By Valentine Provide Makota, former Junior Member of Parliament for Bikita South
Fellow 04s, fellow young Bikitarians, it’s about time, yes we can!
Just as we’re united by that 04 prefix on our IDs, it’s possible to confront our common challenges as a united young people.
Yes we can rise above the Eastern, Western and Southern political boundaries imposed on us.
Yes we can unite in our diversity towards a Bikita we all want!
Yes we can peacefully come together regardless of our political, social, economic and religious opinions.
Yes we can renew broken dreams, after all dreams are renewable no matter what.
Yes we can redirect our frustrations and disappointment towards fighting poverty, our common enemy.
Yes we can refuse to let history judge for folding our hands and expecting anyone besides ourselves to build a Bikita We All Want .
Yes we can refuse to have a blue or red Bikita, a West or South Bikita, a Catholic or Pentecostal Bikita, a political party c and political party D Bikita
Yes we can be the torch bearers, the chosen ones, the history makers, the ambassadors of peace, the role models of generations to come!
Yes can we rise above hate, rise above our sad past, rise above different academic backgrounds.
From ward 1 to ward 32, It’s about time we join hands as the young people, in a non-partisan, peaceful, economic & social struggle for the Bikita We All Want.
Farai Dziva| Leading South African Retailer PEP has decided to pull out of Zimbabwe after “posting record losses.”
Pep has indicated it is pulling out of Zimbabwe due to losses it has been recording in the country.
The company has recorded a shocking loss of 70 million rand (US $4.8 million) this year.
“The decision to exit Zimbabwe was based on the continued adverse macroeconomic conditions affecting trading and the weakening currency,” said Pep in a statement.
Farai Dziva| Leading South African Retailer PEP has decided to pull out of Zimbabwe after “posting record losses.”
Pep has indicated it is pulling out of Zimbabwe due to losses it has been recording in the country.
The company has recorded a shocking loss of 70 million rand (US $4.8 million) this year.
“The decision to exit Zimbabwe was based on the continued adverse macroeconomic conditions affecting trading and the weakening currency,” said Pep in a statement.
Farai Dziva| Leading South African Retailer PEP is set to close its shops in Zimbabwe due to the unstable economic environment.
Pep has indicated it is pulling out of Zimbabwe due to losses it has been recording in the country.
The company has recorded a shocking loss of 70 million rand (US $4.8 million) this year.
“The decision to exit Zimbabwe was based on the continued adverse macroeconomic conditions affecting trading and the weakening currency,” said Pep in a statement.
Staff Reporter| MDC Alliance Treasurer General, Senator David Coltart’s son Doug, was over the weekend assaulted by the police, while he was on duty representing trade union leader, Obert Masaraure, at the Harare Central Police Station.
The young Coltart a leading human rights advocate, was brutally assaulted with bloody images of him being shared on social media, as his client Masaraure, President of the Amalgamated Rural Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (ARTUZ), commented on social media, “My heart bleeds for @DougColtart who was brutally assaulted when he brought me food yesterday (Saturday).”
Doug Coltart showing his swollen leg after police brutally assaulted him while representing his client over the weekend
Coltart’s bruised pictures have since gone viral on social media, with Zimbabweans reacting with utmost disgust to the level of impunity that law enforcement agents carry out their duties, violating fundamental human rights and freedoms.
This is against a background of continued police brutality, latest roundly condemned incident being last Wednesday, when scores were injured, in a security crackdown, during opposition leader Advocate Nelson Chamisa’s Hope of the Nation Address (HONA) at the party headquarters Harvest House. Many of those injured are still recovering in hospital.
Coltart indicated to Africa Legal News that he was recovering after receiving some medical attention.
“Got some cuts and bruises, but I have received medical attention,” said the human rights lawyer.
Coltart is not the first lawyer to be attacked in the line of duty, others include, incidents in 2007, when police beat up past President of the Law Society of Zimbabwe, Beatrice Mtetwa and other lawyers during a protest against harassment of lawyers and the arrest of fellow human rights lawyers Andrew Makoni and Alec Muchadehama.
Earlier this year in January lawyers in the country hit the streets in protest against being harassed while on duty.
TimesLIVE quoted Mtetwa at the time, who said that she was “excited” by the march by the country’s lawyers as she led an entourage of senior, middle and junior lawyers to hand their grievances to the court’s officials for the attention of chief justice Luke Malaba. “We want respect for the constitution, human rights and the conduct of trials to be done in a fair manner,” Mtetwa told journalists after she handed over the lawyers’ grievances to court officials.
Staff Reporter| Zimbabwe’s notorious war vets of the 70s liberation struggle, are it again, this time with fresh demands that the cash strapped government, provides them with their own bank and hospital.
Weekend publication, The Standard quotes, War Veterans Ministry secretary Mark Marongwe, who last week told Parliament that, “Women have their own bank, which was established for them, but if you look at the war heroes that fought in the liberation struggle they are not well funded in terms of self-help projects and there is need for financing to be availed so that there can be a war veterans bank where they can borrow money for self-help projects.”
He further said, “Even 39 years after independence our remaining liberation fighters are still suffering from different effects of the war and just like in other countries like the United States of America there is need for a specialised hospital to cater for our war veterans, and the hospital can raise money through charging fees to non-veteran clients.”
The demands by the veterans of the 70s liberation struggle, often leave a bad taste in the mouths of Zimbabweans, given their history in contributing to the drastic fall of the country’s economy, after they pressured the former President Robert Mugabe in 1997 to pay them each Z$500 000 in gratuities. The Zimbabwe dollar lost its value by 70 percent in one day.
Reports The Standard over the weekend, Marongwe’s suggestions were supported by the parliamentary committee whose report also recommended that the former fighters be given more land and be exempted from taxes.
The committee’s chairperson Levi Mayihlome from Zanu PF said the government should adopt a policy to ensure that once land has been allocated to war veterans, it must not be repossessed.
“The government should establish a war veterans bank which allows members to access loans at low interest rates,” he said.
“Beginning year 2020, government should also exempt war veterans from the following taxes; land, vehicles, industrial machinery, agricultural equipment levies, tollgates and parking fees.
“Widows and surviving children of war veterans must not be dispossessed of agricultural land.
“The Ministry of Defence and War Veterans should allow grass roots war veterans to elect their representatives to the board.
“The government should establish vocational training centres, which offer practical short courses in welding, plumbing, pig farming and poultry to be introduced at the beginning of year 2020.”
The committee report also said that war veterans were being ignored during government events.
Staff Reporter| Independent Member of Parliament for the Norton Constituency, Temba Mliswa, has cautioned the MDC Alliance led by Advocate Nelson Chamisa, over its continued stance of refusing to recognise President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s legitimacy, as shooting itself in the foot.
Taking to his microblogging platform on Twitter, Mliswa said, “I’ve been attacked left, right and centre for saying this but the truth of the matter is constitutionally @edmnangagwa is President for at least the next five years; it’s a ConCourt ruling. Whilst one may debate this point in bars etc, it’s a legally binding position; that’s it.”
ZimEye can report that as Mliswa made these comments early Monday morning, there is bound to be more chaos in opposition circles, as another MDC Zimbabwe party was clandestinely registered in Gweru, just when Zimbabweans are also eagerly awaiting a Supreme Court verdict over the authentic leadership of the MDC.
Mliswa cautioned that the resulting impasse in the Parliament between MDC Alliance and Zanu PF MPs, with the latter having in turn responded by refusing to recognise MDC Alliance committee chairs, means the MDC Alliance has lost some crucial spaces of influence, citing the important Public Accounts Committee, (PAC) chaired by Tendai Biti.
Biti was set to preside over a crucial hearing from the controversial Sakunda Holdings, which had to be aborted twice after Zanu PF Member of Parliament, Dexter Nduna, apparently raised a point of order as to why the PAC should be chaired by someone who does not recognise Mnangagwa’s Presidency.
Wrote Mliswa, “The position taken by @MDCAllianceZW is indeed unfortunate as @BitiTendai is a brilliant Chair who’s astute leadership is now being suppressed unnecessarily @nelsonchamisa.”
The outspoken legislator also noted that whilst MDC Alliance MPs had taken this stance their councillors have not.
“Let me try and play by hand at being a peace broker to at least justify tax payers monies which are being wasted by this stance. The Speaker has the final say however and there are processes and procedures to be followed,” said Mliswa.
It is with great pain that we share the sad news of the passing on of Cde King Siwela, father of MLO President Cde Paul Siwela.
Cde King Siwela passed on at 04:00 this morning after a long illness. Born on the 30th March 1929, he passed on at ripe age of 91 years.
We know him to be a humble man of a few words and family man who loved his children, grand children and great grand children so dearly. He is survived by 4 children, 18 grand children and 3 great grand children.
As we mourn his passing we find comfort and solace in the fact that he gave us, as MLO and people of Matabeleland at large, the priceless gift ie his son Cde Paul Siwela who is leading Matabeleland independence struggle.
Mourners are gathered at 18 Fourth Avenue Woodville, Bulawayo.
Sadly Cde Paul Siwela who could not attend his mother, Gezephi Dube’s funeral, who passed on 3 years ago, would not be able to mourn his father together with family back in Matabeleland because the oppressive Shona supremacist government of Zimbabwe is after his life. He lives with the pain of not being able to mourn his parents and being a refugee in foreign lands.
As we morn with Cde Siwela family, we ask for how long should Matebeles continue to suffer oppression and indignities at the hands of Shona supremacist government of Zimbabwe?
We extend our deepest condolences to the Siwela family and pray that his dear soul rests in peace.
Israel Dube
MLO Secretary for Information and Public Affairs
By Own Correspondent| Some news readers suggest that the Chinese might have duped Zimbabweans by “giving us a fake Chiwenga,” because this one his English is too good, his body posture too straight, and the fact that his wife, Marry is nowhere to be seen, adds weight to the mystery.
ZimEye looks to do a short live program which will explore the health of the VP Constantino Chiwenga.
It will investigate the details on the health damage Chiwenga suffered from the poison that hit him over a year ago. ZimEye has interacted with a Chinese doctor at the centre of the poisoning saga. – ZimEye.com
please check if it's really Chiwenga the Chinese gave us. This really proves to ne it's not Chiwenga that we have. Marry ndiyo key yaizotiratidza kuti it's really Chiwenga…- COMMENT pic.twitter.com/3EnhyYIjkz
It's true Chiwenga is planning to go see First Lady Grace Mugabe. But Zimbabweans need not speculate too much because Grace is his sister anyway, isnt it @mawarirej ?
Harare City Council has refused to take full responsibility for poor service delivery in the capital, saying ratepayers, who are not fulfilling their obligations, are also to blame.
Speaking at council and labour unions debriefing held in Harare last Thursday, MDC secretary for elections, who is also a Harare councillor, Jacob Mafume described the issue of service delivery as a chicken and egg situation.
“We have to pay for the services in order for the service to come. Which starts first is a debate which everyone is engaged in, but people must understand that in these days for the telephone you must pay first before using the airtime, for data you pay first before using the airtime,” Mafume said.
“The council is the only one where people get service first and pay later. We use an arrears payment process and many residents do not understand that.
“They believe they are paying for what they are getting upfront. We give you a service first and you pay for it. That system is very difficult to sustain.”
Mafume also claimed that poor service delivery could not be totally pinned down on disgruntled workers, but someone had messed up.
“We are all aware of the inflationary environment and the harsh economic times as a result of austerity measures introduced at central government level. We have been trying to catch up and find ways to alleviate the welfare of employees.” he said
“The shortcomings of the council are not really caused by disgruntled workers, someone messed up and it’s not us. We are trying to do the best we can with the lemonade we are being served.”
Mafume said issues to do with inflation, shortage of cash and liquidity should be addressed to Finance minister Mthuli Ncube.
“Concerns being raised regarding inflation, cash shortage and issues of liquidation must be addressed to Mthuli. We are hoping our colleagues will persuade minister Mthuli to delay the effort of going to space or the moon so that we can use that money to deal with people here on earth. I am sure the moon can wait for us,” Mafume said.
Local analysts have, however, raised eyebrows over the concessions made by the government to the United Arab Emirates, saying top government officials could have taken the Dubai route for personal gain.
Reports are that government intends to fast track some of the deals with UAE while extending visas of investors at the point of entry.
Mnangagwa’s government has already dispatched an ambassador to the UAE to strengthen bilateral relations at a time the Zanu PF leader, who came into office two years ago, has been globe-trotting on a private jet ostensibly “donated” to him from the enclave.
Acting Information minister Nqobizithat Mangaliso Ndlovu confirmed last week that government had approved appointment of Zimbabwe’s first ambassador to the oil-rich nation.
Ndlovu, who is the country’s Tourism minister, said there was a plan to build hotel infrastructure in Zimbabwe to specifically cater for UAE nationals.
“We are planning on hotel infrastructure to cater for their religion and that is under serious consideration,” he said.
Finance minister Mthuli Ncube yesterday defended preferential treatment extended to UAE investors, saying the oil-rich country was Zimbabwe’s second largest export destination after South Africa, and deserved such concessions.
“There is walking the talk with the promises and agreements we had with the United Arab Emirates. When Cyclone Idai struck, remember we were in the UAE and they came in to assist us. They follow up the processes and, as we speak, someone from the UAE is already in the country as part of the advance team. Whether we like it or not, they are the second largest exporter after South Africa. It is a large trading partner we cannot ignore,” Ncube said.
Cabinet on Thursday was briefed on Mnangagwa’s visit to the UAE, where he met the country’s leaders, including the Prime Minister and Vice-President Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum. Mnangagwa took with him a delegation that included 25 businesspeople.
Relations between Mnangagwa and the UAE have been subject to scrutiny, especially after reports that the President was using a private jet he allegedly was hiring at huge cost from Dubai. Mnangagwa earlier this year sought to explain the story behind the jet, saying: “I was invited by the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, Sheikh Mohammed. He hosted us well. You hear people saying I flew with a luxury jet. Those are lies, they sent us a plane.
“We did not pay anything for that plane. The crown prince sent the aeroplane to pick us up and we went and it dropped us. I told him we had a problem with availability of planes, and he said whenever I want to travel, all I need to do is call.”
Confederation of Zimbabwe Industries president Sifelani Jabangwe said he was hopeful that such deals would benefit the nation and not the foreigners and a few local elites.
“What is more important is how these deals will be structured. They must be structured in a manner that benefits Zimbabweans,” he said.
“Local content in such deals is key because it will leave benefits to Zimbabweans. In whatever way they are coming to invest, we hope they will not be like the Chinese who bring in their labourers and their equipment.”
Analyst Rashweat Mukundu said there was need for government to be clear and transparent in such deals, adding that without such, there was reason to suspect dodgy deals.
“Some of the Middle East countries are not known for doing business in a transparent manner and these are countries that tend to manage business deals using underhand methods, moreso, bribing the top leadership and benefiting in whatever manner,” he said.
“So, my fear is that the coming in of the Arab investors outside the legal framework of investment in Zimbabwe, outside the publicity of what is it that they will be doing, the logical conclusion is those deals are shady and will not necessarily benefit Zimbabwe, but a few of our political leaders who are in talks with the investors from the United Arab Emirates.
“It is in the interest of the Zimbabwean government that any business deals be done in the open so that they build confidence in other potential investors.
“To me, it is a clear indication that our political leaders are either being corrupted, being naïve or are benefiting at a personal level and not necessarily looking at investment as a national benefit.”
“It was the president’s briefing. Anything to do with the president contact Mr Charamba.”
military spokesman, Zimbabwe Defence Forces, Col Mugwisi
By Own Correspondent| Following a report that heads of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces on Saturday night met and chose to brief their Commander in Chief Emmerson Mnangagwa saying that there is a security crisis requiring urgent attention, ZimEye sought to obtain direct comments from both Mnangagwa and the military (continue reading).
The ZDF Commander Valerio Sibanda told his boss “the security situation haina kumira mushe, there’s suddenly too much chatter of a coup and suggested to put the country on high alert or even State Emergency. He also said a lot of commanders are suddenly showing defiance to him, ” the report says.
The briefing also came amid rumors that a junior soldier in the Presidential guard fired a full round of bullets into the air protesting the biting economic situation in the country. Government has so far dismissed the rumor as untrue.
Simba Chikanza
There are fears that if the government goes ahead to declare a state of emergency, the military will be used to attack civilians as Mnangagwa works to per chance suppress the simmering public anger. Already, controversial agents like one Tinashe Jonas, linked to the Team Ferret terror gang, had gone ahead to throw emotion triggers in the way seen to serve to justify the looming crimes against humanity.
The military spokesman Col Everson Mugwisi made the following responses in an interview with ZimEye’s Simba Chikanza (SC) late Sunday.
VIDEO LOADING BELOW
SC: Col Mugwisi I just wanted to ask about the state of emergency briefing made to his excellency today and to hear if the ZDF and the government are going to proceed in declaring a state of emergency tomorrow(Monday).
Mugwisi: What state of emergency are you talking about?
https://youtu.be/POHngVgMuw0
SC: Well there was a briefing today wasn’t there… there was a briefing by the generals to the president about the crisis in the country that there is a state of alarm in the community and much talk about a coup.
Mugwisi: Err I am a defence spokesperson. I don’t speak on behalf of the president I think you need to talk to Mr Charamba. It was the president’s briefing. Anything to do with the president contact Mr Charamba.
SC: But the briefing was done to the president isn’t it?
Mugwisi: I think I have made myself very clear that those issues are dealt with by the presidential office; you speak to the presidential spokesperson Mr Charamba. Is that clear enough?
SC: Lastly sir, we saw in January, a spate of violence amid allegations of the military being part of the unleashing of violence. Would the ZDF be there to ensure that there is no repeat of such this time?
Mugwisi: Are you saying the ZDF embarked on violence?
SC: Well, there were uniforms there were military uniforms and the evidence showed that they were soldiers and even the president spoke about soldiers being out of line when he came back from Russia.
Mugwisi: Oh well, I think to be fair you need to send your questions through my email address and I will respond to you formally because you are saying there are people who were involved in violence and you are not sure if they are ZDF.
SC: No I said the president spoke about it, the president in a statement when he returned.
Mugwisi: What did he say?
SC: When he returned.
SC: He said there was insubordination among the security forces; he mentioned it in a statement so, what I am saying is, will the ZDF be there to ensure that there is no repeat of insubordination?
Mugwisi: Err, security forces what’s your interpretation of security forces is it just the zdf?
SC: In this case the area of security forces involved the use of ammunition so I believe this will clearly involve the ZDF.
Mugwisi: But is it only the ZDF that uses ammunition?
SC: No but obviously it is the ZDF that was involved even in clearing and assisting the police in January.
Mugwisi: Ok thank you very much Mr journalist can you send me your questions via email so that I can respond to you formally.
Efforts to get a comment from Mnangagwa were fruitless as his spokesman George Charamba’s phone went unanswered. His other cellphone line kept bouncing into voicemail.
By Correspondent| As the Zanu PF December annual conference nears, Mashonaland East has endorsed Emmerson Mnangagwa as the party’s candidate for the 2023 elections.
The province reaffirmed him at a provincial conference at Goromonzi High School at the weekend.
Said provincial chairperson and Joel Biggie Matiza:
As we move towards the annual people’s conference, the province endorsed our leader, Comrade Emmerson Mnangagwa, as the sole candidate for the 2023 elections. This was one of the major resolutions passed during the provincial conference.
The party’s annual conference will be held from 10 to 15 December 2019.
Own Correspondent| On Saturday morning, Zimbabweans were shocked to learn that vice President Constantino Chiwenga who was away for more than four months seeking medical attention in China had landed at the Robert Mugabe International airport.
Present at the airport were only his two brothers and Deputy Ambassador to China and none from the government or Zanu PF party.
Conspicuously absent was his wife Marry who has not been seen with the retired general since reports of conflict between the two began surfacing.
While there has not been an explanation on why Marry was not present to meet her husband, various sources who spoke to ZimEye have given conflicting statements on the issues surrounding the powerful couple.
The first source alleged that Marry and Chiwenga were no longer in talking terms amid claims that the former model was suspected of leaking sensitive information to President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s faction.
The source added that Marry was sent back home from China with the retired army general not interested in seeing her again.
But another source gave a different story, suggesting that she was in the same plane only to come out later.
They told ZimEye: “a few days ago she had traveled I guess to pick him up. Also, she doesn’t have to come out of the plane the same time with him.”
Footage at the airport Saturday morning however has no Marry, and her absence became more conspicuous hours later when Emmerson Mnangagwa visited Chiwenga at his house.
Another source told ZimEye that soldiers from 1 Commando cordoned off the airport with ministers afraid to go see Chiwenga so they cannot be seen as his backers.
The source added that there was mood of suspense at state house due to the fact that Chiwenga was infuriated when he heard that Mnangagwa had approached Joice Mujuru to replace him while he was still in China.
“But as far as the army is concerned Mnangagwa has done his homework by appointing his own relative Valerio Sibanda the Commander Of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces. It is thus highly unlikely that the military will remove Mnangagwa.
Own Correspondent|A new political party known as MDC Zimbabwe has been added into the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission data based.
The New political party notified ZEC of its existence in a letter on Friday.
To whom it may concern
This serves to notify ZEC of the Movement for Democratic change Zimbabwe political party’s (MDC ZIMBABWE) existence. Here is the leadership for the MDC Zimbabwe party: President : Thulani Ndebele Vice President : Lwazi Mbowa National Chair : Dick Kamuchivende Secretary General : Victor Mpofu Treasure General : Yasini Chiwisa Youth Chair : Revonia Zinzile Moyo Ndlovu. Please find attached our signed notification letter, copy of the constitution and logo .
Thank you for your consideration.
Thulani Ndebele
ZEC has since accepted the notification from the new party without questioning the similarity of the name to the MDC led by Nelson Chamisa and the MDC-T led by Thokozani Khupe.
“It was the president’s briefing. Anything to do with the president contact Mr Charamba.”
military spokesman, Zimbabwe Defence Forces, Col Mugwisi
By Own Correspondent| Following a report that heads of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces on Saturday night met and chose to brief their Commander in Chief Emmerson Mnangagwa saying that there is a security crisis requiring urgent attention, ZimEye sought to obtain direct comments from both Mnangagwa and the military (continue reading).
The ZDF Commander Valerio Sibanda told his boss “the security situation haina kumira mushe, there’s suddenly too much chatter of a coup and suggested to put the country on high alert or even State Emergency. He also said a lot of commanders are suddenly showing defiance to him, ” the report says.
The briefing also came amid rumors that a junior soldier in the Presidential guard fired a full round of bullets into the air protesting the biting economic situation in the country. Government has so far dismissed the rumor as untrue.
Simba Chikanza
There are fears that if the government goes ahead to declare a state of emergency, the military will be used to attack civilians as Mnangagwa works to per chance suppress the simmering public anger. Already, controversial agents like one Tinashe Jonas, linked to the Team Ferret terror gang, had gone ahead to throw emotion triggers in the way seen to serve to justify the looming crimes against humanity.
The military spokesman Col Everson Mugwisi made the following responses in an interview with ZimEye’s Simba Chikanza (SC) late Sunday.
VIDEO LOADING BELOW
SC: Col Mugwisi I just wanted to ask about the state of emergency briefing made to his excellency today and to hear if the ZDF and the government are going to proceed in declaring a state of emergency tomorrow(Monday).
Mugwisi: What state of emergency are you talking about?
https://youtu.be/POHngVgMuw0
SC: Well there was a briefing today wasn’t there… there was a briefing by the generals to the president about the crisis in the country that there is a state of alarm in the community and much talk about a coup.
Mugwisi: Err I am a defence spokesperson. I don’t speak on behalf of the president I think you need to talk to Mr Charamba. It was the president’s briefing. Anything to do with the president contact Mr Charamba.
SC: But the briefing was done to the president isn’t it?
Mugwisi: I think I have made myself very clear that those issues are dealt with by the presidential office; you speak to the presidential spokesperson Mr Charamba. Is that clear enough?
SC: Lastly sir, we saw in January, a spate of violence amid allegations of the military being part of the unleashing of violence. Would the ZDF be there to ensure that there is no repeat of such this time?
Mugwisi: Are you saying the ZDF embarked on violence?
SC: Well, there were uniforms there were military uniforms and the evidence showed that they were soldiers and even the president spoke about soldiers being out of line when he came back from Russia.
Mugwisi: Oh well, I think to be fair you need to send your questions through my email address and I will respond to you formally because you are saying there are people who were involved in violence and you are not sure if they are ZDF.
SC: No I said the president spoke about it, the president in a statement when he returned.
Mugwisi: What did he say?
SC: When he returned.
SC: He said there was insubordination among the security forces; he mentioned it in a statement so, what I am saying is, will the ZDF be there to ensure that there is no repeat of insubordination?
Mugwisi: Err, security forces what’s your interpretation of security forces is it just the zdf?
SC: In this case the area of security forces involved the use of ammunition so I believe this will clearly involve the ZDF.
Mugwisi: But is it only the ZDF that uses ammunition?
SC: No but obviously it is the ZDF that was involved even in clearing and assisting the police in January.
Mugwisi: Ok thank you very much Mr journalist can you send me your questions via email so that I can respond to you formally.
Efforts to get a comment from Mnangagwa were fruitless as his spokesman George Charamba’s phone went unanswered. His other cellphone line kept bouncing into voicemail.
Express.co.uk|DONALD TRUMP’s appearance during a medal ceremony has sparked major fears for his health after he appeared to “wobble”.
The US President awarded the National Medal of Arts to Oscar-winning actor Jon Voight. In video footage from the event, Trump appeared unsteady on his legs, sparking concerns for his health from commenters on Twitter. One wrote: “Trump is NOT looking well!!
“It almost seems like he needs to lean on the podium to keep himself standing!!”
Another said: “Two thoughts.
“1)Any 250lb human body frame carrying 200 additional lbs would tend to weeble wobble.
“2)A human being with two faces has to let one of them rest sometimes, hence the uncomfortable wobbling.”
Donald Trump health news: fears for US President after he ‘wobbles’ during medal ceremony (Image: GETTY)Mr Voight is a renowned supporter of Trump (Image: GETTY)
Mr Voight is a renowned supporter of Trump.
He has starred in hit films such as Ali and Midnight Cowboy.
He won his sole Oscar in 1978 for his role in Coming Home.
Mr Voight is also the father of legendary actress Angelina Jolie.
Mr Voight is also the father of legendary actress Angelina Jolie (Image: GETTY)
During the speech at Mr Voight’s win, Trump said: “Each of today’s recipients has made outstanding contributions to American society, culture and life.
“They exemplify the genius, talent and creativity of our exceptional nation.”
It comes after Trump’s physician gave an update on the President’s health after he was taken to hospital earlier this month.
Trump was reportedly “rushed” to hospital after being spotted with a full escort of Secret Service officials.
Trump’s health has sparked concerns previously (Image: GETTY)
The unscheduled medical tests sparked fears and concerns among the public.
However, it was initially played down by his White House colleagues.
They insisted that Trump was having his annual checkup at the Walter Medical Centre.
In a statement shared on Twitter, the physician said that they “will continue to monitor the President’s health, planning a more comprehensive examination after the New Year”.
The Trump family tree (Image: EXPRESS)
The physician explained that the examination was part of a “routine, planned interim checkup” which was part of the “regular, primary preventative care he receives throughout the year”.
The trip was “kept off the record due to scheduling uncertainties”, the expert continued.
The doctor added: “Primary preventative medical care is something that occurs continuously throughout the year, it is not just a single annual event.
“As such, I will continue to monitor the President’s health, planning on a more comprehensive examination after the New Year.”
These pics you need to verify. I saw a vid that terrified me of an elephant being loaded in a car,a type of car we don't even have in this country…we will never sell our wildlife outside the provisions of @CITES,minister tells @BBCHARDtalk WATCH FULL INTERVIEW ON @BBCWorld -BBC pic.twitter.com/QAmSbi9mre
Own Correspondent |Two years ago, there was the promise of a bright new dawn in Zimbabwe as the country’s army forced long-time dictator President Robert Mugabe from office.
His deputy, Emmerson Mnangagwa, has not only disappointed those who had faith in him to chart a new course, but he has increasingly become a caricature of a despotic African ruler.
He crushes any dissent ruthlessly – as he did a few days ago when his cops beat defenceless civilians in Harare, for the simple crime of wanting to listen to an opposition leader.
His presidential motorcade stretches for as many as 42 vehicles.
His stretch Mercedes-Benz limo – equalled only in opulence by the vehicles favoured by the region’s other tin-pot dictator, eSwatini King Mswati – roars through the streets while his people starve.
Now, he has renamed at least 10 streets after himself and other “heroes of the revolution”, including Congo’s Patrice Lumumba, Jomo Kenyatta of Kenya, as well as Cuba’s Fidel Castro and China’s Mao Zedong.
Mnangagwa lives in his own egotistical ’60s socialist bubble while Zimbabweans flee for a chance at a better life.
Opinion: Paidamoyo Muzulu|IT was never going to be easy, being in uncle Robert Mugabe’s shoes, for he was a man of intellect and charm in equal measure. He commanded respect without demanding it and his friends would always whisper advice to him, but things have taken a nasty turn and Zimbabwe can be berated from the rooftops.
President Emmerson Mnangagwas is in the spotlight, all for the wrong reasons and more importantly being big on rhetoric and short on delivery. Mnangagwa’s three closest allies when he took over power via a coup two years ago; China, South Africa and the United Kingdom, have all come out chiding him like a naughty kid in a week Zimbabwe would want to forget quickly.
The United Kingdom was the first to whisper and then loudly speak out about the political reforms that are taking place at a snail’s pace. They made it clear, Mnangagwa was being a disappointment after coming in with a lot of promise and zeal to change course for the country after taking over from Mugabe.
The UK had feted Mnangagwa, gave him acres of space in their influential mainstream Press to talk about reforms and fashioning his new path. They clapped for him, pleaded for him to be given a chance arguing Mugabe’s messy was endemic and, therefore, needed some time to sweep away.
However, on hindsight, it could be that ambassador Catriona Liang was massively handholding him, chaperoning him in the “right direction” until her reassignment to Nigeria leaving poor Mnangagwa high and dry.
Our South African neighbours were cordial and hoped that Zimbabwe, the regional problem child, was on the mend and needed all the support under the new regime. However, soon they realised they were backing a wrong horse; a regime that did not respect contracts and was pulling them down when Zimbabwe started renegading on Eskom debt.
For once, South Africa this week dumped former President Thabo Mbeki’s “quiet diplomacy” and went for the “megaphone diplomacy”. International Relations minister Naledi Pandor in a rare public lecture said: “By all accounts, there are serious and seemingly intractable political factors that might need attention if solutions are to be effective or implementable. The political formations in Zimbabwe remain at loggerheads and have apparent deep antipathy toward each other which makes joint decision making and planning extremely difficult.” Pandor said.
She, more importantly, added: “It seems clear that even as we support the call for an end to economic sanctions, the political dynamics are inextricably linked to the economic and thus should be confronted simultaneously. This can only be led from Zimbabwe and would certainly ease the development of Sadc contributions in response to the emergent compact.”
Mnangagwa was left in a corner with little room to manoeuvre, but engage his local nemesis Nelson Chamisa if he has to get the regional support. South Africa is not only big in size, but it also has the economic and military mighty to get Zimbabwe to heel. Mnangagwa may have to start thinking about where to sit at the next Sadc Summit.
The Chinese were last to speak and they were lethally brutal in their censure. They literally called Mnangagwa’s regime LIARS. They said Finance minister Mthuli Ncube had understated Chinese bilateral aid to Zimbabwe in the current financial year by a whoping US$133 million. In an unprecedented public statement the Chinese embassy said: “The embassy has noted that the statement, among development partner support received by the Zimbabwean government through bilateral channels, the figure of bilateral support provided by China to Zimbabwe is US$3 631 500. This is very different from the actual situation on the ground,” adding that, “According to our record, from January to September 2019, the actual bilateral support provided to Zimbabwe by China is US$136,8 million. Such a figure does not include the other bilateral supports such as the expert assistance, embassy’s donations to local vulnerable groups and so on.”
Mnangagwa’s regime had no coherent response, except to issue a feeble statement after some tea with Chinese embassy officials. “The two sides have reached an agreement on the facts and figures contained in the statement issued by the embassy on November 19, 2019 and the national 2020 budget statement,” Ncube said without elaborating what were the actual figures.
It needs no rocket science to tell that Mnangagwa is now on his own, a blacksheep among the flock and many would deal with him from a distance like a leper till he cleanses himself and his regime. This may be the reason he has chosen to break out of his cocoon and unleash his dark side on the opposition and civil society activists.
The short-sweet honeymoon is over and everyone demands action from Mnangagwa. This may be a tall order for a man who is fighting hard to consolidate his power with whispers of a palace coup getting louder each passing day. Mnangagwa has a stark choice to make; reform or perish.
Paidamoyo Muzulu is a journalist . He writes in his personal capacity
Correspondent|Police have been notified of a demonstration planned by bank workers this Thursday.
Zimbabwe Banks and Allied Workers Union (Zibawu) said the demonstration is intended to protest against Finance minister Mthuli Ncube’s “unfavourable policies”.
At least 300 union members will demonstrate at Ncube’s offices at New Government Complex in Harare.
In a notice received by the officer commanding Harare Central police station on Friday, Zibawu said the demonstration would draw Ncube’s attention to the plight of workers in the financial services sector.
Finance and Economic Development Minister Professor Ncube said Government had not banned calculations of annual inflation rate but the actualities would be determined using the monthly inflation figures.
He said accounting rules allowed the use of such a methodology and said the previous methodology was inconsistent owing to variances of currencies that applied in the previous year.
Prof Ncube said this while fielding questions from journalists during a media briefing that was held in Harare last Friday. “I did not ban inflation figures. We said the year on year on inflation, the methodology we were using was inconsistent because the current regimes were different. We were comparing a US dollar regime which is pre-February 2019 to a Zimbabwean dollar post that date. We have done that before, we are probably the leaders in it in the world, we did it in 2009, there is nothing new, just wait for two months you will get the year on year inflation in February,” said Prof Ncube.
“There is month on month inflation and the accounting rules allow for the use of month on month inflation indices and accountancy knows this, there is no problem, there is no challenge at all. We expect them (Zimstart) to do their inflation adjusting accounting on the back of the month on month inflation.”
Prof Ncube said Government was determined to fulfil everything that it promised including payment of bonuses for civil servants this month instead of staggering it up to next month.
Turning to industry, Prof Ncube said Government would allow industry to borrow money on the back of guarantee from the State.
“We are proposing something new in industry to support that micro-aspect of industry as a driver of the economy. We are proposing a guarantee scheme for industry to access credit from financial system on the back of a Government guarantee. So we are working on the modalities. This is targeted at retooling and trade financing. Industry is a low hanging fruit, we want industry that is driven by research from our universities and innovation hubs. We will also make sure that industry comes closer to our universities for the research driven industrialisation opportunities.”
State Media|Stakeholders in the informal sector say the 2020 National Budget does not adequately address the sector’s concerns, despite its immense contribution to economic development.
Key among these concerns are the formalisation of the sector as well as provision of decent work
space that should enhance production output, job creation as well as overall contribution to the economy.
At a Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt Development (ZIMCODD) post budget seminar with members of the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Finance held on Friday in the capital, stakeholders concurred the sector had been overlooked in the 2020 National Budget, although it has anchored the economy in the past two decades following an economic downturn that saw bigger corporations downsizing operations while others eventually closed.
Vendors Initiative for Social and Economic Transformation executive director Samuel Wadzai pointed out that one of the major concerns for the sector was lack of decent working space which he said the 2020 National Budget failed to address.
“Without being pessimistic, there were efforts by the Minister to contribute to the development of the sector, such as the $90 million for development purposes, but much could have been done especially on ensuring there is creation for adequate operating space for the informal sectors, with adequate facilities like running water, toilets, sheds so that traders are able to operate from spaces that are conducive for business,” he said in an interview on the sidelines of the seminar.
“On the issue of formalisation of the sector, it’s important that the Government speedily moves to ensure there is conformity and what the International Labour Organisation call recommendation 204, which calls for the formalisation of the informal sector is actualised in Zimbabwe,” he said.
Mr Wadzai also bemoaned the lack of training for the sector, yet this could help improve
production and profitability for the sector that employs an estimated 80 percent of Zimbabwe’s population.
“We need to see Government inject money to support these processes for the informal sector. We also want to benefit from any tax holidays that may be available for businesses while also contributing to economic growth,” he said.
On November 14, Finance and Economic Development Minister Mthuli Ncube presented the 2020 National Business themed “Gearing for higher productivity, growth and job creation”.
Minister Ncube said Government will continue to play a key role in capitalising various institutions which support women, youth and medium and small-scale enterprises (MSMEs) besides facilitating access to markets, workspace, trade promotion and capacity building, among other functions.
In light of this, Treasury allocated $90 million to capitalise the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Corporation (SMEDCO) as part of initiatives to support budding enterprises.
Other institutions supporting MSMEs projects such as Women Development Fund, Community Development Fund, Zimbabwe Women Micro-finance Bank and Empower Bank were also allocated $20 million, $15 million, $100 million and $50 million in that order.
The Treasury boss also highlighted the importance of creating linkages between MSMEs and large enterprises which he said played a critical role in
the development of industry and creation of employment.
Vice President Constantino Chiwenga who arrived in the country on Saturday from China seen here with President Emmerson Mnangagwa
ZANU-PF secretary for Information and Publicity Simon Khaya Moyo has thanked Zimbabweans for praying for Vice President Constantino Chiwenga who was hospitalised in China for four months.
Vice President Chiwenga arrived back home early Saturday morning.
On Saturday morning, President Mnangagwa and First Lady Auxillia Mnangagwa visited VP Chiwenga’s home where they expressed delight at VP Chiwenga’s recovery.
In a statement, Khaya Moyo said: “The revolutionary party welcomes home the indomitable Vice President Retired General Dr Constantino Chiwenga after a spell in the People’s Republic of China for medical attention.
“The Vice President is also the second secretary of the party. I have no doubt that every patriotic Zimbabwean is filled with warm delight for his recovery and return. God is great and we praise him with great reverence, he is indeed worth the praise. The party further expresses its superlative gratitude to His Excellency Cde Mnangagwa for facilitating necessary arrangements for VP Chiwenga’s treatment.
“This is exemplary leadership and comradeship. The revolutionary Zanu-PF wishes the revered Vice President excellent health, rewarding duty performance and long life. Forward with unity, peace and development.”
Khaya Moyo hailed cordial relations between Zimbabwe and China.
“China is indeed our all-weather friend and we appreciate the medical services rendered to our Vice President,” he said.
Speaking to journalists upon his arrival, VP Chiwenga said: “I feel very good and I would want to thank all Zimbabweans for their prayers whilst I was away. Many people prayed for me and I would really want to appreciate it.
“I would also want to thank His Excellency the President who managed to speak to his brother, President Xi, that I manage to get treatment in the People’s Republic of China. The treatment went on very well, extremely well and I am feeling much better, fit and I think everything possible was done and I am much better and raring to go and join the team in building our country.”
VP Chiwenga implored all Zimbabweans to work towards improving the fortunes of the country.
“To our leadership, let us work to achieve the vision our President has set for 2030. Let’s work with him tirelessly to ensure everything is achieved.”
State Media|The Zimbabwe National Army (ZNA) will remain committed to undertaking training needed to meet threats from hostile elements using violence to disturb peace in the nation, ZNA Commander Lieutenant-General Edzai Chimonyo has said.
https://youtu.be/POHngVgMuw0
Officiating during the wings parade at Parachute Regiment at Inkomo Barracks last week to confer parachute insignia on 30 soldiers of the special forces units who completed the parachute course, Lt-Genl Chimonyo said the ZNA will not be deterred from perfoming its constitutional mandate of providing security to Zimbabwe.
“Your graduation comes at a time when the organisation is facing a number of resources challenges but in spite of that, your successful completion of this training today represents the ZNA’s awesome determination of ensuring that its members are prepared to defend the country against all forms of threats through meaningful training,” said Lt-Gen Chimonyo.
“These continuous attacks are meant to scare us and hence force us to dance according to their tune. As a nation we are, however, not scared, more so when we have warriors who are determined to give their lives in defence of our country,” the ZNA Commander said.
Lt-Gen Chimonyo applauded the special forces for their dedication to duty by training with limited resources.
“Today in conferring wings to you graduands, we are not only celebrating your achievements but also your commitment to the total and selfless defence of the country. As members of Zimbabwe’s elite troops, you are among the first to deploy on the ground in all our operations and it is therefore important for you to clearly understand your unique and prestigious role,” he said.
Lt-Gen Chimonyo also applauded the people for defending the nation through uniting and speaking with one voice during the recently held anti-sanctions campaign.
“The people of Zimbabwe supported the Southern African Development Community (SADC), reminiscent to the days of the liberation struggle, rose up to call for the lifting of the illegal sanctions that were unfairly imposed on our Motherland.”
“The stance taken by our people against sanctions as seen during the anti-sanctions march on October 25, 2019 complements the purpose for our existence as members of the ZNA and specifically your existence as members of our elite forces.
Meanwhile, the ZNA says it will continue to deploy personnel to Chimanamani to speed up the reconstruction of bridges, infrastructure and foster development in the Cyclone Idai-affected areas.
Speaking during a combined graduation at the Zimbabwe School of Military Engineering (ZSME) in Harare last week, Brigadier-General Staff, Brigadier-General Steven Gwekwerere said the ZNA will train more engineers to be deployed in cyclone-hit areas to expedite development.
“The engineers who have graduated will go to Chimanimani to increase the number of engineers who are working with the South Africans in order to repair infrastructure that was destroyed during Cyclone Idai which hit the area. ZNA has been doing this for long as part of military aid to civil authority,” he said.
Reconstruction of the destroyed areas remains a top priority for the ZNA and Government, hence the army will continue to train more engineers to boost the required strength of manpower that can effectively quicken the exercise,
He said the engineering courses remained at the core of training for the ZNA
Brig-Gen Gwekwerere said the ZNA would continue to help civil communities in times of disaster as part of its constitutional mandate.
The ZNA played a critical role in the evacuation of pupils at St Charles Lwanga School in Chimanimani when Cyclone Idai which hit the area in March.
As a gesture of regional military cooperation, the South African government donated two Baily bridges which the SANDF engineers, under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel D Ncjoko, to work with their ZNA counterparts to lay over Rusitu and Nyahode rivers in Chimanimani district, which upon completion would assist in improving accessibility to the areas.
In a separate development, 42 soldiers graduated at Kaguvi Barracks last week after completing a four-month basic stores course.
Presiding over the graduation, ZNA Clothing Factory manager Lieutenant-Colonel Caroline Hunidzarira urged the graduates to put to good use the knowledge obtained during training.
“You need to practise so that you gain more experience from what you learnt during the course,” she said.
Government’s intention to stop medical aid societies from owning hospitals, pharmacies and laboratories could disadvantage over a million people on medical insurance and other low-to-medium income earners.
The Government has been considering introducing a Medical Aid Bill that will, among other issues, prevent medical aid societies from providing services.
This will expose people on medical aid to highly priced medical services and in turn lead to quick exhaustion of one’s benefits before receiving comprehensive care.
Health and Child Care Minister Dr Obadiah Moyo has on several occasions warned medical aid societies to “put their house in order” arguing that there was “a huge conflict of interest”.
“Medical insurers should concentrate on funding and service providers should concentrate on service provision. I hope this message gives enough warning and ample time for us to start preparing for the new dispensation,” Dr Moyo was quoted as saying last month during the Association of Healthcare Funders of Zimbabwe (AHFoZ) annual conference.
A random check by The Herald has shown that the pricing of services in medical aid-administered health facilities is cheaper compared to prices in other private health facilities.
For example, some private dentists are charging about $480 as consultation fees, while some facilities owned by health insurers are charging as low as $50 for the same service.
Surgical tooth extraction at private facilities costs about $1 200 against $350.
The costs of laboratory services administered by health insurers are also cheaper by almost 50 percent.
The case for facilities owned by health insurers has been further strengthened over the past three months that Government doctors have been on strike, resulting in public health facilities operating at suboptimal levels, leading to a lot of pressure on private and mission hospitals.
The situation has been worsened by the strike by Harare City Council nurses that has resulted in only six out of 37 clinics operating.
The facilities have averted a potential health disaster as they have catered for their members who would otherwise have also been queuing for services with other people who are not on medical aid.
AHFoZ chief executive officer Ms Shylet Sanyanga said these medical aid-administered facilities were not a conflict of interest, but were complementing Government’s efforts in providing the much-needed care.
She said in line with good corporate governance practices, these facilities are run by separate business units, properly constituted and running separately from the medical aid society.
“The healthcare facilities are complementing the Government by providing services and saving lives of the people of this country who would otherwise have no alternative to turn to, given the prevailing pricing mismatches and shortfalls. The ordinary person will have less options to turn to,” said Ms Sanyanga.
Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Health and Child Care chairwoman Dr Ruth Labode said the current state of affairs provides an opportunity for policymakers to reflect on the impact of some of their decisions.
She said while Parliament was still waiting to see and debate on the proposed Bill, should it include a provision banning medical aid societies from offering health services, the provision is likely to be resisted considering that most low to medium-income earners were benefiting from the same arrangement.
“That provision might not pass in Parliament because as we speak, most civil servants are actually relying on this arrangement. Public hospitals are closed and private facilities are much more expensive.
“Patients have little option and these facilities have played a greater role in making health services accessible at affordable prices, particularly for civil servants,” she said- state media
FORMER First Lady Grace Mugabe’s language was foul, vulgar and stinking to the heavens, a sign of immaturity in politics, veteran freedom fighter and former Cabinet Minister Retired Colonel Tshinga Dube has said.
In his autobiography titled “Quiet Flows The Zambezi”, launched at the Bulawayo National Art Gallery on Friday evening, Retired Colonel Dube, a Zanu-PF Politburo member, wrote that Mrs Mugabe was crude and was the reason behind the subsequent fall of the late former president Robert Mugabe.
Rtd Col Dube said Mrs Mugabe’s immaturity in politics started showing when she used unorthodox means to push former Vice-President Joice Mujuru from her post and Zanu-PF in 2014.
“She was extremely crude and vulgar. Her language was obscene and uncouth, to say the least,” writes Rtd Col Dube.
He said Mrs Mugabe, in her typical crude tirades, made accusations against former VP Mujuru some which bordered on witchcraft and prostitution.
“Some of us knew VP Mujuru to be a respectable person. All the denigration and insults she received were calculated to bring her down so that the First Lady would rise,” he said.
“Her language was foul, vulgar and stinking to the heavens. She solicited support from some party heavy weights,” he said.
Rtd Col Dube said Mrs Mugabe, teamed with some G40 elements such as former Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Development Professor Jonathan Moyo to try to use the same tactic to push out President Emmerson Mnangagwa (then VP) in 2017.State media
Vice President Dr Constantino Chiwenga says timely intervention by President Mnangagwa to engage his Chinese counterpart, President Xi Jinping, to facilitate his airlift to Beijing for specialist care and treatment prevented his “imminent death” and saved his life.
In July, the President made the decision when VP Chiwenga was battling for life in the intensive care unit of a South African hospital.
At the time, the VP suffered memory lapses, speech impairment and excruciating pain.
However, in what has been an extraordinary recovery story, VP Chiwenga — who arrived home in the early hours of Saturday after a four-month absence — yesterday looked fit and agile when he received President Mnangagwa at his home.
The duo shared a hearty embrace before an hour-and-half private engagement.
Emerging from the meeting, a visibly elated President Mnangagwa, who was accompanied by First Lady Auxillia Mnangagwa, explained the VP’s path to recovery.
“When he left he was unwell, which was giving us sleepless nights because our comrade was unwell,” said the President.
“So we arranged for him to go to South Africa and while he was there, we spoke to our Chinese friends, we spoke to President Xi Jinping, who is our dear friend, who offered to assist with his treatment.
“We saw it fit for the VP to go to China. We flew him there and he stayed there for a number of months. Now you can see for yourselves that he has regained his fitness and he is clear-minded.
“When he initially left he was having memory lapses, and he was in so much pain that everyone could tell the agony he was in.”
VP Chiwenga, he said, is now “raring to go”.
“I am confident that now the whole of Zimbabwe knows that the Vice President is back and fit, and he is very clear and raring to go. That is why I said God is there because my colleague is back and we can now put our heads together to uplift the country.”
When The Sunday Mail asked him when the VP was expected back in office, President Mnangagwa responded: “You can see the way he looks now, but on my part, I am not too concerned about him returning back to work, I am more concerned about his welfare and that he is back to full fitness. But as someone who is coming from being ill, I only wish for him to start his duties slowly and move progressively to take up more work. You can see for yourselves that the man is glowing.”
The President also revealed that the VP’s ill-health had “affected him personally”, adding that his return had brought him immense relief.
He said he also sent a special message of thanks to President Xi Jinping for facilitating VP Chiwenga’s treatment.
“I am also very grateful to my brother, the President of the People’s Republic of China whom I talked to and he said he will do his best and instruct his system to do their best to look after your Vice President, and that has been done.
“And I have sent a letter to President Xi Jinping thanking him for the role he played in looking after my VP.
Besides that, I have also asked General Chiwenga on how was the care in the hospital and he says, ‘Mukoma, ndakabatwa zvakanaka, I can’t think of anything else or wish for anything else . . .’”
With a voice full of life, VP Chiwenga thanked the President for his judicious decision to send him to China for treatment.
“And I want to thank personally my President, His Excellency President Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa, if he had not intervened the time I was in the intensive care in South Africa, I could have been history by now, and when he communicated with his counterpart President Xi Jinping, I was then taken to China . . . he did not act as the President but acted as my brother to make sure that I survive . . .
“And I would also want, before I go far, to thank the people of Zimbabwe for their prayers; those prayers from across the country helped my recovery.”
He also explained his hospital stint and recovery.
“Up to yesterday, from the time I left, I had spent 123 days in hospital. When I got there it was the 21st of July and got my discharge certificate later on after 123 days.
“I feel strong and I am raring to go for work . . . everything possible was done; they left no stone unturned . . . so I am very fit and happy.”
He said he had already resumed his duties.
It is now incumbent upon us to work to achieve the vision our President has set for 2030”.
“Let us work with him tirelessly to ensure everything is achieved.”
— SundayMail
By Own Correspondent| Following a report that Heads of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces last night met and chose to brief their Commander in Chief Emmerson Mnangagwa saying that there is a security crisis requiring urgent attention, ZimEye sought to obtain direct comments from both Mnangagwa and the military (continue reading).
The ZDF Commander Valerio Sibanda told his boss “the security situation haina kumira mushe, there’s suddenly too much chatter of a coup and suggested to put the country on high alert or even State Emergency. He also said a lot of commanders are suddenly showing defiance to him, ” the report says.
The briefing also came amid rumors that a junior soldier in the Presidential guard fired a full round of bullets into the air protesting the biting economic situation in the country. Government has so far dismissed the rumor as untrue.
There are fears that if the government goes ahead to declare a state of emergency, the military will be used to commit crimes against humanity as Mnangagwa works to per chance suppress the simmering public anger. Already controversial agents like one Tinashe Jonas, linked to the Team Ferret terror gang, had gone ahead to throw emotion triggers in the way so to serve to justify the looming crimes against humanity.
The military spokesman Col Everson Mugwisi made the following responses in an interview with ZimEye’s Simba Chikanza (SC).
VIDEO LOADING BELOW
SC: Col Mugwisi I just wanted to ask about the state of emergency briefing made to his excellency today and to hear if the zdf and the government are going to proceed in declaring a state of emergency tomorrow.
Mugwisi: What state of emergency are you talking about?
https://youtu.be/POHngVgMuw0
SC: Well there was a briefing today wasn’t there… there was a briefing by the generals to the president about the crisis in the country that there is a state of alarm in the community and much talk about a coup.
Mugwisi: Err I am a defence spokesperson. I don’t speak on behalf of the president I think you need to talk to Mr Charamba. It was the president briefing. Anything to do with the president contact Mr Charamba.
SC: But the briefing was done to the president isn’t it?
Mugwisi: I think I have made myself very clear that those issues are dealt with by the presidential office; you speak to the presidential spokesperson Mr Charamba. Is that clear enough?
SC: Lastly sir, we saw in January, a spate of violence amid allegations of the military being part of the unleashing of violence. Would the ZDF be there to ensure that there is no repeat of such this time?
Mugwisi: Are you saying the ZDF embarked on violence?
SC: Well, there were uniforms they were military uniforms and the evidence showed that they were soldiers and even the president spoke about soldiers being out of line when he came back from Russia.
Mugwisi: Oh well, I think to be fair you need to send your questions through my email address and I will respond to you formally because you are saying there are people who were involved in violence and you are not sure if they are ZDF.
SC: No I said the president spoke about it, the president in a statement when he returned.
Mugwisi: What did he say?
SC: When he returned.
SC: He said there was insubordination among the security forces; he mentioned it in a statement so, what I am saying is, will the ZDF be there to ensure that there is no repeat of insubordination?
Mugwisi: Err, security forces what’s your interpretation of security forces is it just the zdf?
SC: In this case the area of security forces involved the use of ammunition so I believe this will clearly involve the ZDF.
Mugwisi: But is it only the ZDF that uses ammunition?
SC: No but obviously it is the ZDF that was involved even in clearing and assisting the police in January.
Mugwisi: Ok thank you very much Mr journalist can you send me your questions via email so that I can respond to you formally.
Efforts to get a comment from Mnangagwa were fruitless as his spokesman George Charamba’s phone went unanswered. His other cellphone line kept bouncing into voicemail.
Vice President Dr Constantino Chiwenga says timely intervention by President Mnangagwa to engage his Chinese counterpart, President Xi Jinping, to facilitate his airlift to Beijing for specialist care and treatment prevented his “imminent death” and saved his life.
In July, the President made the decision when VP Chiwenga was battling for life in the intensive care unit of a South African hospital.
At the time, the VP suffered memory lapses, speech impairment and excruciating pain.
However, in what has been an extraordinary recovery story, VP Chiwenga — who arrived home in the early hours of Saturday after a four-month absence — yesterday looked fit and agile when he received President Mnangagwa at his home.
The duo shared a hearty embrace before an hour-and-half private engagement.
Emerging from the meeting, a visibly elated President Mnangagwa, who was accompanied by First Lady Auxillia Mnangagwa, explained the VP’s path to recovery.
“When he left he was unwell, which was giving us sleepless nights because our comrade was unwell,” said the President.
“So we arranged for him to go to South Africa and while he was there, we spoke to our Chinese friends, we spoke to President Xi Jinping, who is our dear friend, who offered to assist with his treatment.
“We saw it fit for the VP to go to China. We flew him there and he stayed there for a number of months. Now you can see for yourselves that he has regained his fitness and he is clear-minded.
“When he initially left he was having memory lapses, and he was in so much pain that everyone could tell the agony he was in.”
VP Chiwenga, he said, is now “raring to go”.
“I am confident that now the whole of Zimbabwe knows that the Vice President is back and fit, and he is very clear and raring to go. That is why I said God is there because my colleague is back and we can now put our heads together to uplift the country.”
When The Sunday Mail asked him when the VP was expected back in office, President Mnangagwa responded: “You can see the way he looks now, but on my part, I am not too concerned about him returning back to work, I am more concerned about his welfare and that he is back to full fitness. But as someone who is coming from being ill, I only wish for him to start his duties slowly and move progressively to take up more work. You can see for yourselves that the man is glowing.”
The President also revealed that the VP’s ill-health had “affected him personally”, adding that his return had brought him immense relief.
He said he also sent a special message of thanks to President Xi Jinping for facilitating VP Chiwenga’s treatment.
“I am also very grateful to my brother, the President of the People’s Republic of China whom I talked to and he said he will do his best and instruct his system to do their best to look after your Vice President, and that has been done.
“And I have sent a letter to President Xi Jinping thanking him for the role he played in looking after my VP.
Besides that, I have also asked General Chiwenga on how was the care in the hospital and he says, ‘Mukoma, ndakabatwa zvakanaka, I can’t think of anything else or wish for anything else . . .’”
With a voice full of life, VP Chiwenga thanked the President for his judicious decision to send him to China for treatment.
“And I want to thank personally my President, His Excellency President Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa, if he had not intervened the time I was in the intensive care in South Africa, I could have been history by now, and when he communicated with his counterpart President Xi Jinping, I was then taken to China . . . he did not act as the President but acted as my brother to make sure that I survive . . .
“And I would also want, before I go far, to thank the people of Zimbabwe for their prayers; those prayers from across the country helped my recovery.”
He also explained his hospital stint and recovery.
“Up to yesterday, from the time I left, I had spent 123 days in hospital. When I got there it was the 21st of July and got my discharge certificate later on after 123 days.
“I feel strong and I am raring to go for work . . . everything possible was done; they left no stone unturned . . . so I am very fit and happy.”
He said he had already resumed his duties.
It is now incumbent upon us to work to achieve the vision our President has set for 2030”.
“Let us work with him tirelessly to ensure everything is achieved.”
— SundayMail
A MAN from Silobela was on Tuesday mauled to death by crocodiles while on a fishing expedition at Tshapewa Dam.
Julius Hoko from Tshapewa Village under Chief Gobo, had gone for fishing but did not return home, only for villagers to find his remains after some days of searching.
Although Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority (Zimparks) spokesperson Mr Tinashe Farawo could not be readily reached for comment, Silobela legislator, Mthokozisi Manoki Mpofu confirmed the incident.
“Yes, we received reports of a man from Ward 18 in Tshapewa area who was mauled by crocodiles. His remains were discovered after days of searching after he had been reported missing,” said Mpofu.
He said the remains were taken to Silobela District Hospital.
“We are grateful to the villagers who managed to retrieve the remains and facilitated that the remains be taken to Silobela Hospital. Our prayers and thoughts are with the bereaved family in this time of losing their breadwinner,” said Manoki.
He appealed to relevant authorities to deal with the crocodiles that have since infested the dam, killing humans and livestock alike.
“This is not the first time we have lost many lives to crocodiles in Tshapewa Dam. The crocodiles are also killing people’s livestock.
We are appealing to relevant authorities to do something, be it killing the troublesome crocodiles or transferring them to a safer place where they do not clash with humans,” he said.
Mpofu said it was difficult for the villagers to avoid going fishing as it was their source of livelihood.
— SundayNews
Farai Dziva| As the economic problems continue unabated, The Zimbabwe Energy Regulatory Authority has announced new fuel prices with effect from November 25.
“The Zimbabwe Energy Regulatory Authority (ZERA) has pegged new fuel prices with effect from Monday, 25 November 2019.
The maximum pump price for a litre of diesel is now ZWL$17.90 while Blend E20 (Petrol) is now selling at ZWL$17.44,” an official said.
By A Correspondent- Veterans of Zimbabwe’s liberation struggle want the government to establish a bank exclusively for them where they can borrow money for self-help projects.
This was revealed by the permanent secretary in the Ministry of Defence and War Veterans Affairs Mark Marongwe when he appeared before the parliamentary portfolio committee on defence to speak on the 2020 budget last week.
He said:
Women have their own bank, which was established for them, but if you look at the war heroes that fought in the liberation struggle they are not well funded in terms of self-help projects and there is need for financing to be availed so that there can be a war veterans bank where they can borrow money for self-help project.
War veterans have been making endless demands over the years, ranging from gratuities in cash, farms, posts in the ruling ZANU PF party, free passes at toll gates, among other demands.
However, in this instance, their demand was supported by the parliamentary committee whose report also recommended that the ex-combatants be given more land and be exempted from taxes.
By A Correspondent- A purported Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO) document was allegedly leaked to media houses and journalists.
Prominent journalist and award-winning filmmaker Hopewell Chin’ono castigated the government’s propensity to waste resources on “fiction” rather than focusing on developmental projects.
Using microblogging site Twitter, Chin’ono wrote:
Pastor @ShingiMunyeza, as @Zimpapers board member &Presidential advisor, these are the things pulling us backwards.
The amount of energy, time & resources spent by the regime on non-essential activities is disappointing.
Instead of developmental work, it is concentrating on fiction.
Below is the document allegedly leaked by the Intelligence:
TO: DG
FROM: Honourable Minister Alle
DATE: 21 November 2019
SUBJECT: UNITED STATES EMBASSY INTERFERENCE IN DOMESTIC AFFAIRS
Reference is made to the Counter Intelligence Branch DIA of 20 November 2019 regarding plans by the US Embassy to fund a workshop for a subversive organisation called Frontline Defenders, at its Chancery from 02 to 10 December 2019. Part of the purpose of the workshop is to train subversive civil society organisations on ways of sustaining demonstrations.
It is my view that our Operational Branches can pre-empt the US agenda through various media platforms, including The Herald and The Sunday Mail. The possible exposure, coming on the backdrop of the United Nations Human Rights Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, Hilal ELVER, will help to expose the American hand in political problems affecting Zimbabwe. We will not achieve much by allowing them to conduct the workshop which is aimed at undermining the country.
Forwarded for your actioning.
CC: DIRECTOR COUNTER INTELLIGENCE DIRECTOR INTERNA
Said MDC National Executive member, Anthony Taruvinga:
“Political affiliation will never be a basis for exclusion in an MDC led government.
The picture shows MDC MP Memory Mbondiah dishing out pads to perceived Zanu pf supporters in Shurugwi.
Opposition members are not sub citizens but equal citizens with equal rights, benefits and privileges. The Constitution is clear. Our people have always been excluded from tax payers’ funded and international donor programs such as distribution of agriculture equipments and seeds, food for work, allocation of land etc.
Political plularity and competition build up communities and improve service delivery as opposed to monopolies and dictatorships.
A New Zimbabwe will only come with the complete exodus of Zanu pf. Forget their fake promises, they are all a crippled group of thieves and murderers..”
By A Correspondent- A political analyst has opined that President Emmerson Mnangagwa should be worried by the palpable anger harboured by the general citizenry over the state of the economy, as the disgruntlement could have spilt to the security sector.
Eldred Masunungure, a University of Zimbabwe political science lecturer, was speaking to the Daily News on the incident of a soldier who is alleged to have repeatedly fired his rifle into the air while on guard duty at State House. Said Masunungure:
Anger and disillusionment have been boiling over since November 2017, because many in the lower ranks of the military appear to feel that they were used then.
It is neither here nor there that the soldier in question is said to be deranged … this was an expression of broad anger. It is not an isolated case.
You cannot be guarded by people who are hungry … as it is the elite who are enjoying the fruits of the November coup.
Reports indicate that the soldier emptied his magazine and was apprehended by his colleagues while trying to reload at State House on Tuesday last week.
The soldier is thought to have had shown signs of mental problems in the past, with authorities sending him for psychiatric examination following the shooting incident.
By A Correspondent- Some police officers stationed at Charandura police station in Chirumanzu risk dismissal from the force following reports that they are working with cattle-rustling syndicates in the area.
Zimbabwe Republic Police’s officer commanding Midlands, Assistant Commissioner Peter Sibanda revealed that investigations into the matter are underway.
He said:
As police officers, we are dealing with that issue where our members were accused of dipping in cattle rustling cases.
I sent my Dispol to that area and we are doing something. Very soon some officers may be reshuffled or fired.
The Standard has established that since 2016, there has been a sharp rise in stock theft cases in the area but surprisingly, not even a single arrest has been made.
Police officers in the area have been selling beef to villagers, with a police officer, who owns a butchery at Chaka growth point, reportedly summoned over allegations that he was working in cahoots with cattle rustlers.
“Inspecting the Maize in Kwekwe this morning. As we continue to reform and invest in our blessed lands, may we once again look forward to times of growth and prosperity. I wish all my fellow Zimbabweans a wonderful Sunday.”
By Own Correspondent| Following a report that Heads of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces last night met and chose to brief their Commander in Chief Emmerson Mnangagwa saying that there is a security crisis requiring urgent attention, ZimEye sought to obtain direct comments from both Mnangagwa and the military (continue reading).
The ZDF Commander Valerio Sibanda told his boss “the security situation haina kumira mushe, there’s suddenly too much chatter of a coup and suggested to put the country on high alert or even State Emergency. He also said a lot of commanders are suddenly showing defiance to him, ” the report says.
The briefing also came amid rumors that a junior soldier in the Presidential guard fired a full round of bullets into the air protesting the biting economic situation in the country. Government has so far dismissed the rumor as untrue.
There are fears that if the government goes ahead to declare a state of emergency, the military will be used to commit crimes against humanity as Mnangagwa works to per chance suppress the simmering public anger. Already controversial agents like one Tinashe Jonas, linked to the Team Ferret terror gang, had gone ahead to throw emotion triggers in the way so to serve to justify the looming crimes against humanity.
The military spokesman Col Everson Mugwisi made the following responses in an interview with ZimEye’s Simba Chikanza (SC).
VIDEO LOADING BELOW
SC: Col Mugwisi I just wanted to ask about the state of emergency briefing made to his excellency today and to hear if the zdf and the government are going to proceed in declaring a state of emergency tomorrow.
Mugwisi: What state of emergency are you talking about?
https://youtu.be/POHngVgMuw0
SC: Well there was a briefing today wasn’t there… there was a briefing by the generals to the president about the crisis in the country that there is a state of alarm in the community and much talk about a coup.
Mugwisi: Err I am a defence spokesperson. I don’t speak on behalf of the president I think you need to talk to Mr Charamba. It was the president briefing. Anything to do with the president contact Mr Charamba.
SC: But the briefing was done to the president isn’t it?
Mugwisi: I think I have made myself very clear that those issues are dealt with by the presidential office; you speak to the presidential spokesperson Mr Charamba. Is that clear enough?
SC: Lastly sir, we saw in January, a spate of violence amid allegations of the military being part of the unleashing of violence. Would the ZDF be there to ensure that there is no repeat of such this time?
Mugwisi: Are you saying the ZDF embarked on violence?
SC: Well, there were uniforms they were military uniforms and the evidence showed that they were soldiers and even the president spoke about soldiers being out of line when he came back from Russia.
Mugwisi: Oh well, I think to be fair you need to send your questions through my email address and I will respond to you formally because you are saying there are people who were involved in violence and you are not sure if they are ZDF.
SC: No I said the president spoke about it, the president in a statement when he returned.
Mugwisi: What did he say?
SC: When he returned.
SC: He said there was insubordination among the security forces; he mentioned it in a statement so, what I am saying is, will the ZDF be there to ensure that there is no repeat of insubordination?
Mugwisi: Err, security forces what’s your interpretation of security forces is it just the zdf?
SC: In this case the area of security forces involved the use of ammunition so I believe this will clearly involve the ZDF.
Mugwisi: But is it only the ZDF that uses ammunition?
SC: No but obviously it is the ZDF that was involved even in clearing and assisting the police in January.
Mugwisi: Ok thank you very much Mr journalist can you send me your questions via email so that I can respond to you formally.
Efforts to get a comment from Mnangagwa were fruitless as his spokesman George Charamba’s phone went unanswered. His other cellphone line kept bouncing into voicemail.
FARMERS in the drought hit Matabeleland region are now swarming maputi making firms in Bulawayo to get chuff, a by-product of the snack which they use to feed their cattle as people apply desperate measures to save their livestock.
The situation has been compounded by the continued increase in stock feed which has seen most farmers failing to buy the product.
Poverty deaths have also continued to rise in the region, with estimates now pointing to more than 6 000 cattle having succumbed to the drought.
Sunday Business on Friday last week discovered that farmers were swarming maputi production factories where they are buying the chuff from the plants to feed cattle.
In Kelvin North in Bulawayo, farmers told this publication that the product was cheap and was nutritious feed.
A 20-litre bucket of the chuff costs $5 compared to between $260 and $280 for a 50 kilogramme of stock feed in most shops in Bulawayo.
“We are feeding cattle with this maputi, it has a lot of energy and the price is also cheap. We sometimes add salt and other ingredients but when push comes to shove you just feed the livestock as it is,” said Mr Boas Ncube, who said he has a farm in Marula, Matabeleland South.
“You only need to make sure that after feeding the cattle, there is enough water for them because the feed is full of roughage.”
Another farmer from Kezi said as farmers they have pooled resources and are hiring trucks to carry the feed.
“We are even trying to negotiate with the owners of these factories to reserve the chuff for us but if it was up to us, we even want to buy the maputi to feed our cattle. It is a sorry state back home, cattle are dying and farmers are stranded,” he said.
The situation was also the same at another processing plant at Shasha at the Renkini Long Distance Bus Terminus as farmers were buying the products.
A worker at one of the maputi processing plants at Man Precast Walling in Kelvin, Mr Trust Ngwenya said hundreds of farmers were flocking to the area to buy the chuff.
“We can sell as many as 300kgs of this chuff per day and the demand has been huge,” he said.
Farmers are also banking on the rains that have started falling in most parts of the country.
However, a livestock expert, Mr Mhlupeki Dube has warned that the transition from a drought to a wet season is usually the time when most people lose their animals.
“Remember when it rains firstly it becomes a little bit cold and that type of weather itself, causes animals to draw down on their energy just for thermo-regulation using energy reserves but because they are already very thin animals which do not have any energy reserves are drawing from empty reserves and they can succumb just on the basis of that cold spell that follows after some showers,” he said.
Mr Dube said the other issue is to do with the fact that the rain has some nostalgic effects on animals and they tend to think that there is green grass somewhere so as a result they wander off looking for green grass.
“Some get lost and even die in the bush because they are thin and they are busy looking for non-existent green grass on the basis of the rain that has fallen so once there is rain you need to look at your animals closely so that they do not stray. Above all you need to give them an energy supplementary diet, that means even if it is hay you need to mix it with molasses which is a carbohydrate which provides energy so that is an energy supplement if you do not have the commercial stock feeds.”
He added that farmers also need to give the animals a jab of vitamins.
“The most important part is that farmers have to be patient for about two to three weeks when the grass starts growing so that the animals can gain some condition because the tendency is that just after it has rained people rush to the field and use their animals for draught power regardless of the status of the animals or the condition of the animals. What happens is that soon after the ploughing day as you take them out of the jock the animals may just collapse and die because of the strain.”
Below is a document on civil society meeting allegedly leaked by the Intelligence:
TO: DG
FROM: Honourable Minister Alle
DATE: 21 November 2019
SUBJECT: UNITED STATES EMBASSY INTERFERENCE IN DOMESTIC AFFAIRS
Reference is made to the Counter Intelligence Branch DIA of 20 November 2019 regarding plans by the US Embassy to fund a workshop for a subversive organisation called Frontline Defenders, at its Chancery from 02 to 10 December 2019. Part of the purpose of the workshop is to train subversive civil society organisations on ways of sustaining demonstrations.
It is my view that our Operational Branches can pre-empt the US agenda through various media platforms, including The Herald and The Sunday Mail. The possible exposure, coming on the backdrop of the United Nations Human Rights Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, Hilal ELVER, will help to expose the American hand in political problems affecting Zimbabwe. We will not achieve much by allowing them to conduct the workshop which is aimed at undermining the country.
Forwarded for your actioning.
CC: DIRECTOR COUNTER INTELLIGENCE DIRECTOR INTERNAL
THE Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education has ordered that all school fees increases by private schools for next year are null and void, as they have not been approved by the ministry.
The warning comes as a number of private schools have already sent circulars to parents indicating new hefty fees structures for next year, with some of the schools demanding that the fees be paid before the end of this year.
In an interview in Bulawayo on Friday, Permanent Secretary for the Ministry Mrs Tumisang Thabela said her office was yet to receive any application for fees review.
“We haven’t received their applications from what I know, because ordinarily what should happen is that they must follow the circular that guides them. The parent’s assembly should meet, deliberate and of course there is a need to take economic variables in to consideration.
“We are guided by what the parents say, if the attaching minutes and all the financial audited records indicate that they have utilised whatever they had and its justifiable to seek a rise, we accent.
“But where we don’t have, we do not authorise and currently I am not aware of that development from schools and particularly from the school in question.”
A survey in Bulawayo showed that fees for the first term in most private secondary schools have been pegged at between $12 000 to $15 000.
Part of the memo from one school read: “Following the SDC EGM on Monday 18 November 2019, the 2020 first term fees will be as follows: Form 1 to 4, $12 500, Form 5 to 6, $15 000.
“In view of the inflationary pressure in our economic environment, the initial fee of $3 600 must be paid up by Friday 29 November 2019 and the balance of $8 900 by Tuesday 31 December 2019.”
The school further indicated that, should parents fail to pay before the initial instalment on the indicated date, they must notify the school by 6 December so that their children can be withdrawn from the school.
Mrs Thabela said both Government and Trust schools should follow the correct channels in applying for school fees increases.
Earlier in the term several Government schools also sent proposals to parents for term one 2020 school fees structure and have proposed as much as ZW$600 up from a region of ZW$80.
A parent from a primary school in Bulawayo’s low density suburbs said they received notices of $560 as the proposed tuition for 2020 while Early Childhood Development (ECD) was pegged at $800.
Other primary schools in the eastern suburbs in Bulawayo have also pegged their fees between $300 to $500 for the coming term.
The provincial education director for Bulawayo, Mrs Olicah Kaira, has said that Government schools were ready to absorb pressure that is likely to come from private schools owing to their increases in tuition fees.
She also encouraged schools and parents to assist by erecting extra classroom blocks to cater for the increases in volumes of pupils over time.
The Permanent Secretary, however, noted that schools were in need of more teachers for the coming year and beyond saying the 5 000 teachers that will be recruited in January 2020 were a fraction of what is needed.
“Zimbabwe needs 130 000 teachers to be at an optimum condition but we have been allowed to take 5 000 for 2020, the first batch of 2 700 will be taken in January while the remaining 2 300 will be taken in June 2020.
“We will rationalise this, we will look at every province and see how many teachers are needed and each gets an allocation depending on their needs,” she said.
CONTROVERSY continues to follow former President Robert Mugabe to his grave, with his neighbours now being forced to relocate their cattle kraals to pave way for the construction of a protective precast wall at his rural Zvimba home.
Mugabe died and was buried at his rural Zvimba home in September.
When NewsDay Weekender visited the Mugabes’ homestead at Kutama a few days ago, about 200 workers were busy on site building the brick protective wall around the homestead where Mugabe’s remains are interred.
The controversial protective wall came at a cost for some villagers as they were forced to relocate their cattle kraals to pave way for construction of the wall by Chinese contractors.
A villager, Gibson Mareya, said they were summoned to the site by former First Lady Grace Mugabe early this month and told that their cattle kraals would be relocated to near Kutama Police Base.
They were allegedly told that there was no room for negotiations, but should simply follow instructions.
Mareya said no one objected save for Mugabe’s relative, Josphine Jarijari, who gave a brief history of the cattle relocation history.
“There was no room for negotiations. We were told what to do and everyone agreed. Grace told us that she would pay the cost of relocation. But a Mugabe relative, Ambuya Jarijari, initially refused, briefing the meeting that this is the second relocation after the first was done during the expansion of Mugabe’s rural home,” Mareya said.
Efforts to get a comment from Grace were fruitless. But Mugabe’s nephew, Dominic Matibiri, said the wall was meant to prevent intruders who might want to tamper with Mugabe’s remains.
“Since we buried our father there, a precast wall is a security measure to prevent his enemies from tampering around with his remains, considering that he was no longer a Zanu PF member,” Matibiri said without elaborating.
He said besides the security wall, they would also install CCTVs.
ZIMBABWE’s next Africa Cup of Nations assignment against Algeria might be slated for August 2020, but the Warriors have a lot to do amid revelations that their rivals are already planning for that top-of-the table showdown.
The Warriors have a tendency of going cold during every break.
Zimbabwe’s Warriors are currently occupying second position in Group H of the 2021 Nations qualifiers, two points behind the Desert Foxes of Algeria, who have accumulated six points on the back of a blistering start that began with a thumping triumph over Zambia in Blida.
Reigning African champions Algeria then followed that up with a key 1-0 away win over Botswana at the National Stadium in Gaborone.
Botswana had earlier forced a brave 0-0 draw against the Warriors in Harare before Joey Antipas’ men concluded their 2019 assignments on a winning note after Khama Billiat’s brace ensured a 2-1 win over Zambia in Lusaka.
That victory, the first ever over Zambia in an Africa Cup of Nations qualifier, breathed life back into the Warriors’ qualification bid.
It also condemned 2012 champions Chipolopolo to the bottom of the Group H standings as they are the only team from the pool without a point.
For all their dominance over Zambia in the Cosafa Cup, Zimbabwe was yet to beat their Northern neighbours in a Nations Cup assignment.
But it is the way the Warriors always go to sleep, only to wake up days before an assignment, that has ignited the senior team’s enthusiasts’ fear that the Desert Foxes might catch them napping come August 30, 2020.
Meetings between the two teams have been few and far between.
In the six times they have met the Warriors since 1989, Algeria have struggled to assert their authority on Zimbabwe. Their clashes are always close battles.
The two sides have hosted each other twice and played on neutral soil on as many occasions.
Their first meeting was in 1989, when they clashed in a qualifier for the 1990 World Cup.
Zimbabwe suffered their biggest loss to Algeria on January 6, 1989, at Stade du 19 Mai 1956 in Annaba when Algeria, led by legendary striker Raber Majer, beat them 3-0.
Majer and his team, which also included Djamel Menad, then completed a double over the Warriors with a 2-1 win at the National Sports Stadium on June 25 of the same year.
The Warriors had to wait until 2004 to record their first and single victory over the Desert Foxes on their maiden appearance at the Africa Cup of Nations finals in Tunisia.
In that famous victory, the late Adam Ndlovu and Joel Luphahla struck for Zimbabwe while Hocine Achiou pulled one back for Algeria.
The last meeting between the two sides came at the 2017 Nations Cup in Gabon, where the Desert Foxes battled from behind to force a 2-2 draw with Manchester City winger Riyad Mahrez scoring late to salvage a point for the North Africans after Kudakwashe Mahachi and Nyasha Mushekwi had given the Warriors a deserved lead.
The Desert Foxes, just like the Warriors, had a disastrous Nations Cup outing in Gabon, thereby forcing their new Football Association president Kheirredine Zetchi to order a rebuilding exercise.
Zetchi had replaced Mohamed Raouraoua at the helm of the football body and his audacious bid included appointing a new substantive coach for the team.
“There are priorities, namely the appointment of a coach.
“We will opt for the candidate who corresponds to our brand of football. We all agree that Algerian football is centred on short passes and dribbling,” said Zetchi.
Two years later, Zetchi was basking in glory as Algeria won the ultimate prize in African football at the tournament in Egypt.
Since their moment of triumph at the Cairo National stadium in July, the Desert Foxes have not looked back.
In contrast, the Warriors keep going back and forth with an interim set up of Rahman Gumbo, Lloyd Mutasa and Brenna Msiska as well as that of Lloyd Chitembwe, Tonderai Ndiraya and Tembo Chuma, which is headed by Joey Antipas.
Antipas’ initial six-match mandate with the Warriors ended in success in Lusaka last Tuesday as the senior team finally found a way to beat Chipolopolo in a Nations Cup qualifier.
Zifa has to quickly settle the Warriors coach issue as Zimbabwe heads into a busy 2020. The Warriors will chase glory in the 2022 World Cup qualifiers and at the African Nations Championship finals in Cameroon.
Acting Zifa vice-president Philemon Machana acknowledged the need to decisively deal with the issue.
He said Zifa’s technical committee, which is headed by board member Bryton Malandule, is working on addressing the matter.
This will become the fourth time in three years for Zifa to task someone to take charge of the Warriors.
“There is going to be a technical development meeting before the end of this week. lt will be led by Bryton Malandule and will review the contracts of the technical team.
“After the technical development meeting, the board will then meet to map the way forward based on the recommendations that would have been made by the technical committee,” said Machana.
Machana said Zifa is putting in place measures to allow the Warriors to have decent preparations ahead of 2020’s tight schedule.
“We do not want to promise too much, but we will do our best to give the Warriors the adequate preparations they require so that we qualify for both the World Cup and the Africa Cup of Nations,” he said.
While the four points garnered from matches against Botswana and Zambia put the Warriors in good stead for qualification for the Nations Cup, their real test in Group H will come when they visit the Algerians.
Zimbabwe-Algeria head-to-head clashes
January 6, 1989 Algeria 3-0 Zimbabwe (1990 World Cup qualifier)
June 25, 1989 Zimbabwe 1-2 Algeria (1990 World Cup qualifier)
February 3, 2004 Algeria 1-2 Zimbabwe (Tunisia 2004 Africa Cup of Nations finals)
June 20, 2004 Zimbabwe 1-1 Algeria (2006 World Cup Qualifier/Afcon qualifier)
June 19, 2005 Algeria 2-2 Zimbabwe (2006 World Cup Qualifier/Afcon qualifier)
FORMER FAZ committee member Keegan Chipango says chances of Chipolopolo beating Zimbabwe in Harare in the return leg are slim.
Commenting on Zambia’s 2-1 defeat to Zimbabwe at Heroes Stadium on Tuesday, Chipango said it will be an uphill battle for Chipolopolo. He said Zambia is likely fail to qualify to a third consecutive Africa Cup of Nations.
“We risk not qualifying for the third time for AfCON. If you look at the current situation in Group H, Algeria has six points, followed by Zimbabwe who now have four points out of two games and Botswana who have a point and Zambia zero. Now, we have to work hard, equally Botswana is not a push over these days,” he said.
“I watched them play Algeria, they are a good team, especially when they play at home. So as usual it now means that we start working on calculations that we beat Botswana both away and home. What will Zimbabwe and Algeria be doing? Our chances of beating Zimbabwe in Harare are slim, it is an uphill battle. Zimbabwe gives us problems in Harare and with their supporters, psychologically they will be on top of us. We really have to work hard and dig deeper to find a solution.”
Chipango said Chipolopolo’s defence against Zimbabwe was porous and called on the FAZ executive to sit and resolve issues affecting football administration.
“Football administering requires a lot, but currently it is not about us, but I. Football administration is about us, it’s not a one man show. Currently, football in Zambia is being administered by one man…. FAZ needs to resolve issues and re-evaluate or analyse their relationship with players and also try and reactivate the players’ interest because what is happening now is something that is not encouraging,” he said.
“Football has been taken away from the owners. The owners of football are the councillors, those that elect the executive, those that manage and look after players at club level, but the current situation is that there is hostility between FAZ and the councillors. They have been left in the cold, they are not even consulted. They are only consulted when it’s towards elections. They are only consulted when there is a crisis in FAZ, which is not good. The current FAZ executive needs to accept that there is something wrong and identify people that can help them find out as to what the problem is and find a lasting solution,” Chipango said.
He said players like Kennedy Mweene still could play a vital role in football as a player as well as on the technical bench.
Zambia will play Botswana in their next qualifier in August 2020 but before that they will take part in the CHAN tournament in April.
It never rains, but it pours for flamboyant prophet Shepherd Bushiri’s Enlightened Christian Gathering church as Botswana government closes down all of his church branches following the deregistration of the organisation last year by the Botswana government.
As a result, disciples of Bushiri in Botswana have resorted to following their leader through his television channel, while those who have the means are travelling to South AFrica on weekends to attend Sunday services.
The recent crackdown on the church comes just a few weeks after the government of Botswana lifted a visa travelling ban imposed on Bushiri during former president Ian Khama’s presidency. Unlike other Malawian citizens, Bushiri, who is also known as Major One, was forced to apply for a visa each time he entered Botswana in 2017. The then nationality, immigration and gender affairs minister Edwin Batshu told MPs that Bushiri was “too demanding”.
Batshu indicated that the government slapped Bushiri with a visa restriction because of his demands, which were tantamount to a national security threat. He revealed that Bushiri wanted heavy security from state security organs whenever he was in the country and also wanted government to direct all entry points to be opened around the clock for his convenience.
“His church wrote a letter to my ministry requesting that we open our borders for 24 hours. They stated in the letter that, given the stature of the pastor, we should open the borders as per their request,” he said.
The lifting of the travel restrictions came into effect on 21 October 2019 and no reasons were given for the decision. However, the jovial mood among Bushiri’s disciples following that decision turned sour last week. They were stunned when the government moved swiftly to close church branches around the country.
Last year, the government, through the nationality, immigration and gender affairs department, deregistered the church after it failed to provide the state with a copy of its audited financials for three years in a row. The church approached the courts last year to oppose the deregistration, but later withdrew after Bushiri intervened and asked the leadership to desist from taking the court route to resolve their differences with the government.
Last week, a letter that was dispatched to the church from Botswana police commissioner Keabetswe Makgophe, dated 11 November 2019, warned the church to stop congregating or undertaking church activities because they were operating illegally.
The Botswana Police Service indicated in the letter that it was executing a decision that was made by the department to deregister the church in March last year.
“Following the deregistration of the church and its branches by the Registrar of Societies, the church sought to challenge the decision through the courts,” reads part of the letter.
“The church, however, withdrew its application as per court order… dated July 3, 2019. This meant that the decision to deregister the church stood, hence it should not operate in Botswana. Notwithstanding the above, it appears that the church continues to operate unlawfully within our country. We have therefore within our country. We have therefore been requested to intervene, and its branches around the country do not congregate or undertake any church-related activities.”
Pelotshweu Baeng, the national executive secretary of the church, confirmed that they had received the letter.
“We knew that the letter was on its way. We are law-abiding citizens and we will abide by the law,” he said.
According to Baeng, there were 60 branches of the church in the country – in Gaborone, Francistown, Jwaneng, Maun, Kasane and other towns, as well as in smaller villages.
Baeng also confirmed that the church had resolved to withdraw the case to challenge the deregistration. He said the church was of the view that the court route was not the right channel to end the differences therefore was not seen as a viable solution.
However, he said they would continue to find other means to end the impasse with the government. When quizzed about what he made of the dicision to lift the visa restriction ban on Bushiri and the clampdown on the church, Baeng said it was a private and personal issue. Baeng further confirmed that church followers were attending live television services, known as televangelism, while others were attending services in Pretoria.
He said hundreds of followers attended last week’s session in South Africa’s capital following the letter from the police commissioner.
Former president Robert Mugabe’s loyalists, including those that were forced into exile after the 2017 coup, are regrouping amid indications that they are rallying around former Zanu PF commissar Saviour Kasukuwere.
Kasukuwere, who was forced into exile after his Harare home was sprayed with bullets by soldiers during the coup, was a key member of a Zanu PF faction known as G40.
Victor Matemadanda
The faction that also included former first lady Grace Mugabe was involved in a bruising battle with another one known as Lacoste, which was associated with President Emmerson Mnangagwa, who was Mugabe’s deputy at the time.
After Mnangagwa was fired by Mugabe and forced into brief exile in South Africa, the army intervened.
The then doddering ruler was forced to resign and his loyalists were scattered into different parts of Africa where they are in exile.
Zanu PF insiders said Kasukuwere was tapping into discontent among some of the ruling party’s key constituencies such as graduates of the Border Gezi National Youth Service, who feel excluded from the current set up.
His supporters have already started distributing campaign material.
Videos circulating as part of the campaign have people, mainly the youths, speaking on the current economic and political crisis and how Mnangagwa has allegedly failed.
“We have suffered as Zimbabweans. “Nothing is happening in the hospitals.
“There are no doctors, no nurses and women are resorting to desperate measures to give birth.
“There is a crisis in schools and I think in Zimbabwe we are lacking leadership,” says a man in one of the campaign videos posted online.
“As youths, the future is in our hands and we must find a leader, who has the youths at heart. Let us support Kasukuwere to take us forward.”
Zanu PF spokesperson Simon Khaya Moyo yesterday refused to comment on the developments, saying G40 members were a security threat.
“We do not discuss national security issues with the press,” he said.
A close Kasukuwere ally, who spoke on condition he is not named, confirmed that something was brewing but could not get into details.
Zanu PF national political commissar, Victor Matemadanda last week claimed there was a plot by G40 to overthrow the government and that millions of dollars had been injected into the scheme.
Matemadanda claimed that more than US$5 million had been given to the former Zanu PF members for a social media campaign.
Dar es Salaam. The final hammer may have fallen on low-cost airline, Fastjet, following appointment of a liquidator to wind up its business in Tanzania.
The move could render stillborn the application for a new operating licence for the airline due for hearing next week.
The commercial division of the High Court sitting in Dar es Salaam has declared Fastjet Airlines Limited insolvent, dimming hope of a return to the sky of the once popular airline operator.
In its ruling, the court ordered that Fastjet Limited with certificate of registration number 65799 pursuant to section 279 (1) (d) and (e) of the companies Act, be wound up for being insolvent and unable to pay its debts.
The case against Fastjet was filed in the court by Swissport Tanzania which was claiming about Sh2.02 billion in debt from the company for offering ground handling services. Swissport chief executive officer Mrisho Yassin noted that Fastjet owed them Sh1.6 billion and $183,000 before it was grounded.
A media notice on Thursday revealed Mr Biseko Nyagabona of SBN Attorneys has been appointed the official liquidator.
Liquidation is the process of bringing a business to an end and distributing its assets to claimants. It is an event that usually occurs when a company is insolvent, meaning it cannot pay its obligations when they are due.
Yesterday, Tanzania Civil Aviation Authority (TCAA) director general Hamza Johari told The Citizen that putting the airline under liquidation disqualified it from getting a new operating license. The airline has been fighting for the licence since January this year. It was grounded in December 2018 after operational glitches and mounting debts.
TCAA’s Licensing Board shall be holding a meeting next Wednesday to review the applications for air and ground handling services licenses from several companies.
“During the board meeting we only consider applications by the existing companies registered by Brela (Business Registrations and Licensing Agency).” Mr Johari told The Citizen over the phone.
He asked: “How can we give a license to a company which is under liquidation?”
After Fastjet’s operating license ceased on January 3 this year, several creditors rushed in attempts to secure their money, including employees who have not been paid to date.
“Even when we opted for arbitration process they did not honor it as they were not turning up,” said Mr Yassin of Swissport’s efforts to obtain payment.
“We had to ask for a winding up petition, a plea which has been fruitful through court. As of now we are working to execute the winding up petition, to recover our money.”
Other creditors of Fastjet have been advised to file their claims with the liquidator on or before November 29. “The creditors meeting shall be held on December 2 at the Kisenga Halls, Millennium Towers between 10 am and 2pm,” a statement by the liquidator said.
The Fastjet’s executive chairman and majority shareholder, Mr Lawrence Masha, was not available for comment yesterday as his phone went unanswered.
The airline’s turbulence worsened in January when the validity of its licence expired after it failed to meet the air transport regulator’s standards, including payment of licence fees and the relatively huge debt it owed TCAA.
Five months ago, hopes for Fastjet’s come back were revived after the troubled airline paid some Sh7 billion as part of the debt it owed TCAA, other service providers and assorted creditors.
As the government celebrates the transition from the multi-currency regime to a mono-currency system as one of its successes towards currency reforms, it is a different situation altogether in rural Matabeleland where there is a thriving rand economy.
The government in June promulgated Statutory Instrument (SI) 142 of 2019 which ended the multi-currency system that had been in place since 2009, but in most of Matabeleland’s rural areas, the rand is the trading currency of choice for many shops and individual traders.
SI142 was promulgated after claims by government that foreign currency is not an available commodity of exchange in the money market.
However, for communities in the periphery of Zimbabwe’s borders with South Africa and Botswana, foreign currency remains the sole medium of exchange in business transactions.
Access to foreign currency enables local traders to import goods from neighbouring countries and selling them in rand.
Pricing is lower in foreign currency in these shops compared to prices in urban areas.
Rand remittances from the diaspora are usually on the increase towards the festive season, contributing to a boom in businesses.
According to the World Bank, diaspora remittances to Zimbabwe amounted to about US$1,9 billion or 9.6% of the country’s gross domestic product in 2018.
Local industry and bankers have been lobbying, with little success, for the use of the South African rand as a transacting currency and the United States dollar as a reserve currency.
At Tsholotsho business centre in Matabeleland North, one cannot miss the big number of South African registered vehicles, some of which are cross-border transporters commonly referred to as Omalayitsha ferrying groceries sent by many Zimbabweans based in South Africa.
A significant population from rural Matabeleland such as Tsholotsho, Bulilima, Mangwe, Matobo, Tsholotsho and Gwanda receives monthly remittances from family members living in South Africa or Botswana, thus sustaining the trading in foreign currency.
Many traders import their goods from South Africa for re-sale locally, in that country’s currency.
A recent visit to Tsholotsho showed that while some traders still accepted the Zimbabwe dollar, the pricing forces consumers to transact in rands.
“Basic commodities are ridiculously expensive in local currency, but quite affordable in rands,” Nkosikhona Ncube, a villager, observed.
A 2kg packet of sugar is 45 rand or $40 cash — which is scarce — and $60 using the mobile money transfer facility while some commodities like mealie meal are sold in forex only.
While the use of the rand has brought relative stability and affordability and a steady supply of goods and services to rural Matabeleland, the situation has impacted negatively particularly on civil servants’, who get their salaries in local currency.
Villagers, who have no relatives in the diaspora have been the hardest hit.
“Some civil servants have even resorted to selling airtime using South African currency so that they can be able to buy basic commodities, which are cheaper in rand,” Betty Sibanda said.
A teacher at Tsholotsho High School said he changes his salary into rand as soon as he gets paid to preserve value.
“I have no option but to change my salary, which is in Zimbabwe dollars to the South African rand every month,” he said.
“This is the only way to ensure I can buy some grocery here in Tsholotsho instead of travelling all the way to Bulawayo over 100km away to buy my groceries in local currency.”
In Bulilima, Matabeleland South, most commodities are now pegged in foreign currency even though traders accept local currency.
However, they do not accept mobile money payments as there is limited or no access to mobile networks.
Communities there rely mainly on Botswana mobile phone networks due to lack of enabling telecommunications infrastructure.
Some parts of rural Matabeleland still suffer from poor network connectivity, with villagers forced to climb trees and mountains just to make telephone calls, making it impossible to transact using mobile money transfers such as Ecocash.
The Postal and Telecommunications Regulatory Authority through the Universal Services Fund (USF) has, however, been on a drive to construct base stations, a development that is envisaged to see people living in some parts of rural Matabeleland being connected to local mobile network operators.
The USF was established to, among other things, finance the extension of communication services to underserviced areas.
In some parts of Plumtree, villagers especially those living far from the border town, still do not have access to local radio and television, 39 years after independence.
Many people in the area, especially those living in Mphoengs and Maitengwe border areas, listen to radio and television from neighbouring Botswana because there is no local broadcasting signal.
Effie Ncube, the executive director of the National Consumer Rights Association, a local consumer watchdog, said it was unfortunate that the country’s economic situation has created pockets of different economies, which he said while benefiting some, left those vulnerable worse off.
“The economic crisis led to the scattering of people into the diaspora, who are now remitting different currencies and those currencies are forming their own currencies on the ground and those without access are left a lot poorer,” Ncube argued.
“The crisis we face as a country has created pockets of different economies; for the poor and for the rich; for the rural and urban people; for those who have access to the rand and those who don’t… that the chaos that was introduced by the economic collapse of Zimbabwe.
“Government policies like the one outlawing the use of foreign currencies must be in tune with social and economic realities on the ground.
“In Matabeleland, the rand has always been the preferred currency of choice.
“The economic situation on the ground was self-regulating and it worked for the people.”
Gwanda based commentator Bekezela Maduma Fuzwayo weighed in, saying the situation in Matabeleland South was difficult, particularly in the districts bordering Botswana and South Africa.
He said businesses in the areas were not accepting the local currency -which is in very short supply – compared to the South African rand and Botswana pula.
“The small businesses are also getting goods for the shops from across the borders and so cannot deal in local currency,” Fuzwayo said.
“It’s even particularly worse that most of the areas do not have mobile phone coverage and so mobile money cannot be used.
“In as much as government allowed the tourism sector to use foreign currency, I think special consideration should be given to the province, particularly border districts to use foreign currency.”
Bulawayo City have returned to the Premier Soccer League after winning the ZIFA Southern Region Division One Championship.
Amakhosi who were relegated last year sealed their league triumph with a 3-0 win over Arenel at Barbourfields on Saturday afternoon. They needed at least a point going into the match to win the title, but the victory saw them ending the season with 67 points.
Arenal, on the other hand, have been relegated to the Zifa Bulawayo Province Division Two, as they finished second from the bottom of the 15-team table with 20 points.
Meanwhile, Bulawayo City are the second club from Division One to gain the promotion to PSL after Cranbourne Bullets won the Northern Region League.Soccer 24
Roberto Firmino’s 86th minute winner might have been a scrappy one but it did propel log leaders Liverpool to a 2-1 victory over a battling Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park today.
Jurgen Klopp’s men had taken the lead just after the break through Senegalese striker Sadio Mane only for Palace to level matters in the 84th minute as it seemed Liverpool would drop points only for the second time this season.
Brazilian Firmino had other ideas though, he poked home a goal mouth scramble to ensure all three points for The Reds.
At the Emirates, Arsenal needed an Alexander Lacazzette last gasp equalizer to snach a point against Southampton.
In-form Jamie Vardy and Ayoze Perez were on target as high-flying Leicester City won 2-0 at Brighton and Hove Albion.
In the early kick-off, Jose Mourinho’s Totteham Hotspur beat West Ham 3-2 to ensure a winning start for the newly -appointed Portguese tactician.Soccer24
Manchester City coach Pep Guardiola believes Bernardo Silva is being “accused of something he’s not” after the player received a one-match ban over a racist Twitter post.
The English FA found the Portugal international guilty of an aggravated breach of rules.
“He has been accused of something he is not,” said Guardiola.
“He will be careful to use social media. If this can help to do a better society, OK. I am pretty sure Bernardo accept this punishment.
“But he is not like he has been accused. They don’t know him.” Soccer 24
In November alone fifteen Zimbabweans have died in the Uk from stress related cases. The life in the UK has been moulded to a competition. It may not be The Hunger Games, but in this massive multi-player role-playing game called Life, we’re all competitors.But the most culprits are Zimbabweans who try to outsmart each other in the foreign land. Visiting a Pentecostal church in UK you will be greeted by the top of the range cars parked outside the church. Zimbabweans have competed to an extend of getting stressed.
In November a Zimbabwean nurse committed suicide after she failed to cope with her Job. She had to try and put her life at par with her friends. As a result she has to work extra hours thus robbing her self of social time. She called it quits and shouted enough is enough before she gulped some substances before she died. Let’s face it. There’s always someone who wants exactly the same things you want. That job the headhunter mentioned to you (and four other people). That hot guy or girl you want to ask for a date. Even that last slice of pepperoni pizza in the box. Someone else got their eye on them too. It is not necessary to work yourself to death just to be the same. The sense of belonging has created some fictitious standards which makes it difficult to achieve. For many of us, competing hard is the only way to get what we want in life and work. Talent is always useful, but it’s not enough. Zimbabweans have worked so hard such that they have lost families lost their children lost themselves in their work in their quest for being seen to be better than the other.
Mike Zvenyika from London said” people are no longer in touch with their children they work so hard to please those at home and make those around them see that they are rich. But those who matter the most their children are raised fatherless motherless and indeed cultureless” This is echoed by George Mpofu from Leeds who said “ in the place I work I have ten Zimbabwean children of which seven their parents are nurses. All the ten are suffering from drug related and stress related cases. “
“For almost two decades, I’ve worked in one of the world’s most competitive industries and have seen many talented Zimbabwean individuals fizzle out. Competing is hard work. They also happen to be some of the most determined and resilient people I know.
Nothing is entitled, everything is to be earned. A new actor has to go to countless auditions before getting his big break. A small-business owner must compete with the big boys one customer at a time. An corporate executive has to edge out dozens of candidates to land her dream job. What is the best way to compete in this unforgiving game of life? But Zimbabweans in the UK only compete as a way of showing off. Its sad how many we are burying because of the competition” Zimbabweans need to realise that life is like a sport you just win differently its not winning to prove that you have money. Said Peter Chihaka from Sheffield.
Unsurprisingly, the act of competing has its origins in sports. The best athletes take on world-class competition with a finely tuned combination of preparation, discipline, focus, and performing under pressure. It’s like they locked the blueprint of winning in their muscle memory. But Zimbabwean Nurses in the UK have taken the competition a not h higher. They work to please the onlookers. While in many ways life is like a sport, there is one key difference: life doesn’t have a singular definition of winning. Having Range Rovers Free Landers beautiful outfits is not at all winning. Life should not be measured by wealth. This is called in Shona Ushewekunze.
It’s not as cut-and-dried as being the first to the finishing line, the one to knock out your opponent, or the team to score more goals. In sports, there can only be one winner. It’s a zero-sum game: someone wins at the expense of others. In life, there are more ways to win. Your life is yours and care less what your neighbours say. To reach the success and fulfillment that we seek, we must first understand the true spirit of competing. We do not compete to be the other. Our focus must never be another. As this competition among Zimbabweans rages on the coffins going to Zimbabwe multiply. They die and leave thousands of pounds untouched. Most nurses have cruelly tore their marriages apart because of the competition. People must remove the myth that The best competitors have the most talent. But it is true that The best competitors have the most desire “It’s not the size of the dog in the fight, it’s the size of the fight in the dog.” — Mark Twain
“Do your work with your whole heart, and you will succeed — there’s so little competition” — Elbert Hubbard “The healthiest competition occurs when average people win by putting above average effort.” — Colin Powell At the core of one’s competitiveness lies the desire of the individual. It’s not about strategies, techniques, or skills. It comes down to, as top athletes and entrepreneurs would say, a desire to win that refuses to be denied. The focus must always be you. If you look around you you can only reduce your speed. Underdogs epitomize this desire. Others may have more talent, but underdogs use motivation, grit, and energy to their advantage. These steely individuals are waiting patiently for their chance to shock the world. Don’t let their quiet demeanor fool you; they’re confident of their abilities, proud of the work they put in, and they don’t know how to give up. They make the toughest competitors.
Zimbabweans must learn that you do not have to beat your competition You are your only competitor. “The only competition worthy of a wise man is with himself.” Added John Dzekas from corby. You must be not in competition with anybody but yourself your only goal is to beat your last performance. If you keep looking over your shoulder, you not going to see where you’re going. When you constantly direct your competitive efforts in response to what your rivals are doing, you lose focus on yourself and your goals.
Be aware of your competition, but beware of the disease of being competitive simply to prove you’re better than others. That’s narcissistic and self-destructive. Being in competition with yourself is the healthiest competition. Nobody needs to lose for you to win.
Set the bar for yourself. Channel your competitive fire to meet your own standards and expectations. Be the driver on your journey to success. We look everyday as the children become victims they do not see their parents anymore. Parents are now lovers of their jobs. They have a selfish mind just to be seen as rich by their friends. They now go to church to show off their new designer dresses their cars and soon enough their new coffins. Zimbabweans are dying of stress of fatigue they are dying of diseases caused by this unreasonable working style. The real people they are supposed to work for love and see them grow become their least on their mind. Zimbabweans in the UK have become addicted to work in the competition to show off. May God help us all.
Vice President Dr Constantino Chiwenga says timely intervention by President Mnangagwa to engage his Chinese counterpart, President Xi Jinping, to facilitate his airlift to Beijing for specialist care and treatment prevented his “imminent death” and saved his life.
In July, the President made the decision when VP Chiwenga was battling for life in the intensive care unit of a South African hospital.
At the time, the VP suffered memory lapses, speech impairment and excruciating pain.
However, in what has been an extraordinary recovery story, VP Chiwenga — who arrived home in the early hours of Saturday after a four-month absence — yesterday looked fit and agile when he received President Mnangagwa at his home.
The duo shared a hearty embrace before an hour-and-half private engagement.
Emerging from the meeting, a visibly elated President Mnangagwa, who was accompanied by First Lady Auxillia Mnangagwa, explained the VP’s path to recovery.
“When he left he was unwell, which was giving us sleepless nights because our comrade was unwell,” said the President.
“So we arranged for him to go to South Africa and while he was there, we spoke to our Chinese friends, we spoke to President Xi Jinping, who is our dear friend, who offered to assist with his treatment.
“We saw it fit for the VP to go to China. We flew him there and he stayed there for a number of months. Now you can see for yourselves that he has regained his fitness and he is clear-minded.
“When he initially left he was having memory lapses, and he was in so much pain that everyone could tell the agony he was in.”
VP Chiwenga, he said, is now “raring to go”.
“I am confident that now the whole of Zimbabwe knows that the Vice President is back and fit, and he is very clear and raring to go. That is why I said God is there because my colleague is back and we can now put our heads together to uplift the country.”
When The Sunday Mail asked him when the VP was expected back in office, President Mnangagwa responded: “You can see the way he looks now, but on my part, I am not too concerned about him returning back to work, I am more concerned about his welfare and that he is back to full fitness. But as someone who is coming from being ill, I only wish for him to start his duties slowly and move progressively to take up more work. You can see for yourselves that the man is glowing.”
The President also revealed that the VP’s ill-health had “affected him personally”, adding that his return had brought him immense relief.
He said he also sent a special message of thanks to President Xi Jinping for facilitating VP Chiwenga’s treatment.
“I am also very grateful to my brother, the President of the People’s Republic of China whom I talked to and he said he will do his best and instruct his system to do their best to look after your Vice President, and that has been done.
“And I have sent a letter to President Xi Jinping thanking him for the role he played in looking after my VP.
Besides that, I have also asked General Chiwenga on how was the care in the hospital and he says, ‘Mukoma, ndakabatwa zvakanaka, I can’t think of anything else or wish for anything else . . .’”
With a voice full of life, VP Chiwenga thanked the President for his judicious decision to send him to China for treatment.
“And I want to thank personally my President, His Excellency President Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa, if he had not intervened the time I was in the intensive care in South Africa, I could have been history by now, and when he communicated with his counterpart President Xi Jinping, I was then taken to China . . . he did not act as the President but acted as my brother to make sure that I survive . . .
“And I would also want, before I go far, to thank the people of Zimbabwe for their prayers; those prayers from across the country helped my recovery.”
He also explained his hospital stint and recovery.
“Up to yesterday, from the time I left, I had spent 123 days in hospital. When I got there it was the 21st of July and got my discharge certificate later on after 123 days.
“I feel strong and I am raring to go for work . . . everything possible was done; they left no stone unturned . . . so I am very fit and happy.”
He said he had already resumed his duties.
It is now incumbent upon us to work to achieve the vision our President has set for 2030”.
“Let us work with him tirelessly to ensure everything is achieved.”
— SundayMail
AFRICAN MEDALLION GROUP LTD
9th Floor Maeva Tower. Cnr Silicon Ave & Bank St. Ebene 72201. Mauritius
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN Friday 22 November 2019
RE: STATE INTERFERENCE IN JUDICIARY
African Medallion Group has been informed of allegations pointing to agents of members of the first family in Zimbabwe that have attempted to interfere in the Judicial process in regards to the personal custody matter/s of our founding member Mr Frank Buyanga Sadiqi for their own personal and/or political motives.
Additionally, one of the female legal representatives of the African Medallion Group assisting Mr Frank Buyanga Sadiqi with his personal custody matter in Zimbabwe was recently abducted. The matter was reported to Highlands Police Station, and until now no meaningful investigations have been made. It is our view that this abduction may have been caused by the same elements trying to interfere with the Judicial process. These tactics to attack our Founder by using his innocent 5-year-old child and the mother to further their cause are in our view nothing less than cheap and inhumane.
In light of what has transpired and is alleged, African Medallion Group is issuing a stern warning that should anything happen to our Founder Mr Buyanga Sadiqi, we will hold members of the first family and all their agents fully accountable and responsible. If these shenanigans continue, African Medallion Group will release evidence whereby these agents have been instructed to create false information regarding our Founder to interfere with his credibility as well as the custody matter. Such evidence will reveal the shenanigans that these agents and the first family is involved in to further their political influences. This mischievous conduct and attempted interference by the State with the Judiciary is one of a dictatorship and not a democracy and undermines the Constitution as enshrined by the people of Zimbabwe.
In light of these events. it is our stern view that this mischievous conduct of these agents and the first family should immediately be ceased. We remind these Executives that the Constitution provides clearly that the Judiciary is independent, and impartiality of the Judiciary is central to the law of Zimbabwe and Democratic Governance and that neither the State nor any institution or agency of the Government at any level may interfere with the functioning of the courts.
We believe that despite the alleged attempts of the first family and these agents to interfere with the Judicial process of Mr Buyanga Sadiqi’s personal custody matter, that the Judiciary has remained independent and we commend them for this.
A MAN from Silobela was on Tuesday mauled to death by crocodiles while on a fishing expedition at Tshapewa Dam.
Julius Hoko from Tshapewa Village under Chief Gobo, had gone for fishing but did not return home, only for villagers to find his remains after some days of searching.
Although Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority (Zimparks) spokesperson Mr Tinashe Farawo could not be readily reached for comment, Silobela legislator, Mthokozisi Manoki Mpofu confirmed the incident.
“Yes, we received reports of a man from Ward 18 in Tshapewa area who was mauled by crocodiles. His remains were discovered after days of searching after he had been reported missing,” said Mpofu.
He said the remains were taken to Silobela District Hospital.
“We are grateful to the villagers who managed to retrieve the remains and facilitated that the remains be taken to Silobela Hospital. Our prayers and thoughts are with the bereaved family in this time of losing their breadwinner,” said Manoki.
He appealed to relevant authorities to deal with the crocodiles that have since infested the dam, killing humans and livestock alike.
“This is not the first time we have lost many lives to crocodiles in Tshapewa Dam. The crocodiles are also killing people’s livestock.
We are appealing to relevant authorities to do something, be it killing the troublesome crocodiles or transferring them to a safer place where they do not clash with humans,” he said.
Mpofu said it was difficult for the villagers to avoid going fishing as it was their source of livelihood.
— SundayNews
Own Correspondent| Yesterday morning, Zimbabweans were shocked to learn that vice President Constantino Chiwenga who was away for more than four months seeking medical attention in China had landed at the Robert Mugabe International airport.
Present at the airport were only his two brothers and Deputy Ambassador to China and none from the government or Zanu PF party.
Conspicuously absent was his wife Marry who has not been seen with the retired general since reports of conflict between the two began surfacing.
While there has not been an explanation on why Marry was not present to meet his husband, various sources who spoke to ZimEye have given conflicting statements on the issues surrounding the powerful couple.
The first source alleged that Marry and Chiwenga were no longer in talking terms amid claims that the former model was suspected of leaking sensitive information to President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s faction.
The source added that Marry was sent back home from China with the retired army general not interested in seeing her again.
But another source gave a different story, suggesting that she was in the same plane only to come out later.
They told ZimEye: “a few days ago she had traveled I guess to pick him up. Also, she doesn’t have to come out of the plane the same time with him.”
Footage at the airport Saturday morning however has no Marry, and her absence became more conspicuous hours later when Emmerson Mnangagwa visited Chiwenga at his house.
Another source told ZimEye that soldiers from 1 Commando cordoned off the airport with ministers afraid to go see Chiwenga so they cannot be seen as his backers.
The source added that there was mood of suspense at state house due to the fact that Chiwenga was infuriated when he heard that Mnangagwa had approached Joice Mujuru to replace him while he was still in China.
“But as far as the army is concerned Mnangagwa has done his homework by appointing his own relative Valerio Sibanda the Commander Of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces. It is thus highly unlikely that the military will remove Mnangagwa.
Farai Dziva|Caps United host perennial arch rivals Dynamos in a make or break encounter at the giant National Sports Stadium this afternoon.
“On Sunday all roads will lead to the giant National Sports Stadium where we will host Dynamos in the 79th edition of the Harare Derby.
In our last five meetings with Dynamos, we won once, they won once too, and the remaining 3 matches ended in stalemates,” Caps United said in a statement.
The government has announced the new fuel prices that are effective Monday, 25 November 2019.
Zimbabwe Energy Regulatory Authority (ZERA) made the below revisions which see the price for a litre of diesel going for ZWL$17.90 and Blend E20 (Petrol) selling at ZWL$17.44.
ZERA further announced that operators may sell at prices below the cap depending on their trading advantages.
Writing on Sunday morning, he said, “When I was SRC leader) I never listened to retrogressive statements. Zim health care system has to move towards the first world standards. Hatinga dzokere kwana mbuya nyamukuta
Chamisa you are slow!”
The statement was met with queries on what he expects Chamisa to do which he can better.
To this, he had not responded at the time of going to print.
Magombeyi escaped Zimbabwe early in October after ZimEye.com exposed the Zimbabwe Republic Police for keeping him hostage.
By A Correspondent| HISTORY WAS MADE WHEN EMMERSON MNANGAGWA’S personal spokesman George Charamba yesterday took a direct swipe at the Deputy Chinese ambassador for driving to the RGM Airport to welcome Mnangagwa’s deputy, Constantino Chiwenga on Saturday.
In the wee hours of Saturday, the Deputy envoy, Mr Zhao Baogang performed a brief welcoming ceremony for Chiwenga at the airport.
Writing on his twitter portal, Charamba complained saying, what is the sympathy for itsitsi dzeyi? He said in full:
“TWI-PROTOCOL? Interesting that well-known oppositional twi-voices seek to teach is how to welcome and love our leaders! Itsitsi dzei? For the record, ED who is Head of State and President of Zimbabwe does not – repeat – DOES NOT receive his Deputy. In the same vein, the Chinese.
“…Ambassador who personifies the Chinese State here in Zimbabwe WILL NOT receive a Vice President of the State to which he is accredited. Protocol does not allow both cases. For the record, President Mnangagwa and his Deputy enjoyed daily communication while the VP was away.
“The President will meet and welcome his Deputy in the appropriate way and setting. In the meantime, all well-meaning Zimbabweans rejoice that Vice President Chiwenga is back and looks fit.”
It is believed there is a rift between Mnangagwa and Chiwenga, and the former, Mnangagwa, has omitted Chiwenga in renaming over 10 streets after him.
Meanwhile Chiwenga today announced that he is ready to resume his official duties.
Chiwenga was speaking to reporters after arriving at around 02:30Hrs.
Chiwenga had been in China for the past four months where he had been receiving treatment for an undisclosed ailment.
By A Correspondent- Violent storms destroyed three schools in Chimanimani East recently.
Last Saturday, a storm ravaged Nyambeya Primary School destroying seven classrooms and a teacher’s house. The destruction left four grades (from ECD to Grade 4) without a roof over their heads.
Five blocks at Kwirire Primary School also had their roofs blown off last Thursday, leaving pupils with no classes.
The storm also destroyed teachers’ houses.
Also affected by the rains was Manase Primary School.
The Manica Post visited Kwirire Primary School and discovered that five blocks had their roofs smashed while some tents that were housing 70 Early Childhood Education (ECD) pupils had been razed.
Fortunately, the school authorities had dismissed pupils early upon sensing danger.
“After sensing danger we dismissed all pupils at 2pm. Had we not done that this could have been a disaster considering the extent of damage caused by the storm. On a normal day lessons end at 4pm,” said school head Mr Twoboy Mapooze Sithole.
Chimanimani Rural District Council owns the school, which was built in 1982 with an enrolment of 1 154 pupils.
Two teachers’ houses also had their roofs blown off at the school.
“This is a disaster. We need urgent assistance as a school. The community is incapacitated and cannot render any assistance to the school. We need partners to rebuild the school,” said Mr Sithole.
Mr Sithole said the school was affected by Cyclone Idai in March this year and authorities were busy repairing it before the latest storm.
Manicaland provincial education director Mr Edward Shumba has directed the District Schools Inspector’s office to prepare a detailed report.
“We are not yet in a position to close the affected schools. I have asked the DSI to prepare a detailed report,” said Mr Shumba.
Meanwhile, 12 pupils at Nedziwa High School were struck by lightning on Tuesday afternoon. This happened while they were at school.
By A Correspondent- The Zimbabwe Republic Police(ZRP) has released the names of seven of the eight horror crash victims who perished on the spot after the Toyota Hiace they were traveling in heading to Kanyemba from Harare burst into flames on Friday night.
Zimbabwe Republic Police (ZRP) Spokesperson, Assistant Commissioner Paul Nyathi confirmed the developments in a press statement where he said the seven victims have been identified and the eighth victim is yet to be identified, meanwhile, two survivors who were receiving treatment were discharged.
“One body is yet to be identified and members of the public who are missing a relative are urged to come forward and assist the police in the identification process,” said Nyathi.
The victims have been identified as Charles Mutematsaka(38) from Highfield, Harare, Maria Chada(45) from Waterfalls, Master Mutematsaka(18) from Highfield, Abraham Chinwara from Kanyemba Growth Point, Guruve, Cuthbert Kasana from Shange Village, Mushumbi, Guruve, Tonderai Murasikwa, from Kanyemba and a toddler from Waterfalls.
The commuter omnibus which is suspected to have been carrying flammables collided with a lorry and burst into flames in Concession, Mazowe District killing the driver, a toddler, and six other passengers.
By A Correspondent- A man from Mucheke in Masvingo will spend the next 20 years in jail after the High Court found him guilty of stabbing to death a tout over a $1 he had failed to pay.
Robert Mabhadho (39) stabbed Vengai Mariwo who was 31 when he met his fate in 2010, in the chest and left arm while the pair were drinking beer at Mundondo Beer Hall following a dispute over $1 that Mabhadho was supposed to pay for the tout’s pushcart service.
Mabhadho had hired the deceased’s pushcart but failed to pay for the services rendered, the court was told.
Appearing before Justice Garainesu Mawadze at Masvingo High Court early last week Mabhadho who was represented pro-deo by Mr Emmanuel Mudarikwa denied having stabbed the deceased to death but due to overwhelming evidence he was found guilty of murder with actual intent and sentenced to 20 years imprisonment.
Delivering sentence Justice Mawadze said the accused’s actions were unjustifiable and he deserved sterner punishment.
“What you did was never justifiable and you deserve sterner sentence. There is no rationale in killing someone over a $1. I therefore send you to jail for the next 20 years,” said Justice Mawadze.
Prosecutor, Mr Mike Tembo told the court that sometime in September 2010, Mabhadho, a fellow tout hired a pushcart from Mariwo as he wanted to use it for a piece job.
Mariwo then gave him the pushcart on condition that he would give him $1 for the service and they agreed.
Later, the pair then met at Mundondo Beer Hall and Mariwo demanded his money from Mabhadho.
This did not go down well with Mabhadho and a fight ensued but Mabhadho was overpowered.
Sensing danger, Mabhadho suddenly took out an Okapi knife from his pocket before stabbing his victim on the right side of chest and left arm before fleeing.
Mariwo collapsed and died on the spot.
A report was made at Chikato Police leading to Mabhadho’s arrest at his home in Mucheke.
The body of Mariwo was then taken to Masvingo General Hospital mortuary for post-mortem.
The report indicated that Mariwo died of haemorrhagic shock and stab wound.
By Fanuel Chinowaita- Currently we are in a state whereby some people have unlimited power resting directly on force, not limited by anything or restrained by any laws or any absolute rules.
These people have transformed other people into desperate cornered animals. We have people who were murdered in cold blood. Some, like Itai Dzamara, Paul Chizuze were abducted and their whereabouts remain unknown upto today.
If things do not change, very soon people will be accused for spitting and convicted for hooliganism.
Two days ago someone called Paradza Kainesi, Makonde Legislator said MDC people who were beaten outside their Headquarters in Harare are criminals. It’s very sad!
All the above clearly explains the type of government we have. We are in a Dictatorship state.
WILL ZANU PF INTERNAL FIGHTS HELP US IN ANY WAY?
Learning from the past experience, we have seen that Zanu pf factional fights will not change anything in Zimbabwe.
In November 2019, we all marched against Robert Mugabe who has been on power since 1980. We were all confident that Freedom we have been longing for has finally come…what follows up to now remains a thorn in the flesh. Mugabe died a bitter man.
Let me take you back to Russia in 1918, Lenin retorted, “the energy and mass nature of terror must be encouraged.” Lenin perceived that as a minority representing virtually no one but themselves, the communists could survive and rule only through force.
In 1924 Lenin died from a Stroke and Stalin took over. During his time about 20 million people were killed.
When he died in 1953, a band led by Khrushchev ultimately won, “a faction fight confined to a narrow section of the leadership”, thereby gaining control of the Party and the Soviet Union.
Khrushchev relaxed the terror by closing many concentration camps and freeing many prisoners. He also reorganized the entire political and police structure.
*Think of the so called new dispensation by Mnangagwa.*
False hope was created there. When Mnangagwa took over from Mugabe, he promised jobs, real engagement with Zimbabweans, Africa and the world. He also vowed to follow the constitution and respect human rights.
We all said, “Freedom has finally come”, not knowing that even the little freedom we had has been taken.
Khrushchev had been a zealous agent of the purges and a shameless sycophant to Lenin. While presiding over the purges he referred to himself as “Friend and comrade in arms of Stalin.
On 30 June 1956, Khrushchev formally warned both Soviet people and the world that there would be no fundamental change in the Soviet system.
The Soviet Union still was ruled by a tiny oligarchy, supported by the new class of the Party bureaucracy, whose power rested directly on the force supplied by the secret political police, the KGB.
“As for our country, the communist Party has been and will be the only master of minds, thoughts, the spokesman, leader and organizer of the people.”
Mnangagwa is the typical example of Khrushchev, look at what he promised and what is on the ground.
The state security is being used to silence the aggrieved citizens. Now Mnangagwa has signed MOPO bill into a law. All our freedom has been taken. Zimbabwe to become a one Party State.
All the opposition and civic organizations gatherings and demonstrations are banned. AlutaContinua!!!
During Mugabe error, Mnangagwa was the right hand man of him, leading all the purges, thousands of people died.
Rumours are saying Kasukuwere ‘Tyson’ is planning another coup. Some are saying its Chiwenga. No matter the consequences, the majority of Zimbabwe will not benefit from these factional fights.
*Whoever wins a factional fight confined to a narrow section of the leadership will rule.*
By Nomusa Garikai- There is no denying that President Mnangagwa’s trade-mark “Zimbabwe is open for business!” clarion call is dead in the water. Instead of putting the Zimbabwe economy back on track, the economic meltdown has taken a decidedly turn for the worse.
The country is facing shortages of cash, fuel, power supply, medicine, food, you name it! The country’s hyperinflation, marking the high mark of the country’s 2008 economic collapse, is back with a vengeance. Inflation has soar from single digit in January to 400% plus now.
The regime has stubbornly refused to increase the wages of the doctors, nurses, teachers and other civil servants in desperate attempt to contain the runaway hyperinflation. In an act of absolute folly, the regime has fired doctors for demand a living wage; they are paid a misery US$ 40 per month; delivering the coup de grace to the health service!
The hyperinflation is expected to continue to soar fuelled by gross mismanagement, rampant corruption, etc. The regime has just awarded the top brass in the security services as much as 600% wage increases and the wholesale looting in the diamond industry continues, for example.
President Mnangagwa is clearly aware that he has failed to revive the economy; he, just like Mugabe, does not want to accept any blame and is blaming the failure on drought, cyclone Idai and, Zanu PF’s hot favourite, the sanctions. He knows that the people are not going to suffer and die quietly like sheep in a slaughter house and has reverted to his default position of using overwhelming brutal force to cow down the nation into silent submission.
As long as Zimbabwe’s economic situation does not improve, people will continue to voice their suffering regardless of the brutal violence from the regime. People are not sheep, they will never be cowed into suffering and dying in silence forever. The pressure for meaningful political change is mounting and is coming from all quarters.
“Zimbabwe Self-exiled G40 kingpin Professor Jonathan Moyo and MDC-ALLIANCE leader Mr Nelson Chamisa have allegedly written a letter to South African President Cyril Ramaphosa and selected SADC leaders requesting for them to push for exclusive dialogue between President Mnangagwa and Mr Chamisa, outside the Political Actors Dialogue (POLAD),” reported The Herald.
“The letter dubbed “Open Letter to President Ramaphosa” was not sent through official channels, but has been distributed to five newspapers, among them the Sunday Times for publication on Sunday, Kenyan sources said.”
This is just a waste! Any solution giving or likely to give Zanu PF any meaningful role in charting the way forward is doomed because the party is NOT going to implement any meaningful democratic reforms. As long as Zanu PF is allow to stay in office; be it in the National Transition Authority (NTA) which is what MDC is proposing; we can be 100% certain of one thing – the party will see to it that no meaningful democratic reforms are implemented.
“Zanu PF is not going to reform itself out of office!” Professor Jonathan Moyo once boasted, during his Zanu PF days! He was booted out of the party in the November 2017 coup, still when it comes to embracing democratic change, the party has not yielded one inch.
So the only sure way to make sure Zanu PF does not play any role in determining the way forward in Zimbabwe is to make sure the party is not even invited to the discussion.
Indeed, the nation is in this political mess precisely because Zanu PF rigged last year’s elections and granting the party any meaningful role going forward is just another way of rewarding Mnangagwa and company for rigging the elections. They should be punished and not rewarded.
SA’s President Ramaphosa and SADC cannot play any meaningful role in ending Zimbabwe’s current political crisis because, by endorsing the rigged elections as free and fair and Zanu PF as the winner, they have soiled their own hands. SADC leaders have their hands tied, they have to invite Zanu PF to the talks and expect the party to play a dominant role going forward.
So if Zanu PF cannot be part of the solution in Zimbabwe whoever is initiating the political dialogue must, necessarily, have the authority to reaffirm the political reality that last year’s elections were indeed flawed, illegal and therefore null and void.
And that this Zanu PF regime is per se illegitimate and therefore the party has no legal basis for claiming, as a right, any role going forward. Both SADC and AU leaders lack that political authority since they soiled their hands by accepting last year’s rigged elections.
Only the UN has the authority and gravitas to president over Zimbabwe’s political crisis and stand a chance of producing a real working solution that will get us out of this mess.
By A Correspondent- Prominent human rights lawyer Doug Coltart was reportedly assaulted by the police yesterday when visited his client, Artuz leader Obert Masaraure at the police holding cells. The Amalgamated Rural Teachers Union of Zimbabwe leader, Masaraure had been arrested on charges of disorderly conduct.
According to Masaraure, Coltart had brought him food at the police holding cells when he was assaulted. Masaraure has since been released.
Coltart’s father, former government minister and MDC official David Coltart confirmed the assault on Twitter Sunday morning:
I confirm that my son @DougColtart was brutally assaulted yesterday by police . I trust the @lawsocietyofzim will now act and take this matter up with the Minister of Home Affairs & Commisioner of Police. The assault of lawyers whilst representing their clients is unacceptable .
By A Correspondent- Controversy continues to follow former President Robert Mugabe to his grave, with his neighbours now being forced to relocate their cattle kraals to pave way for the construction of a protective precast wall at his rural Zvimba home.
Mugabe died and was buried at his rural Zvimba home in September.
When NewsDay Weekender visited the Mugabes’ homestead at Kutama a few days ago, about 200 workers were busy on site building the brick protective wall around the homestead where Mugabe’s remains are interred.
The controversial protective wall came at a cost for some villagers as they were forced to relocate their cattle kraals to pave way for construction of the wall by Chinese contractors.
A villager, Gibson Mareya, said they were summoned to the site by former First Lady Grace Mugabe early this month and told that their cattle kraals would be relocated to near Kutama Police Base.
They were allegedly told that there was no room for negotiations, but should simply follow instructions.
Mareya said no one objected save for Mugabe’s relative, Josphine Jarijari, who gave a brief history of the cattle relocation history.
“There was no room for negotiations. We were told what to do and everyone agreed. Grace told us that she would pay the cost of relocation. But a Mugabe relative, Ambuya Jarijari, initially refused, briefing the meeting that this is the second relocation after the first was done during the expansion of Mugabe’s rural home,” Mareya said.
Efforts to get a comment from Grace were fruitless. But Mugabe’s nephew, Dominic Matibiri, said the wall was meant to prevent intruders who might want to tamper with Mugabe’s remains.
“Since we buried our father there, a precast wall is a security measure to prevent his enemies from tampering around with his remains, considering that he was no longer a Zanu PF member,” Matibiri said without elaborating.
He said besides the security wall, they would also install CCTVs.
By A Correspondent- A man from Silobela was on Tuesday mauled to death by crocodiles while on a fishing expedition at Tshapewa Dam.
Julius Hoko from Tshapewa Village under Chief Gobo, had gone for fishing but did not return home, only for villagers to find his remains after some days of searching.
Although Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority (Zimparks) spokesperson Mr Tinashe Farawo could not be readily reached for comment, Silobela legislator, Cde Mthokozisi Manoki Mpofu confirmed the incident.
“Yes, we received reports of a man from Ward 18 in Tshapewa area who was mauled by crocodiles. His remains were discovered after days of searching after he had been reported missing,” said Cde Mpofu.
He said the remains were taken to Silobela District Hospital.
“We are grateful to the villagers who managed to retrieve the remains and facilitated that the remains be taken to Silobela Hospital. Our prayers and thoughts are with the bereaved family in this time of losing their breadwinner,” said Cde Manoki.
He appealed to relevant authorities to deal with the crocodiles that have since infested the dam, killing humans and livestock alike.
“This is not the first time we have lost many lives to crocodiles in Tshapewa Dam. The crocodiles are also killing people’s livestock. We are appealing to relevant authorities to do something, be it killing the troublesome crocodiles or transferring them to a safer place where they do not clash with humans,” he said.
Cde Mpofu said it was difficult for the villagers to avoid going fishing as it was their source of livelihood.
By A Correspondent- Permanent secretary in the Ministry of Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services, Ndavaningi Mangwana, had downplayed the failure by government officials to welcome Vice President Constantino Chiwenga on his return from China on Saturday.
Mangwana said that Chiwenga’s return was not announced as he was coming from the hospital.
He said:
It wasn’t something that was announced in government that he was coming as he was coming from the hospital.
It is just like when he went to the hospital, there were no government officials to see him off.
If he wasn’t sent off when he left, why would there be government officials to welcome him?
Chiwenga landed at the Robert Gabriel Mugabe International Airport around 0230 hrs on Saturday and was welcomed by his son Tawanda, brother Onismo and Chinese deputy ambassador Zhao Boagang.
He had been to China, India and South Africa seeking treatment for an undisclosed ailment since the beginning of the year.
By A Correspondent- Former First Lady Grace Mugabe’s language was foul, vul_gar and stinking to the heavens, a sign of immaturity in politics, veteran freedom fighter and former Cabinet Minister Retired Colonel Tshinga Dube has said.
In his autobiography titled “Quiet Flows The Zambezi”, launched at the Bulawayo National Art Gallery on Friday evening, Retired Colonel Dube, a Zanu-PF Politburo member, wrote that Mrs Mugabe was crude and was the reason behind the subsequent fall of the late former president Robert Mugabe.
Rtd Col Dube said Mrs Mugabe’s immaturity in politics started showing when she used unorthodox means to push former Vice-President Joice Mujuru from her post and Zanu-PF in 2014.
“She was extremely crude and vul_gar. Her language was obscene and uncouth, to say the least,” writes Rtd Col Dube.
He said Mrs Mugabe, in her typical crude tirades, made accusations against former VP Mujuru some which bordered on witchcraft and pr0stitution.
“Some of us knew VP Mujuru to be a respectable person. All the denigration and insults she received were calculated to bring her down so that the First Lady would rise,” he said.
“Her language was foul, vul_gar and stinking to the heavens. She solicited support from some party heavy weights,” he said.
Rtd Col Dube said Mrs Mugabe, teamed with some G40 elements such as former Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Development Professor Jonathan Moyo to try to use the same tactic to push out President Emmerson Mnangagwa (then VP) in 2017.
Describing how former President Mugabe miscalculated the whole issue Rtd Col Dube said: “It was the beginning of the end which was hastened by his over ambitions wife Amai Grace Mugabe who lacked political tact and maturity.
“She began a campaign to land the post of Vice President once she had become the Secretary for the Women’s League from which she had elbowed out Oppah Muchinguri Kashiri.”
Rtd Col Dube said Mrs Mugabe thought she was going to use the same method although she got stuck in the political bog.
“When war erupted between the Party (Zanu-PF) and the war veterans, the writing was on the wall. Amai Mugabe made it even more legible,” he wrote.
By A Correspondent- Communities living close to the borders with South Africa and Botswana have reportedly dumped the local currency for the Rand where it has become the sole medium of exchange.
A teacher at a school in Tsholotsho told a local publication that he has to convert his Zimbabwe dollar salary to the Rand every month so that he can buy groceries which are relatively cheap in foreign currency. Said the teacher:
I have no option but to change my salary, which is in Zimbabwe dollars to the South African rand every month.
This is the only way to ensure I can buy some grocery here in Tsholotsho instead of travelling all the way to Bulawayo over 100km away to buy my groceries in local currency.
In areas such as Tsholotsho, Bulilima, Mangwe, Matobo and Gwanda, the villagers receive monthly remittances from family members living in South Africa or Botswana and this has sustained local trade in foreign currency.
In June this year, the government promulgated Statutory Instrument (SI) 142 of 2019 which ended the multi-currency system that had been in place since 2009, with new notes being introduced earlier this month.
By A Correspondent- Three police officers were attacked while on patrol along Speke Avenue and moving towards Leopold Takawira last night, 22nd November 2019 at 1930 hours.
Read statement below:
23 NOVEMBER 2019
ACTS OF HOOLIGANISM AND ROBBERY IN CENTRAL BUSINESS DISTRICT
The Zimbabwe Republic Police condemns acts of hooliganism, attacks on police officers and robbery which occurred in Harare Central Business District last night, 22nd November 2019 at 1930 hours.
Three police officers were on patrol along Speke Avenue and moving towards Leopold Takawira. Suddenly, a group of sixteen (16) male adults who are yet to be identified emerged at the corner of Rezende Street and Speke Avenue.
One of the gang members started to assault one of the police officers with open hands whilst the other two officers escaped unhurt and sought refuge at a Harare City Council yard. A police communication radio was stolen in the process.
The criminals proceeded to Engen Service Station, corner Albion and Leopold Takawira Street and severely assaulted two uniformed police officers who were going home after reporting off duty.
The officers were rescued by a member of the security services and later took shelter inside an Eat and Lick food outlet. In the process, a Gee Investment shop near the service station was looted of various cellphones.
The criminals moved to Julius Nyerere Street where they robbed a certain man of US$100.00 and ZW$1 900.00 after assaulting him.
Criminal gangs and unruly elements who are attacking police officers and robbing members of the public in Central Business Districts will only have themselves to blame as the full wrath of the law will be applied in order to ensure the culprits are brought before the courts to face justice.
(NYATHI. P) Assistant Commissioner Senior Staff Officer (Press, Public and International Relations) To the Commissioner-General of Police Police General Headquarters
The court-challenged SA Express Airways’ new route between OR Tambo International Airport and Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, had a shaky take off because of delays, permit issues and a hastily-organised press conference.
While the privately-owned SA Airlink is still fuming over the International Air Services Council’s decision last month to grant the SA Express additional routes into Africa, SA Express forged ahead on Monday to unveil its new routes to Zimbabwe.
The airline also acquired other routes, such as from Joburg to Botswana and Angola, while domestically it was granted the Mthatha-Cape Town, Mthatha-East London and East London-Cape Town trips.
Airlink, however, has approached the court to challenge these routes, claiming that they would be at the taxpayers’ expense.
What was promised to be a groundbreaking launch for the 25-year-old regional and domestic passenger carrier, the Joburg to Bulawayo route failed to impress to the 40-odd passengers, including invited journalists and SA Express employees, who had to wait more than an hour for the CRJ 200 aircraft to arrive at OR Tambo Airport for the 75-minute journey to the JM Nkomo Airport.
More time was wasted at the airport due to protocol issues with the Zimbabwean authorities, which seemed to have been resolved by the time the plane flew out of the airport at 2.45pm.
On arrival in Bulawayo at 4pm, SA Express guests were told they could not proceed to the venue (outside the airport) where the launch ceremony was planned. After a few minutes of deliberation, confusion and pointless walking around the airport, company chief financial officer Andre Odendaal held an impromptu press conference in the airport’s corridor.
So hasty was the conference that it lasted barely five minutes and ended before Odendaal’s colleagues from the marketing department could pull up the banners they had flown with from South Africa.
The conference ended as other senior staff members were pacing about trying to sort out permit issues with the Civil Aviation Authority of Zimbabwe. After spending about an hour in Bulawayo, the team had to fly back to Joburg.
“Yesterday’s inaugural flight experienced a few teething challenges with Zimbabwean transport and airport authorities that are currently in the process of being resolved,” SA Express spokesperson Mpho Majatladi later told The Star.
She said the routes were key to the airline’s growth and for job creation in the country.
“It is also critical to note that an important part of SA Express’s turnaround strategy is route network growth – especially as regional routes generate higher yields than the domestic markets.
“SA Express is committed to restoring customer confidence and is working towards re-establishing its status as the well-running, efficient, profitable entity it was in previous years,” Majatladi said.
The Bulawayo route consists of flights every Tuesday and Thursday.
Regarding their spat with Airlink, Majatladi said they had approached the Competition Commission for intervention.
“SA Express will contest the appeal to the North Gauteng High Court. The airline has also lodged a complaint with the Competition Commission against Airlink for its anti-competitive behaviour. It is clear that Airlink’s behaviour of lodging objections is intended to limit and stifle competition,” she said.
Airlink, however, said their challenge to SA Express’s new route was on the grounds of fairness and compliance. They claim the company does not meet the criteria as set down in the International Air Services Act.
“Airlink believes that SA Express is not financially capable given that its recently presented annual financial statements, reflecting a loss before tax of R758 million, have been disclaimed by the auditor-general in their totality and that the company is not a growing concern,” said Airlink chief executive Rodger Foster.
Presidential Spokesperson George Charamba has lashed at the Chinese Deputy Ambassador for breaking protocol and welcoming Vice President Constantino Chiwenga at the airport on Saturday morning.
Chiwenga was arriving from a medical pilgrimage in China whe he was being treated for multiple organ failure.
Said Charamba, “TWI-PROTOCOL? Interesting that well-known oppositional twi-voices seek to teach is how to welcome and love our leaders! Itsitsi dzei? For the record, ED who is Head of State and President of Zimbabwe does not – repeat – DOES NOT receive his Deputy. In the same vein, the Chinese Ambassador who personifies the Chinese State here in Zimbabwe WILL NOT receive a Vice President of the State to which he is accredited. Protocol does not allow both cases. For the record, President Mnangagwa and his Deputy enjoyed daily communication while the VP was away.”
With Mashaba on the verge of leaving, the EFF fielding a mayoral candidate, and the ANC backing IFP’s Bonginkosi Dlamini, the DA’s control of Joburg is under threat.
The ANC could elect to support an IFP mayor in the City of Johannesburg, party insiders told News24, saying talks between the party and the IFP were at an advanced stage.
IFP Gauteng chairperson Bonginkosi Dlamini is understood to be the front runner as outgoing mayor Herman Mashaba’s replacement.
“That is the idea. The objective is to take power away from the governing party in the City. We will maintain help steering the City from within the mayoral committees,” one party insider, who sits in the council, said.
In the past, the ANC has voted for a mayor from smaller parties to ensure a balance of power in a coalition metro.
In Nelson Mandela Bay, with 50 seats, the party voted to install mayor Mongameli Bobani from the UDM. Following the composition of Bobani’s new mayoral committee, the ANC controlled almost all key portfolios in that council, including the City’s finances.
In Johannesburg, the ANC has the most seats (121) and, with the help of the IFP’s five seats and its partners in council – the AIC (4), Patriotic Alliance (1) and Aljama (1) – the DA could lose its hold over the city.
This could also be the case if the EFF, which has 30 seats, goes ahead with its decision to field its own candidate for Johannesburg mayor.
The red berets have maintained the role of kingmaker in the City over the years.
On Thursday, EFF leader Julius Malema said the ANC and the DA should get behind its candidate for mayor.
The DA, which has had a series of leadership challenges resulting in Mashaba’s resignation, announced this week that Finance MMC Funzela Ngobeni was its mayoral candidate.
It’s also understood that ANC secretary general Ace Magashule will meet with the IFP’s leadership on Monday to discuss the final terms of the negotiations, another party insider said.
A Johannesburg councillor told News24 that while the ANC had previously been keen to field one of its smaller partners in the seat of power in the country’s economic hub, its own members seem to have started eyeing the role for themselves.
The ANC has worked at building relations with the IFP throughout the year, with it electing IFP Member of Parliament Mkhuleko Hlengwa as the chairperson of Parliament’s Standing Committee on Public Accounts (Scopa).
In Gauteng, it backed IFP leader Bonginkosi Dlamini as chairperson of the premier’s oversight committee in the provincial legislature.
With the loss of both Mashaba and the EFF, its biggest voting partner in Johannesburg, the DA is set for a fierce battle to hang onto the metro.
The City is expected to hold a sitting to elect a new mayor on November 28.
ANC acting national spokesperson Dakota Legoete was unable to confirm Monday’s meeting at the time of publishing.
State Media|FARMERS in the drought hit Matabeleland region are now swarming maputi making firms in Bulawayo to get chuff, a by-product of the snack which they use to feed their cattle as people apply desperate measures to save their livestock.
The situation has been compounded by the continued increase in stock feed which has seen most farmers failing to buy the product.
Poverty deaths have also continued to rise in the region, with estimates now pointing to more than 6 000 cattle having succumbed to the drought.
Sunday Business on Friday last week discovered that farmers were swarming maputi production factories where they are buying the chuff from the plants to feed cattle.
In Kelvin North in Bulawayo, farmers told this publication that the product was cheap and was nutritious feed.
A 20-litre bucket of the chuff costs $5 compared to between $260 and $280 for a 50 kilogramme of stock feed in most shops in Bulawayo.
“We are feeding cattle with this maputi, it has a lot of energy and the price is also cheap. We sometimes add salt and other ingredients but when push comes to shove you just feed the livestock as it is,” said Mr Boas Ncube, who said he has a farm in Marula, Matabeleland South.
“You only need to make sure that after feeding the cattle, there is enough water for them because the feed is full of roughage.”
Another farmer from Kezi said as farmers they have pooled resources and are hiring trucks to carry the feed.
“We are even trying to negotiate with the owners of these factories to reserve the chuff for us but if it was up to us, we even want to buy the maputi to feed our cattle. It is a sorry state back home, cattle are dying and farmers are stranded,” he said.
The situation was also the same at another processing plant at Shasha at the Renkini Long Distance Bus Terminus as farmers were buying the products.
A worker at one of the maputi processing plants at Man Precast Walling in Kelvin, Mr Trust Ngwenya said hundreds of farmers were flocking to the area to buy the chuff.
“We can sell as many as 300kgs of this chuff per day and the demand has been huge,” he said.
Farmers are also banking on the rains that have started falling in most parts of the country.
However, a livestock expert, Mr Mhlupeki Dube has warned that the transition from a drought to a wet season is usually the time when most people lose their animals.
“Remember when it rains firstly it becomes a little bit cold and that type of weather itself, causes animals to draw down on their energy just for thermo-regulation using energy reserves but because they are already very thin animals which do not have any energy reserves are drawing from empty reserves and they can succumb just on the basis of that cold spell that follows after some showers,” he said.
Mr Dube said the other issue is to do with the fact that the rain has some nostalgic effects on animals and they tend to think that there is green grass somewhere so as a result they wander off looking for green grass.
“Some get lost and even die in the bush because they are thin and they are busy looking for non-existent green grass on the basis of the rain that has fallen so once there is rain you need to look at your animals closely so that they do not stray. Above all you need to give them an energy supplementary diet, that means even if it is hay you need to mix it with molasses which is a carbohydrate which provides energy so that is an energy supplement if you do not have the commercial stock feeds.”
He added that farmers also need to give the animals a jab of vitamins.
“The most important part is that farmers have to be patient for about two to three weeks when the grass starts growing so that the animals can gain some condition because the tendency is that just after it has rained people rush to the field and use their animals for draught power regardless of the status of the animals or the condition of the animals. What happens is that soon after the ploughing day as you take them out of the jock the animals may just collapse and die because of the strain.”
WAR veterans now want government to establish a bank for them and build a specialised hospital to exclusively treat the over 25 000 remaining former liberation war fighters.
The issue was revealed in Parliament by Defence and War Veterans Ministry secretary Mark Marongwe when he appeared before the parliamentary portfolio committee on defence to speak on the 2020 budget last week.
Marongwe’s submission came hard on the heels of a recommendation by the committee that war veterans must be exempted from paying tollgate and parking fees.
“Women have their own bank, which was established for them, but if you look at the war heroes that fought in the liberation struggle they are not well funded in terms of self-help projects and there is need for financing to be availed so that there can be a war veterans bank where they can borrow money for self-help projects,” Marongwe said.
“Even 39 years after independence our remaining liberation fighters are still suffering from different effects of the war and just like in other countries like the United States of America there is need for a specialised hospital to cater for our war veterans, and the hospital can raise money through charging fees to non-veteran clients.”
Marongwe’s suggestions were supported by the parliamentary committee whose report also recommended that the former fighters be given more land and be exempted from taxes.
The committee’s chairperson Levi Mayihlome from Zanu PF said the government should adopt a policy to ensure that once land has been allocated to war veterans, it must not be repossessed.
“The government should establish a war veterans bank which allows members to access loans at low interest rates,” he said.
“Beginning year 2020, government should also exempt war veterans from the following taxes; land, vehicles, industrial machinery, agricultural equipment levies, tollgates and parking fees.
“Widows and surviving children of war veterans must not be dispossessed of agricultural land.
“The Ministry of Defence and War Veterans should allow grass roots war veterans to elect their representatives to the board.
“The government should establish vocational training centres, which offer practical short courses in welding, plumbing, pig farming and poultry to be introduced at the beginning of year 2020.”
The committee report also said that war veterans were being ignored during government events.
“The committee recommends that the Ministry of Defence and War Veterans should craft a policy that recognises war veterans, duly awarding them with liberation war medals, with uniforms and special sitting arrangements at all events that relate to the liberation of Zimbabwe,” the committee added.
“It is also recommended that government should declare all veterans of the liberation struggle national heroes upon death with equal benefits despite that one is buried at the national shrine, provincial shrine or his home area.”
In 1997 former president Robert Mugabe was forced to pay the former fighters huge but unbudgeted payouts after they started protesting against his government.
War veterans now get monthly pensions and were also given priority during the land redistribution programme that started in the year 2000.
Zimbabwe Cross Border Traders Association president Killer Zivhu said that the government should have implemented the policy requiring every importer to declare their source of foreign currency when it reintroduced the Zimbabwe Dollar in February.
Zivhu made the remarks following Deputy Finance Minister Clemence Chiduwa’s declaration on Friday that the government is now crafting the policy. Said Zivhu:
“At that time [in February] it would have worked because there was some confidence in the banking sector which has somewhat waned at the moment.
“So, what the Government should do is to direct the RBZ to restore confidence in the banking sector first.”
On Friday Chiduwa, who was in the company of Minister Mthuli Ncube and permanent secretary George Guvamatanga, told reporters that importers will soon be required to declare the legal source of their foreign currency under legislation being drafted.
He said this is meant to push foreign currency trading into the legal interbank market and away from the black market.
Opposition Movement for Democratic Change leader Nelson Chamisa. Picture: Philimon Bulawayo/Reuters
AS POLITICAL tension continues to rise in the country amid growing criticism of the authorities’ brutal handling of dissenters the government warned yesterday that it would arrest opposition leader Nelson Chamisa, pictured, if he holds public meetings without police approval, the Daily News reports.
This comes as President Emmerson Mnangagwa and his government are facing renewed pressure from both locals and the international community to respect the country’s Constitution and allow peaceful gatherings and protests.
But a few days after riot police savaged MDC supporters in Harare on Wednesday, the government said yesterday that it would not hesitate to arrest Chamisa if he ever held meetings that were not sanctioned by jittery authorities.
This is despite Mnangagwa’s recent signing into law of the new Maintenance of Peace and Order Act (Mopa) – which replaced the repressive Public Order Security Act (Posa) which was routinely used by the government to thwart both opposition and pro-democracy groups from holdings mass demonstrations.
“Under the new Maintenance of Peace and Order Act, you can’t do a demonstration without notifying the regulatory authority, and if they do that then they can be arrested.
“If Chamisa carries on with what he said he can be arrested. He is out of order … you can’t do that and endanger other people who are doing their business,” Justice minister Ziyambi Ziyambi told the Daily News yesterday.
The minister was responding to threats by Chamisa to hold public meetings without notifying police, after all his recent requests for such permission were declined by the authorities
Ziyambi added that Chamisa would also be held to account for any damage and destruction resulting from unsanctioned demonstrations and other gatherings organised by his party.
“The reason that you notify the police is so that they can clear it, if it is safe … to do a demonstration. You can’t also have a demonstration the same day that there is a programme that clashes with your demonstration,” he said further.
Since August 16 this year, when police banned MDC protests in Harare, all attempts by Chamisa to be allowed to hold rallies or public meetings have been met with resistance by the police.
Ziyambi said the reasons for banning MDC public meetings were not based on political instruction since the law “allows the convener and police to discuss the reasons for banning a demonstration”.
The government yesterday made conflicting statements about Vice-President Constantino Chiwenga’s return after his four-month-long stay in China where he was receiving treatment.
Chiwenga quietly flew back into the country yesterday and there were no government officials to welcome him at the Robert Mugabe International Airport.
A fit-looking Chiwenga, who appeared to have recovered from an undisclosed ailment, but suspected to be food poisoning, was met at the airport by his son Tawanda, brother Onismo and Chinese deputy ambassador Zhao Boagang.
The VP arrived in Harare shortly after 2am aboard a Chinese plane.
Information secretary Nick Mangwana said there were no government officials towelcome the VP at the airport because his return had not been “announced.”
“The VP is back,” Mangwana said.
“It wasn’t something that was announced in government that he was coming as he was coming from hospital.
“It is just like when he went to hospital, there were no government officials to see him off.
“If he wasn’t sent off when he left, why would there be government officials to welcome him.”
On the other hand, President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s spokesperson George Charamba said his boss does not receive his subordinates at the airport when they return from trips abroad.
Charamba took to Twitter to respond to social media debate about Chiwenga’s low key arrival.
“Interesting that well-known opposition twi-voices (sic) seek to teach us how to welcome and love our leaders,” he tweeted. “For the record (Mnangagwa), who is head of State and president of Zimbabwe does not – repeat – does not receive his deputy.
“In the same vein, the Chinese ambassador who personifies the Chinese state here in Zimbabwe will not receive a vice president of the state to which he is accredited.
“Protocol does not allow both cases. For the record, President Mnangagwa and his deputy enjoyed daily communication while the VP was away.
Mnangagwa and his wife Auxillia later visited Chiwenga at his house in Harare’s Borrowdale suburb.
Regis Chikowore, a principal director in the Office of the President and Cabinet said the president was “extremely happy” to see his deputy in good health.
“The president met the vice president and he was extremely happy to see his deputy in good health,” he said.
Prior to his return, there were reports that Mnangagwa and Chiwenga had fallen out because of factionalism in Zanu PF. A cabinet reshuffle early this month was linked to the alleged infighting.
Some Zanu PF officials were allegedly pushing for Chiwenga’s ouster on the grounds of ill health. The VP, however, seemed to be training his guns on striking doctors and the opposition in an interview with the state controlled media soon after his arrival.
He said there was no need for “others” to have the “Genghis Khan mentality.”
Khan was the founder and first Great Khan of the Mongol Empire, which became the largest contiguous empire in history after his death.
“To the others, it will not help to have that Genghis Khan mentality.
“He wanted to conquer the world and went through the ancient desert. All the horses perished, all the men perished so why would you want to do that?” Chiwenga said
“We have to work, we have the resources-we must utilise them and work and build our country.
“That’s the message we want to give our people that it will not help now and again to go on strike. You strike against what? Let’s work and build our country.”
Doctors at public hospitals have been on strike since September demanding salaries linked to the United States dollar and better working conditions.
Last year, Chiwenga ordered the dismissal of hundreds of nurses that had gone on strike protesting against poor pay.
The VP has been to China, India and South Africa seeking treatment since the beginning of the year.
EDITORIAL COMMENT | There are currently two boiling schools of thought in Zimbabwe – the sudden return of Vice President Constantino Chiwenga is not unusual, and life will just go on as before, there is no rift at all between him and his boss. This view says Chiwenga is no longer popular with the military, and he was stripped of his chain of command long ago.
Another outlook says no way, it is game on, Guvheya remains the face of the ZDF. Exactly what Robert Mugabe did – to anger the military causing the coup that quickly removed him in November 2017 Emmerson Mnangagwa has repeated, and he has done it 10 times more. This article explores how the Gen Constantino Chiwenga could easily become president, or at least the vice president of a functioning country; To date even Chiwenga himself is not safe anymore, the whole nation faces “an explosive stomach.”
The recent spraying of rounds of bullets at Mnangagwa’s residence this week following the fattening of pockets is a sign. To anger the Zimbabwe Defence Forces while enriching onerself, is suicide. There are several factors here:
-it invites the wrath of the stomach. What pushed the military, strengthened them to obey their commanders in 2017 was their stomach. And the spraying of bullets at Mnangagwa’s house by a presidential guard officer during the week demonstrates that the stomach is powerful and it can do anything. It also shows that the stomach is now in control, the stomach is now fast shaping this country’s future. The stomach is furious. One of the world’s most nonsensical cabinet decisions announced during the week that now forces importers of goods and into the country to declare the source of their foreign currency is further evidence that the stomach is now running the country’s ligaments of power, from army all the way to the government offices. The looting over USD3billion from the central bank in less than a month of removing Robert Mugabe, and in the latest the renaming of 10 streets after self while omitting Chiwenga is an explosion trigger.
The 2nd disastrous thing Mnangagwa has done, is the firing of one of the most educated senior military personnel, Brig Gen Engelbert Rugeje, replacing him with an incompetent Victor Matemadanda. Rugeje’s professional and educational background stands tall against some of the best academics in Zimbabwe. He is one of many military bosses who spent over 15 years burning the midnight oil studying on how to run a country. He is like his peer, Gen Perrance Shiri who silently spent his time at university during the Robert Mugabe days only to be revealed as an expert in agriculture soon after the 2017 coup. Another one who has spent years studying is Constantino Chiwenga himself. To remove Rugeje from the most senior and influential post (Political Commissar) in the ruling party is a direct insult, a slap in the face of every soldier in the country.
For Chiwenga- The undoing of this should be a natural explosion of the stomach that will work well in favour of the generals as they peel off the shame put on them by Mnangagwa.
Alleged Poisoning Of Chiwenga.-
There is a strong belief that the general was poisoned. Whether true or not, this belief is powerful and this mood is efficacious. It is the same belief that pushed the military to sympathize with Emmerson Mnangagwa 2-years ago; the same that now poses as an aid for Chiwenga. In Mnangagwa’s case 2 years ago the poison was fake. In the latest case involving his deputy, the poison is real, causing sporadic discolouration of the skin, and multiple organ failure. Most of the poison that is being used against political enemies in Zimbabwe is coming from China.
Angering the Chinese government. –
It is alleged the Chinese government who have a business interests in Zimbabwe, organised for a specialist herbalist to treat Chiwenga 4 months ago. The miraculous return of the man on Sat morning, on the anniversary of the day Mnangagwa was made president by Chiwenga 2 years before and the curious welcoming by the Chinese deputy ambassador furthermore suggest the strong Chinese hand in everything. 2-years ago the man returned to the country after spending several days in China in events that showed that the Asian country was behind him. Has the Chinese government ceased in their interest for Zimbabwe? The deputy Chinese ambassador’s holding a ceremony for the general at the RGM airport demonstrates a strong relationship. Will the Chinese government thus not prove their mettle by assisting another military takeover?
But one problem that will likely be a struggle for the general is that of legitimacy and constitutionalism.
What does the constitution say in the event of a coup? What do SADC and the AU say about military coups? After carrying out a military operation, he is going to struggle to cure the coup. It is not very clear if he has the intellectual capability of comperehending the futility of creating a government using military takeover. The lessons of the last 2 years are full of pointers. And by the way, ZANU PF has in the last 24 months carried out 2 Military coups, the first one on the 15th of November 2017 and the second one on the 1st of August 2018. The Only Way Out will that be of negotiating with the opposition so that through a clear legal admission that a crime was committed; the opposition can help Chiwenga cure at least the second military coup whose evidence of both operation and execution were filmed on LIVE camera. This outlook says Chiwenga will have to negotiate with Chamisa who enjoys 89% of the popular support.
Constanino Chiwenga arriving at RGM airport on Saturday.
By Own Correspondent | Emmerson Mnangagwa’s deputy, Constantino Chiwenga while thanking Chinese medics who revived his health, has criticised his own local doctors.
He did this on the first day of arriving in Zimbabwe.
Zimbabwean doctors as ZimEye reveals, are paid a paltry USD70 per month.
Speaking at his house, Chiwenga praised the Chinese doctors, telling Mnangagwa, ‘Mukoma, ndakabatwa zvakanaka, I can’t think of anything else or wish for anything else . . .’”
But the general barely a day in the country, suddenly opened fire on his own local professionals. Chiwenga took a swipe at civil servants especially doctors, who have been on strike for months demanding pay pegged to the US dollar. “Not that every now and again you go on strike, you strike against who?”, said Chiwenga.
EDITORIAL COMMENT | There are currently two boiling schools of thought in Zimbabwe – the sudden return of Vice President Constantino Chiwenga is not unusual, and life will just go on as before, there is no rift at all between him and his boss. This view says Chiwenga is no longer popular with the military, and he was stripped of his chain of command long ago.
Another outlook says no way, it is game on, Guvheya remains the face of the ZDF. Exactly what Robert Mugabe did – to anger the military causing the coup that quickly removed him in November 2017 Emmerson Mnangagwa has repeated, and he has done it 10 times more. This article explores how the Gen Constantino Chiwenga could easily become president, or at least the vice president of a functioning country; To date even Chiwenga himself is not safe anymore, the whole nation faces “an explosive stomach.”
The recent spraying of rounds of bullets at Mnangagwa’s residence this week following the fattening of pockets is a sign. To anger the Zimbabwe Defence Forces while enriching onerself, is suicide. There are several factors here:
-it invites the wrath of the stomach. What pushed the military, strengthened them to obey their commanders in 2017 was their stomach. And the spraying of bullets at Mnangagwa’s house by a presidential guard officer during the week demonstrates that the stomach is powerful and it can do anything. It also shows that the stomach is now in control, the stomach is now fast shaping this country’s future. The stomach is furious. One of the world’s most nonsensical cabinet decisions announced during the week that now forces importers of goods and into the country to declare the source of their foreign currency is further evidence that the stomach is now running the country’s ligaments of power, from army all the way to the government offices. The looting over USD3billion from the central bank in less than a month of removing Robert Mugabe, and in the latest the renaming of 10 streets after self while omitting Chiwenga is an explosion trigger.
The 2nd disastrous thing Mnangagwa has done, is the firing of one of the most educated senior military personnel, Brig Gen Engelbert Rugeje, replacing him with an incompetent Victor Matemadanda. Rugeje’s professional and educational background stands tall against some of the best academics in Zimbabwe. He is one of many military bosses who spent over 15 years burning the midnight oil studying on how to run a country. He is like his peer, Gen Perrance Shiri who silently spent his time at university during the Robert Mugabe days only to be revealed as an expert in agriculture soon after the 2017 coup. Another one who has spent years studying is Constantino Chiwenga himself. To remove Rugeje from the most senior and influential post (Political Commissar) in the ruling party is a direct insult, a slap in the face of every soldier in the country.
For Chiwenga- The undoing of this should be a natural explosion of the stomach that will work well in favour of the generals as they peel off the shame put on them by Mnangagwa.
Alleged Poisoning Of Chiwenga.-
There is a strong belief that the general was poisoned. Whether true or not, this belief is powerful and this mood is efficacious. It is the same belief that pushed the military to sympathize with Emmerson Mnangagwa 2-years ago; the same that now poses as an aid for Chiwenga. In Mnangagwa’s case 2 years ago the poison was fake. In the latest case involving his deputy, the poison is real, causing sporadic discolouration of the skin, and multiple organ failure. Most of the poison that is being used against political enemies in Zimbabwe is coming from China.
Angering the Chinese government. –
It is alleged the Chinese government who have a business interests in Zimbabwe, organised for a specialist herbalist to treat Chiwenga 4 months ago. The miraculous return of the man on Sat morning, on the anniversary of the day Mnangagwa was made president by Chiwenga 2 years before and the curious welcoming by the Chinese deputy ambassador furthermore suggest the strong Chinese hand in everything. 2-years ago the man returned to the country after spending several days in China in events that showed that the Asian country was behind him. Has the Chinese government ceased in their interest for Zimbabwe? The deputy Chinese ambassador’s holding a ceremony for the general at the RGM airport demonstrates a strong relationship. Will the Chinese government thus not prove their mettle by assisting another military takeover?
But one problem that will likely be a struggle for the general is that of legitimacy and constitutionalism.
What does the constitution say in the event of a coup? What do SADC and the AU say about military coups? After carrying out a military operation, he is going to struggle to cure the coup. It is not very clear if he has the intellectual capability of comperehending the futility of creating a government using military takeover. The lessons of the last 2 years are full of pointers. And by the way, ZANU PF has in the last 24 months carried out 2 Military coups, the first one on the 15th of November 2017 and the second one on the 1st of August 2018. The Only Way Out will that be of negotiating with the opposition so that through a clear legal admission that a crime was committed; the opposition can help Chiwenga cure at least the second military coup whose evidence of both operation and execution were filmed on LIVE camera. This outlook says Chiwenga will have to negotiate with Chamisa who enjoys 89% of the popular support.
THERE was a high voter turnout yesterday for the Zanu-PF Bulawayo District Coordinating Committee (DCC) elections, with results expected to be announced today.
The elections in Bulawayo were held in line with Zanu-PF’s drive to reinvigorate the party. Zanu-PF national political commissar Cde Victor Matemadanda, who was spearheading the party’s restructuring process, said the elections went smoothly and was astounded by the turnout.
“Initially I was not expecting such a large turnout. But the numbers are clear; they are very encouraging and project a correct signal to the leadership of whom the people want to lead them. A person and people elected by the people,” said Matemadanda.
He said of great note about the turnout was the presence of the Muslim community and the return of some former members, who had joined other political fronts such as the National Patriotic Front (NPF).
“There was a huge turnout from the Muslim community, this just goes to show that we are taking steps in the right direction. Also the numbers of youths were encouraging, they came and participated and this shows that they are interested in the affairs of the country. Another thing of note was the presence of former members who had left the party to join the NPF. They wanted to contest but according to our party’s constitution they could not because there are certain procedures that need to be followed. They need to reapply and serve for a certain term for them to be considered,” said Matemadanda.
He said during the process, which was held across Bulawayo there were no incidents of violence or rowdiness.
“We are grateful to all who participated and also displaying signs of maturity, as there were no incidents. This is what we forecasted for Bulawayo. The people know what they want and they were co-ordinated. Even the contestants have no bad blood, there were scenes of them sharing lighter moments and even wishing each other well. The only incidents that we experienced were of some individuals who were trying to influence voters but they were immediately dealt with,” said Matemadanda.
Matemadanda said he was also pleased that there was no interference from senior party members such as those in the Central Committee, National Consultative Assembly and Politburo.
“Vetting of prospective candidates was done smoothly. The party wants to set proper structures in Bulawayo. The New Dispensation will not tolerate acts of factionalism in its structures,” he said.
The reintroduction of DCCs, which were banned in 2012, is the first step in the restructuring of the party as it prepares for the 2023 harmonised elections.
Permanent Secretary for the Ministry Mrs Tumisang Thabela
THE Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education has ordered that all school fees increases by private schools for next year are null and void, as they have not been approved by the ministry.
The warning comes as a number of private schools have already sent circulars to parents indicating new hefty fees structures for next year, with some of the schools demanding that the fees be paid before the end of this year.
In an interview in Bulawayo on Friday, Permanent Secretary for the Ministry Mrs Tumisang Thabela said her office was yet to receive any application for fees review.
“We haven’t received their applications from what I know, because ordinarily what should happen is that they must follow the circular that guides them. The parent’s assembly should meet, deliberate and of course there is a need to take economic variables in to consideration.
“We are guided by what the parents say, if the attaching minutes and all the financial audited records indicate that they have utilised whatever they had and its justifiable to seek a rise, we accent.
“But where we don’t have, we do not authorise and currently I am not aware of that development from schools and particularly from the school in question.”
A survey in Bulawayo showed that fees for the first term in most private secondary schools have been pegged at between $12 000 to $15 000.
Part of the memo from one school read: “Following the SDC EGM on Monday 18 November 2019, the 2020 first term fees will be as follows: Form 1 to 4, $12 500, Form 5 to 6, $15 000.
“In view of the inflationary pressure in our economic environment, the initial fee of $3 600 must be paid up by Friday 29 November 2019 and the balance of $8 900 by Tuesday 31 December 2019.”
The school further indicated that, should parents fail to pay before the initial instalment on the indicated date, they must notify the school by 6 December so that their children can be withdrawn from the school.
Mrs Thabela said both Government and Trust schools should follow the correct channels in applying for school fees increases.
Earlier in the term several Government schools also sent proposals to parents for term one 2020 school fees structure and have proposed as much as ZW$600 up from a region of ZW$80.
A parent from a primary school in Bulawayo’s low density suburbs said they received notices of $560 as the proposed tuition for 2020 while Early Childhood Development (ECD) was pegged at $800.
Other primary schools in the eastern suburbs in Bulawayo have also pegged their fees between $300 to $500 for the coming term.
The provincial education director for Bulawayo, Mrs Olicah Kaira, has said that Government schools were ready to absorb pressure that is likely to come from private schools owing to their increases in tuition fees.
She also encouraged schools and parents to assist by erecting extra classroom blocks to cater for the increases in volumes of pupils over time.
The Permanent Secretary, however, noted that schools were in need of more teachers for the coming year and beyond saying the 5 000 teachers that will be recruited in January 2020 were a fraction of what is needed.
“Zimbabwe needs 130 000 teachers to be at an optimum condition but we have been allowed to take 5 000 for 2020, the first batch of 2 700 will be taken in January while the remaining 2 300 will be taken in June 2020.
“We will rationalise this, we will look at every province and see how many teachers are needed and each gets an allocation depending on their needs,” she said.