The ZIMBABWE Situation
An extensive and up-to-date website containing news, views and links related to ZIMBABWE - a country in crisis
Return to INDEX page
Please note: You need to have 'Active content' enabled in your IE browser in order to see the index of articles on this webpage

Intelligence agency warns of mass revolt against Mugabe

Zim Online

Friday 16 February 2007

      By Brian Ncube

      BULAWAYO - Zimbabwe's national intelligence agency has warned that a
wave of strikes by disgruntled doctors, nurses and teachers "will soon"
spread to all government departments and the security forces and could
easily turn into mass revolt against President Robert Mugabe.

      In a confidential memorandum dated February 8, 2007, the Central
Intelligence Organisation (CIO) claimed the opposition and unnamed foreign
powers were behind plans to manipulate worker grievances to incite public
revolt. It added that such a revolt had "all chances of succeeding" unless
preempted by the government.

      A copy of the memo headed "Grand Plan to Overthrow the Government" and
addressed to the Ministers of State Security, Defence and Home Affairs was
shown to ZimOnline on Thursday. The ministers received the five-paged memo
last Monday, according to our sources in the intelligence community.

      "Recent investigations have revealed that all government departments
will soon be affected by these crippling strikes. This will affect even the
disciplined forces (police, army and prison services), where some members
have become very vocal in criticising the government lately," the CIO wrote.

      State doctors have since December boycotted work to press the
government to hike their salaries by about 8 000 percent. Nurses at some
state hospitals have also joined the doctors on strike to cripple the public
health sector.

      Teachers at several public schools began absconding classes last week
to press for a salary hike, while the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions
(ZCTU) has given the government until February 23 to address doctors, nurses
and teachers' salary grievances as well as move to fix the bleeding economy
or face a general strike by workers across the country.

      The ZCTU warned in a statement that the country should brace up for
"more serious strikes" by workers demanding living wages and better working
conditions.

      But the CIO claims in its memo that its investigations had established
that the political opposition, Western countries and strangely some of
Zimbabwe's neighbours, which the spy agency did not name, were sponsoring
strikes in the hope to incite a civil uprising against Mugabe's government.

      It said: "Our investigations have uncovered a plot by some opposition
political parties, in conjunction with some regional and Western countries,
of paying these professionals handsomely in foreign currency, so that they
continue the strikes, resulting in a public outcry that sparks angry
reactions from the populace, thereby igniting the uprising."

      Defence Minister Sydney Sekeramayi refused to take questions on the
matter, saying he did not discuss "security matters with the Press" while
Home Affairs Minister Kembo Mohadi said he had not seen the memo because he
was away at his rural home in Beitbridge for his father's funeral.

      But State Security Minister Didymus Mutasa, under whose portfolio the
CIO falls, said the government was aware of plans to destabilise the country
and would "heavily deal" with those behind the plans.

      Mutasa told ZimOnline: "We know all about their plans and once they
start it, we will heavily deal with them. They do not stand a chance. We
have a well-trained army that is always on the alert and they should be
warned before they start doing anything funny."

      Sources said the Joint Operations Command, comprising senior
commanders of the army, police, CIO and prisons service, had as a result of
the CIO memo recommended that security forces be put on high alert.

      It was not possible to get confirmation from the Zimbabwe Defence
Forces headquarters whether the army and air force were on alert. But police
spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena said the law enforcement agency was on alert to
quash street demonstrations or any other disturbances to law and order.

      He said: "We gather that there are people who are planning to hold
illegal demonstrations and since our duty is to preserve peace and maintain
law and order, we have placed our members on the alert to deal with those
according to the demands of the law."

      Under the government's tough security laws, Zimbabweans must first get
permission from the police before holding public demonstrations.

      An unprecedented economic crisis marked by the world's highest
inflation of nearly 1 600 percent, acute shortages of food, hard cash and
every basic survival commodity has fuelled political tensions in Zimbabwe.

      Plans by Mugabe - in power since Zimbabwe's 1980 independence from
Britain and blamed by critics for ruining its once brilliant economy - to
extend his term, which ends in 2008, by another two years without going
through an election has only helped stoke up hostilities in the country as
well as in the veteran President's own ruling ZANU PF party.

      Mugabe's controversial plan to extend his term to 2010 has met with
unprecedented opposition from some of his closest lieutenants in ZANU PF,
while outraged opposition parties, churches and civic groups have threatened
to launch street protests to block the plan. - ZimOnline


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

ZANU PF accused of vote buying ahead of by-election

Zim Online

Friday 16 February 2007

      By Regerai Marwezu

      MASVINGO - Zimbabwe opposition parties on Thursday accused the ruling
ZANU PF party of vote-buying and intimidation ahead of Saturday's
by-election in Chiredzi South constituency.

      Four political parties, ZANU PF, the United People's Party (UPP) and
the two factions of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) party will lock
horns in the by-election to fill up a seat left vacant following the death
of ZANU PF legislator Aaron Baloyi last September.

      A spokesperson for the Morgan Tsvangirai-led MDC, Nelson Chamisa, told
ZimOnline yesterday that the weekend election will not be free and fair
because ZANU PF had resorted to "dirty tactics" to garner votes.

      "We are aware that ZANU PF is using food handouts to win votes in the
election. We have also noted with concern that ZANU PF is also threatening
traditional leaders if their supporters vote for the opposition.

      "We cannot have a free and fair election under these circumstances,"
said Chamisa.

      United People's Party (UPP) provincial co-ordinator for Masvingo
province, Antony Kundishora, also accused ZANU PF of using state resources
to buy support ahead of the election.

      "We are going into this election under protest since ZANU PF has
already bought votes from the electorate through the politicisation of food
and agricultural inputs.

      "Our supporters have been denied food because of their political
affiliation. We have raised this issue with the Zimbabwe Electoral
Commission but it appears nothing has been done to address our concerns,"
said Kundishora.

      Contacted for comment yesterday, ZANU PF senator for Masvingo who is
also the party's provincial political commissar, Dzikamai Mavhaire, rejected
allegations of vote buying by his party.

      "We have heard that allegation over and over again in the past
whenever we have an election. The opposition wants sympathy from Western
governments but the truth of the matter is that the allegations are
baseless," said Mavhaire.

      Immaculate Makondo will represent the Tsvangirai-led MDC while
Nehemiah Zenamwe will represent the Arthur Mutambara-led MDC. Mayethani
Chauke will stand for the UPP while retired army colonel, Kallisto Gwanetsa,
will represent ZANU PF.

      Zimbabwe opposition parties and human rights groups have in the past
accused ZANU PF of using food aid to garner political support especially
during elections, a charge the ruling party denies. - ZimOnline


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

174 women protesters still detained

Zim Online

Friday 16 February 2007

Own Correspondent

BULAWAYO - Police were on Thursday still holding 174 women from the Women of
Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA) activist group, three days after arresting them for
demonstrating against President Robert Mugabe's government.

The women, some of whom were brutally assaulted by baton wielding riot
policemen, have not been taken to court since their arrest on Tuesday this
week. Under the law police cannot detain suspects for more than 48 hours
without a court order, however a law police often ignore.

The women's lawyer, Simba Chivaura, said the police had however released
close to a hundred other WOZA activists they had also arrested and the
majority of who were with minor children and babies.

Chivaura told ZimOnline: "The police have not indicated when they are likely
to take my clients to court. They are saying they are still recording
statements and doing the paperwork before taking them to court and it
definitely is not going to be today (Thursday)."

Police wielding truncheons descended on about 500 members of WOZA as they
marched across Bulawayo city waving placards and distributing fliers calling
on President Robert Mugabe to resign.

The WOZA women, who have held public demonstrations demanding better living
conditions for their families every St Valentine's Day over the past three
years, had held this year's march on Tuesday hoping to catch the police
unawares. St. Valentine's Day was on Wednesday.

Police authorities indicated they will charge the women under security laws
that prohibit Zimbabweans from holding political meetings or marches in
public without first seeking permission from the law enforcement agency.

Meanwhile, eight other WOZA activists arrested in Harare were on Wednesday
freed by the police after paying admission of guilt fines.

Their lawyer Rangu Nyamurundira said the women had agreed to pay the fines
of Z$250 each only so they could escape the "deplorable conditions" in the
cells at Harare Central police station where they were being detained. -
ZimOnline


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Press barred from parliamentary hearing into illegal mining activities

Zim Online

Friday 16 February 2007

By Thulani Munda

HARARE -A senior Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) official on Thursday refused
to give evidence before Parliament's special committee on mines and the
environment in the presence of journalists saying information he had to
disclose to the committee could cause instability in the country if shared
with the Press.

Mirirai Chiremba, who is the director of Financial Intelligence Inspectorate
Evaluation and Security at the RBZ agreed to testify on the central bank's
role in an ongoing crackdown by the government against illegal miners and
smugglers of precious minerals only after journalists were ordered out of
the meeting.

Chiremba said: "Because of the nature of my job, I do not think it is
suitable to have the Press here. I do not wish to say anything that will
cause instability in the country."

The committee complied with his request and told journalists to leave the
room.

After the closed-door meeting, acting chairperson of the committee Tsitsi
Muzenda said Chiremba had informed the committee on the RBZ's operations in
light of concerns raised by small-scale miners that the central bank was
involved in illegal gold mining.

Muzenda said the RBZ had invited the committee to tour its projects in
Kwekwe city in Midlands province and a hub of illegal gold mining and
trading. She however said the central bank had not disclosed names of senior
government officials involved in minerals smuggling because it did not have
such names.

Powerful ruling ZANU PF party politicians, government officials and some
military commanders are widely suspected of being behind illegal mining and
trading of gold and diamonds.

For example, private small-scale miners last week told the parliamentary
committee that permanent secretary in the Ministry of Environment and
Tourism Margaret Sangarwe was involved in illegal gold mining.

The small-scale miners claimed that they had more names of senior government
officials involved in illegal mining but which they said they could not
divulge for fear of reprisals.

Acting Police Commissioner Innocent Matibiri a fortnight ago also said
senior government officials were behind illegal gold mining. He did not
provide names.

Zimbabwe has seen earnings from gold and other precious minerals decline
over the past few years as more minerals are smuggled out of the country. -
ZimOnline


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

MDC seeks court order to hold rally

Zim Online

Friday 16 February 2007

Own Correspondent

HARARE - The Morgan Tsvangirai-led Movement for Democratic Change (MDC)
party yesterday filed an urgent court application to force the police to
lift a ban on a rally planned for next Sunday and at which the party will
launch its campaign for a presidential election next year.

The police on Wednesday told the MDC that the rally that had been scheduled
for the Zimbabwe Grounds in Highfield suburb could not go ahead as the law
enforcement agency did not have enough manpower to ensure security at the
political meeting.

"We are filing the urgent court application today (Thursday)," said Jessie
Majome, a lawyer who is handling the case. Majome is also an executive
member of the MDC.

Majome said under the restrictive Public Order and Security Act (POSA),
political parties are not required to seek permission from the police but to
simply notify them before holding any meetings.

A spokesperson for the MDC, Nelson Chamisa, was more defiant saying the
opposition party would press ahead with the rally regardless of the outcome
of the court application.

"We have vowed to defy unjust laws and that's exactly what we will do. The
launch will take place on Sunday whatever happens," he said.

The Tsvangirai-led MDC and the other faction of the opposition party led by
academic Arthur Mutamnbara as well as civic society groups say they want the
election held in March 2008 when President Robert Mugabe's term ends. But
the poll remains in great doubt after Mugabe said he wanted it postponed by
two years.

Mugabe says postponing the presidential poll so it could be held jointly
with elections for Parliament in 2010 would save on administrative costs but
critics say have dismissed this as a ploy by the veteran President to hold
onto power without going through an election.

Mugabe is already facing stiff resistance from his own party over the plan
with ZANU PF failing to endorse the proposal at its annual conference held
last December in Goromonzi. - ZimOnline


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Zim's neighbours need to step in

IOL

          February 15 2007 at 04:00PM

      German Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose country holds the EU
presidency, urged Zimbabwe's neighbours on Thursday to use their influence
to help end the "suffering" from President Robert Mugabe's policies.

      Speaking at the opening of the Africa-France summit in the French
Riviera resort of Cannes, Merkel said there was "great concern" over the
deteriorating economic and political situation in Zimbabwe.

      "The intimidation of political opponents, the difficulties, the
threats to farmers, the destruction of neighbourhoods where the poor live;
there is no justification for this," said Merkel.

      "That is why I am calling on Zimbabwe's neighbouring states to join us
and exert their influence to help men and women who are suffering," she
added.

      Mugabe, in power in Zimbabwe since its independence in 1980, is
accused by his critics of driving his nation to the brink of economic
collapse.

      Zimbabwe's annual inflation rate, the world's highest, reached 1 593
percent in January, as the standard of living continued to drop in the
southern African country.

      In a shift from a previous Africa-France summit held in Paris in 2003,
France decided not to invite Mugabe to the Cannes meeting, in accordance
with a European Union travel ban on the Zimbabwean leader and his inner
circle.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Donors give $70 mln for Zimbabwe AIDS orphans

Reuters

Thu Feb 15, 2007 11:40 AM GMT

HARARE (Reuters) - Foreign donors gave $70 million (36 million pounds)on
Thursday to help Zimbabwe cope with growing numbers of AIDS orphans in what
officials said was a rare show of unity among the government, donors and
non-governmental organisations.

The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) says one in four children in the
southern African nation -- about 1.6 million children -- have lost one or
both parents to HIV/AIDS, which claims the lives of 3,000 Zimbabweans every
week.

The funds were made available by Britain, New Zealand, Sweden and German and
would be jointly administered by UNICEF, NGOs and the Zimbabwe government to
help ensure orphans gained access to facilities such as education and health
care.

President Robert Mugabe has previously accused donors of working with the
opposition to overthrow his government, and has drafted a bill requiring
NGOs to be registered with the government.

"In a complex and difficult environment this is an outstanding agreement
between a diverse group of key institutions," UNICEF Zimbabwe representative
Festo Kavishe told journalists.

Under the five-year programme, a total of $250 million would be required to
help the country's orphans, donors say.

Zimbabwe is among the countries worst hit by the HIV/AIDS pandemic, which
accounts for 70 percent of hospital admissions.

But there were also signs of hope as the HIV prevalence rate declined to
18.1 percent this year from 25 percent five years ago.

Health experts say the fall is due to more condom use and the success of
programmes encouraging people to have fewer sex partners.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Zimbabwe urged not to extradite Briton in coup plot

Reuters

Thu Feb 15, 2007 5:26 PM GMT

By Cris Chinaka

HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwe should reject a request by Equatorial Guinea to
extradite a Briton accused of plotting a coup in the oil-rich West African
state because he will be severely tortured there, his lawyer said on
Thursday.

Former British special forces officer Simon Mann was convicted by a
Zimbabwean court in September 2004 of trying to buy weapons without a
licence and sentenced to four years in jail.

The government said the arms were intended for a coup attempt in Equatorial
Guinea and Mann was accused of being the ringleader of the plot.

On Thursday, Equatorial Guinea launched an application in the Harare
Magistrates Court to secure Mann for a treason trial when he is released
early for good behaviour in May.

Zimbabwean state lawyer Joseph Jagada -- who is representing the West
African state -- charged that Mann was a key player in a 2004 plot to
assassinate Equatorial Guinea President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo and
should be extradited.

"The applicant is only supposed to establish a prima facie that the subject
of extradition has a legal case to answer, and in this the applicant has
gone way beyond that," he said, pointing to a file of documents which he
said incriminated Mann.

"The applicant has also given assurances that the death sentence will not be
pursued if Mr Mann is convicted, and that he will get a fair trial," Jagada
said.

Defence lawyer Jonathan Samkange said Zimbabwe should not hand over Mann
because his case was political and Equatorial Guinea had a long history of
torture and unfair trials.

"There is nothing that resembles a fair judiciary system there, nothing like
a fair trial ... and because this case is political, he will not get a fair
trial and he will be severely tortured," he told the court.

"The assurances being given are not worth the paper they are written on ...
Others facing the same charges have not received a fair trial, one has died
from torture" he said.

Samkange said international law barred the extradition of people indicted in
political trials or facing possible torture. "It would be a very sad day if
Zimbabwe were to extradite a man against all international conventions," he
added.

Equatorial Guinea Attorney General Jose Ole Obono told the court that
although his government believed that Mann was the "intellectual head" of
the coup plot, he would get justice.

Mann -- who was not in court on Thursday, but is expected to give evidence
later during the extradition proceedings -- insists he was not involved in
any coup plot, Samkange said.

Mann also pleaded not guilty at his Zimbabwe trial.

Sixty-six other defendants, including 64 men who had South African passports
when their plane was seized in Harare, served less than a year in jail after
pleading guilty to charges of violating Zimbabwe's immigration and civil
aviation laws.

Mann is an acquaintance of Mark Thatcher, the son of former British Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher, who was arrested in South Africa on suspicion of
involvement in the suspected coup plot but was freed after a legal deal.

Mann's lawyers said on Thursday his extradition case was likely to go on for
weeks.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

SA knowingly turned blind eye to Guinea coup

SABC

February 15, 2007, 14:30

The South African government was prepared to look the other way while a coup
d'etat was carried out in Equatorial Guinea; it was alleged in the Pretoria
Regional Court today. Crause Steyl, a state witness told the court that the
government knew what was being planned. He was the second State witness to
do so.

"One cannot expect the South African government to give us a piece of paper.
It was probably in the intelligence service or a nod from someone that (the
plot was acknowledged)," Steyl told the court.

He was being cross-examined by Margie Victor, a defence advocate who appears
for Raymond Stanley Archer, Victor Dracula, Errol Harris, Mazanga Kashama,
Neves Tomas Matias, and Hendrik Jacobus Hamman. Alwyn Griebenow, an attorney
for Louis du Preez and Simon Morris Witherspoon, also cross-examined Steyl.
The eight men are accused of contravening the Foreign Military Assistance
Act. "The South African government will be on side," Steyl said was the
assurance given to those taking part in the coup.

Foreign Military Assistance Act
Steyl said the issue was again raised with Simon Mann one of the alleged
planners of the coup when in an unrelated matter Carl Alberts, a former SA
Air Force pilot, pleaded guilty in 2004 to contravening the Foreign Military
Assistance Act through mercenary activities in the Ivory Coast. He said Mann
again assured them that the South African government will be "on side". "We
were all grown men who wanted to return to South Africa. We have families
here we did not want to stay in Equatorial Guinea forever," Steyl said.

Steyl earlier testified that the country's opposition leader was already on
his way to take power when the coup was foiled in 2004. He said he was
flying Severo Moto, an opposition leader from the Canary Islands to
Equatorial Guinea. They had landed in Mali to refuel when they received a
message that 60 men - who were on their way to Equatorial Guinea had been
arrested in Zimbabwe. Steyl testified that they returned to the Canary
Islands where they were arrested by immigration officials. After a
conversation with an official, their passports were handed back to them and
they were allowed to go.

Oil millionaire implicated as backers of the coup
Steyl said Moto was accompanied by David Tremain, a British businessman,
Greg Wales, and by Karim Fallaha, an associate of Ely Calil, a London-based
Lebanese oil millionaire. They have all been implicated as backers of the
coup, but have denied any involvement. He said he went to London to try to
raise money to help his friends who were arrested, but being unsuccessful he
returned to South Africa.

He later pleaded guilty under a plea-bargain to involvement in a coup
attempt. He, however, could not implicate one of the eight accused as being
involved in the coup. The trial continues tomorrow. - Sapa


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Church Leaders Urged to Get Real

Institute for War and Peace Reporting

African Christians ask their leaders to concentrate on political, social and
health issues, not just on gays and lesbians.

By Trevor Grundy in Canterbury, England (AR No. 95, 15-Feb-07)

Anglican Christians in parts of Africa are calling on their leaders
attending the 2007 Primates Meeting in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania this week, to
concentrate on real issues and not spend so much time debating the rights of
gay men and lesbian women.

Those who criticise the amounts of time and energy spent debating gay issues
say there should be a focus on the catastrophic spread of HIV/AIDS,
widespread and pervasive poverty, severe drought, lack of governmental
transparency and how the church can use its moral influence to remove
despots from power.

In London, a rising star in the Anglican Communion, the Bishop of Botswana,
the Right Reverend Musonda Trevor Selwyn Mwamba, told IWPR that Anglicans in
Africa are growing tired of the gay debate, the endless arguments about who
goes to bed with whom and what colour pyjamas they wear.

Even prominent African Anglicans sympathetic to gays, such as the
increasingly popular Archbishop of Cape Town, Mjongonkuku, and his
predecessor, Nobel Peace Prize winner Desmond Tutu, are urging church
leaders gathered in Dar es Salaam for six days, ending February 19, to
concentrate on poverty, HIV/AIDS, climate change and political oppression
rather than gay issues that threaten to split the worldwide Anglican
community of 75 million people.

But one real issue the prelates will find impossible to sidestep is the
leader of the Anglican community in Zimbabwe, the Bishop of Harare, Nolbert
Kunonga, who has been accused by his own priests of terrorising Christians
and turning his diocese into a branch of President Robert Mugabe's ruling
ZANU PF party.

Zimbabwean Anglicans want the archbishops and bishops gathered in Dar es
Salaam to act against Kunonga, a ruling party loyalist in his late 50s, who
they say is a disgrace to Christianity and to Africa. Anglican priests
critical of Mugabe have been transferred to tough rural parishes and many
have resigned. A plethora of legal cases between Kunonga and his
disillusioned flock are stuck in Zimbabwe 's chaotic court system. In place
of priests who have resigned, he has appointed men who have pledged not to
criticise the head of state. He even licensed the acting vice president of
Zimbabwe, Joseph Msika, a man on record as saying that whites are not human
beings, to act as a deacon of the church.

From the time of his disputed election as Bishop of Harare in 2001 to the
present Kunonga has, say Anglicans in Harare, made no secret of his personal
ambitions for fame and fortune or his willingness to exploit fully his
sycophantic relationship to Mugabe and ZANU PF.

His election in 2001 to the bishopric was shrouded in mystery, resulting in
the defeat of a popular priest, and marred by widespread allegations that
Kunonga had used his influence with the ruling party to secure the post. He
is the only clergyman among many powerful individual Zimbabweans against
whom heavy sanctions have been imposed by the European Union and the United
States.

Kunonga has used his pulpit at St Mary's Cathedral in Harare to support
Mugabe's controversial land reform programme, in which thousands of
commercial farms have been confiscated from mainly white owners but also
from some black farmers. During one of Kunonga's pro-Mugabe sermons, the
choir began singing hymns to drown out his words. The choir was subsequently
sacked by the bishop along with the cathedral wardens and cathedral council.

He was rewarded by Mugabe with St Marnock's, 2000 acres of prime farmland 15
kilometres outside Harare , confiscated from its previous white owner,
25-year-old Marcus Hale. The bishop installed his son in the seven-bedroom
farmhouse, which overlooked a lake and sweeping fields of wheat and soya:
the lake remains, but the house is now derelict and the crops have been
replaced by weeds. The bishop, a short, thickset man who wears a jewelled
cross over his cassock, also evicted 50 black workers and their families
from the property.

Bishop Nolbert has lost few opportunities to sing the praises of Mugabe, who
turns 83 on February 21. On that day Zimbabwe will, as it does every
February 21, be ordered to come to a halt as "the great and wise authentic
ruler" of the past 27 years requires the nation to pay homage to him.

Last year, Kunonga aped his political patron by ordering all 45 Anglican
churches in the Harare Diocese - including St Mary's Cathedral - to close on
Sunday in honour of his 33rd wedding anniversary. Instead, he called all
Anglicans to a fundraising prayer meeting at a sports arena. Each parish in
attendance was asked to donate the equivalent of 2000 US dollars and each
individual 20 dollars as a present for the bishop and his wife, Agatha. The
5000-seat arena was less than half full. Nineteen church wardens and
choristers were subsequently banned by a Harare court from attending
services in St Mary's Cathedral after Kunonga laid charges against them of
trying to disrupt his wedding anniversary.

In August 2005 the bishop, who likes to mock black critics of Mugabe as
"puppets of the West", and has described Mugabe's repeated election
victories as "God's will", appeared before an ecclesiastical court to face
38 charges arising from scores of complaints, all but three of which were
registered by black parishioners. The charges included incitement to murder,
intimidating critics, ignoring church law, mishandling church funds,
bringing militant ZANU PF politics into the pulpit and preaching racial
hatred.

In December 2005, the court hearing before a Malawian judge collapsed in
disarray without proper explanation and the head of the Anglican province of
Central Africa, Zambian Archbishop Bernard Malango, informed church leaders
in the province that the case against Kunonga had been dropped for ever.

Archbishop Malango is a friend and an admirer of both Mugabe and Kunonga. He
was a guest of honour at the Harare bishop's 33rd wedding anniversary
celebrations.

Kunonga recently hit back at his critics, in Zimbabwe 's government-owned
Herald newspaper, by lambasting white parishioners for their alleged racism
and support for commercial farmers who were removed from their farms after
2000 in Mugabe's contentious land reform programme. The bishop likened his
"stand" against his own white parishioners to Martin Luther's against the
Pope in 1517.

He made no apology for chasing twelve respected black priests out of their
parishes and replacing them with ruling party stooges. Ten of the black
priests sought political asylum in Britain .

He went on to remind the rest of the worldwide Anglican Communion that it is
only a fellowship and that he could pull out of it just as President Mugabe
pulled out of the Commonwealth.

The Roman Catholic Archbishop of Bulawayo , Pius Ncube, Zimbabwe 's most
outspoken critic of Mugabe, said Kunonga had aligned himself with the
"forces of evil".

Last year, black Zimbabwean Anglican priests exiled in Britain called on the
Ugandan-born Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, to intervene in the
dispute between Kunonga and his many critics.

The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, the symbolic head of the
worldwide Anglican Communion, stepped into the dispute before the Dar es
Salaam summit and said the bishop should be suspended until allegations
against him have been properly dealt with.

A senior source in the Anglican Communion told IWPR that Dr Williams would
almost certainly be talking to Archbishop Malango about why he declared the
Kunonga case closed and sealed for ever.

Lambeth Palace, the Archbishop of Canterbury's administrative headquarters
and home in London, continued to put the pressure on Kunonga and Malango
before Dr Williams flew to Dar es Salaam . "In the context of a prolonged
and political crisis, the Anglican Diocese of Harare faces intolerable
strain in the form of the very grave and unresolved accusations against
Bishop Kunonga," said a statement from the Archbishop of Canterbury's London
office.

"In other jurisdictions, a priest or bishop facing such serious charges
would be suspended without prejudice until the case has been closed. It is
therefore very difficult for Bishop Kunonga to be regarded as capable of
functioning as a bishop elsewhere in the communion," it continued.

The Reverend Paul Gwese today lives in self-imposed exile in England. He is
the former rector of St Francis of Assisi, an Anglican church in the Harare
suburb of Glen Norah, a poor black working class community.

He told IWPR, "Since his controversial ordination in 2001, Bishop Kunonga
has terrorised Christians and is turning his dioceses into a religious
branch of Mugabe's ruling party. People want spiritual leaders who are
accountable but when you look at the way things are done in Harare Diocese,
church politics is no different from secular politics. I am depressed to see
what was once a reputable church deteriorate into a circus."

Father Gwese, 34, was suspended by Kunonga for allowing the local member of
parliament to make a donation worth about 300 US dollars to parish funds.
The problem was that the politician, Priscilla Misihairabwi-Mushonga,
belongs to the opposition Movement for Democratic Change, not to ZANU PF.

Father Gwese was transferred to a rural parish 110 km away, while his
congregation boycotted services at their church and staged demonstrations
outside the Harare cathedral to demand that their vicar be returned to them.
Kunonga refused to listen to them and Father Gwese fled into exile.

With many other contentious issues to tackle that could split the worldwide
Anglican church, the bishops in Dar es Salaam may not be able to solve the
Kunonga problem. But once the ageing Mugabe steps down, Kunonga's reign will
end also, for he only retains his post as Zimbabwe 's most powerful Anglican
with the president's patronage.

Trevor Grundy is an author, broadcaster and journalist specialising in
religious affairs and Zimbabwean issues, who lived and worked in Zimbabwe
and other central African countries from 1966 to 1996.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

imbabwe's Reserve Bank chief confirms that gold output has halved since 2004

Engineering News

Z
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Zimbabwean gold producers declared 10,96 t of the yellow metal in 2006 -
down from 13,4 t in 2005 - Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) governor Gedion
Gono said when he presented his latest quarterly monetary policy statement
in Harare at the end of January.

According to Zimbabwean law, all gold produced in the country must be
delivered to Fidelity Printers & Refiners, a subsidiary of the RBZ.

"Cumulative gold deliveries in 2006 stood at 10,96 t, painting a
disappointing picture in this critical sector when compared to 21 t achieved
back in 2004." Gold deliveries for 2005 were similarly lower than for 2004,
with total gold deliveries to the RBZ amounting to 13,45 t. "The decline is
attributed to a combination of factors, including a lack of equipment, and
reduced exploration and mine development, as well as illegal trading and
smuggling of gold," Gono said.

As a result of the leakages, the RBZ has put in place measures compelling
gold millers to become more accountable.

"All custom millers are given up to the end of March 2007 to convert their
production systems to lockable concentrators so as to improve on gold
recovery. "Analysis of the systems by the RBZ has shown that, where a
concentrator is used, gold recoveries are 80%, compared with about 35%,
where a copper plate is used, or 30%, where the blanket or rubber mat method
is used," said Gono.

However, miners attribute the declining gold deliveries to the static
exchange rate, which Gono chose to keep intact. Mine costs are denominated
in foreign currency, miners argue, while earnings remain depressed owing to
the exchange rate, restricting expansion.

Chamber of Mines president Jack Murehwa said that any smuggler should be
arrested, but that there was need for more fundamental economic reforms.

Last year, the RBZ hired Israeli experts to look into the leakages, but
their efforts have yielded little, as gold continues to find its way out of
the country.

Gold is a key foreign-currency earner for the country, accounting for 51% of
Zimbabwe's mineral output. The governor refused to bow to market pressure to
devalue the Zimbabwe dollar, insisting that allowing the local currency to
slide would not solve the country's economic woes. Analysts were expecting
the bank chief to allow the local unit to slide from 250 against the US
dollar, a rate at which it has been fixed since July 31, 2006, when he
presented the last half-yearly monetary policy statement. The local dollar
is currently trading at around 5 000 to the US greenback on an illegal but
thriving parallel market, where the bulk of hard cash is traded. Gono said
no amount of devaluation would lead to "truck loads" of foreign currency,
adding that he did not want to take the responsibility of causing pain to
consumers through price hikes induced by the weakening of the local
currency.

"It is clear that the foreign- exchange market setbacks are a supply and
demand issue, linked to sanctions against the country, linked to a lack of
balance of payment support, linked to smuggling and indiscipline in the
economy, linked to shortage of a fund to support whatever devaluation we may
contemplate and, above all, linked to poor performance of the export
sectors. "To talk of a market rate when these structural issues remain
unattended is as simplistic response to this multifaceted policy area," Gono
said.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Students to appear in court



14 members of the Zimbabwe National Students Union (ZINASU), including the
President, Promise Mkwananzi, who were arrested on Tuesday February 13, 2007
are scheduled to appear in court today, February 15, at 10am on allegation s
of illegally holding a protest march without police clearance as stipulated
by the draconian Public Order and Security Act (POSA). The court session
will be held at the Rotten Row magistrate courts.

Meanwhile.

Raymond Majongwe, PTUZ Secretary General and treasurer,  McDonald Mangauzani
are also scheduled to appear before the magistrate at Rotten Row Magistrate
Courts today at 11am on allegations of addressing teachers at Haig Park
Primary School. The President, Takavafira Zhou was released yesterday
afternoon without any charges leveled against him. Police in Masvingo said
they would continue investigating him.

SW Radio Africa Zimbabwe news


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Go back to Cabinet, Minister told

From The Daily Mirror, 15 February

Pamenus Tuso in Bulawayo

Zanu PF's leadership in Bulawayo has told the Minister of Water Resources
and Infrastructural Development Munacho Mutezo to go back to Cabinet and
convince his colleague to re-consider Zinwa's takeover of the city's water.
In an interview with The Daily Mirror after the ruling party's leadership
met Mutezo on Monday, provincial chairman Macleob Tsawe said they wanted the
matter thrashed out at the central committee level before engaging Zinwa.
Zinwa falls under Mutezo's ministry. "The minister told us that the takeover
was a result of a Cabinet decision, but as a party, we expressed our
displeasure on the consultative process," Tsawe said. "We suggested to the
minister that the issue should be taken to the central committee and the
Cabinet for further discussion." Sources who attended the closed-door
meeting said the Zanu PF leadership flatly rejected the takeover of the
water system, arguing that Bulawayo City Council was doing a good job.
Instead, the source said, the leadership suggested that the government must
urgently connect the city to Mtshabezi Dam and also resuscitate boreholes in
the Nyamandlovu Aquifers before the city runs dry. "Otherwise there is no
point for Zinwa to takeover the city's water and sewer reticulation system
when there is no water to distribute," Tsawe said.

The sources said Mutezo had a torrid time explaining how Cabinet had agreed
that Zinwa should takeover the supply of water in Bulawayo and in other
cities and towns around the country. "The minister tried to explain the
background surrounding the take over which he said is a Cabinet directive,
but the party leadership shot down his explanation saying they were not
consulted over the issue," the source said. Another source said the issue,
if not handled carefully, had a potential to divide the party ahead of local
government elections set for August this year. "I think the government
should consider a climbdown on this one because everybody in the party here,
including churches and civil society, are against the move. This position
was made clear to the minister who promised to take back the concerns to
Cabinet," the source added. Bulawayo City Council spokesperson Pathisa
Nyathi told this newspaper that there was no need for Zinwa to be in charge
of water and sewer reticulation system in the city. "We told the minister
that the city council had not failed to reticulate water and, therefore,
there was no justification for the takeover."


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

WOZA update

Dear All,

Many thanks to all those who have been calling police
stations for the detained WOZA women. It seems Byo
central has been overloaded as they were no longer
answering their phones by yesterday afternoon .

The women have now been split across 7 police stations
(numbers below) and those in Harare have been
released. There is grave concern for the well being
of Magadongo Mahlangu who has been held in isolation.

Full accounts from yesterday 8pm and 11am are below.
Please remember the WOZA Solidarity Vigil in London
on Saturday - 2pm to 6pm outside the Zimbabwe Embassy
249 Strand (nearest tube Charring Cross). We will be
filming activities and posting on Youtube (internet
broadcasting site) to ensure as many as possible know
how deeply respected and widely supported the brave
women of WOZA are - come and show your support!

Police stations holding WOZA women.

Bulawayo Central: (+263 9) 72515 / 61706
Mzilikazi: (+263 9) 202908 / 212905
Nkulumane: (+263 9) 476755 / 467039
Queens Park: (+263 9) 22641/2
Sauerstown: (+263 9) 200960 / 218432
Hillside: (+263 9) 241161/2
Donnington: (+263 9) 474005 / 467309

WOZANews update
Wednesday 14th February - 8pm
www.wozazimbabwe.org

Bulawayo:
131 members remain in custody in Bulawayo for a second
night. The 36 released into the custody of their
lawyers once again have been allowed to return to
their homes having spent the day at Bulawayo Central.
Initial reports from one lawyer indicated that there
were 274 in custody but the figure from another lawyer
was 174 members that were arrested. This figure
includes 17 juveniles, 20 mothers with babies and
three pregnant women.

Only seven of the group are being charged under
Chapter 37, Section (2) of the Criminal Law
(Codification and Reform) Act - 'participating in a
gathering with intent to promote public violence, a
breach of the peace or bigotry is committed whether
the action constituting it is spontaneous or planned
in advance, and whether the place or meeting where it
occurred is public or private.' These seven being the
only ones that arresting officers were prepared to
come forward to testify against. The rest of the
group, including Magodonga Mahlangu, are not being
charged and at 4 pm today, police dealing with the
case agreed that they should be released. The head of
the Law and Order Section at Bulawayo Central, G
Ndlovu, refused to allow them to go home tonight
however, insisting that they only be released in the
morning after the seven had appeared in court - the
lives of 124 people made miserable by the petty whim
of one individual.

Magodonga Mahlangu remains isolated from the rest of
the group as Law and Order officers have resisted
attempts to have her moved back to join others,
arguing that as a leader of WOZA, Mahlangu 'deserves
the dignity of having a cell to herself' - having an
entire police station to herself does seem a little
excessive however! Concerns for her safety continue
whilst she remains in solitary confinement.

Members in Queens Park are still being denied
medication - please call Queens Park Station on +263 9
22641/2 to demand that those taking ARV treatment be
allowed to take their medication.

Harare:
The eight women arrested in Harare yesterday and held
at Harare Central overnight are out of custody having
paid admission of guilt fines early this evening. The
women complained of terrible and inhumane conditions
in the cells and having been beaten in custody.
Attempts are still being made to ascertain exactly
what happened in Harare Central and more information
will be given when it becomes available.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Zesa Power Cuts Cause Havoc for Mobile Firms



The Herald (Harare)

February 15, 2007
Posted to the web February 15, 2007

Harare

MOBILE phone companies in Zimbabwe are now facing a new threat from frequent
power cuts, which could limit the availability of service and also push up
costs beyond the reach of ordinary subscribers.

The power cuts, which are now commonplace throughout Zimbabwe, are causing
havoc for the cellular operators. This is because base stations which
provide cellular coverage use power from the power authority, Zesa Holdings,
for their operations, and each time Zesa cuts power in an area for more than
three hours the base station automatically shuts down.

Zimbabwe is currently experiencing power cuts due to unreliable coal
supplies to thermal plants as well as reduced import supplies.

The firms say they are already struggling to keep their businesses afloat
citing the chronic shortage of foreign currency.

According to an Econet spokesman, the problem is now so severe that is now
"the single biggest source of disruption to service at the moment".

He said that in any given day, Econet experiences not less than 15 base
stations shutdowns because of power cuts. "Once a base station shuts down
you cannot call or receive calls in that area. The problem is multi-faceted
because once a base station goes down congestion can appear on the network
because of overload," the spokesman said.

A Telecel official in the technical department also said due to the power
cuts their company was losing a lot of revenue as on average about seven
base stations switch off every day due to the blackouts.

"Last week alone the Glen View base station shut down for more than 10 hours
while the Glen Norah one went down for about 600 minutes.

"When that happens it means the neighbouring stations will have to take over
the traffic and this has greatly overloaded our network." he said.

He said the power cuts are now a major contributor to calls failing to go
through between networks. "It is an absolute nightmare at the moment because
it affects all the networks. At any given time we simply do not know what
base stations are down between the networks, and it's affecting the calls,"
he said.

Econet currently has more than 300 base stations nationwide and is currently
installing another 200 under its ongoing network expansion programme.

The spokesman said the only way the company can overcome the problem is to
install diesel generators at each base station. The cost of installing and
maintaining such a large number of generators is extremely high, and would
send tariffs skyrocketing.

"Even if we could find the foreign currency to install that many generators
we would need a small army of people to keep then running, and supplied with
diesel," he said.

In Nigeria Econet built a network with more than 2 000 generators as well as
one in Burundi which suffers from unreliable power supplies.

"What makes the challenge in Zimbabwe particularly difficult for the company
is the shortage of foreign currency. We not only have to find the foreign
currency to buy the generators, we also have to find thousands of litres of
diesel every month to keep them going," he said.

The spokesman said that the problem was so severe that they were holding
meetings with their head office in South Africa to try and find a solution.

"Our prognosis is that this is a serious problem, which is likely to get
worse before it gets better. It is affecting the way we plan and run the
network going forward," he said.

The spokesman said cellular operators are working closely with Zesa to find
solutions to the problems that the power authority is facing.

"We must, however, commend Zesa for doing its best to connect power to new
base stations and also for its efforts to try and help us whenever there are
power outages," he said.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Come On Zesa Holdings!



The Herald (Harare)

COLUMN
February 15, 2007
Posted to the web February 15, 2007

Victoria Ruzvidzo
Harare

My seven-year old son yesterday made a statement that not only reflected the
extent to which general service provision by public utilities in this
country has gone down but also made startling revelations that even children
his age have had to mature so early they have to help think up solutions to
national crises.

He innocently asked me to leave my job as a journalist and join Zesa
Holdings to ensure our house would never experience any electricity cuts.

Such a statement made me want to inquire further as to how he had come up
with the idea and this was his response:

"It's so boring that many times we do not have electricity and I can't watch
cartoons. So if we have a power cut we will phone you (at Zesa) so that we
can have electricity back immediately."

You can imagine my reaction. Initially I laughed as I pictured myself as a
Zesa engineer on standby to ensure my house is always fully powered lest my
son misses his favourite Tom and Jerry or Scooby Doo cartoons.

But it quickly dawned on me that this was no laughing matter. In fact, the
statements by my son meant the electricity problem had reached such endemic
proportions it required urgent attention.

To think that when we were his age, we never worried about power cuts and
were not even aware such words existed in the vocabulary.

It was automatic that the minute you flicked the switch the lights would
turn on while using firewood for cooking was sometimes out of choice or in
some cases the absence of an electrical cooker, but never as a result of a
power blackout.

But for now it has become the order of the day that meat, milk and other
perishables find their way into the bin or are quickly turned into dog food
due to power blackouts that last for days, if not weeks.

One day the refrigerator is on, the next it is off and so on.

In some instances you have to "rent" refrigerator space at an acquaintance's
house across town who might have power when you don't and vice versa.

It has ceased to be funny. Imagine the inconvenience and health risk of
thawing food and freezing it again, not just once but time and time again.

This is obviously not the first complaint to Zesa.

I am sure the power utility is choking with complaints of this nature but
the question that beckons is: Is there a solution in sight?

We have recently established though that in most instances, areas where some
of the engineers and Zesa management stay rarely experience power outages.
And when that happens as a result of some vandalism, electricity is restored
in no time.

A story is told of a mishap in the Avenues area which caused a blackout.

However, a certain section of the area had electricity restored the next day
because some top guys from Zesa lived in that area while the other section
of the Avenues went without power for more than two weeks.

Zesa may have a technical explanation for that but many have been tempted to
buy into the former version "because you cannot rule this out with Zesa".

For how long are we to endure the blackouts. In fact, Zesa seems to have a
blackout of solutions.

The power utility has admitted things are not well in its stable but this is
a story we have become so used to over the years. It has been told from
different angles. Various scripts to the drama have been written and they
all have a common rating: UNIMPRESSIVE!

The Zesa "moto muzhinji" beat has since faded.

Last month acting Zesa chairman Professor Christopher Chetsanga said
equipment breakdowns and malfunctioning units at Hwange Power Station were
some of the constraints Zesa was facing, saying these needed about US$30
million.

Furthermore, the power utility, which imports 35 percent of total local
requirements, was failing to get the usual supplies because some of its
sources, which include the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mozambique and
South Africa, were also facing dwindling production hence they could not
meet export requirements as was the case in the past.

What did all this mean? More blackouts, warned Professor Chetsanga.

In the meantime, households, industry and other institutions continue to
suffer.

Elsewhere in this paper we carry a story in which cellular service providers
have said worsening congestion on their networks is as a result of power
blackouts by Zesa.

They say base stations automatically switch off when they go for three hours
without electricity.

Their only alternative is to install generators which they say will
translate into higher tariff charges because the generators are expensive
and they also gobble huge amounts of fuel.

This leaves subscribers caught between a rock and a hard place.

There is need for the relevant stakeholders to craft strategies that will
bring more power to homes, offices, industries and other consumers. Zesa
seems to be lights out in terms of finding solutions so the powers-that-be
need to come to its rescue.

Of course, 2007 is set to present challenges to the entire region in terms
of power shortfalls but we have not seen much in terms of preparedness on
the part of Zesa.

We can only hope that we will soon have all the six units running at Hwange
Power Station and equipment serviced or bought for other units as the power
utility seeks more foreign currency to import the balance.

We are renowned as a country for having the brains that are making regional
economies tick. It's high time we taped on some of these brains locally and
even in the Diaspora as we seek lasting solutions to the electricity issues,
among others that will bring light to this our economy.


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

WFP starts helicopter rescue and food deliveries to victims of Mozambique floods


15 Feb 2007 14:45:00 GMT
Source: WFP
Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this article or
for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author's alone.

WFP has said a WFP-chartered helicopter had started rescue and food delivery
missions in central Mozambique where the worst flooding in years has forced
an estimated 85,000 people to flee their homes.

A WFP-chartered Mi-8 helicopter, flying from the town of Caia and
coordinated by the government's National Institute for Disaster Management
(INGC), delivered 2.5 metric tons of WFP food on Wednesday (14 February) to
an accommodation centre in Shamrrucha for people displaced by the floods.

The helicopter also began rescue missions yesterday, flying to Cocorico
island, where 120 people were trapped by floodwaters. The Mi-8 is continuing
food delivery missions from its Caia base today.

Flooded rivers

WFP and its partners began distributing food aid this week to 2,000 people
in temporary accommodation centres in Caia district and 6,100 people in
Mutarara district of Tete Province.

Some 10,000 litres of JetA1 fuel for the helicopter arrived today in Caia by
road.

Heavy rains in central and northern Mozambique and neighbouring Malawi,
Zambia and Zimbabwe over the last month flooded the Zambezi, Chire and
Rivubue rivers in Tete, Manica, Sofala and Zambezia provinces.

Heavy downpours

The 800-kilometre-long Lower Zambezi River in Mozambique is above alert
levels. Flood waters in Mutarara, Caia and Marromeu districts are nearing
levels last seen during the catastrophic Mozambique floods of 2001.

A total of about 10,000 people affected by the Zambezi Valley floods have so
far received WFP food.

The INGC said yesterday the situation was under control, but with nearly a
month left in the rainy season and continued heavy downpours in neighbouring
Zambia and Malawi, the situation could worsen in the weeks ahead.

The INGC reports that the floods have displaced 85,000 people, of whom
29,000 are sheltering in accommodation centres.

Zambezi

The Lower Zambezi is still being fed through tributaries by rains from
neighbouring countries such as Zambia.

The Cahora Bassa Dam in Tete province yesterday reduced its discharge rate
to 6,000 cubic metres per second compared with 8,400 cubic metres per second
at the weekend.

Influx to the dam was 10,000 cubic metres per second last week but the
discharge was then lowered both because of a reduced influx and to protect
downstream dykes near communities.

Dam

If the government can control the dam outflows and rains in neighbouring
countries decline, flooding on a scale similar to 2001 could be averted.

The Government of Mozambique has deployed troops to evacuate people from the
worst-hit areas, but some people have refused to leave their homes, their
land and their livestock.

The INGC also has a dozen boats that are ferrying people to higher ground in
Caia district.

Appeal

WFP and other in-country humanitarian agencies will soon launch an appeal to
support the Mozambique government's efforts to contain the crisis.

WFP's portion of the appeal is expected to include food aid, air operations
to participate in the rescue and delivery of relief supplies, and
telecommunications to facilitate government coordination of the humanitarian
response.

The INGC estimates that 285,000 people in Mozambique may need food and other
assistance for the next few months in a worst-case scenario.

Crops lost

An estimated 40,000 hectares of crops have been lost in Mozambique under the
floods. Crops are currently in their peak growing and development period
ahead of the April/May harvest.

So far this year, flooding has also hit Angola, Madagascar, Malawi, Zambia,
and Zimbabwe. WFP has responded across the region, but faces a critical
shortfall in funding for all its operations in southern Africa, requiring
US$105 million through to the end of 2007.

Contact us
Michael Huggins
WFP/Caia
Satphone: + 88 216 2111 0121
Cell.: +27-82-908-1448
michael.huggins@wfp.org

Peter Smerdon
WFP/Nairobi
Tel. +254 207 622 179
Cell. +254 733 528 911
peter.smerdon@wfp.org

Brenda Barton
Deputy Director
Communications
WFP/Rome
Tel. +39-06-65132602
Cell. +39-3472582217
(ISDN line available)
brenda.barton@wfp.org

Gregory Barrow
WFP/London
Tel. +44-20-72409001
Cell. +44-7968-008474
gregory.barrow@wfp.org

Christiane Berthiaume
WFP/Geneva
Tel. +41-22-9178564
Cell. +41-792857304
christiane.berthiaume
@wfp.org

Cécile Sportis
WFP/Paris
Tel. +33-1-70385330
Cell. +33-6161-68266
cecile.sportis@wfp.org

Jennifer Parmelee
WFP/Washington
Tel. +1-202-6530010
Ext. 1149
Cell.: +1-202-4223383
jennifer.parmelee
@wfp.org

Bettina Luescher
WFP/New York
Tel. +1-212-9635196
Cell. +1-646-8241112
luescher@un.org


Click here or ALT-T to return to TOP

Mahathir's War Crimes Court to Name and Shame

IPSnews

Baradan Kuppusamy

Kuala Lumpur, Feb 15 (IPS) - By setting up a war crimes tribunal to 'try'
those responsible for torture and death in Iraq, Lebanon and Palestine,
Malaysia's former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad may have scored a few
political points, but he has also revived public memory of his own iron
rule.

Mahathir announced the formation of the tribunal at the end of a three-day
international conference that he organised in the Malaysian capital, last
week, to 'criminalise' war. But embarrassed officials and indignant rights
activists are still to come to terms with the idea of Mahathir being its
leading light.

In a fiery opening speech, Mahathir slammed the United States President
George W. Bush, British Prime Minister Tony Blair and his favourite regional
whipping boy Prime Minister John Howard of Australia as war criminals who
should be tried and punished.

He praised the 'resistance' in Iraq and declared that the only way the U.S.
will withdraw from the country is for more U.S. soldiers to head home in
body bags.

The conference, Mahathir's statements and the Kuala Lumpur tribunal have all
caused uproar, with some Malaysians saying Mahathir is unfit for the job
while others praise him for "biting the bullet."

His supporters see him as a hero who dares to take on the world's only super
power while his detractors say he is just a village bully shouting his head
off to get attention.

In letters to editors and over the Internet, Malaysians are fiercely
debating the merits and worth of the tribunal and Mahathir's own 'fitness'
for the initiative.

The Malaysian government itself rushed to put distance between itself and
Mahathir's blunt and even shocking statements.

Foreign Minister Syed Hamid Albar said the conference and the tribunal were
''independent efforts''by the former prime minister -- who retired in 2003
after 22 years of authoritarian rule during which he transformed Malaysia
from a backwater country into an industrial powerhouse.

''I don't think our ties with the U.S. and Britain will be hurt,'' Hamid
told local reporters.

As if on cue, Malaysian newspapers played down the "anti-U.S. rhetoric" of
the conference which was attended by about 3,000 people including foreign
peace activists, writers, lawyers and judges.

Like other 'private' war crimes tribunals, the Kuala Lumpur version is
symbolic and does not have the legal authority needed to summon individuals
or impose penalties.

It plans to hold name-and-shame 'mock' trials based on complaints by Iraqis
and Palestinians against leaders like Bush, Blair, Howard and Israel's
former prime minister Ariel Sharon.

Mahathir said the tribunal was necessary as an alternative to the
International Criminal Court in The Hague, which he accused of bias in its
selection of cases. "The one punishment that most leaders are afraid of is
to go down in history with a certain label attached to them," he said at a
concluding press conference.

"We cannot arrest them, we cannot detain them, and we cannot hang them the
way they hanged Saddam Hussein but we can label them as war criminals
..that's how history will seem them," he said.

''There are people who take the tribunal seriously," he added, however.
''This is not a show.'' But that is exactly what his critics are
disputing -- saying that the whole thing is a show and a political gimmick.

''The proposal for a war crimes tribunal in Kuala Lumpur is a farce and will
make Malaysia and Malaysians a laughing stock internationally,'' said Param
Cumaraswamy, a respected lawyer and former U.N. Special Rapporteur on the
Independence of Judges and Lawyers.

''It could deter respectable and credible foreign investors from investing
in this country if our system permits such a circus to take place here,'' he
said in a statement.

Cumaraswamy said the Mahathir government did not sign the Rome Statute of
the International Criminal Court to try war crimes and genocide agreed to by
most member states of the United Nations in 1998.

''He never bothered. The Malaysian government to this date is not a
signatory to the statute,'' he said. In numerous letters to the independent
Malaysiakini.com news portal, writers criticised not so much the idea of a
war crimes tribunal but that Mahathir is heading it.

''A tribunal should be impartial and have members with an unimpeachable
record and with moral authority,'' one letter said, accusing Mahathir of
"dictatorship" during his rule.

''He ruined democratic institutions in Malaysia to such an extent that it
will take generations to restore,'' the anonymous writer said.

The writer accused Mahathir of ignoring the ''genocide in East Timor,
supporting the junta in Myanmar (Burma), Pinochet in Argentina and Robert
Mugabe in Zimbabwe.''

"Dr Mahathir's hands are not clean," said human rights lawyer P.Uthayakumar.
"The formation of the commission is excellent and we uphold and encourage it
but it is embarrassing that Dr Mahathir heads it," he said in a statement.

During his administration Mahathir kept up a hard line against Israel and
Jews in general. He blamed Jews for the collapse of the Malaysian ringgit
during the 1997 Asian financial crisis that wiped out billions of dollars in
private wealth.

In his final political retirement speech he accused Jews of controlling the
U.S. and unleashing wars across the globe for political domination and
access to natural resources.

However, the sharpest criticism heard against Mahathir is for his sacking
and ill-treatment in custody of his deputy Anwar Ibrahim.

Anwar spend six years in jail on charges of sodomy and abuse of power,
charges that he said were trumped up. His trial was slammed as 'kangaroo
court' and condemned internationally. Anwar's convictions were overturned in
2004 after Mahathir left office and Anwar was released by the country's apex
court.

Many Malaysians welcome the setting up of the Malaysians war crimes tribunal
which they said raised the country's profile internationally.

''But we don't want this commission to go the way of other war crimes
tribunal established in Turkey in 2005 and Brussels in 2006,'' said one
human rights activist.

The Kuala Lumpur tribunal is headed by a nine-member panel of mostly
Malaysians and is led by a former judge Abdul Kadir Sulaiman.

Many foreign participants at the seminar believed that something concrete
may come out of the tribunal because it is led by Mahathir, a politician.

''Earlier conferences are normally academic, activist and theoretical -- 
nothing ever happens...it's all just talkŕthis one different,'' said writer
and lecturer Kathryn Dyer.

Others felt that people's tribunals were necessary because the international
institutions have shirked responsibility and failed humanity. "We the people
should find ways to readjust this failure. This tribunal says the people are
uncompromising on punishing war criminals," said Hana Bayaty, writer and
chief editor of 'Al-Ahram Weekly' in Iraq.

''It's necessary work. It's the kind of work that will push the
international institutions to perform the functions that they were founded
for and not doing,'' said Cynthia McKinney, former member of the U.S. House
of Representatives.

''Dr Mahathir is admirable, necessary and competent. This isn't hot air.
This tribunal isn't going to give up,'' Mc Kinney said.

Back to the Top
Back to Index