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Mugabe branded 'shameless' over attempt to gatecrash Pope's funeral -07/04/05

President Robert Mugabe has been branded 'shameless' after he flew from
Zimbabwe unannounced to join world leaders attending Pope John Paul II's
funeral in Rome.

The trip which defied a European Union travel ban was denounced by one of
Mugabe's fiercest human rights critics, Roman Catholic Archbishop Pius Ncube
of Bulawayo.

"That man will use any opportunity to fly to Europe to promote himself. The
man is shameless," said the archbishop.

He also said Mugabe was exploiting the Vatican's current preoccupation with
funeral arrangements.

The Archbishop recently called for a non-violent uprising against Mugabe.

In response Mugabe accused the prelate of being "a half wit" and said he was
praying for God to kill him.

By going to Rome Mugabe, 81, who has been in power since 1980 independence,
defied European Union travel sanctions imposed in 2002 after its observers
were barred from disputed presidential elections, at which Mugabe claimed a
further six-year term.

His ruling Zanu-PF party last week announced it had gained a two-thirds
majority in parliamentary elections similarly marred by allegations of
intimidation and massive rigging.

On Monday, Mugabe took the floor uninvited at a requiem mass for the Pope in
Harare's Catholic cathedral, attacking western powers for meddling in
Zimbabwe's internal affairs.

"It is sad to note in today's world there are people who want to dominate
other people contrary to the late Pope's teaching," he said.

Mugabe who is Jesuit-educated, calls himself a Catholic, and described John
Paul II as "a very virtuous man, a virtuous leader of the Catholic Church".

During an apparently shameless interview with the South African Broadcasting
Corporation to mark his Zanu-PF party's recent victory, Mugabe said small
nations such as Zimbabwe feared "the bullies of this world", and hoped that
big nations would pay heed to the Pope's message of peace.

The US embassy in Harare on Wednesday joined critics of last week's
elections, expressing concern at the role of police and ruling-party
officials in polling and counting, the association of polling stations with
food distribution and the "drastic discrepancies" between initial
announcements of votes cast and the eventual combined votes announced for
the rival candidates.

In 2002 Mugabe and approximately 100 of his closest political associates
were also barred by the US and many Commonwealth nations from operating bank
accounts on their soil or travelling there for private purposes.

However, Archbishop Ncube noted that the Italian Government was obliged by
its treaties with the Vatican to admit Mugabe for the Pope's funeral.

Senior church figures would be unable to communicate to him their concern at
the human rights situation in Zimbabwe, the archbishop predicted.

"The Secretary of State might be rather too busy right now to talk to him
but when someone in the family has died you appreciate all the sympathy you
can get from all people, even murders, crooks and thieves like Mugabe," he
said.

"In any case what will he (the Secretary of State) achieve? Mugabe is so
stubborn and so conceited."

His comments, defying draconian new laws that impose a five-year jail
sentence for undermining the dignity or authority of the head of state, mark
a new intensity in the war of words between the two men.



The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent the views
of Ekklesia


The Scotsman

Mugabe Defies EU Sanctions to Attend Pope's Funeral

President Robert Mugabe defied a European Union travel ban and flew from
Zimbabwe unannounced to join world leaders attending Pope John Paul II's
funeral in Rome, state radio announced today.


The trip was immediately denounced by one of Mugabe's fiercest human rights
critics, Roman Catholic Archbishop Pius Ncube of Bulawayo.

"That man will use any opportunity to fly to Europe to promote himself. The
man is shameless," said the archbishop.


State radio said the Jesuit-educated head of state was accompanied by his
acting finance minister, Herbert Murerwa, and a delegation of undisclosed
size. It was not confirmed whether his wife, Grace, was among them, but she
normally accompanies her husband on all foreign trips.

By going to Rome Mugabe, 81, who has been in power since 1980 independence,
defied European Union travel sanctions imposed in 2002 after its observers
were barred from disputed presidential elections, at which Mugabe claimed a
further six-year term.

His ruling Zanu-PF party last week announced it had gained a two-thirds
majority in parliamentary elections similarly marred by allegations of
intimidation and massive rigging.

On Monday, Mugabe took the floor uninvited at a requiem mass for the Pope in
Harare's Catholic cathedral, attacking western powers for meddling in
Zimbabwe's internal affairs.

"It is sad to note in today's world there are people who want to dominate
other people contrary to the late Pope's teaching," he said.

The US embassy in Harare on Wednesday joined critics of last week's
elections, expressing concern at the role of police and ruling-party
officials in polling and counting, the association of polling stations with
food distribution and the "drastic discrepancies" between initial
announcements of votes cast and the eventual combined votes announced for
the rival candidates.

In 2002 Mugabe and approximately 100 of his closest political associates
were also barred by the US and many Commonwealth nations from operating bank
accounts on their soil or travelling there for private purposes.

However, Archbishop Ncube noted that the Italian Government was obliged by
its treaties with the Vatican to admit Mugabe for the Pope's funeral.

He accused Mugabe of exploiting the Vatican's current preoccupation with
funeral arrangements, the presence of many heads of state and arrangements
for election of a new pope.

Senior church figures would be unable to communicate to him their concern at
the human rights situation in Zimbabwe, the archbishop predicted.

"The Secretary of State might be rather too busy right now to talk to him
but when someone in the family has died you appreciate all the sympathy you
can get from all people, even murders, crooks and thieves like Mugabe," he
said.

"In any case what will he (the Secretary of State) achieve? Mugabe is so
stubborn and so conceited."

His comments, defying draconian new laws that impose a five-year jail
sentence for undermining the dignity or authority of the head of state, mark
a new intensity in the war of words between the two men.

Last week Mugabe accused the prelate of being "a half wit" and praying for
God to kill him.

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IOL

Zanu-PF threatens price-raising companies
          April 06 2005 at 05:15PM

      By Michael Hartnack

      Harare - President Robert Mugabe's ruling Zanu-PF party has threatened
to seize commercial companies it says are trying to provoke food riots in
the wake of last week's parliamentary elections.

      "Some of the manufacturers could have unilaterally increased prices
with the ulterior motive of inducing people to blame the government and
trigger food riots," the head of the party's women's league, Nyasha
Chikwinya, said in an article published on Wednesday in the state-owned
daily newspaper, The Herald.

      Trade minister Samuel Mumbengegwi issued a statement saying
manufacturers and retailers who had raised prices of staples such as sugar,
salt, soap and cooking oil by up to 25 percent since the March 31 poll
"should revert to previous levels because the increases were not approved".





      "We have been understudying the running of the companies from the days
of (1998) food riots and shortages. Enough is enough. This cannot go on any
longer," said Chikwinya.

      In 2002, reacting to foreign pressure, the government stopped
militants from invading companies after the seizure of 5 000 white-owned
farms. Some of the invaded premises belonged to South African subsidiaries,
protected by international investment agreements.

      The government has been failing for months to set new maximum prices
in the face of hyperinflation which reached 620 percent last year before
falling back to an official 127 percent in March - a figure many economists
question.

      Despite the country's chronic economic problems, with 70 percent
unemployment and 3,8 million of Zimbabwe's 11,6 million population now
living abroad, Zanu-PF claimed 78 parliamentary seats in last week's
elections, compared to 41 for the main opposition Movement for Democratic
Change. With Mugabe nominating a further 30 in the 150-seat parliament, he
may now amend the constitution at will.

      Chikwinya said that under Zanu-PF management of the seized companies,
"we will produce good results and shame our detractors".

      Appealing for an end to panic buying and hoarding, Mumbengegwi said
temporary absence of maize meal from stores was a result of temporary
"logistical problems" and "millers were now bringing the situation under
control."

      Mugabe, 81, and in power since the country won independence from
Britain in 1980, alleges Zimbabwe's economic problems stem from British
reprisals for his "fast track" redistribution of former white farms. But
critics say he has undermined production and exports, using agitation for
land reform as a smoke screen to intimidating opposition.

      On the eve of the elections, his government raised the national
statutory minimum wage tenfold to 950 000 Zimbabwean dollars (R130,32) a
month, a move unions predicted would lead to increased unemployment and
illicit use of child labor. - Sapa-AP
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News24

Zim slaps price control on food
06/04/2005 20:08  - (SA)


Harare - The government of President Robert Mugabe announced new price
controls of basic food commodities in Zimbabwe to combat hyper-inflation.

In a related action, the women's league of his ruling Zanu-PF party
threatened to seize food manufacturing companies.

All companies producing and selling maize meal, which forms Zimbabweans
staple diet, cooking oil, soft drinks, milk and sugar have to reverse recent
price increases to their previous levels, the state-controlled daily Herald
quoted Samuel Mumbengegwi as saying.

Mumbengegwi was trade minister before parliament was dissolved the day
before the March 31 elections.

The newspaper report said the government feared that manufacturers
unilaterally increased prices with the ulterior motive of making people
blame the government, thereby triggering food riots.

The announcement was the government's first act since 81-year-old Mugabe's
ruling Zanu-PF party won widely disputed parliamentary elections on Thursday
last week.

Logistical problems

State price controls were effectively abandoned about two years ago when the
government set them at levels less than the cost at which companies could
produce them.

At the time, manufacturing stopped, resulting in critical shortages. The
legislation has remained on the official statutes.

Mumbengegwi also said that shortages of maize meal was the result of
"temporary logistical problems with transporting maize to milling companies,
adding "everything will be back to normal" by Wednesday.

"People should not react to rumours and start panic buying," he said.

Economists have long predicted critical shortages of maize meal following
the collapse of the country's once robust agricultural industry after the
government backed the removal of about 4 000 white commercial farmers from
their land.

Mugabe in May last year claimed that the country had produced a record maize
harvest of 2.4 million tons and ordered the United Nations to halt
distribution of famine relief.

Shortfall

However, agricultural experts warned that only about 800 000 tons would be
harvested, less than half the amount needed to feed people.

Food-shortage organisations have said that about 5 million people are
stricken by famine now for the third year in a row.

During the election campaign Mugabe toured remote areas of the country
where, faced with cries of hunger, he admitted that the country did not have
enough food and said it was importing grain.

Meanwhile, Nyasha Chikwinya, spokesperson for the Zanu-PF women's league,
said she had sought Mugabe's approval to seize companies that were creating
"artificial shortages of food".

She said current shortages were a barely-veiled protest by the manufacturers
against the opposition Movement for Democratic Change's defeat in last weeks
elections.

"We cannot allow this to go on any longer," she said. - Sapa-dpa
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Newsday

Africa's top democrat let Zimbabwe down

     BY SEBASTIAN MALLABY

April 6, 2005


Last week's election in Zimbabwe was not merely stolen. It was stolen with
the complicity - no, practically the encouragement - of Africa's most
influential democrat.

If you think too long about this democrat, moreover, you reach a bleak
conclusion. For all the recent democratic strides in Africa, the continental
leadership that was supposed to reinforce this progress is not up to the
challenge.

The bankrupt democrat in question is Thabo Mbeki, South Africa's president.
For the past few years, he's been promising a pan-African Renaissance, a new
era in which Africans would take charge of their own problems.

Mbeki led the creation of the grandly titled New Partnership for Africa's
Development, which commits members to the rule of law and other principles
of good government; he's the driving force behind the peer-review mechanism
that's supposed to police compliance with those pledges.

The New Partnership's principles are quoted frequently by Africa
sympathizers who advocate more foreign assistance, and they've boosted
Mbeki's profile marvelously. Mbeki has become a fixture at the rich
countries' annual Group of Eight summits.

He has been treated by George Bush and Tony Blair as a player. He has felt
emboldened to advance South Africa as a candidate for a permanent seat on
the UN Security Council.

But do Mbeki's New Partnership principles mean anything? In the run-up to
Zimbabwe's election, when the regime's thugs were denying food to suspected
opposition sympathizers, Mbeki undercut the international pressure for a
fair contest. He expressed a serene confidence that the election would be
free and fair.

He quarreled with the Bush administration's description of Zimbabwe as an
outpost of repression. He did everything, in other words, to signal that
mass fraud would be acceptable.

And so Zimbabwe's thugs obliged him. Before the election they arranged for
ballot boxes made of see-through plastic and a voters' roll stuffed with
fictitious names. When polling day came, about a tenth of the voters were
turned away from election stations for mysterious reasons. One constituency,
in which 14,812 people voted according to election officials, was announced
the next day to have awarded more than 15,000 votes to the president's
nephew.

In this way, the regime won a famous victory - and with it the power to
change whatever's left of Zimbabwe's constitution.

If South Africa, which could strangle its smaller neighbor's economy by
switching off its electricity, had been tougher beforehand, this fraud might
have been forestalled. If Mbeki had protested after the election, events
also might have been different.

After the election was stolen, the head of the South African observer
mission heaped praise on the process, declaring that the outcome reflected
"the free will of the people of Zimbabwe" and that "the political climate
was conducive for elections to take place." Zimbabwe isn't the only place
where Mbeki has been disappointing.

On New Year's Day he visited Sudan and addressed its government. Sudan's
Arab leaders are engaged in the systematic killing of ethnic Africans in the
western province of Darfur.

But Mbeki spoke understandingly of "the challenges facing the government"
and reserved his toughest comments for the easy scapegoat of imperialism.
"When these eminent representatives of British colonialism were not in
Sudan, they were in South Africa, and vice versa, doing terrible things
wherever they went," he lectured.

Mbeki is a tragic figure: He personifies the flaw that his own New
Partnership is intended to inhibit. Open and accountable government is
desirable because it exposes leaders to criticism, obliges them to listen
and so reduces the risk of bad policy. But Mbeki, whose democratic
government is without electable opponents, is no more willing to accept
criticism than to dish it out.

Mbeki's error on Zimbabwe is almost as terrible as his earlier one on AIDS,
when he opposed anti-retroviral treatment. Zimbabwe is the poster child for
the emphasis on governance in the New Partnership for Africa's Development.
It shows how bad government can ruin a promising society. A country that was
once a breadbasket for the region now depends on food aid; a country that
once took in migrants now exports desperate people by the million. And yet
Mbeki, the mastermind and guiding light of the New Partnership, will not
speak out against this tragedy.

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The Scotsman

International concern grows as police are deployed in Harare

JANE FIELDS
IN HARARE


TENSIONS increased in Harare yesterday after the government deployed police
across the Zimbabwean capital to deter demonstrations in the wake of last
week's disputed elections.

The move came as Jack Straw, the Foreign Secretary, and Kofi Annan, the
United Nations secretary-general, expressed concern about the ballot, which
returned President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF party to power.

Meanwhile, two British journalists appeared in court yesterday on charges of
reporting without permission, after they were arrested on the day of the
election. Toby Harnden and Julian Simmonds, both of the Sunday Telegraph,
entered not-guilty pleas on charges that they broke Zimbabwe's tough media
laws and immigration regulations. They insist they were in the country as
tourists.

Police were on high alert yesterday after hundreds of youths believed to be
loyal to the opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, ran amok briefly on
Monday.

The opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) draws much of its
support from young Zimbabweans, who bear the brunt of 70 per cent
unemployment rates and have lost faith in Mr Mugabe. But the same youths are
also believed to be growing increasingly impatient with dallying from the
MDC leadership, which has not yet announced what it plans to do in response
to Mr Mugabe's victory.

Paul Themba Nyathi, an MDC spokesman, told The Scotsman that Monday's
demonstration had not been organised by the opposition, "but we do
understand why the youths would demonstrate".

"It was a spontaneous demonstration by the youths who are disgruntled by the
outcome of the elections," said Mr Nyathi, who lost his parliamentary seat
in the south-western town of Gwanda to a little-known ruling party cadre.

Mr Nyathi said that up to 600 youths took part, adding: "It would not
surprise me if we saw more of these demonstrations."

Mr Straw added his voice yesterday to growing international criticism of the
polls, saying there was "strong evidence" that the official results did not
reflect the will of Zimbabwe's people.

He said there were "obvious and serious flaws", which he was "saddened" that
Zimbabwe's neighbours had chosen to ignore.

The Foreign Secretary pledged that the UK would continue to work with its
international partners for "a return to accountable, democratic government,
which respects the rule of law and the human rights of Zimbabweans".

In his first official reaction to the polls, Mr Annan called for dialogue.
"The electoral process has not countered the sense of disadvantage felt by
opposition political parties, who consider the conditions were unfair," Fred
Eckhard, the UN secretary-general's spokesman, said in a statement from New
York.

Mr Annan said the government now needed to build a climate of confidence in
Zimbabwe. "He calls on all sides to engage in constructive dialogue in the
period ahead," Mr Eckhard said.

As anger mounted, a Zimbabwe police spokesman, Wayne Bvudzijena, issued a
grim warning to would-be protesters yesterday.

"We are prepared to deal with anyone who participates in any mass action of
any kind. That determination is not negotiable," Mr Bvudzijena said, adding
that police would use force if necessary.

Protesters have been brutally beaten by riot police and soldiers in previous
attempts at demonstrations in Harare and the southern city of Bulawayo,
another MDC stronghold.
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Opposition to detail Zimbabwe complaints

     By Michael Wines The New York Times
        Thursday, April 7, 2005



JOHANNESBURG As Western governments and the United Nations voiced new
reservations about the integrity of Zimbabwe's parliamentary elections, the
nation's opposition party said it would issue a detailed analysis soon to
show how the government had rigged the vote against its candidates.
.
Five days after the March 31 vote, in which President Robert Mugabe's party
drubbed the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, Britain and the
European Union both said Tuesday that they believed the election had been
seriously flawed.
.
The European Union statement, issued in the name of Luxembourg, which holds
the rotating presidency of the organization, cited continuing concerns with
both Zimbabwe's human-rights conduct and the atmosphere in which the
election was held.
.
.
Britain's considerably stronger statement said that evidence of a fraudulent
vote was "rife," citing the turning away of many who had sought to cast
ballots and the wide disparities between the officially announced numbers of
voters and the numbers reported in final election results.
.
.
"Given all this, I am surprised and saddened that Zimbabwe's neighbors have
chosen to ignore the obvious and serious flaws in these elections and have
declared them fair," said Britain's foreign secretary, Jack Straw.
.
.
Kwadwo Afari-Gyan, the head of the election observer mission of the African
Union, the continent's major international organization, has urged
Zimbabwe's election commission to investigate allegations of fraud, but has
taken no stand on whether the vote was free and fair.
.
Mugabe's Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front captured 78 of the
120 seats being contested in the election. When added to the 30 seats that
Mugabe personally selects, that gives the government a majority of more than
two-thirds, enough to change Zimbabwe's Constitution at will.
.
.
The Movement for Democratic Change, known as the MDC, won 41 seats, down
from 57 in the 2000 election. Many analysts have said that the scope of the
defeat may force the party to change both its goals and its tactics to
reflect its failure to win any of the three national elections it has
contested.
.
.
On Tuesday, a South African spokesman for the MDC, James Littleton, said
that the party would release a report on Wednesday detailing what it says is
evidence of election fraud. A part of that report, he said, compares the
outcomes in selected races with the final vote totals the government's
election commission announced in the early hours of April 1, long after the
polls had closed.
.
.
According to the MDC, there are wide variances between some totals and the
election results, particularly in rural districts where the vote was
especially hard to monitor. For example, he said, the government reported at
2 a.m. on April 1 that a total of 8,579 people had cast ballots in Murehwa
South, a district in Mashonaland East Province.
.
But the announced results in that race showed that Mugabe's party had won
19,200 votes, compared with 4,585 for the MDC - more than 15,000 more
ballots that the total vote reported earlier.

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Daily Mirror, Zimbabwe

NEW CABINET

The Daily Mirror Reporter
issue date :2005-Apr-07

Who will make it?

WITH the swearing in ceremony of Vice Presidents Joseph Msika and Joyce
Mujuru on Tuesday, the nation waits with bated breath to find out who else
will constitute Zimbabwe's new Cabinet.
President Robert Mugabe has already declared he will only appoint to his
Cabinet elected Members of Parliament though there have been hints that
there could be exceptions to that undertaking because if he sticks to it,
that might limit his room to manoeuvre.
For a beginning, the ghost of the infamous Tsholotsho meeting could come to
haunt the exercise pushing some incumbents out and propelling newcomers into
cabinet.
This problem would be further compounded by the need to ensure gender
sensitivities in line with the Sadc protocol that requires greater women
representation in decision-making positions.
There would also be, this time around, a greater focus on economic
development and a need to maintain the momentum that that the Reserve Bank
of Zimbabwe governor, Dr Gideon Gono, has set in motion in his economic turn
around policy.
Observers also note that the landslide victory that ZANU PF registered in
the just ended elections would have boosted the President's confidence and
the country


could see him blending youth, experience, loyalty and potential in the new
cabinet.
The emphasis on sovereignty and territorial integrity is likely to remain
unchanged.
President Mugabe is expected to announce the new cabinet soon so that all
institutions of government are in place before the celebration of the
country's silver jubilee on April 18.
Below is a list of people the Daily Mirror thinks could constitute the new
cabinet.
Ministry of Defence
Marondera East MP Sydney Sekeramyi is likely to retain his position as the
head of one of the most powerful portfolios in the land. Regarded as
fiercely loyal to the President in addition to his ability to retain the
potentially slippery Marondera East seat, there should be no major
challenges to his position. He has also been touted as a possible successor
to President Robert Mugabe. Former army general, Vitalis Zvinavashe has been
mentioned as a possible defence minister but the ex-soldier has declared he
has no interest in politics.
Ministry of State Security
Nicholas Goche, who won convincingly in Shamva constituency, will most
probably be sworn in as state security chief when President Mugabe announces
his new cabinet. Goche has headed this portfolio for four years and
observers say the President is pleased with his performance so far.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
The nation could see ambassador Tichaona Jokonya heading this portfolio
following his victory in Chikomba constituency. Jokonya was once Zimbabwe's
ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva and he should have the requisite
expertise for the post through his dealings with countries whose foreign
policies are hostile to the state of Zimbabwe. He has worked in diplomatic
circles for 20 years and as such his experience cannot be discounted.
Ministry of Health and Child Welfare
David Parirenyatwa will in all likelihood retain this post. Since taking
over from Timothy Stamps, he has been active and visible. He has managed to
remain untainted by corruption and his recent victory in Murewa North should
have boosted his standing in the party. There is also the fact that
Parirenyatwa blends both technical expertise and the political correctness
to take over the post.
Ministry of Finance and Economic Development
Herbert Murerwa, who has been the acting minister of this portfolio since
the arrest of Christopher Kuruneri last year, might get the nod ahead of
other candidates on the strength of his partnership with Reserve Bank of
Zimbabwe governor, Gideon Gono that has overseen a turnaround in the nation's
fortunes. Samuel Undenge, who triumphed over Heather Bennett in Chimanimani
constituency, a rank outsider, cannot be completely ruled out.
Ministry of Higher and Tertiary Education
Murerwa currently heads the ministry but if he is given the finance brief,
then foreign affairs minister Stan Mudenge might take over this post.
Mudenge is an academic of note and has published several history books some
of which have won international prizes. There is also the possibility that
Obert Mpofu, winner in Bubi-Umguza, could be rewarded with this portfolio
for coming out victorious in a Matabeleland North province known for its
support for the opposition. Mpofu is the current governor of Matabeleland
North.
Ministry of Home Affairs
Kembo Mohadi came into this brief in 2000 and it is highly doubtful that he
will be removed from it. Though disliked by the opposition, his control of
one of the most powerful posts in government has been influential.
Furthermore, Mohadi managed to retain Beitbridge constituency, which is
located in Matabeleland South province - also known for its aversion for the
ruling party. He will be rewarded for this achievement and for his loyalty.
Education, Sport and Culture
The current deputy minister of Education, Sports and Culture, Isaiah Shumba,
could shoot to the top and take over the ministry against the backdrop of
his convincing triumph in Mwenezi.
The man has not been dogged and tainted by any kind of criticism many
others have faced. Speculation is rife that the ministry could be split and
Leo Mugabe, MP for Makonde, could land himself the ministry of sport.
Industry and International Trade
If the president sticks to his undertaking then Samuel Mumbegegwi is out of
government and could be part of the proposed Senate. Speculators have put
forward the name of outgoing Matabeleland North Governor Obert Mpofu. Mpofu
was the ministry's deputy minister before the 2000 parliamentary elections.
Agriculture and Rural Development
Mhondoro legislator Sylvester Nguni is tipped to become the new minister
given his background in agricultural management. Outgoing minister Joseph
Made is set to be moved to another ministry.
Ministry of Mines and Mining Development
Amos Midzi, the ruling party's Harare Provincial Chairman, lost agonizingly
narrowly in the Parliamentary elections in the opposition's stronghold in
Harare. If the President sticks to his undertaking of elected MPs only, then
Midzi will be out. The ministry could then go to Jason Machaya, the winner
in Gokwe Kana constituency and the current deputy minister in this
portfolio.
Ministry of Transport and Communications
Christopher Mushowe will likely retain this post. He is said to be a
confidante of the President and he managed to win in Mutare West.
Ministry of Information and Publicity
Webster Shamu, a veteran broadcaster and the current minister of policy
implementation has been touted as a likely successor to the post Jonathan
Moyo was booted from after he chose to stand as an independent candidate.
Shamu is also the MP for Chegutu and endeared himself to many people when he
offered to stand down in the primaries and make room for deputy Speaker of
Parliament, Edna Madzongwe.
Rugare Gumbo, veteran nationalist and former secretary for publicity in the
ZANU during the liberation war is also in the running as is George Charamba
the current permanent secretary in the ministry.
Environment and Tourism
There is no doubt Francis Nhema will retain his post as minister of
environment and tourism. He has managed to steer clear of corruption and
scandal and has overseen a period of growth in tourism to the point where
tourism has become one of the country's top foreign currency earners. Nhema
has also won the elections in Shurugwi constituency.
Ministry of Water Resources and Infrastructural Development
Olivia Muchena, an agriculturalist, is tipped to take over the ministry,
which was under the ambit of Joyce Mujuru before her elevation to the post
of Vice President. Muchena is widely seen as President Mugabe's confidante
and a competent technocrat.
Small and Medium Scale Enterprises Development
Sithembiso Nyoni, who has demonstrated her capacity to deal with medium and
small-scale enterprises over the last five years, will no doubt retain the
ministry.
Ministry of Science and Technology in the President's Office
Flora Buka, who was the Minister of State in the Vice President's office,
will most certainly takeover from Muchena as a presidential appointee.
Ministry of Energy and Power Development
With out-going minister July Moyo not likely to bounce back, his former
deputy Reuben Marumahoko should take over the ministry.
Marumahoko had one of the highest votes in Mashonaland West in last week's
Parliamentary elections. President Mugabe appointed him into the Zanu PF's
central committee in January.
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Statement on U.S. Embassy Observation of the Zimbabwean Parliamentary
Elections



United States Department of State (Washington, DC)

PRESS RELEASE
April 6, 2005
Posted to the web April 6, 2005

U.S. Embassy to Zimbabwe
Harare

On April 1, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said of Zimbabwe's
parliamentary elections: "Although the campaign and Election Day itself were
generally peaceful, the election process was not free and fair. The
electoral playing field was heavily tilted in the government's favor. The
independent press was muzzled; freedom of assembly was constrained; food was
used as a weapon to sway hungry voters; and millions of Zimbabweans who have
been forced by the nation's economic collapse to emigrate were
disenfranchised."

The U.S. Government, along with many other governments that observed the
2000 and 2002 elections in Zimbabwe, were not invited to bring in outside
observers. The U.S. Embassy, however, sent 25 teams of diplomats accredited
as election observers by the Electoral Supervisory Commission (ESC) around
the country during the pre-election period and on Election Day. On Election
Day, U.S. Embassy teams observed more than 350 polling stations in 59
constituencies (list attached).

The U.S. Embassy observers noted several patterns of irregularities that
raised concerns about the freeness and fairness of the process. Of
particular concern was a lack of transparency in the tabulation of vote
counts. U.S. observers were excluded from observing counts in four polling
stations. Where they were admitted, observers and officials, including party
representatives and neutral domestic observers, were locked in the polling
station and not permitted to communicate with anyone outside. At the same
time, uniformed police were observed communicating the vote tallies via
radio and telephone. In several observed instances, the presiding officer
confiscated the notes of party polling agents and independent observers
before letting them depart the polling station. In apparent contravention of
Zimbabwean election law, results were not publicly posted before being
forwarded to regional centers and at many stations were never posted at all.
ZANU-PF agents and the police appeared to have improper roles in the
supervision or conduct of the polling stations and in the operation of ZEC
constituency tabulation centers. In several instances, Embassy observers
witnessed uniformed police participating in the vote compilation instead of
ZEC officials at the constituency tabulation centers.

In addition, some polling stations were located in areas that would be
intimidating to some voters, such as next to police stations or within 200
meters of a ZANU-PF office. Some polling stations also appeared to be
associated with the distribution of food. Finally, in many polling stations
observed, the percentages of voters turned away were as high as 30%.

Compounding concern over the foregoing irregularities is the silence of the
Zimbabwe Election Commission on crucial issues. It has failed to release the
voting results of any polling stations. It has failed to explain why its
initial release of totals of ballots cast only included six of the country's
ten provinces, nor explained why it never released results for the remaining
four provinces. Moreover, it has failed to explain why discrepancies between
its announced figure for ballots cast in constituencies for those six
provinces differed so drastically from the subsequently released official
combined vote totals for candidates in the constituencies. We echo calls by
the Zimbabwe Election Support Network and other observers for the ZEC to
release this information as expeditiously as possible and note the absence
of this information undermines confidence in the electoral process.

Constituencies observed by the U.S. Embassy During the March 2005
Parliamentary Elections:

Bikita East, Bikita West, Bindura, Buhera South, Bulawayo East, Bulawayo
South, Chegutu, Chimanimani, Chiredzi North, Chirumanzu, Chitungwiza,
Dzivaresekwa, Emankandeni, Glen Norah, Gokwe Central , Gokwe North,
Goromonzi, Goromonzi, Guruve South, Guruve South, Gwanda, Gweru Rural, Gweru
Urban, Harare Central, Harare East, Harare North, Harare South, Highfield,
Insiza, Kadoma, Kambuzuma, Lupane, Makokoba, Marondera, Masvingo Central,
Masvingo Central, Masvingo North, Mazowe E, Mhondoro, Mt. Darwin North, Mt.
Darwin South, Mudzi East, Mudzi West, Murehwa North, Mutare Central, Mutare
North, Mutare South, Nyanga, Rushinga, Seke, Shurugwi, St. Mary's,
Tsholotsho, UMP, Umzigwane, Zaka East, Zaka West, Zengeza, Zhombe.
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FinGaz

      ZANU PF can kiss Harare goodbye


      4/7/2005 8:11:15 AM (GMT +2)

      The CITY of Harare is now lost by ZANU PF. The recently-ended
elections clearly show this. The MDC romped to victory with astounding
margins in the capital city and it is very unlikely that ZANU PF will ever
regain the capital.

      For the ruling party, it is time to acknowledge that the capital city
was lost by none other than Ignatius Chombo.
      His assault on Town House, hounding Elias Mudzuri out of office on
flimsy grounds and appointing a commission headed by a ZANU PF stalwart to
run the city sealed the fate of ZANU PF in the "Sunshine City".
      The fact that Mudzuri was removed and the people were not allowed to
then immediately elect a replacement certainly riled the residents of
Harare. Chombo's machinations were crude and everyone saw through them. What
his actions did was to further entrench resentment of the ZANU PF government
in the capital city.
      Worse, having virtually taken over the running of the capital city,
the situation got from bad to worse. There were water cuts on a scale the
residents had not seen under Mudzuri. All work on repairing the roads,
started in earnest by Mudzuri, appeared to have been immediately halted.
Citizens wrote letters to editors complaining about raw sewage in Harare
streets, potholes that were expanding everyday, electricity cuts and a host
of other social ills that made their lives unbearable.
      With each passing day, the Minister of Local Government was hammering
nails into the ZANU PF coffin with abandon. There was no way the ruling
party was going to win the election in the city with all this going on.
      The real issue is simple enough. Yes, ZANU PF is a liberation party.
Yes, ZANU PF was born in Highfield. But, why should the citizens of these
areas continue to support the party when it has, to all intents and
purposes, abandoned them.
      Why should they cast their vote for the very same party that had shown
contempt for their elected mayor, and, having done so, failed to deliver
clean water consistently, failed to attend to the potholes that have turned
Harare into a laughing stock?
      It is obvious that Chombo will be returned to Cabinet, because
undoubtedly, his actions against the people of Harare especially were
sanctioned from high up. The majority of residents in Harare are of the
opinion that Chombo's actions were at the behest of President Mugabe and the
President has done nothing to disprove this suspicion.
      The ruling party therefore committed suicide in the capital city. If,
after they had taken over the city, they had then managed to quickly restore
water supplies, repair the potholed roads and settle the issue of housing
shortages, the story would have been different.
      It is all very well for ZANU PF to remind people in Harare that
Highfield was the cradle of the liberation struggle, but, as I have said
before, Zimbabweans think with their stomachs: potholes, water cuts and
housing shortages are not going to be erased by the fact of our
independence.
      What happened to being responsive to people's needs? This is the
surest way for the ruling party to get its votes back in Harare. But this is
not going to happen because the people who the President relies upon in the
capital city are nothing more than opportunists. Opportunists do not have
the people's interests at heart. They get elected and then sit on their
laurels, shunning the very people who elected them, ignoring their problems.
      Why does ZANU PF think it lost the Epworth constituency, which it won
in 2000? It is because in the five intervening years, the people of Epworth
saw no improvement in their lives. The infrastructure in that constituency
is now in a worse state than it was in when ZANU PF won the seat. Epworth is
still the poorest constituency in Greater Harare. Who can blame them for
wanting to try the opposition for a change? Who, indeed, wants to be taken
for granted?
      And this is where the danger lies for ZANU PF. Even in the rural
areas, still taken for granted by the ruling party, the mood may well shift
as the MDC gains more access and talks to the people there. I have
personally seen growth points that are so potholed that no bus can pass
through. And this, on a dust road, where a simple grader can level the road
and a roller can compact it.
      I sincerely believe that it is time the ruling party started some
serious soul-searching, as opposed to accusing the people of having lost
their way. The people who vote for the MDC have not been led astray. Rather,
they are simply registering their dissatisfaction with the state of affairs
that is eroding their standards of living.
      If the ruling party seriously rolled up its sleeves and started
working in earnest for the good of the people, then it may redeem itself in
the urban areas.
      The party has done it before. After independence, high-density areas
that had no electricity were electrified, clean safe water was made
available in the rural areas, roads were paved and expanded.
      By doing this, ZANU PF was basically banking some goodwill. The ruling
party has been withdrawing against that goodwill it banked for 20 or so
years now. But their account is now overdrawn. Instead of insisting that
they are entitled to keep withdrawing against an overdrawn balance, it is
time to make some deposits in the form of tangible deeds to improve the
lives of urban people like correcting the water situation, the housing
problem, transport blues and other ills that have led the bank manager (the
electorate, in other words) to put a stop to any more withdrawals by the
ruling party.
      As for the MDC, it is clear that the opposition party is still
benefiting from ZANU PF's ineptitude, especially in the urban areas.
      The party needs to work a lot harder than it is doing now to remain
relevant. It needs to start getting votes on the basis of its policies, not
because "people want a change". The opposition party still believes that its
presence in the corridors of power alone is enough to improve the lives of
the people of Zimbabwe. It isn't.
      RESTART, their economic blueprint which I have read and reread, is not
good enough. It relies too much on things that are not within the control of
the MDC. For instance, no party should be allowed to get into power if its
strategy for improving our lives is simply to get the begging the bowl out
and go to the West for aid. This country has enough resources and brains to
make it on its own.
      There is no nation on earth that has become rich or successful by
accident. All success is by design and the MDC must start thinking seriously
about showing the electorate that its ideas are better than what is
contained in RESTART.
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FinGaz

      Mugabe helped Moyo win Tsholotsho

      Charles Rukuni
      4/7/2005 7:20:46 AM (GMT +2)

      BULAWAYO - Presi-dent Robert Mugabe, far from discrediting his former
propaganda chief, may have inadvertently handed Jonathan Moyo the Tsholotsho
seat when he told people in the area that the former information minister
had refused to listen to him and his two deputies when they urged him not to
stand as an independent candidate.

      Moyo was the only independent candidate to win a seat in the
just-ended parliamentary elections, won by ZANU PF with 78 seats against the
Movement for Democratic Change (MDC)'s 41.
      Moyo's victory was unique because he won in a rural constituency
considered a stronghold of ZANU PF, and in an area generally regarded as a
bastion of the MDC.
      The former information minister polled
      8 208 votes, while Mtoliki Sibanda of the MDC polled 6 310 votes and
ZANU PF's Musa Ncube, wife of provincial governor Cain Mathema, got 5 648
votes.
      President Mugabe had vowed that there was no way Moyo would win in
Tsholotsho.
      The ZANU PF leader told a campaign rally at Tsholotsho Business
Centre, a week before the elections, that Moyo had done a lot of terrible
things - including allegedly meeting army commander Lieutenant-General
Philip Sibanda on an unclear mission.
      President Mugabe and Vice-President Joyce Mujuru had met Moyo for
one-and-a-half hours to try to persuade him not to stand as an independent
candidate but Moyo was adamant he would not budge.
      "I advised him that the whole machinery of the party will fall on you
and you will get demolished," President Mugabe was quoted in The Chronicle
daily newspaper as saying.
      "You can never win against ZANU PF . . . If we have Tsholotsho voting
for Prof Moyo, where will Tsholotsho be going to - isolation or oblivion?
Tsholotsho, of all places . . . the cradle of the revolution," the
81-year-old leader said.
      A political observer said while President Mugabe's sentiments had been
meant to de-campaign Moyo, they had actually propped him up.
      "Like it or not, people in this region hero-worship anyone who can
stand up to President Mugabe - and that is what Moyo did. He became an
instant hero. President Mugabe became his trump card. I personally believe
that if Moyo had stood on a ZANU-PF ticket . . . he would have been trounced
by Mtoliki Sibanda," the observer said.
      But political commentator Lawton Hikwa said Moyo won because he poured
a lot of resources and energy into Tsholotsho.
      He said Moyo would probably have won the Tsholotsho seat even on a
ZANU PF ticket because he had split votes with Musa Ncube, which meant that
the party could have polled more than 13 000 votes.
      The observer, however, said while people appreciated what Moyo had
done in Tsholotsho, they still had reservations about him.
      "Moyo's victory in Tsholotsho should not be taken to mean that he is
popular in the region or even in Tsholotsho," the observer said. "He has
done a lot of untold damage to the region. He has isolated the region. The
only good thing he has done for the region is probably to bring on the word
sisonke on national television."
      Reggie Moyo of the National Constitutional Assembly said Moyo won
because he started his campaign way back in 2002.
      According to Reggie Moyo, the former propaganda chief used national
resources to prop up his image but people from Tsholotsho thought everything
that was being done there was being bankrolled by the sacked ex-minister and
not the government.
      "You would often hear people saying: 'Nobody has done as much for us
as Jonathan Moyo', which meant he got all the credit for things he had done
using state funds," Reggie Moyo said.
      He said Moyo also won because he ran a well-organised and concerted
campaign and had the resources.
      "He had the cars to drive up and down to Tsholotsho. Even his campaign
posters were of high quality, better than those from well-funded candidates
like those of ZANU PF, for example. Most independent candidates - like
Charles Mpofu, for example - simply pulled out because they did not have the
resources," Moyo said.
      Mpofu, a former deputy mayor of Bulawayo who had intended to contest
as an independent in Bulawayo South, pulled out of the race a day before the
elections.
      Observers said the only question that remained was whether Moyo would
be able to continue with all the programmes he had initiated - such as
scholarships to all schools in Tsholotsho - now that he no longer had access
to state resources.
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VOA

      Zimbabwe Opposition Presents Proof of Poll Fraud
      By VOA News
      Washington
      06 April 2005



Zimbabwe's main opposition party says an investigation into last week's
parliamentary election proves massive electoral fraud in at least 30 seats
won by the ruling party.

The Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) says its probe into four provinces
showed serious gaps between official vote tallies given by the Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission and total votes attributed to candidates in 30
constituencies.

The MDC says it only examined those seats because the electoral commission
has refused to release figures for other races -- a decision it says
indicates widespread irregularities in those areas.

President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF party won 78 seats, compared to 41 for the
opposition in last Thursday's elections. One seat went to an independent
candidate.

Mr. Mugabe has dismissed allegations of voter rigging as "nonsense."

Some information for this report provided by AP, AFP and Reuters.
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MDC issues ultimatum over poll 'irregularities'

[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]


HARARE, 6 Apr 2005 (IRIN) - The opposition Movement for Democratic Change
has given the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) 24 hours to explain
discrepancies in the final tally of votes cast in the parliamentary
elections, which saw the ruling ZANU-PF win a two-thirds majority.

MDC secretary-general Welshman Ncube said if that did not happen, they would
take their case to the Electoral Court. The MDC made electoral petitions
after the 2000 elections, but since the Electoral Court had not yet been
established, these cases were subject to normal court proceedings and were
only finalised just before last week's elections.

Otto Saki, a human rights lawyer, said the Electoral Court was compelled by
law to finalise all electoral disputes within six months.

The ZEC, chaired by Judge George Chiweshe, a retired soldier and war
veteran, with Lovemore Sekeramayi, the brother of Defence Minister Sidney
Sekeramayi, as the chief elections officer, has not yet reacted to claims
outlined in a statement by Ncube.

"On the night of 31 March and the morning of 1 April, officials from the
Zimbabwe Electoral Commission appeared on Zimbabwe television and gave an
account of the total number of people who had voted in each constituency.
The total number of constituencies, whose figures were given, was 76, before
the announcement was abruptly ceased without explanation," Ncube said in the
statement.

"We have taken time to analyse the figures in relation to the totals that
each candidate polled, as given by officials from ZEC in announcing the
results. In each and every case, we find that there are glaring
discrepancies between the total number given of the people who voted, and
the totals of the results," Ncube noted.

According to ZEC, 36,821 people voted in the Beitbridge constituency, but
the the total of votes cast for the two candidates only added up to 20,602,
leaving 16,219 votes unaccounted for, the MDC said.

There are more than 30 constituencies with 5,000 or more votes unaccounted
for.

"We urgently seek an explanation from you as to the reason for these
disparities. We have reason to believe that these disparities are as a
direct result of manipulation of numbers to achieve ZANU-PF victories in
constituencies where they had lost," Ncube told the ZEC.

MDC spokesman Paul Themba Nyathi said the party had submitted its findings
to the Southern African Development Community and the South African observer
missions that monitored the elections.

"Regrettably, these observer missions have so far shown a chronic lack of
interest in such compelling statistics and, instead, have maintained their
respective positions that the elections reflected 'the will of the people',"
Nyathi told IRIN.

UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan noted that the 31 March poll was conducted
peacefully, but expressed concern "that the electoral process has not
countered the sense of disadvantage felt by opposition political parties,
who consider the conditions unfair".

Annan called on all sides to engage in constructive dialogue in the period
ahead.
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The Star

      Zim torture project set straight
      April 7, 2005

      The Zimbabwe Torture Victims Project (ZTVP) would like to set the
record straight with regard to certain aspects of the article entitled
"Woman tells of alleged abuse by CIO officers" by Benita van Eyssen of the
Deutsche Press Agency. The story was subsequently carried in The Star on
March 30 under the title "Growing ranks of exiles tell of torture in jail".

      The ZTVP staff mentioned in the article had no authorisation to speak
to the media and the views reportedly expressed do not represent those of
the Project and the Institute for Democracy in South Africa (Idasa).

      The Zimbabwe Torture Victims Project is a project of Idasa, based at
the Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation in Braamfontein,
Johannesburg.

      We deal with primary victims and survivors of organised violence and
torture perpetrated in Zimbabwe from the year 2000 to date, and provide
access to psychological, psychiatric, medical, legal and humanitarian
services.


      Our objectives are to provide services that are accessible, holistic
and that ensure the inclusion and participation of victims and survivors in
their rehabilitation.

      The ZTVP does not receive, nor has it solicited funds from Zimbabwe's
opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change.

      The ZTVP is an independent and non-partisan project that serves all
victims of organised violence and torture, whatever their political
affiliation.

      The ZTVP is not aligned to any political party, but is part of the
Zimbabwe Solidarity and Consultation Forum that supports efforts to bring
about democratic and accountable governance in Zimbabwe. As such, the
project remains deeply concerned about the human rights violations reported
to it by its client base and the implications this has vis-^-vis the rule of
law in Zimbabwe.


      Piers Pigou
      Zimbabwe Torture Victims Project
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Taipei Times

Election protest lands opposition lawmaker in jail

UNFAIR: Zimbabwe's opposition MDC called for a new election as the African
country sank further into political and economic instability

AP , HARARE, ZIMBABWE
Thursday, Apr 07, 2005,Page 6
A Movement for Democratic Change lawmaker was arrested over protests against
the outcome of parliamentary elections, which the opposition party says were
rigged.

Also Tuesday, farmers disappointed by low prices for their crops forced the
early closure of the first day of Zimbabwe's annual tobacco sales.

Police spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena announced the arrest of MDC legislator
Nelson Chamisa, the newly re-elected representative of the Harare suburb of
Kuwadzana, on state radio.

Two youths were also detained for participating in a brief demonstration in
Harare on Monday. Bvudzijena said five shops and a bank had been stoned
during the protest.

"Police have assured the nation they will remain alert to ensure law and
order in the country in the face of threats by the opposition to bring a
reign of terror," Bvudzijena said.

Opposition spokesman Paul Themba Nyati was not aware of the arrests, and no
further details of the incident were immediately available.

Several hundred opposition supporters ran through downtown Harare scattering
leaflets Monday calling for mass protests against the outcome of Thursday's
poll. Police deployed on rooftops and set up roadblocks at dawn Tuesday to
prevent further demonstrations.

President Robert Mugabe's Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front
claimed 78 of Parliament's 120 elected seats, compared to 41 for the
opposition MDC. Mugabe's dismissed information minister, Jonathan Moyo, also
picked up a seat on an independent ticket.

Mugabe appoints 30 additional lawmakers, giving his party the two-thirds
majority he sought to secure his nearly 25-year rule and amend the
Constitution at will.

Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai has demanded a revote, saying huge
inconsistencies in the results pointed to ballot stuffing.

Opposition leaders and independent rights groups said years of violence and
intimidation skewed the poll in Mugabe's favor before the first ballot was
cast -- a view echoed by Britain, the US and other Western observers.

However, neighboring African countries largely supportive of Mugabe declared
the largely peaceful voting free and fair.

The country was plunged into political and economic turmoil when the
government began seizing thousands of white-owned commercial farms for
redistribution to black Zimbabweans after the last parliamentary election in
2000. The often violent campaign, coupled with years of drought, crippled
the agriculture-based economy.

Since last week's poll, bread and maize meal have disappeared from Harare
stores. The price of sugar, cooking oil and other basic commodities has
surged by at least 25 percent, the state-run Herald newspaper reported
Tuesday.

Commerce Minister Samuel Mumbengegwi blamed the developments on panic buying
and accused shop owners of profiteering. He pledged the nation would not run
out of food or fuel.

Meanwhile, noisy demonstrations broke out at the tobacco sales, where prices
dropped to US$1.9 per kilogram from last year's average US$2.02. Police were
not called, but the sales were cut short, said Rodney Ambrose of the
Zimbabwe Tobacco Association.

Just 70 of the 500 bales on offer were sold.

"It was not really too good a start at all," Ambrose said.

This year's 64-million-kilogram crop was less than a quarter of that
produced at its peak in the 1990s, when tobacco accounted for a quarter of
Zimbabwe's export earnings.

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Business Day

Election price controls back to haunt Mugabe
Jacob Dlaminiand Dumisani Muleya


THE Zimbabwean government's policy of keeping foodstuff prices artificially
low for last week's parliamentary elections has come back to haunt the
ruling Zanu (PF), with the country experiencing severe shortages this week.

The crisis looks set to worsen after Zanu (PF) militants blamed the private
sector for the crisis and vowed to seize "companies creating artificial food
shortages".

The troubled country has been hit by shortages of maize, cooking oil, sugar
and fuel, with long queues forming in parts of the capital Harare and other
cities as people scramble to buy basic foodstuffs and fuel.

The crisis also comes in the wake of attempts by President Robert Mugabe's
government to force shops and companies to maintain its electioneering
policy of keeping foodstuff prices artificially low.

Mugabe's ruling Zanu (PF) won a two-thirds majority in last week's election.

According to the state-owned Herald newspaper, Trade Minister Samuel
Mumbengegwi ordered retailers and manufacturers who had raised their prices
after last Thursday's election to go back to the old prices.

Mumbengegwi blamed the shortage of maize on "logistical problems", and said
the situation was now under control.

However, Brian Kagoro, chairman of the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition, denied
the situation was under control and said Zanu (PF) was paying for its
policies.

"The chickens are coming home to roost for Zanu (PF). Prices were kept
artificially low before the election, and now they are being reset," Kagoro
said.

Paul Themba Nyati, spokesman for the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change, said the shortages were a "more compelling case for people to fight
Mugabe's government".


However, economist Eric Bloch said the shortages were temporary and the
result of a "rumour machine", which suggested that there would be
"prohibitive price increases" after the election.

"The rumour machine created a self-fulfilling prophecy.

"There were delayed deliveries before the election and this encouraged
hoarding and profiteering by some people," Bloch said.

He said the real crunch would come later this year.

"The bottom line is that our maize crop is only a third of what the country
requires.

"The government will either have to import the other two-thirds or subsidize
maize, something it cannot afford to do.

"It could choose to allow price increases but that would only refuel
inflation," Bloch said.

The shortage of foodstuffs has been a perennial problem since the late 1990s
in Zimbabwe and Mugabe's regime often deals with it by controlling prices.

Price controls were officially lifted two years ago, but Mugabe's regime
still intervenes politically to influence prices. Retailers often react by
withholding goods until government backs down.

The actions of the retailers have resulted in Zanu (PF) saying it would take
over the running of companies and retail outlets.

The women's league of Zanu (PF) has asked Mugabe to approve the seizures and
has formed a consortium for the takeovers, the Herald reported.

League spokeswoman Nyasha Chikwinya said: "We have been understudying the
running of the companies from the days of the food riots and shortages.
Enough is enough. We cannot allow this to go on any longer."
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MDC issues ultimatum over poll 'irregularities'

[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]


HARARE, 6 Apr 2005 (IRIN) - The opposition Movement for Democratic Change
has given the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) 24 hours to explain
discrepancies in the final tally of votes cast in the parliamentary
elections, which saw the ruling ZANU-PF win a two-thirds majority.

MDC secretary-general Welshman Ncube said if that did not happen, they would
take their case to the Electoral Court. The MDC made electoral petitions
after the 2000 elections, but since the Electoral Court had not yet been
established, these cases were subject to normal court proceedings and were
only finalised just before last week's elections.

Otto Saki, a human rights lawyer, said the Electoral Court was compelled by
law to finalise all electoral disputes within six months.

The ZEC, chaired by Judge George Chiweshe, a retired soldier and war
veteran, with Lovemore Sekeramayi, the brother of Defence Minister Sidney
Sekeramayi, as the chief elections officer, has not yet reacted to claims
outlined in a statement by Ncube.

"On the night of 31 March and the morning of 1 April, officials from the
Zimbabwe Electoral Commission appeared on Zimbabwe television and gave an
account of the total number of people who had voted in each constituency.
The total number of constituencies, whose figures were given, was 76, before
the announcement was abruptly ceased without explanation," Ncube said in the
statement.

"We have taken time to analyse the figures in relation to the totals that
each candidate polled, as given by officials from ZEC in announcing the
results. In each and every case, we find that there are glaring
discrepancies between the total number given of the people who voted, and
the totals of the results," Ncube noted.

According to ZEC, 36,821 people voted in the Beitbridge constituency, but
the the total of votes cast for the two candidates only added up to 20,602,
leaving 16,219 votes unaccounted for, the MDC said.

There are more than 30 constituencies with 5,000 or more votes unaccounted
for.

"We urgently seek an explanation from you as to the reason for these
disparities. We have reason to believe that these disparities are as a
direct result of manipulation of numbers to achieve ZANU-PF victories in
constituencies where they had lost," Ncube told the ZEC.

MDC spokesman Paul Themba Nyathi said the party had submitted its findings
to the Southern African Development Community and the South African observer
missions that monitored the elections.

"Regrettably, these observer missions have so far shown a chronic lack of
interest in such compelling statistics and, instead, have maintained their
respective positions that the elections reflected 'the will of the people',"
Nyathi told IRIN.

UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan noted that the 31 March poll was conducted
peacefully, but expressed concern "that the electoral process has not
countered the sense of disadvantage felt by opposition political parties,
who consider the conditions unfair".

Annan called on all sides to engage in constructive dialogue in the period
ahead.
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FinGaz

      No headway in tobacco price talks

      Rangarirai Mberi
      4/7/2005 7:14:59 AM (GMT +2)

      TALKS to resolve a potentially damaging impasse over tobacco prices
achieved little progress yesterday, with farmers saying they would not let
up on demands for higher Zimbabwe dollar prices for the golden leaf.

      Tobacco officials met with Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe and government
officials yesterday, seeking a review of the currency rate and a higher
subsidy for their crop, the country's single largest foreign currency
earner.
      There was an improvement in US dollar prices yesterday, but Rodney
Ambrose, the chief executive officer of the Zimbabwe Tobacco Association,
said there was still a dispute over the conversion rate.
      "Tuesday's opening prices were significantly lower than we expected,
but US dollar prices have improved today (yesterday). Nothing came out of
our meetings though. We are still worried about the local currency return
and talks are continuing," Ambrose said.
      Tobacco auction houses cancelled the season's opening sales on Tuesday
after about 150 farmers protested against a sharp drop in prices. The
producers were back at the floors yesterday while the government, the
Tobacco Industry Marketing Board (TIMB) and tobacco associations sought a
solution.
      "We have had a good turnout today and the quality we have seen is a
lot better than yesterday. The issue (over prices) is before the minister
and the TIMB," said Ian Logan, the sales and marketing manager of Tobacco
Sales Floors.
      By mid-morning yesterday, although some leaf was fetching as low as
US25 cents, prices were averaging US179.9 cents per kilogramme, still lower
than the opening price of US195 cents but better than the lows of US22 cents
that had driven Tuesday's protests.
      The opening price was US21 cents higher than last year's opening day
average, but farmers said returns at current prices lagged behind production
costs.
      Producers say it costs them just above $20 000 to produce a kilogramme
of tobacco, but US dollar prices, at $6 200 on the greenback, would give
returns of about $11 000 for each kg. In 2002, it cost $200 to produce a kg.
      While producers protested at what they called unfair prices, buyers
yesterday took a dim view of the quality of the crop that was brought to
auction. Brazil and India may be offering similar quality tobacco for less,
a buyer said, insisting the prices were a true reflection of the crop on
view.
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Zim Economic Crisis Adversely Affects SA Business

The Daily News (Harare)

April 6, 2005
Posted to the web April 6, 2005

Johannesburg

South African business leaders have urged President Thabo Mbeki to engage
them and discuss Zimbabwe's economic crisis which they say has cost the
Southern African Development Community (SADC) R17 million between 2000 and
2003.

Business Unity South Africa (Busa), a grouping of South African business
people, said they have a vital stake in seeing Zimbabwe resolve its acute
economic problems.

"The inter-dependence of the two economies was highlighted in a recent study
assessing that the Zimbabwean crisis had cost the SADC region R17 billion
between 2000 and 2003," Busa said in a statement broadcast on South African
Broadcasting Corporation.

Zimbabwe, once seen as the economic bread basket of Africa, is mired in
unprecedented economic and political problems, blamed on the skewed policies
of President Mugabe and his ruling Zanu PF party.

But President Mugabe blames the crisis on Western powers especially Britain,
accusing them of imposing illegal sanctions on the country as punishment for
seizing land from white commercial farmers.

Busa's calls for President Mbeki to engage them to find a lasting solution
to the problems besetting Zimbabwe come as the country's captains of
industry and commerce are urging President Mugabe and the country's
opposition to bury their differences to rescue a once-prosperous economy,
battered by a five-year recession.

Zimbabwe's economy was expected to grow in 2005, after contracting by about
a third since 2000, but analysts believe that the disputed results of last
week's parliamentary election could worsen its political and economic
crisis.

Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF delivered a crushing defeat to the Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC), which has demanded a re-run because of alleged
voting irregularities. The ruling party grabbed 78 seats against just 41 for
the MDC, while Jonathan Moyo, a former Minister of Information took one
after standing as an independent in his Tsholotsho rural home.

Top banker Nigel Chanakira and Pattison Sithole president of the
Confederation of Zimbabwe Industries (CZI) told the international media this
week that Zimbabwe's ruling party and the opposition should work together to
boost the country's faltering economy.

"Now that these elections are behind us we should all focus on moving the
economy forward. We need to put Zimbabwe ahead of other personal or
political considerations," Sithole said.

"If collaboration between the two parties is what is required to bring
economic revival then we should pursue it wholeheartedly."

President Mugabe has said he is willing to work with the MDC in Parliament.
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FinGaz

      Mnangagwa's end?

      Hama Saburi
      4/7/2005 7:10:37 AM (GMT +2)

      A NARROW defeat handed to Emmerson Mnangagwa in the just-ended
disputed parliamentary polls has shattered the former ZANU PF secretary for
administration's bid to bounce back into mainstream politics, with his only
realistic chance of survival now resting with President Robert Mugabe.

      Previously seen as a shrewd political schemer, Mnangagwa, once tipped
to succeed President Mugabe until intriguing political gamesmanships
preceding the ruling party's December 2004 congress dashed his ambitions,
all but lost it when the Kwekwe seat slipped through his fingers for the
second time.
      He became the most senior ruling party member to lose the right to
represent ZANU PF in the august House after polling 11 124 votes against
little-known Blessing Chebundo of the Movement for Democratic Change, who
garnered 12 989 votes. This has accelerated the decline in his political
fortunes touched off last year when the political backing which he enjoyed
from President Mugabe evaporated in the aftermath of the infamous Tsholotsho
debacle, which claimed the scalps of many ruling party stalwarts.
      ZANU PF insiders said Mnangagwa, who was rescued from certain
retirement from active politics when he was offered the chance to take over
from Cyril Ndebele as Speaker of Parliament in July 2000, is gingerly
sitting on a political knife-edge.
      His foes, they say, have resumed the war of attrition against him in a
bid to completely eclipse him from the presidential race now tipped in
favour of Vice President Joyce Mujuru.
      They said the former justice minister, who needed to win the Kwekwe
constituency to place himself on a firm footing against other party
heavyweights in line to succeed President Mugabe when his term of office
expires in 2008, could be given the less influential position of minister
without portfolio to save his face. That is if President Mugabe, who saved
him the first time around when he was literally clutching at the straws,
does not throw him both ends of the rope.
      Alternatively, he could be co-opted into the Senate, which would be
created through constitutional amendments that now look certain after the
ruling party won a two-thirds majority in parliament.
      Anti-Corruption Minister Didymus Mutasa, who replaced Mnangagwa as the
ZANU PF secretary for administration, is tipped to take over as leader of
the House. Mutasa has served as Parliamentary Speaker before.
      Dumiso Dabengwa, the former PF ZAPU intelligence supremo, is also
being touted as another candidate for the speakership.
      Mnangagwa, who could not be reached for comment yesterday, has
previously expressed interest in reclaiming his position in Parliament.
      "I believe ZANU PF will win the majority of the seats in the House,
probably more than we have now, and I hope also that they will nominate me
to contest for the speakership again. If that happens I will accept because
I am now more experienced," he said late last year.
      ZANU PF insiders yesterday said the issue was complicated by the fact
that Mnangagwa, long considered President Mugabe's heir apparent, was
supposed to be the ultimate beneficiary of the Tsholotsho indaba convened on
November 18 allegedly to scuttle Vice President Mujuru's ascendancy to the
presidium.
      The meeting did not go down well with President Mugabe, who has vowed
to crack the whip on all those that attended because it had not been
sanctioned by ZANU PF.
      This led to six provincial chairmen being suspended from the ruling
party for five years each on allegations of plotting to influence the
composition of the ruling party's four-member presidium. These are Daniel
Shumba (Masvingo), July Moyo (Midlands), Mark Madiro (Manicaland), Lloyd
Siyoka (Matabeleland South), Jacob
      To Page 27
      Mudenda (Matabeleland North) and Themba Ncube (Bulawayo).
      A number of young Turks, a constant thorn in the ZANU PF old guard's
flesh, were also punished for throwing their weight behind Mnangagwa's
unsuccessful campaign for the vice-presidency. This development comes after
Mnangagwa, seen as the unshakeable quiet man of ZANU PF politics, was
implicated in the looting of precious minerals in the Democratic Republic of
the Congo where Zimbabwe had sent in troops to prop up the government of the
late Laurent Kabila.
      Only last year ZANU PF carried out investigations into a swathe of its
businesses which, observers said, was to all intents and purposes, targeted
at Mnangagwa, the party's former finance chief. Although Mnangagwa emerged
unscathed, political vultures opposed to his presidential ambitions had
already started circling.
      "It is a fact that the man (Mnangagwa) tried by emerging the only
loser with over 11 000 votes, but the issue still remains that the defeat
has put him in a difficult position," said the source.
      "Although Mnangagwa had put up a brave fight in the urban Kwekwe
constituency, the defeat has also given an opportunity to his foes who are
busy celebrating his downfall."
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FinGaz

      Economic worries return to fore

      Rangarirai Mberi
      4/7/2005 7:16:31 AM (GMT +2)

      PRESIDENT Robert Mugabe charmed the press last weekend after
delivering a crushing victory for his ZANU PF party, joking about how the
twin stuffed lions that stand guard at the State House entrance "represent
the spirit of their master".

      And economists say he will need a lot of that charm, and a lion-heart,
to deliver an economic recovery that he promised in months of hard
campaigning.
      ZANU PF seized 16 seats from the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) on its way to a two thirds majority win, leaving the ruling
party feeling more secure in power than it has ever felt since the emergence
of the MDC threat in 1999.
      But ZANU PF's majority could not save Zimbabweans from waking up this
week to price increases on a string of basic commodities and worse still
shortages of other goods that had been in abundance. With most of Zimbabwe's
economic fundamentals pointing lower, only abated by the courageous efforts
of the central bank, economists are pondering what economic policy a
fiercely self-assured ZANU PF will now follow.
      Critics fear a return to the years when ZANU PF had grown arrogant in
the absence of a strong political opponent, rejecting economic prudence for
political expediency.
      In the past, political measures had been suggested as a remedy for
economic woes and national disintegration. ZANU PF says it will immediately
use its advantage to effect long desired changes to the constitution, but
economists urge the ruling party to instead use its majority to get down to
the business of getting the economy functioning normally again.
      Pro-ZANU PF economic commentator Jonathan Kadzura says the ruling
party should use its new dominance to respond to the immediate needs of the
economy. The ruling party, he said, should begin mending fences with the
international community, transferring the means of production to locals and
reaching out to urban Zimbabweans, who once again rejected ZANU PF at the
polls.
      "We need to begin to make our economy work. Once we begin to create
wealth for our own citizens, start to pay off our foreign debts, it will be
easier for us to engage the international community," Kadzura said this
week.
      "The urgent business of this new parliament should be the economy. It
is clear that the urban person depends on jobs and a salary, income earned
from working for corporates, as opposed to rural people who live off the
land."
      Itai Tsakatsa, economist at Guardian Asset Management, sees the
election result as an opportunity for ZANU PF to begin painful economic
reforms that would have been politically risky prior to the election.
      "The political pressure is now off (given the huge win) and this
should give government and the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) enough courage
to take the tough measures needed to revive the economy. In fact, if they
correctly administer the right medicine now, ZANU PF can actually campaign
on an economy platform at the next election," Tsakatsa told The Financial
Gazette this week.
      The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) has released a glum outlook on
the post-election economy, seeing an even weaker economy on continued
international isolation and a lack of policy convergence between central
bank, leading the recovery effort, and government.
      The EIU predicts that the RBZ will continue to push for more reforms,
but will unlikely find support for more fundamental change.
      "The key measures of progress with reform will be whether Dr Gideon
Gono can convince President Mugabe of the need to make a major devaluation
of the auction rate after the election and completely eliminate the dual
interest rates," the EIU said in a report on the eve of the poll.
      Tsakatsa agrees on the need for devaluation, pointing to pent up
demand for foreign currency that is driving business onto the parallel
market for their hard currency needs. The scarcity of foreign currency is
partly responsible for commodity shortages, Tsakatsa says.
      "Devaluation will be a lesser political risk than allowing shortages
to persist," he said.
      On interest rates, economists agree that RBZ will likely find it more
prudent to hold rates at current levels, or even raise them over a short
period, in response to inflationary pressure rising on a weaker currency and
unplanned grain imports.
      Official forecasts say growth in Gross Domestic Product (GDP) will be
positive this year, up between 3.5 and 5 percent. Zimbabwe has seen
recession over the past six years, with negative GDP growth of a cumulative
30 percent between 1999 and 2003, but government is pinning its recovery
hopes on the RBZ's tough monetary policy drive.
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