http://www.voanews.com
11 May
2012
Sebastian Mhofu & Chris Gande | Harare/Washington
The
European Union says it will only consider lifting sanctions on President
Robert Mugabe and his inner circle if Zimbabwe holds free and fair
elections.
The EU ambassador to Zimbabwe, Aldo Dell'Ariccia, made the
announcement
Friday after EU Foreign Secretary Catherine Ashton met with
officials from
Harare in Brussels.
President Robert Mugabe this week
dispatched three ministers to meet EU
Foreign Secretary Ashton in Brussels
to push the 27-nation bloc to remove
targeted sanctions imposed on the
88-year-old leader in 2002 and some other
politicians.
Dell'Ariccia,
told journalists that the sanctions, which include an asset
freeze and
travel ban, will remain in place despite Thursday's meeting in
Brussels. But
he says that could change with meaningful elections.
"The measures were
decided further to the electoral situation and very
serious human rights in
2002… The elimination of the causes that have led
the European Union to
impose these measures will entail the elimination of
the
measures.
"The European Union has been very clear that to have credible
elections
where people can express freely their wishes… these results is
respected by
stakeholders... If these happen there is no need to have the
measures."
The EU diplomat says Europe notes the progress in Zimbabwe
since Mr. Mugabe
formed a coalition government with Prime Minister Morgan
Tsvangirai in 2009.
But he says more needs to happen.
Regional
Integration and International Co-operation Minister Priscilla
Misihairambwi
Mushonga was, however, upbeat about the outcome of the
meeting.
She
told VOA Friday their meeting with Catherine Ashton, the EU foreign
policy
chief was very fruitful.
“We had a very promising meeting but as you know
(Catherine) Ashton is not
capable of making a decision on the issue of
lifting sanctions on her own
but we will have to wait for a full EU council
meeting for the outcome of
whether they will lift the sanctions,” she
said.
Misihairambwi-Mushonga said they did not discuss the human rights
issue in
Zimbabwe, considered one of the key demands by the EU for the
lifting of
sanctions.
Commentator Effie Dlela Ncube said it will take
time for the EU to lift the
sanctions since Zanu PF is reluctant to reform.
http://www.scotsman.com/
Published on Saturday 12 May 2012
02:00
A ROW has broken out in Zimbabwe over the foreword inside millions
of school
textbooks donated with aid from the UK – with supporters of
president Robert
Mugabe saying children are being urged to “show gratitude
to those who hate
us”.
Members of president Robert Mugabe’s ZANU-PF
party have accused education
minister David Coltart of advancing a “regime
change” agenda – because he
acknowledged the books were a gift from Britain
and other Western countries.
More than 22 million textbooks are being
provided to hundreds of
impoverished primary and secondary schools across
Zimbabwe.
Previously up to 20 children shared a single dog-eared copy.
Britain
contributed £5.6 million towards the textbook programme, which is
being run
by the United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef).
Mr Coltart,
a member of the smaller faction of the former opposition party
Movement for
Democratic Change (MDC) party, has had a foreword inserted into
the front of
each book.
Some members of ZANU-PF are furious because in it the minister
acknowledges
that the books come from Zimbabwe’s “generous” friends in the
international
community, including Britain, Australia and the US.
But
Mr Mugabe, 88, tells Zimbabweans that Britain and the West have imposed
sanctions on the country – even though in reality only the president, 112 of
his cronies and 11 companies linked to them are still under EU travel bans
and asset freezes. The Patriot, ZANU-PF’s newspaper, says Mr Coltart should
have actually told pupils that the books “come from people who wish their
parents ill”.
Pro-Mugabe writer Mashingaidze Gomo said: “Our children
are being instructed
to show gratitude to those who hate us, those whose
illegal unilateral
sanctions are making it impossible for us to meet their
educational needs.”
Mr Coltart told The Scotsman the claim was “patently
ridiculous”. He added:
“When I wrote this I showed it to my permanent
secretary [a member of
ZANU-PF], I even discussed it with a former minister
of education.
“There was a process of consultation before this foreword
was written. I
think it is a partisan comment coming from a relatively small
number of
people.”
The minister said the textbook programme had been
recognised by Unicef as
“one of its best programmes worldwide”.
“In
some rural schools none of the children had textbooks,” he said.
Britain
will hand over £80m in aid to Zimbabwe this year, much of it going
to repair
the education and health sectors, ravaged by years of misrule by
the Mugabe
regime.
“It is high time the big wigs in government… showed true
appreciation of the
massive funds being directed into this country, whether
it be food aid,
educational support or assistance to our health care
delivery system,” said
pressure group Sokwanele in a
statement.
Although the textbooks were supposed to be locked away for
safekeeping while
not in use, some have been taken and are being sold by
pavement vendors in
the capital Harare, where they fetch up to £6 per
copy.
Union officials say poorly-paid teachers may be to
blame.
Meanwhile, ministers from Zimbabwe – one from ZANU-PF and one each
from both
factions of the MDC – have pleaded with EU foreign policy chief
Catherine
Ashton for an end to the restrictive measures.
“Our
position is that the sanctions should be removed unconditionally,” said
justice minister Patrick Chinamasa.
http://www.voanews.com
11 May
2012
Ntungamili
Nkomo | Washington DC
The committee tasked with monitoring the
implementation of Zimbabwe's
power-sharing agreement said Friday it was
investigating allegations of
rampant food politicization by President Robert
Mugabe's Zanu PF party.
Officials said they deployed a team to Mutare
North, Manicaland province, to
meet with villagers allegedly denied maize by
a local headman, under a
government loan scheme run by the Grain Marketing
Board.
Politicization of food has been reported across the country, and
last month
cabinet took up the issue and ordered grain officials to ensure
there is no
discrimination.
Joint Monitoring and Implementation
Committee official Thabitha Khumalo said
her organ has received complaints
from different parts of the country,
adding the grain scheme should not be
used for political purposes.
"We have since opened up offices in all
provinces to respond to different
grievances including reports of partisan
grain distribution," Khumalo told
VOA.
"Our team visited Mutare today
(Friday) to investigate reports that some
villagers are being denied maize
because they are members of the MDC."
Zimbabwe, which needs at least 2,2
million tonnes of grain for annual
subsistence, is facing a 1 million tonne
grain deficit due to drought.
Insiza South Member of Parliament Siyabonga
Malandu Ncube said the food
politicization problem was particularly rampant
in his constituency, located
in drought-prone Matabeleland South.
http://www.radiovop.com
Nyamandlovu, May 12, 2012--Zanu
PF officials and war veterans in Nyamandlovu
area, in Umguza district,
Matebeleland North province are allegedly blocking
food distribution to
HIV/AIDS orphans accusing their grandparents of being
MDC
activists.
The inclusive government has started programs to distribute
free food to
“Vulnerable People” especially orphans who lost their parents
due to
HIV/AIDS. Most of these HIV/AIDS orphans are mostly under the care of
their
grandparents.
However in Nyamandlovu area which falls under Umguza
constituency, Zanu PF
supporters and war veterans led by two party
councilors David Moyo and
Johannes Sibanda of Ward Nine and Igusi Ward
respectively, are reported to
be denying food to HIV/AIDS
orphans.
“Children who lost their parents to HIV/AIDS are failing to access
food aid
at the moment as Moyo and Sibanda are accusing their grandparents
of being
MDC activists. Only Zanu PF supporters are getting the food. This
is being
evil because these children know nothing about politics,” Mxolisi
Ndlovu
MDC-T district chairman for Umguza district told Radio VOP on
Friday.
Ndlovu, who was also the only MDC-T councilor in Umguza district
before
suspended by Local Government Minister Ignatius Chombo early this
week, said
the politicisation of food in Nyamandlovu area has left HIV/AIDS
facing
starvation.
Nyamandlovu area is under Mines Minister Obert Mpofu’s
Umguza constituency
which has 12 Zanu PF councilors, six from the smaller
faction of the MDC and
one MDC-T.
HIV/AIDS is by far the biggest killer
in Africa and has so far orphaned more
than 1, 6 million Zimbabwean
children. Every year, about 40,000children also
die from HIV/AIDS in
Zimbabwe, which was declared a national disaster by the
government in
2002.
In the past recent years Zanu PF has been using food aid as a
political
weapon countrywide with party officials sometimes falsifying
records to deny
known opponents assistance from the government and relief
agencies,
Public access to food and humanitarian assistance is being denied
through
well-coordinated webs of partisan structures such as ward
coordinators,
volunteers, village heads, councillors and chairpersons.
http://www.voanews.com
11 May
2012
Blessing Zulu |
Washington
Zimbabwe's constitutional-making process faces collapse as
members of the
military and hardliners from President Robert Mugabe's Zanu
PF team-up to
resist key reforms.
As a result, the parliamentary
select committee writing the nation’s new
charter has called for an urgent
meeting Monday to deal with the impending
crisis.
Army chief of staff
Major General Martin Chedondo this week accused the
select committee of
“trying to bring in and popularize foreign ideas, values
and ethos which
were never the way Zimbabweans used to live and respect.”
Zanu PF sources
told VOA throughout this week that securocrats have been
meeting the party’s
technical committee on the constitution to make demands
that are likely to
torpedo the process.
Among the demands being made by the army and also
adopted by the party, is
the view that President Mugabe retains his
executive powers and be allowed
to unilaterally appoint service
chiefs.
Proposals in the draft constitution say the president must
appoint service
chiefs in consultation with the Defense Services Commission,
which is
appointed by the president and subject to approval by
parliament.
The army is also bitter about what it is calling
over-regulation of the
military’s political activities. This comes amid
reports that securocrats
are increasingly tightening their grip on Zanu PF
as several members of the
Central Intelligence Organization, police and
retired army officers, line up
to stand on party tickets in the next
election.
The hardliners also want the attorney general to retain his
sweeping powers.
The draft takes prosecuting powers from the AG, who becomes
only a legal
adviser to the president while a new National Prosecuting
Authority is
created.
Zanu PF hardliners are also not happy with
clauses that they say give women
unnecessary rights.
Co-chairman
Munyaradzi Paul Mangwana, Zanu PF's point person in the select
committee,
told VOA that the Constitution seeks no security sector reforms.
But
Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's representative co-chairman Douglas
Mwonzora says the army is trying to hijack the constitution-making
process.
Co-chairman Edward Mkhosi of the Welshman Ncube MDC says the
army has no
right to interfere with the select committee’s
process.
Political analyst Trevor Maisiri of the International Crisis
Group says the
army’s intervention spells disaster for the constitutional
writing process.
http://www.thezimbabwemail.com
By Staff Reporter 21 hours
1 minute ago
THE country’s security and intelligence services are
ready to defend it from
external aggression, Minister of State Security in
the President’s Office
Sydney Sekeramayi has said.
Speaking at the
inaugural graduation of 31 students from the Robert Gabriel
Mugabe School of
Intelligence in Harare yesterday, Minister Sekeramayi said
the country’s
sovereignty was once again under threat from the former
colonisers.
The 31 graduates attained Diplomas in Intelligence and
Security Studies.
“Closer at home, all are aware that Zimbabwe is under
siege. The West led by
Britain and the United States are unrelentingly
continuing to pursue illegal
regime change,” said Minister
Sekeramayi.
“I am glad to point out that our security and intelligence
services are
equally unrelenting in their endeavour to counter these forces
in defence of
our independence and national sovereignty.”
Minister
Sekeramayi said for the intelligence service to effectively counter
external
threats, it required reliable and factual information.
He said the State
needed to receive information on threats earlier enough to
launch
appropriate counter actions.
Minister Sekeramayi said the core business
of intelligence services was to
pursue information on threats, risks and
vulnerabilities that exist or were
expected to come into existence at some
point.
“This fact notwithstanding, the State expects the intelligence
services to
produce trustworthy and authoritative statements that describe
and explain
past, present and future realities at all times,” he
said.
“In that context, the skills which these courses imparted to you
broadened
your appreciation of the dynamics underpinning intelligence
collection,
analysis and dissemination to the State.”
Minister
Sekeramayi urged the graduates to remain resolute and serve the
country with
diligence.
He told the graduands that attainment of diplomas was the
beginning of a
long journey in their lives.
Minister Sekeramayi said
the courses offered at RGMSI were tailored to mould
best security officers
able to articulate security and management issues.
“It is heartening to
note that the curriculum is tailor-made amongst other
things, to equip
students with relevant professional skills and attributes
that can be
applied to their special areas of practice,” he said.
Present at the
graduation ceremony were Director General of the Central
Intelligence
Organisation Retired Major General Happyton Bonyongwe and other
senior
officers from the country’s security and intelligence services.
The
course, which targets practitioners in the defence, security and
intelligence sector has attracted a lot of interest in the region, with
students from various countries applying.
The RGMSI is an associate
of Bindura University of Science Education and the
graduation ceremony was
for the first three intakes of the institute.
The institute, which is a
brainchild of Rtd Maj Gen Bonyongwe, also enrolled
students for degree
programmes who will graduate in August.
http://www.newzimbabwe.com/
12/05/2012 00:00:00
by Staff
Reporter
MDC-99 leader and former St. Marys MP Job Sikhala has
appeared in court
charged with raping his personal assistant who also fell
pregnant but later
miscarried as well as stealing from her.
Sikhala,
40, has previously alleged a Central Intelligence Organisation plot
to
arrest and charge him with rape.
“The charges of rape being levelled
against president Job Sikhala have no
substance considering the fact that
the woman swore in court that even
though they shared the same room on one
occasion, they did not engage in
sex,” Sikhala claimed early this
month.
“The ‘alien’ who by now should have been deported back to South
Africa five
months ago, is now being used by the CIO in circumstances
reminiscent of the
Ari Ben Menashe sting against Morgan Tsvangirai to
achieve political ends.”
Sikhala was not asked to plead when he appeared
before Harare magistrate Don
Ndirowei on Friday. He was remanded out of
custody on US$100 bail.
Prosecutors claim that Sikhala met the woman in
South Africa last June while
raising funds for his party and offered her a
job as his personal assistant
on a US$400 monthly salary in addition to 20
percent of all funds raised for
his party.
The MDC-99 leader also
promised to organise a work permit for her before
helping her enter Zimbabwe
illegally through Beitbridge on June 23.
The woman stayed at Sikhala’s St
Marys home in Harare which he also shares
with his two wives. Sometime in
July, say prosecutors, the woman went out
for a drink with
Sikhala.
While returning from the pub, Sikhala allegedly put his hand on
the woman’s
leg and told her he had never slept with a white woman and
wondered what it
was like. He is said to have said some say explicit words
and fondled the
woman’s breasts while his other hand was inside her skirt
but the woman
managed to push him away.
A week, Sikhala allegedly
ordered the woman to accompany him to a purported
business meeting but,
along the way, he drove to a city lodge where he led
the woman into a room
and stripped naked.
He ordered the woman to take off her clothes,
reminding her that she was an
illegal immigrant. The woman told him she did
not like what he was doing but
Sikhala proceeded to undress and rape
her.
Sikhala raped the woman at the same lodge on another occasion and gave
her
US$5 afterwards, it is alleged.
Prosecutors claim Sikhala further
raped the woman several times at his home,
especially on Sundays when his
two wives would have gone to church. She is
said to have fallen pregnant but
later miscarried.
The court heard that Sikhala, taking advantage of the
fact that the woman
had nowhere to stay and did not have any money, told her
to leave his house
if she did not want to sleep with him.
He also
allegedly told her she would be locked up if she reported the rape
since she
was an illegal immigrant adding no action would be taken against
him since
he was a high profile politician.
The woman fled on December 20 and went
to live with a friend where she was
later arrested and jailed for
contravening the country’s immigration laws.
She later reported the alleged
rape while serving her sentence.
Police also said a suitcase with the woman’s
clothes said to be worth about
R22,000 had gone missing at Sikhala’s
house.
However his wives said she never stayed at the property.
http://english.cri.cn
2012-05-13 02:29:55
Xinhua
The Zimbabwean government has signed with the EU and FAO an
agreement to
assist small-holder farmers in the country to improve
agriculture
productivity and produce marketing, state radio said on
Saturday.
Under the agreement, over 20,000 small-holder farmers will
receive technical
support, training and capacity building to enable them to
realize maximum
productivity from their land.
The Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO) Country Representative in
Zimbabwe Dr Gaoju
Han said the project is a result of lessons learnt over
the last five years
which realizes that if given all the support communal
farmers can contribute
significantly to food production in the country.
Zimbabwe's Deputy
Minister of Agriculture, Mechanization and Irrigation
Development Seiso Moyo
welcomed the agreement which he said is of paramount
importance for a nation
that is built on an agriculture driven economy.
European Union (EU) Head
of Delegation in Zimbabwe Aldo Dell' Ariccia called
for the need for such
programs to be channeled in line with government
policy so that they do not
run parallel to the laws of the land.
Communal farmers used to contribute
more than 80 percent of the country's
food produce and experts say that if
given sufficient support, the sector
remains key to taking back the country
to its former bread basket status.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/
By John Weekes
5:30 AM Sunday May 13, 2012
Free
after a 25-day ordeal in a squalid African jail, New Zealand
photojournalist
Robin Hammond was reunited with his fiancee yesterday.
Hammond, a dual
citizen of New Zealand and Britain, landed in London
yesterday morning. From
there, he went to Paris, where he was met by fiancee
Aude
Barbera.
Hammond was finishing a project chronicling the flow of illegal
migrants
between Zimbabwe and South Africa.
"This was to be the last
trip," he said, speaking via Skype from Paris.
"This last theme was to do
with the exodus of Zimbabweans."
Hammond crossed the border at the
Limpopo River, trying to avoid border
guards in both countries.
On
April 16, he and his associates were alerted to the presence of South
African soldiers and had to make a mad dash across the river.
He
returned to Zimbabwe, resting at his Beitbridge hotel, but police were
waiting for him. They arrested him on two charges related to immigration and
protected areas. Hammond believed a hotel employee betrayed him.
He
and his associates were interrogated at Beitbridge police station. "They
said: 'We can make you speak, whether you want a lawyer or not'."
"My
fear was that they would move me from one police station to another and
I
would go missing.
"But luckily they hadn't taken my phone off me yet. I
was able to call Aude
real quickly and say: 'I need a lawyer, this is where
I am'."
Barbera began the efforts to have him freed.
"We were in a
5m by 10m cell. There were 39 of us and we were sleeping side
by
side."
Hammond had no idea when he'd be deported.
Grown men cried
daily as guards regularly taunted and beat inmates, many of
whom were
illegal aliens who waited months or even years to be deported.
Prisoners
were fed weevil-ridden food, including beans meant for cattle
feed.
"There was one toilet for 250 people. People would be tearing
up packets of
cigarettes to wipe their arse."
Hammond's lawyers,
Bryant Eliot and Jeremiah Bamu, and his good friend, Cape
Town-based Braam
Hanekom, worked with Barbera and New Zealand diplomats to
keep pressure on
Zimbabwean authorities, until his deportation was confirmed
on
Wednesday.
Hammond contacted his family in Wellington yesterday.
"Obviously I put them
through the mill and it's been really tough on them. I
hope that this year I
can get back."
http://www.newzimbabwe.com/
11/05/2012 00:00:00
by
Staff Reporter
A SOUTH African truck driver smuggled US$4 million
worth of abalone
shellfish into Zimbabwe concealed under a consignment of
charcoal, a court
heard.
Joseph Ndinganeni Ndou was intercepted at the
Beitbridge border on May 1
after failing to declare the
contraband.
Prosecutors say the charcoal and the illicit shellfish load
were ordered by
a Harare company, Sitric Marketing.
Investigators
believe the abalone – an endangered species in most
countries – were
destined for the Far East.
Ndou, 48, of Nancefield in Musina, was not
asked to plead when he appeared
before Beitbridge magistrate Gloria Takundwa
on Tuesday.
He was released on US$100 after being charged with one count of
smuggling
under the Customs and Excise Act.
Prosecuting, Jabulani
Mberesi said sometime in April, Sitric Marketing had
placed an order for
abalone and charcoal from South Africa.
They later engaged Chabata Transport
Company to move the charcoal and
shellfish to Zimbabwe.
Ndou arrived
at the border on May 1 with invoices only reflecting his
charcoal load. He
made a false declaration to the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority
(Zimra).
Acting on a tip-off, detectives from the Border Control and
Minerals Unit
intercepted Ndou’s truck at a final check-point and directed
it to a Zimra
container depot for physical examination.
Under the
charcoal load, police found 500 packets of abalone worth
$3,853,556.36.
Abalones are large edible sea snails with a shallow
ear-shaped shell found
mostly in warm seas. The mollusc attaches itself to a
rock or stone using
its muscular foot. The fleshy foot of the abalone is
boiled, dried in the
sun, and canned for export.
Trade in abalones is
banned in Zimbabwe. South Africa indefinitely suspended
abalone fishing in
its waters in February 2008 to save the species from
extinction.
Abalones are a delicacy in Asia and investigators believe
that is where the
consignment was ultimately destined after drying and
canning.
http://www.timeslive.co.za
Sapa | 12 May, 2012
14:14
South Africa and Zimbabwe signed a memorandum of understanding on
Saturday,
furthering tourism opportunities between the two countries, the
department
of tourism said.
"Both countries acknowledge the
contribution that tourism makes in growing
their respective economies and
creating employment opportunities," it said
in a statement.
The
memorandum focuses on both countries sharing their best practices on
integrating culture and heritage into tourism, increasing investment
opportunities and collaborating in research and policy making.
It
also allows both countries to exchange professionals and promote
sustainable
tourism.
"Governance mechanisms to oversee the implementation of the
actions related
to the content of the... [memorandum] have been put in place
and officials
from both countries will meet twice a year to report on
progress and also
review progress made," the department said.
"Senior
government officials from both countries will develop an
implementation plan
focusing on the areas of collaboration, and regularly
review progress in the
implementation of the... [memorandum]."
http://www.newzimbabwe.com
12/05/2012 00:00:00
by Staff Reporter
WOMEN must bath occasionally, shave-off their hair,
dress shabbily and get
circumcised to make them less attractive to men, a
Senator has proposed
during a conference on HIV.
Morgan Femai, the
MDC-T senator for Chikomo, said his bizarre prescription
was necessary to
help curb the spread of HIV/AIDS because men were finding
it difficult to
resist attractive and well-dressed women.
“What I propose is that the
government should come up with a law that
compels women to have their heads
clean-shaven like what the Apostolic sects
do,” Femai said Friday while
addressing a parliamentary HIV awareness
workshop in Kadoma.
“They should
also not bath because that is what has caused all these
problems (spread of
HIV).”
Femai also recommended circumcision for women – becoming the
latest in a
long line of MDC-T lawmakers who have pushed forward bizarre
proposals about
how to curb the spread of HIV.
“Women have got more
moisture in their organs as compared to men, so there
is need to research
how to deal with that moisture because it is conducive
for bacteria
breeding. There should be a way o suck out that moisture,” he
said in
comments insinuating that the virus which causes Aids breeds better
in women
than men.
Zimbabwe is one of the countries worst affected by HIV/Aids but
has seen a
decline in new infections year-on-year over the last
decade.
Sithembile Mlotshwa, the MDC-T Senator for Matobo, recently
suggested that
Zimbabweans must be limited to one sexual encounter per
month. Men, she
said, should be administered a drug that reduces their
libido.
During a seperate debate, she asked the government to provide
prisoners with
“sex gadgets” to discourage homosexual
activity.
Another MDC-T legislator, Thabitha Khumalo, is also campaigning
for the
legalisation of prostitution claiming this could help the fight
against
AIDS.
http://www.newzimbabwe.com
12/05/2012 00:00:00
by Staff Reporter
A
MINISTER has demanded that traditional chiefs expel homosexuals from their
communities and seize their land.
Local Government Minister Ignatius
Chombo said homosexuality was a “foreign
value” as he chided Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai for advocating gay
rights.
"The chiefs are there to
protect and promote our cultural values and those
who support same sex
marriages must be banished from the communities and be
dispossessed of their
land,” Chombo said on Friday, speaking in Jotsholo,
Matabeleland
North.
“What kind of madness is this that when we have beautiful women in our
country some people want to marry other men?”
Chombo, a senior figure
in President Robert Mugabe’s Zanu PF party, was
speaking to hundreds of
villagers and traditional leaders attending the
installation of Vusumuzi
Nicodmus Mabhikwa as a chief.
Among the traditional leaders in attendance
was Chief Gampu Sithole of
Tsholotsho who said endorsing homosexuality would
be going against “values
that define us”.
“As chiefs, we are very
clear on homosexuals. We denounce them. I agree with
Minister Chombo that
those who support homosexuality should be expelled from
our communities and
their land forfeited.”
Gay rights have become an electoral battleground
with Zanu PF taking a
hard-line stance which it feels is in sync with the
public mood in
conservative Zimbabwe.
Tsvangirai’s MDC-T, meanwhile,
has been caught in a policy muddle. After
having initially denounced
homosexuality, Tsvangirai retreated from that
stance in a BBC interview last
October.
"It's a very controversial subject in my part of the world,” he
said. “My
attitude is that I hope the constitution will come out with
freedom of
sexual orientation, for as long as it does not interfere with
anybody. To
me, it's a human right.”
The MDC-T later clarified that he
was expressing a personal opinion, which
was not the party
position.
A battle is raging over gay rights around a new constitution
currently being
drafted, with claims – mainly emanating from Zanu PF – that
there are
attempts to “smuggle” gay rights into the country’s supreme
law.
Chombo said: "The views you raised during the constitution outreach
programme are there in Harare and they are written down. The problem is that
our colleagues in government want to change your views and include foreign
values.
"Zimbabweans spoke eloquently about same sex marriages, but
the MDC-T want
to smuggle the issue in order to please their Western
masters.”
Matabeleland North governor Sithokozile Mathuthu also took up a
similar
theme, telling an audience which included ZAPU leader Dumiso
Dabengwa:
“Homosexuality is an abomination before God and Sodom and Gomorrah
were
destroyed because of it. It is a disgusting practice and Zimbabweans
should
oppose it.”
Mystery continues to surround the mansion on the hill next door to Zimbali. And it seems that not even the local town planner has been adequately briefed on the details of the development.
Ballito residents and estate agents have been buzzing with the word for months that Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe or one of his generals, Robert Mhlanga, is building the estimated R200 million mansion complete with two man-made lakes, bullet proof windows, a helipad and an underground bunker beneath a security building.
DA councillor Colin Marsh said building inspectors, armed with copies of articles and published photos that appeared in The Independent on Saturday and Sunday Tribune, were recently refused access to the site when they arrived to check the plans and the building progress.
However, a spokesman for KwaDukuza municipality, Sifiso Zulu, said this week that the inspectors had eventually been allowed access to the site.
Marsh said he had done a deeds search on the properties, which he said were in the names of Straightprops 92 of which Martin Sherwood is a director, and local restaurateur Robert Mauvis, who are believed to be the sellers.
However, the IOS has established that one portion of the land on which the development lies is still in the name of Michelle Mauvis, the restaurateur’s wife, despite the fact that a local estate agent said the property had been sold a year ago. The seller of the other portion is believed to be Straightprops 92.
On why the property transfer was not yet reflected in the deeds office, Mauvis said: “Until the money is in the bank, it has not been sold.”
When the IOS asked Zulu who owned the properties; whether an enviromental impact study had been done, and whether plans had been submitted and approved for the new development, he could not provide clarity.
“With regard to the issues you have raised, the municipal (sic) is still establishing a number of things related to this development, including the ones you have raised,” Zulu said.
Meanwhile, the Southern African Litigation Centre welcomed a North Gauteng High Court ruling confirming that SA had an obligation under domestic and international law to probe and prosecute international crimes against humanity.
Centre director Nicole Fritz said the organisation had a docket that had sufficient evidence to launch an investigation into allegations of torture as crimes against humanity committed in Zimbabwe.
Independent on Saturday
Dear Family and Friends,
Travelling over the Odzi River a few minutes after
dawn when the
landscape is just emerging from silhouette, a trail of warm,
white
mist lifts off the water. The vapour hangs almost unmoving in the
cold
morning air and as you look further, it’s easy to identify the
path
of the river: the straight stretches and the bends, all are
clearly
marked by the route of the hovering mist cloud. When the sun
breaks
the horizon it reveals open plains, golden grass and
mountains
spotlighted in the dawn sunrise. You can’t help but be inspired
by
what you see and as you allow the sight to burn into your memory,
you
add it to the folder: This is Zimbabwe.
Contrast is just around
the corner. Kilometre after endless kilometre
of seized but now deserted,
derelict farms. Once thriving fields now
empty, tractors and people working
in the lands just a fading memory
from the past. Farm buildings stripped of
roofs, door and window
frames look as if they’ve been hit by bombs but in
fact you know
they just been destroyed by another kind of war: a rabble of
political
pawns who came and grabbed, in the name of land reform, and then
left.
This picture too you have to keep because it has become the reality
of
Zimbabwe now.
Along the road you pass growth points where the
buildings are shabby
and badly in need of repair and paint, where donkeys and
oxen stand in
the dust hitched to carts and wagons, and everywhere the chores
of the
women bombard your view. Girls and women walking, always
walking,
carrying huge burdens on their heads: firewood, water, bags of
food.
Often they are also carrying a baby or toddler strapped to their
backs
and this vision too is added to your memory folder; an ancient
image
but unbelievably, still so much the picture of Zimbabwe
today.
Across the border in a foreign land your perspective widens
and
everything screams at you: bizarre, outrageous, larger than
life.
Pink, purple and orange houses, some even decorated with leopard
spot
patterns. People living in houses made of mud and sticks and
bamboo
strips. Giant flea markets that line the main highways for
many
kilometres. Here there are roadside money changers whose bank-
note
folding, flicking and repeated counting techniques leave you
dizzy,
confused and totally ripped off if you fall prey to their
tricks.
Ancient diesel trains billow plumes of thick, choking black smoke
and
at every water source children are stripped to their underpants
or
less and they swim, fish, and splash in every roadside puddle. This
is
the land of bicycles; even danger warning triangles on the
highways
carry pictures of bicycles. Four on a bicycle is not unusual: one
on
the cross bar, one on the seat, one on the carrier and a child
strapped
to the last person’s back. It’s hard to take it all in so
you just shake your
head and add the image to the memory because this
too is
Africa.
Returning to Zimbabwe the last memory is unfortunately the ugly
face
of Africa’s corruption epidemic. Give me one of those packets
of
cashew nuts, the customs official aggressively demands and you
stare
each other down, waiting to see who will give in first. Will
she
refuse to open the boom and let you pass through the border or
will
you mutter and give in. Tragically you get this same bad taste at
so
many other border posts in and out of all our neighbouring countries
–
everyone wants their cut to do the job their government pays them
to do and
you are the helpless victim. Heading back to the never
ending political
turmoil and power struggle of Zimbabwe you wonder if
our situation has also
just become another case of This is Africa or
if we really can turn it round
and prosper again.. Until next time,
thanks for reading, love cathy 12th May
2012.
Copyright � Cathy Buckle. www.cathybuckle.com