Typhoid Scare In Glen View

By A Correspondent| Ten cases of suspected typhoid have been reported in Glen View, a Harare suburb which has over the years been a hot spot for cholera.

This was confirmed by Harare City Council Health Services Director Dr Prosper Chonzi who told a local publication that residents have been reporting to the clinics.

He said:

In Glen View, close to where the clinic is, people there are reporting at the clinic with symptoms consistent with typhoid, fever with temperatures of around 39 – 40, headache and abdominal discomfort, which are consistent with typhoid.

Most of them have gone to the clinic and gotten anti-biotic and so when their culture is tested the results will come out negative because they have been given anti-biotic.

Harare has been struggling to consistently provide water to several suburbs and when it does provide the water, it will be unsafe for most domestic uses including drinking.

The local government authority cites the inadequacy of chemicals caused by shortage of foreign currency and dwindling water levels in its water sources as the main reasons why water supply has been intermittent.

-StateMedia

Suspected Typhoid Cases Reported In Harare

Ten cases of suspected typhoid have been reported in Glen View, a Harare suburb which has over the years been a hot spot for cholera.

This was confirmed by Harare City Council Health Services Director Dr Prosper Chonzi who told ZTN that residents have been reporting to the clinics.

He said:
In Glen View, close to where the clinic is, people there are reporting at the clinic with symptoms consistent with typhoid, fever with temperatures of around 39 – 40, headache and abdominal discomfort, which are consistent with typhoid.

Most of them have gone to the clinic and gotten anti-biotic and so when their culture is tested the results will come out negative because they have been given anti-biotic.

Harare has been struggling to consistently provide water to several suburbs and when it does provide the water, it will be unsafe for most domestic uses including drinking.

The local government authority cites the inadequacy of chemicals caused by shortage of foreign currency and dwindling water levels in its water sources as the main reasons why water supply has been intermittent.-ZTN

FC Platinum Sign Highlanders Coach

FC Platinum sign Hendrik Pieter de Jongh

Zimbabwe Premier League champions FC Platinum are set to unveil Hendrik Pieter de Jongh as the new head coach, Soccer24 can exclusively reveal.De Jongh opted not to extend his stay with Highlanders with his contract set to expire at the end of the month.

The Dutchman arrived at Bosso in September and signed a short-term performance-based deal. Following a successful three-month spell which included winning the Chibuku Super Cup, the club offered him a new contract but he turned it down this week and indicated he will be seeking a new challenge. 

De Jongh has signed a pre-contract with FC Platinum and will be unveiled in the new year. “Everything went quite fast and he will be the new FC Platinum head coach from January a source close to the deal told Soccer24. 

FC Platinum have been on the hunt for an experienced substantive head coach since the departure of Norman Mapeza.

U.S. Recalls Its Zambian Ambassador Over Gay Rights Stance

Daniel Foote

Information just received is that the United States (US) Government has recalled it’s Ambassador to Zambia Daniel Foote.

This follows a demarche by the Zambian Authorities to the US Government after Foot’s demeaning remarks on Zambia’s judiciary after jailing of a gay couple.

Foote also spoke strongly of corruption and human rights abuse by the Zambian Government.

His last day of work is January 2, 2020. THIS IS A DEVELOPING STORY

FC Platinum Snatch De Jongh?

Zimbabwe Premier League champions FC Platinum are set to appoint Hendrik Pieter de Jongh as their new head coach.

De Jongh opted not to extend his stay with Highlanders with his contract set to expire at the end of the month.

The Dutchman arrived at Bosso in September and signed a short-term performance-based deal.

Following a successful three-month spell which included winning the Chibuku Super Cup, the club offered him a new contract but he turned it down this week and indicated he will be seeking a new challenge. 

De Jongh has signed a pre-contract with FC Platinum and will be unveiled in the new year. “Everything went quite fast and he will be the new FC Platinum head coach from January a source close to the deal told Soccer24. 

FC Platinum have been on the hunt for an experienced substantive head coach since the departure of Norman Mapeza. Soccer 24

Billiat Bounces Back

The 2019-20 ABSA Premiership campaign continued with match day 14 and here is how Zimbabwean players based in the Rainbow Nation fared.

Terrence Dzukamanja scored for Bidvest Wits in their 2-0 win over Cape Town City.

Ovidy Karuru, whose contract with AmaZulu was terminated on mutual ground, penned a deal with a new club, which despite not being confirmed yet, is believed to be Stellenbosch.

Khama Billiat returned to Kaizer Chiefs’ line up in their entertaining 1-1 stalemate with Maritzburg United at the Harry Gwala Stadium. In that same game, Willard Katsande conceded a second half penalty but fortunately for him, Daniel Akpeyi denied Maritzburg’s Daylon Klasen from 12 yards.

For the Team of Choice, Clive Augusto was on the bench while Gabriel Nyoni was again not the in the match day squad.

Kelvin Moyo was in the Chippa United’s side which edged Kaitano Tembo’s SuperSport United 1-0. Moyo is part of a defence which has now kept a historic 5th consecutive clean sheet as the Chilli Boys’ resurgence under Norman Mapeza continues.

For Matsatsantsa, Kuda Mahachi and Onismor Bhasera featured.

George Chigova was named man-of-the-match despite Polokwane City succumbing to their 10th defeat in a row, a 0-1 loss to Mamelodi Sundowns. Charlton Mashumba also took part for Rise and Shine.

Elvis Chipezeze was between the sticks when his Baroka lost 0-1 to Stellenbosch.

The trio of Danny Phiri, Devine Lunga and Knox Mutizwa were in Lamontville Golden Arrows’ team which lost to Highlands Park. Tendai Ndoro was an unused substitute for the Lions of the North.

Ronald Pfumbidzai is currently nursing an injury and did not feature for Bloefontein Celtic in their 2-1 loss to Talent Chawapiwa’s AmaZulu.Soccer 24

I Am Humbled By President Mnangagwa’s Efforts To Revive Economy – Khupe

Farai Dziva| MDC T leader Thokhozani Khupe says she is humbled by Emmerson Mnangagwa’s efforts to resuscitate the economy.

See below a tweet posted by ZBC:

MDC -T President Dr Thokozani Khupe says she’s deeply humbled by the efforts made by His Excellency President ED Mnangagwa of resuscitating the economy as testified by what she saw at the President’s farm in Kwekwe. “I will continue supporting him”,she added.

Former Pirates Coach Praises Mapeza

Farai Dziva|Former Orlando Pirates coach Milutin “Micho” Sredojević, has praised Norman Mapeza following his turnaround of Chippa United.

Mapeza has steered the Chilli Boys out of danger in remarkable fashion, winning four of their last five games and not conceding a goal in the process, after taking over at a time when they were win-less and bottom -placed, earning Micho’s admiration in the process.

“Thank you very much for appreciating a great coach, and my dear respected friend and brother, a recognized football gentleman from Zimbabwe — Norman Mapeza,” Micho told The Herald.

“I was in touch with him and firmly believed that he can turn the tables in that extraordinary club and situation.

“He is doing well but he has no time and space to relax as the situation can reverse but I undoubtedly believe in his human and sports qualities.”

Norman Mapeza

Villa Correspondent Blames Nakamba For Weekend Loss

Farai Dziva |Warriors midfielder Marvelous Nakamba got the lowest rating ever since he joined Aston Villa in side’s 1-3 loss to Southampton on Saturday.

The 25-year-old, who came on as a substitute in the first half replacing the injured John McGinn, gifted Danny Ings with the Saints’ third goal, which killed off the contest.

Writing for the Birmingham Mail, Villa correspondent Ashely Preece gave the former Club Brugge man a rating of 4.5 out of 10.

“Marvelous Nakamba, 4.5

Busy as ever and tried his hardest. His mistake killed the game off once and for all, though, Nakamba’s heavy touch allowing Ings to smash home Saints’ third,” wrote Preece.

Minister Gumbo Fingered In The Eviction Of Aspindale Residents By Controversial Tycoon

By Own Correspondent| Aspindale Residents who are challenging Billy Rautenbach’s ownership of stand 48 and 49 have been threatened to stop pursuing the Court challenge against the controversial businessman.

Sources within the cooperatives alleged that the leadership of the cooperatives were summoned to a meeting this week where Minister Jorum Gumbo instructed the residents to comply with Billy Rautenbach’s demands and to also withdraw the court case challenging Rautenbach’s ownership of the land under contestation.

It is alleged that Joshua Nkomo Cooperative was also instructed to withdraw it’s court case against the Ministry of Local Government with immediate effect.

The sources further alleged that the leadership of the housing cooperatives were told to stop complaining about the issue that Billy has no Title Deeds over the land and stop convening meetings with residents anymore.

Residents further alleged that the Minister also demanded that the Cooperative should stop inviting their legislators, Themba Mliswa and Willias Madzimure to come and address them on this issue.

A source who spoke to CHRA alleged that residents were also told that any resistance to Rautenbach’s demands will attract arrests and armed forces would be deployed to stop any resistance to Rautebach’s efforts.

“Billy has no right over that place as he doesn’t have title deeds Honourable Gumbo should be aware and not abuse people like this.”Charged Honourable Mliswa.

Information gathered so far have proved that the controversial business man, Billy Rautenbach does not have title deeds over the land .

Attempts by the Ministry of Local Government to withdraw the offer letter it gave the Cooperatives hit a brick wall after the High Court in July this year declared the cancellation of the offer letter “null and void.”

The Aspindale issue is a litmus test for the ED administration on dealing with land barons.CHRA calls on the Zimbabwe government to respect and protect the right to shelter for Aspindale residents.

The threats by the Minister Gumbo are clear violations of the constitutional provisionsof the freedom of assembly and association as well as the right to shelter.

In responding to the perpetual human rights violations and oppression of Aspindale residents CHRA has commenced a process of engaging the Zimbabwe Human Rights Commission over the gross human rights violations under way in Aspindale ,in addition to a litigation process under way.

ZRP Cop Sneaks Into Female Colleague’s Blankets, Rapes Her After Pretending To Be Her Husband

A 34-YEAR-OLD Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) officer is in soup after allegedly raping a colleague in the dark in the absence of her husband.

Philani Ncube of ZRP Madlambuzi was arrested after rap_ing a fellow cop last week.

Sources close to the investigation allege on December 16 around 9pm the complainant arrived at her place of residence from work and retired to bed whilst her husband was at a bar.

While asleep Ncube sneaked into the complanant’s dark bedroom and started fondling the complainant’s breasts and kissing while the complaint responded thinking that it was her husband.

He raped her once and while in the middle of sexual intercourse, the complanant’ managed to observe that it was not her husband and she was being raped.

She screamed for help and Ncube apologized before fleeing.

When the complanant’s husband came back from the bar the victim narrated her ordeal and she was accompanied by her husband to file a report leading to the arrest of the accused.
— Byo24

Armed Robbers Pounce On Prominent Businessman, Get Away With Cash…

Five Armed robbers pounced on an unsuspecting businessman in the dead of the night at his home and got away with cash, a
kombi and other valuables.

The robbers reportedly disarmed Mr Mapungwana’s security system and tapped him and his security guards before taking away the valuables.

According to the publication, Mr Shepherd Mapungwana of Lee and Lee lost:
US$5 500, $23 000, ZAR3 700, a camera, pistol, a television set, a Toyota Quantum microbus and two mobile phones.

The robbers deflated Mr Mapungwana’s other cars’ tyres before taking. The matter was reported to Mvuri Police.NewsDay

It Cannot Be Unity When You Beat Up People For Saying They Are Hungry- Chamisa

Farai Dziva|MDC leader Nelson Chamisa has said Zanu PF cannot brag about unity when it is terrorizing hapless citizens.

Speaking about the Unity Day Chamisa said:

“It cannot be unity when you beat up people for saying they are hungry. If doctors say they are incapacitated and they want money, you fire them, when teachers say they want money, you set dogs on them. Is that unity?

It cannot be unity when it appears there are two countries in one. Unity shouldn’t be between parties for power, but it must be about institutions and for the good of everyone, tribes, religion, all provinces, seeing there is something for them.
Unity is important, but they think it is partisan.

There is no unity when you can’t resolve issues and hold free and fair elections…”

How Zanu PF Has Monopolized Unity Day

Farai Dziva|The Movement for Democratic Change has accused the ruling party Zanu PF of monopolizing Unity Day Celebrations.

Below is the party’s statement on Unity Day:
Towards a shared Zimbabwean dream

The liberation icon, Joshua Nkomo , said at the signing of the Unity Accord in 1987, “… unity is not just the signing of documents, unity is what follows.”

What has followed is a country at odds with its own ideals, a country that speaks the rhetoric of unity yet its citizens are imprisoned by deeply rooted divisions made worse by the government’s inability to acknowledge the trauma and suffering of its citizens.

The injustices of the past continue to be swept under the carpet.

The colonial-era injustices, the liberation war era injustices, and post-independence injustices must all be negated through a national process of truth-telling, nation-building, national healing and rehabilitative restorative justice.

The Gukurahundi atrocities remain glossed over and dismissed as mere “disturbances” while the victims continue to live with the trauma of unhealed wounds left to fester through insincerity and negligence.

The very fabric of the Zimbabwean dream continues to be eroded by the plague of greed and corruption as our people languish in poverty and hunger.

Murambatsvina left many homeless and hopeless. Violent elections and politically instigated violence have left many dead and wounded.

Government policies have eroded peoples’ savings and wealth.

Pensioners and the vulnerable are without any cushion against the brutality of the harsh economic circumstances.
This is not unity.

True peace and reconciliation require us to sincerely address the divisions in our society, to give voice to those who are marginalised and oppressed, to work together in common purpose to ensure the promises of liberation are enjoyed by every single Zimbabwean without fear or favour.

Until this day comes, we cannot claim to be united or free.

We cannot preach unity when we pursue economic policies that widen the divide between the rich and the poor. We have seen the imposition of austerity measures that punish the poor, for the mistakes made by the selfish, ruling elite.

These economic policies do not unite us. They divide us.
Inequality is growing. It’s one of the biggest threats to the security of our country, and to our unity as a people.
This is not the unity Joshua Nkomo signed for.

The MDC will continue to fight for a truly united Zimbabwe where the ideals of freedom, democracy, peace, and reform belong to every citizen of our beloved nation.

True unity must be beyond just the unity of parties or its leaders. It must be a unity of all people of our beautiful Zimbabwe in vision, ideals, values and destiny.

We must all build the Zimbabwe we deserve and want-the shared Zimbabwean dream.
United we stand.

Full Text: MDC Statement On Unity Day

Towards a shared Zimbabwean dream

The liberation icon, Joshua Nkomo , said at the signing of the Unity Accord in 1987, “… unity is not just the signing of documents, unity is what follows.”

What has followed is a country at odds with its own ideals, a country that speaks the rhetoric of unity yet its citizens are imprisoned by deeply rooted divisions made worse by the government’s inability to acknowledge the trauma and suffering of its citizens.

The injustices of the past continue to be swept under the carpet.

The colonial-era injustices, the liberation war era injustices, and post-independence injustices must all be negated through a national process of truth-telling, nation-building, national healing and rehabilitative restorative justice.

The Gukurahundi atrocities remain glossed over and dismissed as mere “disturbances” while the victims continue to live with the trauma of unhealed wounds left to fester through insincerity and negligence.

The very fabric of the Zimbabwean dream continues to be eroded by the plague of greed and corruption as our people languish in poverty and hunger.

Murambatsvina left many homeless and hopeless. Violent elections and politically instigated violence have left many dead and wounded.

Government policies have eroded peoples’ savings and wealth.

Pensioners and the vulnerable are without any cushion against the brutality of the harsh economic circumstances.
This is not unity.

True peace and reconciliation require us to sincerely address the divisions in our society, to give voice to those who are marginalised and oppressed, to work together in common purpose to ensure the promises of liberation are enjoyed by every single Zimbabwean without fear or favour.

Until this day comes, we cannot claim to be united or free.

We cannot preach unity when we pursue economic policies that widen the divide between the rich and the poor. We have seen the imposition of austerity measures that punish the poor, for the mistakes made by the selfish, ruling elite.

These economic policies do not unite us. They divide us.
Inequality is growing. It’s one of the biggest threats to the security of our country, and to our unity as a people.
This is not the unity Joshua Nkomo signed for.

The MDC will continue to fight for a truly united Zimbabwe where the ideals of freedom, democracy, peace, and reform belong to every citizen of our beloved nation.

True unity must be beyond just the unity of parties or its leaders. It must be a unity of all people of our beautiful Zimbabwe in vision, ideals, values and destiny.

We must all build the Zimbabwe we deserve and want-the shared Zimbabwean dream.
United we stand.

Marry Mubaiwa’s Family Pleads With ED To Stop His Lieutenant

THE Mubaiwa family has made a passionate plea to President Emmerson Mnangagwa to intervene and place jailed Marry Chiwenga (nee Mubaiwa), the wife of Vice President Constantino Chiwenga, under house arrest to protect her honour.

Marry was remanded in custody last week, facing charges of attempting to kill the VP and fraud.

However, the family feels that her honour and respect has been dragged through the mud by incarcerating her with convicted criminals as she is innocent and coming from a ‘higher authority.’

“Coming from a higher authority like that, there is need to honour her. She is the wife of the Vice President, she needs to be respected and honoured regardless of anything else around,” Harrington Mubaiwa, an uncle to Marry told NewZimbabwe Sunday.

Harrington went on to suggest that Marry should instead be placed under house arrest.

“The best they can do is for her to be put under house arrest for now. There is nowhere she can go but there is need for a level of dignity for her,” he said.

According to the uncle, before her arrest Marry was staying with her five children. After her arrest, the VP took three of the children he sired with his wife while he sent the other two packing to stay with the Mubaiwa’s.

“It is illegal for Chiwenga to come and take the children,” said Harrington before accusing their in-law of using military and political power to influence the police and the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (ZACC) to get back on his wife.

Chiwenga is a former army general and is also going through a messy divorce process with Marry.

However, the Mubaiwa family feels that Mnangagwa should intervene and rescue Marry from what it views is persecution not prosecution.

“But the President being a custodian of freedom, safety and liberty of the citizens must intervene because my daughter is being denied that right,” said Harrington.

“President Mnangagwa, I request you to take this matter and give my daughter Marry Mubaiwa the dignity she deserves. I want to appeal for ED Mnangangwa’s intervention in this case in such a way that our daughter is handled with the level of dignity and protection that every citizen should have.”

The Mubaiwa family said it was also saddened with how the arrest of Marry was being handled as it was a family issue not a criminal case.

“We know that when a family has a disagreement, the husband who is unhappy with his wife should approach parents of the wife and discuss the way forward. This has not been done and it shows how Chiwenga despises the Mubaiwa family.

“He should have thought as a strategic man. He should have thought about this and I am sure he considered it but found it to be unnecessary because he perceives that we don’t have powers.

“And coming from a higher authority like that there is need to honour Marry, she is the wife of the Vice President, she needs to be respected and honoured regardless of anything else around.

Marry will be back at the High Court Friday for her bail application hearing.

-NewZimbabwe

Mapeza Overcomes Kaitano Tembo In Battle Of Zim Coaches

Chippa United coach Norman Mapeza outwitted his compatriot at Supersport United, Kaitano Tembo, during an Absa Premier League match played at Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium in Port Elizabeth on Saturday evening.

The Chilli Boys won 1-0 through a Xolani Mahola goal in the 42nd minute.

The win takes Mapeza’s side to ninth place on the log standings, having now kept five clean sheets in a row.

Meanwhile, the defeat leaves SuperSport in third, 10 points behind league leaders Kaizer Chiefs.

When Mapeza took over at Chippa, the club had not won a single match in over five games and was languishing at the foot of the table, with relegation looking certain.
More: SuperSport

Real Madrid Fire Blanks Against Athletic Club

Farai Dziva|Real Madrid drew 0-0 at home to
Athletic Club on Sunday night and ended 2019 in frustration.

Zinedine Zidane’s side extended their unbeaten run in all competitions to 13 games, but failure to score at the Santiago Bernabeu means Los Blancos have now drawn their last three La Liga matches.

After rescuing a point in the 95th minute away to Valencia last weekend, Madrid drew 0-0 at Camp Nou in El Clasico on Wednesday night and were looking to head into the winter break level with Barcelona by beating Athletic on Sunday.

But Real were denied by the woodwork three times and unable to convert any of their 20 chances as they dropped two points off the pace at the top of the table after 18 rounds of matches.

Mealie-Meal Crisis Ahead Of Christmas Holiday

ZIMBABWE’s current mealie meal shortages have been blamed on the Industry and Commerce ministry which failed to register over 60 millers for maize subsidy, with millers withholding their stocks to avoid losses.

Mnangagwa’s government scrapped maize subsidies at the start of the month, but reintroduced them after a public outcry over high prices.

Government, however, introduced a new condition that millers should be registered with the Industry ministry to qualify for the subsidy programme, in a statement released on December 13 by the Finance ministry.

But some millers have complained that the registration process was very slow and about 60 millers have not been registered for the subsidy programme.

The millers are now withholding their stocks for fear that they may not be registered at all.

“The 60 millers are holding on to their maize stocks and cannot risk producing roller meal without being registered,” a miller who requested anonymity said.

“The few who have been registered are struggling to supply the market and this has caused serious shortages of the product on the market. Only highly priced refined mealie-meal being sold at around $115 per 10kg is found in the shops.”

The gazetted price of the roller meal is $50, which is seen as affordable for the public.

NewsDay observed yesterday that many retail shops did not have roller meal.

The registered millers include National Foods Limited (NFL) and Blue Ribbon Foods, which were allocated 28 000 tonnes and 10 000 respectively, out of the 40 000 which government has availed to millers.

Millers who spoke to NewsDay said they were being sent from one office to another without getting any assistance.

Grain Millers Association of Zimbabwe (GMAZ) spokesperson Garikai Chaunza confirmed receiving reports of delayed registration process from millers.

“We are receiving calls from our members asking if the association could assist them and it is our hope that the authorities would speed up the process, so that millers who are holding on to their maize grain start milling and supply the market given that we are in the festive season, where mealie-meal is one of the products on demand,” he said.

“We have the capacity to supply the nation throughout the festive season and what we are waiting for is that government registers us.

“Millers are now required to register with the Industry ministry and after that, approach the Finance ministry, which will give them the subsidy money before they go to GMB for maize collection. The process is cumbersome and millers are complaining that there is no transparency in the process.”

GMAZ used to facilitate the process for its members.

Last week, GMAZ Southern region members raised concern over what they described as a show of “unfair and anti-competitive behaviour,” shown by NFL, which allegedly met government privately and secured over half of the total subsidised monthly maize allocation of 40 000 metric tonnes outside the association.

However, according to the December 13 statement by the Finance ministry, not only GMAZ members qualified for the subsidy programme.

Industry minister Sekai Nzenza yesterday said the matter would be addressed.

“I am surprised that the process is taking long as the team is working hard to register millers. However, we need to resolve this matter quickly and there should be no shortages at all. Please do send the questions to my PA, Victoria Sigauke, and we will investigate,” she said.

-Newsday

Will POLAD Bring Lasting Solution To Political Crisis In Zimbabwe?

POLAD meeting

Warship Dumba

I have followed closely as you argue l need those informed to the process to guide us with facts:

  1. What is POLAD?
    RESPONSE: POLAD is a platform created for all 2018 Presidential candidates who had ideas of how they thought they could move the country forward. It is a platform I can best describe as that of farmers of thought. Ideas are shared and proposals made as to how we can best move the country forward.
  2. Where did it get its MANDATE? The qualification to participate came from the fact that one was a presidential candidate and therefore the mandate come from those that forwarded the aspiring Presidential candidate and those who subsequently voted for those candidates.
  3. What motivated POLAD?

The realization that we all have a responsibility to build the Zimbabwe we want. The majority does not always necessarily have the monopoly of ideas of how to move the country forward especially in a polarised environment like we have in Zimbabwe where the minority groups may never win elections based or tribal voting tendencies we have witnessed over the years.
The majority always have a say and the minority follow out of fear of being left out. The minority seem to be voting with the majority just so they also belong and not necessarily because the majority have their interests.

  1. What will be the key achievables of POLAD for it to be defined successfully? Polad is not a governing platform but it is a platform that generates ideas of what people would like to see happen in their communities.
  2. Where does POLAD differ in other failed political settlements like the GNU? RESPONSE: POLAD is not a power sharing arrangement. IT does not seek to share power but to hold the governing party and all legislatures responsible to what they were voted to do in the spirit of inclusiveness and moving the country forward.
  3. Is POLAD going to bring long lasting permanent political solution in Zimbabwe if so what is its strategy learning from previous mistakes?

RESPONSE :
POLAD is on a voluntary participation basis of those that want to see the country move forward. Unity and respect among the participants is there fore key. It is a platform where people come together based on their willingness to cooperate with each other. The POLAD platform does not compell every one to be a participant in but all those that have a shared vision of a better Zimbabwe and better life for all.

It has been endorsed by UN, AU SADC and other international bodies as a platform of inclusivity and a home brewed solution for Zimbabweans by Zimbabweans.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT POLAD

Warship Dumba

I have followed closely as you argue l need those informed to the process to guide us with facts:

  1. What is POLAD?
    RESPONSE: POLAD is a platform created for all 2018 Presidential candidates who had ideas of how they thought they could move the country forward. It is a platform I can best describe as that of farmers of thought. Ideas are shared and proposals made as to how we can best move the country forward.
  2. Where did it get it’s MANDATE? The qualification to participate came from the fact that one was a presidential candidate and therefore the mandate come from those that forwarded the aspiring Presidential candidate and those who subsequently voted for those candidates.
  3. What motivated POLAD?

The realization that we all have a responsibility to build the Zimbabwe we want. The majority does not always necessarily have the monopoly of ideas of how to move the country forward especially in a polarised environment like we have in Zimbabwe where the minority groups may never win elections based or tribal voting tendencies we have witnessed over the years.
The majority always have a say and the minority follow out of fear of being left out. The minority seem to be voting with the majority just so they also belong and not necessarily because the majority have their interests.

  1. What will be the key achievables of POLAD for it to be defined successfully? Polad is not a governing platform but it is a platform that generates ideas of what people would like to see happen in their communities.
  2. Where does POLAD differ in other failed political settlements like the GNU? RESPONSE: POLAD is not a power sharing arrangement. IT does not seek to share power but to hold the governing party and all legislatures responsible to what they were voted to do in the spirit of inclusiveness and moving the country forward.
  3. Is POLAD going to bring long lasting permanent political solution in Zimbabwe if so what is its strategy learning from previous mistakes?

RESPONSE :
POLAD is on a voluntary participation basis of those that want to see the country move forward. Unity and respect among the participants is there fore key. It is a platform where people come together based on their willingness to cooperate with each other. The POLAD platform does not compell every one to be a participant in but all those that have a shared vision of a better Zimbabwe and better life for all.

It has been endorsed by UN, AU SADC and other international bodies as a platform of inclusivity and a home brewed solution for Zimbabweans by Zimbabweans.

Morgan Richard Tsvangirai Legacy Lives On…

Farai Dziva|MDC vice president Lynette Karenyi presented Christmas gifts to Gogo Tsvangirai, the mother of the late veteran opposition leader and trade unionist, Morgan Tsvangirai.

See statement below:
Blessed be the womb that bore our icon and MDC founding President, the late Dr Richard Morgan Tsvangirai.

Today, on behalf of the loving and caring MDC family, I felt honoured to pay a visit and hand over Christmas gifts to our late President’s mother Gogo Tsvangirai in Buhera.

It was an emotional moment that reminded me just how much sorrow the great Tsvangirai family has had to endure over the past few years.

The MDC, through the leadership of our President Nelson Chamisa, will continue to pay tribute and offer our gratitude to the Tsvangirai family for gifting us with a bona fide hero of social justice.

Gogo Tsvangirai and the entire Tsvangirai family, may you have a blessed Christmas and prosperous new year!

Lynette Karenyi
MDC Vice President.

MDC “Honours” Gogo Tsvangirai

Farai Dziva|MDC vice president Lynette Karenyi presented Christmas gifts to Gogo Tsvangirai, the mother of the late veteran opposition leader and trade unionist, Morgan Tsvangirai.

See statement below:
Blessed be the womb that bore our icon and MDC founding President, the late Dr Richard Morgan Tsvangirai.

Today, on behalf of the loving and caring MDC family, I felt honoured to pay a visit and hand over Christmas gifts to our late President’s mother Gogo Tsvangirai in Buhera.

It was an emotional moment that reminded me just how much sorrow the great Tsvangirai family has had to endure over the past few years.

The MDC, through the leadership of our President Nelson Chamisa, will continue to pay tribute and offer our gratitude to the Tsvangirai family for gifting us with a bona fide hero of social justice.

Gogo Tsvangirai and the entire Tsvangirai family, may you have a blessed Christmas and prosperous new year!

Lynette Karenyi
MDC Vice President.

Mliswa Reveals Why He Spurned Mnangagwa’s Invitation To Rejoin Zanu PF

NORTON’S Member of the House of Assembly Temba Mliswa has disclosed that he has turned down overtures by President Emmerson Mnangagwa for him to rejoin Zanu-PF, because “the party is full of corrupt people.”

Zanu-PF was also infested with unrepentant land barons, Mliswa said.

Mliswa made the revelations while handing over Christmas cheer donations to a community in his constituency.

Said Mliswa: “His Excellency President Mnangagwa said I should come back to Zanu PF, but how can I come back to a party whose leadership is so corrupt . . . The issue of land barons is the latest as exposed by the recent report. Besides our coming back shouldn’t be conditional just as the President’s come back was not conditional.

“I thought President Mnangagwa was going to recall all members fired by the G40 who include Amai Joyce Mujuru, Didymus Mutasa, Rugare Gumbo, Jabulani Sibanda since he was also fired by the same people and came back. Mr President why do you want us to write letters when you did not?”

Mliswa, who recently indicated this is his last term as MP since he now wanted to look for money, said Zanu-PF will continue losing elections in Norton because of the land barons in that town who are aligned to the ruling party but are untouchable.

“Mr President Norton residents voted Zanu PF out because of land barons who you are protecting. It’s a system that was started by former (Local Government) minister Ignatius Chombo and people like Justice Mayor Wadyajena, Killer Zivhu (Chivi South MP) and Cuthbert Mupamhi have been fingered by the report,” Mliswa said.

Mupamhi, however, said Mliswa is the one who is corrupt because he wants to politicise the land issue by roping in the President.

“If there is one person who is corrupt in this whole issue, it is Temba Mliswa. He has been fighting me since he was Zanu PF provincial chairperson; he wants my private land… I was arrested by Zacc and cleared” he said.

-Online

Mliswa Turns Down ED’s Invitation To Rejoin Zanu Pf

By A Correspondent| Norton legislator  Themba Mliswa turned down the president’s invitation for him to rejoin the ruling party and said its infested with corruption and he won’t join the ruling party again.

Mliswa said this as he was handing over Christmas presents from Norton residents and companies to the president when he said;

His Excellency President Mnangagwa said I should come back to Zanu PF, but how can I come back to a party whose leadership is so corrupt . . . The issue of land barons is the latest as exposed by the recent report. Besides our coming back shouldn’t be conditional just as the President’s come back was not conditional.

I thought President Mnangagwa was going to recall all members fired by the G40 who include Amai Joyce Mujuru, Didymus Mutasa, Rugare Gumbo, Jabulani Sibanda since he was also fired by the same people and came back. Mr President why do you want us to write letters when you did not?

Themba is among the group of politicians that were sacked from the ruling party together with Mujuru in 2014.

-Newsday

Two Reasons Why Mnangagwa Is Determined To Have Chamisa In POLAD

By Patrick Guramatunhu| “I told (President) Mbeki that we have a platform for political dialogue which is Political Actors Dialogue (POLAD). It is the only one that we will use.

If anyone wants to join including the MDC led by Chamisa, they are welcome to do so,” said President Emerson Mnangagwa.

This reminded me of You Tube video of this little girl who asked for Ice Bucket Challenge. When some one obliged and emptied an bucket of ice cold water on her, the response was heartfelt swearing. Hilarious! 

Last week UK Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, was beside himself with joy for winning the British elections with a “thumping majority”.

The Conservatives won 365 seats in a 650 seats House of Commons; that is 39 seats past the 326 for a clear majority. 

PM Theresa May, Boris’ successor in the famous 10 Downing Street, had 318 and was compelled to go into a coalition arrangement with the Northern Ireland’s DUP with its 10 MPs just to give her government the 2 parliamentary votes for a simple majority.

Even then, the DUP did not always vote with the Conservatives hence the reason her Brexit proposals were rejected again and again. Theresa May was hamstrung! 

With 39 seats past the simple majority, PM Boris Johnson, knows his government can govern without reference to an other political support. 

With his more that 2/3 majority in parliament President Mnangagwa  had comfortably carryout all his day to day business which require a simple majority vote. He can also carryout the more demanding tasks such as changing the constitution where he must get 2/3 majority to pass. 

Indeed, Mnangagwa has already started abusing his 2/3 parliamentary majority to change the constitution in ways designed to consolidate his presidential powers at the expense of the other democratic institutions such as the judiciary and parliament. 

So why President Mnangagwa is going out of his way to woo all the country’s opposition parties, even parties with not even one council seat much less an MP, with this POLAD is, at first sight, hilarious. Is he like the little girl asking for the ice bucket challenge; is he negotiating with these not aware he does not their support to govern!

A closer examination of the facts reveals the sinister intentions behind Mnangagwa to corral all Zimbabwe’s opposition into POLAD. It is now nearly a year and a half since Mnangagwa was sworn in as president of Zimbabwe and all the confidence and novelty of the new broom sweeping clean has worn off. 

His “Zimbabwe is open for business!” mantra which he was so cocksure will open the floodgate of investors has failed to attract any one. 

By failing to stamp out corruption and blatantly rigging last year’s elections Mnangagwa has confirmed that Zimbabwe is still a pariah state ruled by corrupt, incompetent and vote rigging thugs; same as the Mugabe days, nothing has changed. Investors do not do business with thugs, Mnangagwa should have known that from his days as Mugabe’s henchman. 

There are two reasons Mnangagwa is determined to get Nelson Chamisa to join POLAD:

  1. Whilst PM Boris Johnson knows exactly what he has to do to “Get Brexit done!”, for example; the same cannot be said of President Mnangagwa. Of course, Mnangagwa would like to end Zimbabwe’s worsening economic meltdown, he has no clue how to do it. He knows that, if he does not do something to stop the economic rot, his strangle hold on power is becoming increasingly tenuous. 

Mnangagwa is hoping against hope that the opposition leaders in POLAD will come up with the solutions to the country’s serious economic problems, especial Chamisa who has said he has the key to getting the sanctions lifted and economic recovery.

  1. Given Zimbabwe will remain a pariah state with or without POLAD, it is almost certain there will be no meaning economic recovery. Mnangagwa’s plan B is to use POLAD to silence the opposition voices and to keep the threatened public demonstration off the streets. 

“It’s probably better to have him inside the tent pissing out than outside the tent pissing in,” said USA President Lyndon Johnson in 1971 of a dangerous rival. 

Zimbabwe is in this economic and political mess because the country has been stuck with the same corrupt, incompetent and murderous thugs for the last 39 years; they rigged the elections and thus deny the people the chance to remove them from power.

POLAD is Mnangagwa’s insurance that he remains in office until 2023, that no meaningful reforms are implemented and Zanu PF will once again rig the elections.

Mnangagwa has no clue what to do to revive the nation’s ruined economy but we must not underestimate his resolve to retain political power regardless.

Zanu PF has rigged elections for the last 39 years and got away with it, the real challenge, ice bucket challenge, is to make sure Zanu PF does not get away with it this time. 

If Mnangagwa has his POLAD then he would certainly get away with yet another rigged elections; he would be throwing a bucket of acid, not icy water, on us! It will be sheer folly on our part to let him do that!

Govt Aligned Doctors’ Body Sends List Of Wants

The new Zimbabwe Progressive Doctors’ Association (PDAZ) yesterday said it wants serious discussions with the Health Services Board and has compiled its monetary and non-monetary expectations.

The list has already been sent to the board for its consideration.

The association believes junior doctors have legitimate grievances, the same that led to the job action, but that these must be addressed in meaningful negotiations while doctors are at work.

In an interview, PDAZ spokesperson Dr Anesu Rangwani said they were hopeful the employer would put a meaningful offer on the table.

“We want to be progressive, but we are not going to label anyone who has not been coming to work because doctors did not down tools for no reason,” he said.

“However, as PDAZ we are saying the past should stay in the past. Yes, incapacitation was there, our grievances still stand and they are still genuine, but what we need now is a solution. We need to forge a way forward.

“We have commenced the process (of negotiating with Government) and we have since submitted our proposals in terms of what we expect as salaries and non-salary benefits. There is nothing solid yet, but we are hopeful that an agreement is imminent.”

Although he could not provide the exact number of PDAZ membership so far, Dr Rangwani said the response from fellow junior doctors had been encouraging.

He said following their launch in Harare recently, a number of junior doctors had been signing resumption of duty forms from their respective health institutions, a sign that many were taking heed of their call to return to work and pursue negotiations while on duty.

“Initially, people were sceptical, but a week later following our launch in Harare a number of junior doctors returned to work and that has been our call for people to go back to work and give negotiations another chance,” said Dr Rangwani.

He said PDAZ’s vision was driven

by the Hippocratic Oath that doctors take, which places patients first before anything else.

“The idea of coming up with a different association from the Zimbabwe Hospital Doctors’ Association (ZHDA) came around day 81 when we realised that weeks had gone by with no solution in sight,” said Dr Rangwani..

“A group of doctors with like-minded thoughts then came together and formed PDAZ with the hope of breaking the longstanding labour dispute between Government and junior doctors. Our grievances remain the same with those presented by the ZHDA but we differ in approach,” said Dr Rangwani.

Since its formation, PDAZ has been calling on its members and fellow junior doctors to return to work.

Statistics from the Ministry of Health and Child Care show that all junior doctors at Parirenyatwa Group of Hospitals, Chitungwiza Central Hospital and most from Harare, Mpilo and United Bulawayo hospitals, had by Friday not only signed their resumption of duty forms, but actually availed themselves for work.

PDAZ’s call also followed a 48-hour moratorium provided by President Mnangagwa to the striking junior doctors to return to work despite earlier dismissal by the HSB.

Higher Life Foundation (HLF) also offered a $100 million education facility as scholarships for the doctors to complete their education.

The ZHDA had rejected both offers, arguing that it needed to solve its labour dispute with the employer first before any other interventions from well-wishers.

Most junior doctors went on to apply for the HLF incentive nicodemously and have since returned to work, leaving ZHDA out in the open.

Some senior consultant doctors have also started trickling back at work, joining several others who never downed tools since the beginning of the strike.

-State Media

“Doctors Did Not Down Tools For Nothing”: PDAZ

By Own Correspondent| The recently launched Progressive Doctors’ Association Of Zimbabwe has hit the ground running as they are claiming they understand that incapacitation is there and have started to negotiate for better incentives with the government.

PDAZ spokesperson Dr Anesu Rangwani in an interview with the publication said:

We want to be progressive, but we are not going to label anyone who has not been coming to work because doctors did not down tools for no reason.

However, as PDAZ we are saying the past should stay in the past. Yes, incapacitation was there, our grievances still stand and they are still genuine, but what we need now is a solution. We need to forge a way forward.

We have commenced the process (of negotiating with Government) and we have since submitted our proposals in terms of what we expect as salaries and non-salary benefits. There is nothing solid yet, but we are hopeful that an agreement is imminent.

Doctors have been on strike since 3 September 2019 citing incapacitation

-StateMedia

WEEKEND SHOCKER-Mutsvangwa Says: It’s Western Sanctions Not Gukurahundi That Chased Ndebeles Into Botswana

There were no western sanctions at all when Emmerson Mnangagwa ordered the killing of more than 22,000 Zimbabweans between 1982 and 1984 and no sanctions at all for a whole 20 years since independence, and information minister Monica Mutsvangwa has come out to say Ndebeles who were pushed into Botswana went there because of sanctions.

Monica Mutsvangwa

STATE MEDIA FULL TEXT:

The Government has said the 137 people that have been repatriated by Botswana through the Plumtree Border Post are not victims of Gukurahundi but people who had probably gone to the neighbouring country to look for employment as the facts do not add up to give the story the post-independence narrative.

Commenting on the reports that the returnees fled the country because of Gukurahundi, the Minister of Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services, Monica Mutsvangwa, said in an interview that people should not use the Gukurahundi episode for political capital.

She said the fact that a number of the returnees have confirmed to having left the country 15 years ago disqualifies it from being a Gukurahundi story but essentially an economic one. She added that to give the story a Gukurahundi narrative is a politically expedient way of apportioning weight so as to gain sympathy from the international donor community.

“I have seen the report which allege that some people have been living out of Zimbabwe for 15 years and this clearly has nothing to do with Gukurahundi legacy,” said Minister Mutsvangwa.

She said she fails to see how the number of years they have been out of the country connects with Gukurahundi, unless that was stated for political reasons which were not historically factual.

“As a country we have faced a number of challenges mainly due to the impacts of illegal sanctions imposed by the West on Zimbabwe. For almost 20 years Zimbabwe has been isolated.

“There have been no meaningful investments, in fact there has been disinvestment, most industries closed down leaving most of our people unemployed.

“This triggered migration of our people seeking greener pastures in our neighbouring countries and abroad. Some have made their lives and families elsewhere but should they think of coming home, we will embrace them because we all know home is best,” said Minister Mutsvangwa.

The minister said that there were people trickling back into the country speaks volumes on the success and sincerity of the engagement and re-engagement efforts of the new political dispensation.

“The Second Republic in its engagement and re-engagement efforts has not left out our diasporans. Zimbabwe is their home and they are always welcome,” she added.

Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare Deputy Minister Lovemore Matuke confirmed receiving reports of the returnees and echoed Minister Mutsvangwa’s sentiments that they, like so many others went to neighbouring countries under the weight of economic rather than political challenges.

He said the ministry was going to assess their needs and if need be start assisting them under vulnerable groups.

“We are going to assess their needs. If there is a need for them to be treated as a special group we will do so and make sure they get the assistance they require from the money allocated in the budget. They should not lie about Gukurahundi to gain donor sympathy, we are going to help them the way we are doing with everybody who is in need of assistance,” he said.

Matuke said it was not a secret that a number of economic refugees left the country under the guise of political asylum seekers when in fact they were not threatened politically.

Reports say about 640 refugees are expected to be deported back home with the 137 that have already arrived in Zimbabwe being the first group of returnees. The returnees were provided with transport by the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) and the United Nations High Commission on Refugees (UNHCR).

The Botswana government has reportedly given the refugees an ultimatum to register for voluntary repatriation by 31 December or face forced removals.

Reports suggest that Botswana believes the refugees will not suffer any form of persecution by the present political administration which is what precipitated its decision to return the refugees to Zimbabwe.

“The Botswana government is convinced that Zimbabwe is safe for the so-called political refugees. The thawing relations between Harare and Gaborone is on the mend following a change of administration in both countries with sincerity and engagement seemingly being the hallmark of the two’s political and economic route going forward,” said an official at the border.- Sunday News

WATCH: LIVE Engagement With Marry Chiwenga’s ‘Father’ On ZimEye.com

By A Correspondent| The real Chiwenga “Tezvara,” Hannington Mubaiwa came on camera first the 2nd time last night.

He joined a news review with Chief Svosve on ZimEye.com [program below]. Hannington Mubaiwa was a contractor in Zimbabwe, before relocating to the United States Of America. He is now a Social Scientist, who designs transformation-al economies and comes from a business background.

FULL LIVE VIDEO LOADING BELOW

https://youtu.be/KjJvdc075zg

He tells ZimEye, I was the one who built the houses in places such as Kuwadzana, Harare, Zimbabwe the 3000 houses built there. I am a scholar focusing on transforming economies of the future. I design mordenisation plans for Third World Countries. My study is national transformation.

POLAD Met At Mnangagwa’s Farm “For Serious Business” – Yeah, Name Just One Achievement

By Patrick Guramatunhu- Political Actors Dialogue (POLAD) members meet at Mnangagwa’s Sherwood farm, near Kwekwe. The grouping will never come up with any solution to the nation’s many teething problems!

“It was a request made by POLAD members. The programme is very simple, a couple of hours of business and then another couple of hours touring the farm. So it is almost like a farmers’ field day after the serious business of talks,” explained George Charamba.

“It does clinch the notion of productivity which has been the President’s watchword that we should work, work and work for our economy to grow.”

Charamba is Mnangagwa’s spokesperson and spin doctors. He is never short of an explanation, often irrational as is the case here. 

Zimbabwe is a banana republic complete with Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland type institutions and characters. 

Here is what we know about POLAD; it is a gathering of individuals, exact number is unknown, mostly presidential candidates in last year’s rigged elections.

All who join are required to public affirm the elections were free, fair and credible and that one Emerson Mnangagwa is the legitimate President of the banana republic. 

POLAD is a talk-shop with not rules, no minutes are taken, no quorum, no power to call anyone to appear before gathering and no one is expected to tell the truth or talk sense.

Most important of all, Mnangagwa, the chairperson of POLAD by virtue of being the founder and funder, will, as a rule of thumb, ignore everything said in the talk-shop. 

This compares very favourably with Lewis Carroll’s fairytale.

“Alice and the other animals are still wet, prompting the Dodo to suggest a Caucus race. The Dodo marks out a course, sets everyone in place, and yells “go.” explained sparknotes.

“The animals run around haphazardly until the Dodo declares half an hour later that the race is over. The Dodo says that all of them have won the Caucus race and elects Alice to confer prizes. 

“Alice passes mints to all the animals, leaving herself without a prize. Finding a thimble, she hands it to the Dodo, who in turn presents it back to her as her prize. Alice solemnly accepts the thimble but cannot help feeling that the gesture is absurd.”

Zimbabwe is a country in serious, serious economic trouble. Unemployment has been 80% plus for the last two decades now. 34% of the population are now living in extreme poverty, according to a recent WB report.

The country’s health care has all but completely collapsed, hundreds are dying everyday of easily treatable ailments. If the country is ever going to get out of this mess and end the tragic human suffering and deaths, it needs a forum where there is going to be serious debate.

The root cause of the country’s economic meltdown is the failure by key state institutions like parliament and cabinet to come up with solutions to the nations many problems.

The Zanu PF dictatorship has usurped the people’s power to elect competent MPs and parliament is now full of party loyalists whose primary concern is to please and appease the dictator. There is no quality debate in parliament. Cabinet is not any better! 

Whatever little parliamentary and cabinet debates there was still, it is all going as POLAD, the talk-shop, takes over as the supreme policy and decision making body in the land.

“It is almost like a farmers’ field day after the serious business of talks!” Yeah, right! Name one “serious business” POLAD has accomplished; one year after it was launched and with millions of taxpayers’ money spent on its talk-shops?

If Zimbabwe is to ever get out of the economic and political mess, four decades of Zanu PF dictatorship have landed the nation in; we  must end the curse of rigged elections, the foundation on which the dictatorship stands, and restore good governance. 

POLAD seeks to stifle all meaningful debate and democratic discourse under the pretext of unity. It is just another foolish “caucus race” from the Dodo Mnangagwa at a time the country is desperate for a way out of this man-made hell-on-earth.

Mbeki Literally Says Chamisa Deserves To Be Cheated On, Subtly | NEWS REVIEW EXCERPT

“ED Has Failed To Unite Zimbabweans”: Chamisa

By A Correspondent| Speaking on the Unity Day commemorations Nelson Chamisa said there was no Unity to celebrate right now because ED’s government has failed to unite a populace beleaguered by a myriad of grievances.

Speaking about the Unity Day Chamisa said:

It cannot be unity when you beat up people for saying they are hungry. If doctors say they are incapacitated and they want money, you fire them, when teachers say they want money, you set dogs on them. Is that unity?

It cannot be unity when it appears there are two countries in one. Unity shouldn’t be between parties for power, but it must be about institutions and for the good of everyone, tribes, religion, all provinces, seeing there is something for them.

Unity is important, but they think it is partisan. There is no unity when you can’t resolve issues and hold free and fair elections

Unity Day commemorates the end of the Matabeleland genocide popularly known as Gukurahundi.

-Newsday

Mudzi Accident Declared National Disaster

By A Correspondent- Government has declared a state of national disaster the accident in which 13 people died when a commuter omnibus they were travelling in burst its tyre and veered off the road at the 186 km peg along the Harare Nyamapanda highway, in Mudzi.

Declaring an accident a state of national disaster enables the State to mobilise resources to assist the injured and bereaved families with cash and burial arrangements.

Mudzi District Development Coordinator, Mr Robert Muzezewa, who chairs the District Civil Protection Department, said they are busy assisting bereaved families following the accident.

“We are going to set up a centre at Mtoko Hospital where the bodies of the deceased were taken and we will assist the families with burial arrangements…Although we were overwhelmed we had to recall other members of staff who were on leave to come and assist us,” he said.

Meanwhile, Mashonaland East Minister of State for Provincial Affairs, Apolonia Munzverengwi has sent a message of condolence to the families of the deceased.
In a statement, Munzverengwi also wished those injured in the accident a speedy recovery.

Thabo Mbeki Implicated By Supreme Court Of South Africa Over Mass Murders In Zimbabwe, Here’s The Evidence:

By Simba Chikanza| Former South African President Thabo Mbeki is named over crimes against humanity in which over 103 Zimbabweans were killed as the 2002 elections were rigged.

Mbeki’s actions make him personally liable for prosecution [over Zimbabwe] as a 2012 Supreme Court verdict describes.

Mbeki’s actions have been declared “unlawful, inconsistent with the Constitution,” as the supreme court verdict reads.

In another case, Mbeki personally blocked the report compiled by two top South African High Court judges from being published. He also disregarded the High Court order passed to release the report. In effect Mbeki assisted the criminals who killed Zimbabweans to evade justice, to potentially commit more crime, and aided them to commit mental torture against the victims.

The lawsuit was filed by the South African Mail & Guardian newspaper who after winning the High Court case, were fought by Mbeki and the case was eventually escalated to the Supreme Court.

In effect, Mbeki was implicated for aiding and abeting crimes against humanity committed against Zimbabweans. The full Supreme Court judgement is below –

THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT

REPORTABLE
Case No: 998/2013

In the matter between:

THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF
SOUTH AFRICA
THE DEPUTY INFORMATION OFFICER: FIRST APPELLANT
OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENCY SECOND APPELLANT
THE MINISTER IN THE PRESIDENCY

and
THIRD APPELLANT
M & G MEDIA LIMITED RESPONDENT

Neutral citation: President of the RSA v M & G Media Ltd (998/2013) [2014] ZASCA 124 (19 September 2014).
Coram: Navsa ADP, Brand, Ponnan, Mbha JJA et Mathopo AJA
Heard: 4 September 2014
Delivered: 19 September 2014

Summary: Promotion of Access to Information Act 2 of 2000 (PAIA) – exemption from disclosure of record claimed under sections 41(1)(b)(i) and 44(1)(a) – ‘judicial peek’ at record under s 80 – ex parte representations contemplated in s 80(3)(a) – what these entail. _______________________________________________________

ORDER


On appeal from: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria (Raulinga J sitting as court of first instance):
The appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of three counsel.


JUDGMENT


Brand JA (Navsa ADP, Ponnan, Mbha JJA et Mathopo AJA concurring):

[1] The litigation in this matter has been ongoing for more than five years. It stems from a request by the respondent pursuant to the provisions of the Promotion of Access to Information Act 2 of 2000 (PAIA) for information under the control of the three appellants, who are all part of the Presidency. The respondent is M & G Media Ltd (M & G). It publishes information on matters of public interest, including news and commentary on political issues, in a newspaper, the Mail & Guardian, as well as on its online website. The first appellant is the President of this country, cited in his official capacity. The second appellant is the designated officer to whom requests for information in the Office of the Presidency is to be made. The third respondent is the Minister in the Presidency who is the designated appeal officer to whom internal appeals against adverse decisions by the second appellant lies. For the sake of brevity I shall refer to the three appellants jointly as ‗the Presidency‘.

[2] The information concerned is contained in a report under the control of the
Presidency. It was prepared by two senior judges, Justice Khampepe and Justice Moseneke after their visit to Zimbabwe shortly before the presidential elections that were held in that country in 2002. They did so at the behest of the then President. The report was never released to the general public. On 7 June 2008, M & G applied for access to the report. The second appellant refused the request, citing s 41(1)(b)(i) and 44(1)(a) of PAIA as his grounds for refusal. M & G thereupon lodged an internal appeal against the refusal to the third appellant. She dismissed the appeal, essentially on the same grounds as those relied upon by the second appellant. That triggered the present litigation. The high court ordered the Presidency to make the report available to M & G. On appeal to this court, that order was upheld in a judgment which has since been reported as President of the Republic of South Africa & others v M & G Media (Ltd) 2011 (2) SA 1 (SCA).

[3] A further appeal by the Presidency to the Constitutional Court met with greater success. In a judgment, since reported as President of the Republic of South Africa & others v M & G Media (Ltd) 2012 (2) SA 50 (CC) para 72, that court ordered, by a majority of 5 to 4 that:
‗1 The appeal succeeds.
2 The orders of the High Court and the Supreme Court of Appeal are set aside.
3 The case is remitted to the North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria, for that court to examine the record [ie the report] in terms of the provisions of s 80 of [PAIA] and determine the application under s 82 of [PAIA] in the light of this judgment.
4 There is no order as to costs.‘

[4] Upon its return to the high court the matter came before Raulinga J who examined the contents of the report as contemplated in s 80 of PAIA and then ordered the Presidency to make it available to M & G. The present appeal against that order is with the leave of the court a quo. The issues that evolved before Raulinga J and again arose on appeal before us, will be better understood against the background of (a) the pertinent provisions of PAIA; (b) the evidence relied upon by the Presidency in the previous round of litigation to justify its refusal of access to the report; and (c) the reasoning that appears from the judgment of the different courts – and particularly the Constitutional Court.

Pertinent provisions of PAIA
[5] The provisions of PAIA that are pertinent for present purposes start with s 11, which stipulates that requesters for information under the control of a public body (in contrast with a private body) are entitled as of right to the information sought, provided that the procedural requirements are met. Refusal is only permitted on grounds contemplated by Chapter 4 of Part 2 of PAIA. Since it is common cause that the procedural requirements were met in this case, M & G does not have to justify its request for access to the report. The onus rests on the Presidency to justify its refusal. This is borne out by s 81(3) of PAIA which explicitly provides that:
‗The burden of establishing that a refusal of a request for access . . . complies with the provision of this Act rests on the party claiming that it so complies.‘

[6] From the outset, the Presidency relied on two grounds contemplated in Chapter 4 of Part 2 of PAIA for refusing M & G‘s request. They are those contained in s 41(1)(b)(i) and 44(1)(a). They state in relevant part:
‘41 Defence, security and international relations of Republic
(1) The information officer of a public body may refuse a request for access to a record of the body if its disclosure—
(a) . . .
(b) would reveal information—
(i) supplied in confidence by or on behalf of another state or an international organisation‘
And
‘44 Operations of public bodies
(1) . . . [T]he information officer of a public body may refuse a request for access to a record of the body—
(a) if the record contains—
(i) an opinion, advice, report or recommendation obtained or prepared
(ii) . . .
for the purpose of assisting to formulate a policy or take a decision in the exercise of a power or performance of a duty conferred or imposed by law.‘

[7] Closely related to these grounds of refusal is the public interest override in s 46 of PAIA which provides, under the heading ‗Mandatory disclosure in public interest‘:
‗Despite any other provision of this Chapter [ie Chapter 4 of Part 2] the information officer of a public body must grant a request for access to a record of the body contemplated in sections . . . 41(1)(b) or . . . 44(1) . . . if—
(a) the disclosure of the record would reveal evidence of—
(i) a substantial contravention of, or failure to comply with, the law; or
(ii) . . . ; and
(b) the public interest in the disclosure of the record clearly outweighs the harm contemplated in the provision in question.‘

[8] In setting out the factual basis for its reliance on these two grounds in its original answering papers, the deponents on behalf of the Presidency indicated that they were hamstrung in doing so by the provisions of sections 25(3)(b) and 77(5)(b) of PAIA. Section 25(3)(b) must be read in the context with 25(3)(a). While the latter section obliges an information officer who refuses a request for access to give
‗adequate reasons for the refusal‘, this is qualified by s 25(3)(b) to the extent that these reasons may not rely on ‗any reference to the content of the record‘. Section 77(5)(b) contains a similar embargo against any reference to the content of the record with regard to reasons provided for the dismissal of an internal appeal by the appeal authority, in this instance, the third appellant.

[9] Finally, with regard to the provisions of PAIA, there is s 80 which evolved into the keystone of the majority judgment in the Constitutional Court. It determines in relevant part:
‗80(1) Despite this Act and any other law, any court hearing an application, or an appeal against a decision on that application, may examine any record of a public or private body to which this Act applies, and no such record may be withheld from the court on any grounds.
(2) Any court contemplated in subsection (1) may not disclose to any person, including the parties to the proceedings concerned, other than the public or private body referred to in subsection (1)—
(a) any record of a public or private body which, on a request for access, may or must be refused in terms of this Act; or
(b) . . .
(3) Any court contemplated in subsection (1) may—
(a) receive representations ex parte;
(b) conduct hearings in camera; and
(c) prohibit the publication of such information in relation to the proceedings as the court determines, including information in relation to the parties to the proceedings and the contents of orders made by the court in the proceedings.‘

Evidence relied upon by the Presidency during the first round of litigation [10] The evidence relied upon by the Presidency during the first round of litigation was embodied in three affidavits – one by each of second and third appellants and one by Reverend Frank Chikane, who served as Director-General in the Presidency at the time when the report had been commissioned by then President Mbeki and also when it `was subsequently submitted by the two judges. The second appellant was not there at the time. He only took up his position in 2004. All three affidavits consisted largely of a recital of the wording of sections 41(1)(b)(i) and 44(1)(a), followed by the ipse dixit of these officials that the report is covered by the stated provisions. With regard to s 41(1)(b)(i) the second and third appellants asserted personal knowledge of the fact that the two judges received information from the representatives of the Zimbabwean Government in confidence. Apropos the purpose for which the report was obtained – which was a relevant consideration in the application of s 44(1)(a) – second appellant said (at 155):
‗The President at the time, Mr Mbeki, appointed the Justices primarily to assess the constitutional and legal issues that arose prior to the 2002 Presidential elections in Zimbabwe and report to him . . . A related purpose of the mission which arose once the President had sight of the report was that he was able to utilise the report to assist him in the formulation of policy and taking of decisions in the exercise of his powers or the performance of his duties . . .‘ (Emphasis added.)

Reasoning of the courts in the previous round of litigation
[11] The critical question therefore turned on whether these claims of personal knowledge by the deponents on behalf of the Presidency were sufficient to place the record within the ambit of the exemptions claimed. The high court held that they were not. None of the deponents, so the court held, were privy to the appointment of the two judges. Hence these deponents could not of their own knowledge describe the judges‘ mandate or their terms of reference. Nor could they, on their own account, testify as to what took place in Zimbabwe and as to how, from whom and on what basis the information reflected in the report had been obtained. On appeal this court agreed with the high court that no proper evidential basis had been established by the Presidency for refusing access to the report. On behalf of this court Nugent JA held that not one of the three deponents on behalf of the Presidency could have any direct knowledge of facts which were essential for the grounds upon which the refusal relied. ‗It might be‘, so Nugent JA concluded (in para 33 of his judgment), ‗that the report contains information that was received in confidence and it might be that it was obtained or prepared for a purpose contemplated by s 44, but that has not been established by acceptable evidence‘.

[12] In writing for the majority in the Constitutional Court Ngcobo CJ also concluded that the evidence put forward by the Presidency in its answering papers was insufficient to discharge the onus resting on it in terms of s 81(3), to establish that the report fell within the scope of the exemptions claimed. But, so he held, that was not the end of the matter, because proceedings under PAIA differ from ordinary civil proceedings in several respects (see paras 33-35). One of these differences most pertinent for present purposes, so the Chief Justice said, is that parties to disputes under PAIA may be constrained by factors beyond their control in presenting and challenging evidence. From the requestors‘ perspective, the facts upon which the exemption is justified, will be exclusively within the knowledge of the holder of the information. In consequence they may have to resort to bare denials of facts relied upon by the holder as justifying refusal of access. On the other hand, holders of information may be compelled to rely on the contents of the record itself to justify the exemption. But they will be precluded from doing so by the provisions of ss 25(3)(b) and 77(5)(b) of PAIA. The second feature distinguishing PAIA disputes from ordinary civil proceedings, which is pertinent in this case, so the Chief Justice continued, is that courts are afforded the discretion to call for additional evidence in the form of the contested record itself and have, what is referred to in the parlance of
American jurisprudence, ‗a judicial peek‘ at its contents.

[13] As to when courts should exercise their discretion in favour of resorting to a judicial peek into the contested record, Ngcobo CJ held (in para 44) that it should be reserved for the situation where an injustice may result from the unique constraints placed upon the parties in PAIA disputes: where, for instance, the holder of the information had failed to discharge its burden under s 81(3), but indicated that it was prevented from doing so by the provisions of PAIA, the courts should generally invoke s 80 (para 46). Or where the probabilities are evenly balanced and the doubt as to the validity of the exemptions claimed can be explained in terms of the limitations placed on the parties to adduce evidence (para 47).

[14] In concluding that the provisions of s 80 should have been invoked by the high court in the circumstances of this case, Ngcobo CJ was primarily swayed by three considerations (paras 54-66). First, the conclusion of the SCA that the refusal of access to the report might have been justified, but since this had not been established by acceptable evidence, disclosure of the report was inevitable. Secondly, that the Presidency had alleged in its answering papers that its hands were tied by sections 25(3)(b) and 77(5)(b) of PAIA in presenting evidence in support of its claim to exemptions. Thirdly, that even if refusal of access to the report as a whole was justified, s 28 of PAIA provides for disclosure of information that is not protected and that can reasonably be severed from the protected part. Although the Presidency asserted that the report was not severable, M & G was placed at a disadvantage in challenging this assertion as it did not have access to the report. In consequence, the assertion of non-severability could not be decided without having regard to the content of the report.

[15] In his minority judgment Cameron J also held that the Presidency had failed to justify its refusal of access to the report under PAIA. Where he differed from the majority, however, was that in his view the Presidency had failed to provide a plausible basis for a plea that PAIA made it impossible to provide adequate reasons for its refusal (para 79). As to why he was not persuaded by the ‗hands tied‘ plea of the Presidency, Cameron J inter alia said (in para 113-119):
‗[113] . . . There may be circumstances where a plea of this nature will raise credible issues requiring the court to consider whether it should itself, under the powers the statute vests in it, examine the record in camera and without the parties’ presence. That is not the case here. The plea fails to meet even a baseline standard to warrant further probing.
[114] First, there are substantial reasons for approaching [second appellant‘s] invocation of the ―hands-tied‖ argument with reserve. There was no mention of it when the request was refused. It appears to have been added as an afterthought when the opposing affidavits were drafted. . . .
[115] There is a second reason for not being swayed by the ―hands-tied‖ plea. It is the Presidency’s failure to explain why evidence that seems to have been readily available was not produced.
[116] The person who mandated the judges to go to Zimbabwe was then-President Mbeki. President Motlanthe, who held office when M & G went to court in January 2009, supplied an affidavit. President Zuma, who held office when the Presidency applied to appeal to this court in January 2011, supplied an affidavit. So there was no inhibition against presidential deposition. Neither former President Motlanthe nor President Zuma could cast light on the judges’ mission. President Mbeki could, but there was no affidavit from him. So the question is—why did President Mbeki not testify? Was he asked or not asked? If asked, did he refuse? Or if not asked, why?
[117] Perhaps even more telling was the absence of evidence from the two judges. They, like former President Mbeki, are living and seemingly available. Why did they not testify? Were they asked? If not, why? A simple affidavit from any of them may have put a quick end to the issues.
[118] . . .
[119] The evidence the Presidency failed to present from the former President who commissioned the report, and the judges who wrote it, need not have referred to the contents of the report. It could have recounted quite simply whether one of the reasons the judges were sent to Zimbabwe was to assist in policy formulation, or whether the disclosure of their report would reveal information supplied in confidence by the State of Zimbabwe.‘

Proceedings before Raulinga J
[16] This brings me to the proceedings before Raulinga J. These were set down for hearing on 14 June 2012, which is about six months after the remittal by the Constitutional Court. On 13 June 2012, the night before the hearing, the Presidency applied, in terms of Rule 6(5) of the Uniform Rules of Court, for an affidavit of President Mbeki to be received in further evidence. The declared purpose for introducing the affidavit was to support an attempt by the Presidency to persuade the high court – contrary to the clear directions of the Constitutional Court – not to resort to a judicial peek into the contents of the report under s 80 after all. In order to achieve this purpose, the affidavit clearly tried to plug some of the holes in the case of the Presidency that were pointed out in the judgments of the courts in the previous round of litigation and particularly in the minority judgment of Cameron J in the Constitutional Court. In the event, so counsel for the Presidency told us, the rule
6(5) application was, however, abandoned in the face of the ‗strong view‘ expressed by Raulinga J that the Constitutional Court had directed him to take a judicial peek at the report and that he consequently proposed to do so.

[17] Thereupon Raulinga J ordered the Presidency to make the report available to him to facilitate the judicial peek directed by the Constitutional Court. He then examined the report and made the following rulings:
(a) By virtue of s 80(2), the report would not be made available to the legal representatives of M & G;
(b) The parties were invited to submit ex parte representations as contemplated by s 80 (3)(a); and
(c) There would not be an in camera hearing under s 80(3)(b).

[18] The Presidency then proceeded to file the affidavit by President Mbeki, which was the subject matter of its abandoned application under Rule 6(5), as part of its representations in terms of s 80(3)(a). In addition, it also filed an affidavit by the current President, Jacob Zuma, deposed to on 17 July 2012. What president Mbeki said in his affidavit was essentially that:
(a) As Head of State he appointed the two judges to go to Zimbabwe in order to observe and report to him on the legal and constitutional challenges that had arisen in the period leading up to the 2002 presidential elections in that country. He had asked Chief Justice Chaskalson to release them from their judicial functions and he acceded to the request.
(b) His reason for sending the two judges to Zimbabwe was primarily to assist him to enhance his ability to execute his functions as President and, in particular to have facts at his disposal for purposes of formulating appropriate policy driven intervention in Zimbabwe.
(c) He had made arrangements with President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe for ‗these two envoys‘ to be received by his Government. He also requested that they be given full access to whatever information they sought and persons they wanted to meet, including Government ministers and officials. This the Government of Zimbabwe did. ‗It is commonly understood‘ so President Mbeki said, ‗that communications to Presidential envoys are of necessity confidential in nature, no matter how innocuous.‘
(d) On the return of the two judges they met with President Mbeki and later gave him their report which forms the subject matter of these proceedings. ‗I regard that report to be confidential. It continues to inform South African mediation efforts in
Zimbabwe.‘

[19] In his affidavit President Zuma inter alia:
(a) Emphasised the mediation roles that he and his predecessors played and continued to play in Zimbabwe as facilitators appointed by the Southern African Development Community (SADC).
(b) Referred to the statement by his predecessor that he, President Mbeki, appointed the two judges to gather information which would assist him in formulating appropriate policy driven interventions in Zimbabwe.
(c) Stated that the report by the two judges continued to be relevant to his policy driven interventions and that the SADC facilitation process was ongoing and critical to Zimbabwe as it moved towards and election based on the terms and requirements of the Global Political Agreement, which was entered into by the three political parties in Zimbabwe on 15 September 2008.
(d) Explained that conflict resolution and peace-making by South Africa is a sensitive area; that premature and piecemeal disclosure of information of a confidential nature, as in the case of the report under consideration, could seriously impact on the efforts that are made in Zimbabwe and that these consequences would negatively impact on Zimbabwe, South Africa and the SADC region.

[20] For some or other reason it apparently escaped Raulinga J that the Presidency had abandoned its application to have the affidavit by President Mbeki admitted in terms of rule 6(5). In consequence he proceeded to consider that application and eventually dismissed it as unsustainable. On appeal before us the Presidency contended that this constituted a misdirection in that the court a quo‘s focus on the rule 6(5) application had resulted in its failure to consider whether the affidavit by President Mbeki and the one by President Zuma should be admitted as representations under s 80(3)(a) of PAIA. But I find this criticism unjustified. To me it is apparent that, after refusing the rule 6(5) application, the court a quo indeed considered admitting these affidavits into evidence under s 80(3)(a), but refused to do so. Its reasons for this refusal – which are admittedly somewhat tersely formulated – were that (para 35):
‗Section 80 . . . does not open the floodgates for one party to sneak in new evidence through the back door. A court should not use its powers under section 80 as a substitute for the public body laying a proper basis for its refusal . . .‘

[21] As to the contents of the record which was revealed by the judicial peek, the court a quo were at pains not to disclose anything that may compromise a potential appeal. Yet, he inter alia, said
‗The terms of reference of [the Judicial Mission] were to observe and to report to the President of South Africa on whether in the period before, during and shortly after the elections:
(i) the Constitution, electoral laws, and other laws of Zimbabwe relevant to the elections
(‗the legislative framework‘) could ensure credible or substantially free and fair elections, and
(ii) the elections had been conducted in substantial compliance with the legislative framework.
[59] The contents of the report do not support the first ground that the disclosure of the report would reveal information supplied in confidence by or on behalf of another state or international organisation, contrary to section 41(1)(b)(i) of PAIA. There is also no indication that the report was prepared for the purpose of assisting the President to formulate executive policy on Zimbabwe, as contemplated in section 44(1)(a) of PAIA. The terms of reference above are opposite to this conclusion. It can be mentioned at this stage that the report gives a balanced overview of the events prior to, during and shortly after the elections. In fact the report criticises and gives credit to the parties concerned where it is necessary.
. . .
[62] . . . I can now reveal what the report reflects. This can never reasonably be construed as information supplied in confidence by or on behalf of another state. In my view most of the information is public knowledge. The report itself does not reveal that it was intended to be kept secret. Further, information provided by individuals who happen to be members of the public service cannot be said to be information supplied by or on behalf of another state. Moreover, the information was supplied also by persons who do not qualify as members of another state, Information was also supplied by independent lawyers.
. . .
And under the heading ‗The Section 46 of PAIA override‘ (in para 67):
‗Without disclosing the details of the contents of the report I can reveal that the report potentially discloses evidence of a substantial contravention of, or failure to comply with the law. . . . I am of the view that the public interest supersedes the harm that may ensue should the report be released.‘

Issues on appeal
[22] Pruned down to its essentials, the Presidency‘s case on appeal amounted to this:
(a) The court a quo should have admitted the two affidavits by President Mbeki and President Zuma as representations under s 80(3).
(b) In the light of these affidavits, read with the contents of the report itself, the refusal of access to the report was justified in terms of s 41(1)(b)(i) and 44(1)(a) of PAIA. Conversely stated, the Presidency did not contend on appeal that the court a quo‘s rendition of the contents of the report in its judgment was inaccurate or unfair. Nor did it contend that the court a quo erred in finding that the content of the report in itself did not justify any reliance on either s 41(1)(b)(i) and 44(1)(a). Ultimately, the
Presidency‘s argument on appeal thus revolved around its proposition that the two affidavits which it sought to introduce, should have been admitted in evidence. To that proposition I now turn.

[23] To start with, I believe it can be accepted with confidence that, as a matter of principle, the representations contemplated in s 80(3)(a) must be directed at the contents of the record that the court had ascertained through taking a judicial peek.
After all, s 80(3) is addressed to ‗the court contemplated in subsection (1)‘, which is the court that has decided to examine the record. The purpose of s 80(3) is therefore not to afford an opportunity to any of the parties to adduce new evidence, extraneous to the record, which should have been introduced as part of its original case.

[24] Thus understood, I believe there are various reasons why the affidavit by President Mbeki falls outside the ambit of what s 80(3)(a) is aimed at. First of all, this affidavit was initially the subject of an application under rule 6(5) which was in turn designed to persuade the court a quo not to take a judicial peek at the contents of the report. As I see it, the Presidency thereby gave away its strategy which was to introduce new evidence through the backdoor that should have been introduced in its answering papers. The fact that the Presidency thereafter abandoned its application under rule 6(5) and then sought to reintroduce the same affidavit under s 80(3)(a), is of no consequence. The contents of the affidavit remained the same and so did the purpose for which it was sought to be introduced. The other side of the coin is that the affidavit could never have been aimed at the purpose contemplated by s 80(3)(a), namely, to deal with the contents of a record to which the court already had access. That again is the inevitable conclusion from the fact that the affidavit was deposed to at a time when the Presidency was still seeking to persuade the court not to take a judicial peek at all. In addition, it is also clear from the text of the affidavit itself that it was prepared without any heed to the contents of the report at all.

[25] However, I believe the most telling reasons why the affidavit by President Mbeki was rightly disallowed, derive from the facts of this case itself. As I have said earlier, the affidavit is a clear attempt to plug the holes in the Presidency‘s case that were underscored in the previous judgments, particularly the minority judgment of Cameron J in the Constitutional Court. Paradoxically, though, in doing so the Presidency destroyed the very basis on which the majority of the Constitutional Court afforded it another opportunity to exclude access to the report by M & G. As we know the majority did so on the assumption that the Presidency was hamstrung in motivating its refusal of access by the provisions of s 25(3)(d) and 77(5)(d) of PAIA. One thing that the affidavit of President Mbeki shows, however, is that Cameron J rightly suspected that the Presidency‘s failure to make out a case had nothing to do with being hamstrung at all. But there is more. At the time when the Presidency sought to file this affidavit, it knew what was in the report. By inevitable inference it must therefore have realised that the lifeline which the majority of the Constitutional Court had thrown it, could not save its case from drowning, since the contents of the report did not support the grounds of refusal upon which it relied. What it then tried was to head off the consequence of a judicial peek by tendering evidence which should have been adduced at the outset during the first round of litigation. It clearly did so in the hope that this would persuade the court to refuse
M & G‘s application on a basis which had nothing to do with the contents of the report. The Presidency therefore attempted to use the referral back to the high court for a purpose which was the exact opposite of what the Constitutional Court had in mind. In my view this conduct amounts to an abuse of process which cannot be tolerated.

[26] As to the affidavit of President Zuma, I agree with the court a quo‘s reasoning that this affidavit could not support the Presidency‘s refusal of access to the report based on s 41(1)(b)(i) and 44(1)(a). President Zuma simply did not say that he had personal knowledge of the facts on which these grounds sought to rely. Insofar as President Zuma referred to the potential impact of the disclosure of the report on relations with Zimbabwe, it must be borne in mind that the Presidency never sought to rely on s 41(1)(a)(iii) of PAIA which justifies refusal of access to a record on the basis that it could ‗cause prejudice to the international relations of the Republic‘. But I think the affidavit of President Zuma could potentially be relevant for the purpose of considering the public interest override in s 46. For that purpose the affidavit should, strictly speaking, have been admitted. Yet this override could only come into consideration once it has been established that the Presidency was entitled to refuse the access to the report on the grounds upon which it relied. Hence it was only in that event that the Presidency could have been prejudiced by the consequences of the court a quo‘s refusal to allow this affidavit.

[27] As I have said, the Presidency did not argue that the contents of the report by itself could justify the refusal of the access sought by M & G. On the invitation of counsel on both sides, we also took a judicial peek into the report. In that light, I am satisfied that an argument to the effect that the contents of the report supports the case of the Presidency, could not be sustained. Since this might still not be the end of the matter, I shall refrain from disclosing the contents of the report. But I believe the court a quo gave a fair summary of that content in its judgment and I did not understand the Presidency to argue otherwise. Suffice it therefore to say that I agree with the court a quo‘s conclusion, ie that there is nothing in the report that supports the grounds upon which the Presidency refused the access sought by M & G. In this light the public interest override in s 46 of PAIA does not even come into play. The appeal cannot succeed.
[28] Nonetheless, for the sake of completeness, I may add that even if the affidavit by President Mbeki were to be allowed, it would not, in my view, be enough to satisfy the onus that rests on the Presidency to justify its refusal of access to the report. As to the reliance on s 41(1)(b)(i) President Mbeki simply started out from the petitio principii that the two judges were diplomatic envoys, and that, because this is so, ‗it is commonly understood that communications provided to these presidential envoys are of necessity confidential in nature, no matter how innocuous‘. To this he added that, in any event, he regarded the report as confidential. With regard to the proposition that the two judges were diplomatic envoys, Cameron J said the following (in para 101):
‗The Presidency appears to have abandoned in this court, as it did in argument before the Supreme Court of Appeal, the suggestion that it had persistently maintained, that the two judges were ―envoys‖ or that they were on a ―diplomatic mission‖ to Zimbabwe. Rightly so. It would be surprising to find judges performing so plainly an executive function. For this reason the Supreme Court of Appeal rightly noted that it would require clear and substantiated evidence to establish that the judges assumed a diplomatic role.‘

[29] In the face of this clear exposition the bald, unmotivated acceptance of the unlikely proposition that the judges were envoys, borders on the cynical. In any event, it appears from those parts of the record which are reflected in the judgment of the court a quo that the two judges were not on a diplomatic mission but were deputed to focus on matters of law. In this way the further unmotivated statement that communications to envoys are ‗of necessity confidential‘, loses the petition principii, to wit, that the judges were envoys, on which it depends. What is more, s 41(1)(b)(i) is far narrower in ambit than what the statement by President Mbeki presupposes. The section does not include ‗all information conveyed to envoys‘. It is confined to communications conveyed in confidence on behalf of a foreign state. The report itself reflects that its contents were gathered from many sources, including private individuals and organisations, without any indication as to what information came from whom. The fact that the President regarded the report as confidential, is not a ground for exemption. This is particularly so where the contents of the report itself does not indicate that the two judges were told that their report would be regarded as confidential.

[30] With regard to the ground of refusal contemplated in s 44(1)(a), President Mbeki again largely incants the exact wording of the section without any factual motivation as to why he thought that a report by two judges on matters of law would assist him in taking policy decisions. Especially at a time when the Presidency knew that the court a quo had looked at the contents of the report, it would be reasonable to expect some reference to that content in motivating what otherwise consists of no more than mere incantation. In addition, I have alluded to the testimony of the second appellant in his original affidavit, to the effect that it was decided to use the report for policy formulation only after the Presidency had received it. During the previous round of litigation both this court (in para 34 of its judgment) and Cameron J (in para 105), pointed out that this statement took the report outside the ambit of s 44(1)(a), because the section requires that the report be obtained or prepared for the purpose of formulating policy (see also Minister for Provincial and Local Government v Unrecognised Traditional Leaders, Limpopo Province (Sekhukhune Land) 2005 (2) SA 110 (SCA) in para 16-17). In this light, so Cameron J recorded (in para 105), counsel for the Presidency conceded in the Constitutional Court that if the second appellant‘s account is accurate, the policy formulation ground cannot be sustained. Yet, despite all this, President Mbeki does not say that the second appellant was mistaken when he made that express statement. Despite the
Presidency‘s patent efforts to plug the holes in its case identified by Cameron J, it therefore left this important one unplugged.

[31] In the end it appears to me that, after all is said and done and when the matter is shorn of the intricacies which the Presidency sought to introduce in the second round of litigation, the position simply boils down to this:
(a) The majority of the Constitutional Court agreed with the minority that the Presidency had not made out a case for its refusal to grant access.
(b) For the reasons appearing from its judgment, the majority decided, however, not to grant M & G‘s application for access, but to remit the matter to the high court for final decision after the court had taken a judicial peek at the contents of the record.
(c) The high court did exactly that and thereafter arrived at the conclusion that there is nothing in the contents of the record which would justify the refusal of access.
(d) For my part, after having also had a judicial peek, I am not persuaded that the high court was mistaken in arriving at that conclusion.

[32] For these reasons the appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of three counsel.


F D J BRAND
JUDGE OF APPEAL

APPEARANCES:

For the Appellant:
M T K Moerane SC; L Gcabashe Instructed by:
The State Attorney, Pretoria c/o The State Attorney, Bloemfontein
For the Respondent: J J Gauntlett SC; F Ismail; F B Pelser
Instructed by:
Webber Wentzel Attorneys, Johannesburg c/o Honey Attorneys, Bloemfontein

Prices Have Stabilised- Is This True?

By A Correspondent- The Confederations of Zimbabwe Retailer president has said prices have stabilised this festive season, reported the state media.

Mr Denford Mutashu was speaking to the publication when he said:

We have improved the supply of basic commodities and most shops are fully stocked. Many players have taken what is on the market to stock their shops so that they do not run out of stock, which has resulted in the stabilisation of prices in most supermarkets.

We have also noticed that the customers are out and about buying their goods focusing on basic commodities, though they are buying some stuff which is not basic. Clothing retailers have also stabilised their prices and we hope that the price stabilisation will continue into the New Year.

We are also trying to engage uniform retailers to stabilise their prices as we enter the Back-to-School time. We are happy to have noted the same (price stabilisation) is being done in other cities like Bulawayo, Masvingo, Gweru and Mutare, among others. We encourage our retailers to continue stabilising the prices so that the consumers can do their shopping at ease.

Prices of most commodities have been going up on a regular basis this year, however, statistics released showed that month on month inflation for November significantly decreased. 

-StateMedia

WATCH: The Real “Tezvara” Hannington Mubaiwa Comes On Camera to Address Zimbabweans On News Review

By A Correspondent| The real Chiwenga “Tezvara,” Hannington Mubaiwa came on camera first the 2nd time last night.

He joined a news review with Chief Svosve on ZimEye.com [program below]. Hannington Mubaiwa was a contractor in Zimbabwe, before relocating to the United States Of America. He is now a Social Scientist, who designs transformation-al economies and comes from a business background.

FULL LIVE VIDEO LOADING BELOW

https://youtu.be/KjJvdc075zg

He tells ZimEye, I was the one who built the houses in places such as Kuwadzana, Harare, Zimbabwe the 3000 houses built there. I am a scholar focusing on transforming economies of the future. I design mordenisation plans for Third World Countries. My study is national transformation.

Rural Transport Operators Hike Fares

By A Correspondent- Transport operators plying rural routes have significantly hiked fares as travellers visiting their rural homes for the festive season increase.

According to the state media here are the new fares for distances starting from Bulawayo:

  1. Bulawayo-Nkayi route are now charging $80 for a single trip from $60 while those using kombis have to part with at least $120 from $100 for the same distance.
  2. Kombis plying the Bulawayo-Tsholotsho route charge $70. Previously they charged $50.
  3. Buses are charging $100 for a trip from Bulawayo to Lupane
  4. From Bulawayo to Binga people will have to fork out $200 from $150 for a single trip.

Transport operators have however blamed the mayhem on the acute shortage of diesel, one operator who spoke to the publication said:

Usually during this time of the year, we increase fares due to demand, but in this case, the push factor is a shortage of diesel, which we are now sourcing from the black market at an exorbitant price. Unfortunately, we are then left with no other option but to pass the buck to our passengers.

-StateMedia

The Latest Drone Footage Of Harare CBD Hailed As “Very Good Presentation Unbiased Truth with Facts and Visual Proof”

By A Correspondent | As the year nears an end, the world’s only latest drone footage of the capital city, Harare CBD below, has been hailed by news readers as the a ” very good presentation unbiased truth with facts and visual proof.” SEE COMMENTS –

VIDEO LOADING BELOW…


Leku Mapika
1 month agoVery good presentation unbiased truth with facts and visual proof. Very interesting indeed.

4REPLYMthaX TV1 month agoeven Highlanders vs Dynamos on this day failed to bring the masses they are usually the only ones who can pull the masses.

4REPLYMordecai Nyasha1 month agoShame

?2REPLYConnie Rodrigues1 month agoMy God is great my God is not sleeping my God is letting the truth be revealed where every knee shall bow and the will be spoken God is in control Amen

2REPLYChirandu Masango1 month agoCould it be???????REPLYCharlet Dube1 month agoed rule till your death my guy reform the economy we voted for you .. we love you

REPLYClive Nyathi1 month ago

This is what I call the best show of the true zanu pf membership

REPLYTatenda Inai1 month agoKkkk chaora chinhu ichi3

REPLYSparrow Sparrow1 month agoHaana chaanotaura2REPLYPerseverance Mazuru1 month agoVery true indeed n next time I hope no one will even attend ZANU meetings bcz they are bad people without people at heart at allREPLYLucky5 days ago1:57 each were given a box of chicken slice and a free drink as an incentive for attending. That’s how exactly the Shona people have kept ZANU pf in power for so long. Because of their love for food they would rather suffer for 4 years, then the 5th year towards elections ZANU would start campaigns by giving them free food at the rallies. Then they forget all the 4years suffering bcoz of a single plate of free food. I worked for the government in Mashonaland for a long time I know what I’m talking about. Shona people shit kindRead moreREPLYClifford Savage 011 month agoucharohwa uchiti could it be3REPLYlearnmore kaseke1 month agoANAMBWA AVA HAPANA ANOVADA SAKA MAVOTES VAKAWAANA KUPIREPLYSparrow Sparrow1 month agoTruth revealed thanks Simba2REPLYjoechimmie1 month agorubbish3REPLYchiedza Muringi1 month agoMany were bussed from outside2REPLYsiyabonga siyotula1 month agomnangangwa ibenzi iro vanhu ngavasiyane naye6REPLYView replyIt’sVeeBitch1 month agoMy people are waking up ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????well done well done8REPLYsiyabonga siyotula1 month agomukoma masimba madiii apo1REPLY

Alcohol Anonymous Zim’s Holiday Tips

By A Correspondent- Alcohol Anonymous Zimbabwe took the time to list these 15 tips to help those who want to stay away from adult beverages and sober up the entire time during the festive season where food and beverages will be in abundance.

Here are the 15 tips to stay sober this festive season, in case you want to:

  1. Tell a reliable person about your desire to stop drinking. This may hinder you from sneaking away to have a drink.
  2. Stay busy.
  3. Bring your own non-alcoholic drinks. This is important to remember if you think that only alcoholic drinks will be served.
  4. Choose only to attend parties you will really enjoy. This can limit the stress of not drinking and will reduce the chances that you will.
  5. Avoid attending parties with alcohol.
  6. Let someone know where you will be. Tell your sponsor or a trusted friend when you attend a holiday get-togethers and have them call you to check up.
  7. Take along a friend. An A.A. friend or someone else you trust will help in keeping you from drinking alcohol.
  8. Tell the host you may have to leave early. If you are worried about feeling awkward leaving a party early, tell the host ahead of time that you may not be able to stay the entire night.
  9. Show up at a later time. If you have been invited to a dinner party, showing up shortly before dinner may limit the amount of pressure to drink beforehand.
  10. At parties, choose a non-alcoholic drink like water or soda. Alcohol is not required to enjoy the holidays.
  11. Ask if any food dishes contain alcohol, especially if it is uncooked alcohol.
  12. Have a backup plan. Call a friend and let them know you may need a ride or someone to hang out with that evening if the party you are attending is too tempting.
  13. Attend an A.A. meeting or party so that you can find support in fellow members.
  14. Schedule other plans. Figure out something else to do on the nights you are invited to parties where alcohol will be served. This will keep you from deciding to go last minute!
  15. Remember that choosing not to drink is not rude. Forcing someone to drink is rude.

-AAZF

Ballooning Elephants’ Population Haunts Zim

By A Correspondent- The Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management has lamented the ballooning elephants’ population saying it is now affecting the natural environment as populations continue to soar.

Speaking to the state media, ZimParks Director-General Mr Fulton Mangwanya said:

….We are also still grappling with over population of elephants as a country where we have over 83 000 against an ecological capacity of 55 000.

This causes serious disaster in terms of habitat destruction because elephants destroy vegetation, which will never recover as populations continue to rise,

According to the Director-General, the death of close to 200 elephants at Hwange national park this year was mainly due to the overpopulation due to depletion of natural resources that sustains life in these parks.

-StateMedia

Cash, Power And Fuel Shortages In Zimbabwe Fail To Deter Zimbabweans From Travelling Home For Christmas.

Paul Nyathi|Traffic has surged in recent days, with officials at the Beitbridge border post saying more than 20,000 people are passing through the Zimbabwe side per day.

Many Zimbabweans living in South Africa make the annual journey home at Christmas time.

But due to the difficulty in obtaining a passport, some try to sneak through without permission.

Cash, power and fuel shortages in Zimbabwe don’t appear to have deterred many people from travelling home this Christmas.

The immigration department figures, suggest that at least 21,000 people are crossing through the border post each day. This figure is up from around 16,000 earlier this month.

Zimbabwe immigration staff says they’ve cancelled leave and beefed up their numbers.

Officials on both sides are usually overwhelmed at this time of the year and in January.

According to reports, officials say they’re clamping down undocumented travellers, especially children, who are smuggled across the border to be reunited with their families.

Gloom For Bosso Fans As Celebrated Coach Dumps The Team


DUTCH coach Hendrik Pieter de Jongh has parted ways with Premiership football giants Highlanders.

The Dutch coach announced on his Twitter page yesterday that he will not be returning after the festive holidays as he is set to take up “new challenges” elsewhere.

De Jongh’s contract with Highlanders is set to expire at the end of the month.

“Big thanks to the Bosso family for the cooperation and the great success we had together. Only I go from 1 January 2020 for a new challenges. Thanks for the great time,” he tweeted yesterday.

De Jongh inspired Highlanders to a decent sixth place finish in the Castle Lager Premiership after finding the club wallowing in the relegation matrix when he arrived three months ago.

The Dutchman superintendented Bosso for 16 official games, winning eight times, drawing six and losing once.

Out of the 16 matches, 12 were league games that saw Bosso getting five wins, six draws and a loss, while the other four games were in the Chibuku Super Cup which Bosso won to lift the trophy without conceding a goal.

The Chibuku Super Cup victory ended Highlanders’ four-year trophy drought.

His success with the giants had endeared him to the club’s supporters, who had hoped to see him continue with the club’s revival next season.

21 000 People Cleared Through Beitbridge A Day As Festive Season Peaks

Border authorities ready for holiday …Beitbridge (21 000), Chirundu (3 500) tops in traffic volumes

THE past two weeks have witnessed increased activities at all border posts as Zimbabweans based outside the country return for the festive season.

Both vehicles and human traffic, waiting to be cleared, has characterised the major borders — Beitbridge, Forbes, Nyamapanda and Chirundu. Statistics from the Immigration Department show that Beitbridge, the country’s busiest port, is clearing nearly 21 000 people daily since the beginning of the peak period — December 1.

Before then the immigration authorities were clearing about 16 000 people exiting and entering into Zimbabwe.

To speed up the processing of documentation at the borders, principal immigration officer and national spokesperson Ms Canisia Magaya said they had beefed up staff at the ports of entry and exit.

“We are clearing an average of about 3 500 travellers per day at Chirundu, 1 600 at Nyamapanda and 20 906 travellers at Beitbridge since the beginning of the peak period,” said Ms Magaya.

“In order to cater for the high volumes, normally experienced during the festive season, all forms of leave from work, that is, annual and vacation leave have been suspended to ensure expedited clearance of travellers.

“In a bid to decongest clearance halls, especially at Beitbridge, which have over the years proved to be small to handle human traffic associated with the festive season, we have set up outdoor clearance points.

“We have also separated traffic to ensure smooth flow of traffic at the ports, that is, clearing local residents and visitors separately.”

Ms Magaya said the department was also consulting their immigration counterparts on the other side of the borders to ensure smooth flow of human and vehicle traffic during the holiday. Robust compliance measures had been put in place to mitigate smuggling of undocumented people, she said.

“During this period, movement by undocumented persons and smuggling of minors is rampant as people seek to reunite with their families,” said Ms Magaya.

“To mitigate this challenge, robust compliance measures involving all stakeholders are in place to curb movement by undocumented persons across the borders and the smuggling of minors.”

Majority Of Zimbabweans Living In The Diaspora Just Don’t Want To Come Back To Live In Zimbabwe.

Zimbabweans in the diaspora are reported to be flocking back to the country for the festive period but according to a recent Gallup World Poll, two-thirds of the Zimbabweans living outside the country have no intention of returning home.

A further 18 percent would rather move to another country than return to Zimbabwe.

Only 14 percent want to return home.

Zimbabwe is, however, better than most countries. The poll showed that 77 percent of migrants on average have no desire to return to their home countries. Only a mere 7 percent do.

Ninety percent of Greeks in the diaspora do not want to return to their country.

Apparently this does not seem to be a developing world problem as 87 percent of Britons do not want to return to their country too.

Saudi Arabia has the greatest number of migrants who want to return home at 30 percent, followed by Australia at 21 percent, Turkey 20 percent, Mali 16 percent, and the United States and France at 15 percent each.

Most countries, including Zimbabwe, would like nationals living abroad to return home to use their skills to develop their own country but this is likely to be an uphill struggle.

Some three to five million Zimbabweans are said to be in the diaspora with the majority being in South Africa.

Inside Zim.

Another Political Party Formed – Pinda Panyanga United Front.


The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) has acknowledged the formation of a new political party called the Independence of Zimbabwe African Organisation of People’s Power Pinda Panyanga United Front (IZAOPPOPP UNF).

A letter signed by ZEC’s chief elections officer, Mr Utoile Silaigwana, reads: “The Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) acknowledges receipt of your party profile documents, the contents of which have been noted. Your organisation has been included on ZEC’s stakeholder database and mailing list for notification when appropriate meetings that require your input arise.”

In an interview with The Herald, the party’s leader, Mr Edson Rupondo, said he formed the party to be “the voice of the voiceless”.

Mr Rupondo said his party would be nationalist in nature and would uphold Zimbabwe’s national interests, ideals and ethos. “What we want is a democratic Zimbabwe and we respect the liberation struggle. Our party will be nationalist and pan-Africanist,” he said.

“We simply want to use other avenues through a structure like a political party to advocate for the citizens’ interests.”

He said that constitutionalism was an important part of the party as every Zimbabwean citizen must act in accordance with the law.

“My thinking is informed by the fact that the law is a social institution which may be improved by intelligent human efforts or otherwise the spirits of our liberation heroes will not be pleased by the direction the country will be taking,” said Mr Rupondo.

Govt Subsidies Force Mealie Meal To Disappear From Shop Shelves

ZIMBABWE’s current mealie meal shortages have been blamed on the Industry and Commerce ministry which failed to register over 60 millers for maize subsidy, with millers withholding their stocks to avoid losses.

Government scrapped maize subsidies at the start of the month, but reintroduced them after a public outcry over high prices.

Government, however, introduced a new condition that millers should be registered with the Industry ministry to qualify for the subsidy programme, in a statement released on December 13 by the Finance ministry.

But some millers have complained that the registration process was very slow and about 60 millers have not been registered for the subsidy programme.

The millers are now withholding their stocks for fear that they may not be registered at all.

“The 60 millers are holding on to their maize stocks and cannot risk producing roller meal without being registered,” a miller who requested anonymity said.

“The few who have been registered are struggling to supply the market and this has caused serious shortages of the product on the market. Only highly priced refined mealie-meal being sold at around $115 per 10kg is found in the shops.”

The gazetted price of the roller meal is $50, which is seen as affordable for the public.

NewsDay observed yesterday that many retail shops did not have roller meal.

The registered millers include National Foods Limited (NFL) and Blue Ribbon Foods, which were allocated

28 000 tonnes and 10 000 respectively, out of the 40 000 which government has availed to millers.

Millers who spoke to NewsDay said they were being sent from one office to another without getting any assistance.

Grain Millers Association of Zimbabwe (GMAZ) spokesperson Garikai Chaunza confirmed receiving reports of delayed registration process from millers.

“We are receiving calls from our members asking if the association could assist them and it is our hope that the authorities would speed up the process, so that millers who are holding on to their maize grain start milling and supply the market given that we are in the festive season, where mealie-meal is one of the products on demand,” he said.

“We have the capacity to supply the nation throughout the festive season and what we are waiting for is that government registers us.

“Millers are now required to register with the Industry ministry and after that, approach the Finance ministry, which will give them the subsidy money before they go to GMB for maize collection. The process is cumbersome and millers are complaining that there is no transparency in the process.”

GMAZ used to facilitate the process for its members.

Last week, GMAZ Southern region members raised concern over what they described as a show of “unfair and anti-competitive behaviour,” shown by NFL, which allegedly met government privately and secured over half of the total subsidised monthly maize allocation of 40 000 metric tonnes outside the association.

However, according to the December 13 statement by the Finance ministry, not only GMAZ members qualified for the subsidy programme.

Industry minister Sekai Nzenza yesterday said the matter would be addressed.

“I am surprised that the process is taking long as the team is working hard to register millers. However, we need to resolve this matter quickly and there should be no shortages at all. Please do send the questions to my PA, Victoria Sigauke, and we will investigate,” she said.

Plumtree Border Post Opens 24 Hours A Day To Ease Congestion

NATIONAL, BUSINESS, BREAKING

PLUMTREE Border Post started operating round the clock on Friday to accommodate travellers during the festive season as the volumes have increased by 42 percent since Monday.

Normally the border post shuts down at 10pm daily.

In an interview on Friday, Assistant Regional Immigration Officer Mr Terence Njagu said in anticipation of increased traffic volumes, the border will operate for 24 hours up to tomorrow.

“Generally, from the beginning of the month, traffic has been low.

However, as soon as schools closed, traffic has increased and has been increasing each and every day. I think beginning this week, there was a 42 percent increase from the normal traffic that we were handling a week before,” said Mr Njagu.

“Most of the people work in industries, some in farms so word going on is that, most of them, are closing today, others closed yesterday, so we anticipate increased flows of traffic.

Averagely, we have 1 500 exits and 1 400 entries daily. Now we are clearing up to between 2 900 and 3,600 a day.”

He said two weeks ago the traffic flows stood at 28 000 at Mphoengs and Mulambaphele, the entry points that fall under Plumtree Border Post but last week the statistics jumped to 41 148.

Mr Njagu said immigration has beefed up staff and suspended staff holidays to efficiently deal with increased volumes. “We have instituted a 24-hour shift from today until the 24th of December.

Basically, we open the border at 6am, it will be opened continuously up to Christmas Day at 10 pm.

So, from today until Christmas Day there will be continuous clearance of people. This is meant to create time for our travelling public at any given time they want to pass through the border during that time, they will be served.

It eases pressure, it eases congestion and we ensure that everyone who is coming to Zimbabwe is served quickly and they enjoy their holidays,” said Mr Njagu.State media

NATIONAL, BUSINESS, BREAKING

Mnangagwa Says It’s No Coincidence That POLAD Met At His Farm On National Unity Day.

POLAD meeting

Own Correspondent|President Emmerson Mnangagwa has hailed his meeting with his POLAD partners more so on National Unity Day.

The President said Polad sought to unite Zimbabweans and that was not a coincidence the meeting was held on Unity Day.

“That is unique about Zimbabwe,” he said. “I am saying this because you suggested that we meet here today, again on Unity Day. This is why I don’t believe this is mere coincidence.

“Polad is a platform where we seek to be united as Zimbabweans and the fact that we are concluding this year’s deliberations on Unity Day is significant. I think the creation of Polad in the history of our country is significant and should be eternalised in the history of our country. Even in our region, there has never been a platform of this nature where diverse political parties come together on one table and still debate on issues we don’t agree on, but seek to find a middle way, a compromise and debate and the best argument takes the day.”

President Mnangagwa said it was important that political parties in Polad increased public awareness of their activities so that they could be heard. He said it was important for Polad to make the loudest noise, and not be swallowed by those without a formal platform. “I think the collective voice should be heard more than an isolated voice in the jungle,” said President Mnangagwa.

He emphasised the need for parties to conduct their activities peacefully and to expose those that have brought suffering on citizens. President Mnangagwa said if Zanu-PF or any other party caused violence, it should be condemned in the strongest terms.

“I Am Not Moving From That.” Mnangagwa Vows On POLAD

President Emmerson Mnangagwa showing of his crop at the farm.

Own Correspondent|President Mnangagwa On Saturdayy met with leaders of political parties participating in the Political Actors Dialogue (Polad) in Kwekwe.

The meeting started at mid-morning at President Mnangagwa’s farm, with addresses from the 18 political party leaders.

In his remarks, President Mnangagwa ruled out any talks outside the Polad platform.

“I am happy that us as Zimbabweans have come together to discuss issues that are pertinent,” he said. “Recently, former (South African) President (Thabo Mbeki) came to see me and I think he met some of the leaders here. 

“I am happy that he expressed his desire to see Zimbabweans work together and I assured him that as Zanu-PF and as the President of the Republic, we have created a platform which we call Polad where every single political party can find expression on issues affecting Zimbabwe and the majority of political parties are on that platform.

“I said I don’t see it possible to have two platforms which discuss one issue. Zimbabwe’s political issue is one and if we discuss it we must have one platform which we discuss it and that platform is Polad, I am not moving from that.”

Politicians Mount Pressure On King Mswati Over Democratisation Of The Kingdom

King Mswati III.

Prodemocracy leaders in Swaziland (eSwatini) who had their homes raided by police are calling on the absolute monarch King Mswati III to allow people to talk openly about the political future of the kingdom.

Political parties are banned from taking part in elections and groups that advocate for democracy are outlawed by the Suppression of Terrorism Act.

Six political groups have formed the Political Parties Assembly (PPA) to advocate for change. Leaders of these groups had their homes raided by police on Friday (20 December 2019). They were interrogated by police and had laptops, phones, tablets and other gadgets taken.

At a media conference on Saturday the PPA called on King Mswati to allow talks. The Times Sunday, a newspaper in Swaziland, reported Mlungisi Makhanya, President of the outlawed People’s United Democratic Movement (PUDEMO), said, ‘The King should convene a session where the people will dialogue. He has to mandate a team to engage with us. We don’t mean we should engage with him personally because that would lower his status as King but he can delegate a team mandated to discuss the governing of the country alongside the reigning monarch.’

The Times reported the PPA said if the King did want to be personally involved in talks they would need to adopt international standards, appoint a facilitator, have clear ground rules and a neutral venue.

There is open hostility in Swaziland between the supporters of the PPA and state forces, especially the police.

Jan Sithole, President of the Swaziland Democratic Party (SWADEPA), told the media conference the police service had been politicised and were taking actions on behalf of the government.

Separately, Ngomyayona Gamedze, the former Deputy President in the Swaziland Senate and now acting Chairman of Sive Siyinqaba, one of the groups in the PPA, warned government and the police against the continuous detention of political activists who were calling for democratic reforms.

He told the Swaziland News, an online newspaper, ‘Harassing political activists, breaking into their houses and seizing their cellphones amounts to the violation of human rights. A cellphone is a personal gadget with personal information that should not be accessed even by the police without the consent of the owner and what they doing now is wrong. I am not talking about hearsay here because I was there as a Presiding Officer when Parliament ratified these UN Conventions that ensured the protection of human rights. It’s now surprising that even the Human Rights Commission is silent on this.’

He added, ‘Is it a crime to openly express my political view that I don’t want the current government? Are these political activists expected to embrace the current government by force? Why are we allowing the police to violate human rights in this manner? Any detention of a person even if its five minutes amounts to human rights violation because you have taken that person out of his or her comfort zone, it’s worse when you have seized his cellphone because by so doing you have disconnected that individual from communicating with the world and gained access to personal information.’

Further police action is expected. The Times reported Sithole telling the media conference, ‘We are committed to the spirit of no retreat, no surrender, forward forever.’

He added, ‘Even if it meant being arrested, even if it meant being eliminated; we are prepared to lay our lives on the block for the liberation of the people that have given us that mandate.’

The PPA consists of six groups: People’s United Democratic Movement (PUDEMO); Swaziland Democratic Party (SWADEPA); Communist Party of Swaziland (CPS); Ngwane National Liberatory Congress (NNLC); Swaziland People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) and Sive Siyinqaba (Sibahje Sinje).

MDC Vows To Defend The Constitution Against ZANU PF

NewsDay|The MDC has said it will use all the available platforms to halt the random constitutional amendments proposed by Zanu PF, which the opposition party says are moves by the ruling party to consolidate its stranglehold on power.

The Nelson Chamisa-led opposition party on Friday called on citizens including civil society, the clergy and labour movements, to defend the Constitution. The party said what was required were reforms that enabled the country to move forward.

Cabinet last week approved Constitutional Amendment Bill 2019 which repeals section 92 of the Constitution dealing with presidential running mates, giving the President power to hire and fire his deputies as well as appoint and promote judges.

Chamisa last week led a delegation of top party leadership to Bulawayo for National Standing Committee, National Executive and Structures meetings.

Addressing journalists in Bulawayo, MDC spokesperson, Daniel Molekele said as a party they were opposed to systematic constitutional amendments being carried out by Zanu PF and called on all Zimbabweans to defend the Constitution.

“We are strongly against the constitutional amendments because it negates the gains of the 2013 Constitution. As the MDC we will use all platforms that are available for us to contest against any changes of the Constitution,” Molokele said.

“We will make sure that we contest in Parliament and all public spheres, we will even engage on a diplomatic initiative. We will go international and bring attention to this attempt to negate the democratic gains as gained in the 2013 Constitution.”

“We will come up with an advocacy campaign, we are calling civil society, faith-based leaders, labour movements, students, youth, women and every interested stakeholder to defend the Constitution of the country,” Molokele said.

He said their actions will not be a political process, but a national process.

“This Constitution was enacted after a referendum in 2013 and we are saying people of Zimbabwe if we allow Zanu PF to change the Constitution like any other act of Parliament we will have a big problem,” he said.

Molokele said the party condemns the actions of Speaker of the National Assembly Jacob Mudenda who has succumbed to pressure and reduced Parliament to a captured entity.

“The party will escalate its quest to safeguard the independence of Parliament to appropriate international bodies,” Molokele said.

Last week opposition MPs confronted Mudenda over the alleged bias over Zanu PF.

Tsvangirai Told Mbeki Point Blank That He Is Never The Right Person To Mediate In The Zimbabwean Crisis, Has He Reformed?

Thabo Mbeki

Paul Nyathi|The late tough Zimbabwean opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, in 2008 told then South Africa’s president, Thabo Mbeki, that he was not fit to serve as the region’s mediator in Zimbabwe’s political crisis owing to a “lack of neutrality”, and that “there will be no country left” if Mbeki continued to side with President Robert Mugabe.

And indeed since then there is no country left to talk about.

The warning came in a letter from the MDC leader to Mbeki made public just days after it was revealed that the then South African president had written a four-page letter to George Bush demanding that the US president stop criticising Mugabe.

In his letter, Tsvangirai accused Mbeki of colluding with Mugabe to play down the deepening political crisis, of blocking UN security council discussions on Zimbabwe and of trying to facilitate a controversial weapons delivery from China to the Zimbabwean military.

The strongest criticism by Tsvangirai was over Mbeki’s reaction to the escalating state-sponsored campaign of murder, violence and arrests against the opposition in the run up to the run-off presidential election between him and Mugabe in 2008.

At least 150 people were killed and thousands beaten and/or displaced.

The letter, dated May 13, 2008, accused Mbeki of ignoring evidence that Mugabe was planning the violence, including a leaked Zimbabwean military document outlining the strategy that Tsvangirai personally handed to Mbeki.

“When you started mediating, Zimbabwe still had a functioning economy, millions of our citizens had not fled to other countries to escape political and economic crisis, and tens of thousands had not yet died from impoverishment and disease. In fact, since the March 29 election, Zimbabwe has plunged into horrendous violence while you have been mediating. With respect, if we continue like this, there will be no country left,” wrote Tsvangirai.

“As you know, when MDC attempted to appeal to the UN security council to investigate and help stop the carnage, it was you, the so-called ‘neutral’ mediator, who blocked a possible road to resolution of the crisis.”

Tsvangirai said Mbeki continued to act as if everything was normal, even after the Zimbabwean government blocked the release of poll results showing that Mugabe and his Zanu-PF party had lost.

“Your lack of neutrality became increasingly evident when I arrived to the Lusaka summit to see you and Mr Mugabe on television together proclaiming there is ‘no crisis’ in Zimbabwe,” the letter says.

Tsvangirai also accused the South African government of facilitating the delivery of weapons via Durban from a Chinese ship that was eventually turned away by dock workers and legal action.

“Not only have you been unable to denounce the well-documented post-election attacks on our people, but your government even played a role in Zimbabwean government procurement of weapons of repression … and agree to allow passage of arms of war purchased by the same government through South African territory during the troubled post-election period,” he wrote.

The letter demanded Mbeki step down as the Southern African Development Community mediator on Zimbabwe, as the MDC no longer had confidence in him.

Mbeki denied knowledge of the letter even though the MDC said it had a receipt showing it was delivered to Mbeki’s office.

Responding to a question in the National Assembly, he declined to make a statement on the matter “because we don’t have the letter”.

Gweru Based MDC Promises To Do What Chamisa MDC Has Failed: Defeat Zanu-PF

Thulani Ndebele

The president of newly-formed Movement for Democratic Change Zimbabwe (MDC Zimbabwe), Thulani Ndebele, says his party is expected to beat Zanu PF in the 2023 harmonized elections as he has the people of Zimbabwe at heart.

In his first-ever interview after registering his party last month with the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission, Ndebele said he has already hit the ground running and is optimistic that his party would win the presidential and parliamentary elections.

“I decided to enter the political field after realizing that millions of Zimbabweans are suffering, millions of people are unemployed, people cannot buy basic commodities, people are facing a lot of challenges due to the current harsh economic situation in the country. This makes me believe that we will win the next elections as people want positive transformation in the country.

“I have realized that the MDC led by Khuphe is fighting against the MDC led by Nelson Chamisa, Zanu PF is fighting against the MDC led by Chamisa and as a result people are completely neglected. They are left out. As a result, I believe that we are the only alternative to these parties. We are getting a lot of support from the people and we will do our best to make sure that their dreams of a better Zimbabwe are met.”

He denied allegations that he is being used by the ruling Zanu PF party, saying he is looking for positive social, economic and political change in Zimbabwe.

Ndebele, who was supposed to contest the 2018 general elections under the National People’s Party led by Joice Mujuru, said he withdrew his name in the last minute after realizing that there were chances of splitting votes among opposition parties.

“I withdrew in favour of the MDC candidate. I realized that we were going to split the votes as the opposition. I resigned after I was quizzed by the NPP why I supported an MDC candidate.”

Asked why he chose the name MDC Zimbabwe, Ndebele said, “There is nothing wrong in using the name MDC. We are the true MDC and not these other MDCs.”

However, MDC activists are viewing Ndebele as a ruling party project designed to create confusion among MDC formations.

Douglas Mabuza, a member of the MDC formation led by Thokozani Khupe, said, “I only support the MDC led by Khupe, it’s the only legitimate MDC … This MDC Zimbabwe is fake.”

His views were echoed by Zanu PF member, Joseph Tshuma, who noted that all MDC formation won’t dislodge Zanu PF from power. “These parties are very confused. They don’t know what they want.”

The MDC was formed by various stakeholders in Zimbabwe in 1999 but has split over the years due to differences over political ideologies and push for change.

Source VOA Interviews.

President Chamisa Unity Day Speech | FULL TEXT

Towards a shared Zimbabwean dream

The liberation icon, Joshua Nkomo, said at the signing of the Unity Accord in 1987, “… unity is not just the signing of documents, unity is
what follows.”

What has followed is a country at odds with its own ideals, a country that speaks the rhetoric of unity yet its citizens are imprisoned by
deeply rooted divisions made worse by the government’s inability to acknowledge the trauma and suffering of its citizens.

The injustices of the past continue to be swept under the carpet. The colonial era injustices, the liberation war era injustices, and
post-independence injustices must all be negated through a national process of truth telling, nation building, national healing and
rehabilitative restorative justice.

The Gukurahundi atrocities remain glossed over and dismissed as mere “disturbances” while the victims continue to live with the trauma of
unhealed wounds left to fester through insincerity and negligence. The very fabric of the Zimbabwean dream continues to be eroded by the
plague of greed and corruption as our people languish in poverty and hunger.

Murambatsvina left many homeless and hopeless. Violent elections and politically instigated violence have left many dead and wounded.
Government policies have eroded the peoples’ savings and wealth. Pensioners and the vulnerable are without any cushion against the
brutality of the harsh economic circumstances.

This is not unity. True peace and reconciliation require us to sincerely address the divisions in our society, to give voice to those who are
marginalised and oppressed, to work together in common purpose to ensure the promises of liberation are enjoyed by every single
Zimbabwean without fear or favour. Until this day comes, we cannot claim to be united or free.

We cannot preach unity when we pursue economic policies that widen the divide between the rich and the poor. We have seen the imposition
of austerity measures that punish the poor, for the mistakes made by the selfish, ruling elite.

These economic policies do not unite us. They divide us.

Inequality is growing. It’s one of the biggest threats to the security of our country, and to our unity as a people.

This is not the unity Joshua Nkomo signed for.

The MDC will continue to fight for a truly united Zimbabwe where the ideals of freedom, democracy, peace, and reform belong to every citizen
of our beloved nation.

True unity must be beyond just the unity of parties or its leaders. It must be a unity of all people of our beautiful Zimbabwe in vision, ideals,
values and destiny.

We must all build the Zimbabwe we deserve and want-the shared Zimbabwean dream.

United we stand.

Adv Nelson Chamisa
President
Movement For Democratic Change

Liverpool Unstoppable!

UEFA Champions League winners Liverpool beat South American club Flamengo 1-0 on Saturday to clinch the 2019 FIFA Club World Cup.

The game needed an extra-time after it ended goalless in ninety minutes.

Roberto Firmino scored the only goal of the match in the 99th minute to secure the Reds’ first triumph in the competition. The victory also gave the EPL side its 47th major honour – extending their English record, two ahead of Manchester United.

Virgil van Dijk returned to the first eleven, having missed the semifinal clash on Wednesday due to illness. Trent Alexander-Arnold, Firmino and Sadio Mane also started as part of the four changes coach Jurgen Klopp made.Soccer24

Church Leader Denounces Political Violence

NATIONAL, BUSINESS, BREAKING

CHURCHES have called on political parties to desist from causing superfluous tensions and using people to massage their political egos and heighten their aspirations.

Association of Apostolic Churches in Zimbabwe (AACZ) president Bishop Tsungai Vushe said the country’s political parties should refrain from any forms of violence as this was detrimental to the country’s economy and in most occasions leads to the destruction of property and loss of innocent lives.

“Over the past two years we have witnessed numerous politically motivated violence and this has seen lots of properties being destroyed and left scores of people injured while in some cases lives have been lost. It is our call as churches that political parties should not use people as shields to perpetrate violence,” he said.

Bishop Vushe said political parties should complement each other in efforts of reviving the country’s economy instead of throwing spanners at one another.

“We are seeing a lot of political bickering among political parties. Our wishes as different apostolic sects are to see the country prospering economically, having peace and tranquillity.

Our leaders should also be God-fearing and that way the Lord will listen to our pleas and all the calamities befalling us will end. As churches we can only be mediators in the event of conflicts and pray for peace and prosperity in our country,” he said.

Bishop Vushe warned churches should be non-partisan and guard against being affiliated to any political party but instead strive on providing Godly counselling to all parties.

“We have noted a growing number of churches that affiliate themselves to certain political parties, such tendencies are uncalled for.

Churches should remain apolitical and stick to their mandate of preaching the Word of God across all political divide.

“As indigenous churches we support the Government of the day regardless of the leader as written in Deuteronomy 29 verse 29 (The secret things belong to the Lord our God, but the things revealed belong to us and to our children forever, that we may follow all the words of this law),” he said.State media

NATIONAL, BUSINESS, BREAKING

Health Tips For You

Your brain is arguably the most important organ in your body. Sure, there are several others that you can’t live without, but the brain controls them all.

And not only does it keep your heart beating and your lungs breathing all the time, it is also the repository of everything that makes you, you.

All your thoughts, feelings, and memories originate or reside in the brain.

Obviously, it is important to keep this most vital organ happy and healthy. Proper nutrition can mean the difference between a clear head with a sense of purpose and a foggy head with a sense of desperation. As a lifelong habit, healthy eating also slows the rate of aging-related cognitive decline and reduces the risk of developing dementia.

On the flip side, there are foods that are just the worst for your brain. Indulge too often and you will likely experience confusion, low mood, and slowed reaction times.

In a vicious cycle, a depressed brain has poor ability to make the right decisions in order to improve.

If you know you have some bad habits, it is time to start scaling back. Your brain won’t like a massive dietary overhaul all at once, and even though you know it’s the right choice, you’ll struggle to maintain it.-Welcome Organic

Bus Fares Increased

Transport operators plying rural routes have increased fares to capitalise on an increase in the number of people travelling to their homes to spend Christmas with their families.

A snap survey by The Chronicle yesterday revealed that buses plying the Bulawayo-Nkayi route are now charging $80 for a single trip from $60 while those using kombis have to part with at least $120 from $100 for the same distance.

Kombis plying the Bulawayo-Tsholotsho route charge $70. Previously they charged $50. Buses are charging $100 for a trip from Bulawayo to Lupane while those travelling to Binga will have to fork out $200 from $150 for a single trip.

A trip to Halisupe in Gwanda district and Maphisa in Matobo district now costs $100 from $80.

Some transport operators who spoke to The Chronicle attributed the hike to an acute shortage of diesel at service stations which is forcing them to resort to the informal traders who are charging exorbitant prices.

At filling stations, diesel is going for $18,89 a litre while on the black market the commodity is sold for US$2 per litre (about $32 using the interbank rate).

“Usually during this time of the year, we increase fares due to demand, but in this case, the push factor is a shortage of diesel, which we are now sourcing from the black market at an exorbitant price. Unfortunately, we are then left with no other option but to pass the buck to our passengers,” said Mr Benson Gumede, a driver of a Nkayi-bound bus.

Mr Luckmore Ndlovu, a kombi driver who plies the Bulawayo-Brunapeg route, said they were charging $150 from the previous $100.

When a Chronicle news crew visited Renkini Bus Terminus and Entumbane Country Bus Terminus yesterday, there was a hive of activity as scores of travellers jostled to catch buses to their rural homes ahead of the Christmas holiday.

However, bus conductors and kombi drivers said this year the number of travellers was down compared to the previous year during the same period.

“We normally handle a huge influx of travellers during this time of the year as people will be travelling home for Christmas. However, this time the numbers have gone down and this could be attributed to the prevailing economic challenges,” said Mr Lazarus Ndebele who plies the Bulawayo-Maphisa route.

Mr Lungile Mlotshwa, a vendor who operates at Renkini Bus Terminus concurred with Mr Gumede.

“I have been operating in this place for the past five years and usually it becomes busy during this time as most people will be travelling to their rural homes for Christmas. This year, it is less busy and my business has been adversely affected due to the decline in the number of travellers,” he said.

The Traffic Safety Council of Zimbabwe (TSCZ) has deployed 20 teams nationwide that are conducting periodic road safety awareness campaigns to reduce carnage on the roads during the festive season. The awareness campaigns started on December 16 and will run to January 3, 2020.

Police are also urging motorists to observe road regulations when driving and have mounted roadblocks on most roads to check whether or not vehicles are roadworthy and stamp out speeding and other road offences. -state media/Chronicle

ZRP Cop Shoots At Kombi

Three commuter omnibus passengers were shot and injured yesterday along Mutare Road in Msasa, Harare, when a pursuing police officer opened fire on a kombi whose driver failed to stop at the Mabvuku turn-off roadblock.

Shupikai Kachaya (27), who suffered an ankle injury, Dylan Chidhava (24), who was injured on the left buttock, and Violet Wairesi (32), who was injured on the right thigh, were taken to Parirenyatwa Group of Hospitals where they were receiving treatment.

They were reported to be in a stable condition last night.

Police confirmed the incident and apologised for the injuries, which they said could have been avoided had the driver stopped at the roadblock.
National police spokesperson Assistant Commissioner Paul Nyathi said a silver Nissan caravan commuter omnibus (registration number ADZ 5261) ignored a police roadblock at Mabvuku turn-off when the driver was signalled to stop.

He did not. An armed police officer stood in the middle of Mutare Road just after the roadblock and again signalled the driver to stop, but he sped off.

The officer then got a lift from a well-wisher and pursued the kombi, finding it parked near the headquarters of the Minerals Marketing Corporation of Zimbabwe.

When the officer tried to engage the driver of the kombi, he drove off. The police officer then fired two warning shots, but the driver did not stop.

He then fired at the commuter omnibus to deflate the tyres and in the process, three passengers were injured.

“The police found out that the driver had no driver’s licence and failed to obey police instructions to stop. There was no route authority, vehicle licence and passengers’ licence,” said Asst Comm Nyathi.

The driver is now facing attempted murder charges for driving towards the police officer and reckless driving.

“As police, we want to apologise for this unfortunate incident which could have been avoided if the driver had taken heed of police instructions,” said Asst Comm Nyathi.

“We also urge commuter omnibus owners not to employ unlicensed drivers. We urge drivers to stop at all police checkpoints and to comply with instructions.” -state media

Mnangagwa Rules Out Dialogue Outside POLAD

The president has maintained that there will be no dialogue outside Political Actor’s Dialogue (POLAD).

He further went on to say the visit by the former president of South Africa Thabo Mbeki was not to impose a dialogue outside
POLAD .

ED was speaking to members of the media at the Statehouse after delivering the Unity day speech when he said:
He (Mr Mbeki) never pushed for talks when he met me.

We are very old friends, indeed he discussed the political situation in the country and I explained to him that with regard to dialogue, we have a platform where every political party freely can come into that platform including MDC under Chamisa . That (POLAD) is the only platform where political dialogue will take place.

Thabo Mbeki visited last week and met with both the MDC leader and the president before telling journalists that his visit was private as he was here to speak to friends.State media

I Was There When Tycoon Was Gunned Down

Witness

A long-time friend to South Africa-based Zimbabwean businessman, Bheki Ndlovu (44) who was recently slain in that country, yesterday recounted how the tycoon was shot dead by a lone gunman in his presence in what he suspects was a targeted killing.

Ndlovu (44) was killed on December 14 and is expected to be buried at his rural home in Tsholotsho today. Mr Allan Chigome who is also in the cross-border transportation sector, said he was with Ndlovu during the last minutes of his life.

He narrated what he described as a split- second, heart-wrenching moment that he has agonised over and replayed countless times in his mind.

Mr Chigome said he ducked for cover and raised his head to find Ndlovu dead. He then heard a squeal of tyres as the assassin sped off.

“He was my long-time friend I can’t even remember when we first met. On the day of his fatal shooting, his driver was readying to leave for Zimbabwe. Bheki loaded his vehicle at Ezinjeni, a popular pick up point. He instructed the driver to proceed to the filling station to fill up his tank as he was following behind to make the payment. This was a normal routine for us,” said Mr Chigome.

“It was just the two of us in his car. As we arrived at the service station his driver was still parked at the serving point. We were exchanging general banter as we disembarked from the car. I remember he had bought a few things and instructed me to put them in the driver’s seat.”

In a split second as he moved across the vehicle, I heard gun shots. I scurried for cover and when I was confident that I was safe I was gutted to discover Bheki had been shot dead.”

He said in his view, Ndlovu was targeted during the attack.

“That’s the only thing that makes sense. Why him alone if it was random. No one else was shot. So, I’m clearly convinced that his killer had a specific assignment, just to end his life. When we inquired about who had done it, witnesses said they just saw him jumping into a vehicle and speeding off. No one knows who he was,” he said.

Mr Chigome said prior to the shooting Ndlovu was relaxed and appeared not to have a care in the world.

He described him as a very humble individual who assisted a lot of people.

“His death has left me really shocked. I was forced to come back home earlier than scheduled. I was also fearing for my life. It’s not easy to just see someone you had been together with for the better part of the day being shot dead point blank just before your eyes,” he said.

“At that moment I really felt it could have been me also. He was such a humble person, assisting a lot of people who would be facing challenges. He was in the transport sector for a very long time and some people would negotiate that he ferries them even when they were broke, and he would gladly do so. So, I don’t know who would want to kill him.”

Mr Chigome declined to be photographed saying he also feared for his safety. Several conflicting claims have been made following Ndlovu’s death.

Ndlovu’s family have partly blamed his wife Mrs Nomazwe Ndlovu for his death claiming that she issued threatening messages to him a week before he was shot dead.

Social media has been awash with claims that Ndlovu was killed while on his way to Zimbabwe to divorce his wife of 25 years for having an affair with a married UK based man, Jabulani also known as Christopher Tshabalala.

The family is in possession of 66 videos of Mrs Ndlovu with her lover, including sex tapes.

Mrs Ndlovu last week admitted having the side fling but said her hands were clean while accusing her in laws of wanting to grab the couple’s properties.

Mr Tshabalala’s wife who declined to have her first name mentioned said she got hold of his phone when he was very drunk on the night of Bheki’s murder, and saw the lovers’ WhatsApp chats and a suspicious secret payment of $15 000 to be made in South Africa.

“I reported the matter to the police and forwarded messages to my relatives and Bheki’s relatives when I realised that something could be happening. My husband then wanted to harm me and I was put under police protection. He was called in for questioning by Brighton police here in the U.K He is my husband but if he has a hand in the death of an innocent man, then justice must prevail and he must face the music,” said Mrs Tshabalala. -Herald

Mnangagwa Speaks On Meeting With Mbeki

The president has maintained that there will be no dialogue outside Political Actor’s Dialogue (POLAD).

He further went on to say the visit by the former president of South Africa Thabo Mbeki was not to impose a dialogue outside
POLAD .

ED was speaking to members of the media at the Statehouse after delivering the Unity day speech when he said:
He (Mr Mbeki) never pushed for talks when he met me.

We are very old friends, indeed he discussed the political situation in the country and I explained to him that with regard to dialogue, we have a platform where every political party freely can come into that platform including MDC under Chamisa .

That (POLAD) is the only platform where political dialogue will take place.

Thabo Mbeki visited last week and met with both the MDC leader and the president before telling journalists that his visit was private as he was here to speak to friends.State media

Food Shortage Hits Masvingo Provincial Hospital

Masvingo Provincial, the biggest referral hospital serving 1,7 million people in the province has been running without oxygen for some time now and gasping patients don’t survive.

A source said lucky patients with relatives among nurses and doctors have oxygen cylinders brought for them from private surgeries and returned immediately after resuscitation.

Oxygen at Masvingo Provincial is only found in the theatre, added the source.

In addition, the institution is facing a myriad of problems including critical food shortages.

Recently patients went for three days getting just one meal a day.Credit: Masvingo Mirror

Masvingo Hospital Hit By Shortage Of Oxygen

Masvingo Provincial, the biggest referral hospital serving 1,7 million people in the province has been running without oxygen for some time now and gasping patients don’t survive.

A source said lucky patients with relatives among nurses and doctors have oxygen cylinders brought for them from private surgeries and returned immediately after resuscitation.

Oxygen at Masvingo Provincial is only found in the theatre, added the source.

In addition, the institution is facing a myriad of problems including critical food shortages.

Recently patients went for three days getting just one meal a day.Credit: Masvingo Mirror

“Mnangagwa Is An Immoral Leader”

Former President of the Apostolic Faith Mission of Zimbabwe (AFM), Dr Aspher Madziyire, published an editorial on Friday, calling for President ED Mnangagwa to be removed from office and urging evangelicals not to support him.

“Whether Mnangagwa should be removed from office by force or by popular vote next election that is a matter of prudential judgment. That he should be removed, we believe, is not a matter of partisan loyalties but loyalty to the Creator of the Ten Commandments”

“None of the president’s positives can balance the moral and political danger we face under a leader of such grossly immoral character,” he added. Source -ZIMUCU

Tezvara vaChiwenga Speaks On Sunday

NATIONAL, BUSINESS, BREAKING

VIDEO LOADING BELOW….

https://youtu.be/KjJvdc075zg

By A Correspondent| Hannington Mubaiwa was a contractor in Zimbabwe, before relocating to the United States Of America.

He is now a Social Scientist, who designs economies of nations and comes from a business backgound.

He tells ZimEye, I was the one who built the houses in places such as Kuwadzana, the 3000 houses built there.

I am a scholar focusing on transforming economies of the future. I design mordenisation plans for Third World Countries. My study is national transformation.

LIVE: Hannington Mubaiwa Says I Am Ready To Work With ZANU PF If They Approach Me

VIDEO LOADING BELOW….

https://youtu.be/KjJvdc075zg

By A Correspondent| Hannington Mubaiwa was a contractor in Zimbabwe, before relocating to the United States Of America.

He is now a Social Scientist, who designs economies of nations and comes from a business backgound.

He tells ZimEye, I was the one who built the houses in places such as Kuwadzana, the 3000 houses built there.

I am a scholar focusing on transforming economies of the future. I design mordenisation plans for Third World Countries. My study is national transformation.

LIVE: WHO IS HANNINGTON MUBAIWA?

VIDEO LOADING BELOW….

https://youtu.be/KjJvdc075zg

By A Correspondent| Hannington Mubaiwa was a contractor in Zimbabwe, before relocating to the United States Of America.

He is now a Social Scientist, who designs economies of nations and comes from a business backgound.

He tells ZimEye, I was the one who built the houses in places such as Kuwadzana, the 3000 houses built there.

I am a scholar focusing on transforming economies of the future. I design mordenisation plans for Third World Countries. My study is national transformation.

LIVE: Hannington Mubaiwa Speaks On ZimEye | Economy, Dialogue

VIDEO LOADING BELOW….

https://youtu.be/KjJvdc075zg

By A Correspondent| Hannington Mubaiwa was a contractor in Zimbabwe, before relocating to the United States Of America.

He is now a Social Scientist, who designs economies of nations and comes from a business backgound.

He tells ZimEye, I was the one who built the houses in places such as Kuwadzana, the 3000 houses built there.

I am a scholar focusing on transforming economies of the future. I design mordenisation plans for Third World Countries. My study is national transformation.

Emotional Moment As MDC Family Hands Over Christmas Goodies To Gogo Tsvangirai

Gogo Tsvangirai receives christmas goodies

Blessed be the womb that bore our icon and MDC founding President, the late Dr Richard Morgan Tsvangirai.

Today, on behalf of the loving and caring MDC family, I felt honoured to pay a visit and hand over Christmas gifts to our late President’s mother Gogo Tsvangirai in Buhera.

It was an emotional moment that reminded me just how much sorrow the great Tsvangirai family has had to endure over the past few years.

The MDC, through the leadership of our President Nelson Chamisa, will continue to pay tribute and offer our gratitude to the Tsvangirai family for gifting us with a bona fide hero of social justice.

Gogo Tsvangirai and the entire Tsvangirai family, may you have a blessed Christmas and prosperous new year!

Lynette Karenyi
MDC Vice President.

Chief Ndiweni Calls For An Interim Transitional Govt

OUTSPOKEN Ntabazinduna chief Nhlanhlayamangwe Ndiweni has reiterated his suggestion that an interim transitional government (ITG) of technocrats must be put in place to abolish the bond note and implement a raft of political and economic reforms.

Ndiweni argued Zimbabwe does not need a government of national unity (GNU), adding any dialogue process among the country’s political actors will only result in another unity government, which he said would be a waste of time.

There have been calls for dialogue to unlock the country’s political and socio-economic logjam with former South African president Thabo Mbeki also visiting the country last week to ostensibly lay the groundwork.

Ndiweni, however, argued the same process will not solve the country’s crisis such as a democracy deficiency.

“The mechanism for resuscitating our democracy is an ITG. This is not a GNU,” he said in a press release.

“A GNU is not capable of resuscitating our democracy.

“We had a GNU before and here we are again in not only economic meltdown but with the total collapse of democracy engineered by an emboldened politically corrupt establishment.

“Hence let us not waste time on a GNU.

“The dialogue being championed by the current administration is also a waste of time because it is designed to ultimately lead to a GNU.

“An ITG is a highbrid government that has a fixed short term and has a specific job description. In our case, its remit is to resuscitate democracy in our country.”

Ndiweni said a template for resuscitating democracy has already been tabled, citing recommendations from election observers’ missions to the country’s 2018 harmonised elections from European Union and Commonwealth, among others.

Adopting South Africa’s rand currency and abolishing the Zimbabwe dollar, formerly the bond note will also be key for the ITG, he added.

Finance minister Mthuli Ncube and President Emmerson Mnangagwa have said the Zimbabwe dollar is going nowhere.

“The ITG will immediately at the beginning of its term of office, begin negotiations with the Republic of South Africa and Sadc as a whole to formulary adopt the Rand as our currency for the short to medium term.

“The rand is the right currency for us during this period,” Ndiweni said.

“It is advantageous to those in the diaspora e.g. UK, EC, USA and other countries that have a stronger currency than the rand.

“In terms of currency exchange rates those in the diaspora will gain and achieve a lot more here in the country with respect to development, with their hard earned funds.”

 The Standard.

ZBC Faces Eviction From Rented Properties

The Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) faces eviction from the offices it is occupying at a Masvingo building commonly known as Electricity House after it failed to pay rent, which has now accumulated to over $40 million.

The building is owned by the Zimbabwe Electricity Industry Staff Pension Fund (ZEISPF), which has since approached the High Court seeking to recover the debt from the State broadcaster.

Part of ZEISPF’s court application reads:

Plaintiff’s claim against the defendant is for an order confirming the cancellation of the lease between the parties and an order directing the defendant and all those claiming occupation through it to vacate stand No. 382 Masvingo township commonly known as Electricity House failing which the Sheriff is authorised to evict them.

The Pension Fund revealed in the court papers that ZBC was obliged to pay monthly rentals of US$950 or an equivalent of ZWL$5 700.

Dubai Takes Over Investment Made From Lobengula’s Cows

With a show of hands, a wealthy family have finally checked out of part of a business they built over a century ago from empty beer crates, and stolen cattle.

An EGM of Meikles Limited last Friday voted to sell Meikles Hotel, for decades the crown jewel of the empire. Investment firm Albwardy of the UAE, which operates hotel brands such as the Hyatt and Four Seasons, is to buy the hotel for US$20 million.

With the hotel needing reinvestment, of as much as US$30 million, and now surrounded by degradation in the CBD, the Albwardy offer looked too good to resist.

Years ago, the idea that, one day, the family would sell the hotel would have been dismissed years ago. The hotel has a special place in Zimbabwe’s commercial and political history.

The beginnings

The hotel’s story starts with brothers John, Thomas and Stewart Meikle, whose family had caught a ship from Scotland to seek better fortunes abroad. Their first venture was farming, but this soon failed, and they joined a trek north.

They arrived at Fort Victoria, now Masvingo, “with a speculative five wagons of general merchandise and three of liquor”, according to an entry in “The Guide to the Historical Manuscripts in the National archives of Rhodesia”.

After some initial success in trading, they set up a supply store, with empty crates of booze making up the walls.

John Meikle, quoted in the Rhodesian Genesis, a book on how Rhodesia was built, details their beginnings:

“We arrive at Fort Victoria on the 7th May 1891. The original site of Fort Victoria consisted of a few wattle and daub buildings and a roughly thrown up ground fort surmounted by sacks filled with sand. Ours was the first consignment of fresh stocks of general merchandise to arrive in the country since its occupation,” he writes.

“Our plans for the future were very indefinite. We decided, if we could sell out, that we would do so and return for a further lot of goods. But things were in a very bad way – there was no money in the place, very little outside capital having up to then come in to develop the mines. The pioneers were for the most part scattered over the country prospecting and pegging farms, earning next to nothing.”

The existing businessmen didn’t take too kindly to these new arrivals, he says. Soon, the Meikles decided to set up their own store, and it was with the cheapest materials they could rustle up. Straight away, they priced the products they had brought in a way to undercut the competition.

“Consequently a very rough shelter was run up, using the whiskey cases for a wall and buck-sail for a roof. We were soon ready to start business. Sugar was selling at 1/6d. per lb. and we reduced it to 6d., and other things in proportion, the result being that whatever little business was done came to us. Our fresh stocks were an additional attraction. Flour was unprocurable until then.”

Stewart remained to run the business as Tom and John returned to Pretoria to pick up more stock ordered from Durban.

“This is the story of the start of the firm of Meikle Brothers. Little did we think at the time that business would grow and develop as it has done, that the firm would eventually take a leading part in the commercial life of the country. Most things have small beginnings and our venture was one of them.”

Meikles’ cash cow

The business was growing nicely, but it needed a whole lot more to break out into more than just a corner store in a dusty outpost. This is where Allan Wilson becomes central to the story of the Meikles.

To conquer the land, Cecil John Rhodes had hired groups of settlers to repress the natives. The man heading that effort was Allan Wilson, described as skilled in the art of “kaffir warfare”. As payment, those fighting under Wilson got a farm of “3000 morgen” (2600 hectates today), 20 gold claims and a share of the plunder, “such loot being Lobengula’s personal cattle”.

“WILSON AND MYSELF MADE SOUTH WITH THE LOOT CATTLE, A BELLOWING CONFUSION OF OXEN, COWS AND CALVES…”

As John Meikle states in his diary, Rhodes set up what he called a “Looting Committee”. John was trusted by Rhodes to have a leading role in this Looting Committee. “Farm rights were also being sold for ten pounds each and loot rights were fetching twelve pounds,” he notes.

Rhodes, Meikles writes, “gave me seventy men and ammunition and told me to kill as many cattle as I wanted for food”.

He describes how “Wilson and myself made south with the loot cattle, a bellowing confusion of oxen, cows and calves”.

Of course, there was some good in all this, John Meikle wants us to believe. Lobengula had stolen the cattle himself, and women too, he says. The column had liberated these captives while looting the cattle, he argued. “In addition to the cattle, about 600 head, we brought 30 women, most of them with one or two children. These were eventually restored to their own people in the Victoria district”.

By the time it was done, the Loot Committee “eventually accounted for three hundred and sixty two thousand head of cattle”.

At the end of it, in addition to the cattle, John Meikle got a big cheque from Rhodes for his service.

Says John: “Tom (Thomas Meikle) brought some of the looted cattle for me and we were fortunate in not losing any from lung sickness.”

And so the Meikles had their capital to expand their business. “Headquarters were established in Fort Victoria and from there the brothers spread out to repeat the enterprise; Stewart to Salisbury in 1893, Thomas to Bulawayo in 1894 and John to Umtali in 1896,” one account says.

In 1915, they set up Meikles Hotel, opening it to guests on November 15 that year.

A Meikles Hotel postcard, believed to be from the 1960s New direction

Since then, overlooking the Union Jack-shaped park, the hotel has stood for years as a symbol of old white capital, and later as the centre of business and politics.

It is said the hotel hosted the first parliament of the Colony of Southern Rhodesia in 1924. On the eve of Independence, on April 17, 1980, the hotel hosted a banquet attended by Robert Mugabe and Prince Charles.

Having sold off the hotel, Meikles Limited will now turn to the other investments it has made over recent years in agriculture; Tanganga tea, avocado, coffee and macadamia estates. The company plans to spend part of the hotel sale proceeds on a solar farm at Tanganda.

The Meikles stamp on Harare remains; Strathaven and Avondale in Harare are named after the two Scottish towns from where the Meikles family came.

The Meikles Hotel represents the establishment, and, throughout history, its walls have witnessed history, from colonial times, Independence, corporate politics, and endless meetings to do with the political upheavals of the past 40 years.

Now, it takes on a new identity and direction.

So ends a chapter that began with a family of Scottish immigrants full of drive and ambition, and lots of stolen cattle. 

– Source: NewZWire

World’s Smallest Church In Uganda – Accommodates Only 3 People

See the world’s smallest church in Uganda that only accommodates three
See the world’s smallest church in Uganda that only accommodates three

According to the Guinness Book of World Records, the smallest church in the world can be found on the Niagara River close to Niagara-on-the-Lake in Canada. 

Known as the Living Water Wayside Chapel, it was built in 1969 by the Christian Reformed Church and can contain only 6 people. This fact remained undisputed until recent findings in Uganda proved that the Guinness Book of World Records needs to be updated. 

Discovered by two United Nations workers on an official mission while driving up the Biku Hill in Nebbi Town, Uganda, Solomon Oleny and his colleague, Miburu, together with their friend Godfred came across the magnificent chapel sitting gloriously on the hill.

The chapel has no known or given name yet but it’s popularly known as the Chapel on Biku Hill. Established in 1996, it was founded by now-retired Archbishop of the Church of Uganda, His Lordship Henry Luke Orombi in partnership with a Korean pastor known as Pastor Song.

Built with a mission to help Christians have a special interaction with God once they reach the hill and to have a very personal service, the magnificent but tiny building is built of stones with a height of 8ft and a width of 2.5 metres and forms part of a prayer centre located on the mountain top.

The chapel accommodates only three people with including the priest representing half the number of people who can fit into Canada’s Living Water Wayside Chapel which has been mistaken as the smallest church in the world.

According to Prime Uganda Safari, the whole centre and chapel were built aiming at spiritual healing for persons and church groups who visit for a special and personal encounter with God.

There is no known contending chapel in the world which makes the
Chapel on Biku Hill the smallest chapel in the world. The chapel sits on the hill and overlooks Congo which is a walking distance from Biku. Several people still visit to pray for their country and neighbouring countries.  

Source: Face2face Africa

Chicken Inn Workers Stage Demo Over Poor Salaries

Dear Editor- Simbisa Brands workers over the years have been complaining about low salaries and poor working conditions.

For any country’s economy to grow, workers play a major role as they provide the much-needed labor.

But in Simbisa Brands workers say they are not happy with the way they are being remunerated in a nation gripped by poverty whilst they make millions of profits.

Year after year, Simbisa workers complain of poor remuneration and working conditions.
The supervisors , complains too that top company officials are living large while the majority of the workers are struggling to make ends.

One of Chicken Inn chefs says that workers will stop complaining when the company system improves and people are able to sustain their lives.

Pizza makers argue that the company must respect its social contract with its worker by ensuring that workers are adequately paid as most of them are living below the poverty datum line of almost $RTGs340 per month for a family of six.

According to Mr Moyo, the finance director of Simbisa Brands it has been a long time since tripartite negotiations were held between top management and workers.

He says this has led to the current poor working conditions and low workers’ salaries.

Simbisa Brands workers held a meeting on Friday and they didn’t agree on anything. Instead the HR department started firing and suspending all those who said a word in that meeting.

In response all workers are going to have a sit in at 5 Avenue Complex on the 23rd of December.-Annoyed One

Public Pressure Gets President Lungu Of Zambia To Fire His Top Aide

Edgar Lungu

Zambian President Edgar Lungu has fired his special assistant for political affairs following pressure from the public.

No reasons was given for the dismissal of the scandal-ridden aide Kaizer Zulu.

In his place, President Lungu Friday appointed Chris Zimba as his new political advisor and urged him to “steer clear of trouble.”

Zimba, a youthful academic from the University of Zambia, is a PhD student in politics and holds an Master in Democracy.

Mr Zulu’s latest antics involved him instructing his “boys” to clobber a minibus driver after allegedly hitting him.

Police said they were investigating the matter but he was not summoned.

He later appeared on a TV talk show attempting to exonerate himself after much criticism.

Local media have reported incidents of him brandishing a gun in public.

He also appeared in court recently on assault charges after an incident at a guest house in the capital Lusaka.

Reality Check For Uncle Rolland As Friends Dump Him

Jane Mlambo| After his bank accounts were frozen in South Africa, trending socialite Rolland Muchegwa who has made a name for himself for partying and taking selfies with hot girls has been dumped by friends.

Posting on Twitter, Uncle Roland as he affectionately known said the people who used to follow him are now avoiding because he has gone broke.

“After my bank accounts got frozen things have changed. All the people who were following me are now avoiding me. This is the moment to see who true friends are. People love you and support you when it’s beneficial. A real friend is one who walks in when everyone is walking out,” said Muchegwa.

Muchegwa’s bank accounts were frozen by the South African Revenue Services in connection with tax evasion and since then, he has hit hard times.

Muchegwa is a successful businessman in South Africa who is believed to be worthy millions of rands.

POLAD Claims Great Achievements In 2019, But Who Really Sees Them

POLAD meeting

The permanent secretary in the Ministry of Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services, Ndavaningi Mangwana says the Political Actors Dialogue (POLAD) has made notable achievements since in inception.

Posting on microblogging site Twitter, Mangwana listed what the government considers to be POLAD’s achievements as follows:

  • The coming together of Political Actors under one banner (POLAD) and the official launch symbolised the unity of purpose.
  • The formulation of a Code of Conduct and subsequent adoption and signing of the same.
  • Visit to Cyclone Idai POLAD delegates led to conscientisation of the nation about the problem and the need for urgent intervention by different stakeholders.
  • Improved understanding by POLAD on issues affecting the country through an interface with the Minister of Finance and Economic Development, Minister of Industry and Commerce and the Governor of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe and other Government Official.
  • Acceptance and endorsement of POLAD by both SADC and AU, thereby giving impetus and relevance to POLAD as a vehicle for solving local problems without external interference.
  • Increased call for the removal of sanctions through participation at the SADC Anti-sanctions march in
    Harare.
  • Increased visibility of POLAD through social responsibility activities such as the monthly Clean-up day.
  • Increased public awareness of POLAD through extensive media coverage and debates.

POLAD was created by President Emmerson Mnangagwa as a platform for dialogue following the disputed 2018 presidential election results.

It is made up of some of the losing candidates, among them is Thokozani Khupe, Lovemore Madhuku, Brian Mteki, and Lucia Matibenga.

However, prominent opposition leaders, the likes of Nelson Chamisa, Joyce Mujuru, Noah Manyika, Nkosana Moyo, and Daniel Shumba have snubbed the platform.

Polad members Spend Day In Mnangagwa’s farm: Pics And Videos

POLAD
George Charamba
Lovemore Madhuku
View image on Twitter

“We Place This In God’s Hands,” Mubaiwa Family

businessman Kenny Mubaiwa

HARARE businessman Kenny Mubaiwa says he fears for the safety and security of his daughter Marry, who is in remand prison awaiting trial, as her impending divorce with Vice President Constantino Chiwenga looks set to shake the foundations of State security.

Marry has now clocked nine days in prison following her arrest on multiple charges of fraud, misrepresentation and violating the country’s foreign currency exchange control regulations. A charge of attempted murder on her husband was added when she appeared before a Harare magistrate on Monday.

She denies the charges and said they were motivated by her husband who she alleges is using his access to State power to punish her for wanting out of the couple’s eight years old marriage.

Speaking to The Standard, Kenny Mubaiwa said as a family, they feel their daughter could be harmed, but there is little they can do to protect her.

Kenny Mubaiwa casts his vote during the July 2018 elections

“Obviously in a case like this, we are surely worried about her,” he said. “But there is nothing we can do. We place this in God’s hands. We hope God will intervene.”

Mubaiwa’s concerns come in the wake of a video circulating on social media in which one of Marry’s uncles attacks Chiwenga for allegedly abusing his powers to settle a personal matter with his wife.

In the video, the man identified as Hannington accuses Chiwenga of disrespecting the Mubaiwa family by causing their daughter’s arrest. Mubaiwa confirmed that Hannington was his brother who is based in the United States

“He left many years ago, about 35 years ago. He is in America. But what I cannot confirm is whether he is the one who did the video,” Mubaiwa said.

Hannington said they were worried about the manner in which Marry’s case was being handled, and pleads with President Emmerson Mnangagwa to rein in his deputy who he says is setting a wrong precedence by abusing State power.

“I want to appeal to (President Emmerson) Mnangagwa to intervene in this case in such a way that our daughter is handled with the level of dignity and protection that every citizen should have.”

The Vice President filed for divorce soon after he returned from China where he spent four months being treated for suspected poisoning.

Marry said in court that her estranged husband had caused her arrest so that he gains an upper hand in the divorce case.