmick.

This is the same hard-pressed citizenry, which has to contend with long hours at the bank, that is asked to hand over the little it has to the police.

We are talking here of a citizenry that is well-mannered, well-cultured, well-disposed. Getting into the car every morning to get to work has become a headache. Which roads to use? Which are likely NOT to have roadblocks? What to say when you encounter them?

Who looks forward to driving to Victoria Falls when one is assured of encountering at least a dozen roadblocks?

Who will bother driving to KwaMereki, a normal weekend routine, when that drive is to be met with five roadblocks on potholed roads?

It takes the cheer the away.

In conclusion, I have written you as Commissioner-General because of the level of desperation and frustration we have reached. No one seems to care in the police force.

Is this the kind of legacy that Commissioner-General (Dr) Chihuri would like to leave for Zimbabweans, that his police force has been so menacing, so heartless on the highways?

What we ask of you, Commissioner-General, is change in tact, change in approach.

This is our Zimbabwe, the only country millions of us will ever know, and we would like to live, enjoy and be buried here.

But our police officers, traffic police officers, are not making this life an enjoyable life. We are not criminals. We are law-abiding, taxpaying people trying to get from one day to the next with as little fuss as possible.

 Yours Sincerely,

Garikai Mazara

Extra Editor

VIDEO: Magaya & Mugabe Unmasked

The whole fabric of Zimbabwean society is under a cloud of manipulation in which followers are made to worship their leaders. The above discussion was held on Saturday afternoon on ZimEye.com

Gukurahundi Killings Haunt Gen. Mujuru In His Grave | OPINION


Nomusa Garikayi | “Rinemanyanga hariputirwi!” (Evil, no matter how well you conceal it, will always come out to haunt you!) goes the Shona saying. The Gukurahundi massacres are haunting the late Solomon Mujuru even in his grave.

“On February 11 1983, army Commander Nhongo (Mujuru’s nume-de-guerre) tells senior commanders of plans under consideration by government to purge army of 7 000 to 10 000 former Zapu guerrillas,” reads a declassified United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) report.

There is no doubt that President Mugabe carried out the Gukurahundi massacre to clear the deck for imposition of the de facto one-party dictatorship that rules the nation to this day. Whilst President Mugabe has himself since admitted to “moment of madness!” How can it be a “moment” when the massacre latest a good five years and left over 20 000 mainly innocent civilians dead. Some of the victims were murdered in the most horrific ways like being burnt to death or pregnant women having the wombs slit open!

Worse still, President Mugabe admitted to the moment of madness but has never done anything to address the serious consequences of the madness – compensate the victims of the atrocities and, even more significantly, dismantle the dictatorship.

All the senior Zanu PF leaders who sat beside President Mugabe throughout the Gukurahundi have all strenuously denied knowing anything about the massacres although they have all benefited greatly from the dictatorship. Even those, like VP Emmerson Mnangagwa who, at the time boosted in the local media of their role in the massacre, now claim they were misquoted.

“Solomon was a people’s person. He was their soldier, their commander, their hero. He worked hard to bring together Zipra and Zanla during the liberation struggle,” was Joice Mujuru’s reply when she was asked in her late husband had play a role in the Gukurahundi massacre. He was the Army commander throughout that period.

Joice Mujuru was a cabinet member and she never said anything to stop the massacre, she claims she did not know what was going on. How is it possible that over 20 000 can be murdered in a country and one does not hear of it; someone whose husband is commanding the soldiers doing the killing and is a minister in her own right! Of course, Joice Mujuru was lying, she knew about the massacre and her husband played a role, as the CIA report now confirms!

“Such unfortunate allegations by a so-called CIA report that are being released now, ought to have been made public when he was alive. The publication of that report only leaves us with questions given that the General cannot respond and more-so that he died in very mysterious circumstances,” commented Joice Mujuru’s spin doctor, Nyandoro.

Gukurahundi is a serious issue that has not been dealt with honestly and openly; it was a big mistake that the wound has been allowed to fester all these years and it would be folly to sweep the whole business under the carpet under the pretext that some of those involved are dead and therefore cannot answer for themselves. The late General had ample opportunity to stop the madness or, at least, explain why he failed to do so. Instead, he chose to spend most of his time looting and spending his loot instead.

As for the General dying “in very mysterious circumstances”; that is totally irrelevant as it neither proves he did not do what the CIA report alleges nor make him untouchable. In many ways, the many mysterious deaths surround Zanu PF leaders is itself an indictment of the regime’s total disregard of the sanctity of human life which is at the heart of the Gukurahundi massacre. Therefore that the murderous regime should turn on some of its own people is no surprise.

Joice Mujuru should come clean on what role she and her late husband as played in the corrupt and murderous Zanu PF dictatorship in her 34 years at the heart of the regime. Her claim that she saw nothing because “a puppy does not open its eyes the day it is born” is cutting no ice. No puppy takes 34 years to open its eyes. The truth about Zanu PF’s decades of misrule is now coming out, first it is a trickle but soon it will turn into a flood. In the end the whole truth will always come out regardless how well President Mugabe and his Zanu PF thugs have tried to keep it under wraps!

General Mujuru was buried at Hero’s Acre and he must now be turning in his grave; how can a mass murderer be a hero!

So, Mai Mujuru, we ask you again; what do you know about Zanu PF’s corruption, vote rigging, murders, etc. Speak now whilst you have a chance; we know you have been very economically with the truth!

 

VIDEO: Grace Mugabe Attacked by Mliswa

First Lady Grace Mugabe has been attacked by Norton MP Temba Mliswa.

The video shows Hon Mliswa raising the issue of corruption and extravagance of the first family on the Second Reading Stage of The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Amendment Bill on bond notes. Hon Mliswa challenged the Executive to cut down their spending on luxurious goods and travelling expenses and referenced the recent inconsiderate spending of the First Lady on a ring which cost $1.5m. In his statement, he castigated the Executive for not implementing measures to curb corruption and highlighted that the citizens are suffering, with no money and have no access to drugs.

The country is facing serious cash shortages yet the first family is enjoying luxurious trips, to which Hon Mliswa proposed that the Finance Minister give the first family allowances in bond notes. Hon Mliswa believes that bond notes are a good move to foster economic growth and reduce cash shortages but everyone should use them including the first family.

As the First Lady keeps externalising foreign currency on luxuries and trips, people in Norton are struggling to have food on the table, school fees and the Norton Hospital is not in good shape. Mliswa indicated that at the hospital there’s no a functioning mortuary and one is needed as soon as possible. The Government needs to cut costs on the First family so that these basic needs like a mortuary are built and are kept functioning.

“I Gained Wisdom” – Tsvangirai After Matebeleland Tour

Luke Tamborinyoka | President Morgan Tsvangirai today wound up his 10-day listening tour of the three Matabeleland provinces with an address to the Bulawayo provincial assembly.

Most of the issues discussed were of an internal and strategic nature, and cannot be subject for megaphone communication. However President Tsvangirai said he had come, had seen and heard the deep seated sentiment from the people and was now wiser after spending 10 days in the region.

The jubilant crowd made significant input into both the post- Mugabe governance architecture and the political alliance building process, to which they gave their thumbs up.

Next week, the President continues with his tour of the provinces in which he wants to be guided by the people’s feelings in the execution and transaction of political business both within and outside the party.

In the post-Mugabe era and in the alliance building process, the people’s input is going to be a key ingredient.

Indeed, public participation has been the missing link in Africa and President Tsvangirai, through his mass-line approach, is ensuring that public input participation takes its rightful place in decision-making.

Luke Tamborinyoka
Presidential Spokesperson and Director of Communications
Movement for Democratic Change

17 ZRP Cops Turn Criminal Arrested

Seventeen police officers from Inyathi and Nkayi have been arrested and charged with abuse of office in connection with illegal gold mining activities in Bubi District.

The Police Act prohibits officers from pursuing business interests without first notifying the Commissioner General Augustine Chihuri.

Police sources said the officers — 11 from Inyathi and six from Nkayi — were arrested on Wednesday last week and have been appearing before an internal tribunal at the Nkayi District police headquarters.

Police prosecutors have preferred a range of charges ranging from criminal abuse of office, leaving their posts unattended and engaging in activities which violate the Police Act.

After the internal hearings, which are expected to continue into next week, the police officers will face criminal charges.

Some of the officers who were charged were deployed at Durban Mine where violent clashes over control of gold claims have previously been reported.

A police source said the Officer Commanding Nkayi District, Chief Superintendent Never Tembo and another officer identified as Superintendent Ntundle, presided over the hearings.

He said the officers were allegedly charged for failing to execute their duties, with members of the public accusing them of turning a blind eye to illegal activities by gold panners.

“The 17 officers have been charged under the Police Act after being suspected of being involved in mining at the gold claims and failing to discharge their duties. Some senior police officers tried to cover up the activities of the officers but the matter came to light following increased public complaints and violent clashes,” said the source.

“Their hearings started on Monday at Nkayi Police Station.”

The source said four of the officers were positively identified by omakorokoza who accused them of forcing them into mine shafts.

The names of the 17 officers could not be established yesterday with police keeping a tight lid over the matter.

National police spokesperson Chief Superintendent Paul Nyathi said he was not aware of the case and referred questions to Matabeleland North police.

Acting Matabeleland North police spokesperson Assistant Inspector Eglon Nkala had earlier referred all questions to the national spokesperson’s office.

There have been violent clashes between rival gangs of illegal gold miners in Bubi District.

On Monday, five gold panners who were part of a group of 30 men rounded up by police for wreaking havoc in Inyathi were jailed for two years for a range of transgressions.

Their arrest followed the deployment of 200 police officers from Nkayi in the Inyathi area to restore order. – State Media

Mugabe Gone!


President Robert Mugabe is gone.

Mugabe who arrived late yesterday from his annual leave in the far east, has a few hours later flown out of the country for the AU Summit.

The state media reports that Mugabe has left Harare for Addis Ababa, Ethiopia where he will join other leaders from the continent for the 28th African Union Summit.

The AU Summit is a crucial meeting held annually at the AU headquarters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

The assembly is the AU’s supreme organ and comprises of heads of state and government from all 54 member states.

Issues deliberated and agreed on at the summit guide the AU’s policies and the programme for the year.

The President was seen off at the Harare International Airport by the two Vice Presidents  Emmerson Mnangagwa and  Phelekezela Mphoko, Home Affairs Minister Dr Ignatius Chombo, Information Media and Broadcasting Services Minister Dr Chris Mushohwe, Minister of Transport and Infrastructural Development Dr Joram Gumbo, Minister of State for Harare Province Miriam Chikukwa and Service Chiefs among others. – State Media

Former First Lady Celebrates Birthday

Nathan Banana| Today “Zimbabwe’s First Lady” at independence Janet Banana, my mum, a sister, a teacher, a friend, a grandmother, a work mate celebrates her birthday.

They say history is for the victors and some will be remembered whilst others are forgotten, but facts can never be changed.

Today a great woman, mother, sister, teacher, friend most in Zimbabwe no longer know about will be celebrating her birthday.

May the almighty grant her more happy and peaceful years for you deserve better than what you have had to endure in this life.

Happy Birthday. Masalu!

Australian Open 2017: Serena Williams Beats Venus Williams to Set Grand Slam Record

Serena Williams beat sister Venus in straight sets to win her seventh Australian Open and an Open-era record 23rd Grand Slam singles title.

Serena, 35, won 6-4 6-4 to pass Steffi Graf in the all-time list of major winners since the Grand Slams accepted professional players in 1968.

The American regains the number one ranking from German Angelique Kerber.

Australia’s Margaret Court, with 24, is the only player still ahead of Serena in terms of Grand Slam singles titles.

“Congratulations Serena on number 23,” said Venus, who at 36 is the oldest Australian Open finalist in the Open era.

“I have been right there with you, some of them I lost right there against you. It’s been an awesome win.

“I’m enormously proud of you, you mean the world to me. I, God willing, would love to come back. Thank you for all the love.”

Serena paid tribute to her sister, who was playing her first major final for eight years, saying: “There’s no way I would be at 23 without her. There’s no way I’d be at one without her. She’s my inspiration.

“She’s the only reason I’m standing here today. She’s the only reason the Williams sisters exist. Thank you for inspiring me. Every time you won this week, I felt like I got a win too.”

Serena Williams
Serena Williams won her first Australian Open title 14 years ago

Favourite Serena too strong for Venus

Serena went into the match as a strong favourite, but the tension was apparent as early as the third game when she smashed a racquet in frustration, receiving a code violation.

She had broken serve in the first and third games only to hand the advantage straight back each time, three double faults inexplicably littering a desperate game for 2-2.

All-time Grand Slam singles titles leaders
24 (1960-1973) – Margaret Court (Aus) 19 (1923-1938) – Helen Wills Moody (US)
23 (1999-present) – Serena Williams (US) 18 (1974-1986) – Chris Evert (US)
22 (1987-1999) – Steffi Graf (Ger) 18 (1978-1990) – Martina Navratilova (US)

It was clear the six-time champion was struggling to settle, with 13 unforced errors in the opening five games, while elder sister Venus kept her under pressure with some deep hitting.

The decisive move of the set came with a superb drop volley followed by a thumping forehand winner from Serena to break for 4-3, and this time she managed to consolidate on serve.

In contrast to the opening stages, the following nine games went with serve – Venus recovering superbly from 0-40 early in the second set – but it was Serena who was creating the chances.

She finally capitalised on her sixth break point of the set with a brilliant return to lead 4-3 and followed it up with her best service game of the match for 5-3.

Serena Williams
Serena Williams broke her racquet in frustration in the third game of the match

The crowd on Rod Laver Arena had been backing Venus from the beginning as she tried to win a first major title for eight years, and all the more so as defeat loomed and she appeared to struggle physically.

There was a huge cheer when she held serve to force her sister to serve out the match, but Serena recovered from 15-30 to earn match point and fell back on the court in celebration as her sister sent the ball floating wide.

‘I enjoy seeing Williams on the trophy’

Saturday’s final was the 28th instalment of the sisters’ on-court rivarly, which began at the Australian Open back in 1998, with Serena now 17-11 ahead and 7-2 up in Grand Slam finals.

Venus, who turned professional in 1994 and has won five Wimbledon and two US Open titles, insisted she was not too disappointed after reaching her first major final since 2009.

“No, because I guess I’ve been here before, “she said. “I really enjoy seeing the name ‘Williams’ on the trophy. This is a beautiful thing.”

Venus v Serena in Grand Slam finals
2001: US Open – Venus won 6-2 6-4 2003: Wimbledon – Serena won 4-6 6-4 6-2
2002: French Open – Serena won 7-5 6-3 2008: Wimbledon – Venus won 7-5 6-4
2002: Wimbledon – Serena won 7-6 6-3 2009: Wimbledon – Serena won 7-6 6-2
2002: US Open – Serena won 6-4 6-3 2017: Australian Open – Serena won 6-4 6-4
2003: Australian Open – Serena won 7-6 3-6 6-4

Analysis

Russell Fuller, BBC tennis correspondent:

Perhaps the most remarkable thing about Serena Williams is the length of time she has been winning Grand Slam titles. The first came on 11 September 1999 in New York; the 23rd on 28 January 2017 here in Melbourne.

The match itself will quickly be forgotten; but never the achievement. Richard Williams used to beg tennis clubs to part with their old balls when he started to put his daughters through their paces in the Los Angeles district of Compton, and now Serena has more Grand Slam singles titles than anyone who has ever played the game, with the exception of Margaret Court.

Williams is now just one behind the Australian – who was watching on the Rod Laver Arena – and in the view of the 18-time Grand Slam champion Martina Navratilova, it is a record she could “shatter” before her playing days are done.

Reaction

Billie Jean King on Twitter: Congrats @serenawilliams on your 23rd major title and return to the top of the @WTA rankings. You are a history maker and a trailblazer.

Angelique Kerber on Twitter: Congrats to @serenawilliams for this amazing achievement!!! What a historic final- both are true champions @Venuseswilliams

Pat Cash on Twitter: Serena Williams continues to make history with her 23 GS. Just amazing! Further solidifies her place among the greatest sports people ever. BBC

The Jammeh Tragedy, When A Murderer Goes Scot-Free

By Brezhnev Malaba | A deranged dictator — cornered by the masses and scared stiff — decides to loot millions of dollars from the state treasury, hops on a private jet and literally gets away with murder in The Gambia. Bizarrely, everyone is suddenly hailing the “triumph” of democracy. What democracy?

From where I am seated, Africans have set very low standards of good governance. What is the life of an African worth?

As Africans, we must stop lying to each other. Who really wins when a murderous tyrant flies off with a planeload of US dollars? Amilcar Cabral counselled against such misguided thinking: “Hide nothing from the masses of our people. Tell no lies. Expose lies whenever they are told. Mask no difficulties, mistakes, failures. Claim no easy victories …”

The dramatic developments in The Gambia are no cause for celebration. I will only shift my stance when Africa’s mass murderers are not only booted out of office, but also brought to justice for their heinous crimes. The recent jailing of former Chadian despot Hassan Habre by an African court, on African soil, gives me hope that the days of impunity could indeed be numbered.

In 2013, Yahya Jammeh vowed to rule for “a billion years”. Four years later, he has been ousted. Although his exit may allow a traumatised nation to somewhat breathe easy, it is scandalous that he walks away scot-free while many of his victims will suffer for the rest of their wretched lives.

How come nobody is talking of justice, accountability and genuine healing? Some world leaders and multilateral institutions such as the United Nations and African Union have fallen over each other in a frenzy of congratulatory messages.

But spare a thought for the women who were raped by Jammeh’s marauding goons, the children whose parents were slaughtered in cold blood, the opposition supporters who were killed or maimed, the families of disappeared activists and countless other victims of state-sanctioned terror.

The butcher of Banjul is now leading a life of luxury in exile. His last-minute looting spree gave him an additional US$11 million cash and expensive luxury cars, including two bespoke Rolls-Royce marques.

In Western media, there is often an attempt to portray the Gambian dictator as an eccentric, bizarre and therefore benign autocrat who is more of a clown than a murderer. The brutal reality, of course, is that Jammeh was a cold-blooded killer.

Like other African megalomaniacs — past and present — he ran a ruthless intelligence agency, death squads and a mass terror network whose tentacles reached every nook and cranny. He ruled through fear. The despot was so feared that even exiled Gambians, staying thousands of kilometres away in neighbouring countries, discussed his excesses in hushed tones as if Jammeh’s spooks had extra-territorial powers.

When it became increasingly clear to Jammeh that the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas) was resolutely determined to kick his butt, he resorted to a time-worn tactic by seeking succour in “sovereignty” — the last refuge of scoundrels.

Achille Mbembe, one of my favourite living thinkers, says the ultimate expression of sovereignty resides in the power and capacity to dictate who may live, and who must die. To kill, or to allow to live, constitute the limits of sovereignty, its fundamental attributes.

Make no mistake, the decisive intervention by the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas) in defence of the democratic will of the people of The Gambia gives me a glimmer of hope for better days as an African. But I am gutted by the thought that the victims may never see justice.

Prominent Harare lawyer Fadzai Mahere echoed the opinion of many when she tweeted: “We need an Ecowas in Southern Africa!”

Perhaps we do. But more importantly, we need justice for traumatised societies. I will celebrate when that happens. For now, impunity reigns supreme and the life of an African is worthless in the eyes of the world.

Crazed dictators who slaughter the innocents must be brought to justice. The carnage has to stop. – Independent

 

MUGABE BACK: Goodbye Singapore, Welcome To Potholed Harare

Say goodbye to Singapore, President Mugabe. And Beijing and wherever else you’ve been on your LONG Christmas holiday.

Harare’s potholed streets await your shiny motorcade. Don’t worry though: your road is fine.

Residents of the Zimbabwean capital – parts of which have been recently battered by rains – have remarked upon the speed with which the road leading to Mugabe’s Borrowdale mansion is being fixed ahead of the president and first lady Grace Mugabe’s scheduled return home on Friday.

Heavy rains in the capital dislodged parts of the road surface earlier this week, making the highway the president’s limo thrums along at least twice a day (when’s he’s actually in the country) uncannily similar in its “pot-holeyness” to some other roads in Harare.

Tweeted watchdog @ZimMediaReview: “Some roads are more equal than others.”

In contrast, residents of other areas of Harare end up trying to fix potholes outside their homes themselves. Or the craters get roughly filled in with mud and sand by workers – only for the mud to be washed away in the next shower of rain.

“Stampede to fix the presidential motorcade route. Shocking. Why should this route get special attention?” tweeted Zimbabwean lawyer Fadzayi Mahere as she posted a video of trucks and workmen fixing the Borrowdale road.

Mugabe turns 93 next month and has been in power in Zimbabwe since independence in 1980. – News24

Mthwakazi To Block Mugabe

ZIMBABWE’S long time ruler Robert Mugabe faces fresh trouble over his alleged Gukurahundi crimes which he committed between 1983 and 1987.

His Zanu PF party has announced that it will hold the nonagenarian’s annual birthday bash in Matabeleland South’s Matobo district where most innocent civilians perceived to be the late Joshua Nkomo, then leader of the ZAPU party, supporters were butchered in cold blood by Mugabe’s Korean trained army.

A pressure-group-turned-political-party – Mthwakazi Republic Party (MRP) – has vowed to stop Mugabe’s lavish party arguing that the fete would be “a celebration of the 1980 genocide which claimed an estimated 20 000 people in the Midlands and Matabeleland provinces.

The killings are popularly known as Gukurahundi – an incident which soon-to-be 93 year-old Mugabe has described as “a moment of madness.”

“We cannot allow Zanu PF to throw a birthday party near the Bhalagwe Gukurahundi mass graves. To us this is a celebration of the atrocities,” MRP said during a presser to announce its intent to contest Zimbabwe’s 2018 elections in Bulawayo mid week.

Bhalagwe is a disused section of the Antelope Mine where the Fifth Brigade – believed to have been sent by Mugabe tortured and mercilessly buried people alive in the shallow grave. The mine has never been opened since then and bones of the deceased have not been properly buried to date.

Relatives of the Gukurahundi victims believe that reburying their relatives properly constitute a step towards justice. However, the Zimbabwe government led by Mugabe has since time immemorial made sure that the matter remains a “closed case” and at worst taboo to discuss publicly.

Asked what he thought about the decision by Zanu PF party to hold the celebrations in Matobo, former ZIPRA intelligence supremo and current ZAPU president Dumiso Dabengwa said “the matter was not for politicians”.

“It is (you) civil society who must decide what to do about the issue. It’s not for us politicians to take a move,” Dabengwa said during a civic dialogue meeting organised by the Public Policy Research Institute of Zimbabwe in Bulawayo on Wednesday this week.

“The Maleme community did it and the civil society there in Matopo took a stand and said no this cannot happen here; so I am sure you can still do something about this,” he added.

Ironically, ZANU PF continues with the preparations for the bash scheduled for next month undeterred.

In a statement gleaned by The Citizen Bulletin, Matobo villagers said they have no power to stop Mugabe but they do not want him to set his foot in the area whose dwellers are still apparently grieving Gukurahundi atrocities.

“We have no powers to stop His Excellency from celebrating his birthday where ever he wants to, if we had, we would not want him to dare step his foot in Matobo but history will record that we are against it and that we warned,” a statement issued by the villagers through Matobo Community Development Trust read in part.

“We appeal to the broader Civil Society, opposition parties, media and everyone who is sane and cares to stand in solidarity with us during this painful time of celebrating Mugabe’s birthday.

“We may be arrested, tortured and even disappear; we live in fear but our spirits are unwavering. We are being threatened and forced to attend by the regime against our will,” further read the statement. – Citizen Bulletin

Makandiwa, Magaya, Ezekiel Guti: WHO IS CLEAN? | LIVE ON SATURDAY 6pm(Zim time)

Ray Nkosi | Prophetic Healing and Deliverance (PHD) Ministries’ leader Walter Magaya has raised a storm in the Zimbabwean community, as sex scandals involving himself and junior female members of his church were exposed.

Zimbabweans have been exposed to all kinds of spiritual abuse, ranging from eating raw sewage, to forking out their hard earned cash in paying greedy prophets for the release of God’s blessings.

The media has also in recent weeks been full of reports of bizarre happenings in the church, which border around money, sex and other dubious scandals.

“Makandiwa, Magaya and Guti, who is clean?,” is the topic of the ZimEye LIVE show to be hosted on Saturday 28th January.

Prominent church and community leaders, join ZimEye this day to debate the challenges emerging in the church on the panel will be: representatives of churches followed by social critics, analysts and experts, Dr Nkululeko Sibanda, Howard Nyoni, Steve Blomefield, Flossie Kandodo, and Jean Gasho.

Wife Begs Hubby For Sex Threatens To Rape Him | WATCH TETE RASTA LIVE

Women always suffer in silence, this old adage has been proven to be true after an unidentified woman recorded a touching conversation with her husband.

The woman is heard complaining about how her husband never seems to have time for her.

She weeps bitterly begging her husband to treat her like a woman but her plea seems to fall on deaf ears.The woman attempts to rape him after the hubby declines her more than generous offer.

Watch Tete Rasta dissect this particular case, as well as look into some areas that affect sexual intimacy amongst couples.

Moyo Takes ‘Scheming’ Chinamasa On

HIGHER and Tertiary Education minister Jonathan Moyo this week came short of accusing his Finance counterpart Patrick Chinamasa of a sinister plot to foment anarchy at State universities after reducing his budget by half.

In an angry statement signed by ministry permanent secretary, Machivenyika Mapuranga this week, Moyo said Chinamasa had reneged on his undertaking that the 2016 wage bill would spill into 2017 without adjustments. The statement said staff at universities had reacted angrily to the proposed salary cuts.

“Key players have been alarmed by this decision taken by the ministry of Finance, which, according to the staff association, had given assurance that the 2017 wage bill was to be based on the October 2016 salary bill, meaning that the 2017 salary bill would remain at the 2016 levels and the staff association formally communicated this position to staff of all State universities,” the statement read.

While indicating that a salary cut would be viewed as unfair labour practice, the workers had according to the ministry demanded a reversal of the move.

“They unreservedly expressed their position that the salary budget should be reversed to 100% with immediate
effect. Members categorically stated

that State universities are not able and have no capacity to pay for the other 50% towards employment costs,” the statement said.

Early this week, NewsDay Weekender was inundated with calls from universities across the country confirming government had officially communicated its intention to slash salaries, but Mapuranga shot down the claims when contacted for comment.

“I met with nine vice-chancellors this morning and they did not tell me anything of that sort. There is nothing like that,” he said on Tuesday before releasing the stinging statement.

Moyo’s ministry seems to have ganged up with workers against Chinamasa.

“The ministry and vice-chancellors agreed that there appears to be a shocking lack of appreciation by Treasury on the strategic role universities play in the socio-economic development of the nation and universities are operating in the same harsh economic environment like any other sector,” Mapuranga said.

“The majority of the students who enrol at local universities and tertiary institutions are from poor families and Treasury continues to ignore this reality.” – Newsday

MUGABE SUCCESSION: Block Mnangagwa And Die

Batsirai Musona | Why an extra-ordinary congress will not bring the desired leadership change in Zanu PF party soon like I once highlighted in one of my last articles, it is no longer the people’s party but a personal project of a self centred and myopic president Robert Mugabe, hence making it impossible for any individual in that private enterprise to raise their voice against the self styled mafia style don.

This private project has been fortified by a well oiled bootlicking mantra, hero worshipping absurdity as well as a useless patronage and cultism system that will not only destroy the party but a guaranteed recipe for disaster and extinction of the Mugabe legacy and ZANU PF ‘s continued existence . For this reason and numerous other reasons, Mugabe is not willing nor in a hurry to hand over power to anyone.

In my opinion, he will not do so when he is still alive but may be after the gods decided on denying him the air to breathe . He wants to make dangerous history by being the first and last president of both ZANU PF and Zimbabwe who will have never referred to any Zimbabwean as his superior thereby setting a very bad precedence of the highest standard of selfishness and very unpatriotic tendencies.

He does not care what will happen long after he has departed because there is in Shona there is a saying ” wafa wanaka ” whatever that means. However from now onwards we will as citizens of this country not stop calling for Mugabe’s immediate retirement from active politics. As a result of his prolonged, unwelcome and forced stay in power has caused a lot of suffering to the generality of the citizens of this once beautiful country.

The economic fortunes of our country have been plundered by a chosen few of president Mugabe’s inner most circle who include his motor mouth wife.

I’m not trying to play down the important contributions this president Mugabe has done for ZANU PF and the country at large starting from the early 60’s during the early days of the liberation struggle up to 1980 besides the period between 1990 and the year 2000 when he had nuts tightly fit and his marbles in place.

This man sacrificed a lot both personally and materially for this country but that does not give him a blank cheque to do as he pleases with people’s lives and the future of this once bread basket of Southern Africa that he has single handedly destroyed.

In all the contributions he made during the period mentioned , we have some equally very prominent people who contributed even more than he did so president Mugabe must not see himself as an omnipotent immortal being.

Some of these luminaries of the liberation struggle have long departed but some are still living but this man tries by all means to overshadow or outshine them whilst considering himself to some main actor in a movie as he was made to believe by a political upstart in a state craft. These armed struggle luminaries are the people who he persecutes day and night as if they are enemies yet they lost all their dignity the liberation cause . Therefore if president Mugabe sincerely appreciates and value other people’s contributions the same way they, appreciate, respect and value his contributions, then he must without wasting much of our valuable time pass on the button of power to one of them who were side by side with him during the liberation struggle and let Zimbabwe move on without further ado.

Progressive and right thinking Zimbabweans are not only sick and tired of president Mugabe’s disrespectful wife but utterly disgusted by his overdue and prolonged stay at state house . The journey travelled from the early days of nationalism by activists like Benjamin Burombo , the late Father Zimbabwe VP Joshua Mqabuko Nyongolo Nkomo up to the armed struggle can be likened to Egypt’s enslavement of God’s people.

Moses was then raised to liberate God’s chosen people and embarked on a journey to the promised land of milk and honey , that is freedom to be human and having the will power to chart a course towards the aspired. I’m tempted yet deeply bored to give similarities of events between the biblical Moses and Mugabe. Moses was given the duty to free the Israelites from Egyptian bondage and embarking on a journey to the promised land free from oppression and any forms of inhumanity. Moses was very much eager to live and see the promised land of abundance but God his sender had other plans for him.

He had done his part of getting God’s people out of Egypt according to God but the duty of getting the Israelites to the promised land full of milk and honey it needed some one else in the form of Joshua. 40 years they spent in the wilderness trying to get to Canaan but they couldn’t because the old and temperamental Moses was still at helm. It was only after one good day when God instructed Moses to anoint Joshua as the new leader to lead God’s people to the promised land because Moses would not get.

President Mugabe is trying to be both Moses and Joshua thereby resisting the most noble calling to hand over power to his 2nd in command VP Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa aka. Comrade Trabablus , who happens to be his long serving, unwavering loyalist and prison mate who escaped the gallows by a whisker in the same fashion the biblical Joshua was saved from death by Moses when he killed the Egyptian according to biblical narratives.

The Joshua president Mugabe must hand over power to is indisputably none other than Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa and he doesn’t like it he might as well begin to like it . Everyone is entitled to their opinion but don’t mistaken me for a person sent by Mnangagwa to speak on his behalf because I have my own ethos but I’m just bringing out the sentiments of the majority of the Zimbabwean people in general and in particular the ZANU PF faithfuls and this is the naked truth Mugabe and his inner cabal don’t want to hear.

All this Mugabe chete chete and the shameful presidential candidature endorsements including other funny and hero worshipping and bootlicking slogans are only done during the day much to the amusement of sekuru Va Simba but it is something else during closed door meetings. That is what he wants to hear to be lied to that the people love you Mr president. No wonder why he will not act against social media abuses by his hard nutty, tweeting rocket scientist professor who he once called the devil incarnate, the weevil with a head as hard as a coconut. That is why president Mugabe will not care about an economy that is in the intensive care unit as a result of corruption because he is the chief officer commanding the corruption brigade. Brimming evidence is abound and awash.

If he denies this then he must account for the plunder of Marange diamonds worthy $15 billion. People are doing this because they have come to know how much Baba Va Bona likes to be endulged as so Demi god . It is an open secret that the majority of ZANU PF membership now want to see the back of president Mugabe because they have had enough of him.

In Mugabe’s own words, a leader must come from the people , we the people have chosen Mnangagwa as our next president after Mugabe and those that feel otherwise can be subjected to an election to prove that Mnangagwa is not only electable but also shockingly popular. Mnangagwa may not be interested but we the people will press it on him to lead us the same way we pressed Mugabe to lead us after the Sithole debacle and the Mgagao Declaration style might be re-employed. Leadership in ZANU PF is by peoples power and choice therefore we will do the same to make sure that the will of the people is respected in installing Mnangagwa to be the next president whether president Mugabe and other G40 membership like it or not. He who dares to stand on the way of a moving bullet moving train does so at their own peril. Kumagumo kunenyaya !!! Batsirai Musona igwee can be contacted on [email protected]

Man Caught Having Sex With A Dog

By Joylene Mtandwa, Chinhoyi | A local man here is on the run after he was caught red handed having sex with his neighbour’s dog.

Davison Mudzungairi, of Chikonohono township in Chinhoyi, was last week found in a compromising position with a dog by his neighbour, at the corner of a dura wall.

“I had a strange sound outside the gate when I was throwing litter in the bin at around 2000hrs. “It was not a barking sound but just an unusual sound, and when I got out of the gate I was shocked to see Davison riding the screaming dog,” the shocked neighbour explained.

“I clapped him from behind and he disembarked from the dog and ran away,”he said.

The neighbour said he reported the case to the police who have since launched an investigation on Davison.

Mugabe Boasts Of ‘Mega Deals’ With China

China has committed to fund the implementation of several projects here as relations between Harare and Beijing continue to flourish to greater heights, President Mugabe said last night.

The Head of State and Government and Commander-in-Chief of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces, who was in high spirits, revealed this soon after landing at the Harare International Airport from his annual leave in the Far East.

President Mugabe, who was accompanied by First Lady Dr Grace Mugabe, was welcomed by his two deputies Cdes Emmerson Mnangagwa and Phelekezela Mphoko, Cabinet Ministers Sydney Sekeramayi (Defence), Ignatius Chombo (Home Affairs), Chris Mushohwe (Information, Media and Broadcasting Services), Harare Metropolitan Minister of State Miriam Chikukwa, Chief Secretary to the President and Cabinet Dr Misheck Sibanda, Information Media and Broadcasting Services secretary Mr George Charamba, and services chiefs.

President Mugabe took time to reflect on his vacation, which was interspaced with official business, which saw him meeting President Xi and attending the France-Africa Summit in Mali.

Said President Mugabe: “We were on vacation, but we used it during our stay in China to meet our brother and friend President Xi Jinping to discuss our programmes here and to inform him on the progress we have made; the progress we have not made; the need we still have for China to fund some of the projects, which need funding, but it was a fruitful stay, and as usual of course President Xi Jinping said they will help us as much as possible.”

During his two-day State visit here in 2015, President Xi and President Mugabe oversaw the signing of 12 landmark deals cutting across all sectors of the economy.

President Xi’s visit to Zimbabwe followed President Mugabe’s visit to Beijing in 2014 where a number of economic deals were also signed.

The exchange visits by the two Heads of State and Government have seen Chinese firms going into partnership and joint ventures with local companies as part of efforts to turn around the economy.

The deals are at various stages of implementation and fit in well with the objectives of the country’s economic blueprint, the Zimbabwe Agenda for Sustainable Socio-Economic Transformation (Zim-Asset).

During President Xi’s visit here, Finance and Economic Development Minister Patrick Chinamasa penned four agreements on behalf of Zimbabwe with the first one being an economic and technical co-operation agreement with China, while Chinese Minister of Commerce Mr Gao Hucheng signed on behalf of his country.

The two also signed an agreement on avoidance of double taxation.

Minister Chinamasa signed two loan agreements for the expansion of Hwange Thermal Power Station and TelOne’s fibre optic project with the chairperson of the China Eximbank, Ms Hu Xiaolian.

On the Hwange Power Station expansion, the Zimbabwe Power Company represented by its managing director Engineer Noah Gwariro and Sinohydro represented by the chairman of its parent company Power China, Mr Yan Zhiyong, signed a co-operation agreement on Hwange 7 and 8 project.

The expansion project at Hwange, which is now at an advanced stage will see Sinohydro adding two units with a capacity of 600 MW.

Mr Gao signed four more deals on aviation co-operation with Transport and Infrastructure Development Minister Joram Gumbo and construction of a national pharmaceutical warehouse with Health and Child Care Minister, Dr David Parirenyatwa.

He also signed a handover and acceptance of certificate on the donation of equipment for wildlife protection in Zimbabwe with Environment, Water and Climate Minister Oppah Muchinguri and an agreement on the exchange of notes for the construction of a new Parliament building with Local Government, Public Works and National Housing Minister Saviour Kasukuwere.

Policy Co-ordination and Promotion of Socio-Economic Ventures in the President’s Office Minister Simon Khaya Moyo signed an agreement with the chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission chairperson, Mr Xu Shaoshi, on enhancement of investment.

Two more private sector agreements were also signed between the International Business of China and China Africa Sunlight Energy on the development of coal and methane gas mines, as well as the establishment of 600 MW thermal power station in Gwayi. The other agreement was between AVM Africa Limited and Beijing Automobile Assembly. – State Media

 

Law To Criminalise Bond Notes Trading

Retailers and other businesspeople charging extra for payments made in bond notes or bank cards and less for US dollar transactions will be prosecuted when the Reserve Bank Amendment Bill, which sailed through the National Assembly on Wednesday becomes law.

Responding to questions from Members of Parliament on Wednesday, Finance and Economic Development Minister Patrick Chinamasa reiterated that bond notes were interchangeable at a rate of 1:1 with the US dollar.

He said those apprehended for charging more for goods paid for using bond notes will be prosecuted

The Bill now awaits transition to the Senate.

“The Reserve Bank Amendment Bill, which is before this House, is addressing those concerns, said Minister Chinamasa. “It is coming up with a law to penalise and criminalise that kind of conduct.”

Minister Chinamasa was responding to an oral question without notice from Glen View North legislator Fani Munengami (MDC-T) on the “three tier” pricing system, whereby some shops were selling the same goods at different prices, depending on the method of payment.

Mr Munengami claimed that a product can cost $90 when using cash, $100 when swiping and if one buying using bond notes, $120.

Government, Minister Chinamasa said, was making concerted efforts to ensure that point of sale machines were readily available.

“As of now, we do not have sufficient point of sale machines to distribute countrywide”, he said. These machines have to be imported.

“Resources are being mobilised on a daily basis to ensure that we import more point of sale machines, which eventually should be able to reach every shop where there is connectivity.”

Minister Chinamasa said it was daylight robbery for banks to charge more in transaction fees than the price for a loaf of bread and said he would hold discussions with Reserve Bank Governor Dr John Mangudya so that the anomaly is rectified.

He then called for tangible evidence to enable Dr Mangudya to enforce punitive measures against any banks charging exhorbitant fees.

Minister Chinamasa said this after Buhera South MP Cde Joseph Chinotimba (Zanu-PF) had expressed concern over high bank charges customers were paying when buying goods using plastic money.

He said hiccups in network or interconnectivity where customers have to wait for more than 10 minutes before a transaction is concluded, had been referred to the Ministry of Information Communication Technology, Postal and Courier Services. – State Media

 

Magagula Dies

Ray Nkosi | City of Bulawayo’s Director of Housing and Community Services Isaiah Magagula has died, reports indicate.

Speaking to ZimEye.com in the early hours of Friday the sources indicated that the long serving City Council official passed on the same day.

Details are still coming through and ZimEye.com is closely monitoring the developments. More To Follow…

Mujuru Named In Gukurahundi Dossier | LATEST

Commonly referred to as the Gukurahundi atrocities, the genocide left over 20 000 civilians dead as then Prime Minister and now President Robert Mugabe’s government unleashed a crack military unit on the western regions of the country.

Former Vice-President and widow to the late general Joice Mujuru has been on record claiming her husband, who died in an inexplicable inferno at his farm in August 2011, had nothing to do with the atrocities.

 But a declassified United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) report seems to lift the lid on how senior officials viewed the brutal military incursion that critics claim was meant to destroy opposition to Mugabe’s rule.

“On February 11, 1983, army Commander Nhongo [Mujuru’s nume-de-guerre] tells senior commanders of plans under consideration by government to purge army of 7 000 to 10 000 former Zapu guerrillas,” the report claims.

Zapu was then lead by the late Joshua Nkomo, who was cowed into submission before he went on to become Mugabe’s deputy in the aftermath of the purges.

Mugabe let loose the 5th Brigade under the guise of hunting down a handful of ex-Zapu dissidents, but the report argues that the Zanu PF leader could have used this as a ruse in pursuit of a one party state.

Joice claimed in an interview last year that her husband had been out of the country and Mugabe was forced to recall the army boss as the atrocities got out of hand.

“Solomon was a people’s person. He was their soldier, their commander, their hero. He worked hard to bring together Zipra and Zanla during the liberation struggle.

“It is also for the same reason that he had to be called back from Pakistan, where he was attending a military course when Gukurahundi started. He had to be called back to try to find ways of ending the fighting that had started in his absence,” she said.

Joice now leader of opposition party, Zimbabwe People First (ZimPF) through her spokesperson Gift Nyandoro insisted Mujuru did not have a hand in Gukurahundi that Mugabe has characterised as a moment of madness.

“The issue of Gukurahundi, its implementation and perpetration had nothing to do with the late Retired General Mujuru. It is a matter of public record that the 5th Brigade was directly under the control of the man responsible for running down our country today and that is the authority of Mugabe,” he told NewsDay Weekender.

“Such unfortunate allegations by a so-called CIA report that are being released now, ought to have been made public when he was alive. The publication of that report only leaves us with questions given that the General cannot respond and more-so that he died in very mysterious circumstances.”

Nyandoro argued that, while Mujuru was army commander, he had a boss.

“The report is meant to protect those guilty of the most heinous crime this country may ever see. Unless someone wants to tell us that Mujuru was the Commander-In-Chief of the army. If not, then the person who was boss needs to own up and take the fall for those atrocities. The buck stops with Mugabe. He was the final voice,” Joice’s spokesperson said. – Newsday

Lighting Kills Students, While 83 Are Injured

TWO teenage students died and 83 others were injured after a lightning bolt struck Chinatsa Secondary School in Marondera District on Thursday.

A sombre atmosphere gripped villagers in Marondera East’s Chinatsa area following the tragic incident that forced the school to temporarily close.

When NewsDay Weekender visited the school yesterday, it was deserted, as students did not turn up for classes while parents were seen milling around in shock.

Mashonaland East provincial education director, Christopher Chihota confirmed the incident.

“I can confirm the incident and the unfortunate death of two children. I am yet to get a briefing from the district education inspector, who is currently at Marondera hospital, hence, I am not certain of the number of those who are detained. However, I am told that they are in a stable condition,” he said.

Chihota would not say when the school would re-open.

“We have not discussed anything and it depends on the recommendations from our officials on the ground. We have not provided any help yet because there are discussions going on. But the Civil Protection Unit met this morning to discuss the issue,” he said.

The lightning strike left a visible trail of destruction, burrowing a 200m trench across the school yard, while burnt uniforms and shoes were strewn all over the place.

According to a police memo gleaned by this paper, on January 26, at around 3:20pm, students were gathered under a tree near the assembly point waiting for dismissal when lightning struck, leading to the death of the two.

The deceased students are Munashe Munemo (15) and Blessed Muchenga, (17) who were in Form 2 and Form 4, respectively.

NewsDay Weekender gathered that the injured students were taken to the nearby Wenimbe Clinic, where 57 of them were treated and discharged, while 25 were transferred to Marondera Hospital, where they were still admitted as of yesterday.

According to villagers who were at the school yesterday, the incident was a mysterious, given that no rains fell on the day. The villagers said a bad omen had befallen the area.

Among those who reacted to the tragedy were Defence minister Sydney Sekeramayi (pictured), Marondera Central legislator Lawrence Katsiru and Marondera Rural District Council chairperson Patrick Chidhakwa, who visited Marondera Hospital where they met the victim. – Newsday

Shock As Renal Unit Machine Is Stolen From Govt Hospital

 Terrence Mawawa, Masvingo |The vital Renal Unit equipment donated to Masvingo Provincial Hospital by the Chinese Government has been stolen, it has emerged. Health experts have described the theft of the Renal Unit equipment as shocking and catastrophic. The Renal Unit Section situated close to the female medical ward lost its float switch, UV light and dialysis circulation pump under mysterious circumstances.

Sources at the hospital told ZimEye.com yesterday, the Renal Unit Machine was yet to be officially commissioned. It is understood medical doctors who have links with private clinics have been fingered in the scam and investigations are in progress.

“The chief suspects are medical doctors in that unit. Investigations are in progress and we hope the suspects will be brought to book,”said an official at the government run hospital. It is understood the Renal Unit Machine is valued at $100 million. Detectives from Masvingo Central Police Station ,armed with a search warrant also raided a local private clinic in search of the missing parts. Masvingo Provincial Medical Director Amadeus Shamu told ZimEye.com ,the police were investigating the matter.

“The crucial parts are missing but we cannot rush to conclude that the parts were stolen.We are waiting for a comprehensive report from the police,”said Dr Shamu. Health Minister,Dr David Parirenyatwa also said investigations on the matter were being carried out. As a result of the missing parts, the Renal Unit Section has all but suspended operations , putting the lives of hundreds of patients across the province and surrounding places at risk.

Revelation of Christ

Erasmus Makarimayi | A BELIEVER has to have the revelation of Christ to enjoy salvation. Victorious Christian living calls for accurate and precise knowledge of the one who lives in you.

Without this knowledge, believers might live as servants yet they’re sons and daughters of God. The revelation of Christ is the revelation of the believer. Scripture makes it clear that the life we live is the life of Christ.

Understanding the life of Christ brings us to an understanding of the life of a believer. Christ lives in us expressing Himself through us. When we know Him, we then know ourselves.

Let’s develop and construct this. Before salvation we’re dead. Life comes through and from Christ. In sin, we were in a state of death. In Christ we’re alive.

Ephesians 2:1 (Amplified Bible) clarifies, “And you [He made alive], when you were dead (slain) by [your] trespasses and sins.”

We’re saved from death to life and that life is the life of Christ. Further, Galatians 2:20 teaches, “I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless, I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life, which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me.”

Our life is the life of Christ by the faith of Christ.

A believer is in Christ. As a minister of the new covenant, this is something that I always repeat and emphasise. 2 Corinthians 5:17 should be one of your valued references.

It reads, “Therefore, if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new.”

Believers are new creation in Christ not in natural ancestry. A compressive study of this verse has been done before in this column, but suffice to say that the life of a believer is not passed through generations, but derived from Christ, where it exists and subsists.

The Bible records an interesting story of the resurrection of Jesus in Luke 24. Cleopas and another unnamed disciple are going from Jerusalem to Emmaus discussing the recent death of Jesus. Jesus catches up with them.

Luke 24:17-19 reads, “And he said unto them, What manner of communications are these that ye have one to another, as ye walk, and are sad? And the one of them, whose name was Cleopas, answering said unto him, Art thou only a stranger in Jerusalem, and hast not known the things, which are come to pass there in these days? And he said unto them, What things? And they said unto him, Concerning Jesus of Nazareth, which was a prophet mighty in deed and word before God and all the people.”

They were His disciples, having walked with Him much of His earthly ministry. Jesus wasn’t impressed that they still didn’t have the revelation of Christ. Please remember that earlier on, Peter had known, who Jesus was by inspiration from God.

Matthew 16:16-17 records, “And Simon Peter answered and said, Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God. And Jesus answered and said unto him, Blessed art thou, Simon Bar-jona: for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father, which is in heaven.”

So Jesus is not known through human understanding, but by divine revelation. Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the living God.

Jesus’s issue with Cleopas was that after this, they still knew Him at human level as the Man of Nazareth and a prophet.

He called them fools. Luke 24:25-26 reads, “Then he said unto them, O fools, and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken: Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to enter into his glory?”

The biblical prophets were pointing to Christ. He had told them many times before that He was going to die and rise again but they didn’t comprehend it.

Jesus died and rose entering into glory and the glorified Christ is in you. His life is the life of the believer. Who is Jesus to you? Is He the Son of a carpenter from Nazareth or one of the prophets?

Without knowing Him, you cannot know yourself. Wrong knowledge of Him results in wrong knowledge of yourself — it’s identity crisis.

Grace and peace be multiplied to you through knowledge. You’re going somewhere.

All Bible quotations are from the King James Version unless otherwise stated.

Feedback: [email protected]

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MUGABE GONE: Tsvangirai Plans Ahead

OPPOSITION MDC-T leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, yesterday gave the clearest hint yet that he is already looking beyond President Robert Mugabe following a meeting with the clergy and civic groups in Bulawayo.

Tsvangirai said the MDC-T wanted to avoid the chaos that unfolded in The Gambia after that country’s former President, Yayha Jammeh, refused to step down following the former military ruler’s electoral loss to Adama Barrow on December 1.

“We were talking of a post-Mugabe transition, what form it will take if we are going to have a peaceful and stable transition. I wanted to hear various views and what we can do to ensure that transition takes place, and peacefully,” he told journalists after the closed-door meeting with the clergy and civic society leaders held at a local hotel.

Jammeh had to be forced into exile following threats of military intervention by the Economic Community of West African States, and Tsvangirai said the MDC-T wanted a peaceful and stable transition seemingly suggesting he will win next year’s presidential poll.

Amid growing talk of negotiations for a possible opposition coalition, Tsvangirai said the MDC-T was committed to a pre-election pact, but denied reports the opposition party had already hammered out an agreement on how parliamentary seats were going to be shared among parties to the alliance.

Reports suggested the MDC-T and Welshman Ncube’s MDC party were close to signing an agreement, amid speculation that the latter was going to be given leeway to field candidates in Matabeleland.

“There are reports going around saying there is a seat that has been given to so and so. There is no such thing. We haven’t discussed that, we haven’t even started the negotiations, so how can you start talking about distribution of seats?

“As far as we are concerned, there will be a pre-election alliance and a post-election agreement in the whole process,” Tsvangirai said.

The former trade union leader also waded into the emotive Gukurahundi storm, describing it as a burning issue along with tribalism and marginalisation.

“There was also the issue around the question of unresolved historical grievances, what are the expectations from the MDC-T to look at. In all my interactions, we have suggested how to put closure to these historical imbalances and people have suggested various ways, reparations to affected communities, devolution, truth and reconciliation commission, the issue of identity documents.

“There was also the burning issue of how do we build a society, which has ethnic and cultural diversity so that we begin to bridge the gap between various ethnic groups in this country,” Tsvangirai said. – Newsday

HORROR POTHOLES: Harare Mayor Responds

Harare mayor Ben Manyenyeni has responded to an outcry over the menacing potholes that have caused angers to flare in Zimbabwe’s capital city.

response…Mayor Ben Manyenyeni

Writing in a lengthy response seen by ZimEye.com in a political debate forum, mayor Manyenyeni said the problem lies solely on with the Robert Mugabe run road agency, ZINARA. Below was the post which ZimEye re-publishes in full:

1. The potholes have overwhelmed the city’s resources and I have spent the last few months persuading ZINARA for resources.

2. This work has become an unfunded mandate for nearly 7 years. That tells you the gap and may point to the number of years to a solution if correct funding resumes. For now it will be correct to advise that the road will get worse before they get better.

3. On behalf of council I have consistently sought to educate those in power and this who seek to know the truth that the responsibility and the resources must be in the same court.

4. Road maintenance follows road revenues NOT NEGOTIABLE.

5. Don’t despair good people – we have since had a MINISTERIAL interest in this crisis and they have promised PRESIDENTIAL intervention (citing at every opportunity “failure by City of Harare”).

6. Now that the messiahs (maybe “saviours” is a better word?) have landed in Harare our failure as council will be fixed.

7. They might also fix all the failure (by Harare City Council of course!) to repair all the badly dilapidated roads around the WHOLE COUNTRY.

8. There are times when there is simply nowhere to hide.

Bikita-West – Warning Of Things To Come

Nomusa Garikayi| “The president (Tsvangirai) said one swallow does not make a summer and Bikita West is the swallow. It was a farcical election that cannot be used to measure someone’s popularity,” Tsvangirai’s spokesperson, Luke Tamborinyoka recently said.

“Yes, there are some people who want to use it to undermine the coalition. However, we will not allow that because we have already decided to do a cow-horn formation on Zanu-PF.”

The Bikita West by-elections confirmed what most people have been saying about Mai Mujuru and her Zim PF, that the she and her party are all bluff and no substance. Zim PF boosted that they will stop Zanu PF rigging elections because they know how the regime rigged elections. The Bikita West by-elections results showed ZimPF’s presence had no effect!

The Bikita West by-election results confirms nothing has changed, it is the first swallow but of many to follow. We do not need to go through yet another election process in 2018 to know the result is yet another rigged election; the Bikita West by-election was the warning of what is certain to come!

We need to implement the democratic reforms now before holding the next elections if we are going to stop Zanu PF rigging the next elections. Tsvangirai and his friends have their heads buried in the sand, they will only believe Zanu PF can rig elections AFTER the elections are rigged.

Zimbabwe is in a serious economic and political mess, millions of our people now live in abject poverty and life expectancy has plummeted from 68 years when Zanu PF first came into power in 1980 to 34 years in 2004, the last time it was measure. Life expectancy has grown in most of the other countries in the region in the same period and countries like Angola and Mozambique had as much as 5 to 10 years better life expectancy than us.

Zimbabwe cannot afford another five years of Zanu PF corrupt and tyrannical rule and push the nation even deeper into poverty and hopelessness. MDC will once again admit, after the 2018 elections have been rigged, that Zanu PF stole the elections and the party’s “cow-horn formation against Zanu PF was useless. No doubt, they will renew their promise not to contest any elections until reforms are implemented, just as they did after the rigged 2013 elections. But what comfort will all the admission be to the millions unemployed to whom poverty now spells death who will have to endure another five years of this corrupt and tyrannical Zanu PF dictatorship!

The coalition between MDC and ZImPF is not the panacea to stop Zanu PF rigging the 2018 elections, implementing the reform is that cure. Taking part in the next elections with not even one reform in place is madness and we have seen this madness in 2013 and on many other occasions in the past.

It was the greatest physicist and intellectual, Albert Einstein who said “Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.”

Zanu PF will rig the 2018 elections with or with the grand MDC-ZimPF coalition as long as there are no democratic reforms in place. After 37 years of rigged elections we KNOW Zanu PF has mastered the art vote rigging to perfection. We do not need to go through another meaningless election process to know that!

 

Zimbabwean Musicians Mourn Lundi

https://youtu.be/cdcPtOdapbo?t=3

After a long battle with stomach TB and liver complications award-winning gospel star Lundi Tyamara has died.

Sources close to the musician confirmed he died in an Edenvale hospital Johannesburg, South Africa in the early hours of yesterday morning.

The Ndixolele hitmaker was moved to ICU on Monday after his condition took a turn for the worse.

Insiders confirmed that the singer was placed on oxygen machines as his liver “had practically stopped working”.

Despite the dire situation his family remained hopeful that “God’s intervention” would help get him through the ordeal and called on the nation to pray for him.

Lundi was first admitted to hospital in December after returning from a trip to China.

Zimbabwean musicians joined the rest of the continent in mourning the gospel musician.

Charles Charamba said he was saddened by the death and recalled how in 2005 Lundi came to the Charambas’ Gunhill residence in Harare for a brief chat where he invited them to a concert he was performing. Victor Kunonga expressed similar sentiments while hip hop musician Mudiwa took to Twitter to express his condolences. Diana Samkange had strengthening words for Lundi’s family.

Meanwhile, the man who discovered Lundi says he was a tough man who was adamant he could make it in the industry.

Founder of Zuz’muzi Music, Tshepo Nzimande, says Lundi was only 16 years old when he came to Johannesburg in 1995 and wanted to record his own album. Nzimande said he will be remembered for his great work.

“I will remember Lundi as one of the toughest gospel artistes I have ever seen because Lundi went through a lot in his time, to an extent where I thought that he was going to give up. There was all this bad publicity, which some of them were true but people would come on Thursday and not have a story and think— let me target Lundi because he is known for this.” – State Media

17 ZRP Cops Arrested

SEVENTEEN police officers from Inyathi and Nkayi have been arrested and charged with abuse of office in connection with illegal gold mining activities in Bubi District.

The Police Act prohibits officers from pursuing business interests without first notifying the Commissioner General Augustine Chihuri.

Police sources said the officers — 11 from Inyathi and six from Nkayi — were arrested on Wednesday last week and have been appearing before an internal tribunal at the Nkayi District police headquarters.

Police prosecutors have preferred a range of charges ranging from criminal abuse of office, leaving their posts unattended and engaging in activities which violate the Police Act.
After the internal hearings, which are expected to continue into next week, the police officers will face criminal charges.

Some of the officers who were charged were deployed at Durban Mine where violent clashes over control of gold claims have previously been reported.

A police source said the Officer Commanding Nkayi District, Chief Superintendent Never Tembo and another officer identified as Superintendent Ntundle, presided over the hearings.

He said the officers were allegedly charged for failing to execute their duties, with members of the public accusing them of turning a blind eye to illegal activities by gold panners.

“The 17 officers have been charged under the Police Act after being suspected of being involved in mining at the gold claims and failing to discharge their duties. Some senior police officers tried to cover up the activities of the officers but the matter came to light following increased public complaints and violent clashes,” said the source.

“Their hearings started on Monday at Nkayi Police Station.” The source said four of the officers were positively identified by omakorokoza who accused them of forcing them into mine shafts.

The names of the 17 officers could not be established yesterday with police keeping a tight lid over the matter.

National police spokesperson Chief Superintendent Paul Nyathi said he was not aware of the case and referred questions to Matabeleland North police.

Acting Matabeleland North police spokesperson Assistant Inspector Eglon Nkala had earlier referred all questions to the national spokesperson’s office.

There have been violent clashes between rival gangs of illegal gold miners in Bubi District.
On Monday, five gold panners who were part of a group of 30 men rounded up by police for wreaking havoc in Inyathi were jailed for two years for a range of transgressions.

Their arrest followed the deployment of 200 police officers from Nkayi in the Inyathi area to restore order. – State Media

BORROWDALE DESTRUCTION: Council Puts Blame On Pre-Cast Walls

Harare City Council has attributed the destruction of property and flooding of homes in parts of Borrowdale and Glen Lorne on Thursday to pre-cast walls, “that disturb the natural flow of water” although Government water engineers note that this only happens when the wall is built across a water course.

There has been extensive development in north-east Harare since Independence. This area is largely very hilly with steep valleys drained by the Mbvunze River (sometimes called the Umwindsi) and its tributaries.

Earlier development was on the hillsides but more recently has extended to the valley floors and especially along the wider than average and flatter valley drained by Borrowdale Brooke.

Many of the newer developments, including those in the valleys, are gated communities with few access roads and few roads leading directly to the river and stream beds, so blocking water from the hillside if the main drains on the main roads cannot cope with the load.

Residents in some sections of the two suburbs woke up to destruction of property on Thursday while some homes in Chitungwiza were also severely affected.

Over 2 000 houses in Chitungwiza and Harare were affected by the floods.

In a statement yesterday, Harare City Council spokesperson Mr Michael Chideme said it was important for residents to seek approval from the city’s building inspectorate before constructing perimeter walls. “This message is coming to you in the wake of preliminary findings on why there was extensive damage in the Borrowdale and Glen Lorne areas following the heavy rains and floods,” said Mr Chideme.

“The perimeter walls in brick and mortar created a buffer that disturbed the natural flow of run-off water leading to flooding and overpowering of the perimeter walls. The flow thereon was so intense that it tore into houses, breaking window panes and doors and in some instances washing away property such as refrigerators, couches and television sets.”

In an interview, Local Government, Public Works and National Housing Permanent secretary Engineer George Mlilo said pre-cast walls can only cause flooding if they are constructed across the flow of water.

“They don’t necessarily lead to flooding, unless if they are constructed across the flow of water,” he said.

Mr Chideme implored Harare residents to be on high alert and to be mindful of the fact that any amount of rain could cause flooding. He said it was important for residents to evacuate their homes the moment they see that their lives are in danger from flooding.

“Always ensure that windows and doors are properly secured and that keys to the doors are accessible. Residents should park their vehicles properly to avoid them being swept away and safe from trees that can fall in the event of a storm.

“Residents should always have a keen interest in weather forecasts and develop the culture of sharing such information with neighbours, relatives and friends.

“It is important to keep communication links with neighbours in the event of disaster. They can be the first port of help,” said Mr Chideme.

He also warned residents against crossing flooded rivers and streams.

Meanwhile, the Meteorological Services Department has warned of heavy rains countrywide that are expected to intensify from today until Tuesday next week. – State Media

Cuthbert Dube Loses Mansion

Former  ZIFA president, Cuthbert Dube is set to lose an incomplete house in Harare’s leafy suburb of Glen Lorne in a dispute with FBC Bank.

Bard Real Estate –as duly instructed by the Sherriff of the High Court –will offer Dube’s property for sale by public auction at Raylton Sports Club on February 3.

According to the notice in Herald yesterday, the property measures 9493 square metres and has an incomplete house comprising several bedrooms, bar, bathrooms, toilets, garages, lounges, dining room, kitchen and balconies.

Outbuildings include a pavilion, change room, swimming pool and staff quarters with two living rooms. – Agencies

AFM Pastor Records Own “Horror Video” Committing Suicide


An AFM pastor, Richard Nhika has done the unthinkable, recording a horrific video of himself committing suicide.

Nhika who was also a gospel musician, shot a two-minute video of himself ending his life in a bush near Goodhope suburb in Harare.

After gulping down a poisonous substance said to be a cotton pesticide, the 38 year old Nhika was soon taken to Parirenyatwa Hospital.

He eventually passed away the following day.

The evidence suggests that the preacher killed himself over a misunderstanding with his girlfriend only identified as Nomatter.

He attempted to kill himself before. The first attempt was in 2009 when he broke up with a woman and that left him devastated.

“My brother I had committed to someone for about two years and we broke up. This was after I paid lobola for her and thereafter things went down the drain. I don’t understand what happened because I wanted to marry her. I was so heartbroken it took me time to recover from the whole issue,” Nhika told the state media then.

“I nearly committed suicide after that. I drank some poison and luckily I was rushed to hospital. However, the poison damaged some of my organs. A splenectomy was done as a result. I was heartbroken. I was saved by the grace of God as He didn’t let me die. I lived and I live for a higher calling.”

When he was asked as to reveal the identity of the woman, Nhika refused saying: “It’s all in the past. One day I’ll get married. I don’t want to drag her through the mud but she was and still is a good person. I’m optimistic that I’ll get married one day.”

The second according to sources was in 2015, after having an undisclosed misunderstanding with some members of his family.

“He tried to commit suicide after having a row with family members. However, he was overpowered by them and they took away the substance and he eventually calmed down,” said the source.

Nhika revealed at that time, that God had taken a hold of his life and he was ready to turn a new leaf and wanted to minister to the masses through Chivindi. At that time many thought Nhika was trying to use his misfortune and embellish it to gain mileage.

However, his recovery from the heartbreak seemed not to have been complete in light of the way he took his life this week.-state media

Gold Baron’s Riches Exposed in Court

CONTROVERSIAL Esigodini businessman Baron Dube makes nearly $10 000 per month and has six gold mines, a farm, four shops and a herd of 200 cattle, his estranged wife told a Maintenance Court hearing in Bulawayo yesterday.

Ms Nikki Cameron (23) dragged the gold baron to the Maintenance Court demanding $650 per month for the upkeep of their three minor children aged four years, one year and five months.

Dube (42) of Habane Township in Esigodini is allegedly not contributing towards the upkeep of his children.

“Your Worship, I need the money to buy food, clothes and pay school fees for my children. I know that he can afford $650 because he owns six mines. He has two mines in Esigodini and other mines at Inyathi, Filabusi, Fort Rixon and Woodlands,” said Ms Cameron.

“Baron prefers to pay someone to drive him all over the place yet he doesn’t want to support our children. I’ve been in this marriage for the past five years and have been assisting in managing his business but he never appreciates.”

Dube said he can only afford to pay $150 per month because he was unemployed and has six other children, bringing the total number of his children to nine.

He told the court that Ms Cameron was lying about the number of businesses he runs.

 “She is lying; I have a mine and 56 cows. I also have other six children that need my support. Zimbabwe’s economy is very bad, people don’t have money and I only make $300 per month from all the shops including the sports bar,” Dube said.

Asked by Magistrate Tashaya how much he makes per month, the businessman said:

“From shops I realise $300. I can give her $150 per month because these other six children are at school and they are in arrears. I need to clear all the arrears at their school”.

Mr Tashaya told the gold baron that it was clear that he was lying in court and postponed the matter to February 3.

“You told me that you are unemployed and your wife is telling me that you are a businessman. You are telling the court that you have 56 cows while your wife whom you have been married to for the past five years says you have 200 cattle. Why are you lying in court?” asked the magistrate.

Mr Tashaya told Dube that he would order him to pay more than $650 if he discovers that he was lying in court.

“I’m postponing this matter to February 3. Dube come with the ownership books for the cattle and mines. I want to see the number of cattle that you have.

Can you please bring your mine licences, birth certificates of your other six children and your bank statement,” he said.

In November last year, there were violent clashes at one of Dube’s mining claims in Filabusi that claimed the life of his nephew.

Qalisani Moyo, who was popularly known as “Friday” of Sanale area in Filabusi, was axed to death after his right foot was chopped off in a fight over the gold claim at HeyHill Farm.

Dube later revealed that on the day his relative died, they were supposed to travel together to the claim for a meeting, but he later decided against going there. – State Media

4 Cheat Death As Car Plunges Into Flooded River

FOUR people escaped death when a Mazda B1800 they were travelling in fell into a flooded Gweru River along the Gweru- Matobo Road yesterday.

The vehicle, according to the Gweru Chief Fire Officer Mr Emmanuel Musemwa, fell into the flooded river when the driver failed to negotiate a narrow bridge.

He said the incident occurred at around 11AM at the Gweru River bridge. Four people who were in the vehicle survived due to the heroic efforts by fellow motorists who jumped into the flooded river and rescued them.

“These people are lucky to be alive but it’s sad that the driver attempted to cross the bridge which was flooded. The four were taken to Gweru Provincial Hospital for monitoring by medical staff. We encourage motorists and members of the public to desist from crossing flooded rivers. They should wait for water levels to drop because if it wasn’t for the alert motorists, we could have lost four lives,” he said.

When The Chronicle arrived at the scene, members of the Gweru Fire Brigade were attempting to retrieve the vehicle which had been swept some few metres down the river.

Ms Seletina Mucheki (21) one of the survivors said she was travelling with her husband Mr Itayi Chafa (28), their daughter Nancy (2) and the vehicles’ driver offered them a lift.

Ms Mucheki — a member of Zion Christian Church — said they boarded the vehicle near Ascot Stadium as they intended to go to Arizona 43 Farm, some 40km from Gweru. She said when they got to the bridge; some motorists had parked their vehicles waiting for the water to subside.

“Since I was at the back I don’t know what the driver thought but I saw him driving across the bridge. Before I knew it, the vehicle started swerving to the right side. I then saw that we were being pushed by the waters in the bridge and I got hold of my daughter. I started praying to the God of Samuel, Anginas and Nehemiah and I felt calm. I knew we were going to survive and here we are. We thank God for this miracle,” he said. – State Media

Zanu-PF Heavyweight In Trouble For Firearm Misconduct

A SENIOR Zanu-PF official from Bulawayo Nacisio Elijah Makhulumo has been fined $100 for not reporting to the police that his firearm was missing.

Makhulumo pleaded guilty to failure to report a missing firearm when he appeared before Bulawayo Provincial Magistrate Mr Tinashe Tashaya on Thursday.

“I’m sure you are aware of the dangers that may come with not securing a firearm. You are lucky that no one killed someone with it. You need to take more caution in securing it. Let this be the only time that you face such an offence,” said Mr Tashaya.

“You are sentenced to pay a $100 fine or face 90 days imprisonment. The money has to be paid to the Clerk of Court on                                          or before January 31.”

Makhulumo said he was not aware that his gun had gone missing.

Prosecuting, Miss Sithembiso Sweswe said the firearm went missing on December 3 last year until it was picked up by someone in Hillside suburb last Wednesday.

“Accused person lost an FN pistol serial number 95974, black in colour at a place unknown to him. No report was made until Wednesday,” said Miss Sweswe.

“The pistol was recovered by one Farai Paradza hidden under a heap of thorn branches opposite Christian Brothers College in Hillside suburb where he was slashing some grass. Paradza surrendered the pistol to the police at Hillside police station.” – State Media

Drama As DStv Fires ‘All’ Bulawayo Staff

MULTICHOICE Zimbabwe has asked six employees who were working from its Bulawayo office to resign for alleged misconduct.

The six, including the regional manager, allegedly signed resignation letters last week on Thursday.

The employees are said to have been selling their own decoders, prejudicing the company in the process.

Sources said only the messenger remains on the job.

“I understand that Multichoice fired all its workers on Thursday except the messenger who protested and won,” said a source.

“I think what got them into trouble was the fact that they were selling their own decoders during working hours and claiming that they belonged to Dstv.”

The source said some workers from Harare had been temporarily deployed to fill the vacant positions while Multichoice fixes the problem.

“We heard that the regional manager was called for a hearing in Harare last year in December and she sold out her colleagues. The whole branch is alleged to have misused company resources and they were making lots of money from using the company’s name to sell their personal gadgets,” a source said.

Multichoice spokesperson Ms Elizabeth Dziva promised to respond to questions on Monday as she was waiting for her boss who was out of the country. – State Media

Tsvangirai MDC Squabbles Over Candidate Selection

Terrence Mawawa, Masvingo | MDC officials here have vowed to defy a ban imposed on the selection of candidates by party leader Morgan Tsvangirai.

Irate officials here have described the move to ban the candidate selection process as a deliberate attempt by Tsvangirai and party Secretary General Douglas Mwonzora to impose candidates ahead of the 2018 polls.

In 2013 the imposition of candidates contributed towards the party’s dismal performance in that year’s watershed polls, party sources have said. Senior party officials here blasted both Tsvangirai and Mwonzora for attempting to trample on the provisions of the party constitution.

“This is a clear attempt to impose their favourite candidates.This time we will resist the deliberate attempt to subvert the will of the people.They are preaching democracy but they do not want to implement fair principles,”said a member of the MDC Provincial Executive Committee who declined to be named.

Mwonzora maintained the selection of candidates had been phased out.He also wrote a memo to all party structures indicating the new position. “It has come to our attention that some provincial members are trying to initiate the candidate selection process ahead of the 2018 elections. Let me state that the Election Directorate -headed by the national chairman-has finalised the candidate selection rules,”said Mwonzora. However provincial executive members here told ZimEye.com despite Mwonzora’s memo, they would not stop the candidate selection process.

President Mugabe Is Back

President Robert Mugabe has arrived back home from his annual traditional vacation.
President Mugabe and the First Lady Grace Mugabe were met at the Harare International Airport by the two Vice Presidents Emmerson Mnangagwa and Phelekezela Mphoko, Cabinet Ministers Dr Sydney Sekeramayi, Dr Ignatious Chombo and Dr Christopher Mushohwe, Harare Metropolitan Resident Minister  Miriam Chikukwa, Chief Secretary to the President and Cabinet Cde Misheck Sibanda, Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Information, Media and Broadcasting Services  George Charamba and Service Chiefs among others.

President Mugabe said he had a fruitful engagement with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jing Ping and the Chinese promised to assist Zimbabwe in various projects. – State Media

Has The Bond Notes Project Collapsed?

That sooner or later Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe chief John Mangudya’s bond notes project
would run into problems was a foregone conclusion. The bond notes, which were touted as the panacea to Zimbabwe’s cash problems, have so far proven to be a cancer that is slowly eating away at the little gains of economic stability achieved by the introduction of the US dollar in 2009.

Earlier warnings that the surrogate currency would be discounted by the Zimbabwean
public were quickly dismissed. Elsewhere, we carry a story on the problems wrought so far by the issue of bond notes.

Yet despite assurances from the central bank last year and to date that the bond notes have
some sort of value derived from a US$200 million Afrexim Bank facility backing the notes, the situation on the ground shows that his assurances are not enough.

External payments glitches have intensified. Expatriates cannot send a few dollars to family overseas.
Already banks, themselves unwilling participants in a project they secretly knew would
fail, but too scared to resist a regulator’s desperate move to end a cash crisis, are
demanding hard currency from customers seeking to transfer funds out of the country not
withstanding current bank balances.

Essentially, what banks are saying is although we played along to the whims of the
central bank to launch bond notes with a value that is said to be at par with the American
unit, the balances they claim we have with them are nothing but just electronic money, which unfortunately cannot be mistaken for hard currency.

Anyone who has attempted to import anything into the country will testify to this.
This situation is not only preposterous but also a blatant disregard for the financial
welfare of citizens by the state.

Instead of promoting and preserving the financial well- being of citizens, the
government, through the central bank, is leading a campaign to erode the financial
integrity of its citizens and plunge them into untold misery. It is now apparent that
Mangudya’s assurances that bond notes would have par value with the US dollar and be used
in lieu of the currency and share the same account despite protestations to separate the
two accounts, was nothing but a yarn spun so beautifully.

Could this be systematic theft from the populace through devious means? Many are beginning to believe this was all an elaborate scheme to deprive Zimbabweans of their valuable dollars. More worryingly, the greenback seems to have vanished suddenly from circulation.

In the circumstances, citizens have a reason to mistrust the central bank and the financial institutions. Unfortunately, it seems a confidence crisis has occurred. Against such a background charecterised by low confidence in the currency, it is just a matter of time before the chickens come home to roost. -Independent

BOND NOTES: Importers Left Stranded

THE introduction of bond notes has put ordinary Zimbabweans and importers in a rut with many facing bottlenecks as some local banks reject the use of the fiat money for foreign payments amid a severe shortage of US dollars that has paralysed the economy.

Zimbabwe has been facing foreign currency shortages since last year as shown by long, winding queues at banking halls and demand for cash-backs in supermarkets. Since the introduction of the multi-currency system in 2009, the United States dollar has been the dominant currency.
As first reported by the Zimbabwe Independent last November, local banks, which on the surface appear to be supporting the introduction of US$200 million worth of the new promissory currency in bond notes into the market, are now raising concerns over chaos on accounting standards and operational headaches since the introduction of the bond notes.

Bank executives who spoke to this paper said most local banks are having challenges accepting the currency to fund import payments for customers as they cannot carry out cross-border transactions.
The Reserve Bank had initially indicated that upon expiry of the bond notes (when exports reach US$6 billion), those customers who would have deposited foreign currency would be entitled to demand their funds in foreign currency.

“In principle if a customer deposits the bond note, that note cannot be used to carry out any cross-border payments or fund prepaid cards (VISA/MasterCard). As it stands now other banks have taken the stance that they do not accept bond notes for prepaid cards or cross-border payments,” a senior banker with a local financial institution, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said.

“We are also facing challenges from some customers that have requested that their USD accounts should not be diluted with the bond notes despite the currency being at par with the greenback. The challenge with this request is how banks can comply with such an instruction from a customer given that the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe turned down our proposal to have mirror accounts for bond notes and more so it has reiterated that the notes are at par value with USD.”

“…Another concern that the industry is raising is that before the introduction of the bond note, banks were made to understand that if a customer intends to carry out a cross-border payment, the bank would present the bond notes to the RBZ and the central bank would supply the US dollars. However, practically this is not happening on the ground.”

The bankers have also raised concerns on automated teller machines (ATMs) which they say are configured to dispense money below the daily withdrawal limits, thereby pushing the cost to the customer.

“From an operation point of view, our machines have also been affected by bond notes. ATM operations are currently being affected by the small denominations because the cassettes can only take up to a maximum of 40 notes, which means customers have to perform several transactions resulting in build-up of queues and accelerated wear and tear of the machines, hence $5 bond should be introduced urgently,” another executive working for a foreign-owned bank said.

Bond notes, according to Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) governor John Mangudya, are backed by a US$200 million African Export and Import Bank (Afreximbank) facility and are largely an export incentive.

Official figures show that total exports stood at US$2,83 billion against a projected target of US$3 billion while imports were at US$5,21 billion, resulting in an annual trade deficit of US$2,38 billion.
When reached for comment on challenges being faced by banks since the introduction of bond notes, central bank governor John Mangudya said this was yet to be brought to his attention.

“We are not aware of the banks that are refusing to accept bond notes to fund cross-border transactions. Cross-border transactions are effected from debiting foreign exchange accounts of the transacting party or entity. Such transactions require funding in the country’s nostro accounts,” Mangudya said in a written response to questions sent by the Independent.

“The bottom line is that the country needs to enhance exports and other foreign exchange receipts in order to sustain its import requirements. We need to enhance productivity across all the sectors of the economy. As previously advised, the $5 bond notes shall be released into the market in February 2017, in line with the release of the export incentive scheme pay-outs which basically conforms to the drip-feed process in sympathy with export receipts.”

The Bankers Association of Zimbabwe (BAZ) said bond notes had played a role in easing the cash shortages, adding that they were not a permanent solution to problems besetting the economy.

“The introduction of bond notes has reduced further foreign currency leakages as the notes are only useful within the country. The notes have resulted in the improved availability of cash in the market and queues at banks have substantially reduced. Bond notes are however not a panacea for cash shortages as the under US$80 million worth of bond notes so far issued to the market, as published in the media by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, is a minor part of the overall money in circulation in the country,” BAZ president Charity Jinya said in a written response to emailed questions .

“It is important to understand that bond notes are legal tender meant for internal circulation within Zimbabwe and cannot be used to finance offshore payments. They have thus relieved banks of part of the burden of importing foreign currency notes from offshore, and these resources are being availed to critical import payments.

“The banking public is encouraged to make greater use of electronic payment channels to reduce demand for cash and banks are working round the clock to ensure that more point of sale devices are availed to businesses for the convenience of the public.”

In 2013, the Supreme Court ruled in favour of China Shougang International which had sued Standard Chartered Bank for not reimbursing its deposits worth nearly US$48 000 which were raided by the RBZ during its quasi-fiscal operations at the height of the economic meltdown and hyperinflation which ended after the introduction of the multi-currency regime in 2009.

Banking officials are also raising concerns over the lack of transparency on the US$200 million Afreximbank facility after President Robert Mugabe invoked the Presidential Powers (Temporary Measures) Act to gazette Statutory Instrument 133 giving legal effect to the introduction of bond notes.

As it stands, the banking sector relies on official figures released by the apex bank on the current holdings of bond notes.

Early this month the central bank more than doubled the current holdings of bond notes to US$73 million in just less than a month as the central bank moves to ease a biting cash crunch amid concerns the apex bank could run the printing press unabated.

Banking officials further said while bond notes have relatively eased the cash crunch, failure by government to constitute an independent committee to oversee the supply of bond notes into the market could dampen market confidence.

Meanwhile, the government says it is still crafting a statutory instrument that will give legal effect to the setting up of the panel despite initial assurances by the central bank that the committee would be in the place when the bond notes were introduced. zimbabwe indepednent

War Against Vendors Continues

A faith-based rights group has accused the Harare City Council (HCC) and police of disregarding a court order to stop the removal of vendors from the central business district (CBD).

The Jestina Mukoko-led Zimbabwe Peace Project (ZPP) said the two institutions had continued to show intent to violate laws after forging ahead with the raids on informal traders in the city centre despite a court injunction.

“According to the lawyers representing Vendors Initiative for Social and Economic Transformation (Viset), the court order was delivered to HCC officials and the (police) commissioner-general Augustine Chihuri.

 “Despite this, police and council municipal police are still raiding vendors in the city centre in contempt of the court order,” ZPP said in a statement.

 

ZPP called for an investigation to be instituted urgently and those found guilty to be punished for violating the law. The rights group said authorities mandated to protect the vulnerable were now threatening their security and harassing them. Vendors and law enforcement agents have continued clashing in the city centre as informal traders resisted eviction, with police using teargas.

“It is definitely contempt of court and we will deal with it when we get to court because clearly they will be coming to court with dirty hands,” Viset counsel Tonderai Bhatasara said.

On Tuesday, High Court judge David Mangota issued an injunction in response to an urgent chamber application seeking to block the demolitions ordered by the HCC after an inter-ministerial taskforce led by the Health ministry banned vending of all uncooked and cooked foods following a typhoid outbreak that has so far claimed two lives. – Daily News

COALITION DEAL: “I Have Not Given Away Parly Seats” – Tsvangirai

Luke Tamborinyoka | President Morgan Tsvangirai today continued on his listening tour when he engaged opinion leaders in Bulawayo and Plumtree in Matabeleland South.

The tour continues to reflect a region with deep-seated feelings of marginalisation, neglect and abandonment by an uncaring government that has no love for its people. The people continued to pour their hearts out to a leader they love and whom they thanked for giving them an opportunity to input into the alliance building process and the sculpting of a new society beyond Mugabe and Zanu PF in 2018.

So frank and open were the meetings that at one point in Bulawayo, one opinion leader made an emotional outburst in which he bemoaned the marginalisation of the people in the Matabeleland region.

Both in Bulawayo and Plumtree, they were strong feelings not only about the collapse of the political economy, but also of the deep wounds inflicted by the State-sponsored Gukurahundi atrocities. There were several suggestions on how to deal with this grievance so that the nation puts closure to this painful period in the country’s history.

The suggestions ranged from the payment of reparations to the implementation of devolution as a permanent solution to the bad politics of exclusion that Zanu PF has pursued in the past.

President Tsvangirai took time during the engagements to clear the air about the false reports that he had already traded off some seats to the coalition partners. The alliance negotiations had not even begun and the reports were false and malicious as there was no agreement yet. He said the new government must be inclusive and must prioritise merit and not tribe.

The opinion leaders had strong feelings on gender representation in the new government and said while they supported the alliance, it must be sculpted in a way that would inspire the people and ensure that change comes in 2018.

Most of the input by the people are of a strategic nature and are meant to enrich both the alliance building process and the post-Mugabe government policies that should promote development and inclusivity.

As part of his mass-line approach to politics, it is President Tsvangirai’s belief that public participation can only enhance and enrich the party’s approach to national issues that affect the people.

The opinion leaders that are being engaged represent the breadth of leaders ranging from traditional leaders, civic leaders as well as leaders in church and business, among many others sectors.

Tomorrow, President Tsvangirai addresses a provincial assembly meeting in Bulawayo, after which he will go on a short break before proceeding to the other provinces to solicit the people’s views at this delicate political moment for the country.

Luke Tamborinyoka
Presidential Spokesperson and Director of Communications
Movement for Democratic Change

Wife Not Getting Enough Sex From Hubby Must Be Allowed To Get Pleasure Outside? | LIVE VIDEO at 4pm (UK time) TODAY

Ray Nkosi | Many wives are starved of sex, while their husbands pleasure themselves to no end with other women outside the home. What can a woman denied of her conjugal rights do? Her reason for being in the matrimonial arrangement, if there is no sexual intimacy, can she be blamed for seeking sex outside? After all a healthy lifestyle includes good sex. What is your take? Should women suffer in silence? Join Tete Rasta on ZimEye LIVE at 6pm (Zim Time) to discuss this hot topic. 

ZSE Summons Econet

THE Zimbabwe Stock Exchange (ZSE) on Tuesday summoned mobile network operator Econet Wireless Zimbabwe over contentious issues in its US$130 million rights offer after the country’s capital markets regulator, the Securities and Exchange Commission of Zimbabwe expressed concerns that the capital-raising initiative could result in the unfair treatment of local investors.

Econet is currently seeking shareholder approval for a capital raise of US$130 million by way of a rights offer of ordinary shares and linked debentures in order to facilitate the servicing of its foreign debt. Shareholders are expected to vote for or against the rights offer on February 3.

The weighted average interest rate on long-term borrowings for the company as at February 29 2016 was 7,1% (2015: 7,3%).

In addition to the all-inclusive rate of borrowing of 7,1% the group pays guarantee fees of 6% per annum to Econet Global Limited for the guarantee provided on the multi-creditor loan facilities.

The rights offer will be fully underwritten by Econet Global Limited which holds 30,02% shareholding in Econet Wireless Zimbabwe.

Should the capital-raising initiative get a green light from shareholders, it will need approval from the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe for the proceeds of the rights offer to be paid by each participating shareholder into the debt service account held by EWZ with the African Export and Import Bank outside Zimbabwe and for the proceeds to be applied by the company to repay its secured loan obligations.

Sources familiar with the developments told the Zimbabwe Independent that the SECZ, which sits on the ZSE listing committee as an ex officio member, raised issues of unfair treatment of local investors in following their rights as well as the rationale behind the conversion of the company’s Class A shares into ordinary shares.

This, sources said, resulted in Econet being summoned by the listing committee this week to explain issues relating to exchange control and the funding structure of the capital raise.

SECZ chief executive Tafadzwa Chinamo confirmed that the capital markets regulator had raised some concerns with ZSE which, in turn, instructed Econet to work on the issues. Questions sent to ZSE chief executive Alban Chirume were not responded to at the time of going to print.

“Investor protection is one of our mandates as the Securities and Exchange Commission of Zimbabwe. We want to ensure fair treatment to all shareholders. As was first presented by the company (Econet), we felt that the local investors that do not have access to foreign currency would be denied an opportunity to follow their rights. So the company must address that,” Chinamo said.

“I don’t know how far they have gone in addressing those issues but I can speak on the issues we raised. We understand the challenges that companies are going through but that should not be the reason to override shareholders’ interests.”

Analysts have also raised eyebrows over the the urgency of the capital raise, saying it comes well before the due date of the debt with some saying this could be a plot to buy out minority shareholders given the current foreign currency shortages in the market.

They also queried why Econet Global did not bail out EWZ given that the debt was secured and the group was receiving guarantors’ fees which is above market rates.

In its abridged circular published last week, Econet said the rights offer shares are priced at a discount to the market, in order to provide an incentive for members to invest capital into a deflationary and illiquid environment where it is extremely difficult to withdraw cash in United States dollars, or to make foreign payments.

“Shareholders are being given the opportunity to earn a fixed US Dollar return of 5% per annum by subscribing to the linked debentures. The debentures allow the company to defer a debt settlement, which is due and payable within the next 12-18 months by a further 4-5 years.

This will afford the company an opportunity to accumulate foreign currency resources to fund the redemption of these Debentures at maturity.

“It also provides an important incentive for shareholders to participate in the rights offer and the linked debentures while mitigating the dilutive impact of the Rights Offer on those shareholders who may not have access to external US dollar resources with which to follow their rights.

Subject to the availability of United States dollars with which to make external payments, it is the opinion of the directors that the company will be able to mobilise sufficient resources over the six-year period to redeem the linked debentures.” – Independent

Mugabe’s Rice Looted

By Ray Nkosi | Hungry Doctors and nurses at Gwanda Provincial Hospital are reported to have shared amongst themselves five tonnes of rice donated to patients by the Chinese through the Presidential Feeding Scheme programme.

Impeccable sources within the hospital told ZimEye.com that the hospital received 169 bags of 50kg rice late last year meant for patients but the hospital authorities instead shared 100 bags amongst doctors and nurses as well as the general staff at the hospital.

The sources said each person got almost 20kg of rice.

“Sometime before Christmas we got notice that we were supposed to collect a bucket of rice each; everyone at the hospital excluding student nurses benefited and everyone was meant to sign on collection,” said one of the sources in confidence.

“We thought this was a benevolent gesture from government since we have not yet received our annual bonuses,” said added.

The sources said that they have since been ordered by the Department of Social Welfare to reimburse the hospital of the rice.

“However, we are now being ambushed to return the “stolen” rice at the behest of the Social Welfare ministry who are saying we were not meant to benefit,” said the source.

Although Dr. Chimberengwa could not be reached for comment authoritative sources said the rice was distributed to staff members after management felt it was likely to go bad whilst being kept at the hospital.

“If indeed the rice was not meant for us we are willing to pay back but we should not be held at ransom as nurses because the decision came from the top,” said a nurse.

Grace Bleeds Tomana Into Shocking Poverty


Cross First Lady Grace Mugabe’s path and tomorrow your teeth will be biting the dust in Harare’s dirty streets.

Tomana has several of Grace’s machine guns pointed at him; firstly for being an Emmerson Mnangagwa aide, secondly for being a child sex abuser, what the First Lady has said she will never tolerate while she is alive and finally for interfering with the Gushungo bombing suspect case, a CIO plot meant to incriminate Mnangagwa and imprison the Vice President.

The state media reports that suspended Prosecutor-General Mr Johannes Tomana had his property attached over legal costs to the tune of $28 000. The costs were accrued from court cases which Mr Tomana lost last year when he was battling to block the setting up of a tribunal to determine his suitability to continue holding the esteemed office.In the spirited attempts to stop the disciplinary proceedings, Mr Tomana cited the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) as a respondent. JSC lawyers, Kantor and Immerman, last month obtained a writ of execution before instructing the Sheriff of the High Court to attach property.

After the attachment of property, Mr Tomana through his lawyers Mambosasa Legal Practice, filed an urgent chamber application at the High Court to stop the removal of the property which had been set for yesterday. Advocate Thabani Mpofu successfully argued for the temporal stay of execution pending determination on whether or not the PG should lose his property.

Justice Herbert Chitapi on Wednesday evening temporarily stopped the removal of the property pending determination of the dispute today. The property was attached at Mr Tomana’s residence in Glen Lorne on January 23 this year.

The property under attachment includes:

A Toyota Prado (AEB 1142)

Mercedes Benz (ABE 4686)

Wheel barrow

LG plasma television sets x2

Sofas (two sets)

Dining table and eight chairs

Fridges x2

Washing machines x3

Carpets x2

Garden chairs

Borehole pump

Microwave

Television stands

In the pending High Court urgent chamber application, Mr Tomana said JSC lawyers had assured him that he would not meet the payment of costs.

Surprisingly, Mr Tomana said he was ambushed with a writ of execution and subsequent attachment of property as he was never given an opportunity to pay the debt.

“If first respondent’s position (JSC) is that it wants to enforce its costs order, it must tell me, give me time to pay and that will be the end of the matter.

“What is unacceptable with respect, is for first respondent to tell me that it will not enforce the costs order, then turn around at a time that I am supposed to be testifying in defence of my job.

“The clear intention is to unhinge me. Execution carried out under such circumstances cannot be lawful,” he said.

He said everything that his family owns was attached and that the court should intervene and stay execution.

Mr Tomana argued that the writ of execution and notice of seizure and attachment were illegal. “The writ does not relate to sums of money procured under HC1913/ 16. It creates obligations that are not anointed by the parent judgment.

“The notice was not served on myself personally, neither was I granted the rights under Rule 355, which include an opportunity to satisfy the judgment or sums claimed.

“The failure to effect personal service affects computation of the 48 hours within which the removal can be conducted, as such can only commence to run upon my knowledge of the same,” said Mr Tomana.

He said no inventory or valuation report was attached to the notice of attachment, giving an indication that the Sherriff acted unlawfully.

Mr Tomana described the execution as a tainted process and an abuse of the law.

The High Court will today determine whether or not Mr Tomana should lose the property. – State Media

Mangudya At Crossroads

Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe governor John Mangudya will in the next few days present his Monetary Policy Statement.

With his policy statement, the market is keen to see the direction the central bank chief takes and the resultant monetary measures it will introduce, especially now when he has found new leverage in the form of money supply after the introduction of bond notes.

With a ready and oiled printing press, it remains to be seen what course the central bank will take.

His predecessor, Gideon Gono, earned himself notoriety for running the printing press to finance quasi- fiscal operations and to keep President Robert Mugabe in power, triggering unprecedented hyperinflation.

Against such a background, whatever limited monetary interventions Mangudya can introduce, they will not be enough to get the economy going again.

Traditionally, central banks increase the total supply of money in the economy more rapidly than usual in times of economic decline.The effect of monetary expansion is increasing the overall demand for all goods and services in an economy, which boosts growth as measured by gross domestic product. If Mangudya attempts to stimulate economic growth in the economy by running the printing press, the move could trigger inflation.

In fact, the move could backfire spectacularly. His hands are tied, with regards the the amount of bond notes he can issue. Although this works well elsewhere, Zimbabwe is an isolated instance.

The only thing close to a currency Zimbabwe has is a bond note, which the central bank claims is backed by a US$200 million Afreximbank facility. In other words, any note outside the US$200 million facility is not backed by any value and could create valuation problems, triggering total loss of confidence in the currency. Concerns are rising over the bond note’s value, with importers not accepting the promissory currency as legal tender for transactions.

Apart from that, the troubled southern African nation uses a basket of the world’s currencies ranging from the US dollar to the yuan.

In light of this, Mangudya is not expected to come up with anything exciting or earth shattering.

In a country where the wage bill gobbles up more than 90% of revenue, company closures are rampant, government policy is inconsistent and cash in short supply, there is not much room for decisive monetary intervention.

Against such a background, Mangudya needs to delicately balance between the need to stimulate economic growth and maintaining the status quo ahead of elections.

With noisy elections looming, Mangudya might be forced to defy economic logic and pursue populist agendas to the detriment of the economy.

Last year, Finance minister Patrick Chinamasa’s proposal to suspend civil servants’ bonuses for two years and to implement productive measures was rejected. – The Independent

Mnangagwa Blocks Chief Justice Appointment

VICE-PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa, who presides over the Ministry of Justice and Legal Affairs, has stuck to his guns over the appointment of the Chief Justice (CJ) insisting that the current process is flawed hence the need for a constitutional amendment.He also questioned the calibre of people, who interview the short-listed candidates for the CJ post under the current constitutional arrangement.In his response to the heads of argument filed at the Supreme Court a fortnight ago by the Judiciary Service Commission (JSC), in a matter in which the commission is appealing against Justice Charles Hungwe’s interdict preventing it from conducting public interviews for the CJ post on December 12, Mnangagwa questioned why the commission was quick to carry out the public interviews when it was aware that there was an executive order to amend the constitution.

Mnangagwa was cited as the third respondent in the matter.

He said there was no need to rush the interviews because the law is clear on what must be done when the office of the CJ becomes vacant but does not “impliedly set the timeframe within which such a vacancy must be filled”.

“There was and there is no need for the rush when filing such a crucial post is made. There is a general consensus among the citizens that whilst the procedure laid down under section 180 is laudable, it presents serious challenges when it concerns the appointment of a chief justice,” Mnangagwa said in his arguments filed last week.

He questioned whether the CJ should be chosen through public interviews by a panelist as prescribed by the constitution under section 189.

“Clearly section 180 and 189 are clear and not in dispute as they spell out the broad framework within which appointment of a chief justice must be undertaken in the new constitutional dispensation. However the inevitable question arises when one gives serious attention to the process relating to public interviews insofar as section 180 states that all prospective judges and chief justice must be interviewed in public before their appointment,” Mnangagwa said.

“One such question is whether in view of a list of panelists who constitute the Judicial Service Commission, the constitution indeed requires that a person to be appointed as chief justice be subjected to public interviews? Is it the intention of those who drafted the supreme law of the land that the prospective candidates for appointment of a chief justice be scrutinised through public interviews before their appointment?”

He said while one can advance the argument that the public interview process is necessary because it ensures transparency and in any case is what the supreme law prescribes, “one should not lose sight to the great respect and responsibilities attached to office of a chief justice”.

“A close scrutiny of those who ought to sit as panelists when prospective chief justice is being interviewed leaves a lot to be desired,” Mnangagwa said.

“For instance it cannot be said that it is the intention of the drafters of the constitution for the chief justice to be questioned about his or her suitability for appointment by the chief magistrate. That state of affairs is not sustainable. Surely majority of the panelists are likely to have little or no knowledge of the law compared to the person they sit to interview.

“The public expectations and aspirations for good corporate governance cannot be met where a chief justice is subjected to interview by people who are too junior in terms of experience and hierarchy.”

Mnangagwa said Hungwe was correct in granting an interdict to stop the conduct of the interviews for the CJ pending the amendment of the constitution.

“There is no way a responsible judge could have ignored evidence from the executive indicating its intention to correct a patent defect in a constitutional provision…… There is nothing novel about the attitude taken by the court in this regard since in other jurisdictions a court can make a provisional order suspending declaration of invalidity of any law of conduct pending remedial action by the relevant authorities,” he said.

However, the JSC in its arguments said Hungwe’s ruling was misdirected and a violation of the constitution.

Hungwe’s ruling followed a court application by a fourth-year University of Zimbabwe law student Romeo Zibani seeking an order to stop the interviews arguing that the process was “unfair” and “not transparent”.

Zibani wanted section 180 of the constitution amended to allow for the president to appoint the CJ, deputy chief justice and judge president using his own discretion.
In its arguments, the JSC said there was nothing wrong or unlawful in the process of the selection of the CJ as “eminent jurists on our jurisdiction were properly nominated in response to the advertisement”.

The commission also said Hungwe’s ruling was misdirected and a violation of the constitution adding that under the new constitution an ordinary constitutional bill is not “a walk in the park”, hence Section 180 of the Constitution is the present law.

The matter will be heard and determined by the Supreme Court on February 13.

The battle to succeed Chief Justice Godfrey Chidyausiku is now widely seen as political. This comes as warring factions within the ruling Zanu PF jostle to have a candidate of their choice occupying the office.

Mnangagwa’s faction wants Judge President George Chiweshe to succeed Chidyausiku, while the G40 faction, which has coalesced around First Lady Grace Mugabe is backing JSC secretary Rita Makarau. – The Independent

 

Armed Robber To Hang for Brutal Murder

AN armed robber who brutally murdered a security guard at Grafax Cotton Company offices in Gokwe before stealing cash, two solar inverters and a generator nine years ago, has been sentenced to death.

Doubt Mathe, whose age was not given, of Zunguziva village under Chief Chireya in Gokwe, yesterday appeared before High Court Judge Justice Nicholas Mathonsi, sitting on circuit in Gweru, charged with murder.

Mathe was convicted of murder with actual intent and sentenced to death. In passing sentence, Justice Mathonsi said people should respect the sanctity of human life.

He said the circumstances surrounding the commission of the crime shows that it was premeditated.

The judge said the murder was committed in the course of a robbery, therefore the death sentence was appropriate.

“The courts do not condone murder. We should respect the sanctity of human life. There is a need for stiffer penalties for murders committed with intent,” said Justice Mathonsi.

It was the State’s case that on June 15, 2008 at around 1 AM, Mathe and his accomplices, one of whom is now deceased and the other one who is at large, brutally murdered a security guard, Taurai Mache (24), who was manning Grafax Cotton Company offices in Gokwe.

They hit him with a hoe handle, cracking his skull.

On June 14, 2008 at around 6 PM, the now deceased Mache reported for duty and found Ms Winnie Sigwala, who was a cotton buyer, still at work.

Ms Sigwala then proceeded home within the same premises.

At around 12 midnight, Mathe and his two accomplices went into the Grafax Cotton Company premises armed with a hoe handle and found Mache on duty.

The three started assaulted him with the hoe handle several times on his head until he fell unconscious while bleeding profusely.

After the attack, Mathe and his accomplices proceeded to Ms Sigwala’s house where they found her asleep. They broke the door and gained entry into the house.

The three demanded money from her, threatening to kill her after informing her that they had already killed Mache. Sigwala directed the accused and his accomplices to where the money was.

They stole Z$50 billion, two solar inverters and a generator which they put in a bag belonging to Ms Sigwala. – State Media

CIA Implicates Sekeramayi In Gukurahundi Killings

DEFENCE minister Sydney Sekeramayi has been implicated as having been instrumental in the post-independence atrocities committed by President Robert Mugabe’s government that left over 20 000 civilians dead.

A declassified document from US spy agency, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), quotes Sekeramayi as having indicated that a crack North-Korean trained military unit codenamed Fifth Brigade had specific instructions at deployment.

“Renewed violence at the end of 1982 provoked the government into a full-scale military campaign against Zapu. The dissidents attacked cars, buses and trains and destroyed government construction equipment; they seized several hostages and killed six whites,” the report said.

“The 5th Brigade was sent to Matabeleland in January 1983 with a mandate to be ‘relentless in neutralising dissident elements,’ according to Minister of State for Defence Sekeramayi.

“Although there were some exaggerated Press reports of atrocities against Ndebele villagers by the all-Shona brigade, there is little doubt it engaged in indiscriminate brutality and destroyed property, including entire villages, in several instances,” the report said.

Contacted for comment yesterday, Sekeramayi said he was yet to see the declassified report.

“I am yet to see that report,” he said.

When NewsDay quizzed him on whether the quoted words were consistent with what he might have said at the time, the Defence minister insisted: “I have not had sight of the report you are referring to.”

According to the CIA, the government followed a campaign, also codenamed “Mailed Fist”, whose aim, besides ending dissident violence also targeted the elimination of “Zapu as a political organisation”.

Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa has denied culpability in the atrocities, arguing he was neither head of government nor the army at the time. Mugabe has described Gukurahundi, which continues to raise emotions, as a “moment of madness”.

Several accounts have accused Mnangagwa and Sekeramai of playing a leading role.- Newsday

Drunk Medical Doctor ‘Kills’ Patient During Operation

 Terrence Mawawa, Gutu | A medical doctor at the Reformed Church in Zimbabwe (RCZ) run Gutu Mission Hospital conducted an operation under the influence of alcohol resulting in the death of a patient, ZimEye can reveal.

Dr Henry Harry Mushuku performed the operation on Locadi Mbinda two weeks ago and the latter died soon after the operation. Gutu District Medical Officer, Dr Tapiwa Mupepe, confirmed the death of the woman adding she left a day-old bay.

He however said the woman died as a result of delivery complications. “The woman died as a result of delivery complications and we are in the process of analysing the matter,”he said.

Masvingo Provincial Medical Director Dr Amadeus Shamu said the woman  died under unclear circumstances. “I have heard about the incident but let me say investigations are under way.I can only furnish you with further details after receiving a comprehensive report on the matter,”said Dr Shamu.

Dr Mushuku became aggressive after being contacted for a comment on the issue. ” Are you the one who died as result of the operation?Do not regret if you proceed to write the story.Why are you concerned about the matter?Leave me alone,”said Dr Mushuku.

Authorities at Gutu Mission Hospital have remained mum on the matter. “We are not allowed to comment on such issues.They are too sensitive,thank you for calling,”said an official at the hospital. However it is understood the medical doctor was under the influence of alcohol when he conducted the operation.

BREAKING NEWS: Gospel Star Lundi Tyamara Dies


After a long battle with stomach TB and liver complications award-winning gospel star Lundi Tyamara has died.

Sources close to the musician confirmed he died in an Edenvale hospital in the early hours of this morning.

The Ndixolele hitmaker was moved to ICU on Monday after his condition took a turn for the worse.

Insiders confirmed that the singer was placed on oxygen machines as his liver “had practically stopped working”.

He was a fighter. We thought he would beat this thing – Lundi Tyamara family
Despite the dire situation his family remained hopeful that “God’s intervention” would help get him through the ordeal and called on the nation to pray for him.

Lundi was first admitted to hospital in December after returning from a trip to China. – Timeslive

“Mugabe Is Jesus” Man Attacked By Mysterious Horror Fire


Staff Reporter| The ZANU PF official who in the last few days said that President Robert Mugabe is Zimbabwe’s Jesus Christ, Kudzai Chipanga has been attacked by a mysterious fire.

The ZANU PF national youth leader’s farm property was torched down to ashes shortly after uttering the blasphemous statements equating the 92 year old ailing leader to Jesus Christ of the Holy Bible.

Property worth over USD18,000 were set ablaze at his Headlands plot on Wednesday.

His 12-roomed farmhouse in Headlands was suddenly made worthless in what some now claim was a politically instigated attack.

Chipanga confirmed the development to the local Newsday saying “Yes, I lost a 12-roomed house. The house was razed down by fire and we suspect an electrical fault to have caused the fire. We made a police report and they said they were investigating the matter. Luckily, there was no one in the house. I lost household goods worth almost $15 000.’

However his party-mates say the values are above $18,000.

ZimEye reveals that many ZANU PF farm properties have gone up in smoke in recent years in unexplained circumstances. Former Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono’s property has suffered the same fate. The man’s farm properties have been attacked (4) four times since 2011. In August 2011, his warehouse at his poultry plot in Borrowdale was destroyed by fire, rendering goods valued at over US$100 000 worthless.  In July 2013, property worth about US$30,000 was destroyed when fire gutted facilities at Gono’s chicken farm.

But Zanu PF Manicaland provincial youth chairperson, Mubuso Chinguno, has implicated a rival faction opposed to Chipanga’s camp for the alleged arson.

“When he was given that farm, some politburo members and a minister from Makoni were against the idea. There was a time when even some senior officials incited villagers to demonstrate against Chipanga over the farm. We are not going to be intimidated, as we carry out our own independent investigations into the incident,” he said.

Mujuru Dashes To Matebeleland

Namhla Ntandwa | Zimbabwe People First President, Joice Mujuru will this weekend make an urgent trip to Bulawayo to meet with the faction ridden provincial executive in a bid to solve  factional fights and serve the party from imminent collapse.

Sources very close to the former Vice President indicated to ZimEye.com that Mujuru will be in the city to meet the provincial executives who have been on each other’s throats over who should be her Vice President in the party.

So dirty have been the factional fights that members have even resorted to death threats against each other. In another incident senior members of the party are alleged to have gone all out to drag members of the State Security to harass a youth member at his home for allegedly not being loyal to them.

The province is reportedly heavily divided between the nomination of Provincial Chairlady Esnath Bulayani and former Peoples’ Democratic Party Vice President Samuel Sipepa Nkomo for the vice presidency.

Mujuru is likely to get an extremely hostile reception in the city as members of the youth league have be threatening a massive demonstration against her and the entire provincial executive.

According to sources some members of the provincial executive committee have been busy mobilising thugs to be on stand by to assault their rivals in case things don’t go their way at the meeting.

According to the sources, the rival groups have previously brought thugs on each other during provincial committee meetings where heavy insults and threats are reportedly always the case in the meetings.

Headman Fires Shots At Mugabe, Mnangagwa

Terrence Mawawa, Bikita | A local traditional leader here has blamed President Robert Mugabe and his deputy, Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa for initiating political violence across the country.

Headman Mpakwa accused the top Zanu PF politicians of inciting political violence and national unrest. He said the Zanu PF politicians were unfairly manipulating traditional leaders to achieve their political ambitions.

Ironically, Mnangagwa is said to be determined to succeed his boss who is widely seen as an impediment to social and political progress in Zimbabwe and the SADC region. Headman Mupakwa warned of a bloody campaign ahead of the 2018 polls.

“I am a victim of the ongoing political mind games.The most senior individuals in Zanu PF are inciting violence. Despite numerous threats from politicians I will not be cowed into submission,”said Headman Mupakwa.

Last week Headman Mupakwa was threatened by CIO operatives after denouncing the Zanu PF slogan at a local funeral. He added:”I am a Zanu PF member but I am worried about the gross abuse of office by senior politicians. I cannot force villagers to vote for a certain individual or political party. I think everyone has the democratic right to vote for a party of his or her choice.” He also said senior party officials were behind the factional battles in the ruling party.

“There are some overzealous politicians who are giving us headaches.We will name and shame them very soon. We are not afraid of their political posts.We have had enough of suffering,”said Headman Mupakwa. The Bikita West by-election won by Zanu PF last weekend has been described as chaotic because of gross irregularities, intimidation and violence.

D-DAY For Mnangagwa

PRESIDENT Robert Mugabe is expected to fly back home today ending his month-long annual vacation, amid reports that rival Zanu PF factions were plotting to dress each other down when they converge at Harare International Airport to welcome him.

Zanu PF Harare provincial commissar, Shadreck Mashayamombe, yesterday confirmed plans for Mugabe’s “massive welcome rally” at the airport this afternoon, but denied reports that they were planning to use the occasion to embarrass Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa over his alleged growing ambitions to succeed Mugabe.

“We will, as usual, welcome the President. It is now our tradition, but this is just routine for us and nothing sinister about it,” he said.

“The President is coming tomorrow (today) and we are urging our members to come in their numbers. But our plans are dependent on his itinerary, which we do not have as of now.”

Mashayamombe denied claims they wanted to demonstrate against Mnangagwa, who is said to be in India, saying that was not how the party operates.

“We would never do that (seek to embarrass Mnangagwa) at the airport. It is not the way we do things,” he said.

“We are a peaceful people and are disciplined. If anyone wants to take advantage, we will see them.”

Some insiders claimed T-shirts and placards inscribed There is only one boss had been printed, in response to pictures that emerged of Mnangagwa carrying a mug written I’m the boss, which have caused ructions in Zanu PF.

A similar strategy was used in 2015, when T-shirts showing a picture of Mugabe and the late Vice-President Joshua Nkomo embracing with the words The unity that shall never collapse and Munhu wese kuna amai were distributed at the late Sikhanyiso Ndlovu’s burial, which were again targeted at Mnangagwa after he was accused of denigrating the former Zapu leader.

Zanu PF youth leader, Kudzai Chipanga, professed ignorance of the rally, although the ruling party’s Harare provincial youth leader, Edison Takataka, confirmed it.

“We know we will welcome our father, but I have not been advised as to when. As for the issue of T-shirts, it was just a suggestion, which I am not sure will be implemented,” Takataka said.

“But I can assure you, as chairperson, I will have mine. Of course, there is only one boss and that’s the President.”

Mashayamombe is linked to Zanu PF’s G40 faction, which is bitterly opposed to Mnangagwa’s bid to take over from the ailing Mugabe.

Mnangagwa is reportedly leading the other faction known as Team Lacoste.

Insiders said the plots to embarrass Mnangagwa would continue after today’s rally up to Mugabe’s 93rd birthday celebrations set for Matobo next month.

“They have printed different paraphernalia, which will carry messages taunting Mnangagwa’s recent pronouncements on Gukurahundi and their ‘mug declaration’. It is a plan to whip up emotions in the party against Mnangagwa,” one source said.

Other Zanu PF sources said today’s welcome rally could be moved to next Tuesday to allow Mugabe to travel to the African Union summit in Ethiopia, before “he is officially welcomed” back home to resume his duties.

In a bizarre twist, former Zanu PF provincial youth leader, Godfrey Tsenengamu, seen to be aligned to Mnangagwa, yesterday declared he would attend Mugabe’s welcome rally.

“Mugabe is the President of Zimbabwe and our understanding is that the function is not a party gathering,” he said.

“So we will also attend in our numbers as citizens. We hear they have made arrangements to embarrass Mnangagwa or picket against him. If anyone is to be allowed such mischief, they should expect similar doses from us. We will deal with anybody who is planning to be up to no good.”

This will not be the first time Mnangagwa would have been embarrassed at a public event.

In February last year, Hurungwe East lawmaker, Sarah Mahoka, launched a broadside at the Vice-President and was followed by Manicaland Provincial Affairs minister Mandiitawepi Chimene six months later. – Newsday

Grace Mugabe’s Diamond Dealer Seeks Zim Return

LEBANESE businessperson, Jamal Ahmed, who recently caused a fierce storm after he dragged First Lady Grace Mugabe to court over his seized upmarket houses in Harare, yesterday told the court, through his lawyer, that he wanted assurances that police would not arrest him when he comes back to Zimbabwe to execute his court matters.

Jamal dragged Grace, together with her son Russell Goreraza and Kennedy Fero in a dispute emanating from the purchase of a $1,4 million diamond ring, to court.

However, Ahmed, who was supposed to attend another court hearing in which he is suing his former business partner, Petros Chaponda, over stolen vehicles, failed to turn up, as he was said to be in Belgium.

Ahmed’s lawyer, Jonathan Samkange, told High Court judge, Justice Happius Zhou that his client was prepared to come to Zimbabwe and execute his cases, but needed assurance he would not be harassed by the police.

“I want to put it on record that my client has problems with the First Lady, but he is anxious to present his case once he has made arrangements to come. He is going to engage the international community with a view to seek assurances from the government that he will not be arrested when he comes here,” Samkange said.

“My client is not a criminal, but he only has problems that need to be resolved between him and the First Lady.”

Samkange further said although his client was going to apply for an interdict to the bar the police from arresting him, there was no guarantee that the law enforcement agents would honour the court order.

“If the judges do not obey their own orders, what about Ahmed? Are they going to respect an order not to arrest him when he comes? I once obtained an interdict against the Chief Justice [Godfrey Chidyausiku] himself and what did he do? He disrespected it,” he said, before Justice Zhou interjected and directed him to focus at the case in hand.

Chaponda’s lawyer, Advocate Thabani Mpofu, opposed the application for postponement, but Justice Zhou ruled in Ahmed’s favour and ordered him to pay costs at a higher scale. – Newsday

Panic As AirZim Flight Fails To Land

AN Air Zimbabwe plane from Harare failed to land at the Joshua Mqabuko Nkomo Airport in Bulawayo yesterday due to bad weather.

The plane had to return to Harare at about 7.30AM, following a heavy downpour in the city.

It returned and landed in Bulawayo after 10.30AM before proceeding to Victoria Falls.

Passengers who spoke to The Chronicle said it was a frightening experience as the plane took a sharp rise when it was about to land and headed back to Harare.

Some passengers allegedly cancelled their flights and remained in Harare.

“We left Harare a bit later than the official time but we took off smoothly. About 10 minutes into landing in Bulawayo it started raining heavily. We were almost landing and we could see the tarmac when the plane took a sharp rise.

“It was frightening. Suddenly there was panic and fear among the passengers.

“The airline crew announced that they were communicating with the Meteorological Services Department (MSD) and the officials on the ground. They later announced that we were about to land in Harare,” said one of the passengers who declined to be named.

He said some passengers abandoned their trip to Bulawayo.

Some passengers said the failure by the Air Zimbabwe plane to land on time had inconvenienced them as they failed to attend meetings on time.

Others complained that the delay had cost them business as they had to cancel their trip.

“I was travelling to Bulawayo for meetings. I had to cancel my trip and postpone the meetings. Air Zimbabwe must learn to communicate. It’s their duty to check weather conditions at their destinations before taking us on board,” said another passenger.

There was no immediate comment from Air Zimbabwe with chief executive officer Mr Ripton Muzenda unreachable as he was said to be in a meeting.

An airport official who declined to be named said the incident was due to bad weather.

“What we did was for the safety of passengers. There was a heavy downpour before the plane landed. It had to go back to Harare.

“Fortunately the rains quickly stopped and the plane managed to land safely in Bulawayo a few hours later. It also managed to proceed to Victoria Falls,” said the official.

He said although they constantly check with the MSD, it was difficult to predict that weather patterns would make it difficult for the plane to land safely.

“We normally communicate with the MSD but it’s difficult to predict that the weather will not be suitable for landing,” he said. – State Media

Guy Tortured To Death Over Woman

A MAN from Bulawayo who went missing last Friday but was later found with severe injuries and burns all over the body in his rented room in Barham Green suburb following a savage attack linked to a woman, died before he could name his attackers.

Mr Mthokozisi Sibanda (32), an employee at a city company, did not report for duty last Friday and on Monday, only to be found in his room with severe injuries and burns all over his body.

Mr Sibanda was rushed to the United Bulawayo Hospitals (UBH) on Monday and died on Tuesday night.

There was no sign of fire in his room, but his friend yesterday told The Chronicle                           that when they found him naked in his  room, Sibanda appeared scared and mumbled that some people had attacked him over a girl, but did not disclose who they were.

Mr Sibanda’s aunt only identified as Mrs Dube said they could not immediately say what happened to Mr Sibanda, but were praying for his attackers’ arrest.

“When he didn’t report for duty on Friday and Monday morning, his colleagues went to check on him at his house where he was renting.

“Upon arrival they found Sibanda lying naked on the floor. He was heavily bruised, looking more like he was burnt all over his body. His skin was peeling off,” she said.

Mrs Dube said as a family they couldn’t immediately say what happened except that they were at a loss.

“He was found burnt in his room but there was no sign of fire or even cables indicating that there had been an electrical fault. We have taken the body for post-mortem. Our prayer is that whoever did this must be caught like the Masiyephambili cyclist murderers,” she said.

Mr Sibanda’s friend who spoke on condition of anonymity said he refused to disclose who had attacked him.

“He mumbled that someone had done that to him over some girl. He seemed scared to disclose the name of whoever had attacked him,” said the friend.

Bulawayo acting police spokesperson Assistant Inspector Abednico Ncube said he had not yet received the report. – State Media

Zanu PF’s Chabaya Sworn In

Newly elected Bikita West Member of Parliament Cde Beauty Chabaya (Zanu-PF) was yesterday sworn in as a legislator in the National Assembly. Clerk of Parliament Mr Kennedy Chokuda administered the oath in terms of the Constitution, after Speaker of the National Assembly Advocate Jacob Mudenda officially informed the House of the election of Chabaya.

Chabaya was declared the winner in Bikita West in a by-election last weekend after she garnered 13 156 votes, followed by Mr Kudakwashe Gopo of ZimPF who trailed with a distant 2 453 votes.

Independent candidate Mr Innocent Muzvimbiri weighed in with 725 votes, followed by Mr Madock Chivasa (NCA) with 343.

Mr Terrence Tanyaradzwa Makomborero (PDZ) got 132 votes, while former MDC-T legislator for the same constituency Mr Heya Shoko got a wooden spoon of a paltry 76 votes. Chabaya was sworn in amid a rousing applause from the floor.

After she was sworn in, she proceeded to shake hands with Adv Mudenda, before doing the same with Government ministers on the front row.

Meanwhile, the Land Commission Bill sailed through in the National Assembly yesterday after being steered by Lands and Rural Resettlement Minister Dr Douglas Mombeshora.

The proposed law now awaits transmission to the Senate before going to the President for his assent.

The Bill is set to lay the foundation for the Land Commission to carry out periodic land audits countrywide and is also expected to help resolve land disputes. The commission will take over functions previously performed by the Agricultural Land Resettlement Board.

Government is prioritising the Bill as it moves to realign various laws with the new Constitution adopted in 2013 and refine the land reform programme.

In a related matter, Buhera South MP  Joseph Chinotimba (Zanu-PF) yesterday hailed Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe governor Dr John Mangudya for launching an investigation into bank charges, which most MPs had complained were too high.

The probe of financial institutions by the central bank stemmed from complaints from several legislators on Wednesday during the question and answer session, as they grilled Finance and Economic Development Minister Patrick Chinamasa on why banks were being allowed to levy high charges on transaction, particularly on POS. – State Media

BOND NOTES: Retailers Face Jail

Retailers and other businesspeople charging extra for payments made in bond notes or bank cards and less for US dollar transactions will be prosecuted when the Reserve Bank Amendment Bill, which sailed through the National Assembly on Wednesday, becomes law.

Responding to questions from Members of Parliament on Wednesday, Finance and Economic Development Minister Patrick Chinamasa reiterated that bond notes were interchangeable at a rate of 1:1 with the US dollar.

He said those apprehended for charging more for goods paid for using bond notes will be prosecuted

The Bill now awaits transition to the Senate.
“The Reserve Bank Amendment Bill which is before this House, is addressing those concerns,” said Minister Chinamasa. “It is coming up with a law to penalise and criminalise that kind of conduct.”

Minister Chinamasa was responding to an oral question without notice from Glen View North legislator Fani Munengami (MDC-T) on the “three tier” price, whereby shops were selling the same goods at different prices, depending on the method of payment.
Mr Munengami claimed that a product can cost $90 when using cash, $100 when swiping and if one is buying in bond notes, $120.

Government, Minister Chinamasa said, was making concerted efforts in making sure that point of sale machines were readily available.

“As of now, we do not have sufficient point of sale machines to distribute countrywide,” he said. “These machines have to be imported.

“Resources are being mobilised on a daily basis to ensure that we import more point of sale machines, which eventually should be able to reach every shop where there is connectivity.”
Minister Chinamasa said it was daylight robbery for banks to charge more in transaction fees than the price for a loaf of bread and said he will hold discussions with Reserve Bank Governor Dr John Mangudya so that the anomaly is rectified.

He then called for tangible evidence to enable Dr Mangudya to enforce punitive measures against any banks charging exhorbitant fees.

Minister Chinamasa said this after Buhera South MP Joseph Chinotimba (Zanu-PF) had expressed concern over high bank charges customers were paying when buying goods using plastic money.

He said hiccups in network or interconnectivity where customers have to wait for more than 10 minutes before a transaction is concluded had been referred to the Ministry of Information Communication Technology, Postal and Courier Services. – State Media

South-Africa Jails Zimbo For Fake Immigration Office

A ZIMBABWEAN man was yesterday jailed for six years in South Africa for opening an illegal immigration office at Beitbridge Border Post.

Duncan Danda (29) was arrested at his base within the border’s taxi rank on January 3 while stamping passports for foreigners and some Zimbabweans.

He was convicted by a Musina magistrate on two counts of contravening a section of that country’s Immigration Act. For the first count he was sentenced to six years imprisonment which were set aside for five years.

On the second count, he was fined R10 000 and risks being imprisoned for 12 months if he defaults. Danda is accused of giving prospective travellers up to 90 days to stay in South Africa.

Under South Africa’s immigration laws, Zimbabweans are not allowed to stay for more than 90 days in that country per year.

Danda exploited failure by some locals to get enough time to stay in South Africa by awarding people more than 90 days per each single entry for a fee.

Hawks spokesperson for Limpopo province Captain Matimba Maluleke welcomed the sentence saying it was deterrent enough to those in the same trade.

“We welcome the sentence and hope it will serve as a deterrent to all those who want to play hide and seek with the law.

“We acted swiftly on information about a person who had opened a one stop Home Affairs office in the heart of the border. He was stamping passports of foreign nationals at the Beitbridge taxi rank,” he said.

Captain Maluleke said they confiscated among other things, Department of Home Affairs immigration stamps and an undisclosed amount of United States dollars, which they believe had been paid to him by his clients.

He said there was suspicion that Danda was part of a syndicate.
“We strongly suspect that he was not working alone when we look at a scenario where foreigners were able to exit and return to the country through his underhand craft,” said Capt Maluleke.

In the last eight months, 18 people were arrested at the Beitbridge Border Post on charges of fraud and corruption.

In May last year, 15 people including police and immigration officers as well as customs clearing agents were arrested on allegations of facilitating illegal migration among other underhand deals at Beitbridge Border Post. – State Media

Borrowdale Savaged By Floods

Lands and Rural Resettlement Minister Dr Douglas Mombeshora and many others from his neighbourhood in Borrowdale Brooke, Harare, yesterday woke up to massive destruction and flooded homes.

When news teams visited other areas located along Crowhill, several people were still to come to terms with what had hit them. Secretary for Local Government, Public Works and National Housing Engineer George Mlilo says over 2 000 houses have been affected in Chitungwiza and Harare due to the floods.

Rains partially destroyed Dzitika Bridge in Honde Valley, forcing motorists and pedestrians to share a single lane. Fears abound that the remaining part of the bridge could collapse if rains persist.

Motorists using the Hauna–Sagambe Road could soon face a predicament if rains continue to pour out and disrupt the construction of Dzikita Bridge which was partially destroyed by rains.

The single lane being used by motorists and pedestrians is already giving in as it was also damaged and huge cracks have already developed posing yet another serious disaster.

Councillor for Ward 5 Mr Maxwell Tsarukanai and villagers from Muparutsa area described the incident as unfortunate. District administrator for Mutasa Mr Tendai Kapenzi said the disaster was a result of stream bank cultivation which had reached alarming levels in Honde Valley.

Mutasa Rural District Council chief executive Mr George Bandure, who was part of the team that visited the damaged bridge said the disaster was so serious and required collaborative efforts.

In the Borrowdale case, families were left stranded while property worth tens of thousands of dollars was destroyed following heavy rains that pounded Carrick Estate as the Civil Protection Unit warned against any activities along the flooded Manyame River.

Mr Enock Gede, a resident, had his vehicle swept away for about 500 metres from his house into Mubvinzi River, with his property flooded. Other residents lost household property.

Trees were uprooted, a bridge was swept away, pre-cast walls collapsed while the floods also swept away crops and livestock. Dams were reportedly spilling, resulting in fish being found along riverbanks. Most children downstream failed to go to school because of the collapsed bridge. When The Herald visited the area yesterday, residents were speechless.

“We had to take cover in the ceiling as the water kept flowing in the house and the water level rising. Outside, it was windy with thunder and heavy rain, so we could not get out,” said Mr Gede.

“I had never seen such rains in my life and we have never experienced such flooding in this area,” he said.

In the morning, Mr Gede woke up to find his car missing. “With the assistance of neighbours, we searched around and found it about 500 metres away from the house tucked in between trees and facing the river,” he said. Another resident, Mr Andrew Pahwaringira was still in shock.

“The water was just too much and we still believe there could be a dam which collapsed upstream resulting in the increased flow of water. We saw fish scattered along the riverbanks and there are many people who do fish farming around this area,” he said.

While CPU spokesperson Ms Sibusisiwe Ndlovu said no similar reports or casualties were reported, she urged people living and farming along Hunyani River to stop all activities forthwith as the river was in flood.

In a statement released yesterday, CPU said flooding of Hunyani River was expected to continue up to the end of the rainy season. “Hydrological reports indicate that all the dams on this river system have been spilling for about two weeks now.”

The dams include Chivero, Darwendale (Manyame), Seke and Bhiri. She said the catchment area of Hunyani River has so far received up to 200 percent of normal rainfall, hence the ground was soaked and there was high run off even with what appeared to be insignificant rains.

Ms Ndlovu said the built up areas in Harare and its satellite towns drain into Hunyani and further contribute to its high run off.

“The river is not only in flood but is also characterised by swift currents. These currents are strong thus can easily drag and sweep away people, canoes and anything that ventures into the river. A number of people have been marooned and some have been swept away,” she said.

The CPU warned against attempts to cross flooded rivers and urged people to desist from any activities on the river downstream. “Communities with equipment such as movable water pumps downstream of major dams are urged to remove the equipment to avoid losses and everyone living near rivers must be on high alert.”

Meanwhile, the Meteorological Services Department (MSD) has warned of heavy rains countywide that are expected to intensify from Saturday to Tuesday next week. The MSD senior forecaster, Mr Tich Zinyemba yesterday called for more vigilance and preparedness, particularly for rescue operations by those responsible.

“Generally, rainfall in excess of 50mm in 24 hours is expected. Over the high ground areas along the central watershed as well as the Eastern Highlands however, rainfall in excess of 90mm in 24 hours is highly probable. This is especially more so between Saturday 28 and Monday 30 January.

“Despite these warnings and advisories, reports of drowning are a serious cause of concern. Let us all collectively take these alerts seriously, more so between now and the middle of February,” said the MSD.

Mr Zinyemba said the present rain situation was a combination of the presence of the Inter Tropical Convergence Zone and a frontal cloud system which entered the country through Matabeleland Provinces. “Added to this combination is the heating around midday which further enhances rainfall activity,” he said. – State Media

Mphoko Attacked by Mnangagwa Aides

Staff Reporter | Acting President Phelekezela Mphoko yesterday received a barrage of attacks from opposition parties and from the Emmerson Mnangagwa ZANU PF camp.

Is Mphoko really abusing state resources?

VP Mphoko who is currently Acting President, was attacked for as claimed, using state resources to sponsor his own company all arising from an announcement that he is (as Acting President) to officiate the opening of a branch of his Choppies business in Harare.

He is currently the Acting President and had Robert Mugabe returned home, the Head Of State would himself be the one to open the Choppies branch as Mugabe has done before.

But those facts were ignored yesterday as one of Mnangagwa’s digi-aides Jones Musara wrote of Mphoko saying the development represents, “more evidence of Mphoko’s abuse of Gvnt office for personal business!”

Others also added attacking Mphoko.

Renewal Democrats of Zimbabwe party spokesman Pishai Muchauraya said “(the) Acting President (is) using state resources to officially open own business!.”

Meanwhile, below was the government letter announcing the development.

Is Mphoko really abusing state resources?

Olinda and Pokello Fight Each Other? | SHOCKING SHOE BATTLE

Showbiz Reporter| Hardly a week after Olinda Chideme stunned many by appearing to copy husband Stunner’s ex girlfriend Pokello’s hairstyle, the cat fight between the two has now progressed to the love of classy shoes.

Once again the latest picture posted by Olinda on Instagram has had tongues wagging. see below:

Sithulile Dube Lol, you know, you know !!!

 

Teit Wenyasha
Teit Wenyasha KundieCarol

 

KundieCarol Ashleigh Chiswa
KundieCarol Ashleigh Chiswa Aitsve😂

 

Constance Mabhande
Constance Mabhande Umm vanhu makuzonyanya. there is nothing special about Pokello. When this lady was posting designer shoes on her instagram from as far back as 2015 noone said anything but today she posts and all of a sudden Pokello’s name is mentioned. Even this hairstyle women have been doing it for ages long before that tape that made everyone know Pokello. I dont see why pple keep puttin her on a pedistal. They are both smart beautiful businesswomen who jus happened to date the same guy at some point chashamisira chii

 

Memez Mulipo
Memez Mulipo Constance Mabhande tell her to stop it 😂😂😂😂 aka kopa akakopa chete lol

 

Annie Spears Mapfumo
Annie Spears Mapfumo Aka kopa aka kopa chete why are you defending her.olinda akutotsvaga pamuromo.ende ndingafare uka kopa body yake.manje apa watokanganisa your husband will sleep with you achi imaginer poky

 

Annie Spears Mapfumo
Annie Spears Mapfumo Akungoda kudzikisira poky kuti sezvo akachinja hair style acha chinjazve shoes kkkkk forget it.

 

Ras Tawaz Kambarami
Ras Tawaz Kambarami kikikk ndabva ndafunga madhinda ndlovu kana rambo (mercedes sibanda)

 

Sithulile Dube
Sithulile Dube Ras Tawaz Kambarami 🙊ndafa nekuseka

 

 

Mnangagwa To Be Humiliated Tomorrow | BREAKING NEWS

to be humiliated tomorrow…

Ray Nkosi | There are unconfirmed reports that the Zanu PF faction aligned to First Lady Grace Mugabe, the G-40 group, is plotting a massive demonstration against Vice – President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

The warring factions within the ruling party are now openly baying for each other’s blood, with the most recent and vocal calls yet made just this week, by Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) leader, Julius Malema, who called on ‘Grandpa’, Robert Mugabe to step down.

Calls which were not only endorsed but repeated by Norton Member of Parliament, Temba Mliswa’s YARD. Mliswa told journalists recently that his relative Mnangagwa must take over power now, or risk being redundant in 2018.

In the new twist, an unconfirmed circular is doing the rounds, claims that the G-40 has mobilised its structures to protest against Mnangagwa, as President Mugabe arrives back home from his long leave tomorrow. A Mnangagwa defender Jones Musara took to social media to write; ” G40 has organised a demo to spite and embarrass Ngwena tomorrow when President Mugabe arrives.. T-shirts and banners have all been printed and ready. Manje Ngwena nesu vatsigiri vayo hativhundutswe neruzha.”

However, President Mugabe is also reported to be joining African Union leaders, who are expected to convene in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, from January 27 to 31 for the grouping’s 28th Summit.

Below is the unconfirmed circular;

FIRST LADY OKS TYSON AND JONSO DEMONSTRATION AGAINST VP MNANGAGWA

In news filtering in, it would seem that the go ahead for Kasukuwere and Moyo to stage a demonstration against VP Mnangagwa has been green lighted.

The said demonstration has apparently been scheduled to take place upon the arrival of His Excellency tomorrow, Friday the 27th in a bid to embarrass the Vice President, who is believed to be away on vacation in India.

Placards, t-shirts and various banners are all said to be being prepared ahead of the demo through funding from Mphoko’s Choppies shops, as G40 intensifies its attack on the VP to stage his downfall.

Factional spats have reached unprecedented levels in ZANU PF as the party remains mum on its succession plan. Mandi Chimene once did the same however it seems the security forces are alert to this latest showdown and may be bringing in Chipanga for questioning …more details to follow

Warriors Were Cheated On by Unfair Referee

Shocking details revealed by state media journo, Robson Sharuko reveal that there was a conspiracy by the referee to cause the Zimbabwe Warriors to lose to Tunisia. The development comes as stats showed that Zimbabwe could have beaten Tunisia having withstood Algeria, Tunisia’s match.

FULL TEXT:

Robson Sharuko| The explosive incident happened during the final Group B decider in Libreville, which produced half-a-dozen goals, with the Carthage Eagles romping to a 4-2 victory — with all their goals coming in the first half — which secured them a place in the quarter-finals.

The Tunisians, needing a draw to reach the quarter-finals, led 4-1 at the break before substitute Tendai Ndoro scored early in the second half to give the Warriors a flicker of hope of staging an incredible comeback and scrap into the last eight of the AFCON finals for the first time in their history.

A victory for the Warriors on Monday night would have taken them into the quarter-finals after Senegal, who rested virtually the entire team that had beaten Tunisia and Zimbabwe in their first two group matches, managed to come from behind twice and hold Algeria to a 2-2 draw in the other final Group B game in Franceville.

The Tunisians powered to a 3-0 lead, in their match against the Warriors, before a beauty by the outstanding Knowledge Musona — his trickery eliminating two defenders by flicking the ball between them before he volleyed home from inside the area — reduced the arrears for Zimbabwe and gave them hope to stage an incredible comeback.

But those hopes were soon dashed, shortly after Musona had scored, when the Carthage Eagles were awarded a contentious penalty, strangely given by the assistant referee who ran to take his spot behind the Warriors’ goal without even waiting for consultations with the referee, as is usually the case in such circumstances.

Television replays clearly showed that the Tunisian forward should have been punished for controlling the ball with his hand, under pressure from Zimbabwean centre-back Costa Nhamoinesu, before the defender made the push that resulted in him being punished by the assistant referee for a foul resulting in the penalty which was converted by Wahbi Khazri.

Warriors coach Callisto Pasuwa told the media, in the post-match conference, he felt there were some questionable decisions by Ivorian referee and his assistants, which played a big part in the outcome of the match, even though he also conceded his players could have done better in the way they applied themselves in this winner-take-all showdown.

“There were some poor decisions from the referee, especially in the first half,” said Pasuwa. “We lacked concentration maybe in first minutes of the game and that made us lose the game.

“You can see the way we were leaving them unattended and allowing them to shoot at goal. In the second half it was becoming better though. I thought also they reacted to the officiating and frustration crippled in their heads and they were doing unnecessary tackles that ended up costing us at the end of the day.”

Pasuwa has been criticised by some analysts for pointing fingers at the match officials when his men were outplayed by their opponents who were better technically and appeared to have more energy than the Warriors whose shortcomings in defence were cruelly exposed while their shape in midfield left a lot to be desired.

But, as the brutal post-mortem of the Warriors’ failure in Gabon gathers momentum, with Sports and Recreation Minister Makhosini Hlongwane being forced to issue a public apology in Parliament on Wednesday where he faced furious legislators, including one who even demanded the players and their coaching staff be detained at some military barracks for letting the nation down, it has emerged that the do-or-die showdown against Tunisia was also tainted by controversy.

The Herald has exclusively been told that there was an ugly bust-up between Ivorian referee Dembele and one of the Warriors’ stars during the final Group B game against Tunisia.

“The incident was sparked by a row between one of our star players and the referee after he said he heard the referee asking his assistant what was the scoreline in the other group match between Algeria and Senegal while our game was in progress,” sources told The Herald.

“Our player was taken aback by that and asked the referee and his assistant as to why they wanted to know the scoreline in the other match since their responsibility was just about handling our game as fairly as possible.

“It was quite ugly and one of our coaching staff also said he heard it and wondered what this meant given that the events in the other match had a bearing to our fate.

“It’s strange, but that’s what happened.”

Interestingly, Dembele had been a controversial appointment for the match between Zimbabwe and Tunisia given that he had been the fourth official when the Warriors played their first match against Algeria in Gabon.

It’s the only case where one referee was involved in more than one match involving the same team during the group games in Gabon.

The Warriors were also the only team, during the group stages of the AFCON finals, who had more than one match being handled by referees from the same country.

Dembele was assisted by his countryman, Tan Donatien Marius, who was the first assistant referee, when the Warriors took on Tunisia in their final group match in Libreville.

The two Ivorian match officials had partnered to handle the CAF Confederation Cup match between Tunisian giants Etoile Sportive du Sahel against Moroccan club Kawkab Marrakech last year which the Tunisians lost 1-2 with Dembele giving them a penalty late in the game, only for the Moroccans to find the winner towards the end.

Etoile provided three players — goalkeeper Aymen Mathlonthi, defender Zied Boughatass and midfielder Hamza Lahmar — to the Tunisian squad which is in Gabon.

The Warriors also had a set of Moroccan match officials — referee Redouane Tiyed and first assistant referee Redouane Achik — in charge of their second group game against Senegal.

“When you look at all the other group matches you will see that Zimbabwe were the only ones who had match officials, coming from the same country, handling more than one of their games and that’s quite interesting, isn’t it?” sources said.

“You look at that decision to say Mushekwi (Nyasha) had fouled his marker, when Tunisia were still leading 1-0 and you also look at that penalty which should have been a foul for handball against that Tunisian and everything appears to make sense.”

The Mighty Warriors were also given a raw deal when they suffered the injustice of being robbed a point by a shocking refereeing decision in Cameroon when a goal, which was very clear, which they scored against Egypt, was somehow ruled out and it made a big difference.”

The Power of One. The Power of UNITY.

https://youtu.be/RVGwiqcsdNE?t=2

By Promise Sande| Do you realize the power that one person has? Do you realize the power that you have? As an individual, by yourself, you may not be strong enough to bring change to Zimbabwe. BUT as a part of a group, NOT just an ordinary group, BUT a cohesive group, a strongly bonded group, you become like a single unit of a strong chain, welded together!

Imagine termites. Those tiny creatures creating a huge mount. Structures that are much bigger than an individual termite. All because they have made UNITY a core of their existence.

Imagine a Buffalo. Strong alone, BUT FORMIDABLE as a heard and fending off any vicious pride of lions! This is how I imagine Zimbabweans, strong even by ourselves out there is the world. Beating our chests as very strong and not afraid to pull shifts or lead companies and several world class organizations. We excel wherever we are BUT we have not mastered the art of bringing our individuality to a common cause! A lone buffalo will never survive marauding lions! It’s only with the heard mentality that buffalos can conquer!

Imagine as we grew up and formed circles holding hands. That image is the image of a complete circle. That circle is not complete with YOU missing. This is the power of ONE! You may not realize it but YOU my fellow Zimbabwean, are greater part of the Zimbabwean solution!

Let’s find each other and complete the circle of unity!

#FindingEachOther #TheMissingLink #ThePowerOfOne #ThePowerOfUNITY

At Last Barrow Arrives Home | LATEST

Jubilant Gambians have welcomed home their new President Adama Barrow, who was elected almost two months ago but forced to flee to Senegal when his predecessor refused to step aside.

Dressed in flowing white robes and cap, Barrow stepped off the plane on Thursday, with heavily-armed troops from Senegal and Nigeria standing by as he flew in from neighbouring Senegal, where he had taken shelter on January 15.

Barrow, who was accompanied by his two wives and some of his children, was welcomed by military officials and senior members of his coalition government.

His return marks The Gambia’s first democratic transfer of power and capped days of waiting in the tiny former British colony after longtime leader Yahya Jammeh had refused to leave after losing a December 1 vote.

Barrow took the oath of office at his country’s embassy in Dakar a week ago and a multinational African force then entered The Gambia to ensure his safe return home and Jammeh’s departure.

Hundreds gathered at the airport awaiting Barrow’s arrival, with drummers and dancers firing up the crowds as Nigerian and Senegalese soldiers looked on.

“He will develop this country! He’s good, not a killer,” said Barrow supporter Adja Kombeh.

Gambians have said they were looking forward to their freedom after two decades of Jammeh’s iron-fisted rule.

‘He will be different’

“I’m 100 percent a Barrow supporter and I’m more happy than I can say,” said Kanamo Sansou, sitting with his friends at Serrekunda market close to the capital Banjul.

“He will be different in all aspects… we have been living under dictatorship for 22 years,” added pensioner Ibrahima Gaye.

“You can go home at night and sleep without worrying you will be arrested before daybreak,” he said.

Barrow had not been seen in public since his swearing-in and has yet to publicly address Gambians.

Diplomats had urged Barrow to return quickly to curb the impact of the political crisis on the tourist-reliant economy, already in a fragile state.

The UN envoy for West Africa, Mohamed Ibn Chambas, who briefed the Security Council on The Gambia, stressed that the United Nations was working to bolster stability.

Barrow will be staying at his own residence until further notice while State House, Jammeh’s former seat of power, is assessed for potential risks.

His first job is to deal with an internal crisis after it emerged his choice for vice president, Fatoumata Jallow-Tambajang, may be constitutionally too old for the role.

Immunity for Jammeh?

Around 4,000 west African troops remain in The Gambia charged with ensuring safety, as it is believed rogue pro-Jammeh elements remain in the security forces that were once under his personal control.

“President Adama Barrow has asked us to remain for two or three weeks to see if there are arms caches or mercenaries hiding out,” said Marcel Alain de Souza, head of the 15-nation Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) commission.

ECOWAS is ready to muster a force of up to 7,000 troops, he said this week.

Jammeh finally left the country on Saturday and went into exile in Equatorial Guinea under threat of regional military intervention.

The authorities have accused the former strongman of plundering state coffers and making off with $11m.

But the new government has that confirmed Jammeh will be permitted to keep a fleet of luxury cars, including two Rolls Royces.

Barrow has told Jammeh he will have all the rights legally ensured to an ex-president, which under Gambian law include immunity from prosecution, barring a vote by two-thirds of the national assembly.

However Chambas said there was nothing in the UN-backed agreement that paved the way for Jammeh’s departure that gave him immunity. –  Al Jazeera and news agencies

VOTER FRAUD: Trump Kids Registered To Vote In Two States?

President Trump’s “voter fraud” investigation could hit awfully close to home.

“I will be asking for a major investigation into VOTER FRAUD, including those registered to vote in two states,” Trump tweeted Wednesday — apparently unaware that his daughter Tiffany Trump, Chief White House Strategist Stephen Bannon and Treasury Secretary pick Steven Mnuchin were all reportedly registered to vote in two states during the 2016 election.

Bannon was registered to vote in both Florida and New York, the Daily News confirmed Wednesday. According to the Florida Division of Elections, Bannon is an active registered Republican voter in Nokomis, Fla. He registered there on April 2, 2014.

According to the New York State Board of Elections, Bannon is also registered as an active Republican voter in Manhattan.

News of the dual registrations was first reported by The Guardian.

According to CNN, the Sarasota County supervisor of elections said Bannon had been removed later Wednesday from county voting rolls.

Tiffany Trump, meanwhile, was registered to vote in both New York City and Philadelphia, according to state election records in New York and Pennsylvania reviewed by NBC.

Trump graduated from the University of Pennsylvania last May. The finding was first reported by Heat Street.

Mnuchin is registered in both New York and Bel Air, Calif., CNN’s K-File reported Wednesday.

It is not illegal to be registered to vote in more than one state. It is, however, illegal to cast a ballot for the same election in more than one state. There’s no indication that Trump, Bannon or Mnuchin did so.

President Trump has repeatedly confused the two issues and complained that widespread vote fraud was the reason he lost the popular vote to Hillary Clinton — a criticism that has been debunked.

In his Wednesday tweet, Trump vowed to order an investigation into multiple registrations.

“I will be asking for a major investigation into VOTER FRAUD, including those registered to vote in two states, those who are illegal and even, those registered to vote who are dead (and many for a long time),” he tweeted Wednesday morning. “Depending on results, we will strengthen up voting procedures!”

Trump — who lost the popular vote by nearly three million ballots but won the Electoral College and thus, the White House — has repeatedly insisted that between three and five million people voted illegally.

All 50 states and the District of Columbia have finalized their election results with no reports of the kind of widespread fraud that Trump is alleging. Additionally, multiple independent studies — alongside Trump’s own lawyers — have said there is no proof of massive voter fraud. NY Daily News

Malema Avoids Tsvangirai

Ray Nkosi | Economic Freedom Fighters leader Julius Malema has called on President Robert Mugabe to go, dissing veteran opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, as the next best alternative to take over.

Instead Malema who many in opposition ranks are cheering for his outrage at the ‘cowards’ in Zanu PF who have failed to remove Mugabe, have not made the connection that for him change ends there – Mugabe’s departure and Zanu PF remains.

Analysis

Malema’s position is sadly part of an emerging regional narrative that change can only come from within Zanu PF, that the opposition is weak and will not especially be able to get the support of the partisan security forces.

During many of the past election campaigns, army generals vocalised how they will not salute anyone who has not been to war, this time round apparently endorsing Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa even though his own war credentials are questionable.

Said Malema; “Zimbabwe’s situation is bad. President Mugabe can’t even control a spade. He is no longer capable of discharging his responsibilities,” Malema said.

“We don’t hate the man. They can respond and insult us anyhow they want, but they are a group of cowards, those comrades in Zanu PF, to be scared to say to an old man like President Mugabe, please, with due respect, let go.”

Malema has not endorsed Tsvangirai to take over.

 

More Suffering As Basic Food Prices Go Up

The prices of basic goods, including foodstuffs, have soared in
recent weeks, as the country’s economy continues to collapse – compounding
the misery of long-suffering Zimbabweans.

As a result, crisis-weary ordinary citizens told the Daily News yesterday
that it was imperative for the government to take urgent measures to
mitigate the situation, if a major socio-economic crisis was to be
avoided.

Among the basic foods whose prices have shot up in recent weeks are beef,
poultry products, vegetables, fruits, dairy products, cooking oil, sugar
and rice.

Beef is now sold at $7 per kg from an average of $4,50 in October 2016,
while a 2-litre cooking oil bottle, which used to trade at $2,99 before
the import restrictions which were imposed by the government in June last
year now costs an average of $3,40.

The executive director of the Consumer Council of Zimbabwe (CCZ), Rosemary
Siyachitema, told the Daily News yesterday that while her organisation was
yet to compile the basic food basket data for January, her organisation
had since last December witnessed the price jumps.

She said the December 2016 food basket stood at $133,06 – up from the
November figure of $128,34. In October, the figure stood at $125,37.

According to the CCZ, the price of cooking oil went up in December to
$1,49 from $1,39 in November for a 750ml bottle.

Harare housewife and mother of three, Anesu Mandebvu, implored the
government “to stamp its authority” and call delinquent retailers to
order.

“We are dying slowly because our income cannot fulfil our needs,” she
lamented.

“In fact, we can only afford to buy fish once or twice a week,” she said
adding that her children sometimes refused to eat the cheap and
poor-quality food she now cooks for the family.

When the government introduced Statutory Instrument 64 of 2016 (SI 64) in
June last year, banning a number of imported products, the idea was to
help protect struggling local industries which were operating at an
average of 35 percent of their installed capacity.

However, the move effectively curtailed competition from foreign players
and has resulted on average in an increase in the cost of living, through
price increases.

Elisha Chandawana, who owns a supermarket in the Harare high density
suburb of Kuwadzana, said the increase in food prices had led to a
reduction in demand.

“Our sales have dropped because families cannot cope with the continuous
increase in prices,” he added.

Economic analyst, Francis Mukora, said some of the more recent price rises
were not justified, adding that some supermarkets and manufacturers were
profiteering as figures showed that food prices had gone up far faster
than can be justified.

“Profiteering happens. There are cases where people make inappropriate
margins along the distribution system, and this is what is happening with
some retailers,” he said.

“The priority for supermarkets is to get the appropriate stock on and off
their shelves as fast as possible, and increasing prices should not be
part of the game. Retailers are taking advantage of stifled competition to
rip off consumers,” Mukora added.

However, Confederation of Zimbabwe Retailers (CZR) president, Denford
Mutashu, claimed yesterday that the market had not experienced any price
increases.

“This is actually news to me because prices have actually gone down in the
outskirts. I am coming from Mt Darwin. As CZR, what we see is not prices
going up pe ser, but during the festive season retailers refine prices to
levels that attract traffic.

“But after the holidays, they revert to the normal prices … cooking oil
prices have actually gone down,” he said.

Mutashu also said food prices had stabilised in January, adding that the
declining aggregate demand had left retailers with no room to increase
prices.

“In fact, price increases are detrimental to retailers mainly because of
the competition between informal and formal retailers. Consumers will walk
away.

“Retailers do not increase prices, they are just a conduit and act on how
manufacturers peg prices against supply and demand,” he said. – Daily News

“How Many Hubbies Does Mahoka Have?”

More Jokes in the Parliament of Zimbabwe, when serious debate on bond notes turned into a question and answer on the number of hubbies female MP Mahoka has, bordering more sexual harassment of the female legislator. MP Maridadi asks this question; Below is the debate;

*HON. MAHOKA:  Thank you Madam Speaker.  I also want to add my voice to the debate.  Firstly, I would like to thank the Hon. Minister and the Governor.  The thinking behind the bond note and its introduction to this country is of the highest degree.  The people of Zimbabwe are very happy because the bond notes have helped us.  We no longer have problems if you go to the banks.  When tobacco farmers produce their crop, ….

THE HON. DEPUTY SPEAKER:  Order, order, Hon. Members.  Allow us to hear what the Hon. Member is saying.

*HON. MAHOKA:  We were given a lot of money because of tobacco.  You see us beautiful with glowing skins and our husbands have developed large stomachs, it is because of the money that you have paid us – [HON. MEMBERS:  Inaudible interjections.] –

THE HON. DEPUTY SPEAKER:  Order, Hon. Members.

*HON. MARIDADI:  On a point of order Madam Speaker.

*THE HON. DEPUTY SPEAKER:  What is your point of order?

*HON. MARIDADI:  Madam Speaker, my point of order is on the point that ‘our husbands now have developed large stomachs.’ Does the Hon. Member have a single husband and if she has many husbands, how many does she have?  May she display her status?

*THE HON. DEPUTY SPEAKER:  There is no point of order.

*HON. MAHOKA:  Some Hon. Members take this House lightly.  They came to Parliament with trivial matters not putting at heart representation of the people.  We should know that we came here to represent people and not to play – [HON. MEMBERS:  Inaudible interjections.] –

*THE HON. DEPUTY SPEAKER:  Hon. Members, let us understand each other in this House.

*HON. MARIDADI:  I do not believe that we do not respect this House but she is the one who does not because she is the one who insulted the Vice President in public.  She is the one who does not respect people.  She scolded the Vice President of this country.   Before she would want people to be orderly, she should start with herself because she insulted the Vice President of this country in public and it hurts us.

*THE HON. DEPUTY SPEAKER:  Order, order.  Hon. Members.  I have heard what the Hon. Member said.  She said, let us respect this House.  Can we go ahead with our debate.

*HON. MARIDADI:  The Vice President, Hon. Mnangagwa  is the Leader of the House, whether he is in Shurugwi or Mutoko, he carries the image of this august House.  He should not be insulted by nonentities. – [Laughter.] –

*THE HON. DEPUTY SPEAKER: Order, order Hon. Members.  Can we have order in the House?  Can we please mind our language in this august House.  Hon. Members, please listen.  Hon. Maridadi, you were referring to Hon. Mahoka that she insulted the Hon. Vice President and then you said she is a nonentity.  She is an Hon. Member – [HON. MEMBERS: Inaudible interjections.] – Withdraw that statement.  What does pombi yadonha mean?

*HON.  MARIDADI: My understanding of a nonentity is just an ordinary person, a not so important person. It is not an insult.  While in Parliament, we ordinarily say this Hon. Member is a back-bencher.

*THE HON. DEPUTY SPEAKER:  Hon. Member, there is no ordinary person in Parliament.  Can you please withdraw that?

*HON. MARIDADI: I am withdrawing my word ‘nonentity’ but I am also a nonentity because I am not a Whip or a Chairperson of a Committee but I am a back-bencher.  So, we are both nonentities.  Hon. Mahoka and Hon. Maridadi we are the nonentities.  I thank you.

*HON. MAHOKA: I was talking about the need to be serious in this august House.  The people who elected us are observing how we are belittling or disrespecting this House.  Our words should be proper.  We should not just trivialise issues here in Parliament.  Some people are “vana muti ngauwe tinonge tsotso”.

*HON. MARIDADI: It is even worse; she said the Vice President is an ordinary person.

*THE HON. DEPUTY SPEAKER: Hon. Members, we complained about the need for us to forge ahead with our work.  Let us be mindful of the time, you do not just rise and debate without recognition.   Stand up and say your point of order, I did not hear what you said.

*HON. MARIDADI: I have been hurt but as a man, I cannot shed tears.  She has referred to the Vice President as an ordinary person and she should withdraw.  This is something she should not say in Parliament.  It hurts me so much Hon. Speaker.  May she please withdraw her words because it is painful for her to insult the Vice President of this country.  I thank you.

*THE HON. DEPUTY SPEAKER: Order Hon. Members! Hon. Mahoka, I urge you to speak plain language because what you said is now being taken with a different connotation altogether.

*HON. MAHOKA: Thank you Madam Speaker.  I believe the issue of bond notes is important and it should be debated in depth.  The people in the communal lands are happy with the bond notes.  Well done Hon. Minister, you really realised the challenges that this country was facing.  You intervened and came up with an important note called the bond note.  The 10 provinces are happy because of the bond notes.  We went round in all the provinces and they all accepted it.  Farmers are happy.  Those who do not own any land may be hurt.

There should not be a glut of bond notes on the market but, as it is, it should be maintained.  You have done very well and you are doing quite well.  Keep it up.  You should have a double portion in terms of being a Minister because you have exceeded your performance.

On the negatives of this bond note, in the communal lands, we have not witnessed a situation where prices differ in terms of which currency you are using.  That is if you are paying using bond notes, the item is expensive and if one pays in US dollar the price is lower or if you do a transfer, the price becomes dear.  We do not have that in the communal lands, may be it pertains to the urban areas.  The communal people are happy with the bond notes.  I have risen to support the Minister that what you and the Reserve Bank Governor did is very good.  Keep on thinking along that track so as to ensure the improvement of our economy.  In this House we have been thinking about it so that our country grows.  I thank you Minister.

 

Zimbabwe Tops In Corruption

 

Zimbabwe remains among the world’s most corrupt countries, according to results of a survey by global watchdog Transparency International released on Wednesday.

The southern African nation ranked 154 out of 176 countries on TI’s 2016 Corruption Perception Index (CPI) with a score of 22 points, from 21 over the past three years.

TI, a leading global crusader against graft, says its annual corruption perception index is based on expert opinion and measures perceived levels of public sector corruption worldwide.

Zimbabwe’s police, tender board and tax agency are considered to be the most corrupt public institutions, and are costing the country $1 billion annually, according a report released by TI’s local office in November last year.

The lower-ranked countries in the index are plagued by untrustworthiness and badly functioning public institutions like the police and judiciary. Even where anti-corruption laws are on the books, in practice they’re often skirted or ignored.

“Over two-thirds of the 176 countries and territories in this year’s index fall below the midpoint of our scale of 0 (highly corrupt) to 100 (very clean). The global average score is a paltry 43, indicating endemic corruption in a country’s public sector,” Transparency International said in the report.

Critics say Zimbabwe’s government is not committed to fighting corruption, despite having set up an anti-graft body in 2014. The Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission has yet to resolve a single case and is accused of being used to achieve political ends in President Robert Mugabe’s faction-riddled ZANU-PF party.

Its most high profile case last year was its unsuccessful bid to have Higher Education Minister, Professor Jonathan Moyo arrested over allegations of diverting $430,000 meant for government programmes to personal use.

But it routinely ignores adverse reports by the country’s auditor-general on abuse of public sector funds. In 2015 the auditor-general found 22 ministries, out of a total 26, to have abused funds as well as having flouted procurement procedures and governance rules.

Energy Minister Samuel Undenge admitted to failing to observe the law when the Zimbabwe Power Company (ZPC) made an unsecured advance of $5 million to controversial firm Intratrek, a company fronted in Zimbabwe by Wicknell Chivayo. He did not get a visit from ZACC officials.

The payment was purportedly for preparatory work on the 100MW Gwanda solar plant, one of several power contracts that Intratrek has been awarded by the government.

No country got close to a perfect score in the CPI though Denmark and New Zealand are the top ranked both with scoring 90.

Botswana remains the highest ranked African country at number 35 with a score of 60. Zimbabwe is ranked higher than 11 other African countries, including the Democratic Republic of Congo (156), Burundi (159), South Sudan (175) and Somalia (176). – Source

Gweru Forks Out $40 000 To Repair Mayoral Mansion

GWERU City Council’s multi-bedroomed mayoral mansion, which has been lying idle since the departure of then mayor, Sesel Zvidzai in 2008, now requires at least $40 000 to fix its crumbling fittings.

Town clerk, Elizabeth Gwatipedza, said council was considering leasing or selling the building instead of repairing it.

 This comes amid reports that some of the infrastructure at the buildings had been vandalised.
“The initial quotation showed that $40 000 is required to make sure everything is put back in place,” she said.

But to be honest, it would be better to deposit for a new house than to repair and maintain a building for that amount.”

Gwatipedza said the mansion was not benefitting council and that it would be better to lease or even sell it.

She, however, ruled out earlier proposals to transform the building into a lodge, saying the nature of the mansion would not make it a viable guest house.

Last year, the Judicial Services Commission approached council requesting to lease the building and use it as the seat for High Court sessions, but residents objected to the move, arguing council would not benefit from such a deal.

The mayoral mansion is one white elephant that Gweru has for years been urged to exploit, as the city’s coffers are running dry with dwindling streams to sustain the local authority’s successive budgets.

At one point, council tried to lease out the property for $3 000 per month to any interested tenants, but found no takers.

Mugabe Walks Into Factional Storm

LOCAL artiste Jah Prayzah may have composed his popular ballad, Mudhara vachauya, to simply highlight challenges associated with long-distance relationships between many Zimbabweans and their loved ones in the Diaspora, but if one chose to give a political spin to that song, which talks of a man who is assuring his loved one not to worry because he would soon come back home from abroad, its message would underscore the expectant mood in the country, in general, and the ruling ZANU-PF party, in particular, as President Robert Mugabe’s return looms.


Most likely to fly straight home anytime soon from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, where he is attending the African Union’s 28th ordinary summit, President Mugabe will touch down at the Harare International Airport to the same old Zimbabwe, where political squabbles within his ZANU-PF party and government have become overheated over the 92-year-old’s succession plan.

In power since the southern African nation gained independence 37 years ago in 1980 following a protracted and bloody bush war against the late Ian Smith’s regime, President Mugabe — who turns 93 on February 21 — has, for years, kept the world guessing as to who could be his possible successor during or after his lifetime.
This has led to serious ructions within his 54-year old party.


At the party’s December conference in the country’s ancient city of Masvingo the party’s youths declared that the nonagenarian should rule for life.


And when their dear leader touches down in Harare, they will rush to deliver a new message to him that they are ready to take up arms against a coterie of his erstwhile colleagues in the form of veterans of the 1970s guerilla war for independence, who are insisting that he hands over the baton stick to the most senior person in the party, who happens to be one of his deputies, Vice President Emmerson Mnangagwa.
It will not only be the youths who will be scrambling to report back to the President, but his lieutenants as well.

They have been up to some really serious mischief while he was away since late December last year on a month-long holiday abroad.

They have been exchanging salvos at every opportune time as the factional fighting in the ruling party continues unabated, despite the President himself pleading for ceasefire.
Like some little lads who have been up to some mischief and eager to be the first to report on the others to their parents on their arrival back home, there undoubtedly shall be a scramble at the airport as many in both party and government try to outrun each other to squeal on one another.


Among those who have been really naughty during President Mugabe’s absence were two former workmates at the ministry of information, George Charamba and Jonathan Moyo.
What the former, who has been publishing articles in the Herald under the pseudonym, Nathaniel Manheru, thought was “friendly advice” — albeit laced with prickly venom — to the latter to stop pursuing the succession issue because it was a futile exercise, attracted sharp vitriol from Moyo, who told off Charamba in one of the most crude way that left many including War Veterans Minister, Tshinga Dube, perplexed.

In response to Charamba’s “advice” Moyo went ballistic on his favourite turf: Twitter.
What a useless statement from a useless idiot with a useless message from his useless Stalinist handlers who are ignorant of the magic of elections,” thundered Moyo and in the process unmasking Charamba as the face behind Nathaniel Manheru.

For the two fellas, January is proving to be their favourite month for sparring, especially a few days before the President returns.
Around the same time last year the two were at eat other’s throats throwing up tantrums over the same succession issue.


One tragedy of these little fellas, and I call them little fellas, they confuse media skills with social skills. They think you can scale up a political ladder by twitting; who think when you manipulate one or two headlines you have a social base for launching your stupid ambitions, they will come to grief, get it from me. I am not speaking as a permanent secretary, but as President Mugabe’s press secretary,” said Charamba in a radio interview with ZiFM in January last year.


But the bottom line is: Will the shrewd veteran politician act out of his usual ordinary way?
Analysts are divided over the issue.
But some are convinced that it shall be the same old story of the President not taking sides and simply turning a blind eye to the now full scale open warfare in his party and government while, like a caring parent, delivering his usual words of caution in the process.

President Mugabe has proved reluctant to decisively deal with the factional issues in his party, which evidences the fact that he is aware of his own political constraints and increased loss of grip, in both party and government,” said political commentator, Otto Saki.


He missed several opportunities to unite his party and the open disagreements are not going to abet. He will continue to provide a figment of control and responsibility. Dismissing or disciplining any of the faction members will stand to weaken him further,” Saki concluded.

Since 2004, the emotive issue of who will succeed him whenever he decides to retire from active politics has been the coal that has fired the factionalism furnace whose pressure has been dangerously building up.

In 2014 the pressure chamber first breached and thrust out of the party the country and ZANU-PF’s first female vice president, Joice Mujuru.
Crude shenanigans within the party saw Mujuru and over 200 cadres either being suspended for varying number of years or dismissed altogether, like in the case of Mujuru, Didymus Mutasa and Rugare Guumbo, to name just a few of some of the party’s former top names.

This was the era of the weevils and gammatox, the names given to the two factions linked to Mnangagwa and Mujuru respectively.
More than two years after that decisive moment when President Mugabe for the first time practically tried to act on factionalism, notwithstanding that he opted to side with one of the factions, the veteran leader is now confronted by a much trickier situation.
The best decision to make is for him to resolve the fact that, within and without his party, it appears he is now viewed as the singular greatest liability and threat to party, State and nation’s progression. That is a very unfortunate indictment, but unavoidable as the continued demystification of his person and power, leaves him at the mercy of uncouth political novices across factions in his party, preparing for political life after him,” opined Saki.

Mnangagwa is none the wiser on the novices’ crude machinations after being photographed holding a huge mug with the words: “I’m the boss” written on it.
Long before he had put his mug down following his New Year’s eve toast, the picture had gone round the world countless times jolting his rivals into frenzy.

His attempts to duck enemy missiles being propelled by the connotations of the “I’m the boss” words on the mug were a little late to stop the damage.
Against the background of many utterances and activities, all of them unsolicited but claiming or seeking association with my person, my family and or my position both in ZANU-PF and in government, I want to make it clear that there are elements on the loose who talk and act as if they support me and or the party, ZANU-PF, when in fact they are being handled and managed from elsewhere by hostile forces,” Mnangagwa was quoted as having said.

But his woes go beyond the mug scandal. His archrivals are rubbing their hands in anticipation as they hope that his other shenanigans, such as his controversial interview with a British publication would create more trouble for the 75-year-old politician, who has been fondly known as Ngwena (crocodile) in ZANU-PF circles.

The wide-ranging interview with the New Statesman magazine has torched ragging debate in the ruling party with some of the statements made by Mnangagwa being viewed as anti-Zezuru, which happens to be President Mugabe’s tribe.
Undoubtedly, the real boss President Mugabe, as Mnangagwa confessed following the mug fiasco, has already been fully briefed of all these goings on and, as usual, probably enjoying himself.
However, as former United States president, Bill Clinton once said: “When times are tough and people are frustrated and angry and hurting and uncertain, the politics of constant conflict may be good, but what is good politics does not necessarily work in the real world. What works in the real world is cooperation.”

The politics currently playing out in Zimbabwe might precisely be the kind that Clinton referred to, but, unfortunately, cooperation seems to be the last thing factions in ZANU-PF are prepared to do.

Antagonists are geared for the winner-take-all state of affairs.
Political scientist, Ibbo Mandaza believes that there is now a likelihood that President Mugabe would call for a special congress to finally get rid of Mnangagwa.
I can’t see him (President Mugabe) leaving things to chance. He will now do anything to get rid of Emmerson,” said Mandaza.

The ruling party’s youths have already sounded the war drums having since called for a special congress, failure which they have said they are prepared to plunge the country into civil war if President Mugabe is not allowed to rule till he dies, a demand that pitched the ruling party’s factional wars at a much higher level.

But University of Zimbabwe political science lecturer, Eldred Masunungure, does not see the President drifting an iota from his usual modus operandi.

It’s highly unlikely that he will act any differently, because things are working in his favour. As long as there are divisions in the party it works to his advantage. He is not too worried that is why he is relaxed wherever he is on holiday. There is absolutely no basis for him to act any differently when things are working in his favour,” said Masunungure. Fingaz

 

South-Africa And Zimbabwe In Beitbridge One-Stop Border Post Talks

Zimbabwe and South Africa are in talks over the establishment of a one stop border post at the Beitbridge entry point.

The International Customs Union Day celebrations held on Thursday in the capital provided a platform for government and business to review successes on regional integration, the impact of tight import controls, current trade patterns for Zimbabwe and the state of the nation’s ports of entries.
Minister of Industry and Commerce Dr Mike Bimha who was the guest of honour told the ZBC News following the successful setting up of a one stop border at Chirundu, Zimbabwe and South Africa are now discussing the possibilities of a one stop facility at Beitbridge to ease congestion and facilitate smooth trade.

ZIMRA acting commissioner general Mr Happias Kuzvinzwa says the organisation is committed to fulfill government’s initiative towards the rolling out of one stop border posts across the country.

According to a study by COMESA, the Beitbridge border post is the busiest road border post in Southern Africa with expectations the one stop facility, although capital intensive, will improve customs clearing and other critical procedures. – State Media

Tsvangirai Meets Hwange Traditional Leaders

Luke Tamborinyoka |  President Tsvangirai today met opinion leaders in Hwange as part of his nationwide consultation programme on key national issues among them the alliance building process and the Zimbabwe they expect in the post-Mugabe era that starts after the watershed election of 2018.

Among those who met President Tsvangirai were representatives of traditional leaders and civic leaders from the church and business, among many others.

The opinion leaders, like all the groups and people he has met during this tour, restated the fact that the Zanu PF government had failed and they all gave their input to President Tsvangirai on the new society they want after the 2018 polls.

The issues they raised included marginalisation of their community by the Zanu PF government, collapsed national infrastructure that needed urgent rehabilitation, the Zanu PF/State conflation and the abuse of traditional leaders by ordering them to frog march people to vote for a particular political party during elections.

The opinion leaders lauded the proposed alliance of political parties but urged caution that some of them were direct creations of Zanu PF. However, they expressed optimism that the alliance would defeat Zanu PF and set the tone for a new, prosperous Zimbabwe post-Mugabe in 2018.

President Tsvangirai, on his part, said he was on a listening tour and was finding invaluable the people’s input particularly on the new society they want after 2018. He pledged to build an inclusive society that would not leave anyone behind.

Tomorrow, President Tsvangirai will meet opinion leaders in Bulawayo and Plumtree.

Luke Tamborinyoka
Presidential Spokesperson and Director of Communications
Movement for Democratic Change

 

Barrow Returns To Ruined Gambia

The Gambia’s new president Adama Barrow will return to the capital Banjul on Thursday, days after long-standing ruler Yahya Jammeh, who initially disputed the election results, was forced into exile.

Barrow had to be inaugurated in neighbouring Senegal as regional powers threw their weight behind the new leader and threatened military intervention if Jammeh refused to stepped down after 22 years in power.

“He [Barrow] is leaving tomorrow and will arrive in Banjul at around 4 pm [1600 GMT],” aide Amie Bojang told the Reuters news agency on Wednesday.

The official said the priority would be “putting into place the pillars of reform and human rights,” adding “people are very happy and it’s elating”.

Barrow will be staying at his own home until further notice while State House, Jammeh’s former seat of power, is assessed for potential risks.

His first job is to deal with an internal crisis after it emerged his choice of vice president, Fatoumata Jallow-Tambajang, may be too old, constitutionally, for the role.

Residents in the capital said Barrow’s arrival would mark the beginning of the healing process after divisions created by Jammeh’s regime.

“Not only the government has to change but all the Gambian people have to change, working hand in hand, and change our attitude,” a Gambian who declined to give his name, told the AFP news agency.

Jammeh, a former military officer, finally stepped down on Saturday and went into exile in Equatorial Guinea under diplomatic pressure and after troops from the Economic Community of West African States, or ECOWAS, crossed into The Gambia.

Jammeh’s government gained a reputation for the torture and killing of perceived opponents and many Gambians are furious that he will not face trial at home for those abuses.

About 4,000 West African troops remain in The Gambia charged with ensuring safety, as it is believed rogue pro-Jammeh elements remain in the security forces that were once under his personal control.

Barrow must also deal with latent ethnic tensions between Jammeh’s minority Jola people and the majority Mandinkas, to whom Barrow belongs.

Marcel Alain De Souza, the head of ECOWAS, told a briefing in Nigeria on Tuesday that the troops were working to secure Banjul and the surrounding area for Barrow’s return.

Jammeh pitched The Gambia into turmoil in December when he refused to accept his loss in an election to Barrow and demanded another vote.

Barrow has assured Jammeh that he will have all the rights legally ensured to an ex-president, which under Gambian law include immunity from prosecution, barring a vote by two-thirds of the national assembly.

The new government has also confirmed that Jammeh will be permitted to keep a fleet of luxury cars, while authorities have accused the former strongman of plundering state coffers before heading into exile, making off with $11m.

In New York, the UN envoy for West Africa, Mohamed ibn Chambas, briefed the Security Council on The Gambia during a closed session and stressed that the United Nations was working to bolster stability.

Chambas is due to accompany Barrow on Thursday when he returns to Banjul. – Ajazeera