"The Zimbabwe Situation" news page

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Tuesday, July 18, 2000 10:15 AM
Subject: Zimbabwe this Week

Work in Progress.

I am a bit late this week with my normal review but I have been in the south of the country looking after business interests. On the way I caught a severe head cold which has kept me out of circulation for a couple of days. The only real news this past week was the eventual announcement of the new cabinet - it is an interesting line up with some notable exceptions and some gains. The new Ministers of Finance, Industry and Agriculture are all sound technocrats, the new Minister of Mines is not - an amazing development when you think of our potential as a mining country.

I was sorry to see Eddison Zvobgo go into retirement - in my view he would have been a good choice as Minister of Legal and Parliamentary Affairs and in effect the Leader of the House. Instead they appointed Patrick Chinamassa - the present Attorney General who has been less than effective in that role but has been a loyal doormat for the President. Zvobgo has always been the main threat to Mugabe's hold over Zanu PF and I think he will continue to be dangerous on the back benches.

There are three priorities - restoring the rule of law, turning the economy around and

resolve the conflict over land. The last is linked to the first and cannot be done until you have first restored respect for the law throughout the country. The actual position of the farmers has become impossible. They are the subject of random threats and are being forced to abandon their assets in the face of threats from a nondescript group of thugs who seem to be able to ignore all the norms of a society based on the rule of law. On Sunday my driver was at home in a rural district with his family when the local "war vets" came door to door inviting them to come with them to "get land". He caught a bus to Chinhoyi and left town as soon as possible to avoid giving the impression he was less than enthusiastic about "getting a farm". This is anarchy not land reform. There is no sign that government is about to change its ways - they are still holding the value of the dollar at an artificially high rate, still threatening price controls and ignoring all calls to get the budget deficit under some control. They also continue to talk about the Millenium Economic Recovery Plan as if it held some credibility - if it had any 5 months ago it has none today.

So where does this leave us? I got a copy of the Mining Mirror magazine from South Africa at the weekend and being restricted to bed read it from cover to cover. It was a very interesting read. Bobby Godsell, a South African financial guru said in the magazine that South Africa's economy has never been better managed and he sited the following: - "On the economic front, inflation is well controlled, government deficits are being managed down, trade barriers have been rapidly reduced, tax rates are being lowered, exchange controls are being phased out and economic growth is stronger than it has been for decades." He went on to state that "the rule of law, government under the law, and as a constitutional state are well established." Elsewhere in the magazine you learn that the diamond industry is to be doubled in size in Botswana and that De Beers are expanding their investments in Venitia Mine - some 5 kilometers from the border with Zimbabwe and opposite a defunct diamond mine on the Zimbabwe side of the border. On the BBC this morning we heard that of all the States in Central and East Africa, only Uganda has hit its targets and qualifies for debt relief.

Now compare Godsells analysis with the situation in Zimbabwe - inflation is soaring to levels that could go over 100 per cent per annum within the next twelve months, the government deficit is over 20 per cent of GDP and still rising. Tax levels are rising - driven by rapid inflation and the absence of any management. The Zimbabwe dollar is trading at half the value it is now valued at by the market and our economy is likely to shrink this year by 10 to 15 per cent in real terms. 20 years ago we had a higher income per capita than Botswana - now their GDP per capita is some 5 times the per capita income of Zimbabwe and the gap is widening monthly.

The only comment on the Zimbabwean situation in the Magazine was a remark by the editor that "lets hope that the Zimbabwe land invasions controversy does not damage the upsurge in investor interest and dampen the growth shown recently by the SA mining industry." We are liability in the regional balance sheet and the reckless pursuit of the ambitions of one man and his close associates continues to harm not only our own prospects but also those of the whole region. Here, with the exception of the Congo, Angola and perhaps little Malawi, regional countries are all on the path to growth and recovery.

Yet when you compare us to the rest - we still have the best prospects of all regional states in southern Africa for growth and development. A highly educated workforce, a rich resource base and strategic role in the regional economy from a transport and tourism angle. Despite all the problems of agriculture in Zimbabwe it is an industry that has grown consistently since independence in 1980, our tourism potential is huge, the mining industry is highly diversified and has great potential, industry and commerce all have potential - especially when viewed against the new trade opportunities that are opening up. The service industries of health, education, technical and communications are just beginning to show their potential.

So what is wrong with us - well we all know that, but what to do about it? I think that has been decided because Mr Mugabe knows now that he is basically finished. It may take 3 months or 20 but he will go soon and then we can start putting all our potential to work at solving a few of our national problems and not just those of a small outdated clique of Zanu PF relics who think that their welfare is synonymous with that of the national as a whole. The eventual coming to power of the MDC promises a completely new form of post independence government in Africa - one that could bring a new generation into power and a chance to show what they are made of. A team that really does believe in a market driven social democracy, that at last puts the country before itself. In the mean time, regard us as being "work in progress" - messy, but keep your eye on the eventual shape of the project we are building together.

Eddie Cross

18th July 2000

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Zimbabwe parliament sworn in - BBC: Tuesday, 18 July, 2000, 13:56 GMT 14:56 UK
New look for Zimbabwe cabinet - BBC: Saturday, 15 July, 2000, 20:25 GMT 21:25 UK 
Zimbabwe opposition leader sceptical on new cabinet - HARARE, July 16 (AFP)
Mugabe shuns leader of squatter movement  - The Times 17 July 2000, HARARE
Zimbabwe parliament sworn in
BBC: Tuesday, 18 July, 2000, 13:56 GMT 14:56 UK
Hundreds of farms are still being illegally occupied
Newly elected members of parliament in Zimbabwe have been sworn in nearly one month after a general election in which the ruling Zanu-PF party came close to electoral defeat.
The opposition Movement for Democratic Change won more than one third of the seats - enough to block any constitutional changes - and has filed legal challenges to some of the results because of violence and intimidation.
Correspondents say the MDC is in a strong position to influence future policy.
Priorities for the government and parliament will include tackling the country's worst economic crisis since independence 20 years ago and addressing President Robert Mugabe's controversial plans for land redistribution.
 
The new cabinet, announced last weekend, is dominated by supporters of Mr Mugabe.
New look
However, most of the ministers have not been in government before, as Mr Mugabe tries to portray a fresh image.
And the number of ministries has been slashed in half.
Many of the ministers in the outgoing government failed to win their constituency elections.
The leader of the independence war veterans, Chenjerai Hunzvi, whose followers have occupied hundreds of white-owned farms in recent months, also failed to make it into the cabinet.
The key Finance Ministry is one of those headed by a well-respected businessman, Simba Makoni - and the government will hope he can attract the return of donors, who have cut off aid in recent years.
However, tough political decisions are needed to rescue Zimbabwe's economy, and it is unclear whether he will be allowed to make them.
Farm list
On Monday, Zimbabwe's government issued a list of 165 white-owned farms it said it would begin seizing immediately for the resettlement of landless blacks.
Since February, war veterans have led landless blacks in the often violent occupation of 1,600 farms.
Mr Hunzvi has demanded more seizures in a direct challenge to the government, while farmers whose properties have been listed are demanding compensation before relinquishing their properties.
Intimidation and violence are reported to be continuing on the occupied farms.
 
New look for Zimbabwe cabinet
BBC: Saturday, 15 July, 2000, 20:25 GMT 21:25 UK
War veterans were told to stay on the farms
Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe has announced his new cabinet, three weeks after the general election.
All 21 ministers in the greatly reduced cabinet are either members or supporters of the president's party, Zanu-PF.
Not included is the leader of the independence war veterans, Chenjerai Hunzvi, whose followers have occupied hundreds of white-owned farms in recent months.
In the elections at the end of June the opposition Movement for Democratic Change made big gains at the expense of the governing Zanu-PF party.
In a challenge to the government, Mr Hunzvi told squatters not to move off the land they have occupied, as the government has asked them to.
He said the target of 200 farms the government plans to transfer in the first tranche of land transfers was not enough.
Fresh look
The outgoing cabinet had 44 members, more than twice as many ministers as in the new cabinet.
Most of the ministers have not been in government before, as Mr Mugabe tries to portray a fresh image after 20 years in power.
Mr Mugabe appears to have given in to pressure both from international donors and domestic critics to reduce spending and abolish some of Zimbabwe's ministries.
Over half of the new ministers were not returned to parliament in last month's elections - they are prominent business people and academics.
The key Finance Ministry is one of those headed by a well-respected businessman, Simba Makoni.
BBC Harare correspondent Joseph Winter says Mr Mugabe will be hoping that his new finance minister can attract the return of donors, who have cut off aid in recent years. But there are fears that he may not be allowed to take the tough political decisions needed to rescue Zimbabwe's economy.
The casualties
The most prominent casualty is former Minister of Justice Emmerson Mnangagwa, who was defeated in the recent elections.
He was widely seen as a possible successor to Mr Mugabe, but his chances have been dealt a severe blow by his omission from the government.
Another loser is the most recent minister of lands, Kumbira Kangi, who is currently facing charges of corruption.
War veterans
Chenjerai Hitler Hunzvi's call on war veterans not to leave white-owned farms is a direct challenge to the Zimbabwean Government, who earlier said that war veterans occupying farms which are not part of the government's redistribution programme will be shifted elsewhere.
Vice-President Joseph Msika on Saturday announced the final phase in the government's controversial plans to take over white-owned farms and redistribute them to black peasant farmers.
At a news conference he said the government would start resettling black farmers on 200 white-owned farms.
Ugly mood
Mr Hunzvi, leader of the association of veterans of Zimbabwe's liberation war in the 1970s, delivered a fiery and confrontational speech at a rally in Harare.
"Where we are on the farms there is no-one who is going to move us out of those farms."
Since February, war veterans have led landless blacks in the often violent occupation of 1,600 farms.
Mr Hunzvi said that no one should move until they were sure that the government's redistribution programme was working well.
Correspondents say the mood at the gathering was ugly. A black Zimbabwean journalist was beaten up because of his newspaper's perceived opposition to land redistribution.
At one point, Mr Hunzvi said any white farmer who opposed his followers would be buried "six feet under the ground".

Zimbabwe opposition leader sceptical on new cabinet

HARARE, July 16 (AFP) -
Sunday, July 16 7:54 PM SGT
Zimbabwe opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai on Sunday voiced scepticism over the new cabinet announced by President Robert Mugabe in the wake of last month's general elections, saying it was "too little, too late."
Mugabe summoned journalists to State House late Saturday -- the same day he launched his controversial land reform programme -- and read out a list of 17 full ministers and two heads of department, including 10 new ministers.
Tsvangirai, head of the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) who nevertheless failed to win a seat in the elections, told AFP: "This government is like putting new oil into an old engine," adding: "The real problem is Mugabe."
The MDC trailed only five seats behind Mugabe's Zimbabwe African National Union - Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF), giving Zimbabwe its first viable opposition in 20 years.
Tsvangirai said: "It doesn't matter what kind of people he puts into his cabinet. Those people he puts into the cabinet have no political base. It doesn't augur well for the country."
Tsvangirai had made it clear after the elections that the MDC would not be part of the government.
In an interview with the independent Standard published Sunday, Tsvangirai said: "I do not see this cabinet delivering as long as Mugabe is there, and these people will just be sacrificial lambs."
For his part, fiery war veterans leader Chenjerai "Hitler" Hunzvi appeared to widen his rift with the government Sunday as ZBC radio reported that he was disturbed that the new cabinet did not include a minister for war veterans.
Hunzvi, whose followers spearheaded the invasions of hundreds of white-owned farms since February, did not get a cabinet post despite intense local speculation he would be awarded the war veterans portfolio.
While welcoming the new cabinet, Hunzvi said over ZBC that war veterans "are not comfortable because they have no representation in the new cabinet."
In the previous cabinet, Witness Mangwende was the minister of state in the president's office responsible for war veterans.
Hunzvi issued a direct challenge to the government Saturday by saying his war veterans would not move off farms not designated for government acquisition in the land reform programme.
Vice President Robert Msika had said earlier that war veterans would be "shifted" off the land.
"Where we are on the farms there is no one who is going to move us out of those farms," Hunzvi told war veterans, who, farmers reported recently, are irritated that the government is taking too long to resettle blacks.
Mugabe had, during the election campaign, openly encouraged the war veterans' farm occupation campaign, refusing to order the war veterans off the land.
The Standard crowed over Hunzvi's "conspicuous absence" from the new cabinet.
The Standard was also pleased that several former government heavyweights were "booted out," saying: "Chen, Zvobgo, Kangai on the street," referring to information minister Chen Chimutengwende, minister without portfolio Eddison Zvobgo and lands and agriculture minister Kumbirai Kangai, currently facing fraud charges.
Zvobgo had been in the government since independence in 1980.
Also absent from the cabinet is Mugabe's right-hand man Emmerson Mnangagwa, whom many had seen as a successor to the 76-year-old president.
The state-owned Sunday Mail called the line-up a "new-look cabinet," stressing that Mugabe had brought in "respected personalities in the field of finance and business who are expected to tackle the country's economic woes," including former SADC secretary general Simba Makoni, who is the new finance minister.
Mugabe has presided over a steadily declining economy, now at its lowest ebb since the start of his 20 years at the helm.

Mugabe shuns leader of squatter movement

The Times 17 July 2000, FROM JAN RAATH IN HARARE
 
PRESIDENT MUGABE performed a remarkable about-turn at the weekend, dumping the corrupt and inept ruling party old guard in his Government and appointing a Cabinet dominated by younger, moderate technocrats.
He also indicated that he was abandoning the guerrilla war veterans he used during the bloody run-up to last month's parliamentary elections to intimidate much of rural Zimbabwe into voting for his Zanu (PF) party.
Chenjerai "Hitler" Hunzvi, the war veterans' leader widely tipped for a senior Cabinet post, was excluded. Mr Mugabe also failed to turn up at a meeting of veterans in Harare on Saturday when he was expected to address them.
Joseph Msika, the head of the Government's land acquisition programme, announced that the State was starting immediately to redistribute land.
He said that veterans would have to move off most of the 1,000 white-owned farms they have occupied since February to another 200 properties that he said the Government was in the process of acquiring.
He looked directly at Dr Hunzvi as he stated that "distribution [of white-owned farms] is being done by government", and not by veterans.
Dr Hunzvi went on to address about 1,000 supporters and headed straight for confrontation with Mr Mugabe, who had licensed the movement's murderous campaign of farm invasions. Dr Hunzvi said he would give the Government two weeks to give them the farms that they now occupied. "We are not moving anywhere," he said. "We want to make it clear that we are going to take and distribute land now."
If farmers resisted, he said, "some of them will find themselves six feet underground".
Zimbabweans were stunned on Saturday night to see Mr Mugabe on state television announce a Cabinet that included Simba Makoni, a leading businessman regarded as the enlightened, critical face of Zanu (PF), as Finance Minister, and Nkosana Moyo, an international banker, as Trade Minister.
The choice of ministers took Mr Mugabe three weeks to finalise and the powerful group of pre-independence politicians - nicknamed "the old stone-throwers" - who have dominated his governments since independence in 1980 have been consigned to political insignificance. Only three of them are left in the Cabinet. Chief among the losers was Emmerson Mnangagwa, the sinister party security chief hitherto regarded as Mr Mugabe's likely successor. Sydney Sekeramayi, former minister in charge of Mr Mugabe's secret police, was demoted to Minister of Mines.
In recognition of criticism of his oversized cabinets, the number of full ministers was cut from 27 to 19, although it is expected that Mr Mugabe will appoint deputy ministers and provincial governors, classified as "resident ministers". His last Government consisted of 54 ministers, deputies, ministers of state and governors. "It's a change of persona," said a Western diplomat. "Before the elections he was the Maoist revolutionary, egging on the vets to bloody mayhem. Now he's suddenly the pragmatic reformer."
In another important change, Godwin Matanga, the police deputy commissioner, made it clear at a meeting with the veterans' leadership on Friday that his men would be on standby to stop any violence against white farmers.
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OPINION

Zimbabwe's prospects

Robert I. Rotberg

HARARE, ZIMBABWE

This prosperous-appearing capital city is a modern Potemkin village. Stores and hotels are empty, businesses are shutting their doors, and tourists are absent. Downtown Harare is a lifeless shell following President Robert Mugabe's willful destruction of his nation's economy.

Political leaders, whether the ebullient architects of June's stunning vote in parliamentary elections for the new Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), or the glum Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) followers of Mr. Mugabe, sit in their offices wondering whether the president will change his dictatorial ways.

Last month's elections produced a meaningful opposition for the first time. Of the 120 elected parliamentary seats, 57 went to the MDC, one to an allied party, and 62 to ZANU-PF. Because of widespread intimidation and the likelihood of ballot stuffing and vote rigging, the MDC is contesting 28 of the seats it lost. It won all the cities and all rural areas except those in the president's Shona-speaking heartland. Four of its winners were whites, elected overwhelmingly by blacks despite Mugabe's racist campaign.

Morgan Tsvangirai, president of the MDC, smiled in his office, remembering how voters severely rebuked Mugabe's economic and political follies. Mr. Tsvangirai knows how to begin to fix Zimbabwe's woes: Let the country's currency devalue (to help farmers and other exporters); restore law and order to the farming sector by ousting interlopers; bring the country's 13,000 troops home from the Democratic Republic of the Congo; and end the leader-led corruption.

In contrast, Mugabe remains silent and invasions of the white-owned farms continue illegally. Mugabe is also reluctant to pull his Army out of the Congo, where diamonds and cobalt are enriching his own personal wealth. Senior members of ZANU-PF want their president to resign, but fear his wrath.

Zimbabwe's once rich economy has endured a precipitous meltdown since 1998. Inflation has raced upward from 20 to 80 percent. Government deficits are now as high as 20 percent of GDP, while yearly GDP itself has tumbled from $600 to $400 per capita. GDP growth rates have slumped from 5 percent a year to a predicted minus 10 percent this year. The local dollar has fallen in value from 8 per $1US to 60 .

Zimbabwe is bankrupt. Consequently, its state petroleum monopoly has difficulty importing fuel for cars and tractors, and people stand in long lines, desperate for kerosene and cooking oil. The state-owned electricity utility has no money to import power, and at any time the country may go dark. Because Zimbabwe has no foreign exchange, and farmers can make no money on their crops, food shortages are beginning to appear. They could become serious by September if winter wheat isn't sown now.

In better-managed times, Zimbabwe boasted one of the best-balanced and well-functioning economies in Africa. But this healthy growth has been undermined by direct government action since 1998. By hiring rent-a-thugs to invade white-owned farms - and in some cases kill white farmers who favored the MDC - the government quickly destroyed the equivalent of 20 percent of GDP. Even worse, Mugabe threatened to confiscate all white-owned farms without compensation. He also vowed to nationalize the mines. Foreign investors withdrew in fear and dismay.

Unless Mugabe alters course significantly, emergency assistance from the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, much less Western donors, will not be forthcoming. That help will only arrive when Zimbabwe begins to put its own house in order.

Local businessmen suspect that it is too late. If they are right, then this well-educated and once well-run country could become the next Sierra Leone or Congo. Recovery is possible, but only if Mugabe resigns before his term ends in 2002, or refrains from new acts of venality.

Robert I. Rotberg is director of the Kennedy School's program on intrastate conflict and president of the World Peace Foundation.

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Dear friends,
Attached is a wonderful piece of graffiti I photographed near a shopping
complex during our recent elections that I would like to share with you, as
it is a graphic commentary in itself. The open palm is the symbol used by
the Movement for Democratic Change to signify change.

As expected, our vindictive ruler has taken exception to millions of people
waving their open palms after the election especially in the major cities
where his party was so thoroughly drubbed, that they do not have a single
seat of the 30 or so that were up for grabs.
The bitterness of defeat in the cities has lead him to impose a low-level
curfew in the high-density suburbs of Harare to put down any celebrations
the oppositon MDC might want to have and generally punish the urban populace
for voting against him. This again, comes as no surprise.
He uses the same army that was invisible before the elections while his wide
spread violent intimidation campaign was in progress, to mete out revenge to
those who peacefully exercised their democratic franchise against his
tyranny.
The worst side of public servants being used by the state to oppress what
they deem as dissent, was exposed at a recent international football game,
where under the pretext of containing a few hooligans, the police randomly
fired teargas into the 40,000 plus crowd. In the ensuing panic 16 people
died while hundreds were injured in the mayhem that ensued.
If the truth be told, their only crime was an open palm that fluttered
around the stadium like a million butterflies of hope and determination.
So while driving or seeing a friend across the street, and almost everything
else we do in this situation, we must be wary of signalling our intentions
-it could rub-up a weary despot the wrong way.

Chaz

PS. The Graphic Commentaries are now all up on the website: www.article7.org
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A System of Government As Old as the Desert Sands
Talking it up in Botswana
By PETER HAWTHORNE

It helps to have diamonds in your backyard. But that's not the only bounty that Botswana can boast. Once a Cinderella of the colonial era, the central African country on the edge of the Kalahari Desert is the very model of a modern black democracy.

Since its independence from Britain in 1966, Botswana has grown into one of Africa's success stories. It has a small population " 1.6 million " and most of them belong to one tribe, speaking the same language and related through clans. The discovery of diamonds by South Africa's De Beers and development of the industry by a De Beers-government partnership, called Debswana, has made Botswana the world's largest producer of diamonds by value. Behind these shrewd political and business moves, however, lies a system of traditional democracy as old as the desert sands. It is known as the kgotla.

The kgotla can be anything from a conversation across a cattle fence to a full-scale debate in the parliament in the capital, Gaborone. Essentially it means aggression is better expressed with argument than the spear. It also embraces the right to be heard. A humble shepherd boy can talk to a headman. At Debswana's mines, the lowliest worker can confront the boss. "If in doubt," says Terry Stewart, general manager of Debswana's Orapa mine, "we call a kgotla and everybody gets their say."

The kgotla was put to a historic test in a romantic drama that preceded independence when, in 1948, the heir to the chieftaincy of the Bamangwato, Botswana's paramount clan, Seretse Khama, married a white woman, Ruth Williams, in London. Under the camel thorn trees of Khama's tribal capital, Serowe, the kgotla gave the thumbs-down to the union, and for a time the British colonial power banned Khama from his own country "in the interests of tribal unity." He would not give up his wife, however, and eventually the kgotla agreed to welcome the couple back. Khama, knighted by the British Crown a week before independence, became first President of Botswana and Ruth was hailed as Mma Rona (Our Mother).

Botswana's first parliament became the supreme kgotla of the nation. Every five years there have been free, fair and peaceful polls for the 40 elected seats, 33 of which are presently held by Khama's original party, the Botswana Democratic Party.

One of Africa's most respected "winds of change" black nationalist leaders, President Sir Seretse Khama died in 1980, with his independence day description of his country as "a rare gem in the African political collection" turning out to be remarkably prophetic. The first gemstones were recovered in the desert scrub 500 km northwest of Gaborone only a year after independence. Botswana can now produce 26 million carats a year, with reserves for at least 30 years.

Last year Botswana had one of the fastest-growing economies in the world, with a real growth rate of 9% and the possibility this year of 10% with the doubling of the Orapa mine's production through an expansion project begun last month. Born into poverty, with little more than cattle farming and a few big-game hunting concessions to its credit, the country now has around $6.5 billion in foreign reserves " enough to bankroll most of its neighbors. It has no domestic and very little international debt, and a gdp of $4.6 million.

Botswana also has an impressive record for credibility. It is one of the least corrupt countries in sub-Saharan Africa and rates above Japan and Italy in international assessments of corruption.

The downside to the diamond-rich picture, however, is the dependence Botswana has on this source: 70% of foreign exchange earnings, 65% of government revenue, 33% of gdp. With some 95,000 people already unemployed, 25,000 school leavers looking for jobs every year and an hiv infection rate of almost 20% of the entire population, Botswana would be in critical straits if its lifeline were to be affected, as it could be by international campaigns against "conflict" diamonds from Africa. "There is no way our diamonds are contaminated by those from Africa's war zones," says Debswana's managing director, Louis Nchindo. "In any case, arms, not diamonds, are the real instruments of war in Africa."

So, while the diamond dividends roll in, with money in the bank and little or no debt, the government's policy is job creation and attracting private-sector investment in fields such as tourism, wildlife and manu-facturing. But nothing is being rubber-stamped, says Daniel Kwelagobe, Minister of Commerce and Industry. "All will be open for public inspection and criticism." Diamonds may be the heart of Botswana but its soul is still the kgotla.

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For those who missed it the performance at  the swearing in of parliamentarians this afternoon

Dr Timothy Stamps was puke making - taking the oath to serve ZIMBABWE and abide by the rule of Zimbabwe law while vigorously waving the ZANU PF clenched fist and speaking at the top of his voice makes me realize that this man who cannot even win a ZANU PF primary election has  no allegiance to ZIMBABWE and is so far indebted to Mugabe for his very existence that he will do worse than Judas and even betray Zimbabwe just like his master Mugabe has done.

The vote for the Speaker and deputy speaker gives us hope - what Paul Nyahti said about democracy and good men working against evil was brilliant and is already working -

The 15hrs00 vote for the speaker 59 to 87 with two spoilt papers - can you believe it two of Mugabes appointed men cannot even vote - TWO people had voted against ZANU PF - four if you count the spoilt papers.

By the time the vote for the deputy speaker was caste another good man had crossed the floor making the MDC vote 60.   at this rate by the end of the week we will have a majority.

from the desk of   R W   { Topper }   Whitehead

 

 

 

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COMMERCIAL FARMERS' UNION
 
FARM INVASIONS UPDATE
 
Tuesday 18 JULY 2000
 

The President of the CFU, Mr Tim Henwood has issued the following statement:

FOLLOWING last Saturday's statement from Vice President Msika, the Commercial Farmers Union believed that a way had been found to take the land issue forward. We were encouraged by the vice president's statement that illegal invasion of farms by war veterans and their supporters would be brought to an end.

Sadly this has not been the case. Trouble in the Glendale Farmers' Association area, which has been simmering for some time, was brought to a head when the Farmers' Association chairman and his family were forced to leave their farm by a group of hostile invaders.

The invaders, who occupied the homestead yesterday evening, remain camped on the front lawn. Last night the CFU informed the police that the situation was untenable. At 12.40pm today the police arrived at the farm. They left at 14.30pm without taking any notable action.

Because of this, the Farmers Association have taken the decision to close down, believing that it is no longer possible to guarantee the safety of farmers or their workers. All farms in the area have complied with this decision.

There are many Farmers' Association areas in Zimbabwe where the threat to life by war veterans remains intense or is escalating. Because of this extremely dangerous situation, the CFU is not in a position to guarantee the safety of its members or farm workers. The lack of proper police protection and intervention, coupled with continuing invasions and threats, means that there is a strong possibility that other farming areas may take similar measures to protect lives.

The Commercial Farmers Union believes Farmers' Associations should put the protection of lives and property first. If invaders continue to ignore the direction issued by government, the CFU believes that, faced with potential violence, farmers should not risk their lives and the lives of their workers by operating in situations that escalate confrontation. Therefore, where safety demands, Farmers' Associations have been told to consider this option and, if necessary, seek advice from the CFU's head office.

This decision should be based on an area by area basis and made only when there is a   threat to the lives and safety of farmers and workers.

ENDS
 
 
 
REGIONAL REPORTS
 
MASHONALAND CENTRAL
 
Centenary:
Police have managed to bring wide spread work stoppages under control and are to go to Chibuli and Rianbuck today.   A group of 20 went pegging at Mwonga today and war vet leaders have opened a registration list for plots at Everton .
 
Horseshoe:
The owners of Maidevale Farm,   Karoi and Siya Lima received non-hostile eviction notices of 7 days.
 
 Mvurwi:
15 head of cattle were stolen from Chidziwa and driven towards Umsengedzi where there are about 40 war vets pegging today.   When cattle drivers attempted to retrieve the cattle, they were chased by the war vets.   War vets have threatened to take over the whole of Pembi Falls .
 
Glendale:
A complete shutdown of farm work within the district has been implemented until the situation at Mukoko has been resolved.   Police failed to react to the situation yesterday where 50 war vets were camped inside the homestead security fence along with 2 security guards (the owner had moved off for safety reasons).   The war vets demanded to be taken through the house this morning and were accompanied by the guards who reported that nothing was damaged or stolen.   Farm labourers refused to resume work today in spite of demands by war vets.   Police had gone out to the farm at midday today but no further update has been received.
 
Mutepatepa:
Land preparation at Condwelani,   Chiveri , Tarlington and Azikara has been stopped.   The owners of Amanda, Dimon and Banwell   have been given until tomorrow to be off their properties and Dunkerry (Piet Conradie) has an eviction notice for Thursday.   There has been a partial work stoppage at Chomkuti and an eviction notice for Sunday has been given to the owner.   10 war vets have started to clear an area for accomodation on Dundry.
 
Shamva:
60 war vets locked the gate at Darmill this morning and prevented any work from taking place.   Demands for compensation were made and the police were called in to resolve the issue.   The   war vets left with threats to return.   The owner of Robin Hood has been given an eviction notice and negotiations with the police are underway.
 
Victory Block - Mutendamambo Farm, work stoppage today but workers returned to work.   War veteran leader has told them to register with him if they require land.   Prangmere Farm, 15 people with dogs were stealing from the orchards last night, no arrests made.   Birkdale Farm, poaching along the Disi river, one calf was killed in a snare.   Msitwe River Ranch - War veteran Kangachepi made fresh demands for two bicycle tyres and meal for himself which were refused.   He threatened that if the demands made yesterday and today are not met the owner will be given 24 hours to get off the farm.
 
Harare West -   Mayfield Farm, 50 supposed war veterans forced their way into the house yesterday evening and took possession of five firearms and have set up camp outside the main gate.   Police have reacted but unable to retrieve the weapons.   At least three shots were heard on the farm.
 
Tsatsi:
Msasa Farm was invaded by an agressive group of 150 led by Thomas Majuru, who breached the security fence to the homestead.   The farm owner was assaulted by a war vet in the group and escaped to lock himself in the house with his family.   War vets attempted to break the door down and the whole community reacted to give passive support to the owner.   Police support unit was called in and the family had to be escorted off the property while a pungwe ensued.   Following negotiations today, the owner's son was allowed to return and farming operations continued.   A presence was left this morning, however Thomas Majuru has since returned with a group this afternoon.
 
MASHONALAND EAST
 
Bromley/Ruwa/Enterprise   - There is an increase in activity in this area.
 
Marondera North - Suffolk Farm 12 invaders building outside main gate.   War veterans present on Norfolk, Dormavale and on Chapungu they are building on seed beds.

Marondera South - Presence of 20 invaders and a white peugoet on Slow Farm, presence on Keal, Poltimore, Kariba, Chakadenga, Elmswood, Rotsvlei and others.   Police have reacted to an incident where electrical equipment was stolen.   Invaders have arrived on Lendy Farm.   Police assistance is being sought by supposed war veterans to request that farmers hand over title deeds to the police.   Tarara Farm, owner receiving pressure to move off the farm.
 
Harare South/Beatrice - General increase in day-trippers pegging farms.
 
Wedza -   Fels Farm, owner been advised that the farm will be taken even though it has not been gazetted.   Also issued a verbal threat to farmers who support MDC, Chigwadere threatened to get violent next week.   Chakadenga, farm security guard was caught stealing by war veterans!
 
Macheke/Virginia - Lowlands Farm, about 150 invaders occupied the homestead garden on Sunday, making demands for food, firewood etc.   The owner gave them water and wood after being advised to do so by the police.
 
MASHONALAND WEST NORTH
 
The owners of Redhill, Munphaile and Buwi farms have been given 4,7 and 7 days respectively to get off the farms.   War veterans attended a meeting in Banket.   Pegging continues in Raffingora, war veterans have taken over the northern area of Wichens Farm.
Karoi -   an increase in activity of farmers being threathened and told to move off their farms, as well as pegging and new invasions. A more comprehensive report will be put together tomorrow.
 
MASHONALAND WEST SOUTH
 
Norton - Saffron Walden, Mrs Rusike has arrived with 8 others, gave the owner a letter demanding compensation be paid to the farm witch doctor for belongings that were destroyed.   Agressive presence, are building huts right outside the homestead in sheep pens.   Police have not responded.   Tilford Farm, a number of people arrived at the homestead today and despite having promised to buy the owners air tickets yesterday were hostile and demanded that the owner sign over the farm.   Situation is under control.   Bryn Farm, 10 smartly dressed men have demanded to see the owner who was not present at the time.   Rock Farm, work stoppage today.   Serui Source, pegging of the farm.   Lucastes Farm, a group arrived this morning and started to paint gate and boundary posts and put up signs that read "Chivero Area".   Mont Marie Farm, the work stoppage has been resolved after negotiations with NSSA and NEC.
 
Chakari - About 100 people have moved back onto Saaiplaas Farm.   Montana Farm, owner moved off after receiving death threats.   Blackmorevale Farm, war veterans have asked the owner whether he is prepared to co-habit the farm.
 
Chegutu - Torphin Farm, pegging has been completed and 20 supposed war veterans advised the owner that they would begin building huts and land preparation.   Bosbury Farm, 20 invaders are waiting outside the main gate, no demands/agression.   Farnham Farm, a pig was slaughtered last night.   Lionsvlei Farm, there was a work stoppage this morning, police reacted and two arrests were made in connection with previous assault charges.   Police are looking for a blue Citroen car that has been driving around the farms demanding owners hand over house keys and vacate the property - they are not believed to be war veterans.
 
Kadoma - there was a meeting with war veterans yesterday.   On the Shona news it was reported that labour had advised that there would be massive, aggressive invasions if they do not receive land by Monday.   Eureka Farm, the tenant was told to move cattle off the farm and has since moved out of the homestead, pegging has spread onto Iniskilling Farm.   Kufaro Farm, two groups are wanting to move into the homestead.
 
MASVINGO
Masvingo East and Central - Springsfield and Elandskop Farms, gates being left open, extensive chopping down of trees, mingling of cattle which has to be herded up each day to try and sort them out.   Structures being built by the tar road, shacks being built near the prisons property, veld fires being started by invaders.   Bon Accord, Ballihone, Wondedze and Chidza Farms, extensive tree cutting.   Lothian Farm, cattle being moved on during the day and off again at night.   Dromore Farm, lawlessness continues, cattle being moved into wheat fields for grazing, wire fencing is being stolen as well as poaching continuing.   Riverdene Farm has been invaded, extensive tree cutting and pegging.
 
Chiredzi - Fairange Estates, a boom has been set up at the gate entering Save conservancy, building of houses, chopping of trees, some 500 to 600 people had been sharing game scouts quarters but have since been moved out by the owner.   Local war veteran is to arrive to day to issue plots.   Samba Ranch, lots of activity, chopping of trees.   Bangala Ranch, BJB Ranching, tree chopping.   Buffalo Range, veld fires being started by invaders, they have cut down the fence near the tannery where invaders are streaming in, selling of plots, at least 5 places where the game fence has been cut open.   Palm River Ranch, owner reports that 30 invaders invaded the property on Sunday which was reported to the police.

Gutu / Chatsworth - Eastdale Farm, owner met with war veterans, councillors, chiefs and local ZANU PF Chairman yesterday.   Councillors and chiefs oppose the fast track method of resettlement, war vets claimed that a "new war" had started on 2 July 2000 whereby all properties will be resettled - designated or not.   Grasslands, Bath, Appin, Blyth, Farms, extensive cutting of trees, selling of firewood.   Smilingvale, owner has been given a period to move his cattle off the farm.   Irvine "A" Farm, a car has been sighted on the property, pegging taking place near the dam.

Mwenezi - Mateke Hills Area - demands for a new block of land stretching from Valley Ranch to Sheba Ranch.   Extensive tree cutting on 11 farms in the area.   Klipdrift Farm, still 82 head of cattle missing.   Nkumi Ranch, one steer was slaughtered.
 
Save Conservancy -   Owner was given a week to move off the property.   Humani Ranch, major invasion from Chipinge area and a complete close down of operations is to take place.   Sango Ranch, re-invasion.   Angus/Mukasi/Mukwasi Ranch, owner has been given an ultimatum to divide the land by Thursday, or to move off the property if not.   Fences have been cut in several places.
 
MANICALAND
 
OLD MUTARE
On Devonshire Farm the owner has agreed with the war vets to rebuild their grass houses and to reimburse them for their goods that were burnt down inside the hut.   The situation is very tense, the police are there and the provincial task force is hoping to diffuse the situation.
 
MIDDLE SAVE
The situation has still not been resolved but there will be a meeting tomorrow with the local war veterans.
 
Please Note
A family on the way to Mozambique stopped at the lay-by just before Forbes Border Post, they were very badly assaulted.   The man had fourteen stitches in his head and they had all their possessions stolen.   To our knowledge this is the third incident that has happened here in the last few months.   Please would anybody travelling through this border post take extra care.
 
 
MATABELELAND
 
Nyamandlovu - intensive pegging over the weekend on about six properties, covering 12 000 Ha between the Gwaai and Lushabe rivers.   Most invaders from Tjlotjo communal area, most returned yesterday, a few on site.   A new group have moved onto Naisby Farm, threats that more will arrive to peg tomorrow.
Lupane - Zikunga Farm, presence of 30 war veterans, have assaulted 10 of the labour, confiscated a .30 S and .22 rifle from the security guard, police are investigating.
 
MIDLANDS
 
Intensified movement of war veterans mostly onto farms already occupied.
 
 
 
 
 
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Canadian Mining Company focussed on Southern African Gold Production and Exploration in Tanzania and Zimbabwe, with exploration property in Ontario, Canada. Recently requoted May 17th,2000 on Toronto CDN exchange under the symbol CQRS.

 http://www.conquestresources.net/
 
Elections now completed with MDC involvement. Production on Zimbabwean properties to be increased in July. Corporate projections of 10,000 ounces   of gold production in year one at low costs well within target.
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Police and army join in Zimbabwe farm occupation.
By David Blair at Calgary Farm

TAKING advantage of President Robert Mugabe’s vendetta against Zimbabwe’s white farmers, army and police officers have occupied a farm after forcing the owner to flee in the face of death threats.
Mr Mugabe has repeatedly supported the illegal land invasions, which have affected 1684 properties, and the government has transported, fed and paid the squatters. But this is the first evidence of direct state involvement, as the army and police scramble for a share of the spoils.
Shocked farmers fear it illustrates a complete breakdown of the rule of law, allowing “anyone to invade a white property and say ‘this is mine’ “.
With eight spacious houses and a turnover exceeding 330,000 British pounds, Calgary Farm is a plum prize. Irvine Reid, who leases the property, believes that its location 15 miles north of Harare was the main attraction for the new occupiers. “ The army and police guys want this place as a weekend retreat,” he said.
More than 300 squatters raided Calgary in April, shouting that they would murder the owner, David Wheeler - who by chance was away. Mr Reid said : “ He has stayed away. He’s now in France. They were quite open in saying they wanted to kill him.”
Within days, most of the squatters had disappeared, leaving a hard core of 14 occupiers. Mr Reid realised that they were serving army and police officers. “They come here in uniform. They try to disguise it by wearing long dustcoats, but they are definitely wearing their uniforms underneath,” he said.
The policemen arrive in official Land Rovers and their military colleagues appear in vehicles with army number plates.
In the run-up to Zimbabwe’s election, Calgary became a headquarters for the terror campaign aimed at stamping out the opposition.
At least four of the 180 workers were seriously assaulted. The farm’s large carpentry shed was the venue for numerous political meetings at which people were browbeaten into supporting Mr Mugabe’s Zanu-PF Party.
Mr Reid, his wife, Gayle, and their three children were kept awake night after night by the songs and screams of the squatters and their victims. Rows of grass shacks shoe where the occupiers, who appear at the weekends and then retreat to Harare, have divided the land into 14 plots. Calgary is not among the 804 farms listed for compulsory acquisition, yet Mr Reid has been to harvest his crops and leave.
He said : “These guys are working outside the law, in so far as there still is a law in this country. Now anyone can invade a white property and say ‘this is mine’. It’s got nothing to do with helping the landless, it’s all about helping the hierarchy.”
From the Daily Telegraph page 17 dated Saturday 8, July 2000
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Tuesday, 18 July 2000 0:12
Subject: Attacks on Reporters Condemned


                                                        Attacks on Reporters Condemned

July 17th 2000

THE Media Monitoring Project deplores recent incidents in which journalists from the state controlled and privately owned Press have been assaulted and
detained by war veterans. Any attack on media workers conducting their business in a lawful and peaceful manner must be condemned in the strongest terms, not only because it is illegal, but because it represents the violent repression of public opinion and
therefore undermines the foundations of democratic society.
In the most recent incident, war veterans assaulted a reporter from The Standard newspaper at their meeting on Saturday outside ZANU PF headquarters in Harare.
Other journalists at the meeting were subjected to incessant, aggressive and intimidating verbal abuse.
In the previous week, a reporter and photographer from The Herald newspaper attempting to gather news relating to land resettlement, were detained, interrogated and threatened for three hours by war veterans occupying a farm in the Centenary area of Mashonaland Central.
MMPZ condemns such illegal activities as totally unacceptable because they threaten the security of journalists and interfere with the fundamental democratic right of the nation to be accurately informed.
The recent parliamentary election has spawned a hostile and polarized political climate in the country. As a result, many journalists have been subjected to numerous threats, intimidation and even abduction by various groups and gangs exploiting the erosion of civic order in recent weeks to take the law into their own hands for their own political advantage.
Contrary to the latitude the war veterans have been given, they are not above the law, and those responsible for these acts of lawlessness against media workers conducting their business in a lawful and peaceful manner should be brought to justice without delay.
MMPZ believes these incidents constitute a blatant attempt to terrorize journalists and prevent them from doing their work freely and without hindrance. The Project therefore calls upon the authorities to ensure that justice prevails in order to discourage further violent incidents, and to reaffirm the authority of the rule of law.
ENDS

For more information about the Project, previous issues of the MMPZ reports and alerts, please visit our website at http://www.icon.co.zw/mmpz or contact
the Project
Coordinator, MMPZ, 221 Fife Avenue, Harare, Tel/fax: 263 4 733486, 734207,
E-mail:
monitors@icon.co.zw

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Z I M N E W S

17  July 2000

In today's issue:

From The Times (UK), 17 July

Mugabe shuns leader of squatter movement

HARARE - PRESIDENT MUGABE performed a remarkable about-turn at the weekend, dumping the corrupt and inept ruling party old guard in his Government and appointing a Cabinet dominated by younger, moderate technocrats. He also indicated that he was abandoning the guerrilla war veterans he used during the bloody run-up to last month's parliamentary elections to intimidate much of rural Zimbabwe into voting for his Zanu (PF) party.

Chenjerai "Hitler" Hunzvi, the war veterans' leader, widely tipped for a senior Cabinet post, was excluded. Mr Mugabe also failed to turn up at a meeting of veterans in Harare on Saturday when he was expected to address them. Joseph Msika, the head of the Government's land acquisition programme, announced that the State was starting immediately to redistribute land. He said that veterans would have to move off most of the 1,000 white-owned farms they have occupied since February to another 200 properties that he said the Government was in the process of acquiring. He looked directly at Dr Hunzvi as he stated that "distribution [of white-owned farms] is being done by government", and not by veterans.

Dr Hunzvi went on to address about 1,000 supporters and headed straight for confrontation with Mr Mugabe, who had licensed the movement's murderous campaign of farm invasions. Dr Hunzvi said he would give the Government two weeks to give them the farms that they now occupied. "We are not moving anywhere," he said. "We want to make it clear that we are going to take and distribute land now." If farmers resisted, he said, "some of them will find themselves six feet underground".

Zimbabweans were stunned on Saturday night to see Mr Mugabe on state television announce a Cabinet that included Simba Makoni, a leading businessman regarded as the enlightened, critical face of Zanu (PF), as Finance Minister, and Nkosana Moyo, an international banker, as Trade Minister. The choice of ministers took Mr Mugabe three weeks to finalise and the powerful group of pre-independence politicians - nicknamed "the old stone-throwers" - who have dominated his governments since independence in 1980 have been consigned to political insignificance. Only three of them are left in the Cabinet.

Chief among the losers was Emmerson Mnangagwa, the sinister party security chief hitherto regarded as Mr Mugabe's likely successor. Sydney Sekeramayi, former minister in charge of Mr Mugabe's secret police, was demoted to Minister of Mines. In recognition of criticism of his oversized cabinets, the number of full ministers was cut from 27 to 19, although it is expected that Mr Mugabe will appoint deputy ministers and provincial governors, classified as "resident ministers". His last Government consisted of 54 ministers, deputies, ministers of state and governors. "It's a change of persona," said a Western diplomat. "Before the elections he was the Maoist revolutionary, egging on the vets to bloody mayhem. Now he's suddenly the pragmatic reformer." In another important change, Godwin Matanga, the police deputy commissioner, made it clear at a meeting with the veterans' leadership on Friday that his men would be on standby to stop any violence against white farmers.

From The Star (SA), 16 July

Mugabe's cabinet 'too little, too late' - MDC

Harare - Zimbabwe's opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, on Sunday voiced scepticism over the new cabinet announced by President Robert Mugabe in the wake of last month's general elections, saying it was "too little, too late". Mugabe summoned journalists to State House late on Saturday - the same day he launched his controversial land reform programme - and read out a list of 17 full ministers and two heads of department, including 10 new ministers.

Tsvangirai, head of the MDC who nevertheless failed to win a seat in the elections, said: "This government is like putting new oil into an old engine," adding: "The real problem is Mugabe." Tsvangirai said: "It doesn't matter what kind of people he puts into his cabinet. Those people he puts into the cabinet have no political base. It doesn't augur well for the country." Tsvangirai had made it clear after the elections that the MDC would not be part of the government. In an interview with the independent Standard published on Sunday, Tsvangirai said: "I do not see this cabinet delivering as long as Mugabe is there, and these people will just be sacrificial lambs."

For his part, fiery war veterans leader Chenjerai "Hitler" Hunzvi appeared to widen his rift with the government on Sunday as ZBC radio reported that he was disturbed that the new cabinet did not include a minister for war veterans. Hunzvi, whose followers spearheaded the invasions of hundreds of white-owned farms since February, did not get a cabinet post despite intense local speculation he would be awarded the war veterans portfolio. While welcoming the new cabinet, Hunzvi said on ZBC that war veterans "are not comfortable because they have no representation in the new cabinet". In the previous cabinet, Witness Mangwende was the minister of state in the president's office responsible for war veterans.

Hunzvi issued a direct challenge to the government on Saturday by saying his war veterans would not move off farms not designated for government acquisition in the land reform programme. Vice President Robert Msika had said earlier that war veterans would be "shifted" off the land. "Where we are on the farms there is no one who is going to move us out of those farms," Hunzvi told war veterans, who, farmers reported recently, are irritated that the government is taking too long to resettle blacks. Mugabe had, during the election campaign, openly encouraged the war veterans' farm occupation campaign, refusing to order the war veterans off the land.

The Standard crowed over Hunzvi's "conspicuous absence" from the new cabinet. The Standard was also pleased that several former government heavyweights were "booted out", saying: "Chen, Zvobgo, Kangai on the street," referring to information minister Chen Chimutengwende, minister without portfolio Eddison Zvobgo and lands and agriculture minister Kumbirai Kangai, currently facing fraud charges. Zvobgo had been in the government since independence in 1980. Also absent from the cabinet is Mugabe's right-hand man Emmerson Mnangagwa, whom many had seen as a successor to the 76-year-old president.

The state-owned Sunday Mail called the line-up a "new-look cabinet", stressing that Mugabe had brought in "respected personalities in the field of finance and business who are expected to tackle the country's economic woes", including former SADC secretary-general Simba Makoni, who is the new finance minister. Mugabe has presided over a steadily declining economy, now at its lowest ebb since the start of his 20 years at the helm.

From The Guardian (UK), 17 July

Mugabe faces new row on land seizure

Harare - The Zimbabwean president, Robert Mugabe, announced a new cabinet at the weekend, dropping several heavyweight politicians and omitting the war veterans' leader, Chenjerai Hunzvi. After his Zanu-PF party's narrow victory on June 27, when it won 62 of the 120 seats in parliament, he reduced the size of his cabinet and left out such nationalist stalwarts as Emmerson Mnangagwa, Eddison Zvobgo and Witness Mangwende. Mr Mugabe abolished the post of minister for war veterans' affairs, which had been expected to go to Mr Hunzvi.

There were also contradictory messages about the simmering land issue, making it uncertain whether the war veterans will leave the 1,400 farms they now occupy illegally. The vice-president, Joseph Msika, said land seizures would start immediately. He said the war veterans would be moved off the 1,400 farms to 200 farms designated for seizure through lawful - although questionable - means. "Our 'Fast Track' land resettlement starts today. We are moving people onto farms today," he said on Saturday. "The government will shift the war veterans and peasants from farms that were not identified."

But, revealing the simmering conflict between Mr Mugabe and the veterans, Mr Hunzvi said they would "stay put" on the farms they now occupy until they were satisfied that the government was seizing land fast enough. In a speech to 4,000 war veterans, Mr Hunzvi warned that anyone who opposed them would end up "6ft underground", and he pressed Mr Mugabe to speed up the land confiscations. "I do not usually want to give our government ultimatums, but today I am doing so," he said. "If the government does not speed up taking the remainder of the farms, we the war veterans are going to do that. I give them two weeks from now."

Earlier the veterans had shouted that Zanu-PF was "rotten from the top". Mr Mugabe had been due to address them, but he cancelled at the last minute. "Mugabe feared being roasted by Hunzvi and the veterans, so he avoided them," said a Zanu-PF insider. "He is becoming more isolated. Mugabe is afraid of appearing before the general public because they support the MDC. And even within his own Zanu-PF party his support is limited."

Mr Mugabe relied heavily upon Mr Hunzvi and his supporters during the election campaign, encouraging them to invade white-owned farms and intimidate MDC supporters. He ordered the police not to arrest the war veterans who spearheaded a violent campaign. Now that the veterans believe they are above the law, he will find it difficult to restore their respect for law and order. Mr Mugabe still has eight provincial governorships to announce, and Mr Hunzvi might be placated by being given one of them.

From News24 (SA), 16 July

Farmers tense as reforms start

Harare - Worried white farmers took precautions ahead of anticipated land resettlements on Sunday, after the launch of a controversial land reform programme and President Robert Mugabe's announcement of a new cabinet. CFU official Malcolm Vowles, speaking from the northern Mashonaland Central district, said farmers were taking movable assets off their properties, fearing a sudden surge in land invasions. Vice President Joseph Msika had said on Saturday that landless blacks were to be resettled on 200 white farms and that occupying war veterans would be "shifted" from farms not designated for government seizure.

Also on Saturday, Mugabe announced the 19 members - 10 of them new - of his new cabinet following last month's general elections. Opposition MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai on Sunday voiced his scepticism of the new cabinet, telling AFP: "This government is like putting new oil into an old engine." Fiery war veterans leader Chenjerai "Hitler" Hunzvi, whose supporters spearheaded the invasions of hundreds of white farms since February, did not get a cabinet post. He had said he expected one shortly after he was elected to a parliamentary seat in the 24 to 25 June poll. Hunzvi on Sunday appeared to widen the rift with the government, saying over ZBC radio that he and his war veterans "are not comfortable because they have no representation in the new cabinet". With Saturday's launch of the land reform programme, Hunzvi issued a direct challenge to the government saying war veterans would not be moved from the farms they were occupying.

The new cabinet has 17 full ministers and two heads of department, and includes several well-known faces in the business world, including ex-SADC secretary general Simba Makoni with the finance portfolio. Makoni will have to deal with Zimbabwe's worst economic crisis since independence in 1980. But opposition leader Tsvangirai, who failed to win a seat in the parliamentary elections, had little hope for the new government, saying: "The real problem is Mugabe. It doesn't matter what kind of people he puts into his cabinet... It doesn't augur well for the country," Tsvangirai said.

Analysts meanwhile also greeted the new cabinet with caution. Professor Alfred Nhema of the University of Zimbabwe said that while the new cabinet was "fairly balanced", the president would have to adopt a new style of management if government was to be effective. He told AFP that what was necessary was a "collegial type of relationship. ... The appointed minister can expect to have the full authority to act - rather than having to refer back to the president". Nhema said that the appointment of the internationally respected Makoni could go some way to "opening doors" towards international donors, who have frozen aid.

Meanwhile, farmers say they have not been told which 200 farms are to be taken for resettlement. At the same time, war veterans have stepped up their threats to farmers, said CFU's Vowles. "Part of the current phase is locking farm owners in their houses and saying they'll be released when removal lorries arrive," he told AFP. One farmer in Centenary, north of the capital Harare, was locked in by ex-combatants on Sunday morning, Vowles said. "The war veterans are going to be angry on several counts," Vowles said.

From The Independent (UK), 17 July

Mugabe dumps old allies as land crisis escalates

Harare - After 20 years in power, President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe dropped many of his long-standing political allies at the weekend, filling his new Cabinet with technocrats and business people in a desperate attempt to rescue Zimbabwe's shattered economy. But as the government launched its farms resettlement programme Mr Mugabe excluded the war veterans' leader Chenjerai "Hitler" Hunzvi from his government lineup, fuelling fears that the land crisis is about to become even more confused and volatile.

About 200 farm-owners were told at the weekend that they will shortly be receiving compulsory acquisition notices giving them a month to vacate their farms, which have now become state property. The plan is to begin resettling 150,000 peasants on to the first of 800 white-owned farms earmarked for acquisition earlier this year. The resettlement decision was welcomed by the white-dominated CFU.

However, Mr Hunzvi, who was elected to parliament last month and who had expected a place in government, immediately undermined hopes that the resettlement programme would appease his militant supporters. In a fiery speech on Saturday he told thousands of his supporters to remain on the white-owned farms they have been occupying in defiance of an order from the Vice President, Joseph Msika, that they move. But Mr Hunzvi demanded that war veterans be given 800 farms in the next fortnight. In a similar confrontation between Mr Msika and Mr Hunzvi in April, President Mugabe came down on the side of the war veterans.

They insist the President is the only politician who can order them to leave. After spending several months squatting on the farms, some war veterans are becoming increasingly impatient for their promised land. They are telling white owners to start packing their bags and are once again stepping up the level of violence. Mr Hunzvi warned that those farmers who were obstructive would find themselves "six feet under".

Mr Mugabe's reshuffle gave the key finance portfolio to Dr Simba Makoni, who enjoys respect from across the political spectrum despite being a well-established member of the ruling Zanu-PF party. In 1997, he was sacked as managing director of the state newspaper group after attempting to tone down the government propaganda it was churning out. President Mugabe clearly hopes Dr Makoni can entice back to Zimbabwe those international donors who have cut off aid over concerns about human rights and economic mismanagement. But that will depend on his freedom to manoeuvre - his predecessor agreed several deals with the IMF that Mr Mugabe refused to put into practice.

The new Minister of Lands, Agriculture and Rural Resettlement is a technocrat, Joseph Made, who will have the difficult task of selling a rational programme of land reform to the increasingly militant war veterans and Zanu-PF activists. As ever in Zimbabwe, everything boils down to Robert Mugabe. If he continues to back Mr Hunzvi and the illegal actions of his supporters, the future is bleak indeed. If he lets Mr Made and Dr Makoni do their jobs, there may be some room for hope.

From The Daily Telegraph (UK), 17 July

Mugabe accused of vandalism as land grab begins

Harare - Zimbabwe's white farmers awaited their fate yesterday after President Robert Mugabe embarked on the fastest, cheapest and most chaotic approach to the seizure of their property, condemned by landowners as "official vandalism". Desperate to hand out white farms as rapidly as possible, Vice President Joseph Msika launched the land grab with great fanfare on Saturday and promised that 200 properties would be seized "immediately". But he was unable to say which farms would be targeted and no landowners have yet received occupation orders.

The CFU expects to receive a list today and believes the expropriations will proceed later this week. Meanwhile, squatters who are illegally occupying more than 1,100 properties, are hammering at the gates of farmhouses and ordering the owners to leave their land. In the Centenary area, 90 miles north of Harare, 36 farmers had been given ultimatums by yesterday. Squatters trapped one farmer in his home yesterday afternoon. Greg McMurray, who owns Rianbuck Farm near Centenary, was forced to retreat inside his house when militant invaders objected to his labourers returning to work. Dave McCallum, whose Annandale Farm near Shamva has been occupied by 40 invaders, has been given four days to vacate his property. He said: "You can't talk with these guys, they're totally unreasonable. I don't know how this thing is going to end. I really have no idea. It's the uncertainty that's the worst."

The squatters demanded that Mr McCallum divide his farm into small plots and give each to a black family. This approach to resettlement, known as the "A1 villagised model", has become official policy and Mr Msika described it as "the government's top priority." Farms will be divided into 15 acre plots on which households will be resettled immediately. Apart from water, no infrastructure will be provided - families will have to build their own shelters and could find themselves completely isolated, miles from the nearest road. How they will receive seed and fertiliser is unclear.

A commercial farm that once exported goods and employed hundreds of people will be transformed into a peasant collective. A leading farmer said: "This is just official vandalism. It will rip the heart out of the agricultural industry. What it means is an extension of subsistence, peasant farming, which will be disastrous for the economy."

Zimbabwe's loss of export earnings and employment could also be disastrous. Farmers point out that resettlement might create more losers than winners: the 200 farms earmarked for seizure probably employ 40,000 workers and, including their families, at least 160,000 people could be dependent on their success. But the government only proposes to resettle 30,000 people on the acquired land. The leading farmer said: "The great unanswered question is what happens to the black workers already on the farms? No-one knows. The absurdity is that more black people could lose from this whole scheme than win."

A constitutional amendment passed in April has stripped farmers of their right to full compensation - nothing will be paid for the land itself, only for "improvements" such as roads or buildings. The government has given no details of when or how these payments will be made. This fast and cheap approach will ensure that donor countries refuse any support for resettlement and steer clear of Zimbabwe. John Robertson, an independent economist, said: "If we go ahead with these seizures, we could find it impossible to get back on terms with the international institutions whose support we desperately need."

From The Star (SA), 16 July

No real changes to Mugabe cabinet - analysts

Harare - Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe has pumped fresh blood into his cabinet but power remains firmly with him and his party politburo, analysts said on Sunday. Mugabe said the new line-up reflected "new thinking" on tackling grave political and economic problems which many Zimbabweans blame squarely on his rule, but analysts said major policy changes were unlikely. They said Mugabe's line-up also lacked the ethnic balance he tried to maintain in the past for the unity of his Zanu-PF party, and could lead to serious divisions. His failure to give a post to the war veterans' leader, Chenjerai Hunzvi - who expected one - at a time when mobs of Zanu-PF militants led by the veterans are occupying hundreds of white-owned farms might also prove risky, they said.

Three weeks after his party scraped through its toughest electoral challenge in 20 years of power, Mugabe on Saturday appointed several young technocrats to his government and dropped over a dozen of his old guard. But analysts were unimpressed. "I just don't see how the new thinking will reflect itself in policy or management terms when those who effectively control the government, that is Mugabe and his politburo, don't seem amenable to any new ideas," said Professor Masipula Sithole, a leading political commentator. "He has obviously taken in some very respectable figures but I think they will have very little impact unless Mugabe lets them run the show, which is not his style," he said.

Sithole, a political science professor at the University of Zimbabwe, said Mugabe and the 25-member Zanu-PF politburo had already undercut the work of Simba Makoni, the new finance and economic development minister, by ruling out a currency devaluation. Makoni, a minister in the 1980s and for 10 years executive

secretary of SADC, is respected internationally and in Zimbabwe's private sector. "But he is a political lightweight, he does not sit in the politburo and will not be there when the real decisions are being made," Sithole said.

Political commentator Emmanuel Magade, a lecturer in procedural law, said the technocrats would only make an impact if Mugabe changed his outlook and dumped his associates. "What we have here is an acceptable public relations face, a respectable dress-up but the real test will be on what they are allowed to do," he said. The previous finance ministers - Bernard Chidzero, Ariston Chambati and Herbert Murerwa - although well espected, lacked the political clout to carry out their programmes.

Western diplomats have said for months the Zimbabwe dollar's valuation is key to a resumption of talks on suspended aid. The politburo says the unit - pegged artificially at 38 to the US dollar for over a year - will not be devalued soon as this would hurt ordinary people and undermine growth. The IMF, the World Bank and other Western donors have withheld aid since 1999 over policy differences, including Mugabe's drive to seize white-owned farms for blacks and his costly intervention in the war in the Congo. A senior foreign diplomat said Mugabe's hiring of technocrats would not be enough to win an automatic relaxation of conditions for aid.

Morgan Tsvangirai, the leader of the main opposition MDC, said the newcomers risked being made scapegoats if the government failed to turn the economy around. "There may be some people with good technical skills and expertise, but the problem is political, not the lack of technical skills," Tsvangirai told the privately owned weekly Standard newspaper. "I do not see this cabinet delivering as long as Mugabe is there, and these people will just be sacrificial lambs."

Analysts said Mugabe's failure to reward Hunzvi, who helped his government's re-election strategy by sending veterans into the countryside to invade farms and attack the opposition, could leave some of Hunzvi's men restless. Hunzvi was unavailable for comment on Sunday, but one analyst said: "Hunzvi and his people expected him to be in government and they may become more difficult to control if they feel used and discarded." Before the cabinet was announced on Saturday, Hunzvi told a war veterans' rally they would take over all of 804 white farms earmarked for black resettlement unless the government did so.

From The Financial Times (UK), 17 July

Militants challenge Mugabe cabinet

Harare - President Robert Mugabe's newly-appointed Zimbabwe cabinet on Sunday faced an immediate challenge to its authority when militant supporters gave the government a two-week ultimatum to respond to radical land demands. The deadline was delivered by Chenjerai Hunzvi, leader of veterans of Zimbabwe's civil war. Mr Mugabe's cabinet, from which Mr Hunzvi has been excluded, will be forced to choose between appeasing or confronting the 2,000 supporters spearheading a programme of seizure of white-owned land.

At the weekend, in an attempt to placate the militants, Joseph Msika, vice-president, announced that 200 white-owned farms would be resettled immediately. Mr Msika said the war veterans and their supporters, occupying some 800 farms, should now move on to the farms, expropriated by the state without compensation. But Dr Hunzvi, who had expected to be included in the cabinet which was announced this weekend, rejected the government proposal out of hand. The invaders would not move off occupied farms, he said, adding that he had given the government a two-week ultimatum to make adequate land available. If the farmers did not co-operate, said Mr Hunzvi, they would end up "six feet down".

Farmers say there has been no let-up in the pace of new invasions since last month's elections, nor of death threats and warnings to vacate their properties. It seems clear that at least some of the occupiers are determined to take over farms of their choice, rather than those designated by the government. The government now has to choose between rubber-stamping the illegal takeovers or sending in the police and army to drive out the veterans - a course of action already ruled out by Mr Mugabe.

The new cabinet has been welcomed by some business leaders, pleased with the appointment of Dr Simba Makoni as minister of finance and Dr Nkosana Moyo as industry and international trade minister. Farmers are happy also at the appointment of Mr John Nkomo as minister of home affairs, believing that he is more likely to take a tough line against land invasions than his predecessor. The cabinet has been cut from 28 to 19 ministers, many of whom were not elected but are among the members of parliament nominated by the president. Virtually half the cabinet is made up of Mugabe loyalists from the previous administration, while Jonathan Moyo, the ruling Zanu-PF's chief spin-doctor during the unsuccessful referendum and election campaigns, has been brought into the government as information minister.

From The Times (UK), 17 July

West Indies have no answer to power of Flower

CHESTER-LE-STREET (West Indies won toss): Zimbabwe beat West Indies by six wickets

NEVER underestimate the Zimbabwe cricket team. A partnership brimming with brilliant strokes by Murray Goodwin and Grant Flower took them to an outstanding victory over West Indies yesterday in the first close and memorable match of the NatWest Series, thereby turning the last two qualifying games this week into academic exercises. Zimbabwe will play England in the final at Lord's next Saturday, and even with depleted bowling resources, they are more than capable of winning the £30,000 prize to add to the £40,000 they have already garnered (excluding man-of-the-match awards) from four victories out of five.

The combination of a first-class pitch and welcome sunshine produced the highest scoring of the tournament and the first in which batsmen have dominated. Mighty striking by Brian Lara and Sherwin Campbell in a second-wicket partnership of 173 set a target beyond the reach of teams with less spirit and experience, but after early accidents Zimbabwe found in Goodwin and the younger Flower a combination to push West Indies to the limit. Flower was playing his 130th international, Goodwin his 69th. They know what is possible when good batsmen are well set on a pitch like this.

Zimbabwe still needed 186 off only 27 overs when they came together for the fifth wicket after two run-outs, for one of which Goodwin was more than half responsible. They never doubted their ability to pull it off, although 90 were still needed from the last ten overs, 47 from five and 29 from the final 18 balls. When accuracy was required neither Mervyn Dillon nor Nixon McLean could oblige.

Crucial extra runs and balls came from no-balls and wides, but it was resourcefulness of the strokeplay, especially by Flower in the final thrust, that settled the issue. Time and again he hit the bowlers off the leg stump through or over the off side with cleanly-struck blows. West Indies must have been confident that a total of 287 for five would suffice. Lara hit the ball brutally on his way to 87 from 76 balls and Campbell, who had never made a first-class fifty on this ground in his season for Durham in 1996, blossomed after a sticky start to reach a joyous hundred. To the delight of a crowd that exceeded 6,000 after the authorities had sensibly let people in for a maximum of £10 after the interval, there was plenty of spectacular batting to come.

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